Manawatu Guardian

Trio to evoke tales of enchantmen­t

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Three Wellington concert musicians will visit Palmerston North on Sunday to perform at the Globe Sunday Matinee concert.

Soprano Barbara Paterson, flute player Karen Batten and pianist Rachel Thomson are itinerant teachers at Samuel Marsden Collegiate School.

Thomson is an examiner for Trinity College of London.

Paterson is also an artist-teacher of classical voice at Te Kokı New Zealand School of Music and conducts the Capital Choir.

Batten’s involvemen­t with Orchestra Wellington provides her with plenty of challengin­g orchestral repertoire, and she is also a member of the Royal New Zealand Air Force Band.

A conversati­on among the three in a corridor sparked a desire to make music together, and led to the formation of Amiki Trio. Amiki in te reo Maori means to tell a story in detail.

The theme of the trio’s Palmerston North concert is tales of love and enchantmen­t.

Ravel’s Enchanted Flute opens the programme. The sensuousne­ss of this piece continues with Debussy’s setting of short poems that narrate the fictional story of Bilitis, a young woman in ancient Greece who explores her sexuality.

The flute sonata of Carl Reinecke is based on a German romantic tale of Undine, a water spirit who longs for an immortal soul.

Three colourful Irish folk songs for voice and flute by American composer John Corigliano will allow concert-goers to be grounded before the programme concludes with Schubert’s The Shepherd on the Rock. A lonely shepherd is on a mountain filled with longing for his absent sweetheart and chooses to make his way to find her.

 ?? ?? Amiki Trio are Rachel Thomson (left), Karen Batten and Barbara Paterson.
Amiki Trio are Rachel Thomson (left), Karen Batten and Barbara Paterson.

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