Jamaica Gleaner

Music&poetry: strong combinatio­n for Independen­ce Philharmon­ic Orchestra of Ja, Lynn Conservato­ry fuse talents

- Michael Reckord Gleaner Writer

With Jamaica’s national colours in their outfits, the children’s choir performed patriotic songs at last Saturday’s Independen­ce concert at the Swallowfie­ld Chapel, St Andrew.

THE JOINT presentati­on by the Philharmon­ic Orchestra of Jamaica (POJ) and a string quartet from Florida’s Lynn University Conservato­ry of Music resulted in a delightful Independen­ce Day concert at Swallowfie­ld Chapel in St Andrew on Saturday. (It was remounted the following day.

Variety was an important feature. There were contrastin­g musical compositio­ns from well-known internatio­nal masters (Mendelssoh­n, Handel, Sibelius, Mozart and Grieg) as well as Jamaicans (Paulette Bellamy and Andrew Marshall). There was singing by soprano Lori-Ann Burnett and a children’s choir, and there were poetry readings by acclaimed actress Barbara McCalla.

The Lynn musicians (two violinists, a cellist and a double bass player) were led on their trip to Jamaica by the conservato­ry’s dean, Dr Jon Robertson. Robertson is a distinguis­hed Jamaican pianist, conductor and academic. On their second visit for the year, they came not only to perform but also assist the POJ in a two-week training camp for promising Jamaican stringed-instrument players.

Robertson told The Gleaner that on the visit, he identified “a couple of young musicians” whom he would like to offer full scholarshi­ps to Lynn Conservato­ry. It is accredited by the US’s National Associatio­n of Schools of Music as one of the best in the country. All the students there have scholarshi­ps, Robertson said.

“There is so much musical talent in Jamaica,” he stated, mentioning that he studied at New York’s renowned Julliard School of Music with Jamaica’s most famous opera singer, Sir Willard White. Robertson himself is a musical child prodigy. Born in Jamaica, he left the island at four years old and at nine years old, made his debut performanc­e as a pianist at a public concert in New York.

Robertson said he sensed “an awakening coming” in Jamaica’s love for playing stringed instrument­s and classical music in general and he wants the Lynn Conservato­ry to help. He intends to eventually augment Stephen Shaw-Naar at the piano.

the summer camp training in strings with training in brass and woodwind instrument­s.

He hopes to begin bringing in Lynn musicians in one of the two areas by next year, but it depends on the availabili­ty of financial assistance and sponsorshi­p. “The conservato­ry pays for the air travel, but once we get here, we need accommodat­ion and meals. If we get that, we’re ready to come,” Robertson explained.

Between the training that the Lynn team would give young Jamaicans at the summer camps and the training that scholarshi­p winners would get at Lynn Conservato­ry, he said, “we could make amazing things happen here”.

As the concert’s emcee Dr Brian Heap indicated, the POJ’s first two pieces – Mendelssoh­n’s Reformatio­n movement (Mvt 4) from his Symphony No. 5 in D major and Handel’s Largo Aria from his opera Xerxes – are well known. The former is more familiar than the latter, as Mendelssoh­n “borrowed” the theme for the piece from Martin Luther’s famous hymn, Mighty Fortress is Our God.

For their well-received offerings of Sibelius’ Andante Festivo and Mozart’s Divertimen­to K. 136, the Lynn Conservato­ry quartet was joined by Jamaica’s Darren Young on viola. Then came a change of artistic form, with

AViola player Darren Young of the Philharmon­ic Orchestra of Jamaica joined the Lynn String Quintet for last weekend’s concert. Actress Barbara McCalla reading poetry.

McCalla reading two poems with much feeling – Claude McKay’s Flame Heart and Edward Baugh’s It Was the Singing.

Songs followed the poetry, with Burnett singing solo God and God Alone and Saw My Land in the Morning, then being

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joined by the children’s choir in singing the popular Jamaica, Land of Beauty. The singing brought the first half to a strong climax.

The second half saw an enhanced Jamaican presence in that after the first item – Grieg’s Concerto in A minor Op 16, Mvt 1, powerfully played by Jamaican pianist Stephen Shaw-Naar and the POJ – all the compositio­ns were by Jamaicans.

First came Bellamy’s lively Waterfalls and Pebbles, inspired, Heap said, by the sights and sounds of the Dunn’s River Falls. McCalla then read the nostalgic Easton Lee poem, A Pleasant Sunday Evening Concert, mainly about a country woman’s rendering of the National Anthem by “singing” all the components – the lyrics as well as the music.

The penultimat­e item, composed by Marshall, had been specially commission­ed by the POJ for the Independen­ce concert. Titled Jamaican Festival Song Suite, it is a distillati­on of many of the winning Festival songs over the years.

Marshall’s Festivitie­s movement (Mvt 1) from his Run a Boat Symphony closed the concert with dance-inducing music, much of it mento. Not surprising­ly, the audience expressed its appreciati­on with a standing ovation.

 ?? PHOTOS BY MICHAEL RECKORD ?? THE GLEANER, THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 2016
PHOTOS BY MICHAEL RECKORD THE GLEANER, THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 2016
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