Alice Giles
Rowan Phemister
William Nichols
Kate Moloney
Melina van Leeuwen
Wesley Music
Centre March 16
Reviewed by Len Power
With five harps onstage, Penta Harp Ensemble, in their debut concert, certainly made a big impression.
Penta Harp
Ensemble is a new Australian harp quintet formed to showcase the full range of
sound that the modern concert harp has to offer. Led by Alice Giles, the
ensemble includes Rowan Phemister, William Nichols, Kate Moloney and Melina van
Leeuwen. Alice Giles announced, proudly, that the four harpists sharing the
stage with her had formerly been her students. Each of the ensemble now performs
nationally with Australia’s foremost orchestras and chamber ensembles.
The program featured works by Australian composers Mary Doumany, Elena Kats-Chernin and Ross Edwards as well as works by Debussy, Ravel, Richter, Lecuona and Salzedo. The concert also included a premiere of a new work by emerging composer Katia Mestrovic.
The concert commenced with three works by Claude Debussy, Pour invoquer Pan, dieu du vent d'été (To invoke Pan, god of the summer wind), The Drowned Cathedral and Clair de Lune. These three very different works showed the versatility of the harp to create atmosphere. The deep resonance in the harp playing of The Drowned Cathedral could be physically felt as well as heard.
The second work presented was the premiere of Elektra by Katia Mestrovic. Inspired by the 1962 film, Electra was originally a Greek Tragedy by Euripides. In the first of four sections, the performers sang Ancient Greek text as they played, creating a tense atmosphere to reflect Electra’s suffering and anger. The following sections took us musically deeper into the emotional turmoil of this dark tragedy. It was a fascinating and very effective work and the strong applause from the audience at the conclusion was well-deserved. Mestrovic was in the audience and looked delighted as she took a bow.
Photo by
Peter Hislop
This
review was first published by Canberra CityNews digital edition on 17 March
2025.
Len Power's reviews are also broadcast on Artsound FM 92.7 in the ‘Arts Cafe’ and ‘Arts About’ programs.