Musique-Cordiale

Musique-Cordiale

The Musique-Cordiale Festival Musiques en Liberté is the name for an international festival of music and song and for a series of other musical events in France and Britain. It grew from a dream of making music and encouraging musical appreciation at the highest level in the most conducive surroundings. In a spirit of entente cordiale, the festivals draw people from all ages and many countries and are designed to encourage inter-cultural friendship and understanding through a shared involvement in music-making. Singers and players range in age from 15 to 75.

a concert in Seillans, 2007 Musique-Cordiale International Festival

A key regular feature of Musique-Cordiale events is a period of rehearsal and performance of major choral works by the Ensemble Cordial, a European choir & orchestra with instrumental and vocal soloists. It consists mainly of French, British, German and Swiss musicians and singers and included musicians from the USA and South America in 2006. The ensemble includes some internationally renowned instrumentalists and professional musicians, interacting educationally with budding young singing and playing talent from 'conservatoires'. It has provided a springboard for promising singers and musicians who tend to appear at the festival while at or soon after graduating from colleges such as the Royal Academy of Music and Royal College of Music in London. It also includes good enthusiastic amateurs, there to build up their skills and contribute to the music-making.

Craig Burnett, trumpet, 2005 Festival

Artisan Music plus, Seillans 05 low res.JPG

Mike O'Donnell, oboe, Musique-Cordiale Festival 2007

The annual Musique-Cordiale summer music festival takes place in and around Seillans in the Var in the south of France. It is a growing international musical experience. Like the autumn music weekend, which has taken place under the umbrella of the Canterbury Festival, in Kent, England, it features concerts and open rehearsals by the Ensemble Cordial as well as performances and master-classes by other musicians. Concerts take place in churches, public buildings, out-of-doors and in specially-erected stadiums in the towns.

soprano Anna Leese & tenor Andrew Parnell, applause after a Musique-Cordiale Festival operatic concert in Seillans in 2007

The festival repertoire, from classical to jazz, from sacred to sexy, is designed to suit an eclectic variety of tastes. There has been a particular focus on choral works and opera arias, performed a cappella or with a full or chamber orchestra. Such concerts are interspersed with, for example, violin, piano, trumpet or oboe recitals, musical soirées, lectures and lively youthful gigs by singer-songwriters. Classical training and a passion for music, professionally performed, are common features among most of the musicians, regardless of what kind of music they play or sing. Recent and future performers include Artisan, Emily Kraemer, Stephen Roberts, mezzo-soprano Polly May, Piers Adams & Red Priest (violin, cello, piano and a variety of recorders), Hans Martin Ulbrich (oboe), Florenz Jenny (bassoon), pianists Marina Nadiradze, Paul Posnak & Martin Kasik, oboist Mike O'Donnell, promising young sopranos Rosie Bell, Anna Leese & Elizabeth Drury, counter-tenor James Armitage and the Bolivian Soloists quintet (flute, cello, violin, double bass and piano). Young conductors such as Tomas Netopil and Kevin Griffiths provide energetic new approaches to the direction of works which the Ensemble Cordial performs; the Bach Mass in B Minor, the Mozart Mass and the Mass for Double Choir by Frank Martin have found favour with audiences in the past and the latter reappeared in the 2007 repertoire by popular request - and also because the choir found this an intensely satisfying a cappella piece to sing. In 2007, the choral programme included Pergolesi's Stabat Mater, The Brandenburg Concerto (J S Bach), Handel's Dixit Dominus and Zadok the Priest with the Duruflé Requiem, with its 2 organs played by Andrew Parnell and vocal solos by Christopher Wray and Rosie Bell, providing the musical centre-piece of three final choral concerts performed in three beautiful old churches under the baton of conductor Errol Girdlestone.

Sopranos in the interval: Rosie Bell & Elizabeth Drury, Musique-Cordiale International Festival, Bargemon, 2007

Each year, a specially-constituted Quartet, consisting of well-known chamber music players, plays as a quartet under the guise of Quatuor Cordial 2005, 2007 etc. Other pieces performed in concerts during the 2007 festival included: familiar opera arias sung by Anna Leese following her recent Covent Garden debut, including J C Bach's Cara la dolce fiamma and, with Andrew Staples, the Mi ciamano Mimi, O soave fanciulla duet by Puccini and ; Trumpet concerti and sonatas by Albinoni, Handel and Vivaldi, JS Bach's Concerto for 2 violins and the Marcello concerto for oboe and strings. The Quatuor Arpeggione string quartet performed a concert and its violinists, Nicolas Risler and Isabelle Flory also played in the Ensemble Cordial again in 2007, with Nicolas leading the orchestra, conducted by Errol Girdlestone. Musical direction in 2008 is by Kevin Griffiths & Tom Seligman, himself conducting at the festival for the first time. The artistic director of the festival is violinist and viola-player Pippa Pawlik.

Concerts in 2007 & 2008 took place from in the towns (and lovely Provencal "villes perchées") of Bargemon, Seillans and Mons. The 2008 International Musique-Cordiale Festival ran from 3 - 17 August 2008, the 2009 the festival dates were 6 - 14 August 2009.

In 2010, the festival dates are 3 - 14 August, 2010. This year's festival again features directors, conductors, singers and instrumentalists, among whom are several of Europe's future musical stars. It includes an outdoor staging of Cosi fan tutte, directed by Andrew Staples (music director: Graham Ross, starring Mary Bevan, Rhona McKail, Martha Jones, Sam Evans, Tyler Clarke & Richard Latham), the Fauré Requiem and Haydn's Nelson Mass, conducted by Tom Seligman. Other works, performed as part of the festival in the Provence towns of Aups, Bagnols-en-foret, Mons and Seillans, include music by Massenet, Bizet, Vivaldi, Mozart, Verdi, Ravel, Saint-Saens, Rossini, Donizetti, Gluck, Lalo, Wagner, Walter, Grieg, Corelli, Poulenc, Tippett & Bach as well as a jazz evening with singer Krestine Havemann, drummer Tristan Fry and pianist Jean-Marie Reboul. Other soloists include Melinda Stocker, Ciaran McCabe, Christopher Hoyle, Michel Tirabosco, Suzy Ruffles, Rosie Bel and Kate Howden.

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