The brilliant Scottish guitarist Sean Shibe will join Manchester Collective for ‘Rosewood‘ in the Howard Assembly Room on Wednesday 10 May, moving between classical and electric guitar in a programme ranging from ravishing baroque music to modernist experimentation and blistering 21st-century distortion.
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“The way Manchester Collective explore music and programming is probably the start point that I operate from, too”, enthuses Sean: “I tend to deal with music that is either very early or quite contemporary”.
“I play the classical guitar, the electric guitar, and I also play a bit of a Renaissance lute, and I think all of these different instruments have different strengths.
“Traditionally the lute is associated with the aristocracy and the church. But the classical guitar’s origins are different, in that it was seen as the instrument of the peasants: it’s an instrument of protest and of the proletariat. In the 1700s the aristocracy took it on and were role-playing as peasants in this sort of Arcadian renewal, but really, it’s always been an anti-establishment instrument. Given this history it makes sense that the first frontmen of rock played the electric guitar and it was again seen as something barbaric.
“The classical guitar is an instrument that has many deficits of volume, sustain and projection – and good repertoire actually, when you compare it to other instruments. But it does have a wealth of colour and you’re using this huge tonal palette to make up for the things that it lacks; even using the colour to provide the illusion of the repertoire being better than it is, and it’s these aspects that draw me back to the instrument.
“The electric guitar is something altogether different. It’s not really about smoke and mirrors, it’s much more literal. You can add on a pedal and plug it into an amplifier and crank it up and you are, objectively, sort of without boundary. It’s only limited by your own imagination, and I think that, by placing the two instruments alongside one another, you really experience something that is sonically symbiotic: the two instruments bring out each other’s strengths.
“I’m very excited about working with Manchester Collective on this programme that we’ve put together. Usually when you’re working with an ensemble, you’re brought in to play a concerto and you have 20 minutes within a programme. You do your thing and maybe the conductor or the artistic director has decided the rest of the programme. We’ve made something that is more of an experience than simply a concert, and I think that’s really where the future is: we need to make things that are much more immersive in every way”.