ASQ and Post Dining dish up a sensory treat for Fringe
Adelaide Fringe
Guest will smash slabs of chilli chocolate to the accompaniment of a rousing Shostakovich string quartet in an intimate food-meets-music experience presented by the ASQ and Post Dining in new Adelaide Fringe hub Masonic Lodge.
“We hope that the music will heighten the sense of taste and food, and that the food will equally heighten the sense of the music and the two will just go hand in hand,” Australian String Quartet viola player Stephen King says of the PitchFork event.
“The experience will involve smell as well as taste as well as feel and touch, so it’s all-immersive. It’s so much fun for us to put this together.”
PitchFork is a joint production by the Adelaide-based ASQ and local food experience presenters Post Dining, with a program of nine short pieces of music by both classical and contemporary composers accompanied by a range of complementary flavours.
There will be three shows (March 5, 6 and 7) with around 40 audience members seated cabaret-style in the foyer of the 130-year old Masonic Lodge (aka Freemasons’ Hall) on North Terrace.
“We’ve always felt that music is one of the senses that combines so well with the sense of taste – even when we think about programs normally, we’re thinking about balancing them for people and what would combine well, just like a chef would, so it seemed like just a natural marriage for these two things to go together,” King tells InDaily.
The ASQ members worked with Post Dining’s Stephanie Daughtry and Hannah Rohrlach to create the program, which begins with the guests being seated to the sounds of Philip Glass’s String Quartet No. 3 Mishima.
“In the beginning we will have something a bit more welcoming or transcendental, if you like… something that just sets the mood in a very different way, and then we will walk the audience through a whole set of different music,” King says.
“It includes a lot of very recent music, from composers such as Bryce Dessner from The National, so he’s a rock musician, to Joe Chindamo, who’s an Italian Australian who’s played a lot of jazz and writes some really jazz-influenced music, and then we go back to Scarlatti, who was the very earliest writer for string quartets back in the late 1600s.”
For many of its previous shows, Post Dining has commissioned musicians to create music to go with its food experiences, and Daughtry says they relished the opportunity to take a different approach working with the ASQ’s repertoire.
“I think the classical music works really well with food because it’s very emotional so we’ve had a lot of inspiration to draw from when we’ve been designing food to match that.
Get InReview in your inbox – free each Saturday. Local arts and culture – covered.
Thanks for signing up to the InReview newsletter.
“All the pieces they’ve brought to the table are different and unique.”
Aside from the chilli-chocolate-smashing accompanying Shostakovich’s String Quartet No. 10, she hints that there may be pear and aniseed flavours with Schubert’s String Quartet in D Minor Death and the Maiden, and “something a bit earthy and unexpected” incorporating native flavours alongside David Paterson’s Quartetsätze.
The courses are bite-sized – ie don’t expect dinner – and each has an interactive element.
“One of the courses will have cheese, so there is a savoury element, and others will be sweet and playful to bring out that childlike side in our audience,” Daughtry says.
The ASQ, which is presenting PitchFork as part of its Close Quarters series, is excited to be performing for the first time in the Masonic Lodge, King says.
Related Story
Adelaide FringeAdelaide Fringe picks: 10 top new shows in 2019
“We just love the space, that it’s different but it’s still right in the heart of the city, and it’s somewhere that many people won’t have been and that also makes it a new experience.”
The Masonic Lodge Adelaide Fringe program is being presented by Gluttony, which has also created a pop-up Green Room cocktail bar in a basement room (read more about that here).
The building has been given a Fringe makeover by Tess Footner (formerly of the Henry Austin) to give it a “loungey, sexy, vintage vibe”, with shows across three spaces that have been named The Phoenix, The Owl and The Little Sparrow, in addition to the foyer area being used for PitchFork.
The shows range include magic acts, comedy, music and theatre (see the full list here).
PitchFork will be in the Masonic Lodge foyer on March 5, 6 and 7.
Support local arts journalism
Your support will help us continue the important work of InReview in publishing free professional journalism that celebrates, interrogates and amplifies arts and culture in South Australia.
Donate Here
Comments
Show comments Hide comments