BBC Music Magazine

The Centre is Everywhere

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Edmund Finnis: The Centre is Everywhere; Philip Glass: Company; Schoenberg: Verklärte Nacht (Transfigur­ed Night) Manchester Collective

Bedroom Community HVALUR38 50:09 mins

It seems fitting that the debut full-length album of an ensemble dedicated to collaborat­ion should be titled The Centre is Everywhere. In fact it’s taken from the haunting, iridescent work by Edmund Finnis at the centre of this compelling release, celebratin­g five years of Manchester Collective.

Commission­ed by the ensemble and scored for 12 string players, the piece has an ageless, ancient-yetmodern quality: like a shimmering ghost of Lawes’s viol consorts, a fine latticewor­k of line and colour is viewed through a kaleidosco­pe of grainy harmonies and whistling white noise. The twin push-pull of emotion and texture encapsulat­es a performanc­e ethos that extends to the contrastin­g works either side, uniting them across time and supposed aesthetic distance.

Opening the album, the title of Glass’s String Quartet No. 2 Company also feels apt. Robustly yet wispily played in its larger ensemble version, its origins as fragments written for a Beckett stage adaptation seem pertinent to the Collective’s own fondness for multiple art-forms. Schoenberg’s Transfigur­ed Night seems even less than usually earthbound in light of it and the Finnis. Here the colours may be rooted in tactile, post-tristan binaries of male-female love but the shifting perspectiv­es are pure otherworld. Steph Power PERFORMWAN­CE ★★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★★

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