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Sebastian Lang-Lessing Chief Conductor & Artistic Director
2 0 0 9 SEBASTIAN LANG-LESSING Chief Conductor & Artistic Director 3 2009 3 HIGHLIGHTS WORLD PREMIERES The TSO and TSO Chorus under conductor Richard Mills gave the world première of Mills’s Passion According to St Mark in Hobart on 4 April, a Ten Days on the Island event. Lux Aeterna, by New Zealand composer Kenneth Young, received its world première under conductor Nicholas Milton in Hobart on 24 July. AUSTRALIAN PREMIERE Elena Kats-Chernin’s Ornamental Air, co-commissioned by the TSO, received its Australian première under conductor Baldur Brönnimann in concerts in Launceston and Hobart on 3 and 5 December. CONTENTS ACOUSTIC UPGRADE Highlights 2 The acoustics in Federation Concert Hall received a significant upgrade thanks to an acoustic screen and purpose- Chairman 4 built risers funded by a special one-off grant from the State Government. Managing Director 4 AUSTRALIAN COMPOSER SERIES VOL 3 TSO Holdings Board of Directors 5 The Hon. Peter Garrett, Federal Minister for the Arts, launched the Australian Composer Series Volume 3 at Moorilla on Strategies, Goals, KPIs 7 31 March. The five-CD box set, which features the music of Gerard Brophy, Brett Dean, Peggy Glanville-Hicks, Concerts 9 Richard Meale and Malcolm Williamson, brings the total number of CDs in the Australian Composer Series to 18. Artists 10 (L-R) Richard Mills, Lyndon Terracini, Core Repertoire Sebastian Lang-Lessing, the Hon. Peter Garrett and Nicholas Heyward. Classical and Early Romantic Music 11 Australian Music 13 CD Releases 14 Recordings 16 Marketing and Business Development 17 Education and Training 17 ABAF AwaRDS Orchestra 19 The TSO took out national honours at the Australia Business Arts Staff 20 Foundation (AbaF) awards in the ‘Giving Award’ category at a ceremony TSO Chorus 20 held in Brisbane on 15 October. -
In Concert AUGUST–SEPTEMBER 2012
ABOUT THE MUSIC GRIEG CONCERTO /IN CONCERT AUGUST–SEPTEMBER 2012 GRIEG CONCERTO 30 AUGUST–1 SEPTEMBER STEPHEN HOUGH PLAYS TCHAIKOVSKY 14, 15 AND 17 SEPTEMBER TCHAIKOVSKY’S PATHÉTIQUE 20–22 SEPTEMBER ENIGMA VARIATIONS 28 SEPTEMBER MEET YOUR MSO MUSICIANS: SYLVIA HOSKING AND MICHAEL PISANI PIERS LANE VISITS GRIEG’S BIRTHPLACE STEPHEN HOUGH ON TCHAIKOVSKY’S PIANO CONCERTO NO.2 SIR ANDREW DAVIS HAILS THE NEW HAMER HALL twitter.com/melbsymphony facebook.com/melbournesymphony IMAGE: SIR ANDREW Davis CONDUCTING THE MELBOURNE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Download our free app 1 from the MSO website. www.mso.com.au/msolearn THE SPONSORS PRINCIPAL PARTNER MSO AMBASSADOR Geoffrey Rush GOVERNMENT PARTNERS MAESTRO PARTNER CONCERTMASTER PARTNERS MSO POPS SERIES REGIONAL TOURING PRESENTING PARTNER PARTNER ASSOCIATE PARTNERS SUPPORTING PARTNERS MONASH SERIES PARTNER SUPPLIERS Kent Moving and Storage Quince’s Scenicruisers Melbourne Brass and Woodwind Nose to Tail WELCOME Ashton Raggatt McDougall, has (I urge you to read his reflections been reported all over the world. on Grieg’s Concerto on page 16) and Stephen Hough, and The program of music by Grieg conductors Andrew Litton and and his friend and champion HY Christopher Seaman, the last of Percy Grainger that I have the whom will be joined by two of the privilege to conduct from August finest brass soloists in the world, otograp 29 to September 1 will be a H P Radovan Vlatkovic (horn) and wonderful opportunity for you to ta S Øystein Baadsvik (tuba), for our O experience all the richness our C special Town Hall concert at the A “new” hall has to offer. -
Berkeley Symphony Biography
Berkeley Symphony Biography Berkeley Symphony is unique among American orchestras: founded in 1969 in the intellectual and artistic nexus of Berkeley, California; led by the restlessly innovative Music Director Joana Carneiro and Executive Director René Mandel, an actively performing violinist; committed to premiering and commissioning new music, including a disproportionate amount of music written by women; and sustained by the supportive musical environment of Berkeley, the East Bay, and the San Francisco Bay Area. From the outset, the people behind Berkeley Symphony’s culture and programming were attuned to the culturally diverse people and the heady creative climate of their home city. Thomas Rarick, a protégé of the great English maestro Sir Adrian Boult, founded the orchestra in 1969 as the Berkeley Promenade Orchestra. Reflecting the spirit of the times, musicians performed in street dress and at unusual locations such as the University Art Museum. When Kent Nagano became the music director of the orchestra in 1978, he charted a new course by offering innovative programming that included a number of rarely performed 20th-century works and numerous premieres. The renamed Berkeley Symphony Orchestra gained an international reputation for its adventurous programming, and became known for premiering the music of international composers and showcasing young local talents. During the 30 years he served as music director, Nagano established an international reputation as a gifted interpreter of both the operatic and symphonic repertoire. Nagano stepped down from his post at Berkeley Symphony in 2008, after his 30th anniversary season. In January 2009, Portuguese conductor Joana Carneiro became the orchestra’s third Music Director in its 40-year history. -
N E W S R E L E A
N E W S R E L E A S E Contacts: Michael Hogue 215.545.5451 x26 [email protected] FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE DATE: November 14, 2016 The Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia (COP) announces the appointment of Stephen Tavani as Concertmaster and Matthew Cohen as Section Violist. COP will feature the music of Rossini, Gounod, and new works by NJ native Raphael Fusco and star French-Lebanese pianist and composer Rami Khalifé. intersect series opens with a polystylistic exploration of exoticism in music - a collaboration between COP Music Director Dirk Brossé, Singer/Songwriter Andrew Lipke, and Rami Khalifé. A founding resident company of The Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts, The Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia (COP) will perform music by Rossini and Gounod, premiere a new arrangement by New Jersey composer, Raphael Fusco and present the U.S. premiere of Stories for piano and orchestra by French-Lebanese pianist and rising-star composer Rami Khalifé. Raphael Fusco is no stranger to COP, having premiered Alternate Routes with saxophonist BranfordMarsalis and the Chamber Orchestra on Marsalis’ “Well-Tempered” tour during COP’s 2014/2015 season. “All the instruments share the original solo saxophone line,” Fusco explains about the newly arranged work, “resulting in a concerto for chamber orchestra.” Star Lebanese pianist, Rami Khalifé, described as “positively brand new” and “musician of extreme caliber” by the Daily Star (Lebanon), is making his Chamber Orchestra debut with the American Premiere of his work Stories for piano and orchestra. Khalifé describes Stories as “a series of soundscapes that stand alone just as resolutely as they bind together. -
Colorado Symphony Orchestra Place Boettcher Concert Hall Stamp Boulder, Colorado, 80305 Here
The Colorado Symphony Orchestra place Boettcher Concert Hall stamp Boulder, Colorado, 80305 here Colorado Symphony Orchestra Ms. Brizida Ahrnsbrak CU-Boulder Boulder, Colorado, 80309 Masterworks Series 2015-2016 The Colorado Symphony Orchestra ELGAR "ENIGMA VARIATIONS" MAHLER SYMPHONY NO. 2 “RESURRECTION” This dazzling program showcases Colorado Symphony Principal Harp The Colorado Symphony performs Gustav Mahler's remarkable Symphony Courtney Hershey Bress performing virtuosic masterpieces from Debussy No. 2 "Resurrection," a five-movement symphony that takes listeners on and Ravel New York Philharmonic sta conductor Courtney Lewis leads a dark solemn, and sublime journey that meditates on the themes of Friday this program culminating in Sir Edward Elgar’s Variations on an Friday life, death, and rebirth. Original Theme. Mahler 10.23.15 Haydn 3.4.16 Symphony No. 2 in C minor, "Resurrection" Symphony No. 60 in C major, “Il distratto” Hans Graf, conductor Andrew Litton, conductor Debussy Maureen Thomas, actor Andrew Litton, conductor Silver Ainomäe, cello Sarah Fox, soprano Dances Sacred and Profane Kelley O'Connor, mezzo Ravel Tchaikovsky Strauss Introduction and Allegro The Tempest, Fantasy-Overture, Op. 18 Don Quixote Elgar Mendelssohn Don Juan A Midsummer Night's Dream Suite from Der Rosenkavalier Variations on an Original Theme, Op.36, “Enigma Variations” Commemorating 400 years since the Principal Cello Silver Ainomäe Courtney Lewis, conductor Bard’s passing, the Colorado Symphony’s opens this all-Strauss program Courtney Hershey Bress, harp inaugural Shakespeare Festival weekend with Don Quixote, for a concert celebrates Felix Mendelssohn’s charming and experience That captures the 10.16.15 delightful A Midsummer Night’s Dream as Maureen 2.19.16 breadth of the composer's remarkable Thomas performs passages from the fantastic classic oeuvre. -
An Analysis of the Lost Art of Letter Writing By
u. 0 >> ~.X 1-tu ., 0 (j) z :I 0 a:o ~ m L'\J >- G :!! (/) c: ... z o a :l 0 a:: UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY Con Music Rare Book Q 784.272 0281 1 Thesis An analysis of "The Lost art of letter writing" by Brett Dean THE UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY COPYRIGHT AND USE OF THIS THESIS This thesis must be used in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright Act 1968. Reproduction of material protected by copyright may be an infringement of copyright and copyright owners may be entitled to take legal action against persons who infringe their copyright. Section 51(2) of the Copyright Act permits an authorised officer of a university library or archives to provide a copy (by communication or otherwise) of an unpublished thesis kept in the library or archives, to a person who satisfies the authorised officer that he or she requires the reproduction for the purposes of research or study. The Copyright Act grants the creator of a work a number of moral rights, specifically the right of attribution, the right against false attribution and the right of integrity. You may infringe the author's moral rights if you: - fail to acknowledge the author of this thesis if you quote sections from the work - attribute this thesis to another author - subject this thesis to derogatory treatment which may prejudice the author's reputation For further information contact the University's Director of Copyright Services sydney.edu.au/copyright AN ANALYSIS OF 'THE LOST ART OF LETTER WRITING' BY BRETT DEAN Clare Miller A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of requirements for the degree of Master of Music (Music Performance) Sydney Conservatorium of Music University of Sydney 2010 II I declare that the research presented here is my own original work and has not been submitted to any other institution for the award of a degree. -
2006/07 Season Press Release
Contact: Adam Crane, 213.972.3422 Rachelle Roe, 213.972.7310 LOS ANGELES PHILHARMONIC ASSOCIATION ANNOUNCES 2006/07 SEASON Season Highlights include: • The Tristan Project premieres in New York City and returns for encore performances in Los Angeles, including the complete opera in one evening • Esa-Pekka Salonen, soprano Dawn Upshaw, and the orchestra give U.S. premiere of Kaija Saariaho’s new Philharmonic co-commissioned oratorio for orchestra and chorus: La Passion de Simone • Shadow of Stalin programs explore the effects of political climate on creativity and artistic expression • On Location residencies with Thomas Adès, Emanuel Ax, Joshua Bell, and Dawn Upshaw feature orchestral, Green Umbrella, chamber music, and recital programs • Cycle of complete symphonies by Brahms, led by Christoph von Dohnányi • Other U.S. premieres of works by Gerald Barry, Brett Dean, Esa-Pekka Salonen, Liza Lim, and Anthony Pateras Los Angeles (February 7, 2006) – The Los Angeles Philharmonic announces the season programming for the 2006/07 season, the orchestra’s 88 th subscription year, and 15th under Music Director Esa-Pekka Salonen. Beginning September 28, 2006 and running through June 3, 2007, the 2006/07 season marks the orchestra’s fourth year in Walt Disney Concert Hall. The season opens with a gala concert, led by Esa-Pekka Salonen, that features Manuel de Falla’s Master Peter’s Puppet Show with puppet theater, and works by Ravel, closing with the showpiece, Bolero . “I’m looking forward to this season,” says Music Director Esa-Pekka Salonen. “It has an energizing mix of old and new, familiar and unfamiliar, and even some repertoire returning in a richer version than before.” “The 2006/07 Los Angeles Philharmonic season bears the imprint of our unique perspective on how a season is assembled and what it offers our audiences. -
Lionel Bringuier
Lionel Bringuier Conductor French conductor Lionel Bringuier’s artistic maturity, interpretive depth, and distinct programming have quickly established him as one of the most engaging conductors of his generation. He appears frequently with top orchestras to great acclaim, all of which led to his being named Chief Conductor and Music Director of the Tonhalle Orchestra Zurich in 2012 at age 26. Entering the sixth season since his momentous debut with the Tonhalle, Bringuier’s bold vision and boundless energy – both on and off the podium – are breathing new life and vitality into a historic ensemble. During the 2017/2018 season, Mr. Bringuier will be making two appearances with Orchestre National de Lyon in November 2017 and May 2018. Mr. Bringuier’s 2017/2018 season also includes appearances with Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Montreal Symphony Orchestra, Finnish & Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestras, Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra and Malaysia Philharmonic among others. Bringuier has appeared as a guest conductor with the New York Philharmonic, Cleveland Orchestra, Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, Simón Bolívar Symphony Orchestra of Venezuela, Philharmonia Orchestra, and Israel Philharmonic, to name just a few. Following the landmark inauguration of the Creative Chair Initiative for the Tonhalle Orchestra Zurich in his first season as Chief Conductor and Music Director, this season Lionel Bringuier will collaborate with the composer Brett Dean, as well as X as TOZ Artist in Residence. The first ever Creative Chair role in Zurich was held by Esa-Pekka Salonen, followed by Jörg Widmann in the 2015/2016 season and Peter Eötvös in the 2016/2017 season. Previous TOZ Artists in Residence, Yuja Wang, Lisa Batiashvili and Martin Grubinger remain close collaborators. -
Beethoven: the Piano Concertos
ADELAIDE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA SEASON 2019 SPECIAL EVENT Beethoven: The Piano Concertos June Wed 5 – Sat 15 7pm Elder Hall CONTENTS ARTIST BIOGRAPHIES 3 Nicholas Carter Conductor Jayson Gillham Piano CONCERT ONE 5 June Wed 5, 7pm CONCERT TWO 11 June Sat 8, 7pm CONCERT THREE 16 June Wed 12, 7pm CONCERT FOUR 21 June Sat 15, 7pm ABC Classic is recording the concertos for CD release in early 2020 – the 250th anniversary of Beethoven’s birth. The ASO acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of the lands on which we live, learn and work. We pay our respects to the Kaurna people of the Adelaide Plains and all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Elders, past, present and future. 2 ARTIST BIOGRAPHY Nicholas Carter Conductor Newly appointed as Chief Conductor of the In Australia, he collaborates regularly with Stadttheater Klagenfurt and the Kärntner many of the country’s leading orchestras Sinfonieorchester, Nicholas Carter will lead and ensembles and led the 2018 Adelaide three new productions per season and Festival’s acclaimed full staging of Brett appear regularly in the orchestra’s concert Dean’s Hamlet. Past engagements have series. In his first season, he conducts included the Melbourne, Sydney, West Rusalka, La Clemenza di Tito and Pelléas Australian, Queensland and Tasmanian et Mélisande, and concert programmes Symphony Orchestras with soloists such include Haydn’s Die Schöpfung and Mahler’s as Michelle de Young, Simon O’Neill, Alina Symphony No. 1. Ibragimova, Alexander Gavrylyuk and James Ehnes; also galas with Maxim Vengerov Since his appointment as Principal (Queensland Symphony) and Anne Sofie von Conductor of the Adelaide Symphony Otter (Sydney Symphony). -
Mark-Anthony Turnage Signs with Boosey & Hawkes
Boosey & Hawkes Music Publishers Limited 295 Regent Street London W1B 2JH Telephone 020-7580 2060 Fax 020-7637 3490 11 Dec 2002: for immediate release Website www.boosey.com Mark-Anthony Turnage signs with Boosey & Hawkes Mark-Anthony Turnage We are pleased to announce that Mark-Anthony Turnage, one of the most admired and new publishing contract widely-performed composers of his generation, has signed a long-term exclusive with Boosey & Hawkes publishing agreement with Boosey & Hawkes Music Publishers. The new contract, which runs from 1 January 2003, covers all future Turnage compositions from Crying Out Loud, a new work for Ensemble Modern to be premiered in Taipei in April 2003. Turnage’s existing output, including new works being premiered in January, remains published by Schott, and both publishers will be collaborating closely in the overall promotion of Turnage’s music. future works under Turnage’s future projects reflect his international stature, including commissions for the the new contract New York Philharmonic, London Philharmonic, Berlin Radio Choir and Berlin Philharmonic, the Hallé and clarinetist Michael Collins, Nash Ensemble, Ensemble Modern and flautist Dietmar Wiesner, and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s contemporary music ensemble. Turnage festival at the The BBC Symphony Orchestra appointed Mark-Anthony Turnage as its first Associate Barbican Centre in London Composer in 2000, and this fruitful partnership is celebrated in a weekend festival of 17-19 January 2003 Turnage’s music at the Barbican Centre on 17-19 January 2003. Chandos has recently released a disc of works by Turnage, performed by the BBC Symphony Orchestra under Slatkin, featuring Fractured Lines, Another Set To, Silent Cities and Four Horned Fandango (Chandos 10018). -
NSCMF 2014 Pressreport
josephcorreia A&E COLUMNS Home News Business Sports A&E Life & Style Opinion Real Estate Cars Jobs 2014 North Shore Chamber Music Festival preview Custom Banner - $8.99 vistaprint.com Buy Quality Custom Banners Today. Personalize & Order Online Now. Email Tweet 11 Recommend 68 Pinterest 0 2 1 2 next | single page Violinist Vadim Gluzman and his wife, pianist Angela Yoffe are rehearsing in Chicago on Tuesday, May 27, 2014 for a performance at the North Shore Chamber Music Festival. Gluzman is playing rare violin, the "ex-Auer" 1690 Stradivarius. (Zbigniew Bzdak, Chicago Tribune / May 26, 2014) John von Rhein 1:42 p.m. CDT, June 3, 2014 The North Shore Chamber Music Festival is a mom-and-pop Chicago classical operation that thinks big. Very big. Internationally big. The event's directors, the celebrated violinist Vadim Gluzman and his wife, pianist Angela Yoffe, take time out from their busy solo and duo careers each year at this time to put on the BRAND PUBLISHING This is sponsored content. ? three-day festival at a church near their Northbrook home. WINDY CITY HAIR Every season they invite musician friends from near and far to share their love of the rich After hair-loss chamber repertory with the festival's appreciative audience. battle, resolution for female alopecia This year's roster includes such admired artists as violinist JOHN VON RHEIN sufferer Anne Akiko Meyers, pianist Alessio Bax, cellist Wendy Warner and pianist-conductor Andrew Litton, along with REAL ESTATE INSIDER student musiciansNorth Shore from ChamberChicago's Betty Music Haig Festival Academy • of P.O. -
Program Notes
with the NASHVILLESYMPHONY CLASSICAL SERIES THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, AT 7 PM | FRIDAY & SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 22 & 23, AT 8 PM NASHVILLE SYMPHONY GIANCARLO GUERRERO, conductor CONCERT PARTNER ALBAN GERHARDT, cello AARON JAY KERNIS Symphony No. 4, “Chromelodeon” Out of Silence Thorn, Rose | Weep, Freedom (after Handel) Fanfare Chromelodia SAMUEL BARBER This weekend's performances are made Concerto for Cello and Orchestra, Op. 22 possible through the generosity of Allegro moderato Drs. Mark & Nancy Peacock. Andante sostenuto Molto allegro ed appassionato Alban Gerhardt, cello – INTERMISSION – LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN Symphony No. 7 in A Major, Op. 92 Poco sostenuto – Vivace Allegretto Presto Allegro con brio This concert will last 1 hour and 55 miutes, including a 20-minute intermission. INCONCERT 33 TONIGHT’S CONCERT AT A GLANCE AARON JAY KERNIS Symphony No. 4, “Chromelodeon” • New York City-based composer Kernis has earned the Pulitzer Prize in Music and the prestigious Grawemeyer Award, as well a 2019 GRAMMY® nomination for Best Contemporary Classical Composition. (Winners had not yet been announced at the time of the program guide’s printing.) He also serves as workshop director for the Nashville Symphony’s Composer Lab & Workshop. • The title of his latest symphony, “Chromelodeon,” comes from an unusual word previously used by maverick American composer Harry Partch to describe one of his musical inventions. As defined by the composer, this word aptly describes his own creation here: “chromatic, colorful, melodic music performed by an orchestra.” • The idea of color is especially significant in Kernis’ work, as the composer has synesthesia, a condition that associates specific notes and chords and with distinct colors.