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Northern College

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Addressİnönü, Kayışdağı Cd. Yanyolu, 34755 Ataşehir/İstanbul
Phone (0216) 577 67 67
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Manchester Collective: Award-winning group a mission to shake up classical music

Manchester Collective: Award-winning group a mission to shake up classical music
Jul 1,2023 9:50 pm

... The city has a healthy classical music scene - from the Royal Northern College of Music to the Manchester Camerata, BBC Philharmonic and Halle Orchestra - but a lower cost of living than London...

Taylor Swift fans report 'amnesia' following Eras show

Taylor Swift fans report 'amnesia' following Eras show
Jun 1,2023 10:40 am

... But Dr Michelle Phillips, a senior lecturer in music psychology from the Royal Northern College of Music, says the idea of post-concert amnesia is not as scary as it sounds...

English National Opera: Where next after being told to move out of London?

English National Opera: Where next after being told to move out of London?
Dec 14,2022 9:00 pm

... The Royal Northern College of Music (RNCM) currently stages operas in Manchester, while Leeds-based Opera North brings short seasons to The Lowry theatre in Salford, Greater Manchester, twice a year, as well as touring to cities including Nottingham, Hull and Newcastle...

BBC Radio 3 to shine light on 'forgotten' composers

BBC Radio 3 to shine light on 'forgotten' composers
Jan 28,2022 7:21 pm

... Students from the Royal Northern College of Music will also play two rare string quartets by Saint-Georges...

University strikes: Will classes be cancelled?

University strikes: Will classes be cancelled?
Nov 30,2021 3:24 am

... Which universities are affected? In total, 33 universities will see strikes over both pay and pensions: Aston UniversityBirkbeck, University of LondonDurham UniversityGoldsmiths, University of LondonHeriot-Watt UniversityKeele UniversityKing s College LondonLondon School of EconomicsLondon School of Hygiene and Tropical MedicineLoughborough UniversityOpen UniversityRoyal Holloway, University of LondonSoas, University of LondonThe University of BirminghamThe University of DundeeThe University of KentThe University of LeedsThe University of NottinghamThe University of SheffieldThe University of StirlingUniversity of BradfordUniversity of BristolUniversity of CambridgeUniversity of EdinburghUniversity of EssexUniversity of GlasgowUniversity of LancasterUniversity of LiverpoolUniversity of St AndrewsUniversity of SussexUniversity of YorkQueens University BelfastUniversity of UlsterAnother 21 will see strikes over pay only: Courtauld Institute of ArtEdinburgh Napier UniversityGlasgow School of ArtGreenwich UniversityKingston UniversityLiverpool Hope UniversityManchester Metropolitan UniversityQueen Margaret UniversityRoehampton UniversityRoyal College of ArtRoyal Northern College of MusicSheffield Hallam UniversityThe University of ManchesterThe University of NorthamptonThe University of SalfordUniversity of the Arts LondonUniversity College LondonUniversity of BrightonUniversity of Central LancashireUniversity of ChesterUniversity of LeicesterFour will see strikes over pensions only: Institute of Development StudiesImperial College LondonUniversity of BathUniversity of ReadingA further six institutions will not see strikes - but staff did vote for action short of a strike, over pay, which, the UCU says, will also begin on Wednesday and could last for the five months staff have a mandate for and " include strictly working to contract and refusing any additional duties"...

Manchester Collective: Award-winning group a mission to shake up classical music

Nov 30,2021 3:24 am

By Ian YoungsEntertainment & arts reporter

Playing at venues ranging from a run-down nightclub to The Royal Albert Hall , the Manchester Collective are - according to the judges of one recent major Award - " transforming all our perceptions" of what a Classical Music group can be.

Glance at Manchester Collective 's gig diary and you'll see conventional, comfortable concert venues like the Albert Hall for the Bbc Proms this summer, the Southbank Centre in London, and the Bridgewater Hall in their home city.

Other dates, meanwhile, are a long way from the traditional classical circuit. Like a nightclub in a former MOT garage in Salford, an indie venue in a former nightclub in Birkenhead, a warehouse in Leeds and a multi-storey Car Park in Peckham.

Those venues don't always have the luxuries of plush concert halls. Like heating.

" It can be very cold, " says violinist and co-founder Rakhi Singh. " Sometimes I'm literally wearing three jumpers. And if you can't feel your fingers and you're trying to play something quite technical, it can be quite an obstacle.

" If the Atmosphere is Damp , your instrument reacts to that and it feels very different. So you have to be less precious.

" And you can hear the dogs barking outside and the clink of glasses. It's good. "

The Atmosphere - Even if Damp - makes up for the lack of velvet surroundings. " It always feels electrifying, " Singh says.

And the intimacy helps too, according to co-founder and chief executive Adam Szabo .

" When it's 150 people standing crammed into a small room and you're closer to The Musicians than you would ever be at the [Royal] Festival Hall or Bridgewater or whatever, it does feel like it's this tightrope, and it has a sense of jeopardy and danger in The Performance , " he says. " The Best kind of risk. "

As well as performing in a range of venues, Manchester Collective play around with instruments, lighting, visuals, amplification and staging. Recent tours have seen them perform with South African showman cellist Abel Selaocoe and sublime Scottish guitarist Sean Shibe .

They can have between two and 20-something musicians On Stage , who can sometimes sing, address The Audience , and don't have to stick to a dress code.

They can also get involved in commissioning and choosing The Music , rather than just being hired to turn up and play.

Singh and Szabo formed Manchester Collective in 2017 after becoming frustrated at the Classical Music establishment's often rigid ideas and ways of working. They also wanted to attract a more diverse audience.

" In the vast majority of cities and concert halls around the country and around The World , the audiences felt very homogenous, " says Szabo, who's from Australia But trained on the cello alongside Selaocoe in Manchester and has never left.

" I don't think it's controversial to say that in the UK, the Classical Music sector is currently in an unsustainable cycle. The funding and financial support is Going Down , we're struggling for audiences, " he says.

" At the same time, The Audience for Classical Music is the least diverse, I think, of all of the art forms. We know that things have to change. "

Manchester Collective 's job, he says, is " to help to reposition Classical Music so it's close to The Heart of cultural life in the UK, rather than being a peripheral frippery for The Few rather than the many".

They aren't the Only People trying to shake up the Classical Music world - virtually every Orchestra will point to attempts to widen access. But Manchester Collective 's efforts have begun to be recognised.

Their collaboration with Selaocoe has just been nominated for the Classical Music prize at the South Bank Sky Arts Awards, and they were named best ensemble at the recent Royal Philharmonic Society Awards.

The RPS judges said: " Manchester Collective is riding an extraordinary wave, changing the vocabulary of how Classical Music is presented. From Birkenhead to the Bbc Proms , it's joyous to be in The Audience and feel part of their collective passion.

" They are transforming all our perceptions of what an ensemble can be. "

One of The Collective 's commissions, Ben Nobuto's Serenity 2. 0, also won best chamber-scale composition, while Selaocoe was named best instrumentalist at the same ceremony.

For their next project, they are turning to opera, staging a new version of Benjamin Britten 's Noye's Fludd, now dubbed Noah's Flood, with equally radical theatre company Slung Low.

The First performance will be in Slung Low's warehouse in Leeds on Friday as part of The City 's year of culture, before a show in a former railway depot for the Manchester International Festival.

It will also star several hundred school children and poet Lemn Sissay . " The whole thing has this very sort of DIY, artisanal aspect, " says Szabo. " Of course, we're big fans of Britten's music. It's a great score. And we've got Lemn Sissay Playing God . What more could you ask for in This Life ? "

It is perhaps no coincidence that The Collective has emerged from Manchester. The City has a healthy Classical Music scene - from The Royal Northern College of Music to the Manchester Camerata , Bbc Philharmonic and Halle Orchestra - But a lower cost of living than London.

" The Nice thing is that Manchester has still not hit that Tipping Point where it's an unaffordable city for that work to take place in, " Szabo says.

" For what artists are paid in This Country , many of them are now priced out of the capital, and it's only really affordable for those big cultural behemoths to work [there].

" Whereas we play a chunk of our season at this quite notorious nightclub in Salford called the White Hotel. They're a bunch of art school kids that took over an MOT garage and now they have one of The Most respected clubs in Europe.

" That can happen in Manchester. Can that still happen in London? Maybe… if you go a long Way Out . But you kind of have to have a rich mum and dad or to be part of that establishment already. "

Singh warns that The Collective 's home city must not price artists out too in The Future . " As Manchester grows, and there's a lot of development happening, it's going to be really important to keep hold of spaces like this, because it does bring a spice to the cultural life, " she says.

" And if that gets pushed out, I think it just becomes homogenous and The City will suffer in its cultural identity.

" It was interesting being at The Royal Philharmonic Society Awards in March, because Manchester did have a bit of a clean-up. "

Szabo continues that The Collective has also benefited from a " spirit of invention which has always existed in the north".

" That feels like a very exciting creative energy, as well, for us to be a part of. "

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Source of news: bbc.com

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