King John Orchestra Concert Sunday, 26th November … · King John Orchestra Concert Sunday, 26th...
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Transcript of King John Orchestra Concert Sunday, 26th November … · King John Orchestra Concert Sunday, 26th...
King John Orchestra Concert
Sunday, 26th November 2017, 7.00 pm
PROGRAMME
Conductor – Chris Jessop
Mikhail Glinka (1804-1857), Overture, Ruslan and Ludmilla, Op. 5
GlinkaspenthisearlyyearsasassistantsecretaryoftheStPetersburgDepartmentofPublicHighways,but inhismid-20shegave thisup to studymusic in Italy andBerlin.HeistodaycreditedwithcreatingauniquelyRussiannationalmusicbyfusingtheEuropeanmusical traditionwithRussian folksongsandanationalist approach.He proved hugely influential on later composers including Balakirev, Rimsky-Korsakov,Borodin,Prokofiev,Stravinsky,andTchaikovsky.
His first opera, Ivan Susanin, was a great success. His second in 1842, Ruslan and Ludmilla, wasinitiallylesswell-received(perhapsbecausethescenariowasreportedlydevisedbyafriendofhis‘inaquarterofanhourwhilehewasdrunk’!),andisnowchieflyrememberedfortheoverture.Theopera,basedonPushkin’spoemofthesamename,tellsthestoryoftheabductionofLudmilla,thedaughterofPrinceVladimir,bytheevilwizardChernomor,andtheattemptofRuslan,oneofhersuitors, torescueher.Ruslantriumphs in theend,afterencounteringahutonhen’s legs,magicalgardens,dragons,agianthumanhead,witches,castles,andamagicsword.Themelodiesoftheoverturemostlycomefromthegeneralrejoicingattheendoftheopera.Aboldandconfidentopening for thebrass,wind,andtimpanimingleswithbustlingpassages forstrings.The more lyrical theme that first appears in the bassoon and lower strings represents Ruslan;Chernomorisrepresentedbywholetonescalesthatdonot‘fit’inthetraditionofWesternharmony,andwouldhavesoundedveryunfamiliartolistenersatthetime.Thethemesdevelopinsonataformbeforeacodathatbringsthepiecetoarousingconclusionthatbefitsthehappyending.
Dmitry Shostakovich (1906-1975), Piano Concerto No. 2 in F Major, Op. 102
1.Allegro2.Andante3.Allegro
Shostakovichwrotethisconcertoin1957forhissonMaxim’snineteenthbirthday.Perhaps as a result of the greater artistic freedom he was enjoying followingStalin’sdeathfouryearsearlier,itisfarmorecheerfulthanalotofhisworks,andfulloffamilyin-jokes.Italsocontainssomeofhismostromanticwriting.
The first movement is characterized by light and elegant rhythmic interplaybetween the orchestra and the soloist, with octaves in both hands for the piano part. Thisplayfulnessgiveswaytotheintenselysoulfulsecondmovement,withthepianoemergingoutofagorgeousandtender introduction for thestrings.Themusicmoves fromminor tomajorandbackagain,insomeofShostakovich’smostmovingwriting.
There is no pause between the second movement and the dance-like third. Here ShostakovichincludesmaterialbasedonHanon’sinfamouspianoexercise,asajokebetweenhimandMaxim–heclaimeditwastheonlywayhecouldgethimtopracticethem!
Lopsided rhythms propel the concerto to its conclusion; although this concerto is sometimesthoughtofasoneofShostakovich’s less importantworks, itsyouthfulvigourandcheekinesshaveensureditspopularitywithpianistsandlistenersalike.
Soloist - Gavin Richards
Gavin Richards is Assistant Head at the Perse School, having served as Director of Music therebetween2002and2014.HehasanHonoursdegree inMusic fromCambridgeUniversityandalsostudiedpianoattheRoyalAcademyofMusicunderthelateAlexanderKelly.Hehastaughtpianotostudents of all ages and has performed widely as a concerto and recital soloist – includingperformances of Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 2 at the Symphony Hall in Birmingham, andalsowith theKing JohnOrchestra in2015.Hecreated theMusicLandwebsite,whichhasbecomeone of the leading online communities for music education in the UK; he has contributed as afreelancewritertoRhinegoldPublishing’sClassroomMusicandhehasexaminedfortheCambridgeInternationalExaminationsBoard.
--Interval--
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893), Symphony No. 5 in E Minor, Op. 64
1.Andante–Allegro conanima2.Andante cantabile, conalcuna licenza–Moderato conanima–Andantemosso–Allegronontroppo3.Valse:Allegromoderato4.Finale–Andantemaestoso–Allegrovivace–Moltovivace–Moderatoassaiemoltomaestoso–Presto
LikeGlinka,TchaikovskystruckabalancebetweentheEuropeanmusicaltraditionand the inspiration he drew from Russian folk music, and his fifth symphonytypifieshisapproachinthisregard.
The composer sketched various notes for the first movement in April 1888:“Murmurs, doubts, laments, reproaches…shall I castmyself into the embrace offaith? A complete resignation before fate,which is the same as the inscrutablepredestinationof fate…”.Theextenttowhichhedevelopedthis idea isdoubtful
(by June 1888 he was claiming that the piece was not programmatic at all), but it certainly issignificant, and ithasbeen suggested that the recurring theme thatoccurs inall fourmovementsrepresentsanevocationoftheideaoffate.
Thesymphonyopenswiththefatemotif in the lowwoodwind; thisominousstartdevelops intoatentative,questioningallegro,withathemereminiscentofSlavicfolktunes.Thesecondmovementopenswithagorgeousmain themeadapted fromapopular lovesong,playedby thesolohorn.Alushorchestralclimaxisinterruptedbythereturnofthefatethemebeforethemusicfadesaway.
Thethirdmovementisagracefulwaltz,withabusysemiquaversectionforstrings–again,thefatetheme reappears at the end. The fourthmovement reintroduces the fate theme, but in amajorratherthanminorkey.Themusicgrowsinstrengthandgrandeur,andaftertheenergyanddriveofthemiddlesection,thesymphonycomestoatriumphantconclusionwithagrandmarch, inwhichthefatethemeisproclaimedloudlyinthebrasssection.
Tchaikovskyinitiallyhaddoubtsaboutthesymphony,deemingit‘tooinsincere’and‘repellentinitsexcesses’. Critical reception was also somewhat mixed to begin with – one American reviewerlikened it to ‘a horde of demons struggling in a barrel of brandy’! However, the piece grew inpopularityafterTchaikovsky’sdeath,andbecameoneofhismostpopularlarge-scaleworks.
OneofthemostmemorableperformanceswasbytheLeningradRadioOrchestraduringtheSiegeofLeningrad in theSecondWorldWar.Theorchestracontinuedperformingduringthesiegetoraisemorale,andonOctober20th1941playedTchaikovsky’s fifth,broadcasting live toLondon.Bombsbegan to fall as the secondmovement began; the orchestra continued playing until the very lastnote.
e ThisperformanceisdedicatedtothememoryofJamieGardiner,1994-2017e
THE KING JOHN ORCHESTRA – KJO
www.kingjohnorchestra.org.uk
Conductor-ChrisJessop
Chris Jessop has beenMusical Director of the King JohnOrchestra since 2010. He has previouslyconductedtheOrlandoSingersofCambridge,SwaveseyCommunityChoir,StIvesChoralSocietyandtheAddenbrooke’sMusicalSociety,andhasalsobeen theChoralDirectorof theHuntingdonshirePhilharmonicSociety.RepertoireconductedincludesBach'sMassinBMinor,VaughanWilliams'SeaSymphony,Handel'sSamson,MessiahandDixitDominus,andElgar'sSpiritofEnglandandTheMusicMakers.HehasbeenaGPpartneratCromwellPlaceSurgery,StIves,since1996.
OurPlayers
TheKJOwasfounded in2006byparentsofKing’sCollegeSchoolandquicklyexpandedto includeparentsfromStJohn’sandanyoneelsewhowouldliketojoinus.Wewelcomeanyonewhowouldliketheopportunitytoplayinanorchestra:noparticularconnectionwiththeschoolsisnecessary.Therearenoauditionsandanyoneiswelcometojoinuntilasectionisfull,buttoenjoyityouwillneed to be (or have been at some point!) at least Grade 6 standard.We rehearse fortnightly onMondayeveningsduringtermtime.Wehavesomevacanciesinthestringsandbrasssectionsatthemoment. If you are interested in playing, please use the contact form on the website athttp://www.kingjohnorchestra.org.uk/aboutjoining.html,andwewillgetintouch.
Violin1LaurenceDrake(Leader)FrancesBaxter
DavidCope
JulianEdge-Partington
AlexandraHayes
JoanneNewton
RebeccadeRafael
ElizabethTaylor
RosamundWilliams
Violin2AntheaMillarJoannaCargill
SheilaHunter
KitStoner
AndrewTusa
AnnWinterborn
ViolaHeatherSutcliffeSarahSteed
CatrionaBall
JoshHealey
MaryKasanicki
MaryReid
CelloFionaCornishGilesBarton-Owen
DavidCarruthers
JonathanChapter
JohnCheney
HelenClayton
RosemaryGrande
JaxParsonson
CharlotteSale
UrsulaWolff
DoubleBassAlisonMcNaught
CarolPatton
AlanGrayer
Flute1/PiccoloRobertGardiner
Flute2LucindaCzernin
AliceGarnett
OboePhilippaElloway
AlanJackson
MaryJaneO’Sullivan
ClarinetPennyBarton
WendyFray
JamesLoudon
BassoonJonathanGadsbyJeremyFairbrother
HornChrisRogers
SachikoRocca
HollyBaker
SusanFairley
TrumpetNaomiWrycroft
RoryGordon
TromboneNigelLow
JimRowley
BassTromboneLizWhite
TubaRobertSansom
TimpaniKateWishart
OUR CHARITY TONIGHT
ThisyearatourKJOconcertwearesupportingtheliteracycharitySchoolreaders.
In2016oneinthreechildrenfailedtoreachtherequiredreadingstandardattheageof11.Thismeansthatthousandsofchildrenarenotbenefittingfullyfromtheirsecondaryeducation.Evenmorefrighteningisthefactthat48%oftheprisonpopulationintheUKhasareadingageof11orless:evidencethatthelong-termeffectsofilliteracycanradicallyaffectachild’slifechances.
SchoolreadersistheonlynationalliteracycharityintheUKwhichrecruits,matchesandsupportsreadingvolunteerstoreadonaweeklybasiswithprimaryschoolchildren,atnocosttotheschool.WerecruitreadingvolunteersfromnetworkssuchastheWI,andwematchthemtoprimaryschoolsintheirlocalarea.Theschoolthencarriesoutthenecessarysecuritycheckandlinksthevolunteertothosepupilswhoneedextraone-to-onereadingsupport.Onaverageourvolunteersspend2hourseachweekreadingwith10children.
ThecosttoSchoolreadersofgivingreadingsupporttoonechildforayearisjust£15,astheSchoolreadersmodelisbuiltonvolunteers:fromourreadersthemselves,tothosewhorecruitthematcountylevel,toourcounty-basedfundraisers–allaregivingtheirtimeforfree.
ThisyearweareexpandingourserviceinCambridgeshireandaimtobeworkingwith830childrenin39primaryschoolsbyJuly2018.Pleasehelpustoreachasmanyofthesechildrenaspossible.
Thankyouforyoursupport!
Please support generously!
Andfinally,specialthanksto:
KatherineFirthfortheposterillustrationJohnatRyecroftDataforprintingservicesMichaelHolidayandThePerseSchoolforinstrumentloanThestaffofKing’s,StJohn'sandthePerseSchoolsforalltheirsupportandencouragementRobertZiegler,ourPatronforhiscontinuedenthusiasmandsupport