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Mark Tatlow

Mark Tatlow is a conductor, pianist and harpsichordist. Born in Wolverhampton, England, he has lived in Sweden for over 25 years. While Artistic Director of the Drottningholm Palace Theatre from 2007 to 2013, he conducted Sweden’s first Monteverdi opera cycle, as well as works by Cavalli, Handel, Martín y Soler, Haydn, and Mozart. From 2002–2012 he served as Professor of Musical Studies at the University College of Opera (now SKH), Stockholm, and in 2013 co-founded Performing Premodernity, a research project based at Stockholm University.
He is currently undertaking artistic research at the University of Gothenburg. His dissertation, “Assaggio. Experimenting with the performance of early vocal music at a time of meta-crisis” looks at ways the catastrophic future facing the world could impinge on his approach to early music.
In 2019 Mark was commissioned by the Buxton Festival to compile and conduct Georgiana, a new eighteenth-century opera pasticcio, which received the UK Theatre Award for Achievement in Opera. In 2022 he was awarded the Gustavian Scholarship from the Swedish Academy. Mark has been artistically responsible for several new concert halls, including the Wathen Hall at St Paul’s School in London and the Queen Silvia Concert Hall at Lilla Akademien in Stockholm.
 

 

ABOUT THE WANDERING SOUNDS OF KALV

THE SEVEN WORDS AND THE SEVEN HAYDN

In my artistic research at HSM I am grappling with the question of how what is often termed “old” music can tell “new” stories. An example of this conundrum is Haydn’s Seven Last Words on the Cross. It was written in 1786 for the Oratorio de la Santa Cueva in Cádiz, where, in 1755, there had been a terrible earthquake and tsunami thirty years earlier. Haydn later wrote the following account of the commission and the peculiar circumstances of the first performance:

 

“Some fifteen years ago I was requested by a canon of Cádiz to compose instrumental music on the Seven Last Words of Our Saviour On the Cross. It was customary at the Cathedral of Cádiz to produce an oratorio every year during Lent, the effect of the performance being not a little enhanced by the following circumstances. The walls, windows, and pillars of the church were hung with black cloth, and only one large lamp hanging from the center of the roof broke the solemn darkness. At midday, the doors were closed and the ceremony began. After a short service the bishop ascended the pulpit, pronounced the first of the seven words (or sentences) and delivered a discourse thereon. This ended, he left the pulpit and fell to his knees before the altar. The interval was filled by music. The bishop then in like manner pronounced the second word, then the third, and so on, the orchestra following on the conclusion of each discourse. My composition was subject to these conditions, and it was no easy task to compose seven adagios lasting ten minutes each, and to succeed one another without fatiguing the listeners; indeed, I found it quite impossible to confine myself to the appointed limits.”

The music is wildly expressive, and beautifully crafted. It has even been compared to late Beethoven in its musical intensity. But, at the same time, its lofty sensibilities have been considered too abstract for a modern audience, and it has been termed “part of the dead culture of eighteenth-century sentimentality”. How can this music to relate to today’s world of crises?

Each of the meditative sonatas is based on one of the seven last words attributed to Christ on the cross. Haydn prefaced the sonatas with a dramatic introduction, and added a final movement representing the cosmic earthquake that took place when Christ died. Many listeners will have been reiminded of the earthquake that took place in Cádiz. This physical link between the original story and the recent history of Cádiz made me ask the question: might there be a way of linking Christ’s death with prophecies that predict the forthcoming death of our planet. After all, the Bible hints that God reveals himself not only in Christ but in the created world.

Could we superimpose Christ’s via dolorosa upon our pilgrim path here in Kalv, walking on earth that is soon to be enveloped in a new crisis? Could we see the crisis as a turning point, that ushers in a time a creativity? As we remember the past, we walk in the present, and we look to the future.  Carrying the cross of creation: on the earth’s final journey.

As well as seven last words, there are seven pilgrim virtues and seven elements, and so I decided to place each of the musical meditations within a framework of three words. I will try and respond to these words in my performances of the Haydn sonatas; festival musicians will respond to the sonatas through improvising over the sets of three words; the audience will then reflect on the experience of listening to the music. Together we will become the wandering sounds of Kalv.

The introductory movement will be played at a separate initial event, which will set the scene for the series of meditations. I hope it will give rise to questions about pilgrimage, and what it might mean to carry the cross of creation. The earthquake will follow on immediately from the seventh meditation at the final concert.

As we listen and wander together, I look forward to hearing the responses of others in music and conversation.

Needless to say, I am enormously grateful to the Kalv Festival for enabling me to present Haydn’s Seven Last Words in this way.

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EVENT
Concert introduction

TIME
Thursday
August 8
19:45

PLACE
Parish Hall

Free admission

THE SEVEN WORDS AND THE SEVEN HAYDN

Concert introduction | Mark Tatlow

Introduction to the sounding pilgrimage in Kalv 2024 with Mark Tatlow.

EVENT
Concert

TIME
Thursday
August 8
20:30  

PLATS
Kalv Church

KAIHOGYO

Concert | Gageego! Klaus Lang Mark Tatlow

World premiere of Klaus Lang’s kaihogyo for organ and ensemble.

EVENT
Concert

TIME
Thursday
August 8
22:30  

PLACE
Kalv Church

I — FORGIVENESS, SIMPLICITY, NATURE

Concert | Mark Tatlow, Per-Anders Nilsson and Johannes Landgren

The first pilgrim’s word of the festival, simplicity, is reflected in relief against Haydn’s music and leads to a nightly improvisation between Landgren’s organ and Nilsson’s saxophone and electronics, where we take part of a concert permeated by the pilgrim’s theme.

EVENT
Conversation — Dinner

TIME
Friday
August 9
16:00  

PLATS
Kalv’s bygdegård

Advance booking required (tickets will go on sale August 1), e-mail to: info @kalvfestival.se

II — COMFORT, FREEDOM, LIGHT

Conversation – Dinner | Martin Lindman, Max Käck, Mark Tatlow and Chris du Preez

20 years of the Kalv Festival will be discussed over dinner. The second pilgrim word, Freedom, ends the conversation as interpreted by Mark Tatlow and Chris du Preez. Then those who wish will walk to the Kalv Church.

Food is included in the event.

EVENT
Concert

TIME
Friday
August 9
23:00  

PLATS
Kalv Church

III — RELATIONSHIP, SHARING, WIND

Concert | Mark Tatlow & Ragnar Arnberg

Sharing is the third word of the pilgrimage. Here Mark Tatlow meets clarinetist Ragnar Arnberg interpreting Emil Nilsson’s music in the late Kalv night

EVENT
Meditation

TIME
Saturday
August 10
13:00  

PLATS
Kalv’s Schoolhouse, Gymnastics Hall

Free admission

IV — ABANDONMENT, SPIRITUALITY, FIRE

Meditation | Mark Tatlow & Anders Jonhäll

We gather at Kalv’s schoolhouse and if the weather permits, we go out for a walk in the area. The focus is on the fourth word of the pilgrim, Spirituality. Haydn’s fourth reflection is paired with Anders Jonhäll’s interpretation of Marcus Lundberg’s delicate flute sounds in Snö, sken, minne.

EVENT
Concert

TIME
Saturday
August 10
16:00  

PLACE
Kalv Church

V — NEED, UNHURRIEDNESS, WATER

Concert | Linda Jankowska, Mark Tatlow & Nina De Heney 

Violinist Linda Jankowska performs Esaias Järnegard’s Insula. Pharos. A world premiere that leads into the fifth meditation of the pilgrim. This time on the word unhurriedness. Nina De Heney’s double bass takes over where Haydn’s notes end.

EVENT
Concert

TIME
Saturday
August 10
23:00  

PLACE
Kalv’s Schoolhouse, Gymnastics Hall

VI — FULFILMENT, QUIETNESS, DARKNESS

Concert| Linda Jankowska, Mark Tatlow 

The sixth pilgrim word is framed by Linda Jankowska’s Parable of the Prize of Heaven.

EVENT
Concert introduction

TIME
Sunday
August 11
11:30  

PLACE
Parish Hall

Free admission

Concert introduction – Mark Tatlow

EVENT
Concert

TIME
Sunday
August 11
12:00  

PLACE
Kalv Church

VII — REUNION, LIGHTHEARTEDNESS, THUNDER

Concert | Gageego! ensemble mosaic Mark Tatlow Elena Gabbrielli Klaus Lang Christy du Preez the Kalv Choir

A musical journey and festival come to an end. The 20th anniversary is over, and we take part in music that echoes through several centuries.

We arrive at the old church with peace signs collected from nature. Is there any hope left?

The earth gives up its spirit and returns to its creator. A sudden thunderstorm and even an earthquake; for a moment all hell breaks loose. An ancient melody dissolves the ensuing silence. Then a song of a morning star is heard…