MORNING SYMPHONY SeRIeS Thursday 13 March am

Similar documents
THE MUSIC OF HARRY POTTER

FAMILY CONCERT Sunday 2 November 1pm & 3pm Perth Concert Hall

WEST AUSTRALIAN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA. Friday 30 & Saturday 31 August 2013, 8pm Perth Concert Hall EY PRESENTS CONNECT WITH WASO

PROGRAM. Wednesday 15 & Thursday 16 June 7.30pm Riverside Theatre Perth Convention and Exhibition Centre

ALCOHOL.THINK AGAIN MAsTers series Friday 7 & Saturday 8 March pm Perth Concert Hall SEASON OPENING

ERNST & YOUNG PRESENTS. 3pm, Sun 22 July. Perth Concert Hall

Friday 28 & Saturday 29 March pm

ALCOHOL. THINK AGAIN MASTERS SERIES Friday 1 & Saturday 2 August 7.30pm Perth Concert Hall CELLO CONCERTO

ALCOHOL. THINK AGAIN MASTERS SERIES Friday 13 & Saturday 14 June 7.30pm Perth Concert Hall CONDUCTS

Patrons and Friends of WASO

MACA LIMITED PRESENTS Thursday 7 August 11am Friday 8 & Saturday 9 August 7.30pm Perth Concert Hall

Encore FEBRUARY 2016 THE NEWSLETTER FOR WASO PATRONS & FRIENDS. WASO Philanthropy Team Contact Details:

Thursday 9 October 11am Friday 10 & Saturday 11 October 7.30pm Perth Concert Hall CLARINET CONCERTO

ALCOHOL. THINK AGAIN MASTERS SERIES Friday 26 & Saturday 27 September 7.30pm Perth Concert Hall STEPHEN HOUGH PLAYS BEETHOVEN

ALCOHOL.THINK AGAIN MASTERS SERIES Friday 17 & Saturday 18 October 7.30pm Perth Concert Hall PIERS LANE PLAYS LISZT

Welcome to 2014 s first edition of Encore!

UWA SCHOOL OF MUSIC. Music Tuition Scholarships Fund

WEST AUSTRALIAN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

Encore. JUNE IS WASO Community Support Month THE NEWSLETTER FOR WASO PATRONS & FRIENDS JUNE 2015

2018 ENSEMBLE CONNECT LIVE AUDITIONS

2018/2019 EDUCATION PROGRAMS. TOMMY BANKS CENTRE for MUSICAL CREATIVITY WINSPEARCENTRE.COM/LEARNING

Encore. Celebrating the Friends of WASO Scholarship Recipients THE NEWSLETTER FOR WASO PATRONS & FRIENDS

2018 ENSEMBLE CONNECT LIVE AUDITIONS

All Strings: Any movement from a standard concerto or a movement, other than the first, of a Bach sonata or suite, PLUS

Bite-Sized Music Lessons

CLASSICS 2018/2019 HULL CITY HALL. in partnership with THE ROYAL PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA AND HULL PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA

Mu 110: Introduction to Music

Music Department Calendar Autumn Term 2014

Audition Packet

VETTA CHAMBER MUSIC. 32 nd Season Joan Blackman Artistic Director

Fall Concert Preview

Contempo Series. Star Wars and Beyond ERNST & YOUNG PRESENTS. 7.30pm, Fri 4 May 2.00pm & 7.30pm, Sat 5 May 2012 Perth Concert Hall

Encore. Scholarship winners MAY We are delighted to announce the winners of the 2013 Friends of

The Boise Philharmonic will launch its 46 th Concert Season in September

WASO TAKE ON KALGOORLIE!

prince george s Philharmonic th season

DO WHAT YOU LOVE MAKE MUSIC WITH THE TASMANIAN YOUTH ORCHESTRA IN 2019

Wesfarmers Arts Classics Series. Pictures at an Exhibition. 21 & 22 October pm Perth Concert Hall. Margaret Blades, Associate Concertmaster

You re invited to experience the magic of the Eugene Symphony! Jeffrey Peyton, Guest Conductor William Hulings, Narrator

PROGRAM. ALCOHOL.THINK AGAIN MASTERS SERIES Fri 8 & Sat 9 May 7.30pm Perth Concert Hall

NEWSLETTER FOR THE SUBSCRIBERS, PATRONS & FRIENDS OF THE WEST AUSTRALIAN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

Civic Orchestra Season Audition Repertoire. Note: Instruments marked with an * have only associate membership openings for the season.

THE CHAMBER MUSIC SOCIETY OF LINCOLN CENTER DAVID FINCKEL AND WU HAN, ARTISTIC DIRECTORS PRESENTS LONG ISLAND DEBUT OF THE CMS YOUNG MUSICIANS CONCERT

STUDENT SECTION Created by:

Audition Packet

Excerpts. Violin. Group A. Beethoven Symphony No. 3 Eroica 3rd Movement: Beginning to 2nd Ending

Audition Requirements for SEASON 2018

The concert will conclude at approximately 9.30pm. This is a smoke-free event.

BSO Concerts 2016/17 Support for GCSE & A-Level AoS

CELEBRATED MASTER CONDUCTOR GERARD SCHWARZ RETURNS TO LOS ANGELES TO CONDUCT THE USC THORNTON SYMPHONY THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2012 AT 7:30PM

3. Berlioz Harold in Italy: movement III (for Unit 3: Developing Musical Understanding)

Program. 9th 11th September 2016

Jury Examination Requirements

Substitute Excerpts 2017 Violin

Level performance examination descriptions

WASO Philanthropy WASO & WAGNER

SPECIALISATION in Master of Music Professional performance with specialisation (4 terms, CP)

LOVE MUSIC? APPLY NOW TO JOIN THE TASMANIAN YOUTH ORCHESTRA FOR 2018

Folksong in the Concert Hall

BSO Season 2018/19. Concerts and pre-concert events for students studying GCSE and A level Music

Music Department Handbook

Classical Music Concerts. October 2018 May 2019

XM RADIO TO BROADCAST NEW SERIES OF BALTIMORE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA CONCERTS IN SEASON

RI PHILHARMONIC PAIRS MOZART AND MAHLER ON FEBRUARY 22 MUSIC DIRECTOR LARRY RACHLEFF CONDUCTS

CARNEGIE MELLON UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MUSIC FORM AND ANALYSIS FALL 2011

rhinegold education: subject to endorsement by ocr Beethoven: Symphony No. 3 in Eb, Op. 55, Eroica, first movement

YOUR 100 FAVOURITE CONCERTOS AS VOTED BY LISTENERS TO ABC CLASSIC FM

Orchestral Concerts Database

CONCERT SEASON

PROGRAM. MORNING SYMPHONY SERIES Thursday 10 March 11am. ALCOHOL.THINK AGAIN MASTERS SERIES Friday 11 & Saturday 12 March 7.30pm Perth Concert Hall

Instruments. Of the. Orchestra

The concert will conclude at approximately 9.30pm. This is a smoke-free event.

principal partner WESTERN AUSTRALIAN YOUTH ORCHESTRA concert

Mu 110: Introduction to Music

Peoria Symphony Orchestra Program Notes September 22, 2018 Michael Allsen

COLLEGE OF MUSIC MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY. music.msu.edu. Exceptional. Early Bird Discounts by July 15. New World-class. Performance.

Symphony in C Igor Stravinksy

The Horn Matters PDF Excerpt E-Book, Volume III

Behzod Abduraimov Plays Prokofiev PROGRAM. MORNING SYMPHONY SERIES Thursday 2 June 11am

Chamber Music Traced through history.

NOTES ON BASIC REPERTOIRE

For Immediate Release

The Classical Period (1825)

PYSO LIVE AUDITION REPERTOIRE 2018 (As of January 2018)

Texas Music Festival Opens Cool & Classical 2015 Summer Season with. Celebrated Concertmaster Glenn Dicterow

Easy Classical Cello Solos: Featuring Music Of Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Tchaikovsky And Others. By Javier Marcó READ ONLINE

(edited 11/19/2012) Civic Orchestra of Chicago Audition Repertoire VIOLIN. First movement of a major concerto Exposition

LISZT: Totentanz and Fantasy on Hungarian Folk Tunes for Piano and Orchestra: in Full Score. 96pp. 9 x 12. (Worldwide). $14.95.

0410 MUSIC. Mark schemes should be read in conjunction with the question paper and the Principal Examiner Report for Teachers.

PROGRAM. MACA LIMITED CLASSICS SERIES Friday 31 July & Saturday 1 August 7.30pm Perth Concert Hall

Sydney Chamber Music Festival 2018

RHODE ISLAND PHILHARMONIC PRESENTS TCHAIK 5, MOZART & THE KISS PIANIST ADAM GOLKA DEBUTS WITH PHILHARMONIC SATURDAY JANUARY 19

Oxford s Professional Orchestra. into. Concerts. Christmas and New Year

Your donations at work in the last year... Here are just a few examples of how your donations made a difference to the Orchestra in the last year.

Seasoned American symphony-goers would probably find it easy to rattle off the names

Exam 2 MUS 101 (CSUDH) MUS4 (Chaffey) Dr. Mann Spring 2018 KEY

PROGRAM. MACA LIMITED CLASSICS SERIES Friday 2 & Saturday 3 October 7.30pm Perth Concert Hall

MELBOURNE SEASON MELBOURNE RECITAL CENTRE MONTSALVAT BARN GALLERY COLLINS STREET BAPTIST CHURCH

MUSIC HISTORY Please do not write on this exam.

Department of Music Events Schedule Spring 1997

Transcription:

MORNING SYMPHONY SeRIeS Thursday 13 March 2014 11am STOTT + HOARe PReSeNT CLASSICS CONCeRT Friday 14 & Saturday 15 March 2014 7.30pm Perth Concert Hall

2

3 EDUcAtion chamber orchestra kids Cushion Concerts Fri 21 & Sat 22 March 9.45am & 11.15am South Perth Community Centre WASO s energetic 15-piece EChO ensemble, featuring one of each instrument of the Orchestra, is joined by an enthusiastic presenter who leads the audience in sing-alongs, dancing and music-making. Suitable for children aged 0-6 years. Kids Cushion Concerts supported by Commonwealth Bank. chamber SERiES Glorious Baroque Sun 23 March 2pm Fremantle Town Hall HANDEL Concerto grosso HWV 317 BRESCIANELLo Violin Concerto No.4 & Chaconne in A major TELEMANN Flute Concerto in E minor HANDEL Concerto HWV 310: Passacaglia GEMINIANI Concerto grosso La Folia Paul Dyer director/harpsichord (pictured) Shaun Lee-Chen violin Andrew Nicholson flute Andrew Nicholson appears courtesy of Apache. Alcohol.think AgAin MAStERS SERiES Brahms Violin Concerto Fri 28 & Sat 29 March 7.30pm Perth Concert Hall weber Oberon: Overture BRAHMS Violin Concerto DVoRAk Symphony No.8 Jahja Ling conductor Alina Pogostkina violin (pictured) Tickets $15 Tickets $42* Tickets from $30* Book Now Call 9326 0000 or visit waso.com.au *Transaction fees may apply.

4 welcome The sound of a string quartet is the purest sound of all classical music. The string quartets of Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven and Schubert, which started the genre at the end of the 18th and beginning of the 19th century, also contain some of the finest music these giants ever composed. New ideas of form, harmony and melody were first tried out in the compact scope of a string quartet before they were implemented in the bigger scale works like the symphony, concerto or even opera. Most composers in the Romantic era composed for a string quartet, and in the 20th century composers like Bartók, Debussy and Ravel kept the medium alive and developed it further. The British composer Edward Elgar was the first, however, to combine the world of the string quartet and the larger string orchestra in his work Introduction and Allegro. In a way this work is looking back to a Baroque form called concerto grosso in which the first desk leaders of the string groups would alternate between playing with the rest or as soloists, but after a century of string quartets this combination takes on a new meaning. Of course, this is an opportunity for us to show off our fantastic principal players who are the soloists in this work. Who would believe that the other three works in our program were composed within two decades of each other? Here we have a perfect representation of the late 19th century classical music landscape. Brahms the traditionalist: always looking back, trying in his later years to cling on to the classical style, adhering to the strict rules of form and structure, harmony and counterpoint. Tchaikovsky the romantic: redefining the symphonic form by pouring passionate melodies and sweeping climaxes into his Fourth Symphony. And Richard Strauss the modernist: who breaks loose from all old forms and looks for a substitute for the abstract symphonic form in the poetic and storytelling world of the symphonic poem. Asher Fisch Conductor & Artistic Adviser Asher Fisch appears courtesy of Wesfarmers Arts.

5 Program MoRning SyMphony SERiES Jahja Ling Conducts Tchaikovsky Thursday 13 March 11am Perth Concert Hall BRAHMS Academic Festival Overture (10 mins) TCHAIkoVSkY Symphony No.4 (44 mins) Andante sostenuto Moderato con anima Moderato assai, quasi Andante Allegro vivo Andantino in modo di canzona Scherzo (Pizzicato ostinato) Allegro Finale (Allegro con fuoco) Jahja Ling conductor Stott + hoare presents classics concert Jahja Ling Conducts Tchaikovsky Friday 14 & Saturday 15 March 7.30pm Perth Concert Hall BRAHMS Academic Festival Overture (10 mins) ELGAR Introduction and Allegro (13 mins) STRAUSS, R. Till Eulenspiegel s Merry Pranks (16 mins) INTERVAL (20 mins) TCHAIkoVSkY Symphony No.4 (44 mins) Andante sostenuto Moderato con anima Moderato assai, quasi Andante Allegro vivo Andantino in modo di canzona Scherzo (Pizzicato ostinato) Allegro Finale (Allegro con fuoco) Jahja Ling conductor Paul wright violin Zak Rowntree violin Paul McMillan viola Rod McGrath cello Pre-Concert Talks Find out more about the music in the concert with this week s speaker, Callum Moncrieff. Pre-concert talks take place at 9.40am in the auditorium on Thursday morning and 6.45pm in the Terrace Level foyer on Friday and Saturday nights. Pre-Concert Talks are supported by Wesfarmers Arts.

6 Making The Most of Your Visit FooD & BEVERAGES Foyer bars are open for drinks and coffee two hours before, during interval and afterwards. To save time we recommend you pre-order your interval drinks. FIRST AID There are St John Ambulance officers present at every concert so please speak to them if you require any first aid assistance. waso RECoRDINGS Continue to experience WASO in your own home! A variety of WASO CDs are available for purchase at the Encore Gift Shop in the foyer at interval and post-concert. Connect with waso LISTEN Tune in to 720 ABC Perth for Breakfast on Friday mornings when Prue Ashurst joins Eoin Cameron to provide the latest on classical music and WASO s upcoming concerts. This performance is being recorded for delayed broadcast on ABC Classic FM. For further details please refer to abc.net.au/classic CoNCERT PLAYLISTS Listen to music featured in 2014 concerts at waso.com.au waso webcasts WASO will be streaming four concerts live and on demand in 2014, thanks to iinet. For more details visit waso.com.au SoCIAL MEDIA youtube.com/westaustsymorchestra facebook.com/westaustraliansymphonyorchestra twitter.com/_waso_ E-NEwS Stay up to date with the activities of your Orchestra by subscribing to SymphonE-news. Go to waso.com.au to join our mailing list. FEEDBACk We would love to hear from you! Please send your feedback to PO Box 3041, East Perth WA 6892, send an email to waso@waso.com.au, call 9326 0000, or leave us a message on Facebook or Twitter.

7

8

9 waso News Bringing set works to life for students On 24 February, 370 secondary students enjoyed a performance of the 2013-2015 School Curriculum and Standards Authority Set Works at Hale School Auditorium. This program has become a regular in our education calendar and helps students studying Western Art Music, to understand the context of the musical selections when they were written, why they were written and more about the great composers who wrote them. Students from 20 different secondary schools across the state had the opportunity to hear conductor and presenter Peter Moore, pull the pieces apart, analyse and reassemble them in performance. Two members of WASO performed solos in the program Semra Lee-Smith (A/Associate Concertmaster) performed the first movement of Mendelssohn s exquisite Violin Concerto in E minor, and Brent Grapes (A/ Trumpet) treated students with a performance of the horrendously difficult piccolo trumpet part in J.S Bach s Brandenburg Concerto No.2. WASO NEWS IMAGE TBC The Big Sing moves to Harmony week The WASO Chorus and WASO musicians are joining forces again with hundreds of Perth s enthusiastic singing community to present The Big Sing on Tuesday 18 March. Participants will enjoy rehearsing choral works that appeal to a broad range of musical tastes and abilities. This year s program, our seventh, celebrates Harmony Week * with a selection of repertoire from around the world chosen by guest conductor Prue Ashurst. Prue is one of Perth s most passionate and experienced choral directors who many of you will know from her Friday morning segment on 720 ABC Perth s Breakfast Show with Eoin Cameron. Participants will rehearse alongside the WASO Chorus, and for the final Big Sing, perform the selected works with members of WASO. Program highlight s include a traditional Ngoongar welcome song and Dan Walker s Laudate for Another Place, Another Time. * Harmony Week runs from 15-21 March and encourages everyone to experience, explore and appreciate WA s wealth of cultural, religious, linguistic and ethnic diversity. The WASO Chorus is supported by Lotterywest. Semra Lee-Smith, A/Associate Concertmaster

10 Biography Jahja Ling Conductor Jahja Ling s distinguished career as an internationally renowned conductor has earned him an exceptional reputation for musical integrity, intensity and expressivity. The 2013-14 season marks Jahja Ling s tenth season as Music Director of the San Diego Symphony. In October 2013 he led the orchestra in a performance at Carnegie Hall, followed by a tour to China. He holds an ongoing relationship with The Cleveland Orchestra, and during his tenure he has conducted over 450 concerts and 600 works. He previously served as Assistant and Associate Conductor of the San Francisco Symphony; Music Director of The Florida Orchestra (1988-2003); and Artistic Director of the Taiwan National Symphony Orchestra (1998-2001). He made his European debut with the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra in 1988, and has appeared throughout Asia and the United States, where he has conducted all the major symphony orchestras. Born in Jakarta, Indonesia, of Chinese descent and now an American citizen, Ling began to play the piano at age four. At age 17 he won the Jakarta Piano Competition and one year later was awarded a Rockefeller grant to attend The Juilliard School, where he studied piano with Mieczysław Munz and conducting with John Nelson. After completing a master s degree at Juilliard, he studied orchestral conducting at the Yale School of Music under Otto- Werner Mueller and received a Doctor of Musical Arts degree in 1985. He was also awarded an honorary doctorate by Wooster College in 1993. Jahja Ling makes his home in San Diego with his wife, Jessie, and their young daughters Priscilla and Stephanie.

12 waso on Stage Tonight VIoLIN Paul wright Concertmaster Semra Lee-Smith A/Associate Concertmaster Graham Pyatt A/Assistant Concertmaster Akiko Miyazawa A/ 1st Violin Zak Rowntree A/ 2nd Violin Kylie Liang A/Assoc 2nd Violin Rachel Aquilina^ Sarah Blackman Fleur Challen Erin Chen Beth Hebert Alexandra Isted Sunmi Jung Shaun Lee-Chen* Lawrence Lee Melanie Pearn Ken Peeler Louise Sandercock Jolanta Schenk Jane Serrangeli Ellie Shalley Kathryn Shinnick^ Jacek Slawomirski Bao Di Tang Cerys Tooby Teresa Vinci^ David Yeh VIoLA Paul McMillan Guest Kierstan Arkleysmith Nik Babic Alex Brogan Katherine Drake Alison Hall Rachael Kirk Allan McLean Caleb Wright^ Aaron Wyatt^ Casual Player^ CELLo Rod McGrath Louise McKay Melinda Gourlay^ Oliver McAslan Nicholas Metcalfe Fotis Skordas Tim South Jon Tooby^ Xiao Le Wu DoUBLE BASS Andrew Rootes* Elizabeth Browning^ Sarah Clare^ Christine Reitzenstein Louise Ross Andrew Tait Mark Tooby Giovanni Vinci^ FLUTE Andrew Nicholson Chair partnered by Apache. Mary-Anne Blades Georgia Lane^ PICCoLo Michael waye oboe Elizabeth Chee Stephanie Nicholls CoR ANGLAIS Leanne Glover CLARINET Allan Meyer Cath Cahill^ Lorna Cook BASS CLARINET Alexander Millier Chair partnered by Alessandrino Property Group. BASSooN Adam Mikulicz Joanne Brown^ Colin Forbes-Abrams CoNTRABASSooN Chloe Turner HoRN David Evans Robert Gladstones 3rd Jess Armstrong^ Julia Brooke Francesco Lo Surdo TRUMPET Brent Grapes Evan Cromie Peter Miller TRoMBoNE Joshua Davis Liam O Malley BASS TRoMBoNE Philip Holdsworth TUBA Cameron Brook TIMPANI Alex Timcke PERCUSSIoN Robyn Gray Amanda Dean^ Paul Tanner^ *Instruments used by these musicians are on loan from Janet Holmes à Court AC. Associate Guest Musician^

13 Meet the Musician Rod McGrath Cello Do you remember the first orchestral work you heard? I first heard the Hallé Orchestra when I was about 13 years old and I fell in love with the sound of a full cello section. Have you played in any other orchestras other than waso? I played as a casual musician with the BBC Symphony Orchestra when I was 18 for a whole season of the BBC Proms. I Joined the London Philharmonic Orchestra as number two cello aged 21 and moved to the London Symphony Orchestra as Co- four years later where I stayed for 20 years. Is there anything special about your instrument? I play on a cello made in London around 1750 by Richard Duke. Duke is renowned for making many extremely fine violins and some violas but only a handful of cellos. I have yet to hear of another one having survived. How would you describe tonight s concert in one sentence? Some of the most enjoyable pieces to play and listen to in the whole repertoire. what do you love the most about working and living in Perth? I love the lifestyle that Perth offers. On top of that the Perth Concert Hall has perhaps the best acoustic that I have ever performed in and certainly we have the best audience! what inspires you? Every time I play the Duke I marvel at the existence of classical music and all of its history, the composers, the instrument makers, the first players to perform and so on. I always try to imagine exactly what the composer was trying to communicate in a fresh way no matter how many times I have played a piece or how few!

15 Timeline of Composers & works Johannes Brahms 1833 Ð 1897 Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky 1840 Ð 1893 Edward Elgar 1857 Ð 1934 ROMANTIC PERIOD 1860 Ð 1920 Richard Strauss 1864 Ð 1949 Tchaikovsky's Symphony No.4 1878 Brahms' Academic Festival Overture 1880 Strauss' Till Eulenspiegel 1895 EARLY ROMANTIC PERIOD 1830 Ð 1860 Elgar's Introduction and Allegro 1905 1825 1850 1875 1900 1925 1950

16 Program Notes Johannes Brahms (1833-1897) Academic Festival Overture, Op.80 Brahms had never been a formally enrolled university student, but in 1853 he d had a rattling good time leading a student-style existence in Göttingen, singing drinking songs with the local student population. In 1880, after receiving an honorary doctorate from the University of Breslau, the by-nowfamous composer responded with a concert overture in honour of the occasion. But rather than writing an academic work, Brahms set out to complete a jovial piece based on the convivial aspects of student life which he had known first-hand. Brahms took four of his favourite student drinking songs and worked them into a free sonata structure using the largest and most percussion-dominated orchestra that he had ever employed. He noted that it was a very boisterous potpourri of student songs à la Suppé a reference to Suppé s opera Flotte Bursch, which is constructed in the same way. The four songs on which the work is based are Wir hatten gebauet ein stattliches Haus (We had built a stately house), which is introduced in chorale-like fashion by the brass; Der Landesvater (The father of our country), heard first on the second violins; the undergraduate initiation song Was kommt dort von der Hoh, introduced by bassoons over pizzicato figures in the violas and cellos; and finally, a full orchestral version of Gaudeamus igitur, a medieval student song that Suppé had also used in Flotte Bursch. The fun starts right at the beginning, with a pompously solemn opening, rapidly giving way to the high spirits which characterise the piece as a whole. Abridged from a note by Martin Buzacott Symphony Australia 1997 WASO last performed this work on 12 & 13 May, 1990, conducted by Max McBride. IF YoU LIkE THIS work YoU MAY ALSo ENJoY BRAHMS Hungarian Dance No.1 featured in Piers Lane Plays Liszt Fri 17 & Sat 18 October Glossary Sonata form A term conceived in the 19th century to describe the way most Classical composers structured at least the first movement of a symphonic work or a sonata. It involves the exposition or presentation of themes or subjects: the first subject is in the tonic or home key, the second in a contrasting key. The resulting tension between keys is intensified in the development, where recognisable melodic and rhythmic aspects of the themes are manipulated as the music moves further and further away from the ultimate goal of the home key. Tension is resolved at the recapitulation where both subjects are fully restated in the tonic. There is sometimes a coda (literally, tail ) to enhance the sense of finality. Pizzicato Plucking, rather than bowing, the strings..

17 Program Notes Edward Elgar (1857-1934) Introduction and Allegro, Op.47 Paul wright violin Zak Rowntree violin Paul McMillan viola Rod McGrath cello Elgar wrote his Introduction and Allegro in 1905 after his publisher Jaeger suggested that he compose a piece for strings. As Elgar wrote to Jaeger: I m doing that string thing Intro. and Allegro no working-out part but a devil of a fugue instead. The Introduction and Allegro reveals considerable debt to Handel s concerto grosso form (in the layout for solo string quartet and full string orchestra), and Haydn s later symphonies (in the way the Introduction s material is worked into the main body of the Allegro). A violinist himself, Elgar enjoyed rich and varied string sonorities and the Introduction and Allegro is really stringy in effect, to use his own phrase. However the powerful impression made by the work owes most to its emotional content. Elgar wrote, The work is really a tribute to that sweet borderland where I have made my home. His house in Hereford stood above the Wye River, where in 1904 he heard a voice singing in the distance. The song in turn reminded him of music he had heard a Welsh choir singing three years earlier. This tune became the third theme of the Introduction, where it is introduced by a solo viola. It is preceded by a downwardsweeping theme for the full band, to which the quartet replies with a wistfully rising and falling theme, over which Elgar wrote smiling with a sigh. In the recapitulation which follows the fugue, the themes are compressed and the piece culminates in Elgar s typical nobilmente manner, ending with a radiant extension of the Welsh tune. Adapted from a note by David Garrett 2001 WASO last performed this work on 1 & 2 August,1997, conducted by Vernon Handley. IF YoU LIkE THIS work YoU MAY ALSo ENJoY HANDEL Concerto grosso featured in Glorious Baroque Fri 21 & Sun 23 March Glossary Concerto grosso A form of Baroque music in which the musical material is passed between a small group of soloists and full orchestra. This is in contrast to the concerto which features a single solo instrument with the melody line, accompanied by the orchestra. Recapitulation A return to the opening material of a piece or a movement.

18 Program Notes Richard Strauss (1864-1949) Till Eulenspiegel s Merry Pranks Symphonic Poem, Op.28 Strauss conceived Till Eulenspiegel as a staged work, but after the failure of his opera Guntram he decided he had no gift for that genre. This was something of a rash judgment, and happily one that he later revised; but as a tone poem, Till Eulenspiegel is wholly delightful. It tells the story of the legendary peasant folk hero Till Eulenspiegel, from the old rogue s tale, who is said to have lived during the 14th century and who became the hero of an expanding pool of anecdotes. Once upon a time there was a roguish jester, wrote Strauss in the score; and above the horn call, whose name was Till Eulenspiegel. Strauss uses rondo form, and describes Till s adventures in the episodes. Our hero is unlucky in love; dressed as a priest he oozes unction and morality. He commits any number of pranks, but the main theme continues to return, and Till is restored to where he started. He resembles nothing so much as an indestructible cartoon character, always ready for trouble again by the next frame. Finally, our hero s antics catch up with him. Till is confronted with the full force of the law, and punished in a rather terminal way: There he dangles, the breath leaves his body, the last convulsion and Till s mortal self is finished. A gory ending, but we sense the composer s delight even in this, as he leaves us, smiling, with Till s death throes, and an echo of the beginning. Anna Goldsworthy 2001 WASO last performed this work on 14 & 15 May, 2009, conducted by Paul Daniel. If you like this work you may also enjoy IF YoU LIkE THIS work YoU MAY ALSo ENJoY STRAVINSKY Petrushka featured in Stravinsky s Petrushka Fri 30 & Sat 31 May Glossary Tone poem Music which is inspired by and suggests a non-musical idea, such as a story or a particular scene. Frequently such a work has a descriptive title. Rondo form A musical form where a main idea (refrain) alternates with a series of musical episodes.

19 Program Notes Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840 1893) Symphony No.4 in F minor, Op.36 Andante sostenuto Moderato con anima Moderato assai, quasi Andante Allegro vivo Andantino in modo di canzona Scherzo (Pizzicato ostinato) Allegro Finale (Allegro con fuoco) The Introduction is the kernel of the whole symphony, without question its main idea. This is Fate, the force of destiny This could be a description of the beginning of Beethoven s Fifth. But the words are Tchaikovsky s and they describe the strident horn fanfares of his Fourth Symphony. Tchaikovsky s patron, Nadezhda von Meck, heard in the symphony a profound emotional drama. After the premiere in 1878 she asked him whether the symphony had a definite program, a literary underpinning. Tchaikovsky had told others that the symphony s drama couldn t be formulated in words, but for von Meck, who paid his bills, he went to the trouble of finding those words. in truth, it is a hard question to answer In our symphony there is a program (that is, the possibility of explaining in words what it seeks to express) Of course, I can do this here only in general terms. The Introduction is the kernel of the whole symphony, without question its main idea. This is Fate, the force of destiny, which ever prevents our pursuit of happiness from reaching its goal It is invincible, inescapable. One can only resign oneself and lament fruitlessly. This disconsolate and despairing feeling grows ever stronger and more intense. Would it not be better to turn away from reality and immerse oneself in dreams? Tchaikovsky continues, identifying musical ideas representing tender dreams and fervent hope, then a climax suggesting the possibility of happiness, before the Fate theme awakens us from the dreams And thus, all life is the ceaseless alternation of bitter reality with evanescent visions and dreams of happiness There is no refuge. We are buffeted about by this sea until it seizes us and pulls us down to the bottom. There you have roughly the program of the first movement. All this matches the emotional character of the first movement the music s profound, terrifying despair and if we allow for Tchaikovsky s personal turmoil at the time (he d emerged from an ill-advised marriage) then it could be given an autobiographical interpretation. More striking, though, is Tchaikovsky s handling of his two principal ideas: Fate and self. Fate is the fanfare (actually a polonaise, writes Richard Taruskin); self is the first real melody a glorious waltz.

20 These two ideas collide in the music. Copying a dramatic strategy from Mozart s Don Giovanni, Tchaikovsky superimposes his dances, matching three bars of waltz time to one bar of the slower, aristocratic polonaise (also in three). Then, in the coda, we hear the complete subjection of self to Fate and the waltz returns one last time, stretched to match the pulse of the polonaise hardly a waltz at all. The effect of this collision is one of music and a composer torn between extremes. Tchaikovsky s instinct was for lyrical outpourings (his waltz), but he understood that to be a symphonist in 1878 meant observing the symphonic conventions established by Beethoven. The Fate fanfare gave him a motto he could manipulate. Tchaikovsky s student, Sergei Taneyev, observed that the disproportionately long first movement gave the appearance of a symphonic poem to which three movements have been appended fortuitously to make up a symphony. Perhaps Tchaikovsky agreed: after the wealth of detail for the first movement, his descriptive program peters out. The second movement is summed up as an expression of the melancholy feeling that arises in the evening as you sit alone, worn out from your labours. The Scherzo appears to contain no definite feelings at all: One s mind is a blank, and the imagination has free rein. But the Scherzo is one of the most effective parts of the symphony the relentless plucking of pizzicato strings combining with brilliant writing for woodwinds and brass, in particular the scampering piccolo. In the Finale, Tchaikovsky chooses a Russian folk song, The Birch Tree, as the theme for a set of variations. He gives the apparently cheerful scenario of holiday festivities a depressing cast: If you can find no impulse for joy within yourself, look at others Never say that all the world is sad. You have only yourself to blame Why not rejoice through the joys of others? It s as if we are to hear the finale as festivity but second hand. If this isn t resignation to Fate, nothing is. Yvonne Frindle 2009/2013 WASO last performed this work on 24 & 25 June, 2011, conducted by Vladimir Verbitsky. IF YoU LIkE THIS work YoU MAY ALSo ENJoY SHOSTAKOVICH Symphony No.5 featured in Romantic Rachmaninov Fri 2 & Sat 3 May Glossary Coda A concluding section added to the basic structure of a piece or movement to emphasise the sense of finality.

21 Meet the Instrument The French Horn The French horn or horn, as it is now more commonly referred to is a brass instrument consisting of around twelve feet of tubing wound into a coil expanding into a flared bell. It is a descendant of the natural horn, on which notes were produced solely by means of variations in lip tension and air pressure. Crooks, or extra lengths of tubing, could be inserted to alter the harmonic series (the notes obtainable naturally from the instrument) and pitch was manipulated by means of handstopping, or inserting the hand into the bell. Modern horns have three or four valves which render the instrument fully chromatic. As the 19th century progressed the demands placed on symphony orchestras from increasingly harmonically complex music by composers such as Wagner led to the widespread adoption of the valve horn. The use of four horns is standard in today s orchestral line-up, with horns 1 and 3 playing the higher parts and horns 2 and 4 the lower parts. This interlocked scoring reflects the historical deployment of two pairs of high and low horns, each pair in a different key. Double and triple tonguing are possible on the horn, however flutter tonguing can be tricky. Other techniques or special effects include cuivré, which calls for a loud, brassy timbre produced by a more forceful attack, and bells up, which instructs the player to lift the bell of the horn into the air. The horn s hunting origins and heroic qualities have long been exploited by composers, and in addition to famous concertos by Mozart and Richard Strauss, favourite works and orchestral solos include Schumann s Adagio and Allegro and Concertstück for four horns and orchestra, Strauss Till Eulenspiegel s Merry Pranks, (featured in Jahja Ling conducts Tchaikovsky) and Weber s Der Freischütz. The British horn virtuoso Dennis Brain (1921-1957) was the inspiration behind works by several composers, including Hindemith, Britten and Malcolm Arnold. Symphony Services International 2011 1. Mouthpiece 1. Mouthpiece 2. 3 valve levers 2. 3 valve levers 3. 3. 3 rotary valves 4. 4. Bell Bell n m k l

22 UWA School of music Fletcher Cox Trumpet Proud Tertiary Education Partner of the West Australian Symphony Orchestra. music.uwa.edu.au WA s only World Top 100 university. UNIPRINT 112234 Is your IT in a bit of a heap? Let WASO look after the music, let M2 Digital look after your IT 1800 802 822 www.m2digital.com.au

23 Philanthropy News Philanthropy Partner welcome to 2014 from waso Philanthropy The Philanthropy team at WASO wishes you a Happy New Year and welcomes you to the opening Classics concert for 2014. We are also delighted to welcome our new Conductor Asher Fisch and look forward to sharing with you what will be a wonderful year of music-making. The impact of supporting your Orchestra is powerful and far-reaching. Many of the instruments on stage are the result of philanthropic partnerships. You may already have seen our gorgeous new celeste on stage at the Perth Concert Hall, made possible through many generous donations to our Celeste and Brass Campaign last year. We are also excited about the imminent arrival of WASO s five new German trombones, which are certain to make a valuable contribution during our Beethoven Festival. Support from our Patrons is central to bringing concerts like this one to our audiences. Philanthropic support not only helps create these wonderful concerts in the Concert Hall, it helps take music all over Western Australia. 2013 saw the launch of our first Giving Catalogue, supporting our ever-growing Education and Community Engagement programs across the state. The response has been fantastic, but if you haven t seen it yet, contact Jane or go online to waso.com.au/giving_catalogue, and help give someone a magical musical experience. This is your philanthropic support at work, with every gift making a difference. Philanthropy at WASO helps us to build a strong, vibrant Orchestra for this state that enriches the lives of many thousands of people. We invite you to become a WASO Patron this year. There are many ways you can be involved to help support and sustain your Orchestra. To learn more please call Jane Clare on 9326 0014 or email clarej@waso.com.au Patrons & Friends Event Make an afternoon of it and join us to meet acclaimed director of the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra, Paul Dyer, after he leads WASO musicians in a delightful one-hour chamber concert at Fremantle Town Hall. Flute Andrew Nicholson and violinist Shaun Lee-Chen both feature as soloists in this charming program of exquisite music from the Baroque period. The concert starts at 2pm and tickets can be purchased for $42. Tickets for the post-concert event are $10 for Patrons & Friends ($15 for guests) and include a glass of wine and nibbles. Meet the Chamber Ensemble Sunday 23 March, 2pm, Fremantle Town Hall Call the WASO Box Office to book on 9326 0000.

24 our Supporters Your attendance helps sustain the Orchestra and we thank you for your commitment. We are also very grateful to our corporate supporters who make a significant contribution to WASO, and of course for government funding which is critical. However, these three sources of income are simply not enough to cover the ongoing costs of the Orchestra and increasingly it is our Patrons that enable us to continue to achieve our vision to touch souls and enrich lives through music. There are many ways you can be involved and your support is deeply appreciated. Endowment Fund for the orchestra The Endowment fund includes major donations from individuals and bequests. The income earned is used for the benefit of the orchestra. Tom & Jean Arkley Janet Holmes à Court AC Estates waso is extremely grateful for the bequests received from the Estates of the following benefactors: Mrs Roslyn Warrick Symphony Circle Recognises Patrons who have made a provision in their will to the orchestra. Anita Clayton Judith Gedero Wolfgang Lehmkuhl Tosi Nottage (in memory Edgar Nottage) Judy Sienkiewicz Sheila Wileman Anonymous (16) The waso Song Book New works commissioned for the orchestra by waso. we gratefully acknowledge the support of the following individuals who have commissioned new music performed since 2010. Janet Holmes à Court AC Peter Dawson Geoff Stearn Anonymous (1) Reach out Recognises Patrons who support our Education and Community Engagement programs. Prue Ashurst Andrew & Nicola Forrest The James Galvin Foundation Barrie & Jude Lepley McCusker Charitable Foundation Simon Lee Foundation Beethoven Circle waso acknowledges Patrons who are generously supporting our Beethoven Festival. Jean Arkley (in memory of Tom Arkley) Bob & Gay Branchi Janet Holmes à Court AC (in memory of her mother) Torsten & Mona Ketelsen Joshua & Pamela Pitt

25 our Supporters Annual Giving We thank the following Patrons for their generous contribution to WASO in the last twelve months through WASO s Annual Giving Program. Conductor s Circle Gifts $20,000+ Janet Holmes à Court AC Jill Mulheron Brian & Nancy Murphy Patricia New Anonymous (1) Impresario Patron Gifts $10,000 - $19,999 Gay & Bob Branchi Tony & Gwenyth Lennon Joshua & Pamela Pitt Anonymous (1) Maestro Patron Gifts $5,000 - $9,999 Jean Arkley (in memory of Tom Arkley) Bill Bloking Don Conroy Ian & Elizabeth Constable Bridget Faye AM Gilbert George & Associates Dr Patricia Kailis Margaret & Rod Marston Robert May Spinifex Trust Peter & Jean Stokes Sue & Ron Wooller Anonymous (1) Virtuoso Patron Gifts $2,500 - $4,999 Prof Fred & Mrs Margaret Affleck Neil Archibald & Alan R Dodge AM Sally Burton Mark Coughlan & Dr Pei-Yin Hsu Stephen Davis Tim & Lexie Elliott Robyn Glindemann Sylvia & Wally Hyams Keith & Gaye Kessell Michael & Dale Kitney Bryant Macfie Mrs Morrell Anne Nolan Ron & Philippa Packer John & Paula Phillips Ms Elizabeth Sachse & Dr Lance Risbey Judy Sienkiewicz Ros Thomson M & H Tuite Ian Watson Trish Williams Strategic Interactions Andrew & Marie Yuncken Anonymous (1) Patron Gifts $1000 - $2,499 Margaret Atkins OAM Colin & Eve Beckett Tony & Mary Beeley Suzanne & David Biddles John & Sue Bird (in memory of Penny Bird) Kevin Blake Matthew J C Blampey Mr John Bonny Mrs Debbie Borshoff Jean Brodie-Hall AM Gavin Bunning Ann Butcher & Dean R Kubank Dr G Campbell-Evans Arthur & Nerina Coopes Hon June Craig AM Gay & John Cruickshank Norman & Denia Daffen Russell & Susan Dixon Margaret Dobson Julian Dowse Don & Marie Forrest Dr Andrew Gardner Roger & Ann Gillbanks Graham & Barbara Goulden Jannette Gray Sandra Gray Joe & Deidre Greenfeld Penelope Grosjean David & Valerie Gulland Brian & Romola Haggerty Richard B Hammond

26 our Supporters Michael Harding Shigeki & Hinako Hirano Michael & Liz Hollingdale Jim & Freda Irenic Cynthia Jee Lilian & Roger Jennings Anthony Kane & Jane Leahy-Kane Bill Kean Anthony & Noelle Keller Dorothy Kingston Dr Rob Kirk & Sarah Gallinagh Stephanie & John Kobelke Ulrich & Gloria Kunzmann Irving Lane Paul Lee Rosalind Lilley Graham & Muriel Mahony Gregg & Sue Marshman Jennifer & Arthur McComb Betty & Con Michael AO Vicki Mizen Hon Justice S R Moncrieff Jane & Jock Morrison Lynn Murray Val & Barry Neubecker Dr Phil & Erlene Noble John Overton The Family of Hilary Owens Michael & Lesley Page Athena Paton Associate Prof. Tim Pavy Alan Pedersen (in memory of Hilary Owens) Charmian Phillips (in memory of Colin Craft) Pamela Platt Andrew & Suzanne Poli Dr Leon Prindiville Chester Reeve John & Alison Rigg Nigel & Dr Heather Rogers Maurice & Gerry Rousset Roger Sandercock Dr R & J Schwenger Margaret & Roger Seares Eve Shannon-Cullity Julian & Noreen Sher Judy Sienkiewicz Laurel & Ross Smith Dr Paul Smith & Denham Harry Gail & Tony Sutherland Richard Tarala & Lyn Beazley AO Gene Tilbrook Mary Townsend Dr Robert Turnbull Maggie Venerys Stan & Valerie Vicich Watering Concepts Joyce Westrip OAM Alan Whitham Jean & Ian Williams AO Dr Peter Winterton Anonymous (15) Tutti Patron Gifts $500 - $999 Geoff & Joan Airey Catherine Bagster Merle I Bardwell Betty Barker Bernard & Jackie Barnwell Shirley Barraclough P M Bennet Michael & Nadia Berkeley-Hill Diane & Ron Bowyer Elizabeth & James Brown C & K Brownlie Marilyn & Ian Burton Nanette Carnachan Claire Chambers and Dr Andrea Shoebridge Dr Anne Chester Lyn & Harvey Coates AO Agatha & Alex Cohen AO Helen Cook Brian Cresswell Gina & Neil Davidson Frances Davies Lesley & Peter Davies Jop & Hanneke Delfos Rai & Erika Dolinschek Lorraine Ellard Mrs G. Ewen The Farghaly Family Annette Finn Joan Gagliardi George Gavranic Elaine Gimson Isobel Glencross Jacqui Grove Pauline & Peter Handford Douglas M & Regina Hansen Prof Alan Harvey & Dr Paulien de Boer Richard Hatch Dr Penny Herbert (in memory of Dunstan Herbert) Helen Hollingshead John Isherwood B. M. Kent In memory of Dr Brenton Knott Trevor & Ane Marie Lacy George Lipton Megan Lowe

27 our Supporters Dr M. E. MacDonald & Mr Michael Pauly Mrs Carolyn Milton-Smith (in loving memory of Emeritus Prof. John Milton- Smith) S.B. Monger-Hay Dr Peter Moss Marianne Nilsson Marjan Oxley Graham & Hildegarde Pennefather Bev Penny Adrian & Ruth Phelps Sheila Pinch Thomas & Diana Potter Alison & John Price Clarissa Repton James & Nicola Ridsdill-Smith Judith E Shaw Hendrick Smit Michael Snell & Vicki Stewart Peggy & Tom Stacy Dr Julian Todres S R Vogt Adrienne & Max Walters Anne Watson Joy Wearne Dr Chris & Mrs Vimala Whitaker Ann Whyntie Violette William Janet Williams Judith Wilton & David Turner Patricia Wong Yalambi Farm Stud Anonymous (14) Friends Gifts $40 - $499 Thank you to all our Friends who support WASO through their gift. Sadly, Mrs Joan Tonkin MBE JP has passed away. Joan was a valued Patron, and will be missed. If you are interested in becoming a Patron or learning more about waso Philanthropy please contact Jane Clare, Fundraising and Philanthropy officer, on 9326 0014 or email clarej@waso.com.au. WASO Philanthropy brochures are available from the WASO Programs & Information desk located in the main foyer of the Perth Concert Hall or you can visit waso.com.au. All donations over $2 are fully tax deductible.

28 west Australian Symphony orchestra Conductor Asher Fisch Partnered by Wesfarmers Arts Conductor Laureate Vladimir Verbitsky VIoLIN Semra Lee-Smith A/Associate Concertmaster Graham Pyatt A/Assistant Concertmaster Rebecca Glorie A/ 1st Violin Zak Rowntree A/ 2nd Violin Kylie Liang A/Assoc 2nd Violin Sarah Blackman Fleur Challen Erin Chen Stephanie Dean Beth Hebert Alexandra Isted Sunmi Jung Shaun Lee-Chen* Akiko Miyazawa Lucas O Brien Anna O Hagan Melanie Pearn Ken Peeler Louise Sandercock Jolanta Schenk Jane Serrangeli Ellie Shalley Jacek Slawomirski Bao Di Tang Cerys Tooby David Yeh VIoLA Paul McMillan Guest Kierstan Arkleysmith Nik Babic Alex Brogan Katherine Drake Alison Hall Rachael Kirk Allan McLean Helen Tuckey CELLo Rod McGrath Louise McKay Assoc Shigeru Komatsu Oliver McAslan Nicholas Metcalfe Eve Silver* Fotis Skordas Tim South Xiao Le Wu DoUBLE BASS Andrew Rootes* Joan Wright Assoc Christine Reitzenstein Louise Ross Andrew Tait Mark Tooby FLUTE Andrew Nicholson chair partnered by Apache Mary-Anne Blades Assoc PICCoLo Michael Waye oboe Elizabeth Chee Stephanie Nicholls CoR ANGLAIS Leanne Glover CLARINET Allan Meyer Lorna Cook BASS CLARINET Alexander Millier chair partnered by Alessandrino property group BASSooN Jane Kircher-Lindner Adam Mikulicz Assoc Colin Forbes-Abrams CoNTRABASSooN Chloe Turner HoRN David Evans Robert Gladstones 3rd Julia Brooke Francesco Lo Surdo TRUMPET Brent Grapes A/ Evan Cromie Assoc Peter Miller TRoMBoNE Joshua Davis Liam O Malley Assoc BASS TRoMBoNE Philip Holdsworth TUBA Cameron Brook TIMPANI Alex Timcke PERCUSSIoN Robyn Gray Troy Greatz HARP Sarah Bowman ASSISTANT CoNDUCToR Christopher Dragon CHoRUS DIRECToR Christopher van Tuinen CHoRUS VoCAL CoACH Andrew Foote *Instruments used by these musicians are on loan from Janet Holmes à Court AC.

29 BoARD of DIRECToRS Janet Holmes à Court AC Chairman Bill Bloking Mark Coughlan Jeff Dowling Keith Kessell Barrie Lepley Deputy Chairman Anne Nolan Paul Shannon Julian Sher ExECUTIVE Craig Whitehead Chief Executive Ellen Wisdom Human Resources Manager Hannah North Executive Assistant ARTISTIC PLANNING Evan Kennea Executive Manager, Artistic Planning Maya Kraj-Krajewski Artist Liaison/Chorus Administrator Claire Stokes Program Manager Alan Tyrrell Program Manager CoMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT Cassandra Lake Community Engagement Manager Hannah Clemen Education Coordinator orchestral MANAGEMENT Keith McGowan Executive Manager, Orchestral Management Richie Burton Orchestral Operations Manager David Cotgreave Production & Technical Manager Alistair Cox Orchestra Manager Wee Ming Khoo Music Librarian Noel Rhind Orchestral Operations Coordinator BUSINESS SERVICES Peter Freemantle Chief Financial Officer Andrew Chew Systems Administrator Angela Miller Accountant Svetlana Williams Payroll Officer Sushila Bhudia Accounts Officer CoRPoRATE DEVELoPMENT Simon Lodge Executive Manager, Corporate Development Sharmini Poulsen Corporate Partnerships Manager Luci Steinhardt Corporate Partnerships Executive Holly Norman Events Coordinator PHILANTHRoPY Alecia Benzie Executive Manager, Philanthropy Josie Aitchison Customer Service & Philanthropy Coordinator Jane Clare Fundraising & Philanthropy Officer MARkETING Kelli Carnachan Executive Manager, Marketing Kirsty Chisholm Digital Marketing Coordinator Nancy Hackett Marketing Manager Claire Dewing Graphic Designer Marc Missiaen Relationship Marketing Manager Paula Schibeci Public Relations Manager Annie Loo Marketing Assistant Sava Papos Customer Service Manager Josie Aitchison Customer Service & Philanthropy Coordinator Beverley Trolio Customer Service Coordinator Alana Arnold Margaret Daws Vicki Prince Debbie Silvester Robyn Westbrook Customer Service Officers Perth Concert Hall AEG ogden (Perth) Pty Ltd Perth Concert Hall is managed by AEG Ogden (Perth) Pty Ltd Venue Manager for the Perth Theatre Trust Venues. Andrew Bolt General Manager Helen Stewart Deputy General Manager Peter Robins Technical Manager Paul Richardson Assistant Technical Manager Penelope Briffa Event Coordinator AEG ogden (Perth) Pty Ltd Rodney M Phillips Chief Executive The Perth Theatre Trust The Hon. Mr Peter Blaxell Chairman 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 waso@waso.com.au

30 Proud sponsor of waso apachecorp.com/australia

31 2014 Corporate Partners PLATINUM PARTNERS CoNCERTo PARTNERS overture PARTNERS SoNATA PARTNERS EDUCATIoN PARTNERS School of Music Tertiary Education Partner keynote PARTNERS orchestra SUPPoRTERS MARGARET RIVER wine PARTNERS Aravina Estate, Edwards Wines, Howard Park Wines, Leeuwin Estate, Moss Wood, Pierro Margaret River Vineyards, Vasse Felix. 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.

32 Alcohol.Think AgAin masters series Enchanting folk tunes and vibrant orchestral colour. Fri 28 & Sat 29 March 7.30pm Perth concert hall WEBER Oberon: Overture BRAHMS Violin concerto DVORAK symphony no.8 Jahja Ling conductor Alina Pogostkina violin (pictured) BOOK NOW Tickets from $30 * Call 9326 0000 quoting 1086 Visit waso.com.au or ticketek.com.au *Transaction fees may apply.