Darkness Visible: Âme x Lawrence Power review – violist and guests reimagine the concert for the digital age
This ambitious and imaginative concert experience blended live and filmed performance. Not all its experiments felt successful, but at its best this was mesmerising
www.silverguide.site –
While the Southbank Centre marked its 75th anniversary this week with a Danny Boyle spectacular that managed to overlook the building’s six resident orchestras and classical raison d’être in favour of grime, techno and drum’n’bass, the Barbican quietly got on with the business of imagining a concert hall for the 21st century.
Darkness Visible – a collaboration between violist Lawrence Power and film director Jessie Rodger, who together are creative studio Âme, along with a host of starry musical friends – isn’t a flawless show. But as an experiment in thinking through sound, in testing digital limits and amplifying the live concert experience, it has a lot going for it: the start of a longer conversation about how we experience music in a multimedia, post-internet age.
The title comes from Milton’s Paradise Lost: infernal flames that generate, “No light, but rather darkness visible”. It’s a vision of the horror that comes after the forbidden fruit, of knowing things that cannot be unknown. We cannot unknow screens and hyperlinks, so why not use them, Âme asks, to our advantage?
And so Power and co invite their audience on “a journey through the city after dark”. A scrim covers the stage, now opaque, now translucent – playing games with sight and blindness. Behind it sit Collegium Orchestra and conductor Simon Crawford-Phillips; on to it are projected Rodger’s images of London – when we’re allowed to see them. Blindness may be thematically interesting, but over 90 minutes it proves less so visually.
The effects are mirrored in sound. We follow Power with a handheld camera, Ivo van Hove-style, as he leaves the stage after Anders Hillborg’s spiderweb-delicate arrangement of Bach’s chorale Ich ruf zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ and wanders out into the City of London. We meet digital Power with vocalist Maddie Ashman for a skeletal performance of John Dowland’s In Darkness Let Me Dwell in St Bart’s Great Hall; Power encounters violinist Vilde Frang in the Guildhall art gallery, before they drift back on to stage in time for Mozart’s Sinfonia Concertante.
It doesn’t all work, but when it does it’s gently magical. Best of all is the closer – Cassandra Miller’s Simone Weill-inspired viola concerto I Cannot Love Without Trembling. An extended lament, it plays with the in-between spaces: between notes, soloist and ensemble, people. Power bends time and pitch, sometimes in dialogue with the cloudy, slow-phase blocks of orchestral sound, at others in a strange duet for one – his answering voice reduced to a single repeatedly plucked pitch. It’s mesmerising, and not a digital effect in sight.

Comment