Manchester Camerata at Wigmore Hall

A memorable concert

Manchester Camerata at Wigmore Hall
Eleonore Cockerham, soprano

It's amazing what can change in three quarters of an a hour. This short lunchtime concert at Wigmore Hall preesnted some remarkable music in superb performances: the known, the lesser-known and the (probably) unknown. But it was hearing Eleonore Cockerham in solo mode that was the true revelation: once a member of VOCES8, she now shines as soloist. She emeged as one of the finest young talents on the stage today; her contribution was faultless from every perspective.

It was also good to see the Manchester Camerata (or members thereof) off home turf: I honestly believe the last time I heard this group was as part of a Hallé concert series at he Free Trade Hall on February 1, 1981, with Haydn's 'Nelson' Mass preceded by Mozart 'Jupiter' Symphony and a Handel Concerto grosso (HWV 322): 44 years ago, by my reckoning. Nice, also, to see Benjamin Powell on piano: las seen (again in my experience) as part of the recording sessions for the much-missed Psappha Composing for … sessions.

The repertoire seems to have expanded a bit to the present; and what a treat this was. The Camerata on this occasion was some 13 players.

Two (relatively) familiar pieces framed the concert. First, Stravinsky's Three Japanese Lyrics. Stravinsky selected his text from an anthology of Chinese poetry translated into Russian. The scoring nods to Schoenberg's Pierrot Lunaire: flute/piccolo, clarinet/bass clarinet, piano and string quartet. “Akahito” brought forth perfectly balanced woodwind and fine, forthright pojection from the soprano. Stravinsky's world, caught between himself and japanoiserie while nodding in the woodwind unisons to passages from the infamous Rite, is consistently fascinating. And yet, he holds us at a remove; as did, rightly, this performance. “Mazatsumi” is fast and furious, and glittering: superb clarinet and piano here (Emily Crook and Powell). Marked Tranquillo, the concluding “Tsaraiuki” seems to move towards a sort of proto-serialist and yet lyrical space. Cockerham's delivery of cantabile disjunct lines was superb, as assured as any of her instrumental colleagues, while the batonless Jack Shen ensured the character of each song shone through.

British-Canadian composer Isabella Gellis (born 1997: website) might be best known for a work for the London Symphony Orchestra, Opera for Orchestra (YouTube link).

Here, it was the 2021 piece I wish I could speak to you, to a text by Dan Soclu, that was in the spotlight. Cockerham's contribution was of preternatural clarity and purity; Gellis seems to deliberately merge the voice with the instruments so that Cockerham sometimes became just one strand in an egalitarian texture. The piece is a miracle of concision of thought; and I wonder if the idea of a tapestry was inspired by this line from Soclu's text: 'in the evening you'd paint / or weave'? Perhaps: the piece is beautiful and skilfully written for these small forces. There is a performance of I wish I could speak to you on Soundcloud here for soprano and piano, where Lotte Betts-Dean is joined by pianist Joseph Havlat, which gives a flavour, but the Wigmore Hall experience was decidedly more entrancing.


Written in 1912, (the Wigmore freesheet gave 1914, which is the year of publication) the Quatre poèmes hindous offers a glimpse into the world of Maurice Delage (1879-1961). Delage travelled to India in 1911, and four cities are encapsulated in Impressionist song: 'Madras: Une belle'; 'Lahore: Une sapin isolé'; 'Bénares: Naissance de Bouddha'; and 'Jeypur: Si vous pensez à elle'. In some ways reaching over to the closing Ravel, the piece offers a subtle marriage of Impressionism and Orientalisme. The opening flute of 'Madras” might imply Debussy's faun, but 'Lahore' found Hannah Kendall on cello bending pizzicatos in a remarkably sitar-like way (Delage based the line on an improvisation by Ustad Imdad Khan). 'Lahore' is a setting of a Heine poem, a poem of longing (a lonely fir tree dreams of a palm tree, far away in the East). Cockerham gave us not only superb sense of line, but also silky-smooth vocalise (the movement includes closed-mouth singing). On to Benares: initial Fench Impressionism cedes to Indian mode-inflected woodwind lines, a cor anglais as snake charmer, perhaps. Finally, ‘Jaipur,’ shimmering in the heat. A terrific performance of a terrific piece.

Here's Janet Baker, soprano with Melos Ensemble and Bernard Keeffe, recorded 1966. I've chosen this one because there's a score:

(The iDagio link below is to Sabine Devieilhe with Les Siècles ad François-Xavier Roth)


Jack Sheen (born 1993) was an expressive conductor throughout, clearly boasting deep knowledge of each score. None more so, perhaps, than his own Hollow popranolol séance II (2021, a piece commssioned by Wigmore Hall, in collaboration with Britten Sinfonia). Some might have come across Sheen's haunting (no pun/link intended) 2016 piece Lung (recorded on the LSO Live's Panufnik Legacies IV). Here, he takes his inspiration from an abandoned offie block in central Manchester which was the home for the full version of his piece: an installaion in which performers cycled though the music as listeners/audience wandered around what Sheen calls a 'cavernous post-inductrial space'. Sheen attempts to 'conjure – however fleeitngly or ambiguously – some kind of presence out of the fragile whirring that we hear in our empty rooms'. It is an 'attempt to orchestrate physical vacancy'. Whether it is a song is another matter: as Sheen himself says, 'the song form here is almost void, flickering in the final moments of the music'. And flicker the music does, an active flute against contemporary done. Perhaps the strumming cello hearkend back to the Delage; but it was taken for a very different walk into quiet but ever-bustling surface. This piece is absolutely hypnotising: you can hear a performance on Soundcloud here, or get a video flavour of the installation experience via Vimeo here.

You can also hear more of Sheen's music at this page on his website.


Finally, back to the known withh Ravel's Trois Poèmes de Stéphane Mallarmé of 1913. Gloriously rarefied music, Ravel's heart was captured by the members of the Manchester Camerata right fom the tissue-delicate arpeggiations of the opening bars. Cockerham's delivery of the line was, rightly, ultra-smooth; how effective, too, her blanching of voice at he word 'angélique'. Perhaps only instrumentally the final chord here needed a touch of attention; endings are as important as beginnings, be they song, or note, endings. Cockerham's attack on the initial 'Princesse!' of 'Placet futile' was exemplary, her delivery so clean; later, Sheen encouraged a slow, sultry dance towards the end of the second stanza, and a lovely shift of harmonic and emotional territory for the song's final couplet. Finally, 'Surgi de l croupe et du bond', the instrumental contribution so carefully prepared in the overlappings of the opening. Again, there was a lovely shift, here inter-stanza (between the first two). Powell beautifully implied distant bells in his contribution, while later a voice-clarinet-voice exchange was absolutely seamless. The close disappeared into nothing: a memorable end to a memorable concert.

Igor Stravinsky – Three Japonese Lyrics. Isabelle Gellis – I wish I could speak to you. Maurice Delage – Quatre poèmes hindus. Jack Sheen – Hollow propanalol séance. Mauice Ravel – Trois poèmes de Stéphane Mallamé.

Eleonore Cockerham (soprano); Manchester Camerata; Jack Sheen (conductor)

Wigmore Hall, London, 18 October 2025

Sabine Devieile's disc is available via Amazon here.

Mirages | Stream on IDAGIO
Listen to Mirages by François-Xavier Roth, Sabine Devieilhe, Alexandre Tharaud, Marianne Crebassa, Jodie Devos, Les Siècles, André Messager, Claude Debussy, Léo Delibes, Maurice Delage, Igor Stravinsky, Ambroise Thomas, Hector Berlioz, Jules Massenet, Charles Koechlin. Stream now on IDAGIO