When
literature and music are brought together one is almost always assured of a
performance not to be missed. Such were
my thoughts when John MacKenna, prize winning author and Brian Hughes, a first
class traditional musician, announced the project on which both have been
engaged for the past 12 months. The
project involved a musical composition by Brian Hughes to which the writer John
MacKenna provided a narrative. The
combined work in music and words is to mark the centenary of Ernest
Shackleton’s Endurance expedition to
the Antarctic.
2014
marks the centenary of the Endurance
expedition, the greatest survival story ever told. In 1914 Ernest Shackleton and the ship Endurance left Europe as the First World
War was commencing. Shackleton, the
Kilkea, Co. Kildare born Antarctic explorer and his crew hoped to achieve one
of the last great feats by crossing the Antarctic from coast to coast. What followed was one of the most daring and
adventurous escapes in the history of Polar exploration.
The
musical suite composed by Brian Hughes featuring the Monasterevin Gospel Choir
with Brian Hughes and a host of other musicians including Shana Daby and Seamus
Brett will be launched as a CD on Sunday, 26th October 2014. The CD launch is on the same night as the
first public performance of the work which will take place in the George
Bernard Shaw Theatre Carlow, starting at 8.00 p.m. The performance will feature not only the
composer, the writer and the Monasterevin Gospel Choir, but also the Kildare
County Orchestra.
The
stage presentation also includes a multi media element devised by Craig
Blackwell, making this a unique and innovative performance of the story of
Shackleton’s Endurance expedition. The combination of words, music and visual
presentation promises an evening of entertainment not to be missed.
The
work was commissioned by Athy Heritage Centre as part of the centenary
celebrations of the 1914 Endurance Antarctic
expedition. The County Kildare born
explorer is the subject of an exhibition in the Athy Heritage Centre which is
the only permanent exhibition anywhere in the world dedicated to
Shackleton.
Brian
Hughes, who in the past has released a number of CDs of traditional Irish music,
highlighted for me the work which as the composer he undertook to match the
music and the mood to the events which make up the Endurance story. The
principal movements of the composer’s suite highlight the optimism of the
parting, the devastation arising from the ship’s destruction, the crew’s
hopelessness when drifting on ice, culminating in the courageous voyage of the James Caird and the dramatic rescue of
the crew members. The beautiful musical
suite by Brian Hughes is complemented by the written words of John MacKenna which
both the musician and the writer will perform on the Carlow stage on Sunday, 26th
October.
The
performance will be officially opened by Ernest Shackleton’s granddaughter,
Alexandra Shackleton. Alexandra, as patron
of the Shackleton Autumn School now in its 14th year, will be
attending the Autumn School which opens in Athy Heritage Centre on Friday 24th
October. The performance in the George
Bernard Shaw Theatre Carlow is part of this year’s Shackleton Autumn School for
which bookings can be made by contacting the Heritage Centre on (059)8633075 or
by email at athyheritage@eircom.net.
Castledermot
born John MacKenna, who to date has produced an extraordinary range of literary
works comprising poems, plays, short stories and novels, has written another
novel which will be launched on Thursday, 20th November. The venue, an unusual one for a literary
event, is the Arboretum Garden Centre in Carlow where radio personality Joe
Duffy will launch John’s novel, ‘Joseph’. John’s literary works have been the subject
of several awards including the Irish Times fiction prize for 1993. His book of short stories, ‘The Fallen’ reviewed in the Sunday
Times by Penny Perrick was described as ‘raw
beautiful stories set in and around Athy’ by a writer who was ‘marvellously enriching’. Further accolades came with his first
novel, ‘Clare’, which has just been
republished, when Irish novelist Kevin Casey described MacKenna ‘as a writer of increasing confidence and
power’. His literary style drew
comparisons with John McGahern when Kate Donovan reviewed his book, ‘The Last Fine Summer’ for the Irish
Times.
John
MacKenna is a writer whose previous works were usually set in the rural
background of South Kildare, bringing comparisons with Hardy’s affinity with Wessex. The new novel, ‘Joseph’ breaks with this literary fascination with place and as
one of the most notable contemporary Irish fiction writers MacKenna extends his
literary borders with his latest work. The
launch is on 20th November and an invitation is extended to all to attend this
notable event.
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