MALVERN CONCERT CLUB FOUNDED 1903 by SIR EDWARD ELGAR OM 117Th Season 2019-20
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MALVERN CONCERT CLUB FOUNDED 1903 BY SIR EDWARD ELGAR OM 117th Season 2019-20 Frith Piano Quartet Pavel Haas Quartet Pavel Kolesnikov Tasmin Little Martin Roscoe The Gesualdo Six Iestyn Davies Thomas Dunford Ruisi Quartet New London Chamber Ensemble Correct as at 7 March 2019 Please check website for updated information malvern-concert-club.co.uk MALVERN CONCERT CLUB 117TH SEASON AT A GLANCE 2019 26 September Frith Piano Quartet 31 October Pavel Haas Quartet 28 November Pavel Kolesnikov 2020 23 January Tasmin Little & Martin Roscoe 16 February The Gesualdo Six 19 March Iestyn Davies & Thomas Dunford 17 April Ruisi Quartet 30 April New London Chamber Ensemble Concerts in YELLOW are daytime concerts, not part of Subscription Series FINAL dates from OUR 116TH Season, 2018-19: Friday 12 April 2019, 10.30 for 11.15am, Elmslie House, Malvern Elizabeth Bass harp D Scarlatti, Jean Cras, Hindemith, Albéniz, Andy Scott and Fauré COFFEE & CAKE CONCERT £12, Students £3 including refreshments from malvern-concert-club.co.uk or Simon Payton, Treasurer; no booking fee Thursday 2 May 2019, 7.30pm, Malvern Theatres Brodsky Quartet . Daniel Rowland . Martin Roscoe FOUNDER’S Chamber MUSIC CENTENARY CONCERT Elgar String Quartet · Violin Sonata · Piano Quintet £21, Students £6 plus 12% booking fee from malvern-theatres.co.uk or Malvern Theatres Box Office Malvern Concert Club also organises coach visits from Malvern to selected concerts by the CBSO and other orchestras at Symphony Hall, Birmingham. Participation is open to all, whether Club members or not. Members will automatically receive details; non-members can be added to the emailing list by contacting Simon Payton at [email protected] 2 MALVERN 117th Season CONCERT CLUB 2019-20 FOUNDED 1903 BY SIR EDWARD ELGAR OM Ever since its first concert on 31 October 1903, MALVERN CONCERT CLUB has been a cornerstone of musical life in Worcestershire. It was founded by Sir Edward Elgar, and the Club’s first Secretary (for over 38 years) was his close friend the local architect Arthur Troyte Griffith, whom Elgar had immortalised in Variation No. VII, Troyte, in his Enigma Variations. The Club continued to run through two World Wars without a break. Now, for its 117th Season, Malvern Concert Club is proud to continue that tradition of bringing the best chamber music to this part of the country, with a roster of British and international musicians, both established performers and promising newcomers. Although we’re called a ‘Club’, anyone can join - and anyone can attend concerts without joining. Besides their high quality, our concerts offer excellent value for money. Single tickets are available to non-members, but membership of Malvern Concert Club offers six concerts for less than the price of four. Do join us! The President of Malvern Concert Club is the eminent baritone and composer Roderick Williams OBE BEETHOVEN 1770 In 2020, the musical world celebrates the 250th anniversary of the birth of 2502020 Ludwig van Beethoven. Malvern Concert Club will present a number of concerts including Beethoven’s compositions, and in the second half of this 117th season (and the first half of the 118th), they will be highlighted in our publicity. 3 Thursday 26 September 2019 7.30pm Frith Piano Quartet Benjamin Frith piano David Le Page violin Robin Ireland viola Richard Jenkinson cello with John Tattersdill double bass Farrenc Piano Quintet No.1 in A minor, Op.30 Fauré Piano Quartet No.1 in C minor, Op.15 Schubert Piano Quintet in A, D.667, The Trout The Frith Piano Quartet was formed in 2001 by a group of like- minded musicians who wanted to explore the wealth of wonderful music written for the piano quartet medium. The group’s founder members included the pianist Benjamin Frith and cellist Richard Jenkinson, latterly joined by David Le Page and Robin Ireland, all distinguished soloists in their own right. The quartet’s first concerts were at the CBSO’s Centre Stage, Birmingham, where they performed the complete piano quartets of Brahms, Fauré and Mozart. Fauré ‘s enchanting first quartet forms the centrepiece of tonight’s concert. The Frith Piano Quartet has a keen interest in performing unjustly neglected works that are not so often heard in the concert hall. Together with John Tattersdill, former Double Bass Section Leader in the CBSO, they open the concert with one such work, the first Piano Quintet by the French composer, virtuoso pianist and teacher, Louise Farrenc (1804-75). Highly successful in her lifetime, Farrenc became neglected after her death until ‘rediscovered’ in recent years. With the double bass, her two piano quintets share the same scoring as one of the most popular works in the whole chamber music canon, Schubert’s ‘Trout’ Quintet, which provides a joyful conclusion to the first concert of our season. This concert is generously supported by Vale Pianos, Pershore through the loan of a Shigeru Kawai SK-EX concert grand piano 4 Thursday 31 October 2019 7.30pm Pavel Haas Quartet Veronika Jarůšková violin Marek Zwiebel violin Jiří Kabát viola Peter Jarůšek cello Ľubica Čekovska The Midsummer Quartet (2016) Schulhoff String Quartet No.1(1924) Smetana String Quartet No.2 in D minor Janáček String Quartet No.2, Intimate Letters The Pavel Haas Quartet first played at Malvern Concert Club exactly ten years ago this month (a concert featuring Janáček’s String Quartet No.1), and we are delighted to welcome them back. Founded in 2002, following their victory in the Prague Spring Festival Competition, the Pavel Haas Quartet soon established themselves as one of the world’s most exciting contemporary chamber ensembles. In 2007, the European Concert Hall Organisation (ECHO) named the Pavel Haas Quartet one of its Rising Stars, following which the Quartet held the title of BBC New Generation Artist and in 2010 was granted a classical music fellowship from the Borletti–Buitoni Trust. Performing at the most renowned concert venues around the globe, the PHQ have to date recorded six critically acclaimed CDs, which have received numerous prestigious awards including the Gramophone Chamber Music Award five times, and the overall Recording of the Year in 2011. The Quartet bears the name of the Czech composer Pavel Haas (1899–1944), the most talented pupil of Leoš Janáček. Like Haas, his contemporary Erwin Schulhoff (1894-1942) died in a Nazi concentration camp. His first quartet is a colourful work that strongly reflects his Czech heritage as well as a heady mix of the styles and trends of the 1920s. The quartet by the Slovak composer Ľubica Čekovská (b.1975), premièred by the PHQ, references Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Of tonight’s two older composers, although Smetana’s first quartet has been played eight times at the Club (including at its third ever concert, in 1904), surprisingly tonight’s is the first ever performance here of the second. 5 Thursday 28 November 2019 7.30pm Pavel Kolesnikov piano Chopin Fantasie Impromptu in C sharp minor, Op.66 Nocturne in F sharp, Op.15, No.2 Scherzo No.3 in C sharp minor, Op.39 Prelude in D Flat, Op.28 Beethoven Sonata No.14 in C sharp minor, Op.27, No.2, Moonlight Schumann Nachtstück, Op.23, No.1 Bartók Out of Doors from The Night’s Music Debussy Prélude Book II No.12, Feux d’artifice Beethoven Sonata No.21 in C, Op.53, Waldstein London-based Pavel Kolesnikov was born in Novosibirsk, Russia and studied both the piano and violin for ten years, before concentrating solely on the piano. He went on to study at the Moscow State Conservatory, the Royal College of Music and in Brussels with Maria João Pires. During his studies he was awarded the Milstein Medal and the RCM Benjamin Britten Piano Fellowship. Since becoming Prize Laureate of the Honens Prize for Piano in 2012, Pavel has performed extensively across the globe including major venues in New York, Berlin, Melbourne, Tokyo and Paris. Following his Wigmore Hall debut in January 2014, The Daily Telegraph gave his recital a rare five-star review declaring it ‘one of the most memorable of such occasions London has witnessed in a while’. A former member of BBC Radio 3’s New Generation Artists scheme, Pavel made his BBC Proms debut in 2016 in Tchaikovsky’s Piano Concerto No.2, returning in 2017 to give an all-Chopin solo recital. He maintains a busy career as a recitalist, chamber musician and soloist with many international orchestras. His studio recordings have been met with critical acclaim, including a Diapason d’Or and a Gramophone Award nomination, whilst earning Pavel a place in The Daily Telegraph’s ‘Cultural Best’ of 2016. Of his most recent all-Beethoven Hyperion CD, MusicWeb International said ‘This Moonlight teems with insight and ambiguity, and leaves an indelible impression that deepens with each listen.’ 6 Thursday 23 January 2020 7.30pm Beethoven Tasmin Little violin VIOLIN Sonata Martin Roscoe piano Series 2018-2020 Beethoven Sonatas for piano and violin BEETHOVEN No.6 in A, Op.30, No.1 1770 No.3 in E flat, Op.12, No.3 2502020 No.9 in A, Op.47, Kreutzer Tasmin Little OBE and Martin Roscoe return to Malvern Concert Club for the final instalment of their three-recital series in which they give us a rare opportunity to hear all of Beethoven’s ten sonatas ‘for piano and violin’, culminating in this, the composer’s 250th anniversary year. Tasmin Little has firmly established herself as one of today’s leading international violinists. Her multi-award winning and varied career encompasses international concerto and recital performances, master classes, workshops and community outreach work.