Multitudes festival: Echoes of Hill and Horizon review – epic light show electrifies Elgar and Vaughan Williams
Queen Elizabeth Hall, LondonWith dizzying surround sound and thousands of LED baubles, this was a synaesthetic feast from the Orchestra of the Age of EnlightenmentThere was birdsong in the Queen...
By Erica Jeal · The Guardian Culture
Queen Elizabeth Hall, London With dizzying surround sound and thousands of LED baubles, this was a synaesthetic feast from the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment There was birdsong in the Queen Elizabeth Hall foyer. In the hall itself, hanging from the ceiling, were ropes and ropes displaying many thousands of walnut-sized LEDs, lined in huge blocks above the heads of the players and front half of the audience, promising to light the place up as if it were Harrods in December. This was Echoes of Hill and Horizon, an unlikely and delightful coming together of technology and English pastoral music at this year’s Multitudes festival. Just over an hour of Vaughan Williams, Warlock and Elgar was played by the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment – who don’t usually play this stuff, but who drew on their experience in the earlier music that inspired it. Their agile playing, at once lean and sonorous, was filtered through the dozens of speakers that make up the QEH’s hidden surround-sound system, which occasionally blunted the orchestral blend but allowed for intriguing spatial effects or cathedral-like reverb. Continue reading...