Ticket to Paradise

40th annual Viola da Gamba Society Conclave celebrates the past and present

by Sarah Freiberg

 

Each summer, enthusiasts gather for a week to celebrate, play, and discuss an instrument that lost popularity when the violin family rose to fame a few hundred years ago—the viola da gamba. Judging from the passion and enthusiasm of the nearly 250 gambists at the 40th annual Viola da Gamba Conclave, the instrument is thriving. The Viola da Gamba Society of America boasts over 1,000 members, and attendance at the annual Conclave has been steadily climbing. The week of playing, studying, and sharing information is held each year in a different locale. The 2002 Conclave took place at Franklin Pierce College in Rindge, New Hampshire, a bucolic campus nestled below Mt. Monadnock, the popular peak that figured in the spiritual writings of Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau. Focusing on the works of British composer William Lawes, born 400 years ago, the event was aptly entitled "Olde Englande in New England" and featured 28 faculty members, including the fabulous British gamba ensemble Fretwork. Conclave participants ranged in age from 17 to 80.

The focus of this gathering is the viola da gamba, a six-stringed, fretted instrument held between the knees (thus the name, derived from the Italian word for leg), and played with an underhanded bow grip. For chamber or consort music, it basically comes in three sizes: treble, tenor and bass, all tuned with intervals of fourths between most of the adjacent strings, with a third between the middle two strings. The bass instrument is tuned an octave below the treble.

Come Together

The annual conclave brings together people of all levels and abilities, as well as instruments of all varieties. It always includes free classes for local adult beginners to spur interest wherever conclaves are held.

Liam Byrne, 20, entered Indiana University as a double bass player, but recently switched to a gamba major. When he came to the conclave this year, Byrne had played only bass viol, but soon played in many groups on all different instruments. He found the conclave "really fantastic. You get to hear all sorts of ideas and styles," he says. "The faculty consists of seasoned players, and you have access to incredible resources. People are really generous—you can play anyone's instrument. For one week of your life people don't get bored when you talk about gamba for hours on end!"

The viola da gamba was a favorite instrument in the Renaissance and Baroque periods, and has enjoyed revivals since the late 19th century. The Viola da Gamba Society of America was founded in 1963. While its members are predominantly amateur gambists, they take their instruments quite seriously.

Conclave coordinator Kathy Schenley, who began gamba as an adult, puts it this way: "The gamba is user-friendly for the older beginner," she says. "There is a wealth of literature that is not technically demanding in terms of speed. It may be rhythmically challenging, though. But it's lots of fun. Once you get to an upper intermediate level, you can play all the different sizes of instrument and learn the music from all different viewpoints. The music from this period was very democratic, and was written as participatory music."

Conclave attendees sometimes participate at unusual times, and in unusual ways. "Ten years ago (when the group last played at a conclave), Fretwork also performed Lawes," society treasurer Ken Perlow recalls. "It turned out that in the jumble of things, one of the players was lacking a page of music. When she got to the missing page, she stopped playing and shrugged. Members of the audience, assuming she was lost, started to hum her part! People in the society really appreciate this music, and really know it."

Consort Highlight

Fretwork's fabulous performance of Lawes' intricate consort music, put on in conjunction with Monadnock Music in Peterborough, New Hampshire, was a highlight of this year's conclave. It was played in the round, and conclave members enthusiastically embraced the performance and demanded an encore. "It's the most brilliant audience we've had anywhere in the world," says Fretwork member Wendy Gillespie.

Conclave participant Martha Davidson points out that "250 people in the audience know the music inside and out."

"They know if we make mistakes," Gillespie adds, "but they don't call us on it."

The Fretwork members each coached three groups a day at the conclave, and clearly enjoyed the experience. "I think it's fantastic to have so many players," says Fretwork member Suzanna Pell. "We don't have nearly so many in England."

Once reason for the popularity of the event is its status in the music world. "It's a great opportunity to meet up with old friends," says Fretwork member Richard Campbell, adding that "some of these (conclave) people have studied with Fretwork in England and Greece. It's also fascinating to teach Lawes, to hear the music from the outside."

The conclave week is packed with chances to play and listen to gamba music, as well as hear lectures on related subjects. The event opens with a big "bow-in" in which participants were advised to "bring one instrument to play and a music stand." For the rest of the week, participants have three coached classes a day, and most signed up for a fourth uncoached consort as well. As participant Lou Conover puts it, "I come because I get to play this music. It's the only chance I get to play consort music all year, since there's no consort in my neighborhood."

Each afternoon there are miniconcerts held under a tent (appropriately called "Twin Peaks"), and evenings include lectures and more consorts. I sat in on an evening group of 10 gambists sightreading music composed by society members. Society music director (and powerhouse) Martha Bishop mentions that "it's sometimes hard to get gambists to play new music, but we're working on it." Actually, the Society actively pursues new compositions: Every three years it holds a competition for new works for gambas and publishes the winning compositions.

The Doctor Is In

Also available at the conclave are a "viol doctor" to fix ailing viols, a bow rehairer, a bookstore, and an instrument-maker exhibit. Kathy Schenley says that the growing popularity of the instruments can be defined by the ready availability of equipment. Viols used to be constructed only by a few specialty shops, she explains, but that is changing rapidly. Maker and conclave participant Charlie Ogle used to make student instruments, but now prefers to fine-tune and set up ones being produced in the Czech Republic. He is planning to travel to China with his own viol designs to help start a viol shop there.

"If your kid comes home and wants to play the violin, you can rent one," he says, "but with the viol, it's been a different story. Lessons are probably going to be two hours away, and if you can find an instrument it will cost $5,000. You don't get people starting on the viol unless they are already committed. So I'm working on getting affordable student instruments [to the public]."

Ogle loves the conclaves. "Today I handed players different instruments to try during a dress rehearsal, then listened to Fretwork," he says. "I've got a pile of instruments that someone might want to take home. It's paradise. What could be better?"

For more details about the Viola da Gamba Society of America and early music links, visit www.vdgsa.org.

 



Excerpted from Strings magazine, November/December, No. 106.


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