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Classy concert honours J'can composers

Published:Monday | November 28, 2016 | 12:00 AMMichael Reckord
Marjorie Whylie
Elaine Wint hosting Sunday's concert honouring Jamaican composers, held at the St Andrew Parish Church, Half-Way Tree.
Noel Dexter
Rosina Moder
Franklin Halliburton
Kimiela Isaacs
Kathy Brown
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The work of 18th-Century classical musician Samuel Felsted, Jamaica's first documented composer and the first known composer of an oratorio in the Western Hemisphere, will be available online in January 2017. Facilitating access to the music by putting it in a digital form is Manfredo Zimmermann, professor of recorder and baroque flute at the Music University of Cologne.

That news was given at a classical music concert featuring Jamaican composers at the St Andrew Parish Church on Sunday. Zimmermann, a special guest conductor and performer at the concert, was in Jamaica courtesy of the German and Argentine embassies, as he is a citizen of both countries.

Also performing were soloists Kimiela Isaacs (soprano), Stephen Shaw-Naar (counter-tenor) and Rosina Christina Moder (on recorder). The groups performing were The University Singers, The Pimento String Quartet, some former National Dance Theatre Company (NDTC) Singers and the Samuel Felsted Chamber Orchestra.

Accompanists for the various performers were Paul Bicknell (organ), Roger Williams (piano), Rafael Salazar (clarinet), Archie Dunkley and Kathy Brown (keyboard), and Marjorie Whylie (keyboard and conga drum).

 

APPROPRIATE EXPERTISE

 

Their expertise was appropriate, considering the importance of the Jamaican composers being celebrated. In addition to Felsted, there were Whylie, Franklin Halliburton, Paulette Bellamy, Noel Dexter and Peter Ashbourne.

Whether by accident or design, the music selected for the concert was almost entirely joyous and the small audience expressed delight during the show with enthusiastic applause and, at the end, left the church with favourable comments on their lips and smiles on their faces.

The concert opened with a lovely rendition by Isaacs of the popular patriotic song Jamaica, Land of Beauty (words by A. L. Hendriks, music by Lloyd Hall). Hall's name came up later in the concert in, unfortunately, a less positive context.

"We need help," Moder, the concert's organiser, told the audience as she spoke of the need for a building to keep the work of the island's deceased classical composers. They include Oswald Russell, Robert Lightbourne and Hall, who left eight boxes of his musical papers which, Moder revealed, were "sent to the Riverton City dump" before she could collect them.

Three of Felsted's compositions followed the opening item. They were Tune Your Harps, Your Voices Raise (from the Jonah oratotio), sung by The University Singers and accompanied by the Samuel Felsted Chamber Orchestra conducted by Zimmermann; the third Voluntary for Organ (from Felsted's collection of Six Voluntarys for Organ and Harpsichord), played by Bicknell; and the aria Lord I Obey, from Jonah, sung by Isaacs. She was accompanied by Moder and Zimmermann on recorders, Emily Dixon on cello and Shaw-Naar on harpsichord.

Moder returned right after to play the cheerful Ashbourne composition Elena, based on the popular Jamaican folk song. The composer himself led his Pimento quartet his bouncy medley of folk songs, including Parakeet in De Garden, Linstead Market and Mango Walk.

It was then Whylie's turn to lead an ensemble of former NDTC Singers with her own compositions. Playing keyboard, and later a conga drum, Whylie accompanied them in five pieces, including Lord, Look at Me (with soloist Howard Cooper), To Everything There is a Season, Our Father and Hallelujah.

Bellamy performed with the Felsted orchestra in the playing of her charming Coconut Woman. The concert ended with the return of the University Singers to deliver three of Dexter's compositions - Wash Day, Psalm 23 and the rousing Psalm 150, as well as Halliburton's Ave Maria.

A one-day symposium, hosted by Music Unites Jamaica Foundation, on the life and work of one-time St Andrew Parish Church organist Felsted (1743-1802) had been held on November 10 at the School of Music's Vera Moody Concert Hall, Edna Manley College of the Visual and Performing Arts.