Stapleton Amidon Aurora Orchestra Muhly review – grisly murder ballads beautifully played
over 1 year in The guardian
Kings Place, LondonNew York-based composer Nico Muhly teamed up with the Aurora Orchestra and folk singers Robyn Stapleton and Sam Amidon to explore songs from Scotland and the USAt first sight the New York- based composer Nico Muhly might seem an unlikely focus for a concert in Scotland Unwrapped, the latest themed series at Kings Place. But in this appearance with the Aurora Orchestra and two folk singers, the Scottish Robyn Stapleton and the Vermont-born Sam Amidon, the focus was very much on Muhly as arranger, in an exploration of a range of ballads and songs from both Scotland and the US. Muhly has long been fascinated by the way in which traditional songs travel across continent, and how they mutate en route, and in particular by the different variants of the murder ballad The Two Sisters, which may have originated in Britain in the 17th century, but exists in more than 500 forms across Europe and the US.Here three versions of this grisly tale of sororicide were threaded through the programme, two of them in Muhly’s tactful arrangements for the Aurora lineup, the third as the kernel of one of his most striking concert works, The Only Tune, which he composed for Amidon in 2007. The original song emerges word by word through a welter of menacing orchestral textures and sampled sounds, before being deconstructed again, and then eventually is heard in more or less intact forms, sung by Amidon with banjo or guitar. It’s a powerfully effective work that wears well. Continue reading...