National Folk Festival, Sunday April 5 2015 at Exhibition Park, Canberra.
A little reflection by Frank McKone
The
National Folk Festival is so vast, with by my count 112 performers
listed in the main program as well as a myriad of others in 26 venues
and in the streets, that to review them all would be impossible. I went
only on Sunday, despite admonitions from aficionado friends who start
on Thursday night and finish late on Monday night. Every year!
The
atmosphere seemed very relaxed (even when a brief storm intruded), the
venues were packed, with queues for most performances, and the energy
level was buzzing everywhere this year as it always has every year I’ve
been. I would like to mention three shows which I thought were
outstanding – all with a Canberra origin.
The Griffyn Ensemble’s WWI – The Antipodes,
using music, songs, speeches, documentary records from the period is a
work of serious re-interpretation of World War I, compared with the
focus on the commemoration of heroes which is central to much of our
100-year anniversary presentations. The relationship between the role
of the Rugby League clubs (from the introduction of League to Australia
in 1907-8 which was news to me), the Trade Unions, Billy Hughes, and
popular attitudes towards – and I must say, against – the war, made
fascinating history. The attempts to impose conscription, and the
failure of those attempts, shed for me a new light on that war.
On
the day, modern technology failed to show the video to accompany the
performance. In any case for the Festival the show was edited down, but
the complete two hour show will be performed at the Belconnen Arts
Centre on Anzac Day and the next day (that is, Saturday 25th and Sunday
26th) at 5pm. Miss the two-up, but don’t miss this.
Then
there’s Fred – Fred Smith, that is. Canberran to the boot-straps. A
DFAT warrior with a successful diplomatic record in some of the war-torn
and socially messy parts of the world, who writes ascerbic songs about
life. The wit is clever and telling, but for me the music was
inspiring. There’s a folk base with a subtlety of tone and mood which
adds intellect to the emotional quality. Now I must follow up his work
on CD, Dust of Uruzgan. Google him as ‘fred smith folk singer’
since there are rather a lot of other Fred Smiths – or if you prefer you
can google ‘Iain Campbell Smith diplomat’.
For
Mikelangelo and the Black Sea Gentlemen I have to admit a very likely
bias, since Michael Simic was a student in my drama classes in his Years
11 and 12 at Hawker College. So I quote a friend – also a retired
(science) teacher but who knew nothing about Mikelangelo: ‘Just
brilliant’ was his unsolicited judgement as the crowd went wild.
I
last saw the Black Sea Gentlemen at The Street Theatre in 2011 adding
to the celebration of the life of David Branson, an original member of
the group before his untimely death. At that time the performance
seemed a bit subdued without the originality of today’s show. When I
think back, maybe that was an occasion for being subdued, but I can
imagine David Branson cheering them on today. Every song was a drama –
comic, but on the dark side of life – and the absolutely full to the
brim Majestic responded to every twist and turn of words, music and
action on stage. Actually quite a lot was off-stage. The show began as
the performers carried in the double-bass as if it were a coffin; it
ended with the audience seeming almost ready to carry off the performers
as they played their way out through the auditorium.
So
I just thought I should reflect a little on the excellent quality of
these Canberra-based performers. Are there still some Canberra bashers
who think we have no heart? Surely not after these three shows.
© Frank McKone, Canberra
Theatre criticism and commentary by Frank McKone, Canberra, Australia. Reviews from 1996 to 2009 were originally edited and published by The Canberra Times. Reviews since 2010 are also published on Canberra Critics' Circle at www.ccc-canberracriticscircle.blogspot.com AusStage database record at https://www.ausstage.edu.au/pages/contributor/1541
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