
Programme
- Christe qui lux es et dies
- Photography
- Les illuminations
- Hymn (after Byrd)
- Black Shuck Lament
- Fantasia Concertante on a Theme of Corelli
Performers
- Zoë Beyersdirector
- Guy Cuttingtenor
Untamed and uncompromising
‘I alone hold the key to this savage parade.’
— Arthur Rimbaud
Britten and Tippett shared many traits: both were pacifists; conscientious objectors during the war; homosexuals, at a time when it was publicly outlawed in Britain; and both shared a love of older forms of music. Drawing on one of Corelli’s concerti grossi, Tippett’s Fantasia views the Baroque through modern eyes in this passing from darkness into light.
In Britten’s sparkling setting for voice and string orchestra (initially for soprano, later tenor) this phrase from French symbolist poet Arthur Rimbaud becomes an enigmatic throughline amid the poet’s eccentric scenes. Lose yourself in Britten’s crystalline textures, and Rimbaud’s magical imagery: of boats battered by whirlpools of light, of jugglers and rogues, cortèges of russet and opaline.
Elsewhere, we hear a trio of works by modern British mavericks – Errollyn Wallen’s propulsive Photography, Edmund Finnis’s crystalline Hymn (after Byrd), and Black Shuck Lament by previous BBC Philharmonic Composer in Residence, Tom Coult.
BBC PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA AT THE RNCM
This partnership series puts our orchestra under the microscope in an intimate, close‑up setting at the Royal Northern College of Music. It’s the place to hear unique collaborations with big‑name artists and solo turns from the orchestral players you’ve seen on the Bridgewater platform, in a relaxed, dressed‑down format.
Zoë Beyers. Photo: Drew Forsyth

