The alchemy of poetry and song
While writing the songs that became the concert/album Buddhist Rain, poet Bill Manhire and jazz pianist/composer Norman Meehan found the collaboration so rich and rewarding they decided
to extend the experience.
The result will be presented by Te Kōkī, New Zealand School of Music in a special concert on Thursday 14 April. Manhire
will read a number of the poems before they are played—a wonderful bonus for the audience, says his collaborator Meehan.
“Hearing the transformation from spoken to sung words has a certain alchemical magic, giving a glimpse into the creative
process.”
Composer Meehan will be at the piano with Hannah Griffin providing vocals, and Colin Hemmingsen on saxophone and
clarinet. They will be supported by backing vocals from Mara Simpson and Ruth Armishaw, Nick Tipping on bass and Wade
Reeves on guitar, all musicians with strong connections to the NZSM as staff or former students.
"Of the poems included in this programme, Bill wrote eight specifically for Hannah Griffin to sing,” Meehan explains.
“The majority of the other poems come from two collections of his poems, Victims of Lightning and Lifted. Those poems were written without any notion that they might assume life as songs, but they are all so musical that
they seemed to cry out to be set as song lyrics. So far Bill hasn’t objected.”
Professor Manhire, who has recently announced his intention to retire from his position as Director of Victoria
University’s International Institute of Modern Letters, is regarded by many as one of the most seminal influences on
creative writing in New Zealand. He remarks on the pleasurable challenge presented by writing lyrics to be set to music
and sung.
"There is a certain creative freedom in writing words where I didn't feel that every syllable counted and every line
break had to be a pause—all that kind of stuff that poets get obsessed with or precious about,” says Manhire.
“The poem has its own strong music already in your head or on the page. The standard song lyric is keen on repetition,
most obviously in refrains, and it is liberating as a poet to build the refrain in very deliberately, or repeat three
lines in the middle of each stanza. I've always liked repetitions in poems, and rhyme is a kind of repetition. I like
the strange energy that repetition and rhyming gives.”
Norman Meehan, who teaches at the NZSM, says he's happy to take musical ideas from anywhere, but: “To be really
interesting, craft is needed to turn the ideas from raw stones into polished gems.”
“Over the past few years, I have been setting poetry to music and, deciding that I’d like to work with material closer
to home, I started looking at words by New Zealand poets. In Bill’s work I found just the material I was looking
for—earthy poems, funny and wry and full of smart observations and weird little twists.
“In setting the poems it's a matter of living with them for a while, to get a feel for them, and then playing around
with musical ideas until finding something that fits the mood or vibe of the poem. That's generally been pretty easy
with Bill's poems, which I find highly evocative.”
Meehan and Manhire is the first event for 2011 in the NZSM’s Hunter Concert Series. The Thursday evening concerts
feature music making of the very highest calibre and will be presented in the elegant and intimate Hunter Council
Chamber on Victoria University’s Kelburn campus. Future programmes in the series can be found on the NZSM website – www.nzsm.ac.nz.
Meehan and Manhire
7.30pm, Thursday 14 April, 2011
Hunter Council Chamber, Kelburn Campus, Victoria University
Adults $15, Couples $20, Seniors / Students $10
Online ticket sales from Eventfinder
About Te Kōkī, New Zealand School of Music.
Te Kōkī, the New Zealand School of Music was formed in 2006 by the merger of Massey University’s Conservatorium of Music
and Victoria University of Wellington’s School of Music bringing together more than 60 years’ experience in the fields
of classical and jazz performance, composition, historical research and ethnomusicology. NZSM offers students unique
study opportunities with the strengths and advantages of two of this country’s most outstanding universities. While NZSM
is primarily located on two campuses in the heart of Wellington—at Kelburn and Mt Cook—students who live in Auckland are
also able to study jazz programmes at the NZSM’s Albany campus.
NZSM fosters the individual development of students through the wide-ranging teaching expertise of the most prominent
composers, musicologists and performers in New Zealand, many of whom have received international recognition and acclaim
for achievements in their respective fields.
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