Digital Programmes
Jess Gillam with Zeynep Özsuca and Sam Becker
Start time: 7.30pm
Approximate running time: 75 minutes with no interval
Please note all timings are approximate and subject to change
In tonight’s concert Jess Gillam plays with a trio combination that’s relatively rare for her, writes Ariane Todes, with soprano saxophone and piano augmented with the sound of the double bass.
This was the starting point for her programming, she says: ‘The contrast between a double bass and soprano saxophone is quite stark and there are so many colours you can create with these three instruments. It started from there – thinking about the kind of colours we could draw from that combination.’
From there, she aimed to start the concert with a sense of serenity, out of which she can build a sense of awakening, she explains: ‘I have in mind that we’re still coming out of the pandemic. We spent so long without concerts, so musicians and audiences need easing into a concert and I like to start recitals somewhat reflectively. I think about the audience as much as possible with programming because it seems even more of a privilege to be able to share performances with live audiences now and I feel even more grateful to the audience for committing to a concert. Choosing to spend their time at a concert is a gift for me as a musician, because it means we can share the moment together.’
The concert opens with three pieces that work as a set which reflects this intention: ‘Meredith Monk’s Early Morning Melody is very simple and effective, conjuring up the awakening of beings and of life with just a simple melody, as does Philip Glass’s Melody for Saxophone No 10 (1995), which is also solo. Luke Howard wrote Dappled Light for me a couple of years ago, and again, it is about the moment of daybreak, and life starting up, which feels like a natural progression following the first two pieces.’
After this gentle wake-up call, the energy level goes up a notch with John Harle’s RANT!, which he wrote for Gillam in 2018, using folk songs and melodies from her native Cumbria. The ‘rant’ is a dance step that is quite specific to the area and used in 4/4 reel tunes, with dancers hitting the floor vigorously with a foot. Harle has described the work as a portrait of Gillam – ‘her energy, her sound and her presence, painted in music from her own part of England’.
Barbara Thompson MBE, who wrote The Unseen Way, is one of Gillam’s great inspirations. Gillam says: ‘Barbara has been a huge influence on me since I was very young. There weren’t many female role models as saxophone players and she was a pioneer. She can no longer perform, sadly, as she has Parkinson’s Disease, but she’s still passionate about composing and sharing music, so it’s poignant to play a piece of hers. The Unseen Way is completely notated, but it sounds spontaneous, and audiences often think it’s improvised.’
The saxophone is as at home in Baroque music as it is in classical and jazz, and the next work on the programme is Georg Philip Telemann’s Sonata in F minor, published around 1728. She explains: ‘When I play transcriptions or arrangements of Baroque music, I try to be conscious of whether the saxophone can bring anything different to a piece while still being authentic and leaving the piece with its integrity. I love exploring Baroque music, especially on the soprano saxophone, an instrument that didn’t exist at the time. The fact that Telemann wrote it for either recorder or bassoon made me think he wouldn’t mind the saxophone!’
We come back to the present day with Lumina, written for Gillam by cellist-composer Ayanna Witter-Johnson. Gillam says, ‘Ayanna describes the work as picking notes out of the air and turning your attention to those notes. Again, it begins quite reflectively, and she explores one theme in different rhythmic iterations.’
Kurt Weill wrote ‘Je ne t’aime pas’ (I don’t love you) in Paris in 1934, a year after escaping Nazi Germany, commissioned by cabaret singer cabaret singer and film star Lys Gauty. Gillam says: ‘This is one of my favourite songs by Kurt Weill. I’ve played it many times with this combination of bass and piano and it works so well because you can play with the contrasts and sculpt the sound. I first heard Ute Lemper sing it when I was very young. I hadn’t experienced anybody singing like that until that point, and I’ve always enjoyed playing it.’
Gillam was drawn to the work of pianist-composer Chilly Gonzales during lockdown as she read his 2020 book, Enya: A Treatise on Unguilty Pleasures. She says, ‘I started transcribing Overnight in lockdown, after reading his book. He talks about the progression of our lives and the music that we enjoy, going from being a baby enjoying lullabies to becoming self aware and trying to like different things in order to be cool.
Finally, Astor Piazzolla leads us into a sultry night club for his History of the Tango, originally written for flute and guitar in 1985. As with many of the other composers on this programme, Piazzolla’s music defies the narrow definitions of musical styles, as he brought tango into the concert hall. Gillam explains: ‘I love how Piazzolla switches between passion and fire and the most tender, lyrical melodies. With his music you’re never quite sure where you’re about to go or where you’ve been. He’s often in the grey area between emotions, which I think we’ve experienced a lot in the last few years.’
© Ariane Todes
Start time: 7.30pm
Approximate running time: 75 minutes with no interval
Please note all timings are approximate and subject to change
Programme and performers
Meredith Monk Early Morning Melody (trans Simon Parkin)
Philip Glass Melody for Saxophone No 10
Luke Howard Dappled Light
John Harle RANT!
Barbara Thompson The Unseen Way
Georg Philipp Telemann Sonata in F minor (trans Simon Parkin)
1. Triste
2. Allegro
3. Andante
4. Vivace
Ayanna Witter-Johnson Lumina
Kurt Weill Je ne t'aime pas (arr Paul Campbell)
Chilly Gonzales Overnight (arr Simon Parkin)
Astor Piazzolla 'Bordel 1900', 'Café 1930' and 'Nightclub 1960' from Histoire du Tango (arr Simon Parkin)
Performers
Jess Gillam saxophone
Zeynep Özsuca piano
Sam Becker double bass
Artist biographies
Hailing from Ulverston in Cumbria, Jess Gillam is animating the music world with her outstanding talent and infectious personality. She has been forging her own adventurous path since she shot to fame becoming the first saxophonist to reach the finals of BBC Young Musician and the youngest ever soloist to perform at the Last Night of the Proms.
As well as performing around the world, Jess is a presenter on TV and Radio. She became the youngest ever presenter for BBC Radio 3 with the launch of her own weekly show, This Classical Life.
Jess is the first ever saxophonist to be signed exclusively to Decca Classics and both of her albums reached No 1 in the UK Classical Music Charts. She has been the recipient of a Classic BRIT Award, has been nominated for The Times Breakthrough Award and was awarded an MBE in the Queen’s Birthday Honours list 2021 for Services to Music.
A free spirit in style and character, Jess is an advocate for the power of music in society. During lockdown she formed her ‘Virtual Scratch Orchestra’, inviting musicians of any standard to come together to play music virtually with her. Jess is a patron for Awards for Young Musicians and London Music Fund and enjoys working and performing with young musicians.
She has performed in prestigious concert halls and with world-class orchestras around the globe including the NDR Hannover, Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra, Iceland Symphony Orchestra, Minnesota Symphony Orchestra, Munich Philharmonic, Lahti Symphony Orchestra and the UK’s leading orchestras.
Jess is currently Artist in Residence at the Wigmore Hall, a European Concert Hall Organisation (ECHO) Rising Star which sees her performing at many of the top concert halls across Europe, and she continues to promote her own concert series, bringing international talent to her hometown of Ulverston.
Jess is a Vandoren UK Artist and became the youngest ever endorsee for Yanagisawa Saxophones aged just 13.
Turkish pianist Zeynep Özsuca has performed worldwide as a soloist, chamber musician and accompanist. Born in Ankara, she began piano lessons at the age of four and continued her studies at Ankara Conservatory of Hacettepe University. After winning Istanbul Symphony’s Young Soloists Competition in 2001, Zeynep moved to the United States to complete a Bachelor’s degree in Piano Performance at the Oberlin Conservatory. She then majored in accompaniment and vocal coaching at Hochschule für Musik 'Hanns Eisler', Berlin and graduated with an MA in 2013.
Zeynep has worked with conductors such as Gustavo Dudamel, Simon Halsey, Sir Simon Rattle and Sir Antonio Pappano, and acted as rehearsal pianist for singers Magdalena Kozená, Rolando Villazón, Gerald Finley, Annette Dasch, Michael Schade to name a few. She has been working as a repetiteur and orchestra member with renowned opera companies and orchestras like London Symphony Orchestra, Berlin Philharmonic, BBC Philharmonic, Staatsoper Berlin, Aix-en-Provence Music Festival, Royal Opera House Covent Garden and Glyndebourne Festival Opera.
As a chamber musician, she has performed on prestigious stages including the Berlin Philharmonie, Palau de la Musica Valencia, Schleswig-Holstein Music Festival, Queen Elizabeth Hall as well as live radio broadcasts on Deutschlandfunk, Deutschlandradio, RBB Kulturradio (Germany), RNE (Spain), BBC 3 and 4(UK), alongside co-hosting the BBC Young Musician Podcast. She also regularly appears in concert with her duo partners saxophonist Jess Gillam and clarinetist Sacha Rattle, as well as her wind and piano sextet Berlin Counterpoint.
Zeynep has a close working relationship with the Guildhall School of Music and Drama where she has acted as accompanist, music director of opera scenes and currently as lecturer of the Opera Skills course.
As an in demand bass player, Sam is equally at home in the studio as he is on stage. He graduated from the Royal Academy of Music in 2018 and has since enjoyed a busy and varied musical career in the classical arena as well as on the pop stage with his own band SUN SILVA. He has performed and recorded for some of the UK’s leading orchestras and artists including Bryan Ferry, the John Wilson Orchestra, the Hallé, Alexis Taylor (of Hot Chip) and the BBC Philharmonic.
Sam’s band SUN SILVA were billed by BBC Radio 1’s Jack Saunders on his UK wide tour 'Hopscotch' and their debut single 'Blue Light' featured on the international best-selling game FIFA 19, a game bought by over 20 million people. Their newer releases have been met with critical acclaim; they were featured as 'track of the day’ by Clash Magazine and DIY Magazine described their music as 'remarkably assured… propulsive and idiosyncratic'.