ORGAN SPLENDOUR. David Drury in recital on the Sydney Opera House Grand Organ. JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH ( ) Toccata and Fugue in F, BWV 540

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2009 SEASON TEA & SYMPHONY PRESENTED BY KAMBLY ORGAN SPLENDOUR Friday 12 June 11am Sydney Opera House Concert Hall David Drury in recital on the Sydney Opera House Grand Organ JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH (1685 1750) Toccata and Fugue in F, BWV 540 JOSEPH JONGEN (1873 1953) Cantabile from Four Pieces for Organ, Op.37 MARCEL DUPRÉ (1886 1971) Crucifixion from Passion Symphony, Op.23 This concert will be recorded for broadcast across Australia on ABC Classic FM 92.9. Estimated timings: 16 minutes, 8 minutes, 8 minutes, 35 minutes The concert will conclude at approximately 12.15pm. CHARLES-MARIE WIDOR (1844 1937) Organ Symphony No.6 in G minor, Op.42 No.2 Allegro Adagio Intermezzo Cantabile Finale PRESENTING PARTNER

It is my great pleasure to welcome you to this concert in the 2009 Tea & Symphony series. One of the jewels in the Sydney Opera House crown is its Grand Organ, completed exactly 30 years ago. It s remarkable not just for its immense scale and structural beauty but for its distinctive sound. At least a few times each year it can be heard in concert with the Sydney Symphony, in music like Saint-Saëns Organ Symphony. But this morning s concert places the Grand Organ in the spotlight and gives us a chance to enjoy some of the magnificent repertoire from the solo organ tradition. Our soloist is David Drury, a musician well-known to Sydney Symphony audiences, and one of Australia s leading organists. Today he s chosen a program for us that traces the generations of great organist-composers, from Johann Sebastian Bach through the Romantic brilliance of Charles- Marie Widor to the modern voices of Joseph Jongen and Marcel Dupré. Kambly has epitomised the Swiss tradition of the finest biscuits for three generations. Each masterpiece from the Emmental is a small thank you for life; a declaration of love for the very best; the peak of fine, elegant taste. Kambly is a way of life, dedicated to all those who appreciate the difference between the best and the merely good. In this way it is fitting that we partner with the internationally acclaimed Sydney Symphony, whose vision is to ignite and deepen people s love of live symphonic music. We hope you enjoy this morning s program, and look forward to welcoming you to future concerts in the Tea & Symphony series in 2009. Oscar A. Kambly Chairman Kambly of Switzerland

ABOUT THE MUSIC Organ Splendour All of the composers represented on today s program were virtuoso organists. Their practical insight into the king of instruments allowed them to write idiomatically for it, even while posing formidable difficulties for the performer. A number of interesting threads connect these composers and their works (something like the old adage of six degrees of separation ): the organ and its players have always been something of a tight-knit group. Johann Sebastian Bach, not only by virtue of his place in time but also as one of the towering figures of Western music, stands at the head of this impressive collection of musicians. Schumann s wellknown observation that music owes as much to Bach as a religion does to its founder resonates especially deeply with the organ world. It is a curious fact, at least from a 21st-century perspective, that Bach was recognised more as a performer in his lifetime than a composer. A master of the organ, with an unmatched knowledge of its intricacies and subtleties, it made sense that he would devote to it some of his most superior compositional ideas. The Toccata and Fugue in F is one such superior work. Scholarship suggests that the toccata and fugue might not have been written as a pair, but there is no autograph manuscript to confirm or deny this possibility. It is possible, however, that the markedly contrasting characters of each movement were a deliberate Affekt, one Bach cultivated elsewhere, and cultivated often. The Toccata itself is surely one of Bach s most dazzling creations. It s characterised by its canonic opening, its thrilling pedal solos, a series of striking chords in a seemingly endless run of cadences, and sheer irrepressible energy. Note, too, some truly shocking cadences in which Bach moves well beyond the key in which he began. The Fugue is one of Bach s only true double fugues; that is, a fugue with two subjects which combine towards the end of the piece. Although the listener mightn t be able to identify specifics, the first fugue theme is obviously stated in isolation. Following this, the second fugue theme is Johann Sebastian Bach (1685 1750) 4 Sydney Symphony

heard in quicker note values minus the pedal division. The combination of subjects occurs again towards the end of the piece in a stroke of contrapuntal mastery. The Belgian Joseph Jongen knew and loved his Bach, as is evidenced by the list of major organ works he programmed throughout his lifetime, including the F major Toccata and Fugue. Between 1898 and 1902 Jongen visited Germany, Italy and France, had composition lessons with Richard Strauss, and later lived in England. His direct exposure to a number of national styles has led to his music being described as somewhat eclectic in its language, but undoubtedly romantic. At the conclusion of World War I, he returned to Belgium and became Professor of Fugue at the Royal Conservatoire in Brussels. No doubt his extensive knowledge of Bach s works assisted him greatly in undertaking the responsibilities of this post. The Cantabile from Four Pieces for Organ (1910) shares a technical trait with the Bach Toccata we have heard in using canon, with the subject in the right hand followed by the left and later vice versa, just as in the Bach. As the title (literally in a singing style ) suggests, the piece is lyrical in nature, with the canon spinning itself out as a long, singing line. The second section of a tripartite structure provides some contrast in terms of tempo, texture, and key before a return to the initial canonic idea. Perhaps Jongen s most famous work is the Symphonie concertante for organ and orchestra. It was commissioned for performance by the Philadelphia Orchestra with the gigantic organ in the Wanamaker Department Store conducted by Leopold Stokowski. The scheduled performance never came about, and it was only last year that the piece was performed for the first time in its intended setting. The Wanamaker organ proved to be fertile creative ground for another giant of the French-speaking organ world, Marcel Dupré. It was on this organ, in 1922, that Dupré performed an improvisation which would later become the basis for the Passion Symphony. His own program note for the work says about the Crucifixion movement: This movement suggests the march to Calvary. The broken Joseph Jongen (1873 1953) Marcel Dupré (1886 1971) LEBRECHT MUSIC AND ARTS LEBRECHT MUSIC AND ARTS 5 Sydney Symphony

rhythm of the theme pictures the excruciating pain of the ascent. After this, the sorrowing watchers chant the doleful hymn Stabat Mater. The Stabat Mater, a meditation on Mary s suffering at the foot of the cross, is played first in a detached manner firstly in the pedals, then in a more sustained manner in the manuals. The music is highly chromatic, and charged with the subject matter. The symphony as a whole requires a fine technique of the performer. Many of Dupré s works require a virtuosity like his own. He performed all of the Bach organ works from memory in 1920 at the Paris Conservatoire, in a series of ten major recitals, and repeated this extraordinary feat at the Trocadero in 1921. Some of Dupré s passion for the music of Bach was, no doubt, stimulated by Charles-Marie Widor, with whom he studied composition and fugue. Bach s music was something of a novelty in mid-19th-century Paris, and Widor was to a large degree responsible for making Bach s music more mainstream. Amongst his legacies is an edition of the Bach organ works, produced in collaboration with Albert Schweitzer. (Dupré, not to be outdone, also produced an edition.) But it is not for this noble undertaking that Widor will be most remembered, but for his ten organ symphonies, in particular, the famous Toccata from the Fifth. Charles-Marie Widor (1844 1937) at the organ of Saint-Sulpice Church LEBRECHT MUSIC AND ARTS 6 Sydney Symphony

Widor s remarkable contribution to organ music must be seen, however, in light of his close personal and professional relationship with the organ builder Aristide Cavaillé-Coll (1811 1899). Cavaillé-Coll played a large part, along with Charles Gounod, in Widor s appointment to the post of organist at Saint Sulpice in 1870, a position Widor retained for 64 years until succeeded by Dupré in 1934. The church contained what would prove to be Cavaillé-Coll s largest instrument, and one of his most renowned. In a circular manner, music influenced specifications and designs of organs, which in turn influenced the music. A number of commentators have said that Widor s symphonies may more be correctly described as suites for organ, since although they imitate orchestral colours and textures, they do not follow the forms associated with a symphony for orchestral forces. The Sixth Organ Symphony is divided into five movements; two slow movements separated by a playful Intermezzo which is really a scherzo, and two quicker movements which act as bookends. The work is a substantial utterance in which Widor exhibits a fine sense of craftsmanship, an excellent sense of form, and perhaps above all, a great love and understanding for the work of one of the greatest organ builders of any age. DR CALVIN BOWMAN 2009 Performer and composer Calvin Bowman will present the complete Bach organ works at this year s Melbourne International Arts Festival, and a song of his, Now Touch the Air Softly, has been recorded by soprano Emma Matthews. GOVERNMENT SUPPORT The Sydney Symphony is assisted by the Australian Government through the Australia Council and by Arts NSW, Department of the Arts, Sport and Recreation. 7 Sydney Symphony

ABOUT THE ORGAN There s a story about an Australian orchestral musician also an organist who disappeared from the bus during a rest stop on tour. He was eventually found in the local church, investigating the organ and discussing its specifications with the local organist. Organs are so magnificently complex that more so than any other instrument there s an inherent fascination in their construction. Did you know, for example, that the Grand Organ here in the Sydney Opera House Concert Hall is the world s largest known mechanical action pipe organ? That it has 10,154 pipes? The instrument as machine. But Ronald Sharp, builder of the Grand Organ in the Sydney Opera House Concert Hall, is on record as saying, I set out to build a musical instrument, not a piece of machinery. Despite the record-breaking proportions of the instrument, Sharp s main concern was sound not size. I hope music lovers will like it, he said when it was completed in 1979. Today s organist, David Drury, points out how central the builder is to the personality of any great organ. Although working within the constraints of a given building or intended musical function (liturgical or concert use, for example), the organ builder s personal vision of a particular sound will always emerge. And when it comes to the Sydney Opera House Grand Organ, Drury says, there is no other instrument like it. The Grand Organ s mechanical tracker action contributes to something of a baroque character articulated and sensitive and the instrument has a warm but relatively gentle sound that most agree is extremely well-suited to earlier music such as Bach. At the same time, says Drury, the organ holds some surprises. Among its repertoire of colours is one that s very close to the harmonic flute stop, invented by Cavaillé-Coll in the mid-19th century and favoured in French music. It s a distinctive breathy, open, but singing sound a personal favourite Drury says, which comes into its own in today s pieces by Widor and Jongen. This year the Grand Organ celebrates its 30th anniversary. Read more about its construction and see the full specifications in the Sydney Opera House information sheet (pdf file) at http://tiny.cc/sohgrandorgan 8 Sydney Symphony

David Drury organ David Drury was born in 1961 and educated at Trinity Grammar School, Sydney. In 1984 he graduated from the Sydney Conservatorium with a degree in organ performance and as the recipient of the Vasanta scholarship for overseas study. In England he studied with the professor of organ of the Royal Academy of Music, David Sanger, and gained the Associate Diploma in organ, and the Choir-Master Diploma from the Royal College of Organists. In 1987 he became the first and only Australian to win the Tournemire prize for improvisation at the St Alban s International Organ Competition. He has given recitals in Westminster Abbey, St Paul s and Westminster Cathedrals in London, and King s College Cambridge. In Paris, he has performed four times at Notre Dame and twice at La Madeleine, and he has also appeared at the Toulon Festival. He has toured North America as a recitalist, tutor, accompanist and choral director, and has given masterclasses and performed on America radio and television. In 1996 he gave a recital for the Organ Historical Society s National convention in Philadelphia. David Drury has appeared at the Sydney Opera House and the Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide and Hobart Town Halls. He has performed at the Melbourne International Festival of Organ and Harpsichord, the Newcastle Festival, the Barossa Festival and the Festival of Sydney. He broadcasts regularly for the ABC and other radio stations. He has performed concertos with the Adelaide and West Australian symphony orchestras, the Australian Opera and Ballet Orchestra and Orchestra Victoria. He also plays with the Sydney Symphony when organ is required; has performed with the Australian Chamber Orchestra, Seymour Group, Song Company, Sydney Brass Ensemble, Sydney University Musical Society and Sydney Philharmonia Choirs; and is the organist/continuo player with the Australian Baroque Brass. He performed in the 2000 Olympic Games opening ceremony and in front of the world leaders at the 2007 APEC concert at the Sydney Opera House. David Drury has released four solo recordings as well as appearing on numerous recordings with the Sydney Symphony, The Song Company and Cantillation. He is also the keyboard player with the emerging progressive band Resonaxis. As a composer, David Drury has a large output of choral music. He is Director of Music at St Paul s College, within the University of Sydney. 9 Sydney Symphony

SALUTE PRINCIPAL PARTNER GOVERNMENT PARTNERS The Company is assisted by the NSW Government through Arts NSW, Department of the Arts, Sport and Recreation PLATINUM PARTNERS MAJOR PARTNERS GOLD PARTNERS SILVER PARTNERS REGIONAL TOUR PARTNERS BRONZE PARTNERS Australia Post Austrian National Tourist Office Bimbadgen Estate Wines Vittoria Coffee MARKETING PARTNERS Lindsay Yates & Partners 2MBS 102.5 Sydney s Fine Music Station 10 Sydney Symphony

PLAYING YOUR PART The Sydney Symphony gratefully acknowledges the music lovers who donate to the Orchestra each year. Each gift plays an important part in ensuring our continued artistic excellence and helping to sustain important education and regional touring programs. Please visit sydneysymphony.com/patrons for a list of all our donors, including those who give between $100 and $499. $10,000+ Brian Abel Geoff & Vicki Ainsworth Mrs Antoinette Albert Mr Robert O Albert AO Mr Terrey & Mrs Anne Arcus Alan & Christine Bishop Tom Breen & Rachael Kohn Sandra & Neil Burns Mr Ian & Mrs Jennifer Burton Libby Christie & Peter James Mr John C Conde AO Mrs Ashley Dawson-Damer Eric Dodd Penny Edwards Mr J O Fairfax AO Fred P Archer Charitable Trust Dr Bruno & Mrs Rhonda Giuffre In memory of Hetty Gordon Mr Harcourt Gough Mr James Graham AM & Mrs Helen Graham Mr Ross Grant Mr David Greatorex AO & Mrs Deirdre Greatorex The Hansen Family Mr Stephen Johns Mr Andrew Kaldor & Mrs Renata Kaldor AO H Kallinikos Pty Ltd Mrs Joan MacKenzie Tony & Fran Meagher Mrs T Merewether OAM Mr B G O Conor Mrs Roslyn Packer AO The Paramor Family The Ian Potter Foundation Rodney Rosenblum AM & Sylvia Rosenblum Mr Paul & Mrs Sandra Salteri Mrs Penelope Seidler AM Mrs Joyce Sproat & Mrs Janet Cooke Mr Peter Weiss AM and Mrs Doris Weiss Westfield Group Geoff Wood & Melissa Waites In Memory of GS Wronker Anonymous (2) $5,000 $9,999 Mr Roger Allen & Mrs Maggie Gray Mr Charles Barran Mr Robert & Mrs L Alison Carr Mrs Emily Chang Mr Bob & Mrs Julie Clampett Ms Leonie Furber Mr Robert Gay Ms Ann Lewis AM Helen Lynch AM & Helen Bauer Mr & Mrs David Milman Mr David Maloney The Perini Family Foundation Miss Rosemary Pryor Bruce & Joy Reid Foundation Mr Irvine Salter Mrs Helen Selle The Sherry Hogan Foundation David Smithers AM & Family Ms Gabrielle Trainor In memory of Dr William & Mrs Helen Webb Michael & Mary Whelan Trust Anonymous (1) $2,500 $4,999 Ms Jan Bowen Ms Jane Brodribb & Mr Colin Draper Mr Peter Coates Prof Christine Deer Ms Elise Fairbairn-Smith Hilmer Family Trust Irwin Imhof in memory of Herta Imhof Mr Bob Longwell The Magid Foundation Ms Julie Manfredi-Hughes Mr James & Mrs Elsie Moore Ms Julie Taylor Ray Wilson OAM & the late James Agapitos OAM Anonymous (2) $1,000 $2,499 Charles & Renee Abrams Ms Robin E Amm AM Mr Henri W Aram OAM Mr David Barnes Mrs Joan Barnes Doug & Alison Battersby Ms Jo-Anne Beirne Mr Stephen J Bell Mr Phil Bennett Nicole Berger Mr Mark Bethwaite Mr Alexander & Mrs Vera Boyarsky Mr David S Brett Mr Maximo Buch Mrs Lenore P Buckle Debby Cramer & Bill Caukill Joan Connery OAM Mr & Mrs R Constable Mr John Cunningham SCM & Mrs Margaret Cunningham Lisa & Miro Davis Ms Michelle Hilton Vernon Ian Dickson & Reg Holloway Mr Russell Farr Mr Ian Fenwicke & Prof Neville Wills Ms Annette Freeman Anthony Gregg & Deanne Whittleston Mrs Akiko Gregory Miss Janette Hamilton Ms Ann Hoban The Hon David Hunt AO QC & Mrs Margaret Hunt Dr Michael Joel AM & Mrs Anna Joel Ms Judy Joye Mr & Mrs E Katz Mrs Margaret Keogh Mr Simon Kerr Miss Anna-Lisa Klettenberg Mr & Mrs Gilles T Kryger Mr Justin Lam Dr Barry Landa Mrs Alexandra Martin & the late Mr Lloyd Martin AM Mrs Mora Maxwell Mr Robert & Mrs Renee Markovic Wendy McCarthy AO Mr Matthew McInnes Mrs Barbara McNulty OBE Kate & Peter Mason Mr & Mrs Obermeier Mr R A Oppen Mr Robert Orrell Mr & Mrs Ortis Timothy & Eva Pascoe Ms Patricia Payn Mrs Almut Piatti Mr Adrian & Mrs Dairneen Pilton Ms Robin Potter Mr Ernest & Mrs Judith Rapee Dr K D Reeve AM Mrs Patricia H Reid Dr John Roarty in memory of Mrs June Roarty Pamela Rogers Mr Brian Russell & Mrs Irina Singleman Ms Juliana Schaeffer Robyn Smiles The Hon. Warwick Smith Mr Ezekiel Solomon Catherine Stephen Mr Fred & Mrs Dorothy Street Mr Michael & Mrs Georgina Suttor Mr Georges & Mrs Marliese Teitler Mr Ken Tribe AC & Mrs Joan Tribe Mr John E Tuckey Mrs Merle Turkington Ms Mary Vallentine AO Mr and Mrs John van Ogtrop Henry & Ruth Weinberg Audrey & Michael Wilson Jill Wran Anonymous (11) $500 $999 Mr C R Adamson Gabrielle Blackstock A I Butchart Mr John Azarias Ms Wendy Black Mr G D Bolton Dr & Mrs Hannes Boshoff M Bulmer Marty Cameron Hon. Justice J C & Mrs Campbell Mr B & Mrs M Coles Mrs Catherine Gaskin Cornberg Jen Cornish Mr Greg Daniel Mrs Francine J Epstein Dr & Mrs C Goldschmidt In memory of Angelica Green In memory of Oscar Grynberg Mr Ken Hawkings Dr Heng & Mrs Cilla Tey Rev H & Mrs M Herbert Bill & Pam Hughes Dr & Mrs Michael Hunter Mr Philip Isaacs OAM Mrs Greta James Mr Stephen Jenkins Mrs Jannette King Julia King Mr Andrew Korda & Ms SusanPearson Erna & Gerry Levy AM Mr Gary Linnane Mr & Mrs S C Lloyd Mr Ian & Mrs Pam McGaw Justice Jane Mathews AO Helen Morgan Mrs Rachel O Conor Mrs S D O Toole Mrs Jill Pain Mr Tom Pascarella Dr Kevin Pedemont PTW Architects Mr L T & Mrs L M Priddle Mrs B Raghavan Mr M D Salamon In memory of H St P Scarlett Mr & Mrs Richard Toltz Mr Andrew & Mrs Isolde Tornya Ronald Walledge Louise Walsh & David Jordan Miss Jenny Wu Anonymous (19) To discuss giving opportunities, please call Caroline Sharpen on (02) 8215 4619. 11 Sydney Symphony

Sydney Symphony Vladimir Ashkenazy PRINCIPAL CONDUCTOR AND ARTISTIC ADVISOR KEITH SAUNDERS PATRON Her Excellency Professor Marie Bashir AC CVO GOVERNOR OF NSW SYDNEY SYMPHONY BOARD John Conde AO CHAIRMAN Ewen Crouch John Curtis Jennifer Hoy Stephen Johns Andrew Kaldor Goetz Richter David Smithers AM Gabrielle Trainor Rory Jeffes MANAGING DIRECTOR Founded in 1932, the Sydney Symphony has evolved into one of the world s finest orchestras as Sydney has become one of the world s great cities. Resident at the Sydney Opera House, the Orchestra also performs throughout Sydney and regional New South Wales, and has toured internationally. The Sydney Symphony s first Chief Conductor was Sir Eugene Goossens, appointed in 1947; he was followed by conductors such as Willem van Otterloo, Louis Frémaux, Sir Charles Mackerras, Stuart Challender, Edo de Waart and, most recently, Gianluigi Gelmetti. The Orchestra s history also boasts collaborations with legendary figures such as George Szell, Sir Thomas Beecham, Otto Klemperer and Igor Stravinsky. This year Vladimir Ashkenazy begins his tenure as the Orchestra s Principal Conductor. This is a PLAYBILL / SHOWBILL publication. PUBLISHER Playbill Proprietary Limited / Showbill Proprietary Limited ACN 003 311 064 ABN 27 003 311 064 1017 Pacific Highway, Pymble 2073. Telephone: (02) 9449 6433 Fax: (02) 9449 6053 E-mail: admin@playbill.com.au Website: www.playbill.com.au Executive Chairman Brian Nebenzahl OAM, RFD Managing Director Michael Nebenzahl Editorial Director Jocelyn Nebenzahl Manager Production & Graphic Design Debbie Carke 15688 1/120609 21TS S41 SYDNEY OPERA HOUSE TRUST Mr Kim Williams AM (Chair) Mr John Ballard, Mr Wesley Enoch, Ms Renata Kaldor AO, Ms Jacqueline Kott, Mr Robert Leece AM RFD, Ms Sue Nattrass AO, Mr Leo Schofield AM, Ms Barbara Ward, Mr Evan Williams AM EXECUTIVE MANAGEMENT CHIEF EXECUTIVE Richard Evans DIRECTOR, FINANCE & INNOVATION David Antaw DIRECTOR, MARKETING & DEVELOPMENT Victoria Doidge DIRECTOR, PERFORMING ARTS Rachel Healy DIRECTOR, BUILDING DEVELOPMENT & MAINTENANCE Greg McTaggart DIRECTOR, COMMERCIAL & OPERATIONS Maria Sykes SYDNEY OPERA HOUSE Bennelong Point GPO Box 4274 Sydney NSW 2001 Administration (02) 9250 7111 Box Office (02) 9250 7777 Facsimile (02) 9250 7666 Website sydneyoperahouse.com 12 Sydney Symphony