Past Events

Filtering by: “NSW South Coast”
Garden of Earthly Delights
Sept
21

Garden of Earthly Delights

A garden teeming with temptation and desire, grotesque creatures and improbable scenes of surrender: the uninhibited world of Hieronymus Bosch’s 500-year-old triptych “De tuin der lusten”.   Baffling his Dutch contemporaries and the casual tourists in Madrid’s Prado in equal measure (not to mention generations of art critics) the Bosch’s Garden of Earthly Delights is ever-enigmatic. Whether it is interpreted as a surreal feast for the senses or as a stark warning about the moral decay during a time of rapid change, this art exudes dread and seduction in equal measure. 

Trust Luminescence Chamber Singers to turn this surreal feast of the senses into an aural tapestry as pleasurable and perilous as Bosch’s vision. Drawn from the vaults of Renaissance raunch, Medieval monasterian excess and daring modern transgressions, Garden of Earthly Delights offers a vocal cornucopia of surprise and surreptitiously cheeky delight, probing the pleasures and perils of excess.

Program to include music by Josquin, Banchieri, Gallus and new works by Nicole Murphy and Archie Tulk.

70 minutes no interval, conducted by Roland Peelman AM

Presented by South Coast Music Society.

Tickets on sale from February 2025.

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Gesualdo Tenebrae
Mar
30

Gesualdo Tenebrae

 "There is something deeply troubling and inscrutable in Gesualdo’s music, something that any listener will unfailingly experience. This most particularly holds for Tenebrae responsoria (1611), his definitive statement, his monument, his testament. It is as if this work would constantly extend over its boundaries and transgress its time and setting, immediately addressing modernity...”
Mladen Dolar, Out of Joint (2020)

More than 400 years later, the music of Carlo Gesualdo still seems strikingly avant-garde. Composed for his own private use during his final years, and likely unheard during his lifetime, Gesualdo’s Tenebrae Responsories are of unmatched intensity. This is music at the end of an epoch; at once steeped in and a radically unsettling subversion of the traditions of the sixteenth century.

The first set of Responsories for Maundy Thursday (Feria V) evoke Christ’s abandonment, betrayal, and death. Gesualdo’s dramatic settings reflect the angst of the passion story, alongside his own bloody encounter with death – in 1590 he murdered his wife Maria d’Avalos and her lover Fabrizio Carafa, Duke of Andria, when he discovered them ‘in flagrante delicto’. Gesualdo’s punishment was as self-inflicted as the crime. His status as prince saved him from criminal persecution; instead he saw out his days living as a recluse, tormented by grief and guilt.

Translating literally to ‘darkness’, the plural form of ‘Tenebrae’ is fitting; it implies a multiplicity, all-encompassing shadows;  a plunge into darknesses of both deeply personal grief and of universal sorrow.

Programme:

Carlo Gesualdo, Responsoria et alia ad Officium Hebdomadae Sanctae spectantia  (1611) 

Feria quinta (Maundy Thursday)

In monte Oliveti

                  Tristis est anima mea

                  Ecce vidimus eum

                  Amicus meus osculi

                  Judas mercator pessimus

                  Unus ex discipulis meis

                  Eran quasi agnus innocens

                  Una hora non potuistis

                  Seniores populi consilium

  Miserere mei, Deus

1 hour no interval

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