Cover Magpie: Solo & Chamber Works by Kevin Raftery

Album info

Album-Release:
2024

HRA-Release:
15.11.2024

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • Kevin Raftery (b. 1951): Meditation in Brown:
  • 1 Raftery: Meditation in Brown 06:07
  • Harpsichord Quintet:
  • 2 Raftery: Harpsichord Quintet 09:13
  • Two Offerings:
  • 3 Raftery: Two Offerings: Neither Here nor There 03:37
  • 4 Raftery: Two Offerings: Beyond 03:32
  • Naked before God:
  • 5 Raftery: Naked before God 08:54
  • Fourth Companion:
  • 6 Raftery: Fourth Companion 09:56
  • Meditation in Gold:
  • 7 Raftery: Meditation in Gold 07:20
  • Two for Mirth:
  • 8 Raftery: Two for Mirth 03:27
  • Atlantis Dances:
  • 9 Raftery: Atlantis Dances: Festive 02:24
  • 10 Raftery: Atlantis Dances: Pastoral 04:01
  • 11 Raftery: Atlantis Dances: Sabre-rattling 02:24
  • 12 Raftery: Atlantis Dances: Exorcism 03:01
  • 13 Raftery: Atlantis Dances: Festive 03:14
  • Meditation in Silver:
  • 14 Raftery: Meditation in Silver 01:51
  • Total Runtime 01:09:01

Info for Magpie: Solo & Chamber Works by Kevin Raftery



Magpie is an extraordinary collection of compositions that navigates the spectrum of human experience, from sorrow to mirth, from funerals to births. Drawing inspiration from the unpredictable nature of life, this album resonates with the complexities and contradictions of existence.

A Dark Inspiration: Composed during challenging times, these works reflect a journey through darkness towards light. The pieces vary from meditative reflections to playful and joyful expressions, encapsulating the emotional highs and lows of life. The album’s title, Magpie, is symbolic of these contrasts—just like the bird itself, a creature both admired and reviled, intelligent and opportunistic.

Richard Benjafield, percussion
Anneke Hodnett, harp
Elizabeth Green, harp
Neil Heyde, cello
Berkeley Ensemble



The Berkeley Ensemble
was formed by friends in a spirit of adventure. ‘An instinctive collective’ (The Strad), its members have come together from diverse corners of musical life to make music in new ways, reach new audiences and, most importantly, explore new repertoire, be it newly written or inadvertently forgotten.

Its acclaimed performances and recordings celebrate contemporary chamber music, especially by British composers. Since its founding in 2008 the ensemble has premiered over 40 works commissioned by or written for the group from composers including Michael Berkeley, John Woolrich, Lynne Plowman, Barnaby Martin and Misha Mullov-Abbado. The ensemble also champions unjustly neglected works and has given the first modern performances of pieces by Lennox Berkeley, Alan Bush and Dorothy Howell.

Its eight albums include 18 premiere recordings amongst a diverse catalogue ranging from Knussen to Beethoven and have attracted considerable praise. The ensemble’s recent recording of Beethoven’s Septet was lauded by BBC Radio 3’s Andrew McGregor as ‘inhabit[ing] the heart of this rewarding score with a grace and ease I found totally engaging’ whilst Lennox Berkeley: Stabat Mater was nominated for a Gramophone Award in 2017 and praised in the magazine’s initial review for ‘a performance of shimmering intensity’.

The Berkeley Ensemble regularly appears at venues and festivals throughout the UK including Southbank Centre’s Purcell Room, St David’s Hall Cardiff, Wiltshire Music Centre and the Cheltenham, Spitalfields, and Lake District Summer Music Festivals.

The ensemble’s own Little Venice Music Festival provides a unique platform to collaborate and explore whilst engaging and entertaining neighbours of the group’s London base of St. Saviour’s Church, Warwick Avenue. Since taking on the festival’s curatorship in 2016, the ensemble has brought world-class chamber music right into the community, with guest artists including Imogen Cooper, Adrian Brendel and Laura Snowden appearing as soloists and as performers with the ensemble. The forthcoming 2021 programme will be inspired by the life and work of locally born codebreaker and father of modern computing, Alan Turing. Plans include duets with synthesisers, a composing project with local schools and a major new commission from Robert Laidlow, to be composed with the help of artificial intelligence.

Away from the concert platform, the Berkeley Ensemble works tirelessly to foster the creation, appreciation and performance of chamber music at every age, level and ability. Recent highlights have included collaborations with both PRS for Music and Tŷ Cerdd on professional development schemes for composers, as well as the release in 2019 of the first commercial recording of winning scores from the ensemble’s New Cobbett Prize for composition. For amateur performers, the group runs a chamber course in Somerset, as well as a series of study days in London.

Residencies and associations with schools allow the ensemble to help create and develop musical communities of lasting and ever-deepening value. The ensemble is particularly proud of its longstanding links with Ibstock Place School in Barnes, Queen Elizabeth School in Kirkby Lonsdale and Meath Primary School near Woking.

Booklet for Magpie: Solo & Chamber Works by Kevin Raftery

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