Sep/090
Homage to Bob Creech
This is an attempt at a homage (or an homage – pronounce it as ye will) to Bob Creech, and a poor one at that.
Not being a Classical music connoisseur, let alone a buff, I’m not privy to what Bob Creech has achieved in a lifetime of dedication to Classical Music and the education of children in Classical Music. But I know, from the lips of many internationally renowned classical musicians who have given freely of their time in successive Summer Music on the Shannon festivals, that his achievements are gargantuan. I let it to those in the know to fill in the details.
I am writing from my personal experience of Bob Creech.
When Bob asked me to take over the running of the SMS office in UCH, from his wonderful wife Nancy 5 years ago, I was both flattered and petrified. I was flattered because I couldn’t understand why Bob could have such faith in me since, to my mind, I hadn’t proven that I could manage anything, let alone the chaotic maelstrom that was Summer Music on the Shannon. I was petrified because I lacked the confidence and belief in myself that I could do it. Yet, such was my respect for Bob that I could not refuse his request, so I accepted.
That first year in UCH was utter hell for me. SMS didn’t have an office, but was situated in the open area of the ground floor in the Foundation Building between the toilets and the Emergency Exit. I think that says something about how UCH saw the programme at the time – I may rue saying this, but I’ve never been a shrinking violet when it comes to speaking my mind and I don’t intend to start being one now. All that was between the office staff and the outside world were some hastily assembled tables. I remember being constantly worried about somebody making off with our computer equipement, despite the fact that our computer equipment was so outdated as to be worthless, so nobody in their right minds would have touched it anyway. I always did make sure to take my laptop with me wherever I went, however. What was worse was having to talk to the parents of the children on the programme. I felt a mixture of terror, fright, confusion and embarrasment (not necessarily in that order) everytime somebody asked me a question. This heady mix was enhanced by a healthy dollop of worry that something would go drastically wrong, with panic waiting in the wings to make a grand entrance when it did. Eventually I got used to dealing with the public and I relaxed a bit. I think it was only after the third year that I felt I had a handle on how things worked, and more importantly, on how things didn’t work and what to do when they didn’t.
Experience is a great teacher.
[To be continued...]
Sep/090
The SMS Interview: Michael Murphy’s view
We are delighted to welcome Michael Murphy, Director of University Concert Hall (UCH), which is on the campus of University of Limerick (UL).![]()
This is 2nd in a series of interviews we plan to publish about SMS around the theme of “SMS : Significance & Future” - showcasing views of key people in and connected with SMS.
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Michael Murphy’s CV :
- responsible for management, growth and development of UCH
- opened & launched UCH in September 1993
- finance director of Irish based high-tech electronics company with marketing, sales and distribution subsidiaries in the UK, Europe and USA
- chartered accountant @PricewaterhouseCoopers Limerick & London
- Educated @ Blackrock College Dublin & Crescent College Limerick
- born Limerick City
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Favorite sport: Rugby. I was @ Crescent College Limerick & Blackrock College Dublin. Support & follow Munster (& Old Crescent).
Favorite music: Eagles, Eric Clapton & Opera, particularly Verdi
Favorite performance ever: Maria Callas & Eric Clapton
Favorite food: I’m a Francophile. Love the weather, love the country, like most of the people – they can be a bit obnoxious at times. There’s a particular restaurant where you get seafood & fillet steak (served out in the open) followed by Crepe Suzette – truly lovely.
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What was your first contact with SMS?
We opened the Concert Hall (UCH) in 1993…. In 1996 it was brought to my attention that Clare Music Makers Association were inquiring about hiring the Hall for a concert in July. I thought “great stuff, this is our quiet period.” Said “keep dealing away with them”. Weeks later, I noticed we had an evening of classical music, Beethoven, Mozart and all that sort of stuff… “Where did all that come out of?“ I was told that was Clare Music Makers Association.
The joke here is that when I heard Clare Music Makers Association originally, I automatically, incorrectly, assumed they were a trad Irish group. And I’m going “CMMA play Mozart! What the hell is going on?”
Shortly after, I met Bob & Nancy Creech, and whoever they had at that time. I began to realise and understand what they were about.
CMMA is still there. They’re a separate organisation from Bob. He was involved with them; his daughter I think was teaching over there, and they used to have a summer festival, “Summer Music on the Shannon”.
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Where did you first meet Bob Creech?
It was here in Allegro Cafe in UCH. It was just before their performance. They were in: all of a sudden they were all over the place; rehearsing. I was introduced to him, probably by Henri (Box Office Manager) who’d been dealing with their concert arrangements & requirements.
Talking to Bob Creech, I discovered he’d been General Manager of Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra for 10 years. A Canadian, wonderful horn player, a man with a huge CV, played with so many orchestras. We were able to talk about Vancouver.
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What’s the connection between Vancouver, Bob Creech and you?
Suzanne Murphy, my sister, was singing in Vancouver. I was working as accountant for an international business. I had to go to Silicone Valley, San Francisco. I timed the trip so that I could travel up to Vancouver afterwards. Suzanne was performing Lucia de Lammermore. I thought I could hop up there, not realising how far it was. Suzanne sang with Dennis O’Neill. It was a stunning, brilliant performance. It’s one of my favourite operas. A magnificent evening. I was absolutely proud in that packed Vancouver hall: here was this girl from Limerick singing in on an international stage.
Next morning in Vancouver Airport, I went to find a newspaper, to see if there was a review. There were big headlines “Nothing Like This For 10 Years“. Vancouver Opera was the second home of Joan Sutherland [hear her sing here]. It was 10 years since she’s sung there. Talking to Bob Creech years later: he was the leader of the orchestra that night!
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What was your first impression of Bob Creech?
Small in stature, well able to listen. I found him an exceptionally interesting character. As you get to know him more and more, you realise he’s had an amazing musical career. He’s built up a wonderful network of contacts with whom he’s kept in touch. People like Carl Davis & Jose Louis Garcia (who’s come to UCH to give tutorials in the Concert Hall).
It’s the legacy he’s created, as musician & arts administrator, including the founding of a Summer School in Vancouver. Bob is forceful…. He’s worked with Paul McCartney, even had the idea of getting Paul to come to Limerick. I’ll believe that when I see it.
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What attracted you to the idea of giving SMS a home in UCH?
It fell into our lap. If you were to prepare a job spec for artistic director, Bob Creech would fit it ideally. What really attracted him was the acoustic of the Hall. At the beginning, I was simply renting a hall to Clare Music Makers. Year after year, Bob Creech came back. SMS were hiring school rooms in Ennis & Limerick. But it was splintered. That doesn’t make for a good festival
Bob was bringing staff in. It grew from one performance. Bob was pressing me for space for tutorials, and then residential student accommodation. It grew and moved in, to the point where there is almost nothing in Ennis. You could say SMS migrated in.
Clare Music Makers is run by a committee. The SMS summer school grew out of it. CMMA found SMS was becoming too big; they were exhausted by it, and wanted to discontinue the relationship. This had financial implications for SMS.
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What were the implications of SMS moving from Clare Music Makers to UCH?
SMS was in receipt of funding from various agencies, including the Arts Council, in the name of CMMA. SMS is not a limited company, limited by guarantee. Bob came to me. We discussed what to do. The obvious thing to do was for UCH to assume SMS as a project of ours, run by Bob Creech.
I was happy, having observed the growth of SMS over many years.
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What’s become the relationship of UCH to SMS?
There was no perceived change. Bob Creech ran SMS. We’d discuss it. Bob Creech would tell me about, say, John Perry. I’d say “I don’t mind what you do artistically, you’re in charge of that area. But I need SMS to break even.”
Then there was the development of the Youth Opera Theatre Programme. Bob Creech’s contacts again. With the production of Noah’s Flood, SMS developed an Arts Programme for two weeks. I was excited by it: kids making the art for the opera staging, rehearsing and learning alongside professional musicians. It’s the discipline of the process, including individual solo performance.
But opera is very expensive to put on… Bob Creech is an artistic entrepreneur.
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Has the expansion of SMS created any challenges for you?
SMS has grown because of the number of students, needing more and more rooms. Bob says “get rooms for me”. I’ve had to go to university departments to acquire rooms for rehearsal, and try to keep up with the expansion. SMS is now a 4 week event. That excites me… but has brought its own challenge.
The campus, in the ’90s, was like a desert all summer, all idle. SMS fitted in neatly with my ambitions to have activity here on the campus. In recent years, the UL campus in summer has become a destination for all sorts of students, many here for language study. Now it’s become difficult to find accommodation on campus. SMS doesn’t have the same freedom as before.
Sep/091
Interview with Michael Murphy, director UCH, coming up soon
On Wednesday I drove from Cork to Limerick and interviewed Michael Murphy about Summer Music on the Shannon (SMS). We talked about his experience of SMS for almost an hour.
I think you’ll be interested in his perspective.
All I have to do is finish knocking my notes and recording into shape.
Michael is Director of University Concert Hall. He’s David Collopy’s manager and has a really interesting take on the SMS story.
Watch this space.
Aug/092
Just when you thought SMS was over for 2009
I’ve just come off the phone with Bob Creech. He’s in Quilty, Co Clare; I’m in Glanmire, Co Cork.
I expected I’d find him putting his feet up, recovering after the exertions of the 2009 season.
Instead he’s been up to Limerick this morning (about 90 minute x 2 drive), cleaning out the accommodation (apartments in Brookfield Hall) with Nancy, his wife. People leave; someone has to return the rooms in the state they were in when they were allocated. Imagine Bob and Nancy having to do that. Why can’t someone else do this? []
As if that wasn’t enough, Bob tells me that the next round of application for 2010 funding to the Arts Council of Ireland has to be in by 25 September.
And, there are reports to funding agencies after 2009 too – like the Limerick Regeneration Agency…
I offered to help, but, living so far away (in Irish terms Quilty to Cork is a long way), there isn’t a lot I can do. By the time Bob had shown me what’s needed, I’d have to drive back home.
Administrative assistance:
Bob’s had a think about administrative assistance. But such a paid post would eat into the budget. So, right now, a paid assistant to Bob doesn’t seem a runner. If I lived close by, I could think about becoming an unpaid volunteer…
So we have an unsatisfactory situation.
Something will have to be done. We need a solution folks… It’s surely time for a big think about what SMS needs for the future.
I hope you’ve all read the David Collopy interview…
Aug/093
SMS Office now closed
Well, we’ve finally disassembled what has been the Summer Music on the Shannon office for 2009. I had some help from Ana Marques, Deirdre Stack Marques and Naoise Stack Marques yesterday and today in expunging all traces of SMS 09 from the Foundation Building at UL. This included taking down all the signs that had been put up on notice boards, walls, and doors throughout the Foundation Building’s ground floor where we operated from, as well as our Room Numbers and maps from the room doors and dressing room doors backstage which served as tuition rooms for the instrumental faculty as well as changing rooms for the many performances on the University Concert Hall stage.
The office itself had to be put back into boxes for transport back to Clare Music Makers which stores SMS office stuff during the year. The computer equipment (consisting of a 17″ CRT monitor, two speakers, an aging epson printer, and CPU, plus cables for same) has been unplugged, battened down where necessary, and taped up ready for transport also. All the tables and chairs have been removed and put back where we got them. So I’ve finally moved out of UCH and the SMS office has gone into hibernation until the summer of 2010, when it will again spring into existence all going well.
The music library is still in the process of being dismounted and put back in its multitude of sturdy plastic containers. This job has fallen to Bob Creech and Bruce Dunn and should be complete by this evening or tomorrow morning. All the music on loan from Germany, Sweden and the UK has to be packaged up and posted off. The remainder goes back into storage at Clare Music Makers in Ennis. Colie Tubridy will transport it, together with the office, tomorrow or Thursday.
Then there is all the musical equipment that has been on loan from Clare Music Makers, the University of Limerick Orchestra, and others, consisting of music stands, percussion equipment and other bits and pieces, which has to be returned to the owners in pristine state. And last, but not least, there’s the TAM on loan from RTE which has to be taken back to Dublin.
This is some of the essential preparatory work that goes on in the background both before and after an event such as Summer Music on the Shannon, that goes unnoticed by the public, and without which SMS could not take place at all.
Aug/094
Three (hornless) Tenors sing the Horn Concerto
At the Mozart and Wine fundraiser on Monday night 10 August last, I thought we were in for a treat when Bob Creech stepped forward with his french horn and made to play the Horn Concerto. Instead he was joined by Dennis Miller and Bruce Dunn without their horns. They then proceeded to sing the Horn Concerto to much laughter from the audience.
Left to right: Dennis Miller, Bruce Dunn, Bob Creech
Aug/090
Pigeon trouble at the Paddock
Much hilarity was had this lunch time at the Paddock when a pigeon, realising it was about to fly into the Paddock restaurant, made an emergency hard turn with milimetres to spare and almost got itself entangled in Gillian Mott’s hair. Gillian performed a spectacular ducking manoeuvre while simultaneously letting fly a very audible expletive quiet unlike any sounds that regularly emanate from her violin! Some of the witnesses to this interlude were Bob Creech (though I think Bob had his back turned and his ear bent to his mobile phone at the time), Bruce Dunn, Colie Tubridy, Pat Downes, and Patrick Stack.
Aug/090
Great fun at the Wine Tasting Fundraiser!
We had great fun at the annual SMS Wine Tasting Fundraiser at the Georgian House on Monday night last. The only down side was the small crowd the showed up. We must promote it better in future. Here are some photos I took on my mobile phone of the proceedings:
Elizabeth St-Syr, David Gaudry, David Pigott, David Bucknall, Janne Johansson
Left to right: Paule Préfontaine
The Lepraclarinet - who's under that hat?
David Stewart at the Georgian House, Limerick with Elizabeth St-Cyr on the rightr
Bob Creech about to attempt the Horn Concerto!
