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In Memoriam Early music pioneer Marijke Ferguson – a life long ears on stalks
It saddens us deeply to announce that our highly esteemed early music pioneer and programme maker Marijke Ferguson (1927-2024) passed away on Friday 29th November. She was 97 years old, but continued to make radio programmes about early music and other subjects until 2018. In 2016, we celebrated her 50th anniversary as a presenter and radio maker with a live programme in the Amsterdam Public Library, entitled ‘Een leven lang oren op stalktjes’ (A life long ears on stalks). Marijke worked for the public broadcaster from the 1960s onwards, where she built up a large and grateful audience with weekly programmes such as Musica religiosa et profana and Music from the Middle Ages and Renaissance. When her career there ended in 1993, she moved to the Concertzender. She remained active for us until she was 91 and made and presented more than five hundred programmes. All episodes of her weekly Music Essay and the monthly Antiqua versus nova can still be listened to via the links. Ferguson was not only an original and gifted radio producer, but also a pioneer of early music. For example, she put the recorder back on the map and even managed to introduce this neglected instrument as a main subject at the conservatories. Together with a then very young Frans Brüggen, a pupil of her husband Kees Otten, she formed the Amsterdam Recorder Ensemble shortly after WWII, through which she brought people’s attention to a wealth of early music . A few years later she was one of the founders of Muziekkring Obrecht, in which she started playing the Celtic harp. Marijke Ferguson became best known for her early music ensemble Studio Laren, founded in 1965. With this ensemble she presented sensational programmes, in which she effortlessly linked medieval music with cultural-historical information. She immersed herself just as thoroughly in the encyclicals of church fathers as she did in the work and life of troubadours. She also experimented with multidisciplinary presentation forms and introduced audience participation long before it became common practice. Marijke Ferguson was a pioneer par excellence, who enriched Dutch music life enormously with all her different projects. We will miss her! Our programme maker Thea Derks portrayed her in her doctoral thesis Tussen Luier en Afwas and interviewed her many times for Radio 4. She wrote an in memoriam on her blog Klassiekvannu.   Thea Derks Amsterdam, 4-12-2024 for the website Concertzender
Johnny Griffin, Sun-Mi Hong, Marike van Dijk
Saturday 30th November 2024, 14:00 – Past, Present & Future. *Tenorist Johnny Griffin recorded an album for the Riverside label in February 1958: Way Out! A quartet line-up with pianist Kenny Drew, bassist Wilbur Ware and drummer ‘Philly’ Joe Jones. *In September 2023, the BIDA Orchestra, led by percussionist Sun-Mi Hong, played at the Amsterdam BIMHUIS. The recording was released on BIMHUIS Records. *Also, live from the BIMHUIS (July 2022): three pieces by Marike van Dijk. In the second half of the 1950s, Johnny Griffin’s career took off. He became one of Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers, performed on stage and in the studio with Thelonious Monk. He also recorded an album with John Coltrane. Griffin opens this hour with three pieces from the album Way Out! – the last being the standard Cherokee. He tackles it in his infamous breakneck tempo. The theme is sharply designed: the successive use of bass, drums and piano respectively accentuates the different parts of the song form. Pianist Kenny Drew matches Griffin’s speed in his solo, at the expense of the articulation. But then again, try to match Griffin’s solo rhythm. Korean Sun-Mi Hong has been in the Netherlands for about ten years now. She started studying percussion here, and in a few years she grew into an improviser, composer with her own signature, band leader and international stage personality. Her current BIDA Orchestra features two saxophonists, a trumpet player, pianist and bass player. Hong’s compositions rarely lack ostinato passages: repetitive rhythmic/melodic figures, consisting of simple rhythms and only a few notes. They function as a ‘background’ for improvisations, but the soloing wind instruments also sometimes find each other in unison playing: doing the same thing together in unison. They seek each other out, they part ways. Tight metric runs out in no time, and vice versa. These compositional elements are of course no guarantee for captivating music. A high-quality, musical brain is required for that, and the right – combination of – musicians. Both present! The title of the album Stranded, by saxophonist Marike van Dijk (photo), refers to her period of lockdown in Australia, during the corona pandemic. Perhaps that forced confinement stimulated her creativity, because the collection of pieces is something to behold! Changes takes you, after a ‘searching’ intro, directly into a tight beat. That beat – a keeper – is the prelude to a colourful, layered theme section. Improvisations and ensembles alternate, then follows the reprise of the theme section. Cheerful. Sun also has that right balance between solos and ensembles. The electric guitar adds a sharp colour accent. All the pieces, including the closing Stranded, are immediately convincing. Imaginative themes, rich colour palette – nine musicians – that allows for layering, instrumentation, design… Perfect. Programme and line-ups in the Guide Past, Present & Future – Jaap van de Klomp

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