1403_WESF - Art Sponsorship Campaign - ACO Collective_Program Ad_150x240mm_V1.indd 1 14/03/17 1:49 PM
*Terms and Conditions: Offer is available to ACO Subscribers only. Offer is available on selected Virgin Australia domestic and international operated services in Economy and Business class for travel until 14 September 2017. 20 day advance purchases applies. You may be required to provide verifi cation of your ACO subscription. Fares are subject to availability. Phone booking fee applies for bookings made by phone. A card payment fee will apply if payment is made via credit card or debit card. Additional fees will be charged for baggage in excess of any published allowances. Conditions and travel restrictions apply for all fares. Flights are subject to VA condition of carriage which are available at www.virginaustralia.com
Music that takes you places
Principal Partner of the Australian Chamber Orchestra
As an ACO Subscriber, enjoy discounts on selected domestic and international routes* when you fl y with Virgin Australia. It’s just our little way of thanking you for supporting the Australian Chamber Orchestra too.
For more information visit aco.com.au/vadiscount or call the ACO on 1800 444 444.
TBM0008 ACO FPC 240x150 v09.indd 1 19/01/2017 12:35 pm1403_WESF - Art Sponsorship Campaign - ACO Collective_Program Ad_150x240mm_V1.indd 1 14/03/17 1:49 PM
HOW DO YOU CELEBRATE A VIOLIN OVER 250 YEARS OLD?When the violin in question is a rare Guadagnini, handmade in 1759, you celebrate by giving it the biggest possible audience you can find.
That’s why we lent ours to the Australian Chamber Orchestra.That way, thousands of people can experience its remarkable sound. After all, an instrument this special is worth celebrating.
5
C O N N E C T
S O C I A L LY We’d love to hear from you – join the conversation on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, and stay up to date on all things ACO. Don’t forget the hashtag #ACO17.
@a_c_o
facebook.com/AustralianChamberOrchestra
@AustChamberOrchestra
A C O B L O G Visit the ACO Blog for up-to-date Orchestra news, interviews and insights. aco.com.au/blog
L O O K Watch us Live in the Studio, go behind-the-scenes and watch ACO concert footage on YouTube.
youtube.com/AustralianCO
L I S T E N Join us for a Spotify Session, hear concert tasters and playlists, and revisit past concerts on Spotify.
aco.com.au/Spotify
R A D I O ACO concerts are regularly broadcast on ABC Classic FM. Follow us on Twitter to keep up to date.
Y O U R S AY Did you enjoy the concert? What was your favourite piece? Is this your first ACO experience? We love to hear what you think about our concerts and recordings or anything else you’d like to tell us.
8
A C O W H AT ’ S O NA C O V I R T U A LUNTIL 27 MAY HAMILTON, BALLARAT, BENDIGO
Join our virtual orchestra on a tour of regional Victoria. Direct members of the ACO as they perform in your very own musical journey. aco.com.au/acovirtual
A C O U L U R U F E S T I VA L2–4 JUNE ULURU
We return to the spiritual heart of Australia. Featuring Australian soprano Greta Bradman and members of the Gondwana Indigenous Children’s Choir. aco.com.au/uluru
M O U N TA I N12 JUNE PREMIERE 3–20 AUGUST NATIONAL TOUR
A unique musical journey through vistas few have visited, this is a visceral experience by film director Jennifer Peedom, Richard Tognetti and the ACO. aco.com.au/mountain
I N T I M AT E M O Z A R T24 JUNE–9 JULY ADELAIDE, CANBERRA, MELBOURNE, NEWCASTLE, PERTH, SYDNEY, WOLLONGONG
Experience one of the world’s leading performers of Mozart, pianist Kristian Bezuidenhout, as he joins Richard Tognetti and an intimate ACO ensemble for a performance of Mozart’s Piano Concerto No.13 in C major. aco.com.au/mozart
A C O E N S E M B L E & P E N R I T H S T R I N G S21 MAY PENRITH
ACO Musicians join the Penrith Strings for their first public concert of 2017, featuring music by Mozart, Haydn and Mendelssohn. aco.com.au/penrith
D E AT H & T H E M A I D E N14–23 JUNE BALLARAT, BENDIGO, HAMILTON, HEALESVILLE, HORSHAM, WARRNAMBOOL
Swedish violinist Malin Broman directs ACO Collective in an inventive program of emotive music by Schubert, Dowland and Britten. aco.com.au/deathmaiden
9
Richard Evans Managing Director
M E S S A G E F R O M T H E M A N A G I N G D I R E C T O R
What a wonderful start we have had to 2017, and this program promises to continue the fine music-making of recent months, at home and abroad. The ACO is often referred to as an orchestra of soloists, and we always look forward to the opportunity to feature our own musicians within our programs.
Principal Violin Satu Vänskä plays Pietro Locatelli’s extraordinarily difficult Violin Concerto nicknamed The Harmonic Labyrinth, and our former Emerging Artist, now full-time ACO Violin, Glenn Christensen, will take to the stage as co-soloist for the Vivaldi alongside Satu and Principal Cello Timo-Veikko ‘Tipi’ Valve.
I pay tribute to the Libling Family for their generous commission of James Ledger’s new work The Natural Order of Things, written in honour of Simon Libling whose fascinating life story appears in full on our website, and in edited form in this program.
Over the years, the Orchestra has had some of the world’s rarest and most beautiful instruments come in to our midst, combining to produce the burnished sound for which the ACO is renowned. These include the 1729 Guarneri filius Andreæ cello, recently donated to the ACO by Peter Weiss ao; the Guadagnini violin on loan from the Commonwealth Bank; instruments by Guarneri del Gesù, Maggini and Da Salò on loan from anonymous benefactors; and the Stradivari and Guarneri violins purchased by the ACO Instrument Fund.
On this tour we have an additional special treat in store. I am very pleased to announce that the ACO Instrument Fund has made another acquisition – a 1616 Hieronymus and Antonio Amati cello – which will become part of the Orchestra’s ever-growing stable of extraordinary instruments. This exquisite masterpiece made by two of Cremona’s finest instrument makers of the 17th century will be introduced to our audiences by Tipi as he is centre stage for Debussy’s Cello Sonata in an arrangement by Australian composer Jack Symonds.
I do hope you enjoy the concert.
A unique musical journey through vistas few have visited – a visceral experience with live visuals by the gifted film director
Jennifer Peedom and music by Richard Tognetti and the ACO.
PRINCIPAL PARTNER
TICKETS FROM $59 | ACO.COM.AU | 1800 444 444 (MON–FRI , 9AM–5PM AEST) Transaction fees apply. Subject to availability.
“EXCEPTIONALLY ABSORBING
THE NEW YORK TIMES ON JENNIFER PEEDOM’S SHERPA
”
Produced by Stranger Than Fiction Films and Lingo Pictures, in association with Camp 4 Collective,
Sherpas Cinema and the ACO.
1 2 J U N E SYDNEY OPERA HOUSE | VIVID LIVE
& SYDNEY FILM FESTIVAL WORLD PREMIERE
3 –2 0 A U G U S TADELAIDE, BRISBANE, CANBERRA ,
MELBOURNE, NEWCASTLE, PERTH, SYDNEY
11
Satu Vänskä Director & Violin Glenn Christensen Violin Timo-Veikko Valve Cello
The Australian Chamber Orchestra reserves the right to alter scheduled artists and programs as necessary.
A C O S O L O I S T S
Approximate durations (minutes):5 – 9 – 13 – 22 – INTERVAL – 12 – 28 The concert will last approximately two hours, including a 20-minute interval.
CRAWFORD SEEGERAndante for Strings
VIVALDIConcerto for Two Violins and Cello in G minor, Op.3, No.2, RV578I. Adagio e spiccato II. Allegro III. Larghetto IV. Allegro
JAMES LEDGERThe Natural Order of Things world premiere
LOCATELLI Violin Concerto in D major, Op.3, No.12 The Harmonic Labyrinth I. Allegro II. Largo – III. Allegro
Interval
DEBUSSY (arr. Symonds)Sonata for Violoncello I. Prologue: Lent, sostenuto e molto risoluto II. Sérénade: Modérément animé III. Finale: Animé, léger et nerveux
MENDELSSOHN (arr. strings) String Quartet in A minor, Op.13I. Adagio – Allegro vivace II. Adagio non lento III. Intermezzo: Allegretto con moto – Allegro di molto IV. Presto – Adagio non lento
12
W H AT Y O U A R E A B O U T T O H E A R
Antonio Stradivari, Giuseppe Guarneri del Gesù, Giuseppe Guarneri filius Andreæ, Hieronymus and Antonio Amati. Some of the greatest instrument makers the world has ever seen. And their artistry, pursuit of perfect craftsmanship and invention ushered in the era of the virtuoso, particularly for the violin.
Composers such as Tartini, Corelli, Albinoni, Geminiani, and Antonio Vivaldi and Pietro Locatelli, both of whom are featured on this program, were eager to demonstrate the full range of virtuosic brilliance the violin could offer.
Locatelli’s 12th concerto from his Opus 3 set, L’arte del violin, published in 1732, even comes with a warning to those who dare to play it: easy to enter, hard to exit.
But these words of caution are not a deterrent to ACO Principal Violin and curator of the ACO Soloists program, Satu Vänskä; rather they serve as a source of inspiration and encouragement.
“The Locatelli is such a peculiar and, in some ways unconventional piece. It has taken me months to get my head around it. There are just so many notes to play. He was the one that encouraged Paganini. Locatelli wrote 24 Caprices, then Paganini obviously played them and wrote his. Everyone knows Paganini’s but few people know the original inspiration,” says Satu. “Locatelli’s concerto is just so physically exhausting; the whole piece is relentless. But I find that really compelling as a violinist. It isn’t performed very often. I’m not even sure if it has been played in Australia before. The ACO certainly hasn’t.”
“This whole concert is about showcasing the ACO in all its diversity. It demonstrates the range of what we can do and what we can play,” she says.
Timo-Veikko Valve, Principal Cello and also soloist in this concert concurs. “In a program such as this, one can really experience and hear all the voices that make this an Orchestra of soloists, not just those at the front.”
“This program might look esoteric on paper, but there is a lot of thought into how it all fits together,” Satu continues. “We have the ‘new’ pieces – Ruth Crawford Seeger’s Adagio and James Ledger’s The Natural Order of Things – juxtaposed with these Italian Baroque masterpieces by Locatelli and Vivaldi. It is like a trompe l’oeil except for the ear, hearing these old pieces with some fresher pieces and making them sound a bit like ghosts, taking them into the 21st century.”
PICTURED: The difficulty of Locatelli’s The Harmonic Labyrinth is best depicted by the number of notes on just one of the many pages of this fiendishly difficult Concerto.
13
Glenn Christensen, a former Emerging Artist and now full-time member of the ACO, will be joining Satu and Tipi for Vivaldi’s Concerto for Two Violins and Cello.
“Vivaldi was so extraordinarily prolific and inventive in his writing. His music is so exciting and distinctive, that even after hundreds of years it’s still relevant” Glenn says.
Tipi will come front and centre for Jack Symonds’ arrangement of Debussy’s Sonata for Cello and Piano. “Jack has reworked the delicate and characterful dialogue between the cello and piano in a way that the original cello part stays unchanged, but the piano part is divided into 11 solo string parts. This method highlights the intimacy of the conversation without over-orchestrating the original score and thus making it a concertante piece, soloist versus orchestra.”
But it is Mendelssohn’s String Quartet arranged for string orchestra that all three soloists agree is the binding force on the program.
“I’m excited to revisit this work after performing it numerous times with my quartet in Finland. It’s definitely one of the cornerstones that has, after Haydn and Beethoven, secured this art form’s importance,” said Tipi.
Satu has always wanted to perform this quartet with the full forces of the ACO. “It follows on nicely from the late Beethoven quartets we performed last year. Beethoven’s late quartets were certainly not popular in his lifetime. Mendelssohn’s own father and his peers did not value the strange, internal, complex quartets written by the then fully deaf master. However, the young Mendelssohn was fascinated by them and eagerly studied the scores that had only been published recently. A genius himself, he saw the quality in Beethoven’s works and used them as an inspiration when writing his first mature quartet in A minor. Mendelssohn was ahead of his time in acknowledging the uniqueness of these late Beethoven works. This is a mindset we like to follow at ACO also: forward-thinking and without prejudice.”
PICTURED: Satu Vänskä
PICTURED: Glenn Christensen
PICTURED: Timo-Veikko Valve
14
A B O U TT H E M U S I C
RUTH CRAWFORD SEEGER Born East Liverpool, Ohio, 1901. Died Chevy Chase, Maryland, 1953.
ANDANTE FOR STRINGS
Composed 1931. Orchestrated by the composer 1938.
Raised in Florida, Ruth Crawford Seeger studied at the American Conservatory of Music in Chicago, where she studied composition and theory with Adolf Weidig. With her first Piano Preludes of 1924, Crawford had already developed her own unique, ‘ultra-modern’ voice. In 1926, Crawford composed her Sonata for Violin and Piano, often performed at modern music concerts in the late twenties; critics remarked that Crawford could ‘sling dissonances like a man’. She was recognised early on as a woman composer who did not fit the sentimental stereotypes.
PICTURED: Ruth Crawford Seeger.
15
‘. . .a study in dissonant dynamics . . . carefully organised to be shaped through single pitches in each instrument. . .’ RUTH CRAWFORD SEEGER
PICTURED: Charles Seeger.
By 1930, Ruth Crawford was a force to be reckoned with in American modernism. Stylistically, her work stood out in its uncompromising use of dissonance, contrapuntal ostinato, striking choice of texts and tidy formal construction. In March 1930, Crawford won a Guggenheim Fellowship to travel to Europe; the first woman so honoured. The following year witnessed her most famous work – String Quartet, from which the Andante comes.
In 1929, she began studies with Charles Seeger, a key figure in American music as a composer, theorist, and musicologist. They married in 1932, with Ruth assuming responsibility for his children from a previous marriage, including son Pete, soon to become one of America’s best known folksingers. She likewise adopted several of Seeger’s theoretical methods that mark the works of her most productive period, 1930-33. However, her composing came to a virtual standstill after 1934.
Among her children with Seeger were daughter Peggy and son Mike, both to become renowned folksingers and teachers in adulthood. In 1936, the Seegers moved to Washington DC to work in folksong collecting for the Library of Congress.
As Ruth Crawford Seeger, she published her own pioneering collection, American Folk Songs for Children in 1948. She only returned to serious composition with the Suite for Wind Quintet in 1952. By the time it was completed, she learned she had cancer. She died at the age of 52, ending prematurely a career that had begun with extraordinary promise.
Crawford Seeger’s 1931 String Quartet is widely considered to be a masterpiece. She described the slow movement as ‘a study in dissonant dynamics, the waxing and waning of crescendos and diminuendos carefully organised to be shaped through single pitches in each instrument’. She arranged the slow movement for string orchestra in 1938. Describing its concentrated power, music critic Peter Dickinson described her as ‘a kind of American Webern’.
Australian Chamber Orchestra © 2017
16
ANTONIO VIVALDI Born Venice, 1678. Died Vienna, 1741.
CONCERTO FOR TWO VIOLINS AND CELLO IN G MINOR, OP.3, NO.2, RV578
Composed 1711.
I. Adagio e spiccato II. Allegro III. Larghetto IV. Allegro
Both Antonio Vivaldi and Pietro Locatelli enjoyed careers as violin virtuosos and composers, and both benefited immensely from the developments in printing being made by music publishers in the Netherlands.
Vivaldi’s works included some 500 concertos as well as many operas, instrumental sonatas and a large body of sacred music. His playing was clearly prodigious. One contemporary describes how Vivaldi ‘put his fingers but a hair’s breadth from the bow, so that there was scarcely room for the bow’. Vivaldi pioneered technical advances, such as using the highest register of the strings, which were unknown at the time.
In 1711, Vivaldi met the Amsterdam-based printer Estienne Roger, who had revolutionised music printing. Instead of moveable type, Roger engraved plates, and used beams to link shorter notes like quavers and semiquavers. The music could therefore be printed as often as needed, and it had the great virtue of being much more legible. Vivaldi’s Opus 3, or L’estro armonico (The harmonious fancy), a collection of 12 concertos for a variety of instrumental combinations appeared in Roger’s edition in 1711. Roger was so impressed at the collection’s popularity that he ordered what became Opp. 5, 6 and 7 and engraved them at his own expense. It soon became, as scholar Michael Talbot puts it ‘perhaps the most influential collection of instrumental music to appear during the whole of the 18th century’.
L’estro armonico includes four solo concertos and eight concerti grossi where a group of soloists (the concertino) is pitted against the rest of the band (the ripieno). In the G minor work the concertino consists of two violins and cello. Vivaldi’s treatment of the concertino is different from that of older composers in that he treats each member of it as a soloist,
PICTURED: Antonio Vivaldi.
17
mixing and matching the solo, duet and trio possibilities it offers. The G minor concerto is also unusual, and slightly old-fashioned, in that it is what was known as concerto da chiesa, or ‘church concerto’. This is not to say that it was used in liturgical contexts, but refers to the fact that it consists of four movements, slow-fast-slow-fast, unlike the concerto da camera, or chamber concerto, that Vivaldi pioneered with its fast-slow-fast movement layout. A recent recording of the manuscript version shows the small but significant revisions that Vivaldi made before allowing Roger to publish the piece.
The opening consists of those implacable spiky figures that Vivaldi turns to illustrative effect in the ‘Winter’ concerto of the Four Seasons, with the concertino violins only emerging at the end. For much of the following allegro they play ornate figures in rhythmic unison against simple accompaniment, though Vivaldi introduces passages of syncopated motifs against driving fast semiquavers that swap from concertino to orchestra and treble to bass in what is known as invertible counterpoint. There are also substantial duets between first violin and cello. The slow movement, with its use of short motifs dominated by dotted rhythms, cultivates a ceremonial air, its material passed from the orchestra to the concertino trio. This is dispelled by the finale, whose boisterous 12/8 metre suggests a gigue or tarantella.
Gordon Kerry © 2017
PICTURED: 1st Edition title page of L’estro armonico by Etienne Roger, 1711.
18
JAMES LEDGER Born Perth, 1966.
THE NATURAL ORDER OF THINGS world premiere
Composed 2016.
The orchestral music of James Ledger is well known to Australian concertgoers. His first work for orchestra, Indian Pacific (1996), is still regularly performed around the country.
Ledger has been composer-in-residence with the West Australian, Adelaide and Christchurch (NZ) Symphony Orchestras and at the Australian National Academy of Music, the Australian Festival of Chamber Music (Townsville) and the Four Winds Festival (Bermagui). He has won APRA Art Music Awards for his violin concerto Golden Years and the orchestral work Chronicles.
Ledger enjoys an ongoing collaboration with songwriter Paul Kelly. Their song-cycle Conversations with Ghosts won an ARIA award in 2013. In 2015 the Sydney and New Zealand Symphony Orchestras simultaneously premiered War Music for choir and orchestra, with text by Kelly.
James Ledger is currently lecturer in composition at the School of Music at the University of Western Australia.
For more information please visit jamesledger.com
PICTURED: James Ledger.
19
Simon Libling’s life is a story of vicissitudes: fortitude, hard work, success followed by disaster, the process repeated over and over. He was born in 1912 in Krakow, which was then in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, to a very wealthy family. His father died before he was born. His mother invested all in debt instruments. The post-WWI hyperinflation reduced her to penury, unable to support her children, so Simon lived with his grandfather. He became a furrier and, despite the Great Depression, established a flourishing business. He supported many members of his family, no matter what their circumstance.
Simon was never afraid of work, often working for 20 hours a day, seven days a week for the half-year fur season. In the other six months, he studied philosophy at University, went to the theatre and concerts, and read. Books were real to him. He seemed to think that there were answers to life to be found in philosophy and great literature. He was also a qualified skiing instructor, as well as district figure-skating champion.
The German invasion of Poland ended that life. The closing of synagogues led to an unexpected bonus. He visited a friend on the Day of Atonement and there met his future wife Mary, who was by his side for their 46-year marriage, until his death in 1987. Mary, now 96, lives in Melbourne.
Simon escaped from the Plaszow Concentration Camp. He would never say much about this except for: ‘I did not like it, so I left.’ His life was saved by hiding in a former walk-in wardrobe with so little space that after the war he had to re-learn to walk.
At the end of the war, he and Mary sacrificed a precious stone from a ring in exchange for rucksacks of food which they then walked from Krakow to Prague to exchange for perfume, which they then walked to Vienna, selling it to American soldiers. Now having money, they returned to Krakow and repeated the process. The Czechoslovakian State decorated Simon for saving tens of thousands of lives from starvation. He also made enough money to establish Poland’s largest gumboots and allied shoe wear factory. In 1947, when the Stalinists took over Poland, Simon was classified a class enemy. Not the deadly designation it would have been in the Soviet Union in the 1930s, but it did make life difficult and unpleasant until 1956. During those difficult years, Simon found solace in music, going to concerts in Krakow and Warsaw. He also developed a deep affection for gypsy and piano accordion music, befriending and assisting many of its practitioners.
Simon was a devoted father. Virtually every Sunday, Simon took his son for a long walk, during which they talked of everything from anti-semitism to the gold standard. But his son’s independent thinking came at a price: Simon was charged and convicted in 1959 of ‘bringing up an anti-socialist child’. The sentence was five years with hard labour, but he avoided serving the sentence and left Poland. In October 1960, the Liblings arrived in Melbourne with less than $100, some, not entirely suitable, clothing and no knowledge of English.
Simon’s legacy of hard work, self-reliance and devotion to doing the right thing lives on through his grandsons.
CELEBRATING THE LIFE OF SIMON LIBLING
20
The story of Simon Libling’s life reads like a film script.
The composer writes:
The Natural Order of Things came about through a commission for the Australian Chamber Orchestra by David and Sandy Libling. I first met them both in January 2015. David sought to commission a piece in celebration of his father, Simon. I asked David if he would write a little about his father just so I could form some ideas for the work. What I received was an account of his father’s truly astounding life.
Simon lived in Poland and experienced a great many setbacks – ‘a story of vicissitudes’ as David put it. A life that included time in and escaping from Plaszow concentration camp and having to learn to walk again after hiding in a wardrobe during the war. After the war, he and his wife Mary walked from Krakow to Prague (to exchange food for perfume) and then to Vienna (to exchange perfume for money). He was decorated by the Czechoslovakian State for saving tens of thousands of lives from starvation. The story of Simon’s life reads like a film script.
Perhaps the most memorable part for me was how Simon would take David for long walks virtually every Sunday throughout Simon’s boyhood. Here, ‘they talked of everything from anti-Semitism to the gold standard’. The thought of ‘passing the baton’ between father and son, down the generations, led to the title, The Natural Order of Things.
The work had an incredibly long gestation, and went through many different shapes and forms before settling on its final iteration which consists of five short movements – each having it’s own mood and characteristic:
I. Static and serene II. With a sense of burden III. Threatening and agitated IV. Ceremonial V. Calm and resolute
The Natural Order of Things was commissioned by David and Sandy Libling in celebration of the life of Simon Libling for the Australian Chamber Orchestra. It was an honour for me to write this work.
James Ledger © 2017
21
PIETRO ANTONIO LOCATELLI Born Bergamo, 1695. Died Amsterdam, 1764.
VIOLIN CONCERTO IN D MAJOR, OP.3, NO.12 THE HARMONIC LABYRINTH
Composed 1733.
I. Allegro II. Largo – III. Allegro
A generation younger, Locatelli pushed violin technique even further than Vivaldi, devising new positions to play ever higher on the instrument, as well as expanding the role of double- and triple-stopping, and polyphonic playing. His compositions exist largely to demonstrate that prodigious technique, though, curiously, Locatelli avoided the public limelight as his career progressed. He worked largely in Rome until 1723, when his patron, Monsignor Cybo left the papal court, and from then until 1729 seems to have performed in various German cities before settling in Amsterdam. He had had works published by Vivaldi’s publisher, Roger in 1721, but a decade later was granted a monopoly to print his own music (in the days before copyright a composer’s work was fair game). He only gave private weekly concerts to well-heeled music lovers at his home in Amsterdam, where he lived out the rest of his life.
PICTURED: Pietro Antonio Locatelli c. 1733. From a mezzotinto by Cornelis Troost (1696–1750).
22
PICTURED: Dedication page of L’Arte del Violino.
L’arte del violin was published in 1732. It is a series of 12 concertos, in the three-movement design established by Vivaldi, but the fast outer movements have unaccompanied Capriccios grafted onto them. The first movement, nicknamed the ‘harmonic labyrinth’ by the composer, which bears the inscription ‘facilis aditus, difficilis exitus’ (easy to enter, difficult to exit). It is introduced by a simple D major sentence from the cello before the others join in with, soon enough, the soloist playing in extravagant three-part harmony above the fray. The Capriccio acts as a kind of cadenza, that is the unaccompanied, quasi-improvised star-turn for the soloist – and is a simple pattern of chords on the page, marked ‘arpeggio’ – thus an opportunity for pyrotechnic display. After a short orchestral introduction, the slow movement, in the relative minor key (a more classical than Baroque practice) begins with a long and ornate melody for the soloist accompanied only by continuo – that is the cello with optional harmony from a keyboard. At its centre the movement has a much faster (presto) section where isolated orchestral chords support a feverish moto perpetuo from the soloist. A version of the opening material acts as a bridge to the finale, a gracious dance in 3/8 metre, that again offsets a brilliant capriccio in driving semiquavers and always in two- or three-part harmony.
Gordon Kerry © 2017
23
CLAUDE DEBUSSY Born St Germain-en-Laye 1862. Died Paris 1918.
SONATA FOR CELLO AND PIANO
Composed 1915.
I. Prologue: Lent, sostenuto e molto risoluto II. Sérénade: Modérément animé III. Finale: Animé, léger et nerveux
Paris before the outbreak of World War I was a city giddy with the progress of science, industry and art. It was the time of ‘La Belle Epoque’, as we now call it. The good old days . . .
Claude Debussy was witness to the end of these heady days, as Paris and indeed the world prepared for the Great War. This pre-War period saw the rapid decline of his health.
As with Mozart, the miserable circumstances in which Debussy found himself during his dying days are not reflected in the music which he composed at the time. In agony from the final stages of cancer, with the First World War at its height with millions of young people going to senseless deaths, and with
PICTURED: Claude Debussy by Donald Sheridan.
24
PICTURED: First page of the Sonata for Cello and Piano by Claude Debussy.
most of his own musical masterpieces mistakenly interpreted under the label of ‘impressionism’, the composer, in his mid-50s, was close to despair.
And yet, even as he felt the dark night closing in around him, he set out to compose a series of six sonatas for various instruments, three of which were completed before he succumbed to the inevitable, and none of which could be described as reflecting his current mental state. True, he described the Sonata for flute, viola and harp as ‘frightfully mournful’, but to the listener, it’s radiant. The Violin Sonata represents a triumphant rediscovery of the Classical style. Its simplicity and structural clarity was a call-to-arms to his countrymen – he wrote ‘I want to work, not so much for myself, but to give proof, however small it may be, that even if there were thirty million Boches, French thought will not be destroyed!’
And the Cello Sonata, Debussy described as an example ‘of what a sick man can write in wartime’. It’s almost whimsical in its jaunty good humour and sense of invention and is a picture of musical health. But perhaps most surprising, is Debussy’s decision to use a traditional sonata form structure – one of the rare occasions he did, in fact. He wrote to his publisher Jacques Durand, ‘It’s not for me to judge [the Cello Sonata’s] excellence, but I like its proportions and its almost classical form, in the good sense of the word.’
In this concert, we will be hearing an arrangement for cello and strings by Australian composer Jack Symonds.
Australian Chamber Orchestra © 2016
From Jack Symonds:
Debussy’s piano writing is as original as it is idiomatic. Transcribing any of his piano music for strings is probably just perverse. However, a string ensemble is greatly flexible beyond the obvious ‘expanded string quartet’ colour often associated with it.
I have tried in this arrangement to catch Debussy’s extraordinary sense of attack and decay in detailed mixtures of string soloists. When one plays this Sonata at the piano, there’s a constant sense that the composer is gently guiding your feet on both pedals to conjure a half-lit world beyond the 88 keys and mechanism of the piano. The string colour choices I have made are sometimes quixotically linked to how I like to play this piece, but ultimately I hope they have illuminated the downright strange and dazzling relationship between solo cello and ‘accompaniment’ Debussy originally imagined.
. . . an example ‘of what a sick man can write in wartime’. CLAUDE DEBUSSY
25
FELIX MENDELSSOHN Born Hamburg 1809. Died Leipzig, 1847.
STRING QUARTET IN A MINOR, OP.13 (arr. strings)
Composed 1827.
I. Adagio – Allegro vivace II. Adagio non lento III. Intermezzo: Allegretto con moto – Allegro di molto IV. Presto – Adagio non lento
Classicism, in the music of Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven, largely came and went in the years between the death of Locatelli and the births, in very different circumstances but within a year of each other, of Mendelssohn, Schumann and Chopin. These, along with the Liszt and Wagner were the Romantic Generation, as Charles Rosen calls them in his book of the same title.
Felix Mendelssohn was the eldest, born in 1809 to a wealthy Jewish banker (who later converted to Lutheran Christianity).
PICTURED: Mendelssohn, 1830, aged 21 – from a watercolour by James Warren Childe.
26
PICTURED: Adagio – Adagio vivace opening movement from Mendelssohn’s String Quartet in A minor.
During the Napoleonic wars, the family moved from Hamburg to the safety of Berlin in 1811; the Prussian government’s Emancipation Act of 1812 guaranteed the civil rights of Prussian Jews, and Abraham Mendelssohn’s financing of the war effort had made him a valued member of the community. Felix enthusiastically absorbed the music he heard in Berlin’s concert-halls and opera houses – notably that of Weber, whose Der Freischütz he heard at the newly rebuilt Schauspielhaus. At the age of 10 he began lessons with the esteemed composer Carl Friedrich Zelter, who gave Mendelssohn strict lessons in harmony and counterpoint with particular reference to the music of the 18th century. Mendelssohn’s love of the Baroque and classical periods would have far-reaching effects on his own music and his career as a conductor, and make him seem, misleadingly, the most conservative of the Romantic Generation. We have him largely to thank for the Bach revival, and the resulting revival of other Baroque composers.
Keen to support the musical talents of his children, in 1822 Abraham Mendelssohn initiated a series of Sunday concerts at the family home where Felix and his brilliant sister Fanny would perform with paid members of the Court Orchestra. By 1827, when Mendelssohn was 18, he had already composed a formidable amount of music, including 13 Sinfonias (composed for those Sunday concerts), which established his effortless
PICTURED: Carl Friedrich Zelter – Mendelssohn’s first teacher.
27
Like Beethoven, Mendelssohn is able to create moments of extraordinary grace out of seemingly no material . . .
technique in writing for strings. His early masterpiece, the Octet dates from 1825 and one of his most defining works, the Overture to A Midsummer Night’s Dream, was composed a year later. His later music includes a number of classicising symphonies and sacred oratorios, and as conductor of Leipzig’s Gewandhaus Orchestra in later life, he effectively founded the modern practice of performing past masterpieces rather than only new works.
The String Quartet Op.13 was written in 1827 during the composer’s summer vacation from the University of Berlin, where his mother hoped he would get an education ‘so rare in musicians’. Beethoven had recently died, and Mendelssohn – despite those accusations of musical conservatism – understood the importance of the late Beethoven quartets more than many of his contemporaries. This work shows a number of subtle influences from Beethoven’s Opp.95, 74, 130 and 132 without, however, sounding derivative. Like Beethoven, Mendelssohn is able to create moments of extraordinary grace out of seemingly no material, and as in late Beethoven there is a fruitful tension between the popular and the ‘learned’. Mendelssohn shows his mastery of fugue, for instance, but can then write the simplest melody and accompaniment as in the Intermezzo, which is itself balanced by a shimmering Trio section that recalls the fairy music from the ‘Dream’ overture. The whole work, more interestingly, is derived from the melody of his song Frage (Question), Op.9 No.1, known also as Ist es wahr? – Is it true?. The first three notes of the song form a characteristic ‘motto’ theme (like Beethoven’s ‘Muss es sein?’ in his Op.135), which is heard, transformed, in all four movements. As Mendelssohn himself put it, ‘you will hear it – with its own notes – in the first and last movements, and in all four movements you will hear its emotions expressed’. The motto appears sometimes as a whole-tone step down followed by a rising third (or the same contour upside down), or by the rhythm of a dotted quaver, semiquaver and longer note as in the urgent main theme of the first movement. The work is further unified by the pensive music sounded at the very beginning and end.
Just how Beethovenian the Second Quartet is, was brought home to the composer some years later when he attended a performance of the work in Paris. The man next to him at one point said ‘He has that in one of his symphonies.’ When asked ‘Who?’ the man replied ‘Beethoven, the composer of this quartet’. In a letter home Mendelssohn described it as ‘a very dubious compliment.’
Gordon Kerry © 2017
28
S AT U VÄ N S K ÄV I O L I N
Satu Vänskä was appointed Assistant Leader of the Australian Chamber Orchestra in 2004. She performs regularly as lead violin and soloist with the Orchestra. She is also curator, vocalist and front woman of the critically acclaimed electro-acoustic ensemble ACO Underground. As a singer and violinist she has collaborated with such distinguished artists as Barry Humphries, Meow Meow, Jonny Greenwood, The Presets, Jim Moginie, Brian Ritchie and Katie Noonan. Satu features in a variety of roles at festivals with the ACO in Australia, Niseko and Maribor. She was presented in recital in July 2012 by the Sydney Opera House as part of their Utzon Room Music Series.
Satu was born to a Finnish family in Japan where she took her first violin lessons at the age of three. Her family moved back to Finland in 1989 and she continued her studies with Pertti Sutinen at the Lahti Conservatorium and the Sibelius Academy. From 1997 Satu was a pupil of Ana Chumachenco at the Hochschule für Musik in Munich where she finished her diploma in 2001. This led to performances with the Munich Philharmonic, the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, at the Tuusulanjärvi Festival, and at Festivo Aschau.
In 1998 Sinfonia Lahti named her ‘young soloist of the year’. In 2000 she was a prize-winner of the ‘Deutsche Stiftung Musikleben’ and from 2001 she played under the auspices of the Live Music Now Foundation founded by Lord Yehudi Menuhin which gave her the opportunity to perform with such musicians as Radu Lupu and Heinrich Schiff. In 2011, she became the custodian of the only Stradivarius violin in Australia – the magnificent 1728/29 violin on loan from the ACO’s Instrument Fund.
Chair sponsored by Kay Bryan
Photo by Mick Bruzzese
29
GL E NN CHR I S T E N S E NV I O L I N
Glenn was born and raised in the regional Queensland town of Mackay, where he received his early music education through the Suzuki Method with local teacher Diane Powell. Glenn then studied with Michele Walsh at the Queensland Conservatorium, Griffith University and graduated in 2011 with a Bachelor of Music, First Class Honours. He was also the first person ever to be awarded the three highest prizes – the Conservatorium Medal, the Music Medal and the University Medal.
From 2015, Glenn has been a full-time member of the Australian Chamber Orchestra. Prior to this appointment, he held the position of Principal First Violin in the Queensland Symphony Orchestra from 2012. He has also performed as Guest Principal with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, was the Concertmaster of the Australian Youth Orchestra in 2012 and 2013 and was an Australian Chamber Orchestra Emerging Artist in 2012.
As a soloist, Glenn has performed with the Queensland Symphony Orchestra on multiple occasions, most recently in July 2015, where he returned as Guest Concertmaster, Director and Soloist for a regional Queensland tour. He has had performances broadcast live on ABC Classic FM, was a finalist in the 2014 ABC Young Performer Awards, and in 2009 won every category in the prestigious Kendall National Violin Competition. Also a keen chamber musician, Glenn is the violinist in the Lyrebird Trio, which won both the audience choice prize and the Piano Trio prize in the 2013 Asia Pacific Chamber Music Competition.
Glenn has also appeared at numerous festivals and masterclasses around Australia and internationally.
Chair sponsored by Terry Campbell ao & Christine Campbell
Photo by Mick Bruzzese
30
T IMO -V E IK KO VA LV EC E L L O
Timo-Veikko ‘Tipi’ Valve is one of the most versatile musicians of his generation performing as a soloist, chamber musician and orchestral leader on both modern and period instruments.
Tipi studied at the Sibelius Academy in his home town of Helsinki and at the Edsberg Music Institute in Stockholm, Sweden, focusing on solo performance and chamber music in both institutions.
Tipi has performed as a soloist with all major orchestras in Finland and as a chamber musician throughout Europe, Asia, Australia and the US. He works closely with a number of Finnish composers and has commissioned new works for the instrument. Most recently, Tipi has premiered concertos by Aulis Sallinen and Olli Virtaperko as well as two new cello concertos written for him by Eero Hämeenniemi and Olli Koskelin. ACO’s 2015 season included the world premiere of an arrangement of Olli Mustonen’s Sonata for cello and chamber orchestra, commissioned by Tipi and the ACO.
In 2006, Tipi was appointed Principal Cello of the Australian Chamber Orchestra with whom he frequently appears as soloist. Tipi is a founding member of Jousia Ensemble and Jousia Quartet.
Tipi’s instrument is attributed to both Giuseppe Guarneri (filius Andreæ) and Bartolomeo Giuseppe Guarneri (del Gesù) from 1729, kindly donated the Australian Chamber Orchestra by Peter Weiss ao.
Chair sponsored by Peter Weiss ao
Photo by Jack Saltmiras
31
A U S T R A L I A N C H A M B E R O R C H E S T R A
From its very first concert in November 1975, the Australian Chamber Orchestra has travelled a remarkable road. With inspiring programming, unrivalled virtuosity, energy and individuality, the Orchestra’s performances span popular masterworks, adventurous cross-artform projects and pieces specially commissioned for the ensemble.
Founded by the cellist John Painter, the ACO originally comprised just 13 players, who came together for concerts as they were invited. Today, the ACO has grown to 21 players (four part-time), giving more than 100 performances in Australia each year, as well as touring internationally: from red-dust regional centres of Australia to New York night clubs, from Australian capital cities to the world’s most prestigious concert halls, including Amsterdam’s Concertgebouw, London’s Wigmore Hall, Vienna’s Musikverein, New York’s Carnegie Hall, Birmingham’s Symphony Hall and Frankfurt’s Alte Oper.
Since the ACO was formed in 1975, it has toured Indonesia, Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia, Hong Kong, Japan, New Zealand, Italy, France, Austria, Switzerland, England, Belgium, The Netherlands, Germany, China, Greece, the US, Scotland, Chile, Argentina, Croatia, the former Yugoslavia, Slovenia, Brazil, Uruguay, New Caledonia, Czech Republic, Slovak Republic, Spain, Luxembourg, Macau, Taiwan, Estonia, Canada, Poland, Puerto Rico and Ireland.
The ACO’s dedication and musicianship has created warm relationships with such celebrated soloists as Emmanuel Pahud, Steven Isserlis, Dawn Upshaw, Imogen Cooper, Christian Lindberg, Joseph Tawadros, Melvyn Tan and Pieter Wispelwey. The ACO is renowned for collaborating with artists from diverse genres, including singers Tim Freedman, Neil Finn, Katie Noonan, Paul Capsis, Danny Spooner and Barry Humphries, and visual artists Michael Leunig, Bill Henson, Shaun Tan and Jon Frank.
The ACO has recorded for the world’s top labels. Recent recordings have won three consecutive ARIA Awards, and documentaries featuring the ACO have been shown on television worldwide and won awards at film festivals on four continents.
Richard Tognetti Artistic Director & Violin Helena Rathbone Principal Violin Satu Vänskä Principal Violin Glenn Christensen Violin Aiko Goto Violin Mark Ingwersen Violin Ilya Isakovich Violin Liisa Pallandi Violin Maja Savnik Violin Ike See Violin Alexandru-Mihai Bota Viola Nicole Divall Viola Timo-Veikko Valve Principal Cello Melissa Barnard Cello Julian Thompson Cello Maxime Bibeau Principal Bass
PART-TIME MUSICIANS
Zoë Black Violin Thibaud Pavlovic-Hobba Violin Caroline Henbest Viola Daniel Yeadon Cello
‘If there’s a better chamber orchestra in the world today, I haven’t heard it.’ THE GUARDIAN (UK)
32
Zoë Black Violin
Maja Savnik 2 ViolinChair sponsored by Alenka Tindale
Ike See ViolinChair sponsored by Di Jameson
M U S I C I A N S O N S TA G E
Ilya Isakovich ViolinChair sponsored by The Humanity Foundation
Liisa Pallandi ViolinChair sponsored by The Melbourne Medical Syndicate
Mark Ingwersen ViolinChair sponsored by Julie Steiner & Judyth Sachs
Aiko Goto ViolinChair sponsored by Anthony & Sharon Lee Foundation
Glenn Christensen ViolinChair sponsored by Terry Campbell ao & Christine Campbell
Satu Vänskä 3 Principal ViolinChair sponsored by Kay Bryan
Nicole Divall Viola Chair sponsored by Ian Lansdown
Alexandru-Mihai Bota Viola Chair sponsored by Philip Bacon am
Thibaud Pavlovic-Hobba Violin
33
Maxime Bibeau 5 Principal Bass Chair sponsored by Darin Cooper Foundation
1 Satu Vänskä plays a 1728/29 Stradivarius violin kindly on loan from the ACO Instrument Fund.
2 Maja Savnik plays a 1714 Giuseppe Guarneri filius Andreæ violin kindly on loan from the ACO Instrument Fund.
3 Timo-Veikko Valve plays a 1616 Hieronymus and Antonio Amati cello kindly on loan from the ACO Instrument Fund.
4 Julian Thompson plays a 1729 Giuseppe Guarneri filius Andreæ cello with elements of the instrument crafted by his son, Giuseppe Guarneri del Gesù, kindly donated to the ACO by Peter Weiss ao.
5 Maxime Bibeau plays a late-16th century Gasparo da Salò bass kindly on loan from a private Australian benefactor.
6 Esther Kim plays an Italian Harpsichord after Grimaldi by Carey Beebe, Sydney 1990. This instrument is supplied & prepared by Carey Beebe Harpsichords. In Perth, she plays a French Double Harpsichord by Michael Johnson 1987. This instrument is prepared by Colin van der Lecq.
Players dressed by Willow and SABA
Jasmine Beams Guest Principal ViolaChair sponsored by peckvonhartel architects
Esther Kim 6 Guest Principal Harpsichord
Julian Thompson 4 CelloChair sponsored by The Grist & Stewart Families
Melissa Barnard CelloChair sponsored by Martin Dickson am & Susie Dickson
Timo-Veikko Valve 3 Principal CelloChair sponsored by Peter Weiss ao
34
BOARD
Guido Belgiorno-Nettis am Chairman
Liz Lewin Deputy
Bill Best John Borghetti Judy Crawford John Kench Anthony Lee James Ostroburski Heather Ridout ao Carol Schwartz am Julie Steiner Andrew Stevens John Taberner Nina Walton Peter Yates am Simon Yeo
ARTISTIC DIRECTORRichard Tognetti ao
ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF
EXECUTIVE OFFICE
Richard Evans Managing Director
Alexandra Cameron-Fraser Chief Operating Officer
Katie Henebery Executive Assistant to Mr Evans and Mr Tognetti ao & HR Officer
ARTISTIC OPERATIONS
Luke Shaw Director of Artistic Operations
Anna Melville Artistic Administrator
Lisa Mullineux Tour Manager
Ross Chapman Touring & Production Coordinator
Danielle Asciak Travel Coordinator
Bernard Rofe Librarian
Cyrus Meurant Assistant Librarian
Joseph Nizeti Multimedia, Music Technology & Artistic Assistant
EDUCATION
Phillippa Martin ACO Collective & ACO Virtual Manager
Vicki Norton Education Manager
Caitlin Gilmour Education Coordinator
FINANCE
Fiona McLeod Chief Financial Officer
Yvonne Morton Financial Accountant & Analyst
Dinuja Kalpani Transaction Accountant
DEVELOPMENT
Anna McPherson Director of Corporate Partnerships
Jill Colvin Director of Philanthropy
Yeehwan Yeoh Investor Relations Manager
Lillian Armitage Capital Campaign Executive
David Herrero Events Manager
Tom Carrig Senior Development Executive
Sally Crawford Patrons Manager
Max Stead Development Executive
Kay-Yin Teoh Development Coordinator
Belinda Partyga Researcher
MARKETING
Antonia Farrugia Director of Marketing
Caitlin Benetatos Communications Manager
Cristina Maldonado Marketing & Communications Executive
Ann Chen Marketing Coordinator
Hilary Shrubb Publications Editor
Chris Griffith Box Office Manager
Dean Watson Customer Relations & Access Manager
Christina Holland Office Administrator
Robin Hall Archival Administrator
A C O B E H I N D T H E S C E N E S
AUSTRALIAN CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
ABN 45 001 335 182
Australian Chamber Orchestra Pty Ltd is a not-for-profit company registered in NSW.
In Person Opera Quays, 2 East Circular Quay, Sydney NSW 2000
By Mail PO Box R21, Royal Exchange NSW 1225
Telephone (02) 8274 3800 Box Office 1800 444 444
Email [email protected] Web aco.com.au
35
V E N U E S U P P O R T
In case of emergencies…
Please note, all venues have emergency action plans. You can call ahead of your visit to the venue and ask for details. All Front of House staff at the venues are trained in accordance with each venue’s plan and, in the event of an emergency, you should follow their instructions. You can also use the time before the concert starts to locate the nearest exit to your seat in the venue.
QUEENSLAND PERFORMING ARTS
CENTRE
Cultural Precinct,
Cnr Grey & Melbourne Street,
South Bank QLD 4101
PO Box 3567,
South Bank QLD 4101
Telephone (07) 3840 7444
Box Office 131 246
Web qpac.com.au
Christopher Freeman am Chair
John Kotzas Chief Executive
ADELAIDE TOWN HALL
128 King William Street,
Adelaide SA 5000
GPO Box 2252,
Adelaide SA 5001
Venue Hire Information
Telephone (08) 8203 7590
Email [email protected]
Web adelaidetownhall.com.au
Martin Haese Lord Mayor
Mark Goldstone Chief Executive Officer
ARTS CENTRE MELBOURNE
PO Box 7585,
St Kilda Road, Melbourne VIC 8004
Telephone (03) 9281 8000
Box Office 1300 182 183
Web artscentremelbourne.com.au
Tom Harley President
Victorian Arts Centre Trust
Claire Spencer Chief Executive Officer
CITY RECITAL HALL LIMITED
Chair, Board of Directors Renata Kaldor ao
CEO Elaine Chia
2–12 Angel Place
Sydney NSW 2000
Administration 02 9231 9000
Box Office 02 8256 2222
Website www.cityrecitalhall.com
SYDNEY OPERA HOUSE
Bennelong Point
GPO Box 4274, Sydney NSW 2001
Telephone (02) 9250 7111
Box Office (02) 9250 7777
Email [email protected]
Web sydneyoperahouse.com
Nicholas Moore
Chair, Sydney Opera House Trust
Louise Herron am Chief Executive Officer
PERTH CONCERT HALL
5 St Georges Terrace,
Perth WA 6000
PO Box 3041,
East Perth WA 6892
Telephone (08) 9231 9900
Web perthconcerthall.com.au
Brendon Ellmer General Manager
WOLLONGONG TOWN HALL
Wollongong Town Hall is managed by
Merrigong Theatre Company
Crown & Kembla Streets,
Wollongong NSW 2500
PO Box 786, Wollongong NSW 2520
Telephone (02) 4224 5959
Email [email protected]
Web wollongongtownhall.com.au
36
All enquiries for advertising space in this publication should be directed to the above company and address. Entire concept copyright Reproduction without permission in whole or in part of any material contained herein is prohibited. Title ‘Playbill’ is the registered title of Playbill Proprietary Limited. Title ‘Showbill’ is the registered title of Showbill Proprietary Limited. Additional copies of this publication are available by post from the publisher; please write for details. ACO–173 — 180780 — 1/050517
OPERATING IN SYDNEY, MELBOURNE, CANBERRA, BRISBANE, ADELAIDE, PERTH, HOBART & DARWINOVERSEAS OPERATIONS:New Zealand — Wellington: Playbill (NZ) Limited, Level 1, 100 Tory Street, Wellington, New Zealand 6011; (64 4) 385 8893, Fax (64 4) 385 8899. Auckland: PO Box 112187, Penrose, Auckland 1642; Mt Smart Stadium, Beasley Avenue, Penrose, Auckland; (64 9) 571 1607, Fax (64 9) 571 1608, Mobile 6421 741 148, Email: [email protected]. UK: Playbill UK Limited, C/- Everett Baldwin Barclay Consultancy Services, 35 Paul Street, London EC2A 4UQ; (44) 207 628 0857, Fax (44) 207 628 7253. Hong Kong: Playbill (HK) Limited, C/- Fanny Lai, Rm 804, 8/F Eastern Commercial Centre, 397 Hennessey Road, Wanchai HK 168001 WCH 38; (852) 2891 6799, Fax (852) 2891 1618. Malaysia: Playbill Malaysia Sdn Bhn, C/- Peter I.M. Chieng & Co., No.2 – E (1st Floor) Jalan SS 22/25, Damansara Jaya, 47400 Petaling Jaya, Selangor Darul Ehsan; (60 3) 7728 5889, Fax (60 3) 7729 5998. Singapore: Playbill (HK) Limited, C/- HLB Loke Lum Consultants Pte Ltd, 110 Middle Road #05-00 Chiat Hong Building, Singapore 188968; (65) 6332 0088, Fax (65) 6333 9690. South Africa: Playbill (South Africa) (Proprietary) Limited, C/- HLB Barnett Chown Inc., Bradford House, 12 Bradford Road, Bedfordview, SA 2007; (27) 11856 5300, Fax (27) 11856 5333.
Head Office: Suite A, Level 1, Building 16, Fox Studios Australia, Park Road North, Moore Park NSW 2021PO Box 410, Paddington NSW 2021Telephone: +61 2 9921 5353 Fax: +61 2 9449 6053 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.playbill.com.au
Chairman & Advertising Director Brian Nebenzahl OAM RFD
Managing Director Michael Nebenzahl Editorial Director Jocelyn Nebenzahl Manager — Production — Classical Music Alan Ziegler
This is a PLAYBILL / SHOWBILL publication.Playbill Proprietary Limited / Showbill Proprietary Limited ACN 003 311 064 ABN 27 003 311 064
This publication is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s consent in writing. It is a further condition that this publication shall not be circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it was published.
A C O S O L O I S T S
T O U R D AT E S & P R E- C O N C E R T TA L K S
Pre-concert talks take place 45 minutes before the start of every concert.
Fri 5 May, 6.45pm Wollongong Town Hall
Pre-concert talk by Ken Healey am
Sun 7 May, 1.45pm Melbourne – Arts Centre Melbourne
Pre-concert talk by Lucy Rash
Mon 8 May, 6.45pm Melbourne – Arts Centre Melbourne
Pre-concert talk by Lucy Rash
Tue 9 May, 6.45pm Adelaide Town Hall
Pre-concert talk by Vincent Plush
Wed 10 May, 6.45pm Perth Concert Hall
Pre-concert talk by Rosalind Appleby
Sat 13 May, 6.15pm Sydney – City Recital Hall
Pre-concert talk by Ken Healey am
Sun 14 May, 1.15pm Sydney Opera House
Pre-concert talk by Ken Healey am
Mon 15 May, 6.15pm Brisbane – QPAC Concert Hall
Pre-concert talk by Gordon Hamilton
Tue 16 May, 7.15pm Sydney – City Recital Hall
Pre-concert talk by Ken Healey am
Wed 17 May, 6.15pm Sydney – City Recital Hall
Pre-concert talk by Ken Healey am
Fri 19 May, 12.45pm Sydney – City Recital Hall
Pre-concert talk by Ken Healey am
Pre-concert speakers are subject to change.
37
A C O B E Q U E S T P AT R O N S
The late Charles Ross Adamson
The late Kerstin Lillemor Andersen
The late Mrs Sybil Baer
The Estate of Prof. Janet Carr
The late Mrs Moya Crane
The late Colin Enderby
The late Neil Patrick Gillies
The late John Nigel Holman
The late Dr S W Jeffrey am
The Estate of Pauline Marie Johnston
The late Mr Geoff Lee am oam
The late Shirley Miller
The late Josephine Paech
The late Richard Ponder
The late Mr Geoffrey Francis Scharer
The Estate of Scott Spencer
The ACO would like to thank the following people, who remembered the Orchestra in their wills.
Please consider supporting the future of the ACO with a gift in your will. For more information on making a bequest, please call Jill Colvin, Philanthropy Manager, on 02 8274 3835.
IBM
Mr Robert Albert ao & Mrs Libby Albert
Mr Guido Belgiorno-Nettis am
Mrs Barbara Blackman ao
Mrs Roxane Clayton
Mr David Constable am
Mr Martin Dickson am & Mrs Susie Dickson
Dr John Harvey ao
Mrs Alexandra Martin
Mrs Faye Parker
Mr John Taberner & Mr Grant Lang
Mr Peter Weiss ao
A C O L I F E P AT R O N S
A C O M E D I C I P R O G R A MIn the time-honoured fashion of the great Medici family, the ACO’s Medici Patrons support individual players’ Chairs and assist the Orchestra to attract and retain musicians of the highest calibre.
MEDICI PATRON
The late Amina Belgiorno-Nettis
PRINCIPAL CHAIRS
Richard Tognetti ao
Artistic Director & Lead Violin
The late Michael Ball ao & Daria Ball
Wendy Edwards
Prudence MacLeod
Andrew & Andrea Roberts
Helena Rathbone
Principal Violin
Kate & Daryl Dixon
Satu Vänskä
Principal Violin
Kay Bryan
Principal Viola
peckvonhartel architects
Timo-Veikko Valve
Principal Cello
Peter Weiss ao
Maxime Bibeau
Principal Double Bass
Darin Cooper Foundation
CORE CHAIRS
VIOLIN
Glenn Christensen
Terry Campbell ao & Christine Campbell
Aiko Goto
Anthony & Sharon Lee Foundation
Mark Ingwersen
Julie Steiner & Judyth Sachs
Ilya Isakovich
The Humanity Foundation
Liisa Pallandi
The Melbourne Medical Syndicate
Maja Savnik
Alenka Tindale
Ike See
Di Jameson
VIOLA
Alexandru-Mihai Bota
Philip Bacon am
Nicole Divall
Ian Lansdown
CELLO
Melissa Barnard
Martin Dickson am & Susie Dickson
Julian Thompson
The Grist & Stewart Families
ACO COLLECTIVE
Pekka Kuusisto
Artistic Director & Lead Violin
Horsey Jameson Bird
GUEST CHAIRS
Brian Nixon
Principal Timpani
Mr Robert Albert ao & Mrs Libby Albert
FRIENDS OF MEDICI
Mr R. Bruce Corlett am &
Mrs Annie Corlett am
38
A C O E X C E L L E N C E F U N D P AT R O N S
K Chisholm
Dr Jane Cook
Paul & Roslyn Espie
M Generowicz
Dr Roy & Gail Geronemus
The Hadfield Family
Paul & Gail Harris
Doug Hooley
Mike & Stephanie Hutchinson
Geoff & Denise Illing
Professor Anne Kelso ao
Macquarie Group Foundation
Kevin & Deidre McCannBaillieu Myer ac
Gina Olayiwola
Elisabeth & Doug Scott
David Shannon
J Skinner
Christina Scala & David Studdy
Dr Jason Wenderoth
Anonymous (5)
ACO Excellence Fund Patrons assist with the ACO’s general operating costs. Their contributions enhance both our artistic vitality and ongoing sustainability. For more information, please call Sally Crawford, Patrons Manager, on 02 8274 3830.
A C O C O N T I N U O C I R C L E
Steven Bardy
Ruth Bell
David Beswick
Sandra Cassell
Mrs Sandra Dent
Peter Evans
Carol Farlow
Suzanne Gleeson
Lachie Hill
David & Sue Hobbs
Penelope Hughes
Toni Kilsby & Mark McDonald
Mrs Judy Lee
Selwyn M Owen
Michael Ryan & Wendy Mead
Ian & Joan Scott
Cheri Stevenson
Leslie C Thiess
G.C. & R. Weir
Margaret & Ron Wright
Mark Young
Anonymous (13)
The ACO would like to thank the following people who are generously remembering the ACO in their wills. If you are interested in finding out more about making such a bequest, please contact Jill Colvin, Philanthropy Manager, on 02 8274 3835 for more information. Every gift makes a difference.
A C O R E C O N C I L I AT I O N C I R C L EContributions to the ACO Reconciliation Circle directly support ACO music education activities for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students, with the aim to build positive and effective partnerships between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and the broader Australian community. To find out more about becoming a member of the Circle, please contact Jill Colvin, Philanthropy Manager Manager, on 02 8274 3835.
Colin & Debbie Golvan
Peter & Ruth McMullin
Sam Ricketson & Rosie Ayton
Clare Ainsworth Herschell
Lucinda Bradshaw
Justine Clarke
Este Darin-Cooper & Chris Burgess
Amy Denmeade
Catherine & Sean Denney
Jenni Deslandes & Hugh Morrow
Mandy Drury
Anthony Frith & Amanda Lucas-Frith
Alexandra Gill
Rebecca Gilsenan & Grant Marjoribanks
Adrian Giuffre & Monica Ion
John & Lara James
Aaron Levine & Daniela Gavshon
Royston Lim
Gabriel Lopata
Rachael McVean
Carina Martin
Barry Mowzsowski
Paris Neilson & Todd Buncombe
James Ostroburski
Nicole Pedler & Henry Durack
Michael Radovnikovic
Jessica Read
Louise & Andrew Sharpe
Emile & Caroline Sherman
Michael Southwell
Helen Telfer
Karen & Peter Tompkins
Joanna Walton
Nina Walton & Zeb Rice
Peter Wilson & James Emmett
John Winning Jr.
ACO Next is an exciting philanthropic program for young supporters, engaging with Australia’s next generation of great musicians while offering unique musical and networking experiences. For more information, please call Sally Crawford, Patrons Manager, on 02 8274 3830.
MEMBERS
A C O N E X T
39
Peter Weiss ao
PATRON, ACO Instrument Fund
BOARD MEMBERS
Bill Best (Chairman)
Jessica Block
John Leece am
Andrew Stevens
John Taberner
PATRONS
VISIONARY $1m+
Peter Weiss ao
LEADER $500,000 – $999,999
CONCERTO $200,000 – $499,999
The late Amina Belgiorno-Nettis
Naomi Milgrom ao
OCTET $100,000 – $199,999
John Taberner
QUARTET $50,000 – $99,999
John Leece am & Anne Leece
Anonymous
SONATA $25,000 – $49,999
ENSEMBLE $10,000 – $24,999
Leslie & Ginny Green
Peter J Boxall ao & Karen Chester
Leslie C. Thiess
SOLO $5,000 – $9,999
PATRON $500 – $4,999
Michael Bennett & Patti Simpson
Leith & Darrel Conybeare
Dr Jane Cook
Geoff & Denise Illing
Luana & Kelvin King
Jane Kunstler
John Landers & Linda Sweeny
Genevieve Lansell
Bronwyn & Andrew Lumsden
Patricia McGregor
Trevor Parkin
Elizabeth Pender
Robyn Tamke
Anonymous (2)
INVESTORS
Stephen & Sophie Allen
John & Deborah Balderstone
Guido & Michelle Belgiorno-Nettis
Bill Best
Benjamin Brady
Sam Burshtein & Galina Kaseko
Carla Zampatti Foundation
Sally Collier
Michael Cowen & Sharon Nathani
Marco D’Orsogna
Dr William Downey
Garry & Susan Farrell
Gammell Family
Edward Gilmartin
Tom & Julie Goudkamp
Philip Hartog
Peter & Helen Hearl
Brendan Hopkins
Angus & Sarah James
Daniel & Jacqueline Phillips
Ryan Cooper Family Foundation
Andrew & Philippa Stevens
Dr Lesley Treleaven
Ian Wallace & Kay Freedman
The ACO has established its Instrument Fund to offer patrons and investors the opportunity to participate in the ownership of a bank of historic stringed instruments. The Fund’s first asset is Australia’s only Stradivarius violin, now on loan to Satu Vänskä, Principal Violin. The Fund’s second asset is the 1714 Joseph Guarneri filius Andreæ violin, the ‘ex Isolde Menges’, now on loan to Violinist Maja Savnik. The Fund’s third asset is the 1616 ‘ex-Fleming’ Antonio and Hieronymus Amati Cello, played in this concert by Principal Cello Timo-Veikko Valve. For more information, please call Yeehwan Yeoh, Investor Relations Manager on 02 8274 3878.
A C O I N S T R U M E N T F U N D
Holmes à Court Family Foundation The Ross Trust
A C O T R U S T S & F O U N D AT I O N S
40
A C O S P E C I A L P R O J E C T SSPECIAL COMMISSIONS PATRONS
Peter & Cathy Aird
Gerard Byrne & Donna O’Sullivan
Mirek Generowicz
Peter & Valerie Gerrand
G Graham
Anthony & Conny Harris
Rohan Haslam
John Griffiths & Beth Jackson
Lionel & Judy King
Bruce Lane
David & Sandy Libling
Tony Jones & Julian Liga
Robert & Nancy Pallin
Deborah Pearson
Alison Reeve
Dr Suzanne M Trist
Team Schmoopy
Rebecca Zoppetti Laubi
Anonymous (1)
INTERNATIONAL TOUR PATRONS
The ACO would like to pay tribute to
the following donors who support our
international touring activities:
Mr Robert Albert ao & Mrs Libby Albert
Linda & Graeme Beveridge
Kay Bryan
Stephen & Jenny Charles
Anthony & Sharon Lee Foundation
Ann Gamble Myer
Daniel & Helen Gauchat
Yvonne von Hartel am & Robert Peck am
peckvonhartel architects
Doug Hooley
Janet Holmes à Court
Bruce & Jenny Lane
Delysia Lawson
John Leece
Julianne Maxwell
Jim & Averill Minto
Alf Moufarrige
Angela Roberts
Friends of Jon & Caro Stewart
Mike Thompson
Peter Weiss ao
MOUNTAIN PRODUCERS’ SYNDICATE
Executive Producer
Martyn Myer AO
Major Producers
Janet Holmes à Court
Warwick & Ann Johnson
Producers
Richard Caldwell
Warren & Linda Coli
Anna Dudek & Brad Banducci
Wendy Edwards
David Friedlander
Tony & Camilla Gill
John & Lisa Kench
Charlie & Olivia Lanchester
Rob & Nancy Pallin
Andrew & Andrea Roberts
Peter & Victoria Shorthouse
Alden Toevs & Judi Wolf
Supporters
Andrew Abercrombie
Warwick Anderson
Joanna Baevski
Charles & Cornelia Goode Foundation
Charles & Elizabeth Goodyear
Phil & Rosie Harkness
Peter & Janette Kendall
Andy Myer & Kerry Gardner
Phillip Myer
Sidney Myer
Allen Myers
The Penn Foundation
The Rossi Foundation
Kim Williams AM
Peter Yates
Anonymous (1)
MELBOURNE HEBREW CONGREGATION PATRONS
LEAD PATRONS
Marc Besen ac & Eva Besen ao
SUPPORTER
Leo & Mina Fink Fund
EMANUEL SYNAGOGUE PATRONS
CORPORATE PARTNERS
Adina Apartment Hotels
Meriton Group
LEAD PATRON
The Narev Family
PATRONS
David Gonski ac
Leslie & Ginny Green
The Sherman Foundation
Justin Phillips & Louise Thurgood-Phillips
ACO COLLECTIVE QUEENSLAND REGIONAL TOUR
Lead Patrons
Dr Ian Frazer ac & Mrs Caroline Frazer
Urbane Restaurant Group
Patrons
Andrew Clouston
Cass George
Marie-Louise Theile
ACO UK SUPPORTERS
Ambassadors
Brendan & Bee Hopkins
Friends
John & Kate Corcoran
Hugo & Julia Heath
John Taberner
Patricia Thomas
Supporters
John Coles
Isla Baring
41
PATRONS
Marc Besen ac & Eva Besen
Janet Holmes á Court ac
EMERGING ARTISTS & EDUCATION PATRONS $10,000 +
Mr Robert Albert ao & Mrs Libby Albert
Geoff Alder
Australian Communities Foundation
– Ballandry Fund
Steven Bardy & Andrew Patterson
The Belalberi Foundation
Anita & Luca Belgiorno-Nettis Foundation
Guido Belgiorno-Nettis am & Michelle
Belgiorno-Nettis
Helen Breekveldt
Rod Cameron & Margaret Gibbs
Michael & Helen Carapiet
Stephen & Jenny Charles
Rowena Danziger am & Ken Coles am
Irina Kuzminsky & Mark Delaney
Mr Bruce Fink
Dr Ian Frazer ac & Mrs Caroline Frazer
Ann Gamble Myer
Daniel & Helen Gauchat
Kimberley Holden
Di Jameson
John & Lisa Kench
Miss Nancy Kimpton
Liz & Walter Lewin
Andrew Low
Anthony & Suzanne Maple-Brown
Jim & Averill Minto
Louise & Martyn Myer Foundation
Jennie & Ivor Orchard
Bruce & Joy Reid Trust
Andrew & Andrea Roberts
Mark & Anne Robertson
Margie Seale & David Hardy
Rosy Seaton & Seumas Dawes
Tony Shepherd ao
Anthony Strachan
Leslie C. Thiess
David & Julia Turner
Libby & Nick Wright
E Xipell
Peter Yates am & Susan Yates
Peter Young am & Susan Young
Anonymous (3)
DIRETTORE $5,000 – $9,999
The Abercrombie Family Foundation
Jon & Cheyenne Adgemis
Geoff Ainsworth & Jo Featherstone
Peter Atkinson
David & Helen Baffsky
Will & Dorothy Bailey Charitable Gift
Veronika & Joseph Butta
Caroline & Robert Clemente
Caroline & Robert Clemente
Darrel & Leith Conybeare
Mrs Janet Cooke
Suellen Enestrom
Bridget Faye am
JoAnna Fisher & Geoff Weir
Kay Giorgetta
Louise Gourlay oam
Warren Green
Tony & Michelle Grist
Liz Harbison
Kerry Harmanis
Dr John Harvey ao & Mrs Yvonne Harvey
Annie Hawker
Insurance Group Australia Limited
I Kallinikos
Anthony & Sharon Lee Foundation
In memory of Dr Peter Lewin
Lorraine Logan
Macquarie Group Foundation
David Maloney & Erin Flaherty
P J Miller
James Ostroburski & Leo Ostroburski
QVB
John Rickard
Paul Schoff & Stephanie Smee
& Friends
Greg Shalit & Miriam Faine
Peter & Victoria Shorthouse
Sky News Australia
Jon & Caro Stewart
Alenka Tindale
Ivan Wheen
Simon & Amanda Whiston
The ACO pays tribute to all of our generous donors who have contributed to our National Education Program, which focuses on the development of young Australian musicians. This initiative is pivotal in securing the future of the ACO and the future of music in Australia. We are extremely grateful for the support that we receive.
If you would like to make a donation or bequest to the ACO, or would like to direct your support in other ways, please contact Jill Colvin on (02) 8274 3835 or [email protected]
Donor list current as at 7 February 2017.
A C O N AT I O N A L E D U C AT I O N P R O G R A M
42
Shemara Wikramanayake
Cameron Williams
Hamilton Wilson
Anonymous (3)
MAESTRO $2,500 – $4,999
Jennifer Aaron
David & Rae Allen
Brad Banducci & Anna Dudek
DG & AR Battersby
Beeren Foundation
Mr & Mrs Daniel Besen
Neil & Jane Burley
The Hon Alex Chernov ac qc &
Mrs Elizabeth Chernov
Carol & Andrew Crawford
Anne & Tom Dowling
Ari & Lisa Droga
Maggie & Lachlan Drummond
Cass George
John & Jenny Green
Nereda Hanlon & Michael Hanlon am
Peter & Helen Hearl
Ros Johnson
Peter Lovell
Jennifer Senior & Jenny McGee
Jane Morley
Nola Nettheim
Jenny Nicol
OneVentures
Sandra & Michael Paul Endowment
Patricia H Reid Endowment Pty Ltd
Ralph & Ruth Renard
Mrs Tiffany Rensen
Fe and Don Ross
D N Sanders
Petrina Slaytor
Howard & Hilary Stack
John & Josephine Strutt
Nicky Tindill
Ralph Ward-Ambler am &
Barbara Ward-Ambler
Westpac Group
Dr Mark & Mrs Anna Yates
Professor Richard Yeo
William & Anne Yuille
Anonymous (4)
VIRTUOSO $1,000 – $2,499
Annette Adair
Barbara Allan
Jane Allen
Andrew Andersons
Jessica Block
Dr David & Mrs Anne Bolzonello
In memory of Peter Boros
Brian Bothwell
Vicki Brooke
Diana Brookes
Dr Catherine Brown-Watt psm &
Mr Derek Watt
Sally Bufé
Terry Campbell ao & Christine Campbell
Ray Carless & Jill Keyte
Ann Cebon-Glass
Patrick Charles
Dr Peter Clifton
Andrew Clouston
Angela & John Compton
R & J Corney
John Curotta
Peter & Penny Curry
Ian Davis & Sandrine Barouh
Michael & Wendy Davis
Martin Dolan
Dr William F Downey
Pamela Duncan
Emeritus Professor Dexter Dunphy am
Wendy Edwards
Dr Linda English
Peter Evans
Julie Ewington
Elizabeth Finnegan
Michael Fogarty
Don & Marie Forrest
Chris & Tony Froggatt
Justin & Anne Gardener
M Generowicz
Brian Goddard
Jennifer Hershon
Lachie Hill
Christopher Holmes
Doug Hooley
Michael Horsburgh am & Beverley
Horsburgh
Merilyn & David Howorth
Penelope Hughes
Professor Andrea Hull ao
Sue Hunt
John Griffiths & Beth Jackson
Owen James
Anthony Jones & Julian Liga
Brian Jones
Bronwen L Jones
Mrs Angela Karpin
Josephine Key & Ian Breden
Airdrie Lloyd
Gabriel Lopata
Diana Lungren
Garth Mansfield OAM & Margaret
Mansfield OAM
Mr & Mrs Greg & Jan Marsh
Jane Tham & Philip Maxwell
Kevin & Deidre McCann
Ian & Pam McGaw
In memory of Rosario Razon Garcia
Helen & Phil Meddings
Michelle Mitchell
Barry Novy & Susan Selwyn
Paul O’Donnell
L Parsonage
Prof David Penington ac
Dr S M Richards am & Mrs M R Richards
Em Prof A W Roberts am
Julia Champtaloup & Andrew Rothery
Richard & Sandra Royle
J Sanderson
43
In Memory of H. St. P. Scarlett
Lucille Seale
Mr John Sheahan qc
Maria Sola
Dr Peter & Mrs Diana Southwell-Keely
Keith Spence
Harley Wright & Alida Stanley
Ross Steele am
In memory of Dr Warwick Steele
Caroline Storch
Andrew Strauss
Charles Su & Emily Lo
David & Judy Taylor
Susan Thacore
Rob & Kyrenia Thomas
Ngaire Turner
Kay Vernon
Jason Wenderoth
M White
Don & Mary Ann Yeats
Rebecca Zoppetti Laubi
Anonymous (16)
CONCERTINO $500 – $999
Elsa Atkin am
Ms Rita Avdiev
A & M Barnes
In memory of Hatto Beck
Mrs Kathrine Becker
Robin Beech
Ruth Bell
Max and Lynne Booth
Debbie Brady
Denise Braggett
Mrs Pat Burke
Alberto Calderon-Zuleta
Connie Chaird
Angela & Fred Chaney
Colleen & Michael Chesterman
Richard & Elizabeth Chisholm
Stephen Chivers
ClearFresh Water
Sally Collier
P Cornwell & Cecilia Rice
Annabel Crabb
John & Gay Cruikshank
Sharlene & Steve Dadd
Marie Dalziel
Mari Davis
Mrs Sandra Dent
In memory of Raymond Dudley
M T & R L Elford
Leigh Emmett
Penelope & Susan Field
Jean Finnegan & Peter Kerr
Paul Gibson & Gabrielle Curtin
Paul Greenfield & Kerin Brown
Annette Gross
Kevin Gummer & Paul Cummins
Hamiltons Commercial Interiors
Lesley Harland
Sandra Haslam
Gaye Headlam
Kingsley Herbert
Dr Penny Herbert
in memory of Dunstan Herbert
Dr Marian Hill
Sue & David Hobbs
Chloe Hooper
Dr & Mrs Michael Hunter
Margaret & Vernon Ireland
Robert & Margaret Jackson
Barry Johnson & Davina Johnson oam
Caroline Jones
Bruce & Natalie Kellett
Lionel & Judy King
Prof Kerry Landman
Genevieve Lansell
Kwong Lee Dow
Megan Lowe
Dr & Mrs Donald Maxwell
H and R McGlashan
JA McKernan
Peter & Ruth McMullin
Louise Miller
Justine Munsie & Rick Kalowski
G & A Nelson
Robyn Nicol
Graham North
Robin Offler
Willy & Mimi Packer
Anne & Christopher Page
Robin Pease
Elizabeth Pender
Kevin Phillips
Michael Power
Beverly & Ian Pryer
Mandie & Andrew Purcell
Jennifer Rankin
Mrs J Royle
Garry E Scarf & Morgie Blaxill
Carol Schwartz am & Alan Schwartz am
The Sherman Foundation
In memory of Dr Aubrey Sweet
Gabrielle Tagg
Simon Thornton
TWF Slee & Lee Chartered Accountants
Dr Ed & Mrs Julie van Beem
Denise Wadley
Joy Wearne
GC & R Weir
Sally Willis
Sir Robert Woods cbe
Michael Zimmerman
Brian Zulaikha
Anonymous (31)
44
Mr Guido Belgiorno-Nettis am
Chairman,
Australian Chamber Orchestra
Mr Matthew Allchurch
Partner,
Johnson Winter & Slattery
Mr Philip Bacon am
Director,
Philip Bacon Galleries
Mr David Baffsky ao
Mr Marc Besen ac &
Mrs Eva Besen ao
Mr John Borghetti
Chief Executive Officer,
Virgin Australia
Mr Craig Caesar
Mrs Nerida Caesar
CEO, Veda
Mr Michael &
Mrs Helen Carapiet
Mr John Casella
Managing Director,
Casella Family Brands
(Peter Lehmann Wines)
Mr Michael Chaney ao
Chairman,
Wesfarmers
Mr & Mrs Robin Crawford am
Rowena Danziger am
& Kenneth G. Coles am
Mr David Evans
Executive Chairman,
Evans & Partners
Mr Bruce Fink
Executive Chairman,
Executive Channel International
Mr Angelos Frangopoulos
Chief Executive Officer,
Australian News Channel
Mr Daniel Gauchat
Principal,
The Adelante Group
Mr James Gibson
Chief Executive Officer,
Australia & New Zealand
BNP Paribas
Mr John Grill ao
Chairman,
WorleyParsons
Mr Grant Harrod
Chief Executive Officer,
LJ Hooker
Mrs Janet Holmes à Court ac
Mr Simon &
Mrs Katrina Holmes à Court
Observant
Mr Andrew Low
Mr David Mathlin
Ms Julianne Maxwell
Mr Michael Maxwell
Ms Naomi Milgrom ao
Ms Jan Minchin
Director,
Tolarno Galleries
Mr Jim &
Mrs Averill Minto
Mr Alf Moufarrige ao
Chief Executive Officer,
Servcorp
Mr John P Mullen
Chairman, Telstra
Mr Ian Narev
Chief Executive Officer
Commonwealth Bank
Ms Gretel Packer
Mr Robert Peck am &
Ms Yvonne von Hartel am
peckvonhartel architects
Mr Mark Robertson oam &
Mrs Anne Robertson
Mrs Carol Schwartz am
Ms Margie Seale &
Mr David Hardy
Mr Glen Sealey
Chief Operating Officer,
Maserati Australasia & South Africa
Mr Tony Shepherd ao
Mr Peter Shorthouse
Senior Partner,
Crestone Wealth Management
Mr Noriyuki (Robert) Tsubonuma
Managing Director & CEO,
Mitsubishi Australia Ltd
The Hon Malcolm Turnbull mp
& Ms Lucy Turnbull ao
Ms Vanessa Wallace &
Mr Alan Liddle
Mr Peter Yates am
Deputy Chairman,
Myer Family Investments Ltd
& Director, AIA Ltd
Mr Peter Young am &
Mrs Susan Young
A C O C H A I R M A N ’ S C O U N C I LThe Chairman’s Council is a limited membership association which supports the ACO’s international touring program and enjoys private events in the company of Richard Tognetti and the Orchestra.
45
THE ACO THANKS OUR GOVERNMENT PARTNERS FOR THEIR GENEROUS SUPPORT
A C O G O V E R N M E N T P A R T N E R S
The ACO is supported by the NSW Government through Arts NSW.
The ACO is assisted by the Australian Government through the Australia Council, its arts funding and advisory body.
A C O C O M M I T T E E SHeather Ridout ao (Chair) Director, Reserve Bank of Australia
Guido Belgiorno-Nettis am Chairman, ACO
Maggie Drummond
John Kench Johnson Winter & Slattery
Jason Li Chairman, Vantage Group Asia
Jennie Orchard
Peter Shorthouse Senior Partner, Crestone Wealth Management
Mark Stanbridge Partner, Ashurst
Paul Sumner Chief Executive Officer, Mossgreen
Alden Toevs Group Chief Risk Officer, CBA
Nina Walton
SYDNEY DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE
Peter Yates am (Chair) Deputy Chairman, Myer Family Investments Ltd & Director, AIA Ltd
Paul Cochrane Investment Advisor, Bell Potter Securities
Colin Golvan qc
Peter McMullin Chairman, McMullin Group
James Ostroburski
Paul Sumner Chief Executive Officer, Mossgreen
Susan Thacore
MELBOURNE DEVELOPMENT COUNCIL
Morwenna Collett CEO, Accessible Arts
Paul Nunnari Manager, Event Access & Inclusion NSW Government
Ebru Sumaktas Senior HR Officer, Department of Family and Community Services
Alexandra Cameron-Fraser Chief Operating Officer, ACO
Sally Crawford Patrons Manager, ACO
Vicki Norton Education Manager, ACO
Dean Watson Customer Relations & Access Manager, ACO
DISABILITY ADVISORY COMMITTEE
SYDNEY
Liz Lewin (Chair)Jane AdamsLillian ArmitageLucinda CowdroySandra FermanJoAnna FisherEleanor GammellFay Geddes
Deb HopperLisa Kench Karissa MayoElizabeth McDonaldRany MoranJohn TabernerLynne Testoni
BRISBANE
Philip BaconKay BryanAndrew CloustonDr Ian Frazer ac & Mrs Caroline FrazerCass George
Wayne Kratzmann Shay O’Hara-SmithMarie-Louise TheileBeverley Trivett
EVENT COMMITTEES
P E E R R E V I E W P A N E L SZoe ArthurJohn Benson
Helen ChampionJane Davidson
Jared FurtadoTheo Kotzas
Lyn Williams oam
Yarmila AlfonzettiElaine ArmstrongToby ChaddJane Davidson
Alan DodgeJim KoehneSiobhan Lenihan
Marshall McGuireKatie NoonanJohn Painter
Anthony PelusoMary Vallentine ao
Lyn Williams oam
EDUCATION PEER REVIEW PANEL
ARTISTIC PEER REVIEW PANEL
46
A C O P A R T N E R SWE THANK OUR CORPORATE PARTNERS FOR THEIR GENEROUS SUPPORT
PRINCIPAL PARTNER
PRINCIPAL PARTNER: ACO COLLECTIVE
NATIONAL TOUR PARTNERS
OFFICIAL PARTNERS
CONCERT AND SERIES PARTNERS
MEDIA PARTNERS EVENT PARTNERS
A C O P A R T N E R S WE THANK OUR PARTNERS FOR THEIR GENEROUS SUPPORT
*Conditions apply. Tour price is based on per person twin share, land only in AUD. Fly for $595 is available ex MEL/SYD/BNE/PER/ADL is strictly limited and subject to availability. For new bookings only. Pricing and fl ight offer based on RPCL250418.V. A non-refundable booking deposit of $500pp is due within 7 days of booking. Airfares are with an airline and class of Scenic’s choice. Pricing correct as of 5 April 2017. For full terms and conditions refer to brochure or scenic.com.au/tours/canada-alaska/2018 Scenic ABN 85 002 715 602
138 128 SCENIC.COM.AUVisit scenic.com.au/agents for your nearest Scenic AgentQUOTE ‘CANPRE2018’ WHEN BOOKING
BEST PRICE FOR 2018
Included with Scenic, stroll through beautiful Butchart Gardens, created by Jennie Butchart over a century ago and lovingly developed into a fl oral masterpiece.
2018 CANADA & ALASKAPRE-RELEASE
Butchart Gardens, Victoria
5 STAR
MAGNIFICENT CANADIAN ROCKIES & ALASKAN CRUISE22 Day Cruise & Tour | Vancouver > Vancouver From $13,775*pp | Fly for $595*pp
With Scenic, the perks and privileges come included. Enjoy 5-star luxury on our Magnifi cent Canadian Rockies and Alaskan Cruise, with a full range of luxurious benefi ts that will enhance your experience throughout your journey. Exclusively for Scenic as part of our Enrich program, visit the Capilano Suspension Bridge Park before it opens to the public, meet and greet a Canadian Mountie and be treated to a ‘Rocky Mountain Round Up’, a unique evening fi lled with food and entertainment.
SNMA195 ACOSoloists_Canada PreRelease_FP.indd 1 7/4/17 3:14 pm
48
A C O N E W S
A C O I N S P I R E Q U A R T E TIn March the ACO’s dedicated Education Quartet, the ACO Inspire Quartet, returned to Cairns to continue their work with the Gondwana Cairns Indigenous Children’s Choir at the Choir’s annual choir camp in the Atherton Tablelands.
Whilst in Far North Queensland, they also returned to Djarragun College, a school in Gordonvale that is comprised almost exclusively of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students, to run some live ACO Music & Art classes – our primary school online curriculum delivered via video conferencing.
In Victoria, ACO Inspire visited Worawa Aboriginal College in Healesville. They worked with from the new Performing Arts stream at the school, and performed with them during a special concert for their classmates.
The ACO is proud to acknowledge National Reconciliation Week 2017 and notes the special place, cultures and contributions of the first Australians.
PICTURED: ACO Inspire with Gimuy Yidinji elder, Gudju Gudju (Seith Fourmile), in the Atherton Tablelands.
PICTURED RIGHT: ACO Inspire with the Gondwana Cairns Indigenous Children’s Choir.
Photos by Lyn Williams
49
A C O I N S T R U M E N T F U N D A C Q U I R E S I T S F I R S T C E L L OThe ACO Instrument Fund is pleased to announce its latest acquisition, a 401-year old cello by the influential makers, Antonio and Hieronymus Amati.
The ‘ex-Fleming’ 1616 Amati will be the first cello and third instrument acquired by the Fund, after the 1728/29 Stradivarius and 1714 Guarneri filius Andreæ violins. It also joins other rare historical instruments played by the Orchestra, including the 1743 Guarneri del Gesù violin played by Artistic Director Richard Tognetti, the 1759 Guadagnini violin on loan from the Commonwealth Bank of Australia, a 1610 Maggini viola and a 1585 da Salò double bass, both owned by a private benefactor. It is also a stunning complement to the Weiss cello, a 1729 Guarneri recently gifted to the ACO by Peter Weiss, Patron of the Instrument Fund.
‘The Amati’s brilliant voice will complement the darker resonance of the Weiss cello, a 1729 Guarneri recently given to the ACO by Instrument Fund founding Patron, Peter Weiss,’ said ACO Managing Director Richard Evans. ‘The Amati will mean a tremendous new level of amplification and tonal range for the ACO.’
The ACO Instrument Fund is an unregistered Australian unit trust for wholesale investors only, which invites investors and patrons to participate in the ownership of a bank of fine instruments.
To find out more about the ACO Instrument Fund, please contact Yeehwan Yeoh, Investor Relations Manager at [email protected].
PICTURED: ACO Principal Cello Timo-Veikko Valve unveils the Amati cello in ACO Soloists.
PICTURED: The ‘ex-Fleming’ 1616 Amati cello, the ACO Instrument Fund’s latest acquisition.
50
A C O N E W S
FA R E W E L L C H R I SChris Griffith, the Australian Chamber Orchestra’s Box Office Manager, the voice many of you speak to on a regular basis, is retiring. He first walked into the ACO Offices on Monday 9 May 1994.
‘One of the greatest parts of the ACO is the youth and vitality of the players. They kind of force you to keep a young perspective on things,’ Chris said. ‘I’m really going to miss that.’
‘The Orchestra is so friendly. I suppose I grew up with lots of them. I’ve known Richard, Aiko, Helena, so many of them, since the beginning. I remember Max walking into a plate glass door and getting that scar on his head. It has been an amazing journey.’
During the course of his time with the Orchestra, Chris has seen literally hundreds of ACO performances, so coming up with favourites or highlights was difficult.
‘When we did Handel’s Messiah years and years ago with ACO Voices, it was spectacular, and Bach’s Magnificat was just fabulous. I loved the concert last year with Synergy Percussion, Cinemusica. I wasn’t sure about it when I saw it on paper, but for me, it was the best concert in five years.’
‘Really, there have been hundreds and hundreds of concerts I could listen to over and over again. You see I was a subscriber myself before I started working here. I used to come in the early 1980s with a group of friends. We’d sit in row M or N at the Opera House. It was one of those great social occasions where you’d see the same people at the concerts from year to year. And I’d go into the Green Room afterwards. I was working at the Sydney Symphony at the time. There wasn’t the same security as there is now. There was just a book and I’d sign everyone in: it was like the RSL. We’d hang out and rub shoulders with the players and see people like Joan Sutherland walk through.’
‘I’m really going to miss the subscribers, some of whom I have known for the whole time I’ve been here. I’ve seen so many lovely people come and go over the years.’
‘I’m also really going to miss going to concerts and knowing that I had something to do with the planning that put the concert together. That’s the thing: people often think that it is all the Orchestra. But they wouldn’t be on stage if it weren’t for us. And we wouldn’t be down in our basement office if it weren’t for them. It’s a symbiotic relationship: they need us and we need them. I will really miss all of it.’
PICTURED: Chris Griffith
PICTURED: There is no way to calculate how many calls Chris has answered during the course of his 23 years with the ACO, but it has been many thousands.
PRINCIPAL PARTNER
Pianist Kristian Bezuidenhout joins Richard Tognetti and an intimate ACO ensemble for a program featuring Mozart’s Piano Concerto No.13 and
Schumann’s Piano Quintet.
24 JUNE – 9 JULYADELAIDE, CANBERRA, MELBOURNE,
NEWCASTLE, PERTH, SYDNEY, WOLLONGONG
“BEZUIDENHOUT IS A REVELATION” THE INDEPENDENT
“TOGNETTI GIVES THE ACO ETERNAL YOUTHFULNESS, AND MOZART IS THE ELIXIR”
SYDNEY MORNING HERALD
TICKETS FROM $59 ACO.COM.AU | 1800 444 444 (MON–FRI , 9AM–5PM AEST) Transaction fees apply. Subject to availability.
Top Related