Westport Festival of Chamber Music
Various venues, Westport, Co Mayo Friday September 7th-Sunday September 9th westportchambermusic.ie
The strangest of good things happen in bad times. The Dublin Grand Opera Society was founded in 1941, in the midst of the Second World War. Wexford Festival Opera opened its doors 10 years later, when food rationing was still in force. John Beckett’s Bach cantata series in Dublin started in 1973, the year of the oil crisis, and Opera Theatre Company, now subsumed into Irish National Opera, presented its first production in 1986, when Ireland’s borrowing, unemployment and emigration were all headed in the wrong direction.
Five years ago, when the arts in Ireland were reeling from years of cutbacks, two new chamber music festivals arrived on the scene, the Killaloe Chamber Music Festival in Co Clare, at the end of May, and the Westport Chamber Music Festival in Co Mayo, at the beginning of September. Both are still happily with us, and thriving.
Westport is what you might call a boutique festival, running from a Friday evening to a Sunday afternoon, with pride of place going to concerts in Westport House, as characterful and idiosyncratic a historic venue as you’ll find on the Irish concert scene.
The future of the debt-ridden house was in doubt for a number of years until its sale last year to Hotel Westport Ltd. This was followed by the appointment of Tim Husbands as CEO. Husbands was the highly successful CEO of Titanic Belfast, but in July he jumped ship a second time, citing project delays as the reason for his departure from Westport. His plans there apparently included turning the estate into a major outdoor concert venue.
Threats and changes
The chamber music festival and its artistic directors, violinist Catherine Leonard and pianist Hugh Tinney, have so far sailed safely through all the threats and changes. The Westport House concerts are held in a room that's long and narrow, and if you don't like the idea of intimacy with fellow concert-goers and performers you'd be well advised to stay away. That intimacy, of course, is what most people prize.
There are two concerts in Westport House. Friday's opening programme features Grieg's ardent C minor Violin Sonata (from Venezuelan violinist Giovanni Guzzo and Irish pianist Michael McHale), Milhaud's Six chants populaires hébraïques, based on material from the Jewish traditions of Poland and Ukraine (Milhaud himself was Jewish), and Honegger's light Petit Cours de morale (both performed by Irish tenor Robin Tritschler and Latvian pianist Diane Ketler), and Mozart's great String Quintet in G minor (with Norwegian viola player Eivind Holtsmark Rinstad and Britain's Heath Quartet). The Heath Quartet has Sunday morning's Westport House concert all to itself, for chorales by Bach and Britten's Second String Quartet.
Up and running
All of Saturday's concerts are in Westport's Town Hall Theatre, a venue which was not even up and running when the chamber music festival started. In the morning, rising cellist Killian White gives the Next Generation Artist Concert with pianist Gary Beecher. Works by Lowell Liebermann (his Yeats setting A Poet to His Beloved from Tritschler with a mixed ensemble that includes Hugh Tinney), Shostakovich (his Cello Sonata with Natalie Clein) and Fauré (his G minor Piano Quartet) form the main evening concert. And Tritschler is joined by pianist Michael McHale for a late-night performance of Schumann's song-cycle, Dichterliebe.
The closing concert, in the Holy Trinity Church at 2.30pm on Sunday, mixes and matches the festival’s performers in Schubert’s Arpeggione Sonata, Debussy’s Six épigraphes antiques and Mendelssohn’s Piano Trio in C minor Op 66.