Anne Frank and Liberation Day

Anne Frank
Source: Wikimedia Commons

On 5th May, 2020, the Dutch celebrate seventy-five years of liberation since the Second World War. Together with guitarist Luc Groen, pianist Huub de Vriend, and the Rev. Margreet Klokke, Emma will participate in a live broadcast for Dutch liberation day.

One of the most famous Dutch citizens of the Second World War was a young girl called Anne Frank. Whilst in hiding in the secret annex, she wrote in her diary that she wanted to become a writer. She is now one of the most internationally-read Dutch writers. Alas, she did not live to know this: she died in Bergen Belsen in 1944.

Anne Frank lived in a much more severe lockdown. In spite of this, she found some sense of inner freedom.

The Rev. Margreet Klokke has organized a beautiful programme about Anne Frank and her diary, including readings by Dutch girls of the same age.

The programme will be streamed on www.sleutelstad.tv at 13:10 on Tuesday, 5th May.

Please note, the main spoken language will be Dutch.

2020-05-02T14:02:51+02:00May 2nd, 2020|

Remembrance Day in the Netherlands

The Dutch have their day of commemoration on 4th May: the last day of the year that the Dutch mainland was occupied in the Second World War before the surrender of the Third Reich forces on May, 1945.

This year marks seventy five years since the end of the Nazi occupation, which was a time of great suffering for the Dutch, especially the hunger winter of 1944-1945 in which around 20,000 people perished.

The 2020 commemorations have been affected by the SARS-CoV-2 virus and the measures taken to protect the population.

In Leiden, there will be several live broadcasts at the city’s monuments, as well as prerecorded material, so that people at home can still participate in Dutch remembrance traditions.

Emma is really touched to be one of the few people will be present as part of the live broadcasts, singing the Dutch National Anthem, “Het Wilhelmus” at the Haagsche Schouw at 15:00 and “Abide with Me” and “Het Wilhelmus” at the monument De Valk at 19:00.

Both ceremonies will be broadcast on Sleutelstad TV, and can be watched online here.

2020-05-02T14:05:56+02:00April 25th, 2020|

A Little St Matthew Passion, live-streamed

Please join us on Good Friday at 10:30 for a live streaming of a Mini-Mattheüs with meditation from the Hooglandse Kerk. Four Leiden singers, an organist, a minister, and a technician have teamed up to present an abridged version of Bach’s St Matthew Passion. The streaming link can be found on www.hooglandsekerk.com and it will also be broadcast on Dutch television, on Unity TV.

The initiative came from verger Ronald Hartsuiker. He asked his partner, mezzo-soprano Emma Brown, if she thought it would be possible to perform the St Matthew Passion within the new social distancing guidelines. The work is originally for two choirs, a children’s chorus, six soloists, and a small orchestra. This far exceeds the current guidelines that only seven people should attend Leiden’s protestant chuches. So Ronald challenged Emma to work out a way of performing the Mattheüs within the maatregelen: a very limited number people in the church. 

When Emma moved to Leiden in 2007, she was suprised by the enthusiasm of the Dutch for the St. Matthew Passion. “It’s performed in England, but it’s not given the same reverence as it is here. I understood why Ronald wanted to continue the tradition this year, even if we have to make changes and adapt because of the new guidelines.”

The St Matthew Passion is Bach’s setting of the gospel of St Matthew, chapters 26 and 27, together with chorals and arias by various authors. The libretto was compiled by Picander, the pen-name of Christian Friedrich Henrici. The words of the gospel are mostly sung by a tenor (the evangelist) and a bass (Jesus) in recitative: a style of music with minimum accompaniment to suggest speech. The gospel is occasionally interupted by an aria, chorus, or chorale which reflects on the gospel.

In our mini-version, we present a selection of the chorales, choruses and arias. These include “O Haupt voll Blut und Wunden,” “Erbarme dich,” “Mache dich, mein Herze, rein,” and the closing chorus. In between the fourteen extracts, the gospel texts will be read by the minister of the Leidse Binnenstadsgemeente, Margreet Klokke. Our other verger and in-house technical genius, Peter Breedijk, is arranging the live-streaming. The singers, all from Leiden, are soprano Saskia Brons, mezzo-soprano Emma Brown, tenor Jacob Trudy, and bass Eric Brons. Saskia and Eric Brons both sing in the Leidse Cantorij, the choir of the Hooglandse Kerk, and co-ordinated the purchasing and restoring of the magnificent Father Willis organ. This organ will be played by Willke Smits, organist of the Hooglandse Kerk.

Ronald Hartsuiker says: “As the guidelines have become stricter, we have naturally allowed fewer people into the church. It is heartening to see that people are watching the live stream each Sunday. Before I worked for the church, I worked in healthcare and I am aware of the loneliness caused by isolation and boredom. I am glad we are able to present something from us who work in the church for both the church community and the wider community in Leiden.”

2020-04-08T09:38:32+02:00April 9th, 2020|

A Virtual Commemoration of the Battle of Arras

A photo of 2019’s Dawn Ceremony, before the COVID-19 social distancing rules.

103 years ago, on 9th April 1917, the Battle of Arras began, a battle which caused over a quarter of a million casualties and losses. Each year, the city of Arras commemorates the dead during a dawn ceremony at the Wellington Tunnels.

In 1916, 500 miners from the New Zealand Tunneling Company including Māori and Pacific Islanders, together with the Royal Engineer tunneling companies, dug twelve miles of tunnels to connect the existing tunnels under and around Arras. They were fitted with electricity, running water, latrines, a light rail system and a hospital. They could accommodate over 20,000 people.

At 05:30 on the morning of 9th April, 1917, the exits of the tunnels were dynamited and the allied soldiers began their attack on enemy trenches. Despite initial success at pushing back the enemy line, the casualty rates reached over 4000 per day and the offensive was called off.

On 9th April, the Battle of Arras will be commemorated on Facebook. there will be broadcasts of music, speeches, and remembrance ceremonies throughout the day, including speeches by the Mayor of Arras, the British and New Zealand ambassadors, and film-maker Sir Peter Jackson. Emma will sing at 06:30 and 09:30, and she was honoured to be invited to speak the Act of Remembrance in English.

To follow the event, please “like” the Carrière Wellington facebook page, and  you will be able to see the events in your news feed: www.facebook.com/CarriereWellington

2020-04-08T09:30:46+02:00April 8th, 2020|

COVID-19 Pandemic

The COVID-19 pandemic has led to many events being cancelled or postponed. Emma had the following events in her agenda until mid-May.

In the meanwhile, it is possible to hear her singing in her new albums “Echoes of War” and “Fantasia,” both of which are available on Spotify, Apple Music, and to purchase as CDs in stores such as Amazon and Floating World Records (see links).

She hopes that all her readers will stay safe and well during these uncertain times.

8th – 21st March – Visit to Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia to work together with the children and music teachers of the CNCF Blue Skies Ger Village on music and performance, and on preparing for the anniversary gala dinner. (cancelled)

2nd April – A concert in De Witte, a private members’ club in The Hague, the Netherlands, with Hungarian guitarist Robert Sinha and singer Dorottya Lackfi, presenting English and Hungarian folk songs and light music. (cancelled)

3rd April – A concert of English Song from Dowland to Sting in Sijthoff, a culture centre in Leiden, the Netherlands, with Hungarian guitarist Robert Sinha. (cancelled)

5th April – (tbc) Guest singer during a football match between FC Twente and Fortuna Sittard, in which the players were to wear shirts with the names of the 21 British soldiers killed in the liberation of Enschede, with 906 veterans in the public. (pending)

5th April – Liszt’s ‘Via Crucis’ with Dutch concert pianist Willem Brons and the Leidse Cantorij in the Hooglandse Kerk, Leiden, the Netherlands. (cancelled)

9th April – Dawn Ceremony in Arras, France, to commemorate the Battle of Arras. (cancelled)

10th April – Concert and CD presentation of “Echoes of War” in the beautiful chapel of Arras Conservatoire, with concert pianist Han-Louis Meijer. This was to be the launch of our recent CD in France. (cancelled)

19th April – (tbc) Military Tattoo in Epe, the Netherlands, with the Band of Liberation and Pipes. (pending)

3rd May – Concert in the Dominicus Kerk in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, with the Hoofdstadkoor: Duruflé’s Requiem, the second movement of Goreki’s Symphony of Sorrowful Songs, “Silent, so silent now” from Karl Jenkins’s “The Armed Man,” and Emma’s composition “Mater Pulchra” especially arranged for choir and string orchestra. (pending)

Please check this website for updates.

4th May – Remembrance Day ceremony in Hoek of Holland, the Netherlands.(pending)

5th May (tbc) – Multi-faith Liberation Day service in the Hooglandse Kerk, Leiden, the Netherlands. (pending)

5th May – Concert with Gouda’s Liedertafel and Han-Louis Meijer in the St Jan cathedral church in Gouda, the Netherlands. (pending)

Please check this website for updates.

8th – 10th May – Remembrance ceremonies for the 80th anniversary of Dunkirk and for VE Day in Dunkirk and northern France. (pending)

15th – 18th May – Guest singer with the royal Dutch military orchestra ‘Fanfare Bereden Wapens’ in Lourdes, France, during the international military pilgrimage to Lourdes. (postponed until 2021)

2020-03-14T12:15:16+02:00March 14th, 2020|

Concerts with Guitarist Robert Sinha in the Netherlands

Hungarian guitarist Robert Sinha will visit the Netherlands in early April as part of a tour of Western Europe. Emma will join him for two concerts, one in De Witte, a private members’ club in The Hague, and the other in the Sijthoff culture centre in Leiden.

In De Witte they will be joined by Hungarian singer Dorottya Lackfi and poet János Lackfi for an evening of Hungarian and English music. The event is by invitation only.

In Sijthoff they will present a programme of folk music from the British and former British Isles, and English song. For more information and tickets (in Dutch), please see the website of Sijthoff.

2nd April, 2020, De Witte, The Hague, the Netherlands

3rd April, 2020, 20:00, Sijthoff, Leiden, the Netherlands

Here is a video of Robert and Emma performing “The Poor Wayfaring Stranger” in 2019:

2020-03-10T17:13:27+02:00March 10th, 2020|

Christina Noble Children’s Foundation in Mongolia

Emma was delighted to be invited to sing for the CNCF fundraising gala in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. Due to the COVID-19 outbreak, the event has been postponed, hopefully to later in the year.

Emma sang for the CNCF’s gala in Ho Chi Minh last November. Here is an impression of the event. Please consider supporting this wonderful foundation.

For more information, please visit www.cncf.org

2020-03-10T17:00:26+02:00March 9th, 2020|
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