Summer recitals with Lieselotte van Tol

In rehearsal with Lieselotte van Tol.

Pianist Lieselotte van Tol and I have been working on a summer programme of mostly English and French songs from the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Composers include Saint-Saëns, Fauré, Hahn, Ravel and Poulenc, Butterworth, Moeran, Guerney, Britten and Vaughan Williams, and Strauss and Brahms.

We have a series of recitals lined up at different venues across the Netherlands: we’ll put out more information on our social media.

2023-07-02T15:24:25+02:00June 20th, 2023|

Commemorating D-Day, 79 years later

“This is what we did it for, this makes it all worth it: you’re free, little man.” There’s almost a century age difference between veteran Alec Penstone and our son. They met in Bayeux Cemetery, just before the Royal British Legion’s service of remembrance for the 79th commemoration of D-Day.

This year was our seventh trip to Normandy to support the commemorations of the D-Day landings. I was touched to see that there were more veterans present than in 2022, just after the COVID lockdowns. And yet it was also sad to notice those who had no made the pilgrimage.

My first ceremony was in Vauville, at a single grave of a young soldier who had been killed crossing the road to deliver a message. His senior officer had visited the grave annually after his death, and then the family of the senior officer continued to make the pilgrimage, and now the residents continue the tradition. It was moving and intimate to sing at a single grave and to focus on a single story: a contrast to the ceremonies in larger cemeteries where it is difficult to process the sheer number of casualties.

The Spirit of Normandy Trust gave their annual ceremony at the statue of Field Marshall Montgomery in Colleville-Montgomery, where I joined Jedburgh Pipe Band. The grandson of Montgomery, Viscount Henry Montgomery, was present and spoke before the ceremony.

The ceremony at the statue of Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery, organised by the Spirit of Normandy Trust.

In the evening, I sang at the midnight ceremony of the family of Major John Howard, the man who commanded the six gliders which landed during the night before 6th June, in order to capture two bridges so that the troops landing on the beaches could move in land. The beauty of this ceremony lies in its simplicity. The Ox and Bucks veterans used to meet at the landing place together with Major Howard and share their memories of that terrifying night. After Howard’s death, the family played a recording of one of the evenings, in which one hears Howard’s description and the reaction of the men. This year, Ben Wallace, Secretary of State for Defence for the U.K., and French Defense Minister Sébastian Lacornu attended the ceremony.

With Secretary of State for Defence Ben Wallace, and Penny Howard Bates, daughter of Major John Howard.

In Bayeux Cemetery, the final resting place of over 4,200 people, the Royal British Legion had their annual ceremony. I joined the British Army Band Catterick to lead the hymns and to sing ‘Abide with Me.’ Although I have sung this song countless times, it was quite a challenge because it followed first-hand accounts from the veterans. Stan Ford described the sinking on his ship, HMS Fratton.

“HMS Fratton sank in four minutes, taking with her 31 of the crew of 80. I was lucky when so many of my shipmates were not and I often ask myself why me? HMS Fratton still lies about a mile off of Arromanches and I will always remember the crew that I served with, and I will keep coming back to Normandy as long as I can to do so.”

Mr. Ford received spontaneous applause after this speech.

Singing with the British Army Band Catterick in CWGC Bayeux cemetery.

In Arromanches, I joined the Band of Liberation for an outdoor concert. At the veterans’ parade and remembrance ceremony, on request of Adrian Cox, himself a former chorister, I sang “The Silver Swan” by Gibbons, a beautiful melody and a thought-provoking text. Behind us, in the sea, the debris from the landings is still visible.

On 7th June, in Grangues, 44 Canadian airmen are commemorated each year. Some died in a crash, others were taken prisoner of war and shot in the castle grounds. The village remembers these men alongside the residents who died in the war effort.

Leading the national anthems in Grangues.

In the afternoon, a memorial was unveiled to the Glider Regiment: the only memorial in France. The Glider Regiment brought soldiers, equipment and supplies to France. Without them, the war effort would certainly have failed. Since we no longer use gliders, their work risks being forgotten. I hope that the memorial will help their legacy last.

With veteran and author Mervyn Kersh.

2023-07-02T15:10:49+02:00June 12th, 2023|

Commemorating the Dutch Merchant Navy

On 4th May, Dutch Remembrance Day, the Dutch Merchant Navy association launched a website with a database of the stories of over 19,500 men and women who served in the Merchant Navy during the Second World War.

In the presence of descendants of the seamen, HRH Princess Margriet of the Netherlands, Mayor Ahmed Aboutaleb and MP Mark Halbers, Minister of Infrastructure and Water Management, we learned more about the men and women who joined the war effort. Descendants told the stories of their ancestors.

I joined the Douane Orkest to sing hymns and songs during the ceremony, under conductor Björn Bus.

When the website was launched, boats in the harbour sounded their fog horns. For a brief moment, it felt like the desperation of a civilian vessel, manned by people not trained for war, making one last cry before steaming into battle. War is tragic and all are victims, and my heart went out to the men and women who fought against all odds so that those who remained could live free from tyranny.

2023-07-02T14:16:06+02:00May 10th, 2023|

Duruflé Requiem and other beautiful music!

This weekend, I’m singing with Highgate Choral Society. They have been established for over 140 years and they have sung in the Royal Albert Hall, the Barbican, and St. Paul’s Cathedral. Their repertoire spans several centuries, from baroque music to new commissions.

Highgate Choral Society are on tour in the Netherlands with a beautiful programme of mostly-English choral music, including Parry, Finzi, and Goss, and also extracts from Duruflé’s Requiem.

I’m very happy to be joining them to sing the Pie Jesu from Duruflé’s Requiem and Dank sei dir, Herr, a song attributed to Handel. Their conductor is Ron Corp and the organist is Edward Batting.

2023-04-29T14:13:00+02:00April 29th, 2023|

Commemorating the Battle of Arras

During Easter weekend, I sang for two remembrance ceremonies in northern France.

On 8th April, we gathered to remember the soldiers who fought in the Battle of Vimy Ridge in 1917. Most of the soldiers were Canadian. They are commemorated on the Canadian National War Memorial Vimy. Today it is a beautiful, peaceful environment that invites refection on the cost of war. The trees – a whole forest – represent the fallen soldiers, and even with this visual reference it was difficult to grasp the immensity of the loses. The scars of war are still visible in the cratered ground, and even today it is too dangerous to walk in some areas because of unexploded bombs, fatal remnants from a war fought over 100 years ago.

Photo: Jérémy Bourdon

On 9th April, which was Easter Sunday, there was a dawn ceremony at the Wellington Tunnels. These tunnels housed over 24,000 allied soldiers before the Battle of Arras, a battle that claimed nearly 300,000 lives. The soldiers were from Germany, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Newfoundland, South Africa, and the Pacific Islands. Many of these men and boys would have only a brief glimpse of France before they died or suffered life-changing injuries in a brutal battle.

To acknowledge the Māori miners, the Dutch Waka Crew performed a Haka and presented a Māori song. A prayer was read in Tahitian Māori. I visited New Zealand, the Cook Islands, Fiji, and Tahiti in 2004 in my gap year, and it felt almost absurd that men and boys from these beautiful islands, so remote from Europe, could have perished in northern France.

Photo: Eric Compernolle

If you are planning a trip, do consider visiting Arras. Parts of the Wellington Tunnels are open to the public and it is fascinating to experience how the soldiers were accommodated: not only seeing the artefacts, but also feeling the temperature and humidity underground. Vimy Ridge is stunning. Of course it is precisely because of the beautiful, expansive views that it was a tactically-interesting place during the Battle of Arras.

2023-04-29T14:11:29+02:00April 29th, 2023|

Liszt’s “Via Crucis”

Franz Liszt is perhaps best known for his flamboyant, virtuosic piano music. His Via Crucis is startlingly contrasting, with intimate, simple, serene melodies, and moments of pain that pushed the boundaries of tonality. It has moments of Gregorian chant as well as Lutheran and Bach chorales. I find it inspiring both as a singer and a composer.

On Palm Sunday I will join pianist Willem Brons, the Leidse Cantorij, and conductor Hans Brons to perform Via Crucis in the Hooglandse Kerk to mark the start of Holy Week.

Sunday, 2nd April, 17:00, Hooglandse Kerk, Leiden, the Netherlands

The event is free, with a collection at the end.

2023-03-27T18:55:36+02:00March 29th, 2023|

Romantic and Modern Songs for Voice, Clarinet, and Piano

I’ve worked with clarinettist John Macfarlane for several years, and together with pianist Hein Putter we formed Trio Colla Voce. Having played both piano and clarinet as a child, the idea of seeking out repertoire for voice, clarinet and piano was very appealing. There are some gems, some well-known, such as Schubert’s Shepherd on the Rock, and others relatively obscure.

On Wednesday 29th March we will be performing at Leiden University Medical Centre as part of the Boerhaavepleinconcert series. Our programme includes Mozart’s “Parto, parto” from La Clemenza di Tito and Berceuseby the Dutch romantic composer Alphons Diepenbrock, arranged for basset horn and piano (the original is with ‘cello). We are giving what we believe to be the Dutch première of Michael Head’s The World is Mad. John has composed a piece especially for the trio, Stad in Tijd, on the poem by Henk Gombert. There are also two romantic pieces: Alpenlied by Andreas Spaeth and I Lai by Mariano Obiols.

Wednesday, 29th March, 17:00, LUMC Boerhaaveplein, Leiden, the Netherlands.
The recital, which lasts around half an hour, is free to attend.

2023-03-27T18:51:28+02:00March 27th, 2023|
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