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Concordia’s
director is Mark Levy, one of Britain’s leading ambassadors for the
viol. Mark's music-making includes solo and chamber recitals, directing
Concordia, working with both leading symphony orchestras and early
music groups, and recording early and new music for CD, radio, television
and film. Appearances in the past few seasons have included solo and
chamber recitals at the Bruges Festival, the Wigmore Hall, the Covent
Garden Festival, the Spitalfields Festival, the Bath Festival, the
York Early Music Festival, the Leipzig Bach Festival, the Innsbruck
Festival, the Handel House in Halle, and for the Dutch Early Music
Network, and concert tours have taken him to Belgium, Holland, France,
Spain, Greece, Germany, Austria, Slovenia, Denmark, Finland, Norway
and Iceland, while recent broadcasts have included concerts for the
BBC, Belgian and German Radio. Mark has recorded for Decca, DG, Harmonia
Mundi, Hyperion and most of the smaller British labels, notably a
complete Gibbons series with Concordia for the prize-winning Metronome
label. The first disc in the series won several awards including the
Choc de Musique from Le Monde de la Musique (France), an Outstanding
rating from BBC Music Magazine, and an award from Fonoforum (Germany),
while the second CD won the Diapason d’Or (France) and was an Editor’s
Choice in Gramophone magazine.
Mark
was artistic director of the Wigmore Hall’s William Lawes 400th
anniversary concert series in 2002, and their Elizabethans series
in 2003, and appeared in a two-part BBC TV series on Lawes. During
the Bach 2000 festivities he appeared with the London Philharmonic
Orchestra and the English Chamber Orchestra at the Royal Festival
Hall and Symphony Hall in Birmingham.
Mark's work outside the world of early music has
included contributions to the soundtracks of movies such as The
Governess, Titus and The Knight’s Tale, as well as numerous television
programmes. He was heavily featured in the soundtrack of Channel
4's recent Elizabeth I, which won both a BAFTA and a Novello award.
With Concordia Mark performs and commissions new music for viols,
including pieces from John Tavener and Gavin Bryars.
In 2000-1 Mark was a guest Lecturer at Southampton
University, and he has also taught at Nottingham University, at
the Dartington International Summer School, and on courses in Israel
and Poland. Besides lecturing Mark writes reviews and feature articles
for magazines such as BBC Music Magazine, Clssical Music, Music
Teacher and Early Music. He has devoted a part of his time to researching
and editing 16th- and 17th-century music, and his edition of the
complete Songs of Matthew Locke was published in 1996 by Stainer
and Bell. In the last couple of years Mark has pursued a growing
interest in the application of computers and internet technology
to music, particular the development of new search engines for music,
and since 2005 he has been a researcher in the Centre for Digital
Music at Queen Mary, University of London.
‘Mark Levy draws an
alluring sound from his 17th-century instrument’
The Gramophone
‘Mark Levy doesn’t
put a finger wrong: his subtle variety of expressiveness and tone are a joy to
listen to’
Gramophone Early
Music
‘The highlight
of the disc is the air tendre from L'Impatience... in which Mark Levy's
fine viola da gamba weaves delicately around the unhurried singing’
Sunday Times
Solo programmes
Mark’s solo
programmes range from the comfortingly familiar – Bach gamba sonatas with Gary
Cooper harpsichord - to the delightfully strange – the unkown music of
Johann Schenck, which inspired Bach’s cello suites, or Rachel Stott’s new
commissions on Caribbean themes – also often featuring the unforgettable music
of Marin Marais, chief viol player to Louis XIV.
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- The Spanish Madness
with Elizabeth Kenny guitar and Gary Cooper harpsichord
Marais’ brilliant set of variations on the Folia
theme forms the centrepiece of this exploration of the Spanish baroque
and its influence abroad. Thanks in particular to the Spanish guitarists
themselves, such as Sanz and Murcia, the innocent seeming little Folia
chord sequence spread like a craze throughout Europe in the 17th
and 18th centuries, its sixteen bars embodying the sensual
dance rhythms and Moorish exoticism which are so uniquely Spanish. As
well as several of Marais’ other latin-inspired pieces, we also
include harpsichord sonatas by Domenico Scarlatti, an Italian who lived
and worked in Madrid, and the best known Italian Folia variations, by
the violinist Arcangelo Corelli, here in an original 18th-century
transcription for viol.
Tous les Matins du Monde
with Elizabeth Kenny theorbo
The mysterious Monsieur de Sainte Colombe was hardly a
household name before the wonderful movie Tous les matins du monde
shot his music to the top of the classical charts. While we still do not
know his real name, several new volumes of beautiful music by Sainte
Colombe and his followers (including his talented son, who spent several
years working in Scotland) have come to light as a result of the recent
surge of interest. This programme presents some of the most exquisite
pieces from this repertoire including touching memorials for the great
man by his son and his star pupil, Marin Marais.
Mr Gainsborough’s Viol
with Gary Cooper fortepiano
Besides painting, Thomas Gainsborough’s greatest love
was music, his instrument was the viola da gamba, and his closest
musical friend (and drinking-partner) the composer and gamba virtuoso
Carl Friedrich Abel. The two exchanged music and paintings: Abel wrote a
fugue for Gainsborough and even presented him with a viol, while
Gainsborough painted the musician’s portrait at least twice, and Abel’s
walls were said to be completely covered in Gainsborough drawings. This
programme, which includes short readings from Gainsborough’s letters
and other contemporary accounts, traces the both the friendship between
the two men and the graceful, heartfelt music of Abel and other emigré
virtuosos of Gainsborough’s circle, which marks the transition from
the baroque to the classical style.
“I’m sick of Portraits and wish very much to
take my viol-da-gamba and walk off to some sweet village, where I can
paint landskips and enjoy the fag-end of life in quietness and ease.”
Thomas Gainsborough, 4 June 1768
The Echo of the Danube
with Gary Cooper harpsichord
From the wild Aria Burlesca of Johann Schenck’s
Viennese fantasy the Echo of the Danube to August Kühnel’s delicious
variations on a traditional chorale tune, the little-known delights of
German gamba music offer a totally new repertoire to even the most
dedicated lovers of the baroque, as well as a fascinating insight into
Johann Sebastian Bach’s creative relationship with the music of his
own time and place.
And so to bed…
A programme inspired by Samuel Pepys, whose favourite
late-night activity (well actually his second favourite) was to while
away the hours of darkness strumming on his viol. Evocative sounds from
the Elizabethan party-pieces of Tobias Hume to the haunting airs and
divisions of Simpson and Purcell.
"And so home, troubled in my conscience at my
being at a play. But at home I found Mercer playing on her Vyall, which
is a pretty instrument; and so I to the Vyall and singing till late, and
so to bed." Samuel Pepys, 28 September 1664
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