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Leonore Overture

collects the music and arts criticism of Keith Powers

Après-chaud: A look back at Portsmouth, NH's Halcyon Music Festival

This feature appears at Classical Voice North America. Please visit that site and read it there—it’s a much more interesting site than this one anyway. Besides, they paid for it.

Violinist Julia Glenn addresses the Halcyon Music Festival audience before a performance of Bartok No. 2. Grace Park, Peter Stumpf and Burchard Tang wait to begin. Taylor Rossi photograph



The Halcyon Music Festival hides in plain sight.

The hipsters who live in stylish Portsmouth, NH, where pianist and HMF founder Heng-Jin Park started her two-weekend festival in 2014, don’t really populate the HMF’s hip-in-their-own-right audience. That loyal audience skews chamber-music–specific.

They will find out about it, or should, soon. Until then, the HMF audience gets to enjoy the musical adventures Park creates, which pivot around striking repertory choices, and the brilliant playing of her accomplished friends.

Devoted? This audience has already proved it.

Like most small festivals, the pandemic nearly did in HMF. Programs were cancelled in 2020, and in 2021 Park was still unable to house the musicians (they stay in nearby University of New Hampshire residences), or mount live performances in St. John’s Episcopal Church. Live streams were born out of necessity, and Park could only hope the future would be better.

“When we came back in 2022, folks were still wary,” Park says. “The opening concert was scarcely attended, and I worried. But I stood up in front of the audience and gave the kind of motivational talk I never thought I could give. I said, ‘I need to enlist you, go talk to your friends and family, get us back to where we were. I want you to come back with one person who has not been here before.’ 

Halcyon Music Festival founder and artistic director Heng-Jin Park honors two of the many devoted attendees. Taylor Rossi photograph

“The audience seemed to rejoice in the task,” she says, still surprised after two years. “The next performance was nearly back to normal. And by last year it felt like we were really back. We had full attendance, and the musicians were a happy bunch.”

HMF runs over two weekends in June, with six performances. “I didn’t invent anything,” Park says. “This model has existed for decades. When I first visited Portsmouth I loved it. There are so many festivals in New England—tons in Maine, and in Vermont. This is a little corner that needs it.” 

Park makes it clear this is no teaching festival, where the roster blends students with professionals. “I could happily go play at teaching festivals, and I have,” she says. “But I wanted to create something that was exactly what I wanted. Other festivals are not yours; it’s not what you envisioned. My happy place is a chamber music festival with a wonderful level of world-class musicians—who are also friends.”

She’s managed that.

Cellist Jonah Ellsworth—Park’s son, Boston Symphony Orchestra section member and colleague with Park and violinist Irina Muresanu in the well-known Boston Trio—of course plays in his mom’s festival. His BSO mates Danny Kim (viola) and newly named principal flute Lorna McGhee joined in. Stalwart string players like violinists Grace Park, Gabriela Dìaz, Julia Glenn and Monica Pegis; cellists David Hardy and Peter Stumpf; with violists Marcus Thompson and Tim Deighton, made repeat appearances over the two weekends.

Park has created a festival where everyone cares. Audiences return concert after concert; the musicians are equally invested. Housed together, rehearsing each day, and performing some of the most interesting chamber music written, the musicians add to the feeling of belonging through their own actions. 

Not playing a certain piece? Park’s colleagues aren’t hiding out in the green room, checking their phones. They turn pages. They come out and sit in the audience. Not a few of them—all of them.

Park’s repertory choices reward such devotion. HMF doesn’t commission works, and anchors most concerts with a chestnut—like the Dvorak D major piano quartet, Mozart’s Dissonance quartet, Tchaikovsky’s Souvenirs de Florence

But the programs extend their appeal beyond the familiar, including corner-of-the-repertory works like Puccini’s Crisantemi string quartet, string duos by Sibelius, Prokofiev and Mozart, the Turina piano quartet, and, most dramatically this summer, George Crumb’s theatrical Vox Balaenae.

Gabriela Dìaz, Monica Pegis, David Hardy and Tim Deighton perform Puccini’s Crisantemi at the Halcyon Music Festival. Taylor Rossi photograph

Concerts take place at St. John’s Episcopal Church, half a block from Portsmouth’s bustling downtown. The church has a good piano and solid acoustics—but it’s still a church.

That means no air-conditioning. So when 100 degree weather coincides with a performance of the gymnastic Vox Balaenae, climate changes the music. 

Everyone hates it indoors in the non-air conditioned summer, but audiences find love in the experience as well. Witnessing the effort to stay tuned, stay composed, and not give in to the obvious discomforts breeds a certain “we’ve been there” camaraderie. Performing music becomes performance art, and at some point during a sweltering event, everyone shares a grin at the impossibilities. There’s a baked-in excuse for everything, good and bad. Even basic readings seem a triumph; mesmerizing readings like this one expand the experience. 

The musicians—Park, Hardy and McGhee—performed in the dark, with deep blue lighting. The score also calls for them to wear masks, but c’mon, it was 100 degrees and felt hotter.

Park worked out on a prepared instrument, plucking, pounding and smacking glass tubes inside the piano. Hardy whistled while he played. McGhee played flute of course, but also sang apart from and then through the instrument, tapping along, as well as reaching over to mallet a triad of chimes that she shared with Hardy. Instruments mimicking (cello/prepared piano, flute/whistling, shimmering flute/piano) created imprecise approximations of the same pitches, to eerie effect. 

Everyone tried to find air to breathe, and appreciate the moment. Memories are fortified by experiences like this.

The Halcyon Music Festival, Heng-Jin Park artistic director, performed June 13–22 at St. John’s Episcopal Church in Portsmouth, NH.

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