November 24, 2024
Athens, GR 8 C
Expand search form
Blog

An eclectic mix: Brixton Chamber Orchestra at Clapham Park Cube

An eclectic mix: Brixton Chamber Orchestra at Clapham Park Cube
Matthew O'Keeffe and Brixton Chamber Orchestra in action at Love Clapham Park Fun Day
Matthew O’Keeffe and Brixton Chamber Orchestra in action at Love Clapham Park Fun Day

Brixton Chamber Orchestra, musical director Matthew O’Keeffe is coming to the end of its 2024 Summer Estates tour, appearing in community venues around the borough. On Saturday 27 July 2024 they popped up in the afternoon at the Love Clapham Park Fun Day at Clapham Park Cube, where people took a break from browsing the stalls, sampling the amazing food and watching the carnival to listen to an eclectic set from O’Keeffe and the 30-piece orchestra which managed to get everyone dancing and ended with an open mic session. 

Love Clapham Park Fun Day
Love Clapham Park Fun Day

The music moved easily between classical and contemporary, including jazz, dance and rap (performing styles such as rap and grime with orchestral backing is one of the orchestra’s specialities). The sound system was pretty impressive too, and there was no sense of loss of quality because we were out of doors, whilst the carnival attendees made a keen audience.

The set mixed Respighi, Lully, Beethoven, Walton, the overture to Rossini’s The Barber of Seville and Offenbach’s can can from Orpheus in the Underworld, with Donald Grant’s The Way Home, jazz standards, rap, The Special’s Ghost Town, a dance medley and Abba’s Dancing Queen. The vocals were share between two guest vocalists and rapper, Samson, whilst music director Matthew O’Keeffe helped out as well. For The Killers’ Mr Brightside, the audience had to get singing. At the end there was an open mic session with a couple pretty impressive soloists.

The Mayor of Lambeth, John Paul, at Love Clapham Park Fun Day
The Mayor of Lambeth, John-Paul Ennis, at Love Clapham Park Fun Day

The orchestra’s tour finishes this weekend with a gig tonight at St Matthew’s Church, but they’ll be back.


Go to Source article

Previous Article

Meet the new principal horn

Next Article

Cleveland int’l piano competition inserts a round of pop

You might be interested in …

New music mourns Wolgang Rihm

New music mourns Wolgang Rihm

Among many tributes today to the prolific German composer: Leipzig Volkszeitung: The last great German composer. Michael Haefliger: Wolfgang Rihm, the leader of our Lucerne Festival Academy passed away last night. We are in tears […]

Death of a viola legend

Death of a viola legend

Friends are reporting the death of Donald McInnes, influential performer and teacher. With an international career, he was long associated with the University of Southern California in Los Angeles at the Thornton School of Music. […]