Passchendaele: The End of the Road

This year marks the centenary of the battle of Passchendaele, a battle whose death toll exceeded half a million. On 10th November, the eve of the armistice ninety-nine years ago, a memorial service will be held in the town of Passchendaele followed by a concert. Emma will sing with the Canadian Army Band Musique Royal 22ème Régiment, together with folksinger Alan Brydon, The Swigshift, Harmonie St. Cecelia Beselare, and Field Marshal Haig’s Own Pipes & Drums, in the presence of the Canadian Ambassador to Belgium Olivier Nicoloff, the Belgian Minister of Defense, and other representatives.

Tickets are available via the following e-mail address: gps1917vzw@gmail.com, and can be purchased in the shop of the Memorial Museum Passchendaele 1917

2017-11-09T15:17:07+02:00November 7th, 2017|

The Armed Man: A Mass for Peace

Karl Jenkins “The Armed Man”

Karl Jenkins’ “The Armed Man: A Mass for Peace” was commissioned by the Royal Armouries Museum and first performed in 2000. Based around the movements of the Mass, it journeys from militarism and a descent into war, through the horrors of war, and ends with a prayer for peace. The additional texts include the Islamic Call to Prayer, sections of the Bible and the Mahabharata, and citations from Rudyard Kipling, Alfred Lord Tennyson, and Hiroshima survivor Sankichi Toge. Emma’s solo “Now the Guns have Stopped” was written by Guy Wilson, master of the museum, and concerns the guilt experienced by surviving soldiers of World War One.

The French secular song, “L’Homme Armé” (the armed man) was cited in several Masses from the mid-fifteenth century until the eighteenth century. Karl Jenkins quotes the song in the opening and closing movements of his work. Other composers who used this theme include Dufay, Ockegem, Obrecht, Morales, Palestrina, Carissimi, and, more recently, Peter Maxwell Davies.

On a personal note, Emma recently visited Corporal John Sleep, a paratrooper from the Second World War, who fought during the D-Day landings on Sword Beach and in the Netherlands. He mentioned how his main goal was not so much defeating the enemy but ending the war. In other words, he was fighting for peace. With this in mind, the subtitle “A Mass for Peace” perhaps reflects the goals of many serving soldiers.

The Mass is dedicated to the victims of the Kosovo crisis. This is close to Emma’s heart since her partner worked in the peace operation after the war.

The concert is on Sunday, 5th November at 15:00 in the Muziekgebouw aan ‘t IJ in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. The first half of the programme is the première of a work commissioned by the Hoofdstadkoor of Amsterdam to mark their sixty-fifth anniversary. The Iraqi composers Hamid Al Badri and Raad Khalaf, father and son, have written a powerful work based on songs of love and peace called “The Golden Bird.” It has lush symphonic textures and uses authentic Iraqi and Syrian instruments. The solos are sung by Baidar Al Basri, the daughter and sister of the composers.

In the second half of the concert, Emma will join the Hoofdstadkoor of Amsterdam as a soloist together with Taiwanese soprano Kayi Min and Turkish baritone Bora Balci, with the Promenade Orkest and conductor Martin van der Brugge for “The Armed Man.” Tickets are available here.

2017-11-01T13:55:10+02:00October 25th, 2017|

Jan Wolkers

To mark the publication of Dr. Onno Blom’s biography of the Dutch author Jan Wolkers, Dutch artist Casper Faassen hosted an exhibition of portraits of Wolkers. Jan Wolkers is considered to be one of the leading four post-World War Two Dutch authors. He was also known for his sculptures.

Faassen visited the Wolkers’ family home on the island of Texel several times together with Blom to study Wolkers’ archive. A modest selection of portraits is on display in Faasen’s gallery. I was invited to sing as a thank you present for Karina Wolkers, the wife of the late Jan Wolkers, for lending the gallery the works. I highly recommend visiting the exposition in Marktsteeg 10, Leiden, the Netherlands.

2017-10-20T17:38:09+02:00October 20th, 2017|

Jan van den Oever

www.janvandenoever.com

On Saturday, 7th October, Emma will sing a short recital of Gregorian Chant in the Hooglandse Kerk, Leiden, the Netherlands. The recital is a part of a day of lectures and meditations about non-duality, given by Jan van den Oever. More information is available here.

2017-10-06T14:12:34+02:00September 30th, 2017|

The Story of John Sleep

On 17th September, Emma was invited to sing from the presentation of a film about the life of Corporal John Sleep. John Sleep was a paratrooper during the second world war. He arrived at all his missions by sea. First he fought in Africa and then in Italy. On D-Day he landed on Sword Beach and travelled north towards the Netherlands. He was eventually injured when a tank fired at him. Last year, during the commemorations of the second world war, John was asked to speak about his time in the army. This was made into a short film which was presented on 17th September. Emma sang a concert following the presentation.

2017-10-06T14:07:38+02:00September 18th, 2017|

Remembrance in Venray, the Netherlands

At the Commonwealth War Graves Commission cemetery in Venray, the Netherlands, 663 soldiers of the second world war are buried. Each year, in September, the people of Venray organise a remembrance ceremony to which veterans are invited. This year, Emma was invited to sing Amazing Grace with piper Kenny Brouwers. The local children laid red roses on every grave in the cemetery. Following the service, the veterans gave the children chocolate, just as they had shared their rations with the people of the Netherlands when the country was liberated in 1945.

2017-10-06T14:06:29+02:00September 18th, 2017|

Stichting Nederland-Amerika

With Fred Harris and Karin Churchill.

On 12th September, Emma sang at a wreath-laying ceremony at the Netherlands American Cemetery in Margraten. 8,301 American soldiers rest in the cemetery; they perished fighting to liberate the Netherlands in the final year of the Second World War. Stichting Nederland-Amerika invited twenty veterans from America, Canada, and the United Kingdom for remembrance ceremonies and celebrations. There were some familiar faces present from Normandy including Fred Harris, Len Fox, Len Mann, Reginald Charles, and Frank and Karin Churchill. Also present was a US veteran returning to the Netherlands for the first time since the fighting in 1944. Emma sang “Abide with Me” and “How Great Thou Art.” The ceremony was broadcast on Omroep Brabant.

2017-09-14T20:42:35+02:00September 12th, 2017|
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