MOURN
MOURN
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Doors 7pm, Performance 7.30pm
This event has unreserved seating on ground floor and balcony level.
FIGURE and Alkanna Graeca present MOURN, a musical-theatrical exploration of the experience of loss through the rituals of the Balkans and the music of 17th-century Italy. The performance examines the universal experience of losing a loved one, and the ways we come to terms with death. Through music and song, unfolding in a series of poetic scenes inspired by ancient funeral traditions kept alive in the Balkans and reimagined in Italy, MOURN asks how we say farewell to those we love most.
In Renaissance Italy, composers drew on Ancient Greek tragedy to invent a new declamatory style that sits between speech and song. The funeral laments that were woven into those dramas became central to early opera, and the style spread across Europe. The “lament bass” - a repeating, descending four-note line - was used in Germany by Biber, in France by Lully and, nearly 1000 miles away, in England by Purcell in Dido’s Lament. Had those Italian composers crossed the Adriatic Sea to the Balkans, they would have found the mourning traditions which were immortalised in Ancient Greek tragedy still in practice, forming an unbroken lineage with the past. There the funeral lament, sung rather than spoken, endured as part of everyday life - delivered outward and upward to a community of the living, the dead, and the divine.
Historically informed performance ensemble FIGURE has been praised in The Times for its “high-risk, high-reward” projects, and in The Guardian as musically “unequivocally impressive, its sound invigorating, its commitment absolute”. Alkanna Graeca is a vocal trio blending raw folk traditions from the Balkans, Mediterranean, and Black Sea with free improvisation, whose “spine-tingling harmonies and dissonances have reinvented ancient polyphony for a contemporary audience”. MOURN places the imagined tradition of Western Europe and the living tradition of the Balkans in dialogue, reconstructing a ritual of grief.
MOURN features traditional polyphonies from across the Balkans, including Albania, Epirus, and Thrace, as well as music composed by Claudio Monteverdi, Barbara Strozzi, and Carlo Gesualdo. The original concept was devised by Alexandra Achillea and Frederick Waxman.
Vocalists
Alexandra Achillea
Irini Arabatzi
Dunja Botic
Violin
Naomi Burrell
James Toll
Lute
Sergio Bucheli
Double Bass
Carina Cosgrave
Kanun
Konstantinos Glynos
Chamber Organ
Frederick Waxman
Stage Director
Alexandra Achillea
Assistant Director (Movement and Dramaturgy)
Konstantina-Maria Spyropoulou
Music Director & Creative Producer
Frederick Waxman
Photo Credit: "Nyx (the night)," 2019. Photographer: Ioanna Sakellaraki
Stone Nest is an arts
organisation and performance venue in the heart of London's West End,
bringing exceptional and experimental art to a wide audience. A hidden gem nestled amidst the bright lights of
theatreland, it offers a platform for bold, visionary artists and a
space where audiences can encounter an eclectic programme of
contemporary performance.
Stone Nest is an old building and unfortunately cannot currently accommodate electric wheelchairs. We can accommodate manually operated wheelchairs via a temporary ramp; please let us know that you are a wheelchair user when booking and whether a Companion will be accompanying you, and we will arrange a Companion ticket for you.
Location
Stone Nest, W1D 5EZ