Performances & Interviews
Performers
- Catherine Larsen-MaguireConductor
Digital Concert: Helen Grime's Limina
Scored for a large orchestra (triple winds, three percussionists, piano, harp, and strings), Limina is a single movement of about fifteen minutes鈥 length. Its energy, nuance, and multi-levelled activity require a high level of virtuosity and cohesion among the players.
鈥淟imina鈥 signifies 鈥渢hresholds,鈥 a point at which one state becomes another; in Grime鈥檚 piece the thresholds are between musical ideas representing expressive states. The idea of shifting states was suggested by a chapter in the Norwegian author Tarjei Vesaas鈥檚 1963 novel The Ice Palace, which describes a young girl鈥檚 emotions as she moves between chambers within a frozen waterfall. Although some of Grime鈥檚 previous works have links to imagery or literary ideas, Limina鈥檚 connection to Vesaas鈥檚 narrative was unusually explicit and direct; the various chambers and the girl鈥檚 corresponding emotions determined the episodic structure of Grime鈥檚 piece. In spite of this specificity, once Grime was fully involved with the piece, purely musical, compositional concerns became the focus. Although there are a few clear shifts, these musical states are frequently layered and dovetailed with one another, leaving the listener balanced, as it were, right on that liminal boundary. The overlapping of larger ideas and small rhythmic variations among similar parts 鈥渂lurs鈥 the impact of any expressive state, paralleling the girl鈥檚 unsettled blend fear, joy, and confusion. The music also contrasts the girl鈥檚 physical fragility with the dispassionate strength and coldness of the ice.
Limina鈥檚 opening, marked 鈥淏right, icy,鈥 has a deliberately cold, somewhat off-putting character. This passage develops in increasingly complex waves, filling out the orchestra 鈥 shimmering, suspended strings with vibraphone, a glittering, rising figure in high woodwinds, a fragmented chorale in brass. The arpeggiated figure played by three solo violins signals a recurrent dream state. A warming, humanizing element appears with the expansion of the strings into the bass register; the various layers come into clearer focus with definite pulse and distinct melodic lines. Increasing density and intensity leads to a big sustained chord starting the final episode, marked 鈥淓cstatic and tender.鈥 The once-obscured chorale for winds comes to the foreground, but this is still interrupted by the strings鈥 breathless textures, as though it鈥檚 unwilling to take on the full burden of conclusion.
Programme note 漏 2019 Robert Kirzinger