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New Music Concert Listings
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9 Dec |
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10 Dec |
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11 Dec |
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12 Dec |
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13 Dec
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Thursday, September 13, 2012 at 19.00 Fish Music The Big Screen The Big Screen, Armada Way, Plymouth United Kingdom 01752 585050 http://peninsula-arts@plymouth.ac.uk
Tickets: Free Ten Tors Orchestra Strings
Sam Richards piano
Tim Sayer trumpet
Andy Vissier saxophone
150 with Plymouth University
Fish in an aquarium become musical notes by placing a musical stave in front of them. String players play this mobile score/installation. Improvisers, with their backs to the action, take the string sound as their cue. Fish Music has become an urban legend. Come and see and hear the original, the real thing.
Sam Richards : Fish Music
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13 Dec
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14 Dec
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Friday, September 14, 2012 at 4:45PM Contemporary Classics 2 Kings Place 90 York Way, London, N1 9AG United Kingdom 020 7520 1440 http://www.kingsplace.co.uk/ info@kingsplace.co.uk
Tickets: £4.50 Mark van de Wiel clarinet
Jonathan Morton violin
Igor Stravinsky’s output varied hugely over his lifetime, and The Soldier’s Tale (1918) dates from the early Russian phase after the composer had made a huge impact with his early ballet scores including Petrushka and The Rite of Spring. The original piece is a musical, narrative and dance composition which tells the story of a solider making a deal with the devil. This arrangement for three instruments was made by Stravinsky in 1919, and includes five numbers from the longer original for seven players.
Stravinsky's Three Pieces for Solo Clarinet also date from the same time, and are dedicated to Werner Reinhart, a supporter and patron of Stravinsky’s and a fine amateur clarinettist. Oliver Knussen’s Secret Psalm was written as a memorial piece to Michael Vyner, the artistic director of the London Sinfonietta until 1989. The concert will be introduced by the players, who will demonstrate how these contemporary classics work.
Igor Stravinsky : Three pieces for solo clarinet Oliver Knussen : Secret Psalm for unaccompanied violin Igor Stravinsky : The Soldier's Tale (1919, trio version)
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14 Dec
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Friday, September 14, 2012 at 3:30PM Contemporary Classics 1 Kings Place 90 York Way, London, N1 9AG United Kingdom 020 7520 1440 http://www.kingsplace.co.uk/ info@kingsplace.co.uk
Tickets: £4.50 Mark van de Wiel clarinet
London Sinfonietta
This concert combines a 20th century chamber music classic along with other contrasting and complementary chamber pieces.
Bartók’s Contrasts was written in 1938, commissioned by jazz clarinettist Benny Goodman and incorporates a number of Hungarian and Rumanian folk melodies. Lutoslawski’s Dance Preludes for clarinet and piano is similarly based on folk melodies, this time from the north of his native Poland. London-based composer Simon Holt’s Brief Candles is an evocative set of eight miniatures for solo clarinet. London Sinfonietta Principal clarinet Mark van de Wiel features as soloist.
Simon Holt : Brief Candles (for solo clarinet) Witold Lutoslawski : Dance Preludes Béla Bartók : Contrasts
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15 Dec |
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16 Dec
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Sunday, September 16, 2012 at 8:45PM Minimal Materials 2 Kings Place 90 York Way, London, N1 9AG United Kingdom 020 7520 1440 http://www.kingsplace.co.uk/ info@kingsplace.co.uk
Tickets: £4.50 Sound Intermedia
London Sinfonietta
Steve Reich first developed his Counterpoint pieces in the 1980s, using in distilled form some of the compositional techniques he had developed from as early as the late 1960s.
While these pieces can be performed live, using many instrumentalists, the idea of one live musician performing against a recording of themselves came from Reich’s earlier experiments that developed such techniques as phasing (a musical pattern shifting inexorably forward against a steady version of itself).
The Counterpoints use short melodic phrases which are mostly played in canon, repeated at a fixed distance from each other. Each piece progresses through the differently paced sections by adding layer upon layer of interlocking ideas.
While it’s possible to hear the musical evolution of each piece as the fragments build up, the listener can eventually just revel in the fascinating and energetic textures, picking out new melodic patterns that emerge, guided sometimes by the soloist who also layers these on top.
Steve Reich : Vermont Counterpoint Steve Reich : New York Counterpoint Steve Reich : Cello Counterpoint
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16 Dec
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Sunday, September 16, 2012 at 7:15PM Minimal Materials 1 Kings Place 90 York Way, London, N1 9AG United Kingdom 020 7520 1440 http://www.kingsplace.co.uk/ info@kingsplace.co.uk
Tickets: £4.50 London Sinfonietta
London Sinfonietta Academy Ensemble
The first of two concerts that explore how the repetition of minimal amounts of musical material make for a compelling listen.
Laurence Crane’s music is hauntingly beautiful in its stillness. Crafted with immense care, and a careful choice of consonant harmonies, his Trio and Riis both date from 1996.
Graham Fitkin was a pupil of Louis Andriessen, and while studying with him evolved his own highly tonal and often piano based version of minimal composition. His early piano piece, The Cone Gatherers (1987) helped establish his reputation and the concert also features his high energy Flak for two pianos and eight hands and a new arrangement for ensemble of Compel.
In this concert, London Sinfonietta musicians perform side-by-side with members of the London Sinfonietta Academy Ensemble.
Graham Fitkin : The Cone Gatherers Laurence Crane : Trio Graham Fitkin : Flak Laurence Crane : Riis Graham Fitkin : Compel
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17 Dec
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Monday, September 17, 2012 at 19:30 The Necks Barbican Hall, London Barbican, Silk Street, London EC2 United Kingdom 020 7638 8891 http://www.barbican.org.uk/eticketing
Tickets: £15.50 The Necks
Together for 25 years the Australian cult trio, The Necks, enthral audiences worldwide with their compelling style of improvisation.
Chris Abrahams (piano), Tony Buck (drums), and Lloyd Swanton (bass) conjure a chemistry together that defies orthodox description. Not entirely avant-garde, nor minimalist, nor ambient, nor jazz, their music is regularly described internationally as, simply, unique.
The deceptive simplicity of their music throws forth new charms on each hearing. Featuring lengthy pieces of long-form development, which build in a mesmerizing, epic fashion frequently underpinned by an insistent deep groove, their performances are never less than phenomenal.
Village Underground in Shoreditch will play host to this great cult band of Australia as part of our Transcender festival.
'One of the most extraordinary groups on the planet... sonic experience that has few parallels or rivals.' Guardian
The Necks : Various
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17 Dec
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Monday, September 17, 2012 at 19.30 Julietta English National Opera London Coliseum United Kingdom
Tickets: £12-83 ENO
Michel arrives in a small town, intent on finding the unknown girl he once heard singing at an open window. But is he the only sane man in a world where everyone else has lost their memory, or a madman trapped in a recurring dream from which there is no escape?
Based on a 1930s French surrealist play set in a poetical no-man’s-land poised between dreams and reality, Julietta is the operatic masterpiece of Martinu, the finest Czech composer in the generation following Janácek. ENO’s new production of this poignant work is directed by Richard Jones, whose inspired staging of The Tales of Hoffmann – ‘a potent cocktail of image and reality, illusions and fantasies’ (Evening Standard) – was one of last season’s five-star hits. Edward Gardner, ENO’s award-winning Music Director, conducts a large cast led by tenor Peter Hoare, star of A Dog’s Heart and The Damnation of Faust, and ENO Harewood Artist Julia Sporsén as Julietta, the girl of his dreams.
Mon 17 Sep 2012
Sat 22 Sep 2012
Thu 27 Sep 2012
Sat 29 Sep 2012
Tue 02 Oct 2012
Wed 03 Oct 2012
Bohuslav Martinù : Julietta
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18 Dec
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Tuesday, September 18, 2012 at 7.30pm Jack Liebeck performs Sibelius Cadogan Hall 5 Sloane Terrace, London, SW1X 9DQ United Kingdom 02075898212
Tickets: £40, £32.50, £25, £15 Conductor - Enrique Batiz
Violin - Jack Liebeck
A brand-new season of orchestral masterpieces gets off to a dramatic start with Wagner's exhilarating Overture to The Flying Dutchman, one of his earliest operas. The Violin Concerto by Sibelius is among his best-loved works, combining passionate lyricism with dazzling display. The Concerto finds an exciting exponent in violinist Jack Liebeck, winner of the 2010 Classical BRIT Award for 'Young British Performer of the Year'.
Tchaikovsky's Fourth Symphony is one of his most powerful works, charting an intense struggle against the caprices of Fate, culminating in an electrifying finale in which the battle seems to have been won.
Richard Wagner : The Flying Dutchman Overture Jean Sibelius : Violin Concerto Pyotr Tchaikovsky : Symphony No.4
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19 Dec |
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20 Dec |
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21 Dec
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22 Dec
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23 Dec
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24 Dec
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25 Dec
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Tuesday, September 25, 2012 at 7.30pm Dmitry Yablonsky conducts Amirov and Stravinsky Cadogan Hall 5 Sloane Terrace, London, SW1X 9DQ United Kingdom 02075898212
Tickets: £40, £32.50, £25, £15 Conductor - Dmitry Yablonsky
Piano - Farhad Badalbeyli
AMIROV Azerbaijan Capriccio
AMIROV Piano Concerto after Arabian Themes
STRAVINSKY Petrushka (1947)
A colourful programme featuring two rare gems from Azerbaijani composer Fikret Amirov. Overlooking the Caspian Sea, Azerbaijan is a cultural melting pot bubbling with influences from Eastern Europe, Western Asia and the Middle East. Fusing Azerbaijani folkmusic with powerful orchestration, Amirov transports us to his homeland in the mysterious Azerbaijan Capriccio and exotic Piano Concerto, which was influenced by Arabic music. The piano is also featured in Stravinsky’s ballet Petrushka, a mesmerising depiction of an unfortunate Russian puppet. Written early in the twentieth century and revised in 1947, this is a masterpiece full of intricate rhythms and inventive orchestration.
Free for all concert ticket holders: The Mountains of Gabala; a 30-minute film documenting the city of Gabala and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra’s residency at the Gabala International Music Festival, featuring conductor Dmitry Yablonsky and pianist Farhad Badalbeyli, Artistic Directors of Gabala Festival. Main auditorium 6.15pm.
Box Office: 020 7730 4500
Fikret Amirov : Azerbaijan Capriccio Fikret Amirov : Piano Concerto after Arabian Themes Igor Stravinsky : Petrushka (1947)
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26 Dec |
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27 Dec
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Thursday, September 27, 2012 at 7.45 pm In the Locked Room Lindbury Studio Royal Opera House, Covent Garden United Kingdom http://www.roh.org.uk
Royal Opera House Associate Company Music Theatre Wales, and Scottish Opera
This one-act opera, an adaptation of a short story by Thomas Hardy, explores the power of the imagination and the boundaries between reality and fantasy.
Huw Watkins is admired across the UK for his work as a composer and pianist, and has an impressive body of orchestra, chamber and vocal works. For In the Locked Room, he teams up with poet and librettist David Harsent, with whom he previously collaborated in 2009 on the chamber opera Crime Fiction. Harsent’s work in opera also includes his libretto for Harrison Birtwistle’s The Minotaur, which was given its premiere at the Royal Opera House in 2008.
In the Locked Room is brought to the Linbury Studio Theatre by Music Theatre Wales in collaboration with Scottish Opera. The production is directed by Michael McCarthy and Matthew Richardson.
PERFORMANCES ALSO ON 28TH AND 29TH SEPTEMBER
Huw Watkins : In the Locked Room
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28 Dec |
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29 Dec
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29 Dec
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30 Dec
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30 Dec
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Sunday, September 30, 2012 at 7.30pm The Fathers are Watching CBSO Centre, Birmingham Berkley Street, Birmingham United Kingdom
Tickets: In advance: £14 full price / £8 concession / £5 under 16s Conductor: Oliver Knussen
Tenor: Andrew Staples
Members of CBSO Youth Chorus
This concert marks the start of BCMG’s 25th anniversary season, a landmark we will be celebrating throughout 2012/13.
A substantial new work for tenor, ensemble and girls choir - the world premiere of Alexander Goehr’s Sound Investment commission To These Dark Steps – is the main feature of the programme. To These Dark Steps sets a series of striking poems and prose commentary by Gabriel Levin, written in the shadow of Israel’s bombardment and incursion into Gaza in 2008. The texts view the depredations of war through the prism of music by Webern, Messiaen, Bartók and Ligeti - all favourite composers of Alexander Goehr. This provides the context for the other pieces in the programme.
A late work by French composer Olivier Messiaen opens the concert. This three minute, marvellously incisive tribute to the publisher Alfred Schlee has at its heart a piano solo based on the song of the Garden Warbler, one of Messiaen’s favourite birds.
Following this opening are Webern’s Six Pieces for Orchestra in his arrangement for chamber ensemble; Goehr’s recent violin duos, behind which hovers the ghost of Bartók; and György Ligeti’s 12-minute Melodien, which superimposes waves of melody in a piece rich in allusions to Ives, Mahler and Brahms.
There will be a free pre-concert talk from 6.30-7pm with Alexander Goehr and Gabriel Levin, open to all ticket holders.
Olivier Messiaen : Pièce pour piano et quatuor à cordes Anton Webern : Six Pieces for Orchestra Alexander Goehr : Duos (for two violins) Gyorgy Ligeti : Melodien Alexander Goehr : To These Dark Steps
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31 Dec |
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Tuesday, October 2, 2012 at 3pm to 7pm Composers Concordance's Festival II: Concert #3: Composers Play Composers Marathon DROM, New York , 85 Ave A (b/w 5th & 6th St) in East Village United States (212) 777-1157 http://www.dromnyc.com/events/772/composers-concordance-records-release-party
Tickets: $15 (includes one drink) 30 composers including:
1. Dan Cooper
2. daniel palkowski
3. Molly Joyce
4. Gene Pritsker
5. Lynn Bechtold
6. kinan azmeh
7. Lisa Dowling
8. Loop
9. David Morneau
11. Luis cobo
12. Nataliya Medvedovskaya
13 Rubens Salles
14 Cristian Amigo
15 Joseph Pehrson
16 Jon Diaz
17 Franz Hackl
18 Val Coleman
19 Debra Kaye
20 Milica Paranosic
21Alon Nechushtan
22 Paul Pinto
23 Daniel Schnyder
24 Robert Voisey
25 Angela Babin
26 alon nechushtan
27 Larry Simon
28 John Clark
29 Daniel Reyes Llinas
30 Pat Grant
When did composers become non-performers? We can trace the tradition of the composer-as-performer back to the beginnings of western classical music. This 4th Annual Composers Play Composers Marathon, presented at the lower east side's most excellent venue Drom NYC, explores the connection between composers and their given instruments, as well as how composers go about writing music in which they know that they will be the performer. This matinée event features no fewer than 30 different composers performing on their own succinct solos, duos, and trios. http://www.dromnyc.com/events/2077/composer-play-composers
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Wednesday, October 3, 2012 at 8.15pm The Concertgebouw Orchestra with Andris Nelsons Voyage Concertgebouw, Amsterdam Het Concertgebouw, Concertgebouwplein 2-7, 1071 LN Amsterdam Netherlands http://www.concertgebouw.nl
Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra
Andris Nelsons - conductor
Hakan Hardenberg - trumpet
The Concertgebouw Orchestra voyage
traveled Last season Andris Nelsons with the orchestra in Europe, now he takes us on a voyage. From the Wreckage is a solo concerto written for the virtuoso trumpeter Håkan Hardenberger. It is a psychological journey that leads from fear, from anger and unbridled anger to calmness. Along the way Hardenberger all facets of his instrument - or rather instruments, because not only ordinary berry-trumpet, but also the piccolo and flugelhorn are covered - show. With such a star player can naturally trumpet concerto, that of Haydn, not missing. Andris Nelsons The stormy underway conducting career Andris Nelsons has quickly solid form adopted by the RCO. After his earlier successes, the Latvian conductor leading the orchestra on this voyage including Britten and Debussy.
Benjamin Britten : Four Sea Interludes and Passacaglia from 'Peter Grimes', op. 33a and 33b Joseph Haydn : Trumpet Concerto in Eb, Hob.VIIe: 1 Mark-Anthony Turnage : From the Wreckage (Trumpet Concerto) Claude Debussy : La Mer
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Thursday, October 4, 2012 at 8pm Tremplin / Cursus 2 IRCAM/Centre Pompidou-Grande salle-Paris
France
Tickets: 14€ Ensemble intercontemporain | Conductor Susanna Mälkki | IRCAM Computer Music Design Rune Glerup | IRCAM Pedagogical Advisor Jean Lochard
Selected by a jury, these artists from the four corners of the globe have the possibility of working with the musicians from the Ensemble intercontemporain or studying at IRCAM during the second year of the Cursus program for computer music. The results of this laboratory are found in the Tremplin concerts where the creations of young composers are performed together with works from the youth of their elders, in this case, the Finnish composer Magnus Lindberg. Now with worldwide renown, Lindberg shook up the beginning of the 1980s with the fierce, energetic, malleable expression of his music.
Lu Wang : New Work Anthony Cheung : New Work Einar Torfi Einarsson : Desiring-Machines Rune Glerup : Examples of Dust Magnus Lindberg : Tendenza
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Friday, October 5, 2012 at 7.30pm RSNO - Oundjian Conducts Shostakovich Usher Hall Edinburgh Scotland
Tickets: £35, £25.50, £19, £14.50, £11.50 Peter Oundjian (conductor)
Vadim Gluzman (violin)
Royal Scottish National Orchestra
Time to celebrate! Glinka's Overture to Russlan and Ludmilla has been called a musical firecracker – so what better way to launch Peter Oundjian's very first concert as RSNO Music Director? That's just the start of this thrilling all-Russian programme, which sweeps from the heart-melting song of Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto – played by the superb Vadim Gluzman – to the revolutionary fervour of Shostakovich's mighty Eleventh Symphony. Be there, as we raise a glass to a very special night for Scottish music.
Mikhail Glinka : Overture to Russlan and Ludmilla Pyotr Tchaikovsky : Violin Concerto Dmitri Shostakovich : Symphony No11 The Year 1905
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Friday, October 5, 2012 at 6pm London Sinfonietta in Sweden Palladium, Malmö
Sweden 040 19 19 21 http://www.palladium.nu/
Ben Gernon conductor
Jonathan Morton violin
Gareth Hulse oboe
The London Sinfonietta visit Malmö, Sweden, to perform a programme featuring works by a variety of composers including Danish composer Pelle Gudmundsun-Holmgreen and British composers Oliver Knussen, Tansy Davies, Thomas Adès, and Simon Bainbridge. Edmund Finnis' Unfolds, written on the London Sinfonietta's Writing the Future scheme, will also be performed.
London Sinfonietta Academy alumnus Ben Gernon conducts, while London Sinfonietta Principal players Jonathan Morton and Gareth Hulse take solo spots in Oliver Knussen's Secret Psalm and Simon Bainbridge's Concertante in Moto Perpetuo.
Oliver Knussen : Secret Psalm Tansy Davies : inside out 2 Thomas Ades : Catch Oliver Knussen : Songs Without Voices Pelle Gudmundsun-Holmgreen : Near Still, Distant Still Edmund Finnis : Unfolds Thomas Ades : Court Studies from the Tempest Simon Bainbridge : Concertant in Moto Perpetuo
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