Category Archives: Favourite Places

A guitarist in the crypt, a saxophonist at Raven Row…

In the House

In the House

Reflections on our musical tours of Spitalfields

This is one of the reasons why we love doing what we do. When people share with us how Spitalfields Music has affected their lives it’s hard not to get a warm fuzzy feeling inside. One of our longtime supporters Humphrey Evans has written an e-book 14 Random Observations which features some of his memories of attending our In the House events over the years. Part concert series, part historical tour, In the House presents intimate music performances at venues such as Town House and other Georgian Fournier Street buildings, many with strong ties to the Spitalfields silk weaving industry.

We are audience

When you come out of the Bishopsgate entrance to Liverpool Street station, look up to your right. That plainish Victorian red-brick is effectively the back of what was once the Great Eastern Hotel, now refurbished as the Hyatt Andaz. Walk on and the more florid Bishopsgate frontage itself comes into view, stepped gables and stone detailing, but what you will notice, now I have drawn it to your attention, is that on the first floor, running round that corner, the windows, eight in all, I think, have been bricked up.

Weird. What you will work out is that behind those blanked-off windows there must be quite a large room, cut off from any contact with the outside world. And there is. It’s a Masonic temple which you reach from inside the hotel down an almost secret winding staircase.

The temple is a place of marble and mahogany dating from 1912. There’s a throne-like seat at each end, about 50 chairs banked up along the sides, a black-and-white chequered floor, an ornate ceiling featuring zodiac signs, a dark and somewhat oppressive grandeur. Who knows what the Masons get up to in there. For me it will always be where I heard Rebecca Crawshaw, then a student at the Royal Academy of Music, take on the baroque trumpet, perhaps two metres of brass tubing looped back on itself and drilled with a couple of finger holes, no valves, in order to render two movements from Henry Purcell’s Sonata for trumpet in D major.

Interesting music in interesting places could be the unofficial motto for the organisers, Spitalfields Music, who, for some years now, have often featured a generically named In the House event as part of their summer or winter festivals. In the early evening, some 60 or 80 people meet up outside Christ Church Spitalfields, the Hawksmoor masterpiece, and then, split into groups of 15 or 20, are led off for a series of mini-concerts, soloists from the Royal Academy of Music telling us a little bit about the instruments they play before performing a mix of older pieces and modern works, often with the composer in attendance – world premieres, in fact.

After the masonic trumpeting, we moved on to hear a guitarist play in the excavated remains of a crypt that had turned into a charnel house, a saxophonist in the Raven Row art gallery, and a cellist in Dennis Severs’ house.

Dennis Severs’ house. Spitalfields. 18 Folgate Street. Some half a dozen streets round here – Fournier Street, Folgate Street, Wilkes Street, Princelet Street, Hanbury Street – pack in terraces of top-of-the-range Huguenot silk merchants’ houses. Here’s a date to hang on to: 1685. Louis XIV, France’s Sun King, revoked the protestant-protecting Edict of Nantes, put in place by Henri IV, Henri of Navarre. More than 200,000 Huguenots left France, perhaps 25,000 joining those already in London. These houses were built from the 1720s on, and through that century, with Spitalfields silk a sought-after status symbol and the import of French silk banned, the area must have been awash with money. (Digression: if you want some idea of why the Huguenots fled so precipitately, take a look at the film La Reine Margot, which starts with the St Bartholomew’s Day massacre of protestants in 1572.)

In Spitalfields, things went downhill in the nineteenth century. Money ran out. New waves of refugees came in, such as Jews fleeing the pogroms of eastern Europe. The houses mouldered, falling into something beyond multi-occupancy with whole families crammed into single rooms. But then, in the 1970s, people such as the architectural historian Dan Cruickshank, author of The Secret History of Georgian London, came to realise that these houses, unprepossessing in their run-down near-derelict state, could be restored to something that was structurally sound and, because of their high-spec origins, impressively desirable. Much of the Georgian panelling and the woodwork of the staircases, for instance, had been boarded up over the years, rather than ripped out. Dan Cruickshank’s own house still has uneven Georgian glass in some of the windows.

Dennis Severs’ House is typical. Well, typical is a relative term. Dennis Severs was an artist who took his house right back to what it once was – not what it could have become, but what it was. There’s no electricity in the place, for instance. Anyone can visit, can have the experience, because they do paid-for tours. On this December night, our group files tentatively in – these houses can be both big and yet constrained with tight-fitting staircases and, in this case, tables awash with knick-knacks and fripperies to carefully avoid.

Glowing fires in the fireplaces mean the house is warm. Candles everywhere let you see how much you see in a dimmer light then you are used to. We hear Emily Smith play Bach on her baroque cello and then a modern piece, one of those world premieres, by Robert Peate – 300 years bridged, in all sorts of ways, just like that.

On other nights we have heard other players in other buildings: a bassoonist in the lived-in first-floor living room of a family home in Wilkes Street; an accordion player in the rectory behind Christ Church Spitalfields; a tuba player in that same rectory; a double-bass player in what has become an architects’ office in Princelet Street; a recorder player in Worrall House, tucked into a courtyard between Fournier and Princelet Streets, giving us Georg Telemann and a new work by Elo Masing, a young Estonian composer.

We have been exposed to musical cutting edges. Violinist Galya Bisengalieva hooked herself up to a computer to offer us Sebastian Rapacki’s Vox humana for violin and live electronics. The 23-year-old Swedish composer himself was there to listen and comment: “At one moment in the rehearsal process, I swear I could hear a human voice crying out in despair – but that was just Galya.”

We have been invited to identify ourselves with the aristocratic audiences of eighteenth-century Parisian salon concerts, this in the austerely comfortable L-shaped one-and-a-half rooms on the first floor of a private house on Fournier Street. The half room is very nearly filled by a harpsichord, itself bought on Brick Lane. I am standing virtually in the harpsichord, a few have chairs, others are sitting on the floor or perched out on the stairs: “Take care. The stairs are uneven.”

Our harpsichordist, Nathaniel Mander, dark blond hair, cleft chin, wearing a black velvet jacket and polo neck sweater, tells us something about one of the composers whose pieces he is going to play, the massively fashionable Claude Babastre, whose pupils included Marie Antoinette (“The French took the harpsichord for their own”), before exciting us with the elaborately exuberant La Lugeac.

In another house in Fournier Street we have sat in another L-shaped conformation, a small fire burning in the corner, painted panels of flowers among a ribbon of leaves on every wall, while a cellist played extracts from a Bach cello suite and a George Crumb sonata. Afterwards we have come downstairs for a glass of wine and, wonderfully, a permitted wandering around. Everywhere there are paintings and pictures, including a large view of Christ Church from along Brushfield Street. “This is the one I want to live in,” says Ros.

And again in Fournier Street, this one more commercial, a larger, panelled room with nothing in it but the chairs set out for the 16 people in our group, we have experienced the astringent, visceral thrill of a full-power onslaught by close-up flute. The player, Kayoko Minamino, is small, slight, as severely presented as the room itself in a floor-length gown over a dark scarlet dress. She breathes in, she begins – and the sound spears through you, cleaning out every cobweb.

Our most recent experience featured a violin and accordion duo playing in the Sandy’s Row synagogue. The building goes back long before the Jewish influx. As synagogue president Harvey Rifkind described it, when explaining why they had needed to seek a restoration grant: “A Huguenot roof was collapsing onto a Huguenot ceiling which would have fallen onto our very non-Huguenot heads.”

What we heard was violinist Abe McWilliams and accordionist Martynas Levickis playing an Anton Piazzolla tango and their own arrangements of Lithuanian folk songs. “We have the melody,” they said, “but, to be honest, most of what we are doing is improvisation.” They swing from slow, dragging plaint to driving rhythm, the violin cascading notes, the accordion opening up like the breathing rib cage of some primordial creature.

And then we can look back to our first time, our entry into this hidden world, our wonder at what lay behind the street facades. A front door opened up. A man said come in. We rattled down two short, cramped flights of stairs and out into a courtyard garden, high slightly unexplained brick walls suggesting a vanished presence of past buildings. A silver birch, almost house high, stands amid flagstones and greenery. The tiniest of rills splashes water along the length of one wall. And as the setting sunlight of a June evening lingers, we hear clarinettist Scott Lygate play Luciano Berio’s Lied and Belá Kovács’ Hommage à J S Bach.

I could live like this. I am astonished to have been invited in.

By Humphrey Evans

***

If you were inspired by Humphrey’s writing and would like an opportunity to explore Spitalfields, you may be interested in Flow Forms, part of Scanner’s Associate Artist series co-curated by Elizabeth Walling of Gazelle Twin. Discover secret Spitalfields in an unusual tour of its underground spaces via site-specific sound installations and pop-up performances.

To read the rest of Humphrey’s We are audience amongst other tales check out his Kindle e-book, 14 Random Observations.

My favourite place for… delicious pancakes

In a Shrove Tuesday special of Our Favourite Places, Spitalfields Music’s Development Manager, Camille De Groote divulges her passion for pancakes courtesy of our local Crêpeaffaire.

When I was asked to share my favourite place in Spitalfields with our blog readers, I did not have to think twice! Crêpeaffaire is my favourite place in Spitalfields, bien sûr. I am a massive pancake fan; whatever shape or size they come in – with egg and salmon for breakfast, delicious ham and cheese for lunch or yummy chocolate crêpes for desert! Every Saturday morning I make fresh pancakes – it’s my start to the weekend. However, during the week, having access to delicious crepes only 10 steps from our office is perfect! I always look forward to picking up my favourite snack on the way to our awesome Festival venues (Christ Church Spitalfields, Shoreditch Church, Village Underground and many more!)

Crêpeaffaire is my favourite place, because they do my favourite food, and they do it incredibly well indeed! I could do with a Bananalicious crêpe right now – banana and Belgian chocolate, mmmmmmm!

Camille De Groote
Development Manager

Crêpeaffaire, Spitalfields is at 16 Horner Square, Old Spitalfields Market, London EC1 6EW

My Favourite Places around Spitalfields

Our Learning & Participation Programme Director, Clare Lovett shares with us some of her favourite places in the area.

For thinking, meetings and catching up with friends: Skylight Cafe

I’m always on the lookout for great meeting spots, and I’ve recently discovered the fantastic Crisis Skylight Cafe on Commercial Street.  The cafe is just beyond the hustle and bustle of the market, and has plenty of space to spread out! They have amazing coffee and cakes; lunch here is also delicious!  Recent meetings have included discussions with potential Associate Artists and there’s usually a whole bundle of folks catching up and planning projects.  It’s an inspirational space, which also happens to provide on-the-job training and experience for homeless people and ex-offenders.  If you’re in need of a still point in a mad world of shopping, sightseeing or planning your next project, then Crisis Skylight Cafe is your thinking place.

For people watching, chilling out at lunch and spotting interesting Art:  Bishops Square

There’s always something going on at Bishops Square. On the rare occasion that I can pause for lunch, it’s my top place to sit and watch the world go by.  Recent activity has included a new installation of butterflies in jam jars, with confuses city workers and tourists trying to work out whether they’re real or not (they’re not)…the wonderful Spitalfields E1 Routemaster is often parked outside and there’s a real sense of relaxation before the onslaught of the afternoon stint of work.  Grab a falafel wrap from Pilpel, or a hot sandwich from Golds and watch the world in microcosm!

 

My Favourite Place for…chilling out after work

In this Staff Pick post, Ellie Folkes, our Festivals Programme Manager shares with us how she unwinds after work.

My favourite place to head to for a good night out after work is just around the corner to Folgate Street.(Undiscovered Spitalfields at Dennis Sever’s House, Summer Festival 2011)

In a couple of weeks I will be treating my mum to a visit to Dennis Severs’ House and I can’t wait. At any time of year it’s such a special place to visit, transporting you back through the centuries through sight, sound and smell, but it is particularly magical at Christmas time when the house is decorated with festive splendour – evergreens and the smell of pine needles fill the house as you explore the candlelit home of the Huguenot Jervis family. Once you’ve left the house and stepped back into the 21st century, pop across the road to the Water Poet pub – they serve delicious pub grub (including a mouth-watering Christmas menu) AND they even have an underground cinema, which screens anything from cult Korean horror to A Muppet Christmas Carol…. The perfect night out in these cold, foggy wintery months!

Ellie Folkes
Programme Manager: Festivals

Image credit: James Berry mrnovemberphotography.co.uk

My Favourite Place for…Hot and Hearty food – Micha food stall

Spitalfields Music has a new exciting series of feature posts coming up. We are finding out where our staff like to wander in Spitalfields when they are not busy working. In this staff pick post, Cathy Birch, our Learning & Participation Programme Manager explains to us what a bread bowl is, and points us in the right direction to find hot and hearty food in Spitalfields Market!

Micha

Micha

With so much to grab your attention in the bustle of Spitalfields Market it could be easy to miss one of this area’s real food treats! Nestled in a corner of the Old Spitalfields Market, there’s a row of food stalls and right in the middle, often masked by the queues for its wares, is Micha. Here you’ll find an assortment of delicious goodies, from beautiful fresh salads and soups to falafel and sandwiches. But for me the reward of the queue is their hot & hearty baked potatoes and, discovered to my joy a few weeks ago, bread bowls (for the uninitiated these are pasta and sauces but served in a freshly baked bowl of bread – Obviously). The fillings are always brilliantly put together and there’s a good range to choose from; plus the portions are so huge there’s often enough to save for later! It’s definitely also worth mentioning that despite the generous servings and beautiful ingredients you’ll never spend more than a few pounds in Micha – though you might have to allow a few more for a mid afternoon coffee after such a hearty lunch…

Micha is located in Old Spitalfields Market.