MACA LIMITED CLASSICS SERIES Friday 10 & Saturday …d35ivtiultdflj.cloudfront.net/res/Concert...
Transcript of MACA LIMITED CLASSICS SERIES Friday 10 & Saturday …d35ivtiultdflj.cloudfront.net/res/Concert...
PROGRAMMACA LIMITED CLASSICS SERIESFriday 10 & Saturday 11 June 7.30pmPerth Concert Hall
Vivaldi’sGloria
C3 VG Program Cover 2016.indd 1 3/06/2016 10:56 AM
MACA is proud to be a leader in supporting a wide range of community initiatives, small and large.
We value our position as a platinum sponsor of the West Australian Symphony Orchestra and their vision to touch souls and enrich lives through music.
Established in 2002 MACA delivers a range of solutions in:• Mining• Crushing and Screening• Civil works
With over 850 experienced professionals in Australia and Brazil.
We CareWe are FlexibleWe Deliver
Health & SafetyAS 4801
Quality ISO 9001
EnvironmentISO 14001
www.maca.net.auPh: (08) 6242 2600MACA Ltd | 45 Division Street, Welshpool WA 6106
WELCOME
On a bleak Sunday night about eight years ago I was travelling by overnight train across Europe. I arrived in Venice at 10pm and my overnight train to Rome left at midnight. The station was deserted, I was ravenous and it was freezing. I took a chance and jumped on a vaporetto along the Grand Canal and headed to Piazza San Marco as the snow fell. There was just one little place still open. I had a quick bite and began to make my way back across the piazza. I could hear the echo of my boots in the snow as I walked, and as I looked up I suddenly realised I was absolutely the only person there in the whole of the Piazza San Marco. Incredible. No pigeons, no people, just me, the cold and the night. It was a moment I will never forget, and it was like receiving a beautiful and secret gift from the city of Venice itself.
This was the first layer of the gift, and the second came as I was catching the fast vaporetto to the train. I looked up and there was the Ospedale della Pietà, the home of the orphaned and abandoned girls of Venice where Vivaldi worked for over thirty years as musician, director, composer and teacher.
Handel was the original “idol”. He was a star in his day. These days an “Australian Idol” may become famous for a fleeting moment in time, but Handel has always been, and will always be, popular. If iPods existed in the eighteenth century, everyone would have had Handel on their playlist. Even today, people of all ages find a thrill and excitement in his music. No matter which century, Handel’s music has remained in vogue because of its mass appeal.
I don’t really know who Handel was, although I was fortunate enough to play a concert in his house in Brooke Street, London, a few years ago. From
my musicological knowledge and the atmosphere in his home, I sense that Handel was a man of enormous character, a dramatic man, but also one with a great sense of humour – a genius. Whether the dramatic situation called for exuberance, anguish, terror or adventure, Handel composed music to express all these feelings and more. He could depict, in a single phrase of music, that perfect sense of emotion. And let’s face it, Australians love fireworks!
I’ve had the enormous pleasure of working with extraordinary artists during my career. I first met Sara Macliver in 1991, not long after I had founded the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra and it wasn’t long before I brought her to Sydney to work with me. Sara and I forged a long musical relationship over many years. Soon after I had the fortune to work with Fiona Campbell and I knew I had two perfect singers for my style of classical music. Fast forward to 2014 and it’s time to celebrate the Brandenburg Orchestra’s 25th Birthday!
I wanted to capture and celebrate the exuberance and excitement of this very important milestone with all the flair, colour and recognition such an anniversary deserves and so I specially commissioned a new work from my old friend and celebrated composer Elena Kats-Chernin to mark the event. Our new commission from Elena, Prelude and Cube, pays homage to Bach, offering a glimpse into the world of the baroque and a triumphant celebration of my dynamic period instrument Orchestra and Choir. I’m thrilled that this fabulous work now has a new Western Australian vigour here tonight with the magnificent West Australian Symphony Orchestra and Chorus.
I hope you enjoy the concert.
Paul Dyer AO Conductor/Harpsichord
4
2016 WASO EDUCATION WEEK
FAMILY SERIES
PETER AND THE WOLFSUN 26 JUNE 1PM & 3PM Perth Concert Hall
WASO, two dancers, colourful sets and incredible masks make for a fresh and humorous take on the symphonic classic Peter and the Wolf. Suitable for 5 –10 year olds.
Christopher van Tuinen conductor Platypus Theatre actors
TICKETS $27*
WASO IN THE COMMUNITY
THE RUSTY ORCHESTRASAT 25 JUNE 8PM Perth Concert Hall
Active community musicians aged 25 years and above from all over Western Australia sit side-by-side WASO musicians to create a larger than life symphony orchestra.
Peter Moore conductorCall 9326 0000 to book your FREE ticket to the public performance
Phot
o: J
ames
Cam
pbel
l
WASO IN THE COMMUNITY
WASO EDUCATION WEEKMON 20 TO SUN 26 JUNE Perth Concert Hall
WASO shines the spotlight on the variety of its music education activities by presenting a selection of programs for students of all ages: Young & Emerging Artist Composition Project, primary and secondary workshops, Kids’ Cushion Concerts and full symphony orchestra performances.For WASO’s Education Week program details visit waso.com.au
BOOK NOW CALL 9326 0000 VISIT WASO.COM.AU*A handling fee of $5.50 per transaction applies all purchases. An additional fee of $4.40 per transaction applies for delivery via Registered Post.
5
Pre-concert TalksFind out more about the music in the concert with this week’s speaker, William Yeoman. Pre-concert Talks take place at 6.45pm in the Terrace Level Foyer.
Meet the ArtistsEnjoy a post-concert conversation with Paul Dyer & Elena Kats-Chernin Friday night in the Terrace Level Foyer.
Pre-concert Talks and Meet the Artists are supported by Wesfarmers Arts
MACA LIMITED CLASSICS SERIES
VIVALDI’S GLORIA
VIVALDI Gloria (35 mins)
Interval (25 mins)
HANDEL Music for the Royal Fireworks (22 mins)
Ouverture Bourrée La Paix La Réjouissance Menuet I & II
ELENA KATS-CHERNIN Prelude and Cube (14 mins)
Prelude Cube
Paul Dyer conductor/harpsichord Sara Macliver soprano Fiona Campbell mezzo soprano WASO Chorus
WASO IN THE COMMUNITY
Harmony Music A WASO Brass Quintet visited Castlereagh School on 12 May as part of our Harmony Music Program. It was a fantastic morning enjoyed by all 60 students and 50 staff members who attended. Students heard music of all styles including classical, jazz and music from movies, such as the very popular "Frozen" and theme from Pink Panther. A highlight was the Toccata from L’Orfeo. The musicians played this piece on their instruments and then played it again on hose-a-phones. A hose-a-phone is an instrument made of a piece of garden hose and a funnel! This brought much delight to the students, and it was a wonderful way to demonstrate that musical instruments can be made out of almost anything. The musicians then visited the students in their classrooms to give them a closer look at their instruments. The students loved hearing the instruments up close, and having their picture taken with our WASO musicians.
Harmony Music is supported by Mitsubishi Corporation
WASO ON THE ROADWASO on the Road Regional Touring commenced with a fanfare when a WASO Brass Quintet travelled to the Goldfields recently. Leinster Community School, where we were joined by students from Wiluna Remote Community School, was our first stop for a day of activities including a creative workshop to help students make 82 ‘hose-a-phones’. Students then performed the iconic Queen melody “We Will Rock You!” along with our WASO musicians as a fun finale to the Community Concert that evening. From there, it really was time to be “on the road”, as we travelled 370km to Kalgoorlie, stopping off at Leonora District High School and Menzies Community School, performing for students, staff and families in these communities. WASO was then welcomed back to Kalgoorlie-Boulder with performances, have-a-go sessions and side-by-side rehearsals in four schools. Thursday evening saw the Brass Quintet perform a final Community Concert in the beautiful surroundings of the Kalgoorlie Town Hall. What a week!
6
Paul Dyerdirector/harpsichord
In 2013 Paul Dyer was awarded the Officer of the Order of Australia (AO) for his ‘distinguished service to the performing arts, particularly in recognition of his achievements as Co-founder and Artistic Director of the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra and Brandenburg Choir’.
As one of Australia’s most prominent musicians, regularly appearing as Conductor/Director and keyboardist in Europe, Asia, Canada and the United States, Paul’s lifetime mission is to bring the joy of period classical music to as many people as possible.
An inspiring teacher and staff member at various Conservatories throughout the world, in 1995 Paul received a Churchill Fellowship, in 2003 the Australian Centenary Medal for his services to Australian society and the advancement of music, and in 2010 was awarded the Sydney University Alumni Medal for Professional Achievement.
Winning numerous international awards, including the 2016 Palme d’Or at Cannes, five ARIA Awards, and recently featured on the soundtrack of the Bond movie Spectre, Paul is also Patron of St Gabriel’s School for Hearing Impaired Children.
Sara Macliver soprano
Sara is one of Australia’s most popular and versatile artists, and is regarded as one of the leading exponents of Baroque repertoire. Sara is a regular performer with all the Australian symphony orchestras as well as the Perth, Melbourne and Sydney Festivals, Pinchgut Opera, the Australian Chamber Orchestra and Australian Brandenburg Orchestra, Musica Viva, and a number of international companies.
Sara records for ABC Classics with more than 35 CDs and many awards to her credit. In 2015 Sara sang Creation with the Hong Kong Philharmonic, in Pinchgut Opera’s Bajazet, and in the inaugural Brisbane Baroque amongst many others. In 2016 Sara sings with WASO, ANAM, ASQ, St George’s Cathedral, the TSO, and the Festival of Voices amongst many others.
Sara has been awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Western Australia in recognition of her services to singing.
ABOUT THE ARTISTS
Phot
o: A
ustr
alia
n Br
ande
nbur
g O
rche
stra
Phot
o: R
hydi
an L
ewis
7
Fiona Campbellmezzo soprano
Fiona Campbell is one of Australia’s most versatile and beloved classical singers - a producer and guest ABC presenter, accomplished international performer, recitalist and recording artist. She was the winner of the national Limelight Award for Best Solo Performance 2011 (with the ABO in their Haunting Handel concert series), vocal winner of the ABC Young Performer of the Year Award and the ASC Opera Awards.
Fiona sings regularly as a principal artist with all of the major ensembles and orchestras in Australia; her international collaborators have included the Brodsky Quartet, Tokyo Philharmonic, Manchester Camerata, Hong Kong Philharmonic and many others.
Phot
o: S
teve
n G
odbe
e
In 2015, Fiona appeared as soloist with the Sydney Symphony, Melbourne Symphony, Auckland Philharmonia and for Musica Viva in Munich; she also sang major roles in The Barber of Seville, The Marriage of Figaro and Faust for West Australian Opera.
PATRONS & FRIENDS EVENT
10k Musical Quiz NightFriday 28 October, 7.30pm Perth Concert Hall Wardle Room
Invite your friends and brush up on your music trivia for an entertaining evening with WASO musicians and staff, hosted by former WASO Principal Percussion Tim White and conductor and all-round musical guru Prue Ashurst.
This quiz night with a difference will include interactive musical questions, door prizes
and a silent auction featuring beautiful jewellery from The Perth Mint and WASO experiences that ‘money can’t buy’!
Tickets are $50 per head and include a provision of light food and drinks for each table, seating a maximum of 10 quizzers. Either purchase your ticket as an individual for a lucky dip brains trust table, or get your own team together and make one booking through the WASO Box Office on 9326 0000 stating all team member names.
ABOUT THE ARTISTS
8
ABOUT THE ARTISTSMACA LIMITED CLASSICS SERIES
FRI 1 & SAT 2 JULY 7.30PM Perth Concert Hall
GRIEG Peer Gynt: Suite No.1TCHAIKOVSKY Violin Concerto
ELGAR Enigma Variations
Andrew Grams conductorSimone Lamsma violin (pictured)
Brilliant Dutch violinist Simone Lamsma performs
Tchaikovsky’s popular Violin Concerto
TchaikovskySimone Lamsma
Plays
BOOK NOW Call 9326 0000 or visit waso.com.auTickets from $30*
*A handling fee of $5.50 per transaction applies all purchases. An additional fee of $4.40 per transaction applies for delivery via Registered Post.
202 Simone_Program_Ad mono.indd 1 1/06/2016 9:50 AM
WEST AUSTRALIAN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
The West Australian Symphony Orchestra (WASO) is Western Australia’s largest and busiest performing arts organisation. With a reputation for excellence, engagement and innovation, WASO’s resident company of full-time, professional musicians plays a central role in creating a culturally vibrant Western Australia. WASO is a not for profit company, funded through government, ticket revenue and the generous support of the community through corporate and philanthropic partnerships.
WASO’s vision is to touch souls and enrich lives through music. Each year the Orchestra entertains and inspires the people of Western Australia through its concert performances, regional tours, innovative
education and community programs, and its artistic partnerships with West Australian Opera and West Australian Ballet.
The Orchestra is led by Principal Conductor and Artistic Adviser Asher Fisch. The Israeli-born conductor is widely acclaimed for his command of the Romantic German repertoire and is a frequent guest at the world’s great opera houses.
Each year the Orchestra performs over 175 concerts with some of the world’s most talented conductors and soloists to an audience in excess of 190,000. An integral part of the Orchestra is the WASO Chorus, a highly skilled ensemble of auditioned singers who volunteer their time and talent.
waso.com.au
Phot
o: E
mm
a Va
n D
ordr
echt
10
WASO ON STAGE TONIGHT
VIOLINShaun Lee-Chen*Guest ConcertmasterSemra Lee-Smith Assistant ConcertmasterRebecca GlorieA/Principal 1st ViolinZak Rowntree*Principal 2nd ViolinKylie Liang Assoc Principal 2nd ViolinSarah BlackmanFleur ChallenJane JohnstonChristina KatsimbardisGraham PyattLouise SandercockJane SerrangeliKathryn ShinnickKate SullivanCerys ToobyDavid Yeh
VIOLAAlex BroganNik BabicAlison HallRachael KirkAllan McLeanHelen Tuckey
CELLORod McGrath Louise McKayChair partnered by Penrhos College
Shigeru KomatsuEve Silver*Tim SouthXiao Le Wu
DOUBLE BASSAndrew Sinclair*Joan Wright Christine Reitzenstein
FLUTEMichael Waye Principal Piccolo
OBOEPeter Facer Elizabeth CheeLeanne GloverPrincipal Cor Anglais
BASSOON Adam Mikulicz
HORNDavid EvansRobert Gladstones Principal 3rd HornFrancesco Lo Surdo
TRUMPETBrent GrapesEvan Cromie Peter Miller
TIMPANIAlex Timcke
PERCUSSIONBrian Maloney
SOPRANO SAXOPHONEMatthew Styles^
CHAMBER ORGANStewart Smith^
THEORBOAidan Deasy^
*Instruments used by these musicians are on loan from Janet Holmes à Court AC.
PrincipalAssociate PrincipalGuest Musician^
11
WASO CHORUS
Christopher van TuinenChorus DirectorAndrew FooteVocal CoachLea HaywardAccompanist
SOPRANOValerie BannanLisa BarrettMarian BirtwistleAnna BörnerAlinta CarrollCate CreedonCeridwen DumergueBronwyn ElliottNike Titiola EtimDavina FarinolaLouise GillettKath GoodmanDiane HawkinsMichelle JohnGinny LuffAlicia MetuselaElysia MurphyFiona RobsonGosia SlawomirskiMagdalena TodeaVeronique WillingNicole Zago
ALTOMarian AgombarLlewela BennPatsy BrownCatherine DunnJulie DurantKaye FairbairnJenny FaySusanna FleckDianne GravesVictoria HoggKate LewisDiana MacCallumTina McDonaldLyn MillsLynne NaylorDeborah PiesseLouise SuttonClaire TaylorOlga Ward
TENORJohn BeamishAllan GriffithsPatrick MellingJohn MiltonDonald MooreJohn MurphyJay Reso
Rey Rombawa JRSimon TangStephen TurleyMalcolm VernonBrad Wake
BASS Justin AudcentMichael Berkeley-HillCharlie BondAllan DaviesJames DevenishBrian KentTony MarrionBenjamin MartisPeter OrmondSteve SherwoodChristopher SmithAndrew Wong
Formed in 1988, the WASO Chorus brings together auditioned singers who volunteer their time and talents to perform under the WASO banner. The Chorus is led by Chorus Director Christopher van Tuinen and Vocal Coach Andrew Foote.
For more information visit waso.com.au
12
Christopher van TuinenChorus Director
Christopher graduated with a Bachelor of Music from the Victorian College of the Arts (VCA) in 2001. In 2005 he completed a Masters in Conducting at the VCA. Experienced in both vocal and instrumental music he was awarded the John Williams Conducting Scholarship for 2004-5. He also holds a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Queensland, a Bachelor of Laws from Queensland University of Technology and an Associate Diploma in Music from the Australian Music Examinations Board. In 2006 he received a Green Room Award nomination in the ‘Best Conductor’ category. During 2008 and 2009 he was a member of the Young Artists program as a Conductor with Opera Australia and in 2007 he was appointed as the inaugural Conducting Fellow at the Australian Ballet. He has worked with WASO, Orchestra Victoria, Australian Opera and Ballet Orchestra and the Queensland Symphony Orchestra. In addition to his work as Chorus Director for WASO, Christopher is also Conductor of The University of Western Australia Choral Society, Musical Director of Fremantle Chamber Orchestra and Artistic Director of Lost and Found Opera.
Andrew FooteChorus Vocal Coach
Helpmann Award-winner Andrew Foote is one of the most experienced singers and teachers of voice in Australia. For more than 30 years he has been a regular guest artist for Western Australian arts companies, a national broadcast artist for ABC Classic FM, a freelance opera principal artist performing throughout Australia with Opera Australia, OzOpera and West Australian Opera, a regular recitalist and oratorio soloist, and more recently as an opera director. In his professional concert and operatic career, Andrew has performed more than 30 operatic roles for professional companies throughout Australia - including his acclaimed Ned Keene in Peter Grimes for which he received a 2010 Helpmann Award. His soloist and concert repertoire, including recordings for ABC Classic FM, have consistently drawn superb accolades. Andrew is head of vocal studies at the University of Western Australia School of Music.
13
YOUR CONCERT EXPERIENCE
PRINTED PROGRAMS Please share or download our free printed programs to help us be environmentally responsible. WASO’s programs can be downloaded from our website waso.com.au
FOR THE ENJOYMENT OF ALLWhen to applaud? Musicians love applause. Audience members normally applaud:• When the concertmaster (violin) walks onto
the stage • When the conductor walks onto the stage • After the completion of each piece and at
the end of the performance
When you need to cough, try to muffle or bury your cough in a handkerchief or during a louder section of the music. Cough lozenges are available from the WASO Ticket Collection Desk before each performance and at the interval.
Hearing aids that are incorrectly adjusted may disturb other patrons, please be mindful of those around you.
Mobile phones and other electronic devices need to be switched off throughout the performance.
Photography, sound and video recordings are not permitted.
Latecomers and patrons who leave the auditorium will be seated only after the completion of a work.
MOVING TO EMPTY SEATSPlease do not move to empty seats prior to the performance as this may affect seating for latecomers when they are admitted during a suitable break.
FEEDBACK ABOUT THIS CONCERT Please send your feedback to PO BOX 3041, East Perth WA 6892, call 9326 0000, email [email protected] or leave us a message on Facebook or Twitter.
Join us on Facebook facebook.com/WestAustralianSymphonyOrchestra
Follow us on Twitter twitter.com/_WASO_
Tag your photos #WASO on Instagram instagram.com/_waso_
Watch us on YouTube youtube.com/WestAustSymOrchestra
E-News Stay up to date and sign-up to our SymphonE-news at waso.com.au
WASO On The Go Download WASO’s free app on iTunes or Google Play.
Visit waso.com.au For concert information and to listen to concert playlists.
CONNECT WITH WASO
LISTEN TO WASOABC Classic FM
This performance is being recorded for broadcast at 1pm (or 11am online) on Sunday 26 June on ABC Classic FM. For further details visit abc.net.au/classic
720 ABC PERTHTune in to 720 ABC Perth on Friday morning at 6.15am when Prue Ashurst joins James Lush to provide the latest on classical music and WASO’s upcoming concerts.
14
THE HOME OF THE WEST AUSTRALIAN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAPerth Concert Hall is renowned for having one of the finest acoustics in the southern hemisphere. The concert hall is the home and serves as the primary performance venue for the West Australian Symphony Orchestra (WASO), and hosts a number of diverse performances and events all year round.
FOOD & BEVERAGESPlease visit the Perth Concert Hall website perthconcerthall.com.au for full information on food and beverage offerings at the venue.
Foyer bars are open for drinks and coffee two hours before, during interval and after the concert. To save time we recommend you pre-order your interval drinks.
FREE WATER STATIONSFree water stations are set up at the Corner Bar on Terrace Level near the western window and in the Wardle Room, ground floor near the southern window.
FIRST AIDThere are St John Ambulance officers present at every concert so please speak to them if you require any first aid assistance
ACCESSIBILITY Perth Concert Hall is equipped to assist people with disabilities:• A universal accessible toilet is available on
the ground floor (Level 1)• A hearing induction loop operates in
rows N6:35 to X6:35 in the stalls area
WASO BOX OFFICE AT PERTH CONCERT HALLYou can now buy WASO tickets and subscriptions, exchange tickets and make a donation at the Box Office on the ground floor (Level 1) prior to each performance and at interval.
Tickets for other performances at Perth Concert Hall will be available for purchase only at interval.
The Box Office is open Monday to Friday, 9am to 5pm, and contactable on 9326 0000.
DONATE YOUR TICKETCan’t attend a concert? Contact the WASO Box Office on 9326 0000 to donate your ticket for re-sale and you will receive a tax deductible receipt.
PERTH CONCERT HALL
CONNECT WITH PERTH CONCERT HALL
Join us on Facebook facebook.com/perthconcerthallwa
Follow us on Twitter twitter.com/perthconcerthal
Follow us on Instagram instagram.com/perthconcerthall
Visit perthconcerthall.com.au For concert information.
15
MEET THE MUSICIAN
Jane SerrangeliViolin
What initially inspired you to play the violin?When I was in grade two we were sent home with a note explaining that we could choose to learn either the violin or the cello. My parents selected the violin for practical reasons, i.e. it fitted easily into the car.
Beyond the violin what else do you love?When I was very young my Mum once hid my violin and I found it in the pantry! Perhaps that food/violin connection is the reason one of my favourite things to do is invite friends over to play chamber music, drink wine and have dinner. There is something immeasurably wonderful about music scores which can sit silently on shelves for months or years but when opened and played, can create something emotional and alive. Sometimes I think it’s possible to feel music so strongly it’s hard to believe you can’t stretch out your fingers and touch it or see it swirling around you.
If you had to choose any other instrument to play in the orchestra, what would it be? If I could play another orchestral instrument, it would be the cello with its deeper and mellow voice. It has a lot of great repertoire written for it, and does not need to be lifted onto one’s shoulder like a violin. From the perspective of a violinist who must lift the violin up and down at least one hundred times a day in rehearsal, that is a huge bonus.
What is your most memorable concert experience? Very memorable last year, was the Brahms Festival and the year before that, the Beethoven Festival. Both are among my favourite composers and to be so totally immersed in their music with Asher Fisch conducting was an incredible and wonderful experience. The interest, warmth and passion shown not only by orchestra members, but audiences as well was exciting and gratifying. It nearly made me forget the physical pain and exhaustion engendered by the playing of thousands of tiny notes!
Do you have a favourite holiday destination? Last year I made a trip to France for some French culture, shopping and of course eating. I had a few days in Paris and then stayed with a friend in Normandy in a small village. The Tour de France went through the village the day after I arrived. It was such a wonderful experience.
Also, I have tried skiing in Switzerland and Canada and would love to improve, perhaps in the French or Italian Alps.
16
TIMELINE OF COMPOSERS & WORKS
1700 1800 1900 2000
Handel's Music for the Royal Fireworks1749
Elena Kats-Chernin's Prelude and Cube2014
ELENA KATS-CHERNIN1957
Born in 1957, Tashkent, Uzbekistan
ANTONIO VIVALDI
1678 – 1741Born in 1678, Venice, ItalyDied in 1741, Vienna, Austria
GEORGE FRIDERIC HANDEL
1685 – 1759Born in 1685, Halle, GermanyDied in 1759, London, England
Vivaldi's Gloria1715
17
Antonio Vivaldi (1678 - 1741)
Born in Venice, Antonio Vivaldi died in poverty in Vienna and was buried in an unmarked grave, despite a colourful life as a renegade priest, music-master, womaniser, composer of – among other things – 500 or so concertos (of which about 250 are for his instrument, the violin), and one of the great virtuosos of all time. His music was rarely if ever played between his death and the 1930s, when musicians in Italy began rediscovering his huge and varied output of works. With the interest of music scholars like Alfred Einstein, composer Alfredo Casella and poet Ezra Pound, the revival of Vivaldi began; by the end of the 20th century he was one of the most popular and frequently performed composers.
Gloria in D, RV 589
This Gloria was the first of Vivaldi’s 60 or so sacred works to become well known, indeed famous. It was revived shortly before World War II. The opening chorus, with its simple but highly memorable brilliance, shows immediately why it was an exciting discovery for music-lovers. Those who knew Vivaldi’s concertos would have recognised in the Gloria the same brilliance and vitality while finding a breadth of scale, an epic quality and a range of musical expression found in few of the concertos.
Vivaldi’s main task at the Ospedale della Pietà orphanage in Venice was training the girls in instrumental playing, and supplying music for them to play. But in the years when the Pietà was without a choir master, he could be called upon to compose music for the chapel. His fame as a writer of choral music soon spread outside Venice. Louis XV of France, for example, commissioned from Vivaldi a Te Deum to celebrate the birth of his twin daughters in 1727.
Vivaldi wrote two known settings of the Gloria, of which this one appears from its style to be the later. It splits the text of this section of the Mass into separate movements, in the manner of the ‘cantata’ masses of composers from Naples, which J.S. Bach also followed in his Mass in B Minor. The fact that all the solos are for female voices strongly suggests that the Gloria was composed for the girls at the Pietà, who probably sang the tenor and bass parts in the chorus as well (the bass parts an octave above pitch).
ABOUT THE MUSIC
18
YOU MAY ALSO ENJOYMOZART Requiemfeatured in Asher Fisch Conducts Mozart’s RequiemFri 2 & Sat 3 September
Dotted rhythm – a pattern of alternating long and short notesFrench overture – a suite of pieces consisting of an elegant overture or introductory piece featuring dotted rhythms, followed by a string of dancesFugue – a contrapuntal style of composition in which a short melody is sounded by one voice or part and subsequently taken up by othersObbligato – a prominent accompanying melody
Glossary
The use of a trumpet in the opening and closing choruses of the work adds to its extrovert character. The simple but memorable leaps in the invigorating orchestral opening was a type of music considered new and exciting in Vivaldi’s day. On this foundation Vivaldi places the chorus, singing in block harmonies.
From then on this Gloria is notable for the carefully balanced sequence of vocal groupings, keys, metres, and tempos. The second movement, ‘Et in terra pax’, immediately reveals a wide range of harmony and expression, which has reminded some listeners of J.S. Bach – who was indeed an admirer of Vivaldi’s music.
In the ‘Gratias’ and ‘Propter magnam gloriam’ there are touches of a stricter, more severe musical style, which contrasts with the almost blithe siciliano dance of the ‘Domine Deus’ for solo soprano with oboe obbligato; and also with the dotted rhythms in French overture style of the ‘Domine Fili’. Soloist and chorus alternate in the ‘Domine Deus, Agnus Dei’ which is followed by the daring and powerful harmonies of the choral ‘Qui tollis’.
The music of the ‘Qui sedes’ has more than a suggestion of the character of the opening ‘Gloria’, and in fact prefigures the return of that music for the ‘Quoniam’. The final fugue ‘Cum Sancto Spiritu’ is an adaptation by Vivaldi of a 1708 Gloria by Ruggieri, closing a work remarkable for its pervading sense of unity within variety.
© David Garrett
First WASO performance: 8-9 September 1961. Frank Callaway, conductor; University Choral Society; Molly McGurk, soprano; Iris Archer, mezzo-soprano.Most recent WASO performance: 19 August 1975. David Measham, conductor; University of WA Choral Society, Genty Stevens/Elaine Flint, soprano; Kathleen Edgar, mezzo-soprano.Instrumentation: SATB chorus, soprano and alto solo, oboe, trumpet, continuo and strings.
19
George Frideric Handel (1685 - 1759)
Music for the Royal Fireworks
OuvertureBourréeLa PaixLa RéjouissanceMenuet I & II
On a spring day in 1749 Handel’s Music for the Royal Fireworks caused a massive traffic jam in London. So many Londoners thronged to Vauxhall Gardens for the public rehearsal that traffic on London Bridge was halted for three hours. The actual performance on 27 April 1749 was attended by even more excitement, as the fireworks were a failure and the wooden building erected in the park to shelter courtiers caught fire.
The Fireworks music was commissioned by King George II to celebrate the signing of the Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle, the treaty that brought an end to the Austrian War of Succession. The King and Handel disagreed over the nature of the music: the King insisted on a military band without the strings that Handel wished to use. Handel conceded the point and amassed all the winds and percussion he could find: 24 oboes, 12 bassoons, contrabassoons, nine horns, nine trumpets, side-drums and three pairs of kettle-drums. He revised the work shortly after its premiere, and a month later presented it (with strings) at a benefit concert of the Foundling Hospital in Hatton Garden.
The work is in the form of a French suite, comprising a grand overture and a string of dance movements, each with its own flavour. The Bourrée, a cheerfully transparent piece, contrasts well with the sonorous La Paix (Peace), a siciliana. La Réjouissance (The Rejoicing) is not really a dance, but a genre piece. The suite ends with two minuets, the first in the minor and the second more triumphantly in the major.
© Symphony Australia
First performance: 27 April 1749, Green Park, London.First WASO performance: 15 August 1942. E.J. Roberts, conductor.Most recent WASO performance: 12-14 April 2012. Paul Daniel, conductor.Instrumentation: three oboes, two bassoons, contrabassoon, three horns, three trumpets, timpani, continuo and strings.
ABOUT THE MUSIC
Bourrée – a quick French dance from the 17th century, played lightly and expressing an aristocratic joie de vivre.Siciliana – a lilting dance originally from Sicily.
Glossary
Phot
o: B
alth
asar
Den
ner
20
Elena Kats-Chernin b. 1957
Prelude and Cube
When Paul Dyer commissioned me to compose a new work to celebrate the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra’s 25th anniversary in 2014, I felt compelled for the piece to have a connection to J.S. Bach and in particular his Magnificat which was to be performed in the same concert.
The orchestration for Prelude and Cube is almost the same as Magnificat. It was my aim to feature each instrument in this wonderful orchestra, with added soprano saxophone soaring over the top of the period instruments in the piece: the strings, organ, harpsichord, theorbo, choir and winds as well as timpani and tubular bells. In the premiere performance season Paul was conducting from the harpsichord.
I see this piece as a glimpse into Baroque style, using some elements that we associate with this era, including moving bass and particular repetitive chord sequences.
The first movement, Prelude, is expansive and opulent. I wanted to combine both pomp and passion for Paul’s majestic orchestra, leaving plenty of room for individual colour and large-scale emotion.
The second movement, Cube, is more zesty with a robust rhythmic drive and vigorous energy. The textures are sometimes delicate, sometimes dense. I drew the texts from the Magnificat and from a hymn by Martin Luther. Some of the text in Cube praises Bach himself and his creations: ‘Wie wunderbar sind Deine Werke!’ (How wonderful are your works).
Elena Kats-Chernin © 2016
First performance: 19 February 2014, City Recital Hall, Sydney. Australian Brandenburg Orchestra and Brandenburg Choir. This is the first performance of the work by the West Australian Symphony Orchestra.
ABOUT THE MUSIC
Phot
o: B
ridge
t El
liott
21
TEXT & TRANSLATION
Gloria for solo voices, mixed chorus and orchestraNo.1 Chorus Gloria, in excelsis DeoNo.2 Chorus Et in terra pax hominibus bonae voluntatisNo.3 Duet for two sopranos Laudamus te, benedicimus te Adoramus te, glorificamus teNo.4 Chorus Gratias agimus tibiNo.5 Chorus Propter magnam gloriam tuamNo.6 Soprano solo Domine Deus Rex coelestis Deus Pater omnipotensNo.7 Chorus Domine Fili Unigenite Jesu ChristeNo.8 Alto solo and chorus Domine Deus, Agnus Dei Filius Patris Qui tollis peccata mundi miserere nobisNo.9 Chorus Qui tollis peccata mundi suscipe deprecationem nostramNo.10 Alto solo Qui sedes ad dexteram Patris misere nobisNo.11 Chorus Quoniam tu solus Sanctus Tu solus Altissimus, Jesu ChristeNo.12 Chorus Cum Sancto Spiritu in gloria Dei Patris, Amen
Prelude and CubeMein Seele erhebt den Herrn, und mein Geist freut sich Gottes, meines Heilandes. Vom Himmel hoch, da komm ich her, Ich bring euch gute neue Mär; Der guten Mär bring ich so viel, Davon ich singen und sagen will. Wie wunderbar sind deine Werke alle Morgen.
Glory be to God on high And on earth peace to men of goodwill We praise Thee, we bless Thee We adore Thee, we glorify Thee We give thanks to Thee Because of Thy great glory Lord God Heavenly King God the Father Almighty O Lord, the only-begotten Son Jesus Christ Lord God, Lamb of God, Son of the Father Thou that takest away the sins of the world have mercy on us Thou that takest away the sins of the world Receive our prayer Thou that sittest at the right hand of the Father have mercy on us For Thou only are holy Thou alone O Jesus Christ art most high With the Holy Spirit In the glory of God the Father. Amen.
My soul glorifies the Lord, And my spirit rejoices in God, My saviour. From highest heaven I come, I bring you good news; I bring so much good news That I must sing and tell of it. How wonderful are all your works every day.
22
WASO PHILANTHROPYPhilanthropy Partner
June is WASO Community Support MonthJune is our annual WASO Community Support Month when we celebrate and showcase our deep connection and commitment to the community of Western Australia.
For the communityThroughout June we are building awareness about WASO’s life-changing and award-winning Community Engagement and Education programs, culminating in Education Week, a week jam-packed with free and exciting activities for music-lovers and their families.
From the community We are also celebrating the power of giving by highlighting how donations from the community help WASO provide as many people as possible with access to live classical music. WASO is a not-for-profit organisation and community support is critical for us to continue creating inspiring and joyful music for thousands of Western Australians at Perth Concert Hall, in schools, hospitals and in regional communities across the state.
Join us on the journeyBecome part of the incredible community of Patrons and Friends who believe in our commitment to creating exceptional and accessible musical opportunities for children, young and emerging artists and communities across WA.
Need more information or want to join our community?
You can make a donation today at one of the WASO Community Support Month desks, or by completing and returning the donation form in your concert program. You can also contact Jane Clare on 9326 0014 or email [email protected] or visit waso.com.au to learn more.
All donations over $2 are fully tax deductible.
We invite you to join us on the journey in 2016 and support the Orchestra with a gift.
23
OUR SUPPORTERS
Whatever the shape or size, you are helping WASO make a difference and we thank you for your support. WASO’s philanthropy program continues to grow, supporting our vision now and into the future. It is an exciting time be a part of this community, to meet our musicians and to know you have helped your Orchestra to touch souls and enrich lives through music. Together we can do amazing things.
Symphony CircleRecognising Patrons who have made a provision in their Will to the OrchestraMr John BonnyDr G Campbell-EvansDeirdre CarlinAnita & James Clayton Judith Gedero Robyn GlindemannGwenyth GreenwoodRachael Kirk & Tim WhiteWolfgang Lehmkuhl Deborah MarshTosi Nottage in memory of Edgar NottageNigel & Dr Heather RogersGavin Toovey & Jaehan LeeSheila Wileman Sagitte Yom-Tov FundAnonymous (27)
Endowment Fund for the OrchestraThis fund includes major donations and bequests Tom & Jean ArkleyJanet Holmes à Court ACSagitte Yom-Tov Fund
Estates WASO is extremely grateful for the bequests received from Estates Rachel Mabel ChapmanJudy Sienkiewicz Mrs Roslyn WarrickAnonymous (3)
Excellence CircleSupporting excellence across all we doJean ArkleyBob & Gay BranchiJanet Holmes à Court ACTorsten & Mona KetelsenMichael Utsler
The WASO Song BookWe are grateful to those who have supported new works commissioned for the Orchestra by WASOJanet Holmes à Court ACPeter DawsonGeoff StearnAnonymous (2)
Reach OutSupporting our Education & Community Engagement programsJohn Albright & Susan Lorimer – purchase of the EChO Double BassJean ArkleyPrue Ashurst Creative Partnerships AustraliaRon & Penny CrittallKen EvansFeilman FoundationThe James Galvin FoundationRobyn GlindemannKen JohnsonBarrie & Jude LepleyMinderoo FoundationMrs MorrellLynn MurrayJoan ReylandJohn & Alison RiggSimon Lee FoundationThe Stan Perron Charitable FoundationJean & Peter StokesTrish Williams – Strategic InteractionsAnonymous (1)
If you are interested in becoming a Patron or learning more about WASO Philanthropy please contact Jane Clare, Fundraising and Philanthropy Manager, on 9326 0014 or email [email protected].
WASO Philanthropy brochures are available from the WASO Programs & Information Desk located in the main foyer of Perth Concert Hall, or you can visit waso.com.au.
All donations over $2 are fully tax deductible.
Philanthropic partnerships come in all shapes and sizes
24
We are proud to acknowledge the following Patrons for their generous contribution to WASO in the last twelve months through our Annual Giving program.
Principal Conductor’s CircleGifts $20,000+Janet Holmes à Court ACPatricia NewJudy Sienkiewicz (dec.)
Impresario PatronGifts $10,000 - $19,999John Albright & Susan Lorimer Gay & Bob Branchi Gavin BunningTony & Gwenyth Lennon Margaret & Rod Marston Joshua & Pamela PittTrish Williams – Strategic Interactions
Maestro Patron Gifts $5,000 - $9,999Jean Arkley in memory of Tom ArkleyBill Bloking Dr Roland & Therese BrandIan & Elizabeth ConstableMoira & John DobsonTim & Lexie ElliottBridget Faye AM Gilbert GeorgeDr Patricia KailisKeith & Gaye Kessell Dr Ronny Low & Dr Emma RichardsonBryant & Louise Macfie Robert MayPaula & John Phillips Peter & Jean Stokes Richard Tarala & Lyn Beazley AOSue & Ron WoollerAnonymous (5)
Virtuoso PatronGifts $2,500 - $4,999Prof Fred & Mrs Margaret AffleckNeil Archibald & Alan R Dodge AMPeter & Marjorie BirdAlan & Anne BlanckenseeSally BurtonDr G Campbell-EvansMark Coughlan & Dr Pei-Yin Hsu Stephen Davis & Linda SavageRichard FaragoRobyn Glindemann Annette & Vincent GoerkeBrian & Romola HaggertyJacoba Hohnen & Ted SamsonSylvia & Wally HyamsMichael & Dale Kitney Mrs MorrellJane & Jock MorrisonAnne NolanTim Pavy & Cathy ColeGail & Tony Sutherland Ros ThomsonM & H TuiteStan & Valerie VicichIan WatsonJoyce Westrip OAMAlan WhithamAndrew & Marie YunckenAnonymous (1)
Principal PatronGifts $1,000 - $2,499Ron & Sue AdamsCaroline Allen & Sandy DunnPrue AshurstMargaret Atkins Dan & Gail BamBetty Barker
Noelle BeasleyTony & Mary Beeley David & Suzanne Biddles Kevin Blake Matthew J C Blampey Namy BodinnerPeter & Eve BolandMr John BonnyJohn & Debbie Borshoff Dr & Mrs P BreidahlJean Brodie-Hall AMMarilyn & Ian BurtonProf Jonathan Carapetis & Prof Sue SkullPeter & Sue Clifton Helen CookArthur & Nerina CoopesHon June Craig AM Gay & John Cruickshank Lesley & Peter DaviesJulian Dowse Bev EastLorraine EllardAnnette FinnDon & Marie Forrest E & EA FraunschielDr Andrew GardnerRoger & Ann GillbanksGraham & Barbara GouldenJannette Gray Sandra GrayDeidre Greenfeld Grussgott Family TrustDavid & Valerie GullandRichard B Hammond Pauline & Peter HandfordWarwick Hemsley & Melissa ParkeDr Penny Herbert in memory of Dunstan Herbert
Annual Giving
25
Michael & Liz HollingdaleHelen Hollingshead John & Katrina HopkinsSue HovellJim & Freda Irenic Lilian & Roger JenningsAnthony Kane & Jane Leahy-KaneBill Kean Noelle & Anthony Keller AMNelly KleynStephanie & John Kobelke Irving Lane Paul LeeMeg LewisRosalind Lilley Teresa & Jemima LovelandGraham & Muriel Mahony Gregg & Sue MarshmanBetty & Con Michael AOMrs Carolyn Milton-Smith in loving memory of Emeritus Prof John Milton-Smith Hon Justice S R Moncrieff Valmae & Geoff MorrisVal & Barry NeubeckerDelys & Alan NewmanDr P J NobleJohn OvertonRon & Philippa PackerMichael & Lesley PageAthena PatonRosemary PeekAdrian & Ruth PhelpsCharmian Phillips in memory of Colin CraftPamela PlattAndrew & Suzanne PoliThomas & Diana Potter Alison & John PriceBarry & Dot PriceDr Leon Prindiville Chester ReeveJoan ReylandJohn & Alison Rigg
Ms Elizabeth Sachse & Dr Lance RisbeyLeigh RobinsonNigel & Dr Heather RogersGerry & Maurice Rousset OAMRoger Sandercock Dr R & J SchwengerMargaret & Roger SearesMelanie & Paul ShannonEve Shannon-Cullity Glenice ShephardJulian & Noreen Sher Laurel & Ross SmithPaul SmithMichael Snell & Vicki StewartThe Ambient FoundationRuth ThomasGene TilbrookGavin Toovey & Jaehan LeeMary Townsend James & Rosemary TrotterDr Robert TurnbullMaggie VenerysAdrienne & Max Walters Diana WarnockWatering ConceptsPatricia WestonAnn Whyntie Dai & Anne WilliamsIan Williams AO & Jean WilliamsJim & Gill WilliamsMargaret WilsonJudith Wilton & David TurnerHilary & Peter Winterton AMAnonymous (24)
Tutti PatronGifts $500 - $999Geoff & Joan AireyIan Apps Catherine BagsterMerle I BardwellBernard & Jackie Barnwell Shirley Barraclough
Mrs Berwine Barrett-LennardColin BeckettPamela M BennetMichael & Nadia Berkeley-Hill John & Sue Bird in memory of Penny BirdDermot & Jennifer BlackweirSusy BogleElaine BondsDiane & Ron BowyerElizabeth & James BrownLucia BuralliAnn Butcher & Dean R Kubank Michelle CandyNanette CarnachanClaire Chambers & Dr Andrea ShoebridgeFred & Angela ChaneyDr Sarah CherianDr Anne ChesterLyn & Harvey Coates AOAgatha & Alex Cohen AOBrian Cresswell Gina & Neil DavidsonProfessor Wayne Iwan Lee Davies FRSB Jop & Hanneke DelfosJudy Dolan Rai & Erika DolinschekSimon & Pamela DouglasMrs G EwenJoan GagliardiJennifer & Stephen GardinerGeorge GavranicElaine GimsonIsobel Glencross Douglas & Regina HansenAlan Harvey & Dr Paulien de BoerEric & Elizabeth HeenanJohn and Sue HuanJulie, Christopher, Rosemary & Bronwyn HudsonMr John Hylton-Davies JP, VJPeter Ingram Cynthia Jee
OUR SUPPORTERS
26 Cellar Door Open 10am to 5pm Daily • Call (08) 9755 6220 Visit www.pierro.com.au
Peter S JonesB M KentDorothy KingstonUlrich & Gloria Kunzmann John Kusinski & Annie MotherwayTrevor & Ane Marie Lacy Louis & Miriam LandauMartin & Ruth LevitMegan LoweMary Ellen in memory of KerensaJennifer & Arthur McCombS B Monger-HayDr Peter MossMarianne NilssonDr Walter Ong & Graeme MarshallMarjan Oxley
Graham & Hildegarde PennefatherBev Penny Alpha & Richard Pilpel OAMAnn RawlinsonClarissa ReptonJames & Nicola Ridsdill-SmithChris & Serge Rtshiladze Carole SextonThe Sherwood FamilyPaul & Margaret SkerrittHendrik SmitDr L Sparrow & FamilyPeggy & Tom Stacy Eleanor SteinhardtIn Memoriam of Mr Andrew David StewartLisa & Andrew TelfordRuth E Thorn
Patricia TurnerS R VogtAnne Watson Joy WearneDr Chris & Mrs Vimala WhitakerB M WilcoxGeoff WilkinsonViolette William Janet WilliamsDr Robyn YeoChris ZiatisAnonymous (21)
FriendGifts $40 - $499Thank you to all our Friends who support WASO through their gift.
27Cellar Door Open 10am to 5pm Daily • Call (08) 9755 6220 Visit www.pierro.com.au
WEST AUSTRALIAN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
VIOLINLaurence JacksonConcertmasterGraeme NorrisAssoc Concertmaster Semra Lee-Smith Assistant Concertmaster Rebecca GlorieA/Principal 1st ViolinZak RowntreePrincipal 2nd ViolinKylie Liang Assoc Principal 2nd ViolinSarah BlackmanFleur ChallenStephanie DeanBeth HebertChristina KatsimbardisEllie LawrenceShaun Lee-Chen*Akiko Miyazawa Anna O’HaganMelanie PearnKen PeelerGraham Pyatt Louise SandercockJolanta SchenkJane SerrangeliJacek SlawomirskiKate SullivanBao Di TangCerys ToobyDavid Yeh
VIOLAAlex BroganAssoc PrincipalKierstan ArkleysmithNik BabicBenjamin CaddyAlison HallRachael KirkAllan McLeanHelen Tuckey
CELLORod McGrath PrincipalLouise McKayAssoc PrincipalChair partnered by Penrhos College
Shigeru KomatsuOliver McAslan Nicholas MetcalfeEve Silver* Fotis SkordasTim SouthXiao Le Wu
DOUBLE BASSAndrew Sinclair* PrincipalJoan Wright Assoc PrincipalLouise ElaertsChristine ReitzensteinAndrew TaitMark Tooby
FLUTEAndrew Nicholson PrincipalMary-Anne Blades Assoc Principal
PICCOLOMichael Waye Principal
OBOEPeter FacerPrincipalElizabeth CheeAssoc Principal
COR ANGLAISLeanne GloverPrincipal
CLARINETAllan Meyer PrincipalLorna Cook
BASS CLARINETAlexander Millier Principal
BASSOONJane Kircher-Lindner PrincipalChair partnered by Ron & Sue Wooller
Adam Mikulicz Assoc Principal
CONTRABASSOONChloe Turner Principal
HORNDavid Evans PrincipalSharn McIverAssoc PrincipalRobert Gladstones Principal 3rdJulia BrookeFrancesco Lo Surdo
TRUMPETBrent GrapesPrincipalEvan Cromie Assoc PrincipalPeter Miller
TROMBONEJoshua Davis PrincipalLiam O’MalleyAssoc Principal
BASS TROMBONEPhilip Holdsworth Principal
TUBACameron Brook Principal
TIMPANIAlex Timcke Principal
PERCUSSIONBrian Maloney PrincipalTroy Greatz Assoc Principal
HARPSarah Bowman Principal
*Instruments used by these musicians are on loan from Janet Holmes à Court AC.
CONDUCTOR LAUREATE Vladimir Verbitsky
CHORUS DIRECTOR Christopher van Tuinen
PRINCIPAL CONDUCTORAsher FischPartnered by Wesfarmers Arts
CHORUS VOCAL COACH Andrew Foote
28
WEST AUSTRALIAN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
WASO programs are printed by Pilpel Print www.pilpel.com.au who are proud to be ‘Green Stamp Accredited’. This certification acknowledges Pilpel Print’s commitment to minimising environmental impacts associated with producing printed material.
All rights reserved, no part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording or any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. Whilst every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of statements in this publication we cannot accept responsibility for errors or omissions, or for matters arising from clerical or printers’ error. Every effort has been made to secure permission for copyright material prior to printing. Please address all correspondence to the Executive Manager, Marketing, West Australian Symphony Orchestra, PO Box 3041, East Perth. WA 6892. Email [email protected]
BOARD OF DIRECTORSJanet Holmes à Court AC ChairmanAnne NolanMark CoughlanKeith KessellBarrie Lepley Deputy ChairmanPaul ShannonJulian SherMichael Utsler
EXECUTIVECraig Whitehead Chief Executive Rebecca Smith Executive AssistantAnthony PickburnExecutive Manager, Human ResourcesNarelle CoghillHuman Resources AssistantSvetlana Williams Payroll Officer
ARTISTIC PLANNINGEvan Kennea Executive Manager, Artistic PlanningAlan Tyrrell Program ManagerNatalie De Biasi Program CoordinatorMaya Kraj-Krajewski Artist Liaison/Chorus Administrator
COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENTCassandra Lake Executive Manager, Community EngagementFiona Taylor Education CoordinatorLily Protter Community Engagement Assistant
ORCHESTRAL MANAGEMENTKeith McGowan Executive Manager, Orchestral ManagementJenna BostonOrchestral Operations ManagerDavid Cotgreave Production & Technical ManagerAlistair CoxOrchestral ManagerBreanna Evangelista Orchestral CoordinatorWee Ming Khoo Music Librarian
BUSINESS SERVICESPeter FreemantleChief Financial OfficerAndrew Chew Systems AdministratorAlex Spartalis IT SupportAngela Miller AccountantSushila BhudiaAccounts OfficerRenu Kara Accounts Assistant
PHILANTHROPY Alecia BenzieExecutive Manager, PhilanthropyJane Clare Fundraising & Philanthropy ManagerSarah Tompkin Planned Giving ManagerMegan Lo Surdo Philanthropy & Events Coordinator
CORPORATE DEVELOPMENTMarina WoodhouseExecutive Manager, Corporate DevelopmentJamie Parkin Corporate Partnerships ManagerCliona Hayes Corporate Partnerships CoordinatorGinny LuffCorporate Partnerships & Events Coordinator
MARKETINGNancy Hackett Acting Marketing ManagerMarc MissiaenRelationship Marketing ManagerLuke PownallPublic Relations ManagerKirsty ChisholmMarketing CoordinatorZoe LawrenceMarketing OfficerLily ProtterMarketing Assistant
PERTH CONCERT HALLBrendon Ellmer General ManagerLorraine Rice Deputy General ManagerBrad Matthews Operations ManagerPenelope Briffa Events ManagerPaul Richardson Presentations CoordinatorBruce Gaw Maintenance OfficerRyan Sandilands Acting Marketing ManagerAnnie Loo Acting Marketing Assistant Sarah Salleo Reception & AdministrationJosie AitchisonTim ChandlerVanessa WoolleyTicketing Client Account ManagersEleanor AitchisonAlana ArnoldCheryl ButlerLeticia CannellMary-Louise CarboneWendy Cooper Helen GortmansEmily KennedyTalei LouieRebekah RyanKaitlin TinkerBeverley TrolioCustomer Service and Sales Representatives
29
34
2016 CORPORATE PARTNERS
PARTNER OF EXCELLENCE
SYMPHONY PARTNER CONCERTO PARTNER
OVERTURE PARTNERS SONATA PARTNERS
KEYNOTE PARTNERS
PLATINUM PARTNERS
ORCHESTRA SUPPORTERS
MEDIA PARTNERS
FUNDING PARTNERS
The West Australian Symphony Orchestra is assisted by the Australian Government through the Australia Council, its arts funding and advisory body.
We encourage you to support these partners for generously supporting your Orchestra
To share in our vision and discuss the many opportunities available through corporate partnerships please contact Marina Woodhouse, Executive Manager, Corporate Development on 08 9326 0004 or email [email protected].
Booklet Sponsors page.indd 1 4/03/2016 12:20 PM
2016 CORPORATE PARTNERS
30
Phot
o: C
aitl
in W
orth
ingt
on D
esig
n: B
ronW
Ynro
gers
.CoM
W
esF1
341
1341_WESF - Arts Sponsorship Campaign 2014 - WASO_Program Ad_210x148mm_V2_FA.indd 1 16/02/15 1:16 PM
©1981 Lucasfilm Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
BOOK NOW Visit ticketek.com.au
Wed 15 & Thurs 16 June 7.30pmRiverside Theatre, PCEC
The iconic music performed live by WASO
while the entire film plays on the
big screen.
Move 2_Raiders_Program_Ad v2.indd 1 2/05/2016 12:37 PM