Mike
Batt has been and continues to be active in "straight"
classical areas as well as all other points of the musical
spectrum. This page explores his more "straight"
work - (he detests the term "serious" as it implies
flippancy in other areas of music).
He
made his concert debut as a conductor at the Barbican with
the LSO in 1984, with a programme including the Carmen Suites
(Bizet), The Sorcerer's Apprentice (Dukas) and other light
classics, and has since conducted the LSO, LPO and RPO in
various programmes and/or recordings of well-known repertoire
pieces such as The Planets Suite (Holst), Scheherezade (Rimsky
Korsakov) and Romeo and Juliet Fantasy Overture (Tchaikovsky).
In 1990, he was Music Director of the Melbourne Summer Music
Festival, with the State Orchestra of Victoria..
Mike Batt- Classical. (Additional note by Irwin
Slater)
Since then, Mike has had a recurring and constant
relationship with the "repertoire" classics as
a conductor, in between his more pop-based and sometimes
humorous work.
His recording, in 1994 of Holst's "Planets" Suite
for Large Orchestra - plus Elgar's "Pomp and Circumstance"
March No 1 was the very first recording of that repertoire
in the new 20 bit technology. The recording was made at
Watford Town Hall- Mike's ultimate acoustic preference for
classical recording (giving, as it does, a superb bass resonance
combined with a rich warmth on the treble registers). The
Abbey Road mobile recording unit was used for the recording,
originally commissioned by Marshall Cavendish (Partworks)
Ltd for use in the series "The Great Composers"
but now owned by Mike and available via iTunes. The producer
was Robert Matthew Walker, former editor of Music And Musicians
magazine and former director of Classics for CBS and RCA
records.
Mike's relationship with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
has led to various collaborations. The most recent of these-
in live concert terms- was the concert at Powderham Castle,
for Classic FM - on the night of the total eclipse of the
sun last year. The open air concert featured various celestial
repertoire including Richard Strauss: "Also Sprach
Zarathustra", Johann Strauss "The Beautiful Blue
Danube" (As used in Stanley Kubrick's film, "2001:
A Space Odyssey"), Holst:"Jupiter" and "Uranus"
from The Planets, and two movements from Berlioz: "Symphonie
Fantastique".
Mike"s own compositions- even for so called "commercial"
projects - are often classically conceived and performed
from the outset. His scores for The Dreamstone" TV
series, the movie "Keep The Aspidistra Flying"
("A Merry War" in the USA) and the TV series "Watership
Down" all started life as Symphonic suites, which were
later developed into the dramatic context of their film
or TV application.
Mike's concert and Classical works are published and librarised
by Oxford University Press.
Mike is very keen on his conducting, and enjoys enormously
his relationship with and the work he does with orchestras.
"When I was a kid of eleven, I was given an album by
my grandmother.It was called "Music For Frustrated
Conductors", says Mike. "It was things like Vaughan
Williams "Fantasia on Greensleeves" with little
cartoons showing how to conduct the pieces - except that
the cartoons were ridiculously simplistic. I read somewhere
that Simon Rattle had the same album, but I don't know how
true that is. Anyway, when my parents used to go out shopping
on a Saturday morning, I would stack up all the dining room
furniture into a great heap, put handwritten signs around,
saying "violins", "horns" and so on,
and conduct the furniture all morning! My favourite piece
to conduct was Schubert's 9th Symphony, with Brahms 5th
Symphony as a close second. The furniture used to enjoy
playing that one, too. I could whistle them through from
top to bottom, even now..."
Mike says he finds composition and arranging a perfect complement
to conducting. "If you know, after years of hard fought
experience, how to get the brass and basses, for example,
to underpin the bass moments of an orchestration, or you
understand the way to allow a woodwind section or soloist
to cut through the 90 piece accompaniment, it stands you
in good stead to have an opinion on how to balance up a
piece by Delius or Prokofiev" he says. "It also
works in reverse. If you have had the experience of conducting
the LSO at the Barbican or Albert Hall, and can feel the
energy coming from the orchestration of the great masters,
it must effect your own work as a composer or orchestrator."
Recordings available through iTunes:
RPO/BATT
: Holst: "The Planets" and Elgar "Pomp and
Circumstance March No 1"
BATT:
"Dublin Overture" (National Symphony Orchestra
of Ireland)
Coming
soon:
BATT:
"The Dream Stone" Symphonic Suite and "A
Merry War" Suite.
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