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Sappho series – Dolci Tormenti – Melbourne: Fri 24th Oct, Villawood Detention Centre and Sydney: Fri 31st Oct 2014

2/11/2014

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On Friday 24th October at the beautiful Medley Hall in Melbourne, whose rococo glamour made it the perfect venue for such an event, the ladies of Sappho began the first concert in a series which has definitely been the closest to my heart of all the projects I’ve worked on this year. Three concerts: two as fundraisers for asylum seeker charities in Victoria and New South Wales, and the third inside Villawood Detention Centre for detainees.

Hannah Lane (Italian triple harp), Jennifer Kirsner (baroque violin), Ellie Walker (baroque cello) and myself (tambourine….no seriously) presented an ambitious concert of very early Italian music in an homage to the “sweet torments” of love. One of the utterly fantastic things about this early Italian court music is how passionate and unexpected it is – at once elegant and unruly, bursting from melancholy to bitterness, longing and downright bawdiness. (I couldn’t help myself, right at the end of the Melbourne concert before the final piece, I ended up explaining “It’s basically about boobs”, causing my more-refined stage companions to guffaw and shake their heads.

.....I’m confident I got away with it.)



In the five days leading up to this first concert, the four of us spent the time rehearsing down on the pretty Mornington Peninsula, and I know that getting the material up to the level we wanted it pushed all four of us in the short time that we had. To have that experience of challenge and discovery, as well as so much fun and solidarity, with three such fantastic ladies has been a privilege, and I am looking forward to more collaborations in the future.

A week later we hauled ourselves out to Western Sydney in 30-odd degrees (the instrumentalists were all champions, dealing with the temperature-tuning challenges of period instruments) and gave a really magical, humbling performance to a group of detainees. The security protocols surrounding the concert were pretty intimidating, but the reception we got made it all worth it. At the end, many people came up wanting to chat to us and look at the instruments (and help us carry them back to the front security section), and one man who had sat quietly with his eyes closed through the whole concert came and said, “Thank you for taking me away from here for an hour”. That says it all, really: about detention, and about music.

Our first concert was generously sponsored by Purple Hen Wines, and our second public performance – in the equally beautiful Glebe Town Hall – was sponsored by the fabulous Beliso Chocolates (handmade, ethically sourced artisanal chocolate – SO good! The whole performance venue smelled like delicious chocolate by the time interval was through!). Together with our sponsors, we raised nearly $2,000 for The Asylum Seekers Centre (VIC) and The Asylum Seeker Resource Centre (NSW). A lot of hard work was put in by all involved, and I am very proud of what we achieved both musically and socially. Most of all, I am very grateful to be surrounded by musicians and friends who pulled together to make it all happen (with special thanks also going to Matthew Lorenzon, my mum, and my husband for helping with transport and set up!). Well done, everybody!



Here we are having a well-earned drink at the pub after the final show. I have loved hanging out with these ladies:
(L-R: Jennifer Kirsner, myself, Hannah Lane, Ellie Walker)


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    ____ In 2005 I found myself in London, broke, constantly sick, and working in a job I hated. I had dropped out of Uni and run away from Australia years earlier, and had had a mind-boggling succession of actually-I'm-not-going-to-share-them-on-a-professional website adventures. But I looked up one day and realised I really wasn't happy with my life. "So if you're going to change things," I asked myself, "what is the dearest dream you once had? What is it worth turning everything around for?"

    I had chronic pain from (unbeknownst to me) dislocated bones; both my lungs and my throat were compromised. I smoked a pack a day. I hadn't worn an evening gown since my Year 12 formal and couldn't really walk in heels. I didn't read music, and had never sung an aria, nor studied music at school. But I knew what I wanted: I wanted to serve the muse. Bit mad, really.

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