NORTHERN LIGHTS. Adès conducts Sibelius. Wed 1 May 6.30pm Thu 2 May 6.30pm MEET THE MUSIC PRESENTED BY AUSTRALIAN INSTITUTE OF MUSIC

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NORTHERN LIGHTS Adès conducts Sibelius MEET THE MUSIC PRESENTED BY AUSTRALIAN INSTITUTE OF MUSIC Wed 1 May 6.30pm Thu 2 May 6.30pm THE LEADING SCHOOL FOR TODAY S MUSIC INDUSTRY

WELCOME THE LEADING SCHOOL FOR TODAY S MUSIC INDUSTRY On behalf of the Australian Institute of Music (AIM), Silver Partner of the Sydney Symphony, I would like to extend our warmest welcome to this second concert in the Meet the Music series. AIM has a strong affinity with the Sydney community and a commitment to supporting those who share the same dedication to offering the highest calibre of music education. We recognise the importance of music within our community and the role it plays in fostering creativity, innovation, participation and personal growth. For this reason, the Australian Institute of Music is very pleased to be the Presenting Partner of Meet the Music. AIM is proud to support the next generation of arts patrons, giving young audiences the opportunity to see and hear the Sydney Symphony Orchestra live on stage at the Sydney Opera House. We hope you find this concert inspiring, educational, entertaining and uplifting. 2 sydney symphony Prof. Ian Bofinger Executive Dean Australian Institute of Music

2013 season meet the music presented by australian institute of music Wednesday 1 May 6.30pm Thursday 2 May 6.30pm Sydney Opera House Concert Hall Northern Lights Thomas Adès CONDUCTOR Pieter Wispelwey CELLO Ludwig van Beethoven (1770 1827) Namensfeier (Name Day) Overture Witold Lutosławski (1913 1994) Cello Concerto Introduction Four Episodes Cantilena Finale INTERVAL Thursday s performance will be recorded for later broadcast by ABC Classic FM. Pre-concert talk by Kim Waldock at 5.45pm in the Northern Foyer. Visit bit.ly/ssospeakerbios for speaker biographies. Estimated durations: 9 minutes, 23 minutes, 20-minute interval, 14 minutes, 28 minutes The concert will conclude at approximately 8.25pm. Thomas Adès (born 1971) Polaris Voyage for Orchestra Jean Sibelius (1865 1957) Symphony No.6, Op.104 Allegro molto moderato Allegretto moderato Poco vivace Allegro molto This concert will be introduced by Andrew Ford, award-winning composer, writer and broadcaster, and presenter of The Music Show on ABC Radio National. PRESENTING PARTNER THE LEADING SCHOOL FOR TODAY S MUSIC INDUSTRY sydney symphony 3

ABOUT THE MUSIC LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN German composer (1770 1827) Overture in C, Op.115, Namensfeier (Name Day) Even great composers suffer from the tides of fashion, and around 1812 this was Beethoven s bitter experience. It wasn t helped by his depressed state: after completing the Seventh and Eighth symphonies and the Violin Sonata in G in mid-1812, he effectively stopped composing, and may have attempted suicide. Things improved for Beethoven during the Congress of Vienna (September 1814 June 1815), which was an attempt by Britain, Austria, Prussia and Russia the victorious powers in the Napoleonic Wars to restore Europe to something like the pre-french Revolution social order. Beethoven was feted for works like the jingoistic Wellington s Victory; he responded with other patriotic music such as the cantata Der glorreiche Augenblick ( The Glorious Moment ). The enthusiasm was a bubble that soon burst; the dignitaries loved the cantata but the paying public was sparse. Nevertheless, Beethoven tried to regain popularity by, as Maynard Solomon puts it, pursuing musical formulas that had worked so well during the preceding years. Among them was the Namensfeier overture (1815), but even Beethoven recognised it as a minor work sadly it failed to lift his popularity or his income. This overture was completed in 1815, using some material that Beethoven had sketched for a setting of Schiller s poem, An die Freude. It was dedicated to Prince Anton Heinrich Radziwill, but since it was performed at Christmas 1815 around the name-day of the Emperor, it acquired the nickname Namensfeier. The overture begins with music marked Maestoso (majestically) a stately introduction in which fully scored chords march slowly to a ceremonial rhythm. This then leads into the body of the overture, Allegro assai vivace (fast, very lively) energetic music that shares the skipping vitality of the Seventh Symphony. This musical formula refers back to what baroque composers called the French overture and so perhaps, for Beethoven and his listeners, evoked the old order of pre- Revolutionary France. The overture calls for an orchestra of classical proportions: pairs of flutes, oboes, clarinets and bassoons; four horns and two trumpets; timpani and strings. Fashion victim Dedication and nickname Navigating the overture sydney symphony 5

WITOLD LUTOSŁAWSKI Polish composer (1913 1994) Cello Concerto American composer Steven Stucky neatly sums up five hallmarks of Witold Lutosławski s music: 1. beauty of sound and mastery of colour 2. renewal of harmony 3. clarity of form 4. drama 5. eloquent communication Lutosławski s cello concerto is in four movements, which are played without a break. Where classical concertos will begin with the orchestra stating the main themes, Lutosławski writes an unaccompanied Introduction for the soloist. Alone, the cello tries and abandons various contrasting ideas: gracious, martial, comic but elegant. A barrage of trumpet calls interrupts the soliloquy and signals the Four Episodes. The cello takes the lead, inviting (says the composer) groups of instruments to join in. The Cantilena exploits the cello s highest, singing register, but again the music is disrupted (brutally) by the brass and the rest of the orchestra. This is the beginning of the Finale, in which fast and brilliant passages from the cello are repeatedly attacked (again the composer s word) by different groups of instruments in the orchestra. Those instruments are: three flutes (two doubling piccolo), three oboes, three clarinets (one doubling bass clarinet) and three bassoons (one doubling contrabassoon); four horns, three trumpets, three trombones and tuba; timpani and two percussion; harp; celesta and piano and strings. At the very beginning of the concerto the cello soloist repeats the note D in an expressionless or absentminded ( indifferente ) manner. As different moods and personalities are explored the music keeps returning to this repeated D, which eventually expands into the first trumpet interruption. The climax of the work comes at the conclusion with brutal forte chords and a kind of collapse and a weeping gesture from the cello. But all is not lost: the cello rises through the texture to play another repeated pattern this time of As loud and triumphant near the top of its range. Five hallmarks Navigating the concerto Repeated tones 6 sydney symphony

Lutosławski s harmony often uses all available 12 notes of the chromatic scale, but these are deployed so that ther e is huge contrast between chords that are stable and consonant and those that are dissonant. His colours and textures are frequently derived from using small groups within the orchestra, which change from moment to moment. One of his most dramatic features is the contrast between sections played in strict time, and others where individual instruments repeat phrases with rhythmic freedom and independence to create a fluid but motionless effect. When London s Royal Philharmonic Society invited Lutosławski to compose a piece, he requested that he be able to feature the great Russian cellist, Mstislav Rostropovich. The Society was delighted with the idea and the commission went ahead with the assistance of the Gulbenkian Foundation. The concerto was first performed on 14 October 1970 at the Royal Festival Hall with Rostropovich as soloist and the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra conducted by Edward Downes Lutosławski describes how writing for one of the greatest musicians of our century allowed him to forget about technicalities and concentrate on the music. Born into an aristocratic Polish family, Witold Lutosławski was one of many Polish intellectuals marked out for extermination by the occupying Nazis during World War II. He fared rather better under the Communist regime, though his First Symphony, completed in 1947, was denounced as formalist (the catch-all criticism of the Soviet era) and banned. His Concerto for Orchestra, developing his love of both folk-based material and rich orchestral sound, earned him rehabilitation at home and contributed to his growing reputation elsewhere. By the 1960s, that international reputation was assured. He was now able to invent his own very personal modernist style, and he went on to compose three more symphonies, and solo concertos for piano, oboe and harp. He developed particular relationships with American orchestras such as the Chicago Symphony Orchestra under George Solti and, towards the end of his life, the Los Angeles Philharmonic and its then Music Director, Esa-Pekka Salonen. Harmony, colour, texture For Rostropovich About the composer sydney symphony 7

THOMAS ADÈS English composer (born 1971) Polaris Voyage for Orchestra Polaris is the star commonly known as the North Star because of its closeness to the north celestial pole. It appears to stand fixed motionless in the night sky, with the other stars rotating around it, and for centuries sailors have relied on it for navigation. The composer writes Polaris explores the use of star constellations for naval navigation and the emotional navigation between the absent sailors and what they leave behind It is scored for orchestra, including groups of brass instruments that may be isolated from the stage. These instruments play in canon, one in each of the three sections of the piece, entering in order from the highest (trumpets) to the lowest (bass tuba). Their melody, like all the music in this work, is derived from a magnetic series, a musical device heard here for the first time, in which all 12 notes are gradually presented, but persistently return to an anchoring pitch, as if magnetised. With the first appearance of the 12th note, marked clearly with the first entrance of the timpani, the poles are reversed. At the start of the third and final section, a third pole is discovered, which establishes a stable equilibrium with the first. Polaris Navigating by the stars The music begins delicately with piano and violins, then high woodwinds, harp and discreet percussion. The effect is of dripping and gurgling water. The sound of trumpets signals the gradual entry of the brass. At times the music seems to take on the character of Indonesian gamelan music. This affinity relies on the technique known as diminution canon, in which a melody is sounded against itself but at different speeds. This technique also evokes the sound of church bell change-ringing. Adès says the climactic conclusion was inspired by his first trip to the Grand Canyon: That experience definitely gave me the key to how to end the piece. It had to end in a space that was everything at once. American writer James Keller has suggested that the A to which orchestras tune is the musicians Polaris something to consider as Adès zeroes in on a single note A. Landmarks 8 sydney symphony

Polaris began life as a work for orchestra with projected video. The lead commissioner was the New World Symphony, conducted by Michael Tilson Thomas, and it was intended for the opening of the orchestra s home in Miami, the New World Centre, in 2011. This concert hall, designed by Frank Gehry, features multiple performing spaces and sail-like acoustic surfaces that double as projection screens. The companion video work by Tal Rosner was designed to take advantage of the state-of-the-art video capabilities, while Adès s music shows off the spatial possibilities of the hall. Not only are the brass positioned away from the stage but, he says, they have these big, mobile phrases that are played over everything else. It s very much built to show off the space, so you can hear the hall to its fullest advantage. Music in space Thomas Adès (pronounced AH-diss) studied piano and composition at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama and read music at King s College, Cambridge, where he studied with Alexander Goehr. He was signed by the publisher Faber at 19. He was Composer in Association with the Hallé Orchestra (1993 1995), composing The Origin of the Harp and These Premises are Alarmed. Simon Rattle premiered Asyla with the City of Birmingham Orchestra in 1997, and later programmed it for his first concert with the Berlin Philharmonic as principal conductor in 2002. In 2000 Asyla won Adès the Grawemeyer Award, of which he is the youngest-ever recipient. His first opera, Powder Her Face, was premiered in 1995, followed by The Tempest for the Royal Opera House in 2004. Recent orchestral works include his violin concerto Concentric Paths (2005) and Tevot (2007). 2008 saw the premiere of In Seven Days a piano concerto with moving image created with his partner, video artist Tal Rosner. Polaris was his second major collaboration with Rosner. Adès s international reputation is such that a number of festivals have featured his music. These include the 2004 Salzburg Festival and the Melbourne International Arts Festival (2001 and 2010). About the composer Polaris calls for three flutes (one doubling piccolo, one doubling piccolo and alto flute), three oboes, three clarinets (one doubling bass clarinet), two bassoons and contraforte or contrabassoon; four horns, three trumpets, piccolo trumpet, three trombones and tuba; timpani and percussion; two harps and piano (doubling celesta); and strings. Polaris Voyage for Orchestra was premiered in 2011 by the New World Symphony and Michael Tilson Thomas. The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra gave the Australian premiere in 2012, a performance that was recorded for digital release. sydney symphony 9

JEAN SIBELIUS Finnish composer (1865 1957) Symphony No.6, Op.104 This symphony has a deceptive shape. Its modest-seeming orchestral forces are matched by Classical-seeming dimensions: it s less than 30 minutes long, it s in four contrasting movements, and there are formal flourishes that seem to pay homage to Classical symphonies. These include the slow introduction at the top of the first movement, the hunt atmosphere of the third movement and the way Haydn is evoked at the very beginning of the finale. Sibelius referred to his symphony as spring water in relation to the gaudy cocktails being served by his contemporaries in the 1920s. There is a strong air of modality in both the melodies and harmonies of the symphony (especially Dorian mode, a minor-ish scale achieved by playing the white keys of the piano from D to D). This, allied to the symphony s lean textures, gives the music an overall sense of clarity and restraint. From Sibelius s diary September 1922, as he finished the Sixth Symphony: Worked. Felt life s richness today and art s greatness. But a few months earlier: I must get a grip on myself. I am beginning to be afraid of fate. What will become of the family Have thought how difficult it must be to be married to a Sibelius. Sibelius was, as so often throughout his life, in debt and writing what he considered to be trivial music to earn some money. But whatever the creative circumstances in which he found himself, the mood swings between high and low were always dramatic. How terribly alone we all are! he wrote to Axel Carpelan in 1911. Alone and misunderstood. And then afterwards what happens to us? Although Sibelius Sixth can be experienced (and is frequently discussed) as an exercise in reaching for homogeneity of form and purity of musical utterance, its emotional landscape is far from serene. The orchestration looks to be modest on paper: pairs of flutes, oboes, clarinets, bassoons and a bass clarinet; four Navigating the symphony Water or cocktails? Getting a grip The emotional landscape 10 sydney symphony

horns, three trumpets and three trombones (no tuba); harp and strings. But it contains striking colours, specifically a propensity for divisi writing in the strings (multiple parts within each string section) and especially prominent parts for bass clarinet and harp. There is very little slow music in this symphony, and this seems to be integral to another feature of the instrumentation: the long pedal points that feature so prominently in Sibelius s music are, in this symphony, given rarely to the double basses but more frequently to the woodwind, the lower brass or the timpani. Together, the sparsity of slow music and sustained lower string sounds gives the work an often curiously weightless sound. The first movement traverses a musical landscape so varied in texture but emotionally, at best, allusory. And after a dramatic climax, the movement comes to a puzzling end with four bars marked, almost as a non-sequitur, Poco tranquillo (slightly tranquil). The second movement ( moderate, lively ) is, likewise, not at all straightforward. It begins with flutes and bassoons playing an other-worldly minuet slowly, gracefully, indeterminately before the emotions darken and the textures thicken. An extended, fleet-footed passage near the end (virtually a long crescendo) suggests the beating of giant wings, but just as it seems this music will come to a climax, it collapses. Once again, the final bars are a cessation rather than a conclusion. Following the short hunt movement, the finale ( very fast ) is perhaps the richest and strangest movement of all. Having begun in a manner suggestive of Classical propriety, it launches itself, over long pedal points and restless instrumental textures, into a musical journey suggesting a passionate quest. Then, half-way through, there is a grinding moment of collapse. Although the main musical ideas seem to recover, the governing sense of movement leads us down, not up, and the path to the work s famously provisional ending seems, in retrospect, to be inevitable. Sibelius was a force in the creation of a distinctive Finnish voice at the turn of the 20th century, and much of his music was based on themes from the Finnish folk epic, the Kalevala. He made his name with the stirringly patriotic Finlandia. His symphonies and his only concerto (for violin, his own instrument) represent more abstract works. Stylistically, Sibelius s originality grew from taking the language of Tchaikovsky and the Romantic nationalists and putting his distinctive stamp on it. About the composer SYDNEY SYMPHONY 2013 Adapted in part from program notes and commentary by Gordon Kerry (Beethoven and Lutosławski), Phillip Sametz (Sibelius) and Thomas Adès. sydney symphony 11

ABOUT THE ARTISTS Thomas Adès CONDUCTOR Thomas Adès was born in London in 1971. He studied piano and composition at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama and read music at King s College, Cambridge. Renowned as both a composer and performer, he works regularly with the world s leading opera companies and festivals. He has been Artistic Director of the Aldeburgh Festival (1999 2008) and Music Director of the Birmingham Contemporary Music Group (1998 2000), as well as conducting numerous orchestras in Europe and developing a close relationship with the Los Angeles Philharmonic. He was also featured as composer and performer at Carnegie Hall (Richard and Barbara Debs Composer Chair, 2007 08) and in the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra s 2009 10 season. His conducting engagements have included Gerald Barry s opera The Importance of Being Earnest with the Birmingham Contemporary Music Group, the Accademia Santa Cecilia in Rome, a tour with the Britten Sinfonia, the Chamber Orchestra of Europe and the Gulbenkian Orchestra (as part of his Gulbenkian Foundation Residency), the London Symphony Orchestra and São Paulo State Symphony Orchestra. He also made his debut with the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra and has conducted the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Philharmonia Orchestra, Mariinsky Theatre Orchestra, Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra, London Sinfonietta, Ensemble Modern, Athelas Ensemble and the BBC, Finnish and Danish radio symphony orchestras. Most recently he conducted his second opera, The Tempest, at Opéra de Québec and the Metropolitan Opera, as well as concerts with the Boston Symphony Orchestra. As a pianist, Thomas Adès has given recitals at the Festival de Saint Denis and at Carnegie Hall with tenor Ian Bostridge, and performed with Alan Gilbert and the New York Philharmonic. In 2010 he undertook a recital tour that included Carnegie Hall and London s Barbican Centre and featured his new piano work, Concert Paraphrase from Powder Her Face. He has performed and recorded music by Beethoven, Schubert, Schumann, Tchaikovsky, Nancarrow, Kurtág, Ruders and Barry as well as his own works. Thomas Adès made his Sydney Symphony debut in 2010, conducting Asyla and a suite from Tchaikovsky s Nutcracker in the Meet the Music series. On this Australian visit he also performed with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra. BRIAN VOCE 12 sydney symphony

Pieter Wispelwey CELLO Pieter Wispelwey belongs to a generation of performers who are equally at ease on modern or period cello. His stylistic awareness, originality and technical mastery has won hearts in repertoire ranging from JS Bach to Alfred Schnittke, Elliott Carter and works composed for him. Highlights among his current concerto projects include a major tour of Australia (appearing with the Melbourne, Queensland, Sydney and West Australian symphony orchestras and at Canberra International Music Festival), in which he is focusing on cello concertos dedicated to Rostropovich: by Shostakovich and Prokofiev as well as Lutosławski. He will also appear with the Liège Philharmonic, Musikkollegium Winterthur and São Paulo State Symphony Orchestra. Recital highlights include performances in Vienna (Konzerthaus), Paris (Louvre), London (Wigmore Hall), Amsterdam (Concertgebouw), Brussels (Flagey), Boston (Celebrity Series), San Francisco, Tokyo, Essen (Philharmonie), Beijing (National Performing Arts Centre) and the Seoul Arts Center. Pieter Wispelwey recently formed a string quartet, Quartet-Lab, with Patricia Kopatchinskaja, Pekka Kuusisto and Lilli Maijala. Quartet-Lab made its debut at the Konzerthaus Dortmund in 2012, and future concerts will include performances at the Wigmore Hall, Berlin Konzerthaus and Amsterdam Concertgebouw. He has made more than twenty recordings, six of which attracted major international awards. Among his recent releases include his third recording of the Bach Cello Suites, Walton s Cello Concerto (with the Sydney Symphony and Jeffrey Tate), Prokofiev s Symphony- Concerto (Rotterdam Philharmonic and Vassily Sinaisky), Britten s Cello Symphony (Flanders Symphony and Seikyo Kim) all recorded live and music for cello and piano by Schubert (Fantasy D934, Grand Duo D574, Arpeggione Sonata) recorded on period instruments. His next release will feature Lalo s Cello Concerto and Saint-Saëns Cello Concerto No.2. Pieter Wispelwey s most recent appearances with the Sydney Symphony were in 2011 (Haydn s Cello Concerto No.1) and 2007 (Walton concerto). Pieter Wispelwey plays a 1760 Giovanni Battista Guadagnini cello and a 1710 Rombouts baroque cello. BENJAMIN EAVOLEGA sydney symphony 13

MUSICIANS Vladimir Ashkenazy Principal Conductor and Artistic Advisor supported by Emirates Dene Olding Concertmaster Jessica Cottis Assistant Conductor supported by Premier Partner Credit Suisse FIRST VIOLINS Sun Yi Associate Concertmaster Kirsten Williams Associate Concertmaster Fiona Ziegler Assistant Concertmaster Julie Batty Jennifer Booth Marianne Broadfoot Brielle Clapson Amber Davis Georges Lentz Nicola Lewis Alexandra Mitchell Alexander Norton Léone Ziegler Claire Herrick Dene Olding Concertmaster Sophie Cole Jennifer Hoy SECOND VIOLINS Kirsty Hilton Principal Emma Jezek Assistant Principal Susan Dobbie Principal Emeritus Maria Durek Shuti Huang Stan W Kornel Benjamin Li Emily Long Nicole Masters Philippa Paige Maja Verunica Emily Qin Marina Marsden Alexander Read Emma Hayes Biyana Rozenblit VIOLAS Tobias Breider Sandro Costantino Robyn Brookfield Stuart Johnson Jane Hazelwood Graham Hennings Felicity Tsai Jacqueline Cronin* Tara Houghton* Roger Benedict Anne-Louise Comerford Justin Williams Assistant Principal Justine Marsden CELLOS Leah Lynn Assistant Principal Kristy Conrau Fenella Gill Elizabeth Neville Christopher Pidcock Adrian Wallis Teije Hylkema* Rowena Macneish Catherine Hewgill Principal Timothy Nankervis David Wickham DOUBLE BASSES Kees Boersma Alex Henery Neil Brawley Principal Emeritus David Campbell Steven Larson Richard Lynn David Murray Benjamin Ward FLUTES Janet Webb Carolyn Harris Rosamund Plummer Principal Piccolo Emma Sholl OBOES Diana Doherty David Papp Alexandre Oguey Principal Cor Anglais Shefali Pryor CLARINETS Francesco Celata Christopher Tingay Craig Wernicke Principal Bass Clarinet Lawrence Dobell BASSOONS Matthew Wilkie Fiona McNamara Noriko Shimada Principal Contrabassoon Roger Brooke HORNS Ben Jacks Geoffrey O Reilly Principal 3rd Euan Harvey Marnie Sebire Robert Johnson TRUMPETS David Elton Paul Goodchild Anthony Heinrichs Craig Ross* John Foster TROMBONES Scott Kinmont Nick Byrne Christopher Harris Principal Bass Trombone Ronald Prussing TUBA Steve Rossé TIMPANI Richard Miller PERCUSSION Rebecca Lagos Colin Piper Mark Robinson Ian Cleworth* Joshua Hill* Philip South* HARP Genevieve Lang* Natalie Wong* Louise Johnson KEYBOARDS Susanne Powell* Josephine Allan* Bold = Principal Italics = Associate Principal = Contract Musician * = Guest Musician = Sydney Symphony Fellow Grey = Permanent member of the Sydney Symphony not appearing in this concert To see photographs of the full roster of permanent musicians and find out more about the orchestra, visit our website: www.sydneysymphony.com/sso_musicians If you don t have access to the internet, ask one of our customer service representatives for a copy of our Musicians flyer. The men of the Sydney Symphony are proudly outfitted by Van Heusen. 14 sydney symphony

SYDNEY SYMPHONY Vladimir Ashkenazy, Principal Conductor and Artistic Advisor PATRON Her Excellency Professor Marie Bashir AC CVO JOHN MARMARAS Founded in 1932 by the Australian Broadcasting Commission, 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 iconic Sydney Opera House, where it gives more than 100 performances each year, the Sydney Symphony also performs in venues throughout Sydney and regional New South Wales. International tours to Europe, Asia and the USA have earned the orchestra worldwide recognition for artistic excellence, most recently in the 2012 tour to China. The Sydney Symphony s first Chief Conductor was Sir Eugene Goossens, appointed in 1947; he was followed by Nicolai Malko, Dean Dixon, Moshe Atzmon, Willem van Otterloo, Louis Frémaux, Sir Charles Mackerras, Zdeněk Mácal, Stuart Challender, Edo de Waart and Gianluigi Gelmetti. David Robertson will take up the post of Chief Conductor in 2014. The orchestra s history also boasts collaborations with legendary figures such as George Szell, Sir Thomas Beecham, Otto Klemperer and Igor Stravinsky. Sydney Symphony Board John C Conde ao Chairman Terrey Arcus am Ewen Crouch am Ross Grant Jennifer Hoy Rory Jeffes Andrew Kaldor am The Sydney Symphony s award-winning education program is central to its commitment to the future of live symphonic music, developing audiences and engaging the participation of young people. The orchestra promotes the work of Australian composers through performances, recordings and its commissioning program. Recent premieres have included major works by Ross Edwards, Liza Lim, Lee Bracegirdle, Gordon Kerry and Georges Lentz, and the orchestra s recording of works by Brett Dean was released on both the BIS and Sydney Symphony Live labels. Other releases on the Sydney Symphony Live label, established in 2006, include performances with Alexander Lazarev, Gianluigi Gelmetti, Sir Charles Mackerras and Vladimir Ashkenazy. In 2010 11 the orchestra made concert recordings of the complete Mahler symphonies with Ashkenazy, and has also released recordings of Rachmaninoff and Elgar orchestral works on the Exton/Triton labels, as well as numerous recordings on the ABC Classics label. This is the fifth year of Ashkenazy s tenure as Principal Conductor and Artistic Advisor. Irene Lee David Livingstone Goetz Richter sydney symphony 15

SYDNEY SYMPHONY PATRONS Maestro s Circle Peter William Weiss ao Founding President & Doris Weiss John C Conde ao Chairman Geoff Ainsworth am & Vicki Ainsworth Tom Breen & Rachael Kohn In memory of Hetty & Egon Gordon Andrew Kaldor am & Renata Kaldor ao Roslyn Packer ao Penelope Seidler am Mr Fred Street am & Mrs Dorothy Street Westfield Group Brian & Rosemary White Ray Wilson oam in memory of the late James Agapitos oam Sydney Symphony Corporate Alliance Tony Grierson, Braithwaite Steiner Pretty Insurance Australia Grou p John Morschel, Chairman, ANZ Directors Chairs 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 01 Roger Benedict Principal Viola Kim Williams am & Catherine Dovey Chair 02 Lawrence Dobell Principal Clarinet Anne Arcus & Terrey Arcus am Chair 03 Diana Doherty Principal Oboe Andrew Kaldor am & Renata Kaldor ao Chair 04 Richard Gill oam Artistic Director Education Sandra & Paul Salteri Chair 05 Catherine Hewgill Principal Cello The Hon. Justice AJ & Mrs Fran Meagher Chair 06 Robert Johnson Principal Horn James & Leonie Furber Chair For information about the Directors Chairs program, please call (02) 8215 4619. 07 Elizabeth Neville Cello Ruth & Bob Magid Chair 08 Colin Piper Percussion Justice Jane Mathews ao Chair 09 Emma Sholl Associate Principal Flute Robert & Janet Constable Chair Sydney Symphony Vanguard Vanguard Collective Justin Di Lollo Chair Kees Boersma Marina Go David McKean Amelia Morgan-Hunn Jonathan Pease Seamus R Quick Members Centric Wealth Matti Alakargas James Armstrong Stephen Attfield Damien Bailey Andrew Baxter Mar Beltran Kees Boersma Andrew Bragg Peter Braithwaite Andrea Brown Ian Burton Jennifer Burton Hahn Chau Alistair Clark Matthew Clark Benoît Cocheteux George Condous Michael Cook Paul Cousins Justin Di Lollo Rose Gallo Alistair Gibson Sam Giddings Marina Go Sebastian Goldspink Rose Herceg Paolo Hooke Peter Howard Jennifer Hoy Scott Jackson Damian Kassagbi Aernout Kerbert Antony Lighten Gary Linnane Paul Macdonald David McKean Hayden McLean Amelia Morgan-Hunn Phoebe Morgan-Hunn Tom O Donnell Taine Moufarrige Hugh Munro Fiona Osler Julia Owens Archie Paffas Jonathan Pease Jingmin Qian Seamus R Quick Leah Ranie Michael Reede Chris Robertson Emma Rodigari Jacqueline Rowlands Bernard Ryan Katherine Shaw Randal Tame Adam Wand Jon Wilkie Jonathan Watkinson Darren Woolley Misha Zelinsky 16 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. Donations of $50 and above are acknowledged on our website at www.sydneysymphony.com/patrons Platinum Patrons $20,000+ Brian Abel Robert Albert ao & Elizabeth Albert Geoff Ainsworth Terrey Arcus am & Anne Arcus Tom Breen & Rachael Kohn Sandra & Neil Burns Mr John C Conde ao Robert & Janet Constable Michael Crouch ao & Shanny Crouch James & Leonie Furber Dr Bruno & Mrs Rhonda Giuffre In memory of Hetty & Egon Gordon Mr Andrew Kaldor am & Mrs Renata Kaldor ao D & I Kallinikos James N Kirby Foundation The late Joan MacKenzie Vicki Olsson Mrs Roslyn Packer ao Paul & Sandra Salteri Mrs Penelope Seidler am G & C Solomon in memory of Joan MacKenzie Mrs W Stening Mr Fred Street am & Mrs Dorothy Street Peter William Weiss ao & Doris Weiss Westfield Group Mr Brian & Mrs Rosemary White Kim Williams am & Catherine Dovey Ray Wilson oam in memory of James Agapitos oam Gold Patrons $10,000 $19,999 Stephen J Bell Alan & Christine Bishop Ian & Jennifer Burton Howard Connors Copyright Agency Cutlural Fund Edward Federman Nora Goodridge Mr Ross Grant The Estate of the late Ida Gugger Helen Lynch am & Helen Bauer Ruth & Bob Magid Justice Jane Mathews ao The Hon. Justice AJ Meagher & Mrs Fran Meagher Mrs T Merewether oam Mr B G O Conor Henry & Ruth Weinberg Caroline Wilkinson June & Alan Woods Family Bequest Silver Patrons $5000 $9,999 Doug & Alison Battersby Mr Robert Brakspear Mr David & Mrs Halina Brett Mr Robert & Mrs L Alison Carr Bob & Julie Clampett Ian Dickson & Reg Holloway Dr C Goldschmidt The Greatorex Foundation Mr Rory Jeffes Judges of the Supreme Court of NSW Mr Ervin Katz The Estate of the late Patricia Lance Timothy & Eva Pascoe William McIlrath Charitable Foundation Rodney Rosenblum am & Sylvia Rosenblum Manfred & Linda Salamon Mrs Joyce Sproat & Mrs Anna Cooke Michael & Mary Whelan Trust Anonymous (1) Bronze Patrons $2,500 $4,999 Ewen Crouch am & Catherine Crouch The Hon. Ashley Dawson-Damer Firehold Pty Ltd Stephen Freiberg & Donald Campbell Vic & Katie French Mrs Jennifer Hershon Michael & Anna Joel Gary Linnane Matthew McInnes J A McKernan R & S Maple-Brown Renee Markovic Mora Maxwell James & Elsie Moore Drs Keith & Eileen Ong In memory of Sandra Paul Pottinger Dr John Roarty oam in memory of Mrs June Roarty In memory of H St P Scarlett Julianna Schaeffer David & Isabel Smithers Marliese & Georges Teitler Mr & Mrs T & D Yim Anonymous (2) Bronze Patrons $1,000 $2,499 Mrs Antoinette Albert Andrew Andersons ao Mr Henri W Aram oam Dr Francis J Augustus Richard and Christine Banks David Barnes Nicole Berger Allan & Julie Bligh Dr & Mrs Hannes Boshoff Jan Bowen Lenore P Buckle M Bulmer In memory of RW Burley Ita Buttrose ao obe Joan Connery oam & Maxwell Connery oam Constable Estate Vineyards Debby Cramer & Bill Caukill Mr John Cunningham SCM & Mrs Margaret Cunningham Greta Davis Lisa & Miro Davis Matthew Delasey Mr & Mrs Grant Dixon Colin Draper & Mary Jane Brodribb Mrs Margaret Epps Mr Ian Fenwicke & Prof. Neville Wills Mr James Graham am & Mrs Helen Graham Warren Green Anthony Gregg & Deanne Whittleston Akiko Gregory Tony Grierson Edward & Deborah Griffin Richard Griffin am In memory of Dora & Oscar Grynberg Janette Hamilton Michelle Hilton The Hon. David Hunt ao qc & Mrs Margaret Hunt Dr & Mrs Michael Hunter In memory of Bernard M H Khaw Mr Justin Lam Mr Peter Lazar am Irene Lee Associate Professor Winston Liauw Dr David Luis Carolyn & Peter Lowry oam Deirdre & Kevin McCann Ian & Pam McGaw Macquarie Group Foundation sydney symphony 17

Ms Jackie O Brien JF & A van Ogtrop Mr & Mrs Ortis smr Andrew C Patterson Piatti Holdings Pty Ltd Andy & Deirdre Plummer Robin Potter Ernest & Judith Rapee Kenneth R Reed Patricia H Reid Endowment Pty Ltd Caroline Sharpen Dr Agnes E Sinclair Catherine Stephen John & Alix Sullivan The Hon. Brian Sully qc Mildred Teitler John E Tuckey Mrs M Turkington In memory of Joan & Rupert Vallentine Dr Alla Waldman Mr Robert & Mrs Rosemary Walsh Ann & Brooks Wilson am Dr Richard Wing Mr R R Woodward In memory of Lorna Wright Dr John Yu Anonymous (9) Bronze Patrons $500 $999 Mrs Lenore Adamson Mr & Mrs Garry S Ash Barlow Cleaning Pty Ltd Beauty Point Retirement Resort Mrs Margaret Bell Minnie Biggs Mrs Jan Biber Dr Anthony Bookallil R D & L M Broadfoot Arnaldo Buch Ann & Miles Burgess Pat & Jenny Burnett The Hon. Justice JC & Mrs Campbell Dr Rebecca Chin Mrs Sarah Chissick Mrs Catherine J Clark R A & M J Clarke Mr & Mrs Coates Coffs Airport Security Car Park Mr B & Mrs M Coles Mrs Joan Connery oam Jen Cornish Mr David Cross Phil Diment am & Bill Zafiropoulos Elizabeth Donati The Dowe Family John Favaloro Malcolm Ellis & Erin O Neill In memory of Peter Everett Mr Tom Francis Mr John Gaden Vivienne Goldschmidt Clive & Jenny Goodwin Harry & Meg Herbert Sue Hewitt Dorothy Hoddinott ao Mr Joerg Hofmann Mrs Kimberley Holden Mr Gregory Hosking Niki Kallenberger Mrs Margaret Keogh Dr Henry Kilham Chris J Kitching Anna-Lisa Klettenberg Sonia Lal Mr Luigi Lamprati Dr & Mrs Leo Leader Margaret Lederman Erna & Gerry Levy am Sydney & Airdrie Lloyd Mrs A Lohan Mrs Panee Low Dr David Luis Philip & Catherine McClelland Melvyn Madigan Alan & Joy Martin Mrs Toshiko Meric Ms Irene Miller & Ms Kim Harding P J Miller David Mills Kenneth N Mitchell Ms Margaret Moore oam & Dr Paul Hutchins am Chris Morgan-Hunn Mrs Milja Morris A Nhan Mr Graham North Dr Mike O Connor am Mr R A Oppen Origin Foundation Dr A J Palmer Dr Kevin Pedemont Dr Natalie E Pelham Michael Quailey Renaissance Tours Anna Ro Lesley & Andrew Rosenberg Mrs Pamela Sayers Garry Scarf & Morgie Blaxill Peter & Virginia Shaw Mrs Diane Shteinman am Ms Stephanie Smee Ms Tatiana Sokolova Doug & Judy Sotheren Mrs Judith Southam Mrs Karen Spiegal-Keighley Margaret Suthers Norman & Lydia Taylor Dr Heng Tey & Mrs Cilla Tey Mrs Alma Toohey & Mr Edward Spicer Kevin Troy Gillian Turner & Rob Bishop Prof Gordon E Wall Mrs Margaret Wallis Ronald Walledge Ms Elizabeth Wilkinson Audrey & Michael Wilson A Willmers & R Pal Dr Peter Wong & Mrs Emmy K Wong Geoff Wood & Melissa Waites Glen & Everly Wyss Mrs Robin Yabsley Anonymous (22) To find out more about becoming a Sydney Symphony Patron, please contact the Philanthropy Office on (02) 8215 4625 or email philanthropy@sydneysymphony.com DO YOU HAVE A STORY TO TELL? Learn how, with the people who know books and writing best. Faber Academy at ALLEN & UNWIN T (02) 8425 0171 W allenandunwin.com/faberacademy 18 sydney symphony

SALUTE PRINCIPAL PARTNER GOVERNMENT PARTNERS The Sydney Symphony is assisted by the Commonwealth Government through the Australia Council, its arts funding and advisory body The Sydney Symphony is assisted by the NSW Government through Arts NSW PREMIER PARTNER PLATINUM PARTNERS EDUCATION PARTNER MAJOR PARTNERS GOLD PARTNERS SILVER PARTNERS THE LEADING SCHOOL FOR TODAY S MUSIC INDUSTRY executive search REGIONAL TOUR PARTNERS MARKETING PARTNER Fine Music 102.5 sydney symphony 19

ORCHESTRA NEWS MAY 2013 Photo: Paul Muir INTRODUCING ANDREW This month we welcome co-concertmaster Andrew Haveron to the Sydney Symphony. Here s your chance to get to know the guy sitting at the pointy end. I really didn t see that one coming. Andrew Haveron, our newly appointed co-concertmaster, is talking about the phone call some 14 years ago inviting him to join the Brodsky Quartet. They were an established quartet of 25 years, who suddenly rang up out of the blue. There followed eight fabulous years. I would have played 250 to 300 different quartets. I could bore the back legs off a donkey talking about rare and obscure quartets! But when he made the switch to the world of orchestral music, Andrew recognised there was a huge gap in his knowledge. I hadn t even played Beethoven 5! Living in London, Andrew found those gaps were filled pretty quickly. Given the speed with which that city operates, I ve got several Beethoven cycles under my belt now. His music is always rewarding to play. Brahms too, though he didn t bend to string players techniques much. Andrew sees little difference between making music on an intimate chamber scale and that of larger orchestral playing. On a recent tour with the Academy of taking responsibility, passing around the inspiration St Martin in the Fields, performing Haydn symphonies without conductor, he enjoyed observing the responsibility taken by each of the musicians. In a symphonic situation, we all too easily give up responsibility and hand it all over to the conductor. I find that a little frustrating at times. If everyone takes responsibility, the results can be electrifying. When accompanying an orchestral oboe solo, for example, Andrew will try to have direct contact with the oboist, keeping the conductor only in his peripheral view. That s where the truth of the music is coming from. I think conductors enjoy seeing people take that responsibility for themselves, passing around the inspiration. Having made the transition from pure chamber music to leading orchestras, Andrew says it took a little while to appreciate the role of a concertmaster. I know that different orchestras require different things. One thing I m not is a dictator. I just don t see the point. My leadership style is to spread confidence and freedom for people to enjoy playing to their best. An enthusiastic orchestra always sounds better than an uninspired one.

Philanthropy Highlight Education Highlight Photo: Ken Butti Inspiring Teachers Trombonist Nick Byrne and actress Lia Reutens doing it Vanguard style Sydney Symphony Vanguard celebrated its first birthday in style, transporting members back to 1920s New Orleans with smoky jazz, foot-stomping brass, and even a New Orleans funeral processional! The event, held in The Tea Room at the QVB, was the first member event for 2013 and there are three more to follow. Vanguard a membership program for Gen X and Y movers and shakers takes our music out of the concert hall and into different spaces around the city. No two events are the same and there s always an element of surprise. Vanguard members enjoy a close relationship with the orchestra and our musicians, while helping support the activity of the SSO through membership fees. For more information contact Amelia Morgan- Hunn on (02) 8215 4663 or amelia.morgan-hunn@ sydneysymphony.com If you could describe music in words, you wouldn t need music. So says conductor Benjamin Northey, who will conduct our Stage 3 Schools Concerts in August. Nevertheless, as a teacher, that s your challenge. You need to find a way to engage young people s minds so that they can find their own way to the music. Enter the Sydney Symphony s accredited professional learning workshops for teachers. We help them become familiar with the music their children will hear when they come to the schools concerts later in the year, says Kim Waldock, our Head of Education. We do a number of crazy activities and frolicking around, and learning ways of introducing children to orchestral music. The most daunting thing for non-music specialists is reading music. It can be like reading another language, says workshop presenter Vanessa South. We re giving them strategies: learning the rhythms, learning the rhymes. Harriet Muston of Neutral Bay Public School offers the teacher s perspective: It s nice to be able to be a student for a change and participate in the activities. Interested in finding out more about schools concerts and teacher training? Call Kim Waldock on (02) 8215 4684 or watch the video: bit.ly/ssoschoolsconcerts CONDUCT A SYMPHONY AT YOUR PLACE You can enjoy six selected live performances of the Sydney Symphony during its 2013 season in the comfort of your own home, only at BigPond Music online or on T-Box. Visit bigpondmusic.com/sydneysymphony The spectrum device is a trade mark of Telstra Corporation Limited. Registered trade marks of Telstra Corporation Limited ABN 33 051 775 556 Photo: Brendan Read

Photo: Keith Saunders Artistic Focus STUDY BREAKS Most enlightened workplaces offer opportunities for professional development, right? So too the Sydney Symphony Orchestra. Recently, two SSO musicians Marina Marsden (Principal Second Violin) and Marnie Sebire (Horn) packed their bags and headed off overseas for a study break. In crafting her schedule, Marina Marsden reflected on the needs of her section and identified some areas where she could benefit from mentoring. There s a certain amount of training we receive, but besides mentoring young people in our Sinfonia [the Sydney Symphony s training orchestra], as leaders we also need to motivate and support the people in our own section. Marina s jam-packed international trip included everything from instrumental lessons with violin guru David Takeno in London to study with flow technique specialist Andreas Burzik in Bremen. Flow is a way of playing where you become totally inside the music. I ll use the method to improve my performing, mentoring and teaching skills. Marina also met with several mediation and orchestral leadership experts. Marnie Sebire s trip was about refocusing and regaining her inspiration for the French horn, and included lessons with Marina Marsden Marnie Sebire living legend Hector McDonald in Vienna and Sarah Willis in Berlin. Sarah was the first female brass musician accepted into the Berlin Phil, says Marnie. We were fortunate to have her join the SSO horn section last year for performances of Bruckner 8 and she blew me away! Also on her schedule were lessons on Wagner tuba. Describing it as an unwieldy instrument, Marnie explains that Wagner designed it with the sound of a horn crossed with trombone in mind. Unfortunately it s a bit of a devil to play. I m hoping to gain some insights from those musicians in Berlin who play the thing relatively regularly. Both Marina and Marnie were supported in their study travel by the Symphony Friends and Michael & Mary Whelan Trust scholarships. Any musician who has been a member of the Sydney Symphony for more than two years is eligible to apply for assistance with airfares, tuition fees and living expenses for a period of study, usually overseas. It s so great to know that the opportunity exists in the orchestra to be supported and encouraged to go and gain inspiration, says Marina. The Score Playing Favourites Ask Vladimir Ashkenazy outright about his favourite composers or musical works and the response is usually tactfully non-commit tal: How could I possibly name one? they are all so great! Genuinely awed by the wonder of musical creation, he comes across like an unswervingly fair parent refusing to play favourites. But, of course, there are composers and pieces that are close to his heart, that make his eyes light up, that prompt him to en thusiastic discussion and wonderful anecdotes. And he has chosen three such works for the second of his programs in May. There s Russian romanticism in Tchaikovsky s Romeo and Juliet the heartfelt storytelling that Ashkenazy does so well. And there s elegant neoclassicism in the form of Richard Strauss s late oboe concerto, with soloist Hansjörg Schellenberger. But the real highlight is Walton s First Symphony. The choice of an English symphony might seem unexpected, until you remember Ashkenazy s Elgar festival in 2008, when Russian and English sensibilities met to powerful effect. I love Walton s First, says Ashkenazy, it s an absolute favourite. The appeal is in its tremendous energy and Walton s distinctive style nostalgic sometimes, but spirited and colourful. And the anecdote? Stay tuned for the story of the trumpet solo Ashkenazy s Favourites Master Series 15, 17, 18 May 8pm

CODA VALE LINDA VOGT EVANS We re sad to report that Linda Vogt Evans, a former member of the Sydney Symphony, passed away in April, aged 90. Linda played in the flute section from 1942 to 1952. She was the second female wind player to be appointed to any ABC orchestra and was made a Member of the Order of Australia in 1989 for her services to music. She attended our performance of Shostakovich s Tenth Symphony last year just before we toured to China and was thoroughly excited by the music as always and extremely complimentary about the orchestra. She will be sadly missed. PROGRAM IN YOUR POCKET Want to do some last-minute cramming before the concert? Download the Sydney Symphony s free mobile app to get quick access to the program book, available in the week of the performance. You can also browse events, music, news and blog posts, and watch our live webcasts. BRAVO EDITOR Genevieve Lang Available from itunes or GooglePlay. And, of course, program books continue to be available from our website: sydneysymphony.com/ program_library THAT S PINTERESTING Did you know the Sydney Symphony is on Pinterest? We set up Pinterest boards for selected concerts assembling pictures, video, and weird and wonderful information relating to the music. Some of our fans are finding it an interesting and fun way to get to know the music we perform what do you think? pinterest.com/sydneysymphony/ WATCH THE MICHAEL HILL INTERNATIONAL VIOLIN COMPETITION Co-concertmaster Dene Olding wears several musical hats many Sydneysiders will know his work with the Goldner Quartet and the Australia Ensemble. Less well-known is his role as artistic advisor of the Michael Hill International Violin Competition in New Zealand. All the public events of the 2013 competition (31 May 8 June) will be streamed and you can follow along by visiting the competition website: www.violincompetition.co.nz FOR YOUNG MUSICIANS Sydney Sinfonia and Fellowship applications will open on Monday 20 May. More information, including online applications, will be available through our website from this date. Any questions? Call Mark Lawrenson on (02) 8215 4652. 300,000 HITS AND COUNTING In the model of Carlton s Big Beer Ad, we invited our Facebook fans to devise their own lyrics for the iconic opening chorus of Carmina Burana, O Fortuna!. The prize: the fabulous Sydney Philharmonia Choirs would sing the winning entry. We received a huge number of entries about a diverse range of topics, and Matthew Hodge s entry, Ode to Sleep Deprived Parents and Terrorising Toddlers was declared the winner by popular acclaim! You can chuckle along here: bit.ly/odetosleepdeprivedparents sydneysymphony.com/bravo SYDNEY OPERA HOUSE TRUST Mr Kim Williams AM [Chair] Ms Catherine Brenner, The Hon Helen Coonan, Mr Wesley Enoch, Ms Renata Kaldor AO, Mr Robert Leece AM RFD, Mr Peter Mason AM, Dr Thomas Parry AM, Mr Leo Schofield AM, Mr John Symond AM EXECUTIVE MANAGEMENT Clocktower Square, Argyle Street, The Rocks NSW 2000 GPO Box 4972, Sydney NSW 2001 Telephone (02) 8215 4644 Box Office (02) 8215 4600 Facsimile (02) 8215 4646 www.sydneysymphony.com 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. The opinions expressed in this publication do not necessarily reflect the beliefs of the editor, publisher or any distributor of the programs. 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