- … onyt agoraf y drws …
"... _cy. onyt agoraf y drws..." ("...unless I open the door...") is an orchestral piece lasting 15 minutes by the Welsh composer
Guto Puw . It was first performed on9 August 2007 at theProms by theBBC National Orchestra of Wales , conducted byDavid Atherton . Puw is Resident Composer with the orchestra.The piece
The composition is based on part of
Branwen 's story from theMabinogion , a collection of medieval Welsh tales, in which a group of warriors, lately returned from Ireland, feast inHarlech for seven years with the severed head of their leader Bendigeidfran at the head of the table. They then feast in Penfro for eight years in a hall with three doors, and only remember the dreadful events that happened in Ireland when the third door opens.BBC Proms Guide 2007 ISBN 978-1-84607-256-7] The cheerful feasting is represented by a quotation of a Welsh folk tune. Each of the three doors in Penfro was represented by an instrument (trumpet, clarinet, violin) in a box in theRoyal Albert Hall .cite web| url= http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml?xml=/arts/2007/08/10/nosplit/bmproms110.xml| title= BBC Proms review: A Guto Puw world premiere| date=August 10 2007 | last=Rye |first=Matthew| publisher=The Daily Telegraph |accessdate=2007-08-14] The piece has a mixture of frantic, rhythmical sections and sections of "black-magical stasis". The piece uses novel sound combinations and effects: the opening of the first door is depicted with strumming of piano strings, and the forbidden door opens to the sound of rasping strings and a huge creak in the percussion section.cite web |url = http://music.guardian.co.uk/live/story/0,,2146702,00.html| title= Prom 36 BBCNOW/Atherton| last=Jeal| first=Erica| publisher=The Guardian | date=August 11 2007 | accessdate=2007-08-14] There is then a nightmarish reel from a violinist, representing the memories of Ireland; the violinist at the first performance was positioned at the back of the Royal Albert Hall.Critical reception
Critics generally responded well to the first performance.
The Daily Telegraph 's critic described it as a "succession of vivid tableaux" and "liked the way it mixed pictorialism with broader expressions of mood and emotional states.".The Guardian 's critic described it as a "vivid score", saying that the partnership between composer and orchestra was "clearly bearing fruit" and noting the way that Puw used the huge orchestra with restraint.The Times said that Puw had a "knack for drama", "an orchestral ear" and "a winningly flexible technique". However, the critic added that the "spatial games played with the Albert Hall didn't amount to much, and the piece overall lacks weight", whilst commenting that Puw was a composer "well worth noting".cite web | url=http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/music/live_reviews/article2238658.ece |title=Proms: BBCNOW/Atherton| last=Brown| first=Geoff| date=August 13 2007 | accessdate=2007-08-14 |publisher=The Times ]A second performance will take place as part of the
Swansea Festival in 2008.cite web | url=http://www.bangor.ac.uk/news/full.php.en?Id=286| title=Orchestral piece to be performed at the London Proms| date=30 July 2007 | accessdate=2007-08-15 | publisher=University of Wales, Bangor ]References
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