Close Window

Stainer & Bell Home

Morgan Hayes: Violin Concerto

Reviews

Morgan Hayes has written several works of a concertante nature, but his latest piece for soloist and ensemble is unambiguously entitled 'Violin Concerto' and presents the soloist with a commanding, virtuoso part. Dedicatee Keisuke Okazaki grasped the opportunities for technical display with thrilling intensity in the world premiere…

A beautiful, arching melody in B flat for soloist and languid duet for cor anglais and clarinet proved to be atypical: the remainder of the concerto was dominated by spiky, rhythmic utterances with a marked improvisatory quality and a torrent of manic activity from the soloist.

A section entitled Mechanico initiated a potent rhythmic riff, but the crowning moment in the concerto was the cathartic solo cadenza. Consciously mirroring the effect of Lucky's torrential monologue in Beckett's 'Waiting for Godot', this solo outpouring gathered together in one continuous statement the brilliant passagework that hitherto had been spasmodic, ramshackle and unhinged.

Paul Conway, Tempo, October 2006

Theatre is proving a valuable source of inspiration for composer Morgan Hayes. The starting point for his Proms orchestral piece last summer was a National Theatre production of Shakespeare's Pericles, and now his new violin concerto, introduced by soloist Keisuke Okazaki and Birmingham Contemporary Music Group, turns out to have been triggered by an episode in Beckett's Waiting For Godot. The moment in that play when the previously silent Lucky suddenly finds a voice and launches into a stream of gibberish, Hayes reveals, corresponds in his single-movement concerto to the solo-violin cadenza that arrives just before the end of the work, unifying in a coherent musical statement all the virtuoso passage work that previously has only been heard in fragments.

Andrew Clements, The Guardian, 11 May, 2006

No season from the Birmingham Contemporary Music Group goes by without its fair share of both new works and revivals commissioned under the organisation's pioneering "Sound Investment" scheme, which here had made possible the first performance of the Violin Concerto by Morgan Hayes.

Such a title might seem unexpected in an age that prefers to cover its generic tracks, but Hayes is explicit in his description of the work as a dialogue with concerto form: one that is itself centred on the relationship between the one and the many, unfolded in a single movement that embodies a wide range of discourse over its 16-minute span. Aspects of the violin repertoire - at both a technical and expressive level - play a part in this diversity, though whether the (to quote the composer) "complex modality" that holds conflicting tonal elements in check is fully audible was unclear at a first hearing. Moreover, the degree of incident in even the more restrained passages meant the distinction between tension and relaxation was often at a premium - limiting the release effected by the cadenza towards the close, with the analogy of Lucky's verbal meltdown in "Waiting for Godot" a tenuous one at best.

What did impress was the translucent scoring for a varied ensemble, and the skill with which Keisuke Okazaki - his deft and mellifluous tone a real asset in this music - dovetailed the solo line so that a concerto rhetoric emerged from the music rather than as an emotional adjunct. Franck Ollu secured committed playing from BCMG, giving the piece a formal coherence it might otherwise have lacked.

Richard Whitehouse, classicalsource.com