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Chi-chi Nwanoku, BBC Radio 3, March 2nd, 2008 Patricia Hammond, your ears should be burning. Your voice has captivated so many of our listeners that they're queueing up, writing in and tripping over themselves, desperate to hear you again. Charles Giles wrote "I heard her singing Autumn Leaves in your programme last year, and thought it was stunning." Likewise, Sylvie Hardy says that she's a changed woman since hearing Patricia Hammond, and that her disc is a revelation. "Please play any track from it." Well, Ava Scott has made the choice of track very easy for me. She writes "When I was a little girl in the 1930s, my mother used to play me an old, old record before I went to bed. It was the Berceuse from Jocelyn by Godard. I'd forgotten what it was called, and I'd forgotten the singer on the record for years and years. But then I was at a concert in Bushey, Hertfordshire, and a charming mezzo-soprano sang it, and the memories came flooding back. I've discovered recently that she'd recorded it, and I must say that her version is absolutely lovely. The mezzo-soprano's name is Patricia Hammond. The CD is entitled Le Charme and I do hope you can somehow find it, and play the Berceuse for me." Jan DeGrass, Coast Reporter, March 2006 DIVA DELIGHTS: Mezzo-soprano Patricia Hammond performed before a full crowd at the Sunshine Coast Arts Centre last Friday. The singer, who was raised on the Coast and now lives in London, delighted the audience with her ability and effervescent manner. She sang compositions in Italian, French and German - many of which had been set to music by accompanying pianist Michael Brough, also of London. Highlights included an operatic segement, a French version of Autumn Leaves, a Brough arrangement of the Irish folk tune Danny Boy and an undeservedly forgotten Irving Berlin number, You'd Be Surprised. Hammond closed with a nostalgic song from Don Messer's Jubilee, 'Til We Meet Again, followed by an encore duet with her mother Jo Hammond. Brian Newson, France Lynch Herald, November, 2004 After hearing Patricia Hammond singing in the first concert in a series at St. John the Baptist's Church recently, I think I would agree with Tom Conti that she does have one of the most beautiful voices I have heard. Patricia Hammond and Michael Brough, the two musicians, gave very assured performances while their pleasant, friendly presentation soon achieved a good rapport with the audience. The programme, which had an autumn flavour, held something for everyone, ranging from The Honeysuckle and the Bee to César Franck's Panis Angelicus. Patricia was equally happy singing both sorts of music with a beautiful range of expression and very considerable vocal dexterity. But I was particularly interested in a group of French songs and admired the way she carried off Jean-Baptiste Weckerlin's Tambourin. She also included three short interesting Lieder written for her by Michael Brough whcih gave a very pleasant change of direction to the programme. Both performers have obviously spent much time working together as Michael's supporting role of accompanist gave accomplished backing to Patricia's singing.
Andrew Stewart, Music Week, February 28th, 2004 "[Terra Firma] has also established its own label, Belleville, issuing an album of rarely heard French art songs last October...Le Charme presents a platform for young Canadian mezzo-soprano Patricia Hammond, whose very distinctive tone recalls a lost world of French chanson and art song. The disc includes one premiere recording and rarities that last entered the catalogue in the days of 78s." Read Amazon.co.uk customer reviews of 'Le Charme'
Jan
DeGrass, Arts and Entertainment Writer, Coast Reporter (Canada) November 2003 Mezzo
soprano Patricia Hammond, 28, a graduate of Elphinstone, delighted more than 135
people at Canada House in London, England, Oct. 21 when she launched her first
commercially produced CD Le Charme. The songs on Le Charme are sung in French. Hammond has a variety of lieder and art songs in various languages in her repertoire, including German lieder by Brahms and Schumann, English art songs by Edward Elgar and her favoured French songs by Claude Debussy and Cecile Chaminade, among others. Her recent string of musical credits includes soloist for the Manchester Bach Choir, and most recently, singing with the chorus of the Berlin Philharmonic in Germany and Switzerland. In past years, she has performed on the Coast several times to critical acclaim, and she often sings at private recitals such as a recent one at the home of actor Tom Conti who once trained to be a classical pianist. A reviewer for Culture-Kiosque called her performance a moving and fascinating demonstration of what can be achieved in French art song.
Extracts from the notice by John Sidgwick, published in Culture-Kiosque, on Patricia Hammond's recital given at the house of Mr. Tom Conti on 12 September 2002. " the English mezzo-soprano Patricia Hammond gave a moving and fascinating demonstration of what can be achieved in French art song and she was admirably partnered by an exceptionally gifted pianist, Zoë Mather. At the age of twenty-eight, Miss Hammond is in full possession of her vocal powers and she exploits these in the interests of both poet and composer. Moreover, she does not rest on the laurels of possessing a hauntingly-beautiful voice as some singers might be tempted to do; on the contrary, without ever departing from the purest vocal sound, she constantly varies its colour and intensity according to the mood and the meaning of the words. It is Miss Hammond's contention that Joseph Kosma's setting of Jacques Prévert's "Feuilles Mortes" (Autumn Leaves), far from being a mere cabaret song, is a true representative of the art song - and that is precisely what it became in her treatment of it. Avoiding all excess, she sang in sheer simplicity and in so doing, lent the song quite unsuspected depth, well beyond the mere nostalgia to which we have been accustomed. In all, a truly priviliged moment of music"
Patric Standford, Yorkshire Post, Monday March 4th 2002 "(Rebecca Caine's) partner in the duet 'I waited for the Lord' was Patricia Hammond, whose calm clarity sadly made only one appearance."
Véronique Jacôt, reviewing in the Journal du Pays-d'Enhaut, le 3 Janvier 2002 "A côté de ses dialogues brillants avec la trompette, (mezzo-soprano Patricia Hammond) offrit encore deux pièces en solo accompagnées à l'orgue, l'air sautillant "Gott hat alles wohl gemacht", BWV 35, interprété avec précision, brio et délicatesse tout à la fois, ainsi que le poignant "Hymne du soir" de Purcell; Mlle. Hammond, qui semble être née pour chanter ce compositeur, prêtà cette pièce une pofondeur recueillie émouvante jusqu'aux larmes."
Kerry Regier reviewing a performance of the Dvorak Stabat Mater on "West Coast Classics," CFRO-FM, Vancouver, July 2000: "A singer in another class altogether" Patricia Hammond's mezzo solo stood out particularly. In a fine quartet of soloists, she excelled; and although she's clearly a singer in another class altogether, she never upstaged the other soloists, another remarkable achievement beyond her splendid musicality. Hammond sang with intense commitment and musical intelligence, and had the remarkable ability to vary her timbre to suit the expression of the text, something I've heard only rarely, even among famous soloists. This nearly-lost capacity for variety was common among singers of the early twentieth century. Hammond's long and assiduous study of the history of singing has rewarded her, but she never sounded old-fashioned in the Dvorak. I'm looking forward eagerly to more from this young singer.
Taken from an article in The Reporter, Canada, by Allan Crane, August 2001 "Striking Mezzo Indulges Nostalgia" The
audience was small but enthusiastic at Pender Harbour's performance centre on
August. 20. Titled Love's Old Sweet Song, Patricia Hammond's mezzo-soprano recital
with David Stratkauskas, piano, was an evening of nostalgia encompassing selections
in English and French. Extracts from customer reviews of 'Le Charme' on Amazon.co.uk: This
is a great CD! Patricia Hammond has a truly beautiful voice; OK, there are other
good singers around but she is something really special. You don't have to speak
French to enjoy these beautifully produced songs. Everybody who has heard my copy
of this CD reacts in the same way: they want to know who she is and what else
she has recorded (the answer to the last, apparently, is nothing, yet. So come
on you label people, give us a break). What's more, the piano accompaniment by
Zoe Mather is hugely accomplished and sensitive.An excellent CD to dip into. I
find Miss Hammond's voice able to transport me away from the dreariness of everyday
life, into a state of calm and wellbeing that is quite addictive! The songs are
charming, and the delivery is without equal
the tone of the piano is splendidly
revealing, involving and yet perfectly supporting of the vocal. It is also wonderfully
played by Zoe Mather, whose name I have encountered before. (I
am) very impressed with the standard of playing and singing. A lot of thought
must have gone into researching and choosing the repertoire. Charming! when
my sister sent me this cd I couldn't turn it off. The sensitivity and vulnerability
of this unusual voice grabbed my emotions by the throat and wouldn't let go. Even
if I couldn't understand French (and the diction is excellent) I would have understood
enough of the meaning from the phrasing and the way it's sung. I'm
not normally an enthusiast for French music (other than Berlioz) before Debussy
and Ravel, and heard this CD more or less by accident, but I was quickly seduced
by this varied, interesting, emotionally rewarding programme, and by a beautiful
voice and a sensitive response to the poetry of the songs
The famous "Plaisir
d'amour" (Martini) is sung with true sincerity: great sadness but completely
devoid of any excessive languishing. "Les Feuilles Mortes" (Kosma) the
original of "Autumn leaves" is a real pleasure to hear sung so beautifully
and with restraint
.Buy it and enjoy it with your partner! ...a
fantastic disc, with the musicians, pianist Zoe Mather, and mezzo-soprano Patricia
Hammond, absolutely tops. Patricia Hammond has a meltingly gorgeous voice and
she sings these songs in a seductively sweet way. My favourite track has to be
'Les Feuilles Mortes' which is the original French version of 'Autumn Leaves'.
You've never heard this song sung like this before and you won't want it any other
way after! The tunes are great, the performances great, and there are texts and
translations to all the songs in the generous booklet.
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