WHAT’S ON
at the Faculty of Music Michaelmas Term 2014 Volume 2, No. 1
CONTENTS Academy of Ancient Music 3 Britten Sinfonia 4 Endellion String Quartet 6 Cambridge University Lunchtime Concert Series 7 8 Cambridge University Musical Society Secret Theatres: The Music of Harrison Birtwistle 10 Practising Performance Series 12 Cambridge University Opera Society 13 Composers’ Workshops at the Faculty of Music 14 16 Faculty of Music Colloquia Cambridge University Music Outreach 18 Instrumental Awards Scheme 20 College Events 21 Events Listings by date 28
Faculty of Music University of Cambridge 11 West Road Cambridge CB3 9DP W: mus.cam.ac.uk E: facultyevents@mus.cam.ac.uk
This brochure is published by the Faculty of Music and its main purpose is to promote Faculty events. If you think your event should be included in next term’s brochure, please email facultyevents@music.cam.ac.uk with details of your event. All event information for next term’s brochure must be submitted to the editor, Sarah Williams, by 5 December 2014.
© Patrick Harrison
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ACADEMY OF ANCIENT MUSIC Thursday, 16 October 2014 7.30pm, West Road Concert Hall
The Grand Tour: Handel in London
flute and harp. Next stop, Paris where Gluck became master of the Parisian stage by blending national musical styles and injecting human drama. Tonight, the AAM showcases his masterpiece Don Juan.
Richard Egarr, director, organ & harpsichord
TICKETS: £14–£27 (£3 for AAMplify members). To book, visit www.cornex.co.uk or call 01223 357851.
Free pre-concert talk at 6.30pm
The first of AAM’s three grand tours this season begins with a musical voyage to Handel’s London where you can hear spectacular operas by Handel alongside the works of Thomas Arne and William Boyce. TICKETS: £14–£27 (£3 for AAMplify members). To book, visit www.cornex.co.uk or call 01223 357851. Monday, 24 November 2014 7.30pm, West Road Concert Hall
The Grand Tour: Vienna & Paris Free pre-concert talk at 6.30pm Bernard Labadie, conductor Mozart Concerto in C major for flute and harp Gluck Don Juan Take a musical journey to Vienna where Mozart composed his exquisite example of cosmopolitan, trans-European culture, the Concerto in C major for
© Patrick Harrison
Boyce Symphony No. 3 in C major Handel Organ Concerto in A major Op. 7 No. 2 Arne Overture No. 8 in G minor Boyce Symphony No. 1 in B flat major Handel Organ Concerto in F major ‘The Cuckoo and the Nightingale’ Handel Concerto a due cori No. 1
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BRITTEN SINFONIA
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Friday, 3 October 2014 7.30pm, West Road Concert Hall
Kaleidoscopes Nicholas Daniel, oboe/director (1) Jacqueline Shave, violin/director Mozart Adagio for cor anglais and string trio, K580a Gyorgy Kurtag arr. Thomas Adès In Memoriam Andras Mihaly John Adams Shaker Loops Tavener Kaleidoscopes John Tavener’s theatrical oboe concerto, Kaleidoscopes, is a musical mosaic, featuring four string quartets and percussion. Tavener’s greatest musical hero, Mozart opens the programme with his beautifully poignant Adagio and the programme is completed by John Adams thrilling and rhythmically powerful Shaker Loops and an arrangement by Thomas Adès of Kurtag’s spacial memorial to Andras Mihaly with musicians placed around the auditorium. 6.30pm: In Conversation Nicholas Daniel and Jacqueline Shave discuss the programme.
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Stravinsky Eight Instrumental Miniatures* Mozart Per pieta, non ricercate Stravinsky Dumbarton Oaks* John Woolrich Violin Concerto (London premiere)* There’s nothing like planning someone else’s party and tonight Britten Sinfonia is enjoying the celebrations for the 60th birthday of their close friend, collaborator, distinguished composer and programmer, John Woolrich. It’s a party befitting a key figure on the British music scene whose own take on Purcell and Wolf involves young soprano Sophie Bevan, who also brings a present of Mozart to the evening too. Woolrich himself is inspired by Monteverdi in his piece Ulysses Awakes for solo viola (Britten Sinfonia’s Clare Finnimore) and strings. There’s playful Stravinsky and, finally, the main birthday present, the London premiere of Woolrich’s dynamic yet warmly lyrical Violin Concerto assured of a memorable performance by Britten Sinfonia’s own Thomas Gould. 6.15pm: Pre-concert event The young musicians of Britten Sinfonia Academy play pieces by John Woolrich alongside a discussion with the composer. (free to ticket holders)
Supported by the Friends of Britten Sinfonia.
Tuesday, 2 December 2014 1.00pm, West Road Concert Hall
Friday, 21 November 2014 7.30pm, West Road Concert Hall
At Lunch 1 2014–15
John Woolrich at 60 Sophie Bevan, soprano Clare Finnimore, viola Thomas Gould, violin Duncan Ward, conductor* Purcell arr. John Woolrich (2) Three Songs Wolf arr. John Woolrich Italian Songs John Woolrich Ulysses Awakes
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Emer McDonough, flute Nicholas Daniel, oboe Joy Farrall, clarinet Stephen Bell, horn Sarah Burnett, bassoon Michael Berkeley Re-Inventions Crawford Seeger Suite for wind quintet Patrick John Jones (3) (OPUS 2014 Winner) New work (World premiere tour) Nielsen Quintet for Flute, Oboe, Clarinet, French Horn & Bassoon, Op. 43
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Recognised as Denmark’s greatest composer, Carl Nielsen’s fondness for wind instruments is closely related to his love of nature, and in his quintet he attempted to emphasise the rustic characteristics of each instrument. He was inspired to write the quintet after hearing Mozart’s Sinfonia Concertante for wind and in the same vein Michael Berkeley’s Re-Inventions are based on the famous two part Inventions of JS Bach. Completing this lunchtime programme we hear the premiere of a new work by the winner of OPUS2014, Britten Sinfonia and Wigmore Hall’s open call for submissions from unpublished composers. Tuesday, 13 January 2015 1.00pm, West Road Concert Hall
At Lunch 2 2014–15 Jacqueline Shave, violin Caroline Dearnley, cello Huw Watkins, piano Kaija Saariaho (4) Nocturne Debussy Sonata for cello and piano Kaija Saariaho Light and Matter (World premiere tour) Fauré Piano Trio in D minor, Op. 120 All composers are dreamers. Kaija Saariaho conjures sonic images of magnetic power through her music and Fauré and Debussy’s power of suggestion and gift of lyricism, colour and rhythm result in sound worlds that are both luminous and dazzling. In this programme we hear one of Debussy’s finest chamber works and Faure’s profound Piano Trio alongside Saariaho’s Nocturne for solo violin and a new piano trio commissioned by Britten Sinfonia and Wigmore Hall.
Sunday, 18 January 2015 7.30pm, West Road Concert Hall
Sarah Connolly in America Sarah Connolly, mezzo-soprano (5) Jacqueline Shave, violin/director Carter Elegy for Strings Rodney Bennett A History of the Thé Dansant Copland Appalachian Spring Crawford Seeger Andante for Strings Copland Eight Poems of Emily Dickinson American music is something of a giant melting pot, an exhilarating blend of wide open spaces, dance rhythms, traditional hymn tunes, and jazz, with composers so often taking something of what was happening across the pond in Europe and carving out an identity of their own. Aaron Copland is for some listeners the father of American music, his ballet Appalachian Spring conjuring up a sound world to which so many other composers aspired, yet his admiration for the poet Emily Dickinson brings out a more intimate side to his writing, performed tonight by the acclaimed mezzo Sarah Connolly. Adding their voices to the American map tonight are the visionaries Eliot Carter and Ruth Crawford Seeger and surrogate New Yorker, Richard Rodney Bennett. 6.30pm: In Conversation Sarah Connolly discusses the programme. EVENING CONCERT TICKETS: £30, £25, £15. Please book tickets through Cambridge Corn Exchange box office on 01223 357851 or via the Corn Exchange website AT LUNCH TICKETS: £9, (£6 for 2014–15 subscribers to Britten Sinfonia’s Cambridge evening concert series), £3 (students and under 18s), available from tel: 01223 357851; web: www. brittensinfonia.com
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THE ENDELLION STRING QUARTET Andrew Watkinson, violin Ralph de Souza, violin Garfield Jackson, viola David Waterman, cello Wednesday, 15 October 2014 7.30pm, West Road Concert Hall
Wednesday, 12 November 2014 7.30pm, West Road Concert Hall Haydn String Quartet Op. 64 No. 6 Shostakovich String Quartet No. 8 Mendelssohn String Quartet Op. 44 No. 1 This concert will be in aid of ‘Help for Heroes’.
Haydn String Quartet Op. 76 No. 5 Schubert String Quartet in A minor (‘Rosamunde’) Smetana String Quartet No. 1 (‘From My Life’) We begin the series with an effervescent late Haydn gem and then plunge into the darker worlds of Schubert and Smetana. The Schubert ‘Rosamunde’ has long been a favourite in the repertoire, and Smetana’s autobiographical First Quartet charts the progress of his life from carefree youth to a maturity when he was plagued (like Beethoven) by tinnitus.
Shostakovich wrote his Eighth Quartet ‘in remembrance of the victims of fascism and war’. The Soviet authorities may have taken this to refer to World War II but he clearly intended it as a universal message. Its tragic power and directness of message are breathtaking and a huge contrast to the lyricism and wit of Haydn and the energy and brilliance of Mendelssohn. Wednesday, 21 January 2015 7.30pm, West Road Concert Hall Beethoven String Quartet Op. 18 No. 3 Janáček String Quartet No. 1 (‘Kreutzer Sonata’) Schubert String Quartet in G, D. 887 Schubert’s Quartet in G is designed on a superhuman scale. Its titanic struggle between major and minor, and hope and despair, create awe-inspiring music. In comparison the first of Janáček’s two quartets is brief, but with his unique tonality and idiom, and the introduction of ‘stream of consciousness’ music, he also sparked a musical revolution. TICKETS: £26, £24 (OAP), £12 (registered disabled), £5 (students and under 16s). Tickets over £10 will incur a £2.50 booking fee, and those under £10 will incur a £1.50 fee. Available from Cambridge Corn Exchange and City Centre Box Office, 2 Wheeler Street, Cambridge. Box Office tel: 01223 357851; email: boxoffice@cambridge.gov.uk; web: www. cornex.co.uk The Endellion String Quartet is represented by Hazard Chase hazardchase.co.uk
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CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY LUNCHTIME CONCERTS Tuesday, 14 October 2014 1.10pm, West Road Concert Hall
Tuesday, 11 November 2014 1.10pm, West Road Concert Hall
The Aula Ensemble
The Gesualdo Six
Poulenc Sextet for Piano and Winds Ravel String Quartet in F major
Owain Park, conductor
Tuesday, 21 October 2014 1.10pm, St John's College Divinity School Charles Gurnham, piano and the Coda Quintet Schubert Quintet in C Major op. 163: Allegro ma non troppo Debussy Estampes Chopin Ballade Op. 52, No. 4 Tuesday, 28 October 2014 1.10pm, West Road Concert Hall
La Chiesa e la Piazza Cambridge University Chamber Choir Nicholas Mulroy, conductor Monteverdi Madrigals and Motets from Selva Morale e Spirituale Tuesday, 4 November 2014 1.10pm, West Road Concert Hall
Where the Lemon Trees Blow
Songs written in celebration of the South Charbel Mattar, bass-baritone Martin Ennis, piano Wolf Michelangelo-Lieder Ibert Chansons de Don Quichotte Liszt and Duparc Songs
Renaissance music for six unaccompanied voices including works for Remembrance Day Tuesday, 18 November 2014 1.10pm, West Road Concert Hall Victor Sun, violin Johnson Leung, piano Poulenc Sonata for Violin and Piano Debussy Sonata for Violin and Piano Ravel Violin Sonata No. 2 Tuesday, 25 November 2014 1.10pm, West Road Concert Hall Katie Wong, piano George Crumb Extracts from A Little Suite for Christmas Messiaen Vingt regards sur l'enfant-Jésus Liszt Weihnachtsbaum
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CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY
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Friday, 24 October 2014 7.30pm, Royal Albert Hall
Saturday, 1 November 2014 8.00pm, West Road Concert Hall
Verdi Requiem in London
CUMS Symphony Orchestra
The Choirs of St John’s, Clare, Gonville and Caius, and Jesus Colleges Cambridge University Chamber Choir Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
Rory Macdonald, conductor Kristine Balanas, violin (1)
Claire Rutter, soprano Catherine Wyn-Rogers, mezzo-soprano John Daszak, tenor Matthew Best, bass Andrew Nethsingha, conductor TICKETS: £20–£61, available from Royal Albert Hall box office tel: 020 7838 3109; royalalberthall.com Promoted by St John’s College, Cambridge Saturday, 25 October 2014 8.00pm, West Road Concert Hall
Cambridge University Chamber Orchestra
Sibelius Karelia Overture Dvořák Violin Concerto Rachmaninov Symphonic Dances TICKETS: £20, £14, £10 (concessions: £2 reduction of prices), £5 students, available from ADC box office tel: 01223 300085; adcticketing.com Thursday, 20 November 2014 8.00pm, West Road Concert Hall
Cambridge University Wind Orchestra Lucy Morris, conductor Rosalind Ridout, flute
Peter Stark, conductor Rees Webster, oboe (CUMS Concerto Competition joint-winner)
Shostakovich arr. Donald Hunsberger Festive Overture Philip Sparke A Lindisfarne Rhapsody Holst First Suite in E flat Bill Whelan arr. Carl Strommen Riverdance
Ravel Le Tombeau de Couperin Ravel Pavane Françaix Oboe Concerto Ibert Divertissement Ravel Mother Goose
TICKETS: £10, (£8 concessions), £3 students, available from ADC box office tel: 01223 300085; adcticketing.com
TICKETS: £20, £14, £10 (concessions: £2 reduction of prices), £5 students, available from ADC box office tel: 01223 300085; adcticketing.com
© Sussie Ahlburg
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Saturday, 22 November 2014 7.30pm, Ely Cathedral
Saturday, 6 December 2014 8.00pm, West Road Concert Hall
Britten War Requiem
Peter Donohoe performs Brahms
Britten Sinfonia Cambridge University Chamber Orchestra CUMS Chorus The Choir of Girton College The Choristers & Choir of Jesus College (Mark Williams, director)
CUMS Symphony Orchestra Gad Kadosh, conductor (2) Peter Donohoe, piano (3)
Stephen Cleobury, conductor Amanda Roocroft, soprano John Mark Ainsley, tenor Neal Davies, bass
TICKETS: £20, £14, £10 (concessions: £2 reduction of prices), £5 students, available from ADC box office tel: 01223 300085; adcticketing.com
TICKETS: £32, £25, £18, £10 available from Ely Cathedral Box Office tel: 01353 660349; tickets.elycathedral.org
Saturday, 17 January 2015 8.00pm, King’s College Chapel
This concert is part of the Cambridge Music Festival Thursday, 27 November 2014 8.00pm, West Road Concert Hall
CUMS Concert Orchestra
Cambridge University Musical Society’s second symphony orchestra Quintin Beer, conductor Helen McKeown, clarinet (CUMS Concerto Competition prize-winner) Strauss Die Fledermaus Overture Weber Clarinet Concerto No. 2 Brahms Tragic Overture Brahms Hungarian Dances Nos. 3 & 5 TICKETS: £10 (£8 concessions), £3 students, available from ADC box office tel: 01223 300085; adcticketing.com
Brahms Piano Concerto No. 1 Berlioz Symphonie Fantastique
Howard Shelley conducts Dvořák and Brahms Cambridge University Chamber Orchestra Members of CUMS Symphony Orchestra The Choirs of Clare, Gonville & Caius, Jesus and Selwyn Colleges Members of CUMS Chorus and Cambridge University Chamber Choir Howard Shelley, conductor Elinor Rolfe Johnson, soprano (4) Jonathan Sells, bass (5) Tim Brown, chorus-master Dvořák Symphony No.8 Brahms Ein deutsches Requiem TICKETS: £35, £30, £20 (students: £4 reduction of above prices), available from ADC box office tel: 01223 300085; adcticketing.com Some £5 tickets will be available on the door, subject to availability
© Hanya Chlala
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SECRET THEATRES:
The Music Of Harrison Birtwistle
Faculty of Music
Secret Theatres: The Music of Harrison Birtwistle brings some of the world's finest performers to Cambridge for a celebration of one of our leading composers in his 80th year. Birtwistle will be in residence for three days of music-making showcasing his own work alongside new works by student composers in what promises to be the most exciting and ambitious festival of new music in Cambridge for a generation. Thursday, 6 November 2014 5.30pm, West Road Concert Hall
Stravinsky Three pieces for String Quartet Harrison Birtwistle Tree of Strings
Robin Orr Lecture:
TICKETS: £24, £18, £12, (students £5), available from ADC box office tel: 01223 300085; adcticketing.com
Sir Harrison Birtwistle in interview with Richard Causton TICKETS: admission free Thursday, 6 November 2014 7.30pm, West Road Concert Hall
Arditti String Quartet (1) Beethoven Grosse Fuge Op. 133 Joy Lisney String Quartet (world première) Alban Berg String Quartet Op. 3
Friday, 7 November 2014 2.00pm–5.00pm, Recital Room at the Faculty of Music
DVD Screening of Birtwistle’s The Minotaur TICKETS: admission free
© King’s College, Cambridge
© Astrid Karger
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Friday, 7 November 2014 7.30pm, West Road Concert Hall
Saturday, 8 November 2014 5.30pm, King’s College Chapel
Cambridge University New Music Ensemble & The King’s Men (2)
Evensong
Ben Glassberg and Patrick Bailey, conductors Guillaume de Machaut Hoquetus David Harrison Birtwistle Hoquetus David Johannes Ockeghem Ut Heremita Solus Harrison Birtwistle Ut Heremita Solus Guillaume Dufay Se la face ay pale John Hopkins Se la face ay pale David Roche Chapters (world première) Alex Tay On Skipton Moor (world première) Harrison Birtwistle Secret Theatre TICKETS: £18, £12, £6 (students £5), available from ADC box office tel: 01223 300085; adcticketing.com Saturday, 8 November 2014 12.30pm–1.30pm, King’s College Chapel
Lunchtime Concert in King’s College Chapel Anssi Karttunen, cello Nicolas Hodges, piano Richard Causton De Profundis (world première) Harrison Birtwistle Bogenstrich Jae-Moon Lee Tangram (world première) Beethoven Cello Sonata Op. 102 TICKETS: £18, £12, £6 (students £5), available from ADC box office tel: 01223 300085; adcticketing.com
Music by Fayrfax and a motet from Birtwistle’s The Last Supper. Saturday, 8 November 2014 7.30pm, King’s College Chapel
Birmingham Contemporary Music Group Oliver Knussen, conductor Harrison Birtwistle Carmen Arcadiae Mechanicae Perpetuum Harrison Birtwistle Fantasia on All the Notes Alexander Goehr ...between the Lines (Chamber Symphony) Patrick Brennan New Work (world première) Richard Causton Chamber Symphony Harrison Birtwistle Silbury Air TICKETS: £24, £18, £12, (students £5), available from ADC box office tel: 01223 300085; adcticketing.com
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PRACTISING PERFORMANCE SERIES Thursday, 27 November 2014 2.00pm, Recital Room at the Faculty of Music
Masterclass with Joanna MacGregor Joanna MacGregor is thought of as one of the world’s most innovative and creative pianists. She became the Head of Piano at the Royal Academy of Music in 2011, and combines a busy career as a concert soloist, professor and festival curator. Her repertoire is hugely diverse, ranging from core classical music to twentieth century and contemporary music. Joanna MacGregor has made over thirty solo recordings, ranging from Bach, Scarlatti, Ravel and Debussy, to jazz and contemporary music.
Joanna read Music at Cambridge University, studying composition with Hugh Wood, and continued her postgraduate studies with Christopher Elton at the Royal Academy of Music. In Summer 2012 she performed at two BBC Proms at the Royal Albert Hall, and made her debut at Lincoln Center‘s ‘Mostly Mozart‘ Festival. She is currently performing the complete Mozart piano concertos, and performed the complete Chopin Mazurkas to widespread acclaim in 2010. In 2014 /15 her schedule includes concerts in Germany, Holland, Portugal, Ireland, Spain, New Zealand, Australia, China, USA and all over the UK.
© Pal Hansen
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CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY OPERA SOCIETY Wednesday, 29 – Friday, 31 October 2014 7.00pm, King’s College Chapel
Wednesday, 26 November 2014 8.00pm, Jesus College Chapel
Mary of Egypt by John Tavener (UK Première)
Semele by George Frederick Handel
Camilla Seale, soprano Susie Self, alto Nick Doig, bass
Composed in just a month, Semele contains some of Handel’s most inventive and delightful music. The daughter of the King of Thebes, Semele is betrothed to the prince of Boeotia, but is secretly in love with Jupiter, king of the gods. Her sister Ino has fallen in love with the prince, but Jupiter’s wife Juno is determined to take revenge on the mortals. Handel tried to disguise this ‘glittering stone dug from the ruins of Greek mythology’ as an oratorio in order that it be included in the Theatre Royal’s 1744 Lenten concert series. CUOS present the first semistaged performance of Semele, fully orchestrated and sung in English, in the beautiful surroundings of Jesus College Chapel.
The prostitute of Alexandra, Mary, is cast into the wilderness for spiritual contemplation. In the arid desert, Mary and Zossima, a holy man, find in each other a kind of spiritual ecstasy. The simplicity of Tavener’s music contrasts starkly with the theology of the desert fathers in all its searing compassion, now staged in the majestic surroundings of King’s Chapel, Cambridge. TICKETS: £18 (£10) available from The Shop at King’s Tuesday, 4 – Saturday, 8 November 2014 7.45pm, Fitzpatrick Hall, Queens’ College
Albert Herring by Benjamin Britten Lady Billows is organising the annual May Day festival and is desperate to find girls for the coveted position of Queen of the May. However, it turns out none of the girls in the village are virgins – disqualifying them. Thus, Lady Billows and Superintendent Budd decide to select a May King instead of a May Queen. Albert Herring, a virgin, is the perfect candidate. He is crowned May King at the fete. But, feeling ridiculed, jealous of his colleague, Sid’s relationship with Nancy and drunk from a spiked drink, he heads out into the wide world. The town assumes he is dead, and are deep in tragic mourning when Albert finally, and most comically, returns to their great surprise and frustration. TICKETS: £12 (£9) available from ADC ticketing
(Semi-staged, abridged and sung in English)
TICKETS: available from ADC ticketing
© Eugene Langan
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COMPOSERS’ WORKSHOPS AT THE FACULTY OF MUSIC
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The Faculty’s series of Composers’ Workshops is open to students of all years of the undergraduate music course as well as masters and doctoral students, indeed to anyone with an interest in the creation of new music. Because space is limited please email John Hopkins (jeh40@cam.ac.uk) if you are not a Faculty member and wish to attend.
Tuesday, 14 October 2014 2.00pm, Recital Room at the Faculty of Music
Tuesday, 28 October 2014 2.00pm, Recital Room at the Faculty of Music
Richard Causton
PhD Composers
Richard Causton studied at the University of York, the Royal College of Music and the Scuola Civica in Milan. He has worked with ensembles such as the BBC Symphony Orchestra, Philharmonia Orchestra, City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, Sinfonieorchester Basel, Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Saarbrücken, London Sinfonietta, Birmingham Contemporary Music Group, Britten Sinfonia and the Nash Ensemble. His music has been recorded on the NMC, Metier, Delphian and London Sinfonietta labels.
Tuesday, 4 November 2014 2.00pm, Recital Room at the Faculty of Music
(introductory session)
Tuesday, 21 October 2014 2.00pm, Recital Room at the Faculty of Music
Mark-Anthony Turnage (1) A composer of truly international stature, MarkAnthony Turnage is among the most relevant communicators and creators of today. His orchestral and operatic music is often forthright and confrontational, unafraid to mirror the realities of modern life, yet its energy is exhilarating. With his flair for vivid titles, and his complete absorption of jazz elements into a contemporary classical style, Turnage produces work with a strong appeal to an enquiring, often young audience. At the same time his music is capable of expressing deep tenderness, especially emotions associated with loss.
Jennifer Walshe (2) Jennifer Walshe was born in Dublin in 1974. She studied composition with John Maxwell Geddes at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama, Kevin Volans in Dublin and graduated from Northwestern University (Evanston, IL) with a doctoral degree in composition in June 2002. Her chief teachers at Northwestern were Amnon Wolman and Michael Pisaro. In 2003–4 Walshe was a fellow of Akademie Schloss Solitude, Stuttgart; during 2004–5 she lived in Berlin as a guest of the DAAD Berliner Künstlerprogramm. From 2006 to 2008 she was the composer-in-residence in South Dublin County for In Context 3. In 2007 she was awarded a grant from the Foundation for Contemporary Arts, New York. In 2008 she was awarded the Praetorius Music Prize for Composition by the Niedersächsisches Ministerium für Wissenschaft und Kultur. Jennifer Walshe is currently Reader in Music at Brunel University.
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Tuesday, 11 November 2014 2.00pm, Recital Room at the Faculty of Music
Tuesday, 25 November 2014 2.00pm, Recital Room at the Faculty of Music
John Hopkins on the Music of Claude Vivier (3)
Karen Sunabacka (5)
The music of Claude Vivier is a reflection of his personal life. Although he was a student of Stockhausen, Vivier ignored the avant-garde dictum against the expression of individuality through music. Both directly and indirectly, the themes of his compositions were inspired by his unknown family origins, his search for his mother, his religious vocation, and his homosexuality. The forty-nine works composed during his brief career comprise the impressive legacy of an individual as passionate about life as he was about music. Tuesday, 18 November 2014 2.00pm, Recital Room at the Faculty of Music
Frank Denyer (4) Born in London in 1943, Denyer became a chorister at Canterbury Cathedral at the age of ten, the director of the experimental music ensemble Mouth of Hermes in London at the age of twenty-five, and a Doctoral student in ethnomusicology at Wesleyan University, Connecticut at the age of thirty. He has lived and worked in east Africa and India. Today he is Professor of Composition at Dartington College of Arts in Devon.
Born in Winnipeg, Canada, Dr. Karen Sunabacka’s music has been performed around the world. In 2009 Karen won the Canadian Music Centre, Prairie Region, Emerging Composers Competition, and since then she has continued to receive regular commissions from choral groups, ensembles and orchestras. She is an Associate Professor in Music Theory and Composition at Providence University College in Canada, and in Cambridge she is a freelance administrator for Percius, an artist and project management company. Tuesday, 2 December 2014 2.00pm, Recital Room at the Faculty of Music
Undergraduate Composers
© Nuculla Braginskaja
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FACULTY OF MUSIC COLLOQUIA
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The Colloquium series is the main opportunity for members of the Faculty, researchers from other departments, and the general public to come together and hear papers on all aspects of music research, given by distinguished speakers from the UK and abroad. Colloquia in Michaelmas Term cover topics from the erotic dance songs of early modern Spain to the relationship between music and video art. Speakers confirmed for later in the year include Professors Salwa El-Shawan Castelo-Branco, Steven Connor, Mary Hunter, Robert Pascall, Susan Rankin, Reinhard Strohm, Richard Wistreich, Dr Björn Heile, and new Music Faculty Lecturer, Dr Kariann Goldschmitt. Colloquia are held on Wednesday evenings in the Recital Room of the Faculty of Music, West Road. Admission is free and all are welcome. Please arrive at 4.50pm for a 5.00pm start. Papers are followed by a discussion and a drinks reception with the speaker. Wednesday, 15 October 2014 5.00pm, Recital Room at the Faculty of Music
Prof Michael F Robinson (Emeritus Professor, University of Cardiff) (1) ‘The head v. the hands: the teaching of counterpoint and of thorough bass in early eighteenth-century Naples’ Throughout his long university career Michael Robinson has conducted research into the early history of opera between 1600 and 1800 and has paid special attention to the development of Italian opera during the eighteenth century. He has been a frequent lecturer at music conferences throughout Europe, the US and Canada, and in 1989 was a visiting professor at the University of Naples, Italy. His books on opera include Opera before Mozart, Naples and Neapolitan Opera and a catalogue of the works of the late eighteenth-century Neapolitan composer Giovanni Paisiello.
Wednesday, 22 October 2014 5.00pm, Recital Room at the Faculty of Music
Dr Samuel Llano (University of Cambridge) (2) ‘Sounding marginality and social disorder: the battle for Madrid’s soundscape, 1850–1930’
Samuel Llano is a musicologist and cultural historian specialising in the study of nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century Spanish music and in its relationship with other cultures, especially France. His current project deals with the study of Madrid’s soundscape in the nineteenth century, looking at how it helped to articulate social and political responses to a series of problems derived from social inequalities, such as poverty and crime. Llano has worked as Research Associate in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese, University of Cambridge for the past three years and is now a Research Associate at Clare College. Wednesday, 29 October 2014 5.00pm, Recital Room at the Faculty of Music
Prof Raffaele Pozzi (Università degli Studi di Roma Tre) (3) ‘Intermediality and “synmediality” in video art: Robert Cahen and Pierre Boulez’ Raffaele Pozzi is Professor of Musicology, Music History, and Music Pedagogy in the Dipartimento di Scienze della Formazione at the Università degli Studi di Roma Tre. He is the author of studies in twentiethcentury and contemporary music and is a consultant to the University Ministry for the training of music teachers. Since 2005 he has been artistic director of ‘MusicaInFormazione’, a concert and cultural event series promoted by Università degli Studi di Roma Tre.
© Harry Fletcher
© Hanya Chlala
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Thursday, 6 November 2014 5.30pm, West Road Concert Hall
Orr Lecture: Prof Sir Harrison Birtwistle (4)
(see page 10)
Wednesday, 12 November 2014 5.00pm, Recital Room at the Faculty of Music
Dr Golan Gur (University of Cambridge) (5) ‘Beyond socialist realism: political aesthetics in the German Democratic Republic’ Golan Gur is a British Academy Newton International Fellow at the University of Cambridge. Born in Israel, he attended Tel-Aviv University where he earned his bachelor and master degrees. He pursued graduate studies at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and completed his doctoral studies at the Humboldt University of Berlin in 2013. He taught at Tel-Aviv University, at Humboldt University and at Berlin University of Arts. He was a visiting scholar at the Simon Dubnow Institute of the University of Leipzig and the Paul Sacher Stiftung, Basle. Wednesday, 19 November 2014 5.00pm, Recital Room at the Faculty of Music
Dr Ananay Aguilar (University of Cambridge) (6) ‘Navigating the music industry: explorations in creativity, technology and law’ Ananay Aguilar is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at the Faculty of Music in the University of Cambridge. Her interests lie in the production and circulation of recordings, especially in related matters of aesthetics, economics, technology and law. She is currently working on a project on the legal
circumstances surrounding performance and their effect on contemporary music-making, supported by the Centre for Intellectual Property and Information Law (CIPIL) at the Faculty of Law. Ananay studied at Universidad de los Andes in Colombia (BA), UNICAMP in Brazil (MA) and Royal Holloway, University of London (PhD). Wednesday, 26 November 2014 5.00pm, Recital Room at the Faculty of Music
Prof Álvaro Torrente (Universidad Complutense de Madrid) ‘”The demoniac tune of the zarabanda”: erotic dance-songs in early modern Spain’ Álvaro Torrente Sánchez-Guisande is Professor of Music History at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid, director of the Instituto Complutense de Ciencias Musicales (ICCMU), president of the Fundación Gonzalo Torrente Ballester and patron of the Fundación de Amigos de la Biblioteca Nacional de España. He is the director of the project Catálogo Descriptivo de Pliegos de Villancicos, published by Reichenberger, and associate director of the collection The Operas of Francesco Cavalli, published by Bärenreiter. His critical editions of seventh-century Italian operas have been performed in theatres in Munich, Amsterdam, London, Basle, Innsbruck, Frankfurt, Linz, and Wiesbaden. Since 2007 he has been the Spanish representative of the Directorate of the International Musicological Society.
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OUTREACH Monday, 20 October 2014 7.00–9.00pm, West Road Concert Hall
Thursday, 30 October 2014 10.30am–6.30pm, West Road Concert Hall
Hip Hop Psych
Clarinettists and saxophonists: Play Day
Dr. Akeem Sule (Psychiatry) and Dr. Becky Inkster (Neuroscience) demystify mental illness through hip-hop beats and lyrics while Dr. Griff Rollefson (Music) and Big Dada recording artist Juice Aleem discuss the artform’s valorization of non-normative ‘illness’. Indeed, Juice Aleem implores us to ’rock’ our identities: ‘If you know who you are you'll rock your hologram.’ Includes live performances (music, dance, graffiti) – a ‘Hip Hop Takeover’ of the Faculty of Music. TICKETS: Free. Suitable for 16+. Booking: http:// outreach.mus.cam.ac.uk/events Wednesday, 29 October 2014 7.00–9.00pm, West Road Concert Hall
‘Your Song’ Concert, featuring ‘Zimbe’ ‘Your Song’ is a celebration of community singing featuring choirs from across the city expressing their unique identities through song. Each choir will be given their moment to shine before joining forces to perform Alexander L'Estrange's ‘Zimbe’, an upbeat African work scored for chorus, children's choir and jazz quartet. Organised by Cambridge Music Education Outreach. TICKETS: Free. Suitable for 8+. Booking: http:// outreach.mus.cam.ac.uk/events
This one-day workshop is designed for saxophonists and clarinettists, aged 12 to 18 years, to gain experience in musical performance, both in groups and (if they wish) as soloists. Participants will work on ensemble pieces in large and small groups, with experienced coaches. A masterclass will provide an opportunity for some players to develop their solo performance skills. The day will end with a public performance. Participants should be Grade 4 plus or equivalent (Grade 7 plus for Masterclass). Organised jointly by Cambridge Youth Music and Cambridge Music Education Outreach. Participants must live or attend full-time education in Cambridgeshire. TICKETS: £11 registration fee. Booking: http:// outreach.mus.cam.ac.uk/events Limited places available. Deadline for applications: 5pm on Monday 13 October. Thursday, 30 October 2014 5.30–6.30pm, West Road Concert Hall
Clarinettists and saxophonists: Performance Showcase
A chance to hear clarinettists and saxophonists, aged 12–18 years, playing solos and ensembles following a day of coaching designed to improve their performance skills. Jointly organised by Cambridge Youth Music and Cambridge Music Education Outreach. TICKETS: Free (retiring collection). Booking: http:// outreach.mus.cam.ac.uk/events (but not essential)
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Sunday, 2 November 2014 10.00am–1.00pm, The Guildhall, Market Square
Sunday, 2 November 2014 7.00–8.00pm, West Road Concert Hall
Taking a Line for a Walk
Young Composers Concert
A practical composition workshop taking inspiration from the music of Harrison Birtwistle and the art of Paul Klee. Klee’s description of an active line ‘moving freely without goal – a walk for a walk’s sake’ will provide the stimulus for a fun and creative practical workshop considering differences between melodies and musical lines. As part of the workshop, participants will have the opportunity of hearing their works played through by expert professional instrumentalists.
A fun concert presenting some recent compositions by young people. Performed by the Dr K Sextet, a group of professional musicians passionate about contemporary music, the concert showcases the extraordinary talent of teenage composers. It will include performances of some of the entries to this year's Cambridge Young Composer of the Year Competition as well as a specially commissioned piece by last year's Cambridge Young Composer of the Year, 14-year-old William Harmer.
TICKETS: Suitable for ages 16–19. There are limited places at this workshop, so booking is essential. Booking: http://outreach.mus.cam.ac.uk/events
Jointly organised by Cambridge Youth Music and Cambridge Music Education Outreach. TICKETS: Free (retiring collection). Booking: http:// outreach.mus.cam.ac.uk/events
Sunday, 2 November 2014 2.30–5.30pm, West Road Concert Hall
Cambridge Young Composer of the Year Each year the Cambridge Young Composer of the Year competition provides a platform for exciting new compositions by young people, 17 years and under, in Cambridgeshire. Selections from this year's entries will be played at this event by the Dr K Sextet – a group of young professional musicians passionate about new music. Cambridge composer and competition judge Ewan Campbell will discuss each piece in turn and give guidance on composing techniques. The competition is jointly organised by Cambridge Music Education Outreach and Cambridge Youth Music. TICKETS: Free. Booking: http://outreach.mus.cam. ac.uk/events (but not essential)
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INSTRUMENTAL AWARDS SCHEME The Instrumental Awards for Chamber Music Scheme (IAS) was set up to enable gifted players reach a high standard of performance in chamber music, auditioning for coveted places at the beginning of each academic year. They are coached regularly throughout the year by some of the very best professional chamber musicians including James Boyd, Celia Nicklin, Andrew West and the Endellion String Quartet, and have recently taken part in masterclasses with Steven Isserlis, Richard Egarr, the Schubert Ensemble and Angela Hewitt.
Sunday, 9 November 2014 9.00pm, Old Library, Pembroke College
Sunday, 23 November 2014 8.00pm, Selwyn College Hall
TICKETS: £2
TICKETS: free
Saturday, 15 November 2014 8.00pm, Jesus College Chapel
Sunday, 23 November 2014 9.00pm, Old Library, Emmanuel College
TICKETS: free
TICKETS: £2
Monday, 17 November 2014 8.30pm, Old Combination Room, Trinity College
Sunday, 30 November 2014 1.15pm, Gallery 3, Fitzwilliam Museum
TICKETS: free
TICKETS: free
Saturday, 22 November 2014 1.15pm, Bateman Auditorium, Gonville & Caius College
Please make a note of the Instrumental Awards Scheme annual Showcase Concert:
TICKETS: free
Tuesday, 10 March 2015 West Road Concert Hall
IAS Showcase Concert
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COLLEGE EVENTS St John’s College Saturday, 8 October 2014 6.30pm, St John’s College Chapel
and recital, winning two Grammy Awards for recent recordings. She joins Joseph Middleton for this recital at Pembroke, entitled ‘Northern Lights’, before they present it at London’s Wigmore Hall and for BBC Radio 3.
Bach Cantata Evensong The Choir of St John’s College, Cambridge with the St John’s Sinfonia Vivaldi Magnificat J.S. Bach Cantata no. 96 ‘Herr Christ, der ein’ge Gottes-sohn’ J.S. Bach Brandenburg Concerto no. 5 in D major, BWV 1050 (two movements)
Churchill College Saturday, 25th October 2014 6.30–7.30pm, The Chapel at Churchill College
BIBAC 2014 Conference, Centre for Intercultural Musicology concert
Pembroke College Thursday, 9 October 2014 8.00pm, The Old Library, Pembroke College
Valerie Ross Blue Spot (first performance) Mark Gotham Isomorphic Fantasy (first performance) Joshua Uzoigwe Egwu Amala Lutosławski Two movements from Dance Preludes Hibiki Ichikawa & Deepak Venkateshvaran Electric and Shisa (first performance) Cambridge Gamelan Group Traditional & Contemporary Javanese Gamelan works
Katarina Karnéus, mezzo-soprano (1) Joseph Middleton, piano (2)
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TICKETS: £15, £10 (college members), £5 (students), available from the Porters’ Lodge or on the door. Email blissseries@gmail.com
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Songs by Brahms, Schumann, Saint-Saëns, Berlioz, Chausson, Delius, Peterson-Berger, Nystroem and Von Koch. Katarina Karnéus began her international career winning BBC Cardiff Singer of the World in 1995 and has since appeared worldwide in opera, concert
The Centre for Intercultural Musicology at Churchill College and the Churchill Music Society are delighted to host the BIBAC2014 Conference Concert featuring members of the CIMACC Ensemble , Churchill Music Society & Cambridge Gamelan Group. The concert promises an enchanting evening of sensual tonescapes, rhythmic pulsations through mixed metres, instruments from different cultures interacting and therapeutic hues resonating from the Javanese Gamelan…plus the first performance of several compositions as artifacts of practice-led research. TICKETS: Free, but booking required through the Festival of Ideas
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This recital explores the role played by Venetian Baroque composers and cellists in promulgating the cello's potential as an instrument equally suited to accompaniment and to solo display. TICKETS: Admission free Selwyn College Sunday, 2 November 2014 8.30pm, Selwyn College Chapel Roger Williams, reader Selwyn College Chapel Choir Sarah MacDonald, conductor Readings and music to commemorate the First World War supported by the Wilfred Owen Society (Wilfred Owen's nephew and family will be in attendance) TICKETS: Admission free St John’s College Wednesday, 5 November 2014 6.30pm, St John’s College Chapel 3
Evensong
The Choir of St John’s College, Cambridge Emmanuel College Friday, 31st October 2014 6.30–7.15pm, The Queen's Building Lecture Theatre
Burnaby Recital Series: The Venetian Baroque Cello Caldara Sonata in G Major Marcello Sonata in F Major Platti Sonata in D minor Dalla Bella Sonata in C Major Vivaldi Sonata in B-flat major Joseph Crouch and Sarah McMahon (3), baroque cellists
Timothy Watts Echoes (first performance of commissioned work) Jesus College Saturday, 8 November 2014 8.00pm, Jesus College Chapel
J.S. Bach Goldberg Variations The internationally-renowned Canadian harpsichordist, Mark Edwards (4), winner of the 2012 Musica Antiqua Bruges International Harpsichord Competition, plays Bach's masterpiece
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Hughes Hall Tuesday, 11 November 2014 6.00pm, Pavilion Room, Hughes Hall
on the celebrated Bruce Kennedy double-manual harpsichord after a 1728 instrument by Christian Zell. Part of the Piccola Accademia Montisi Jesus College series.
Armistice Concert Ian de Massini, piano Jennifer Bastable, voice A piano and voice recital to commemorate the centenary of the outbreak of the First World War, featuring music written during the Great War by Maurice Ravel, composed in honour of his colleagues killed during the first years of the conflict. TICKETS: Admission free 4
TICKETS: £5 (£2 students) available on the door or reserve in advance on 01223 339699 / choir@jesus. cam.ac.uk
King’s College Wednesday, 12 November 2014 7.30pm, King’s College Chapel
Bach Magnificat Trinity College Monday, 10 November 2014 8.00pm, Trinity College Chapel
Mendelssohn and Schubert with Trinity College Chamber Orchestra
Helen-Jane Howells and Susanna Hurrell, sopranos David Allsopp, countertenor James Gilchrist, tenor Ben Appl, bass Choir of King's College Cambridge Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment Stephen Cleobury, conductor
Trinity College Chamber Orchestra perform Schubert’s Unfinished Symphony and Mendelssohn’s ever-popular Violin Concerto with soloist Gabriella Jones.
Bach Cantata BWV 36 Schwingt freudig euch empor Bach Brandenburg Concerto no. 2 BWV 1047 Bach Cantata BWV 55 Ich armer Mensch Bach Magnificat BWV 243
TICKETS: On the door, £8/£5/free for TCMS members
TICKETS: £5–£40, available from The Shop at King's, tel: 01223 769340
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Girton College Wednesday, 12 November 2014 8.00pm, Girton College Chapel
A Handeliade Girton students and Fellows combine forces to celebrate the richness of the compositional legacy of George Frideric Handel. In a programme curated by Margaret Faultless we present a selection of works ranging from sonata and suite movements through opera arias to choruses from oratorios. TICKETS: Admission free (retiring collection) Clare College Saturday, 15 November 2014 7.00pm, King's College Chapel, Cambridge
Spem in alium The Choirs of Clare College (5) and Jesus College Cambridge and Berkshire Youth Choirs Peter Asprey, Louise McGahon, Graham Ross & Mark Williams, conductors English choral music from the 16th century to the present day, including Handel's Zadok the Priest, Parry's Blest Pair of Sirens and Tallis's 40-part motet Spem in Alium, sung by over 100 singers from the Choirs of Clare and Jesus Colleges and Berkshire Youth Choirs. TICKETS: Admission free (retiring collection)
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Wolfson College Sunday, 16 November 2014 3.00pm, Lee Hall
Sunday Soirée at 3 Junior Prime Brass and The Robins (6) (King’s Junior Voices) Christopher Lawrence and Lyn Alcántara, conductors Vocal items include Sumer is icumen in, Past time with good company, Ah Robin and Handel’s Ombra Mai fu. Brass items include Warlock’s Capriol Suite, Mozart’s Variations on ‘Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star’ & Hoagy Carmichael’s ‘Stardust’. TICKETS: Admission Free (retiring collection)
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Churchill College Saturday, 22 November 2014 7.30–9.30pm, The Chapel at Churchill College Annual choral-orchestral concert given by Churchill Chorus and the Orchestra on the Hill.
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Hughes Hall Tuesday, 18 November 2014 6.00pm, Pavilion Room, Hughes Hall
Postcards from Europe Marianne Olyver, violin Nigel Yandell, piano
Anna Lush and Anna Kaye, sopranos Giverny McAndry, alto Jon Schranz, tenor Tom Ainge, bass Mark Gotham, conductor Repertoire including Bach's Magnificat TICKETS: £10 / £5 Wolfson College Sunday, 23 November 2014 7.30pm, Lee Hall
A performance of music banned under the Third Reich, giving voice to lost musical traditions and works by Jewish composers of the time. A project seeking to honour the lives of those who suffered during this period of persecution. TICKETS: Admission free Pembroke College Saturday, 22 November 2014 4.00pm, Pembroke College Chapel Rachel Ambrose Evans, soprano Nicola Beckley, mezzo-soprano James Savage-Hanford, tenor Christopher Webb, bass Gregory Drott, conductor Henry Purcell Hail, Bright Cecilia Z.328 The Kenderdine Consort and Players perform an ode by Purcell, on St Cecilia’s Day, at an event marking the 30th anniversary of the admission of women to Pembroke College. TICKETS: Admission free, no tickets required
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Wolfson College Michaelmas Term Concert: ‘An American Tribute’ Lyn Alcántara, conductor/mezzo-soprano Andrew Goldman, piano Wolfson College Choir (7) and Wolfson College Chamber Singers perform works by composers including Samuel Barber, Aaron Copland, Eric Whitacre and Richard Rodney Bennett. TICKETS: Admission free (retiring collection)
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Homerton College Thursday, 27 November 2014 6.00pm, Homerton College
Clare College Thursday, 4 December 2014 7.30pm, Great Hall
A Ceremony of Carols Choir of Clare College, Cambridge (9) Tanya Houghton, harp Graham Ross, conductor The Choir of Clare College present Julius Harrison's arrangement of Britten's much-loved A Ceremony of Carols, alongside traditional Christmas repertoire and carols for audience. Mulled wine and mince pies will be served during the interval.
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Joanna MacGregor (8) in Conversation: a talk with performance Joanna MacGregor is regarded as one of the world’s most innovative and creative pianists. In this 45-minute talk Joanna will explore aspects of her career and learning journey: how she realised her dreams of success as a global and groundbreaking artist. TICKETS: Admission free
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TICKETS: £20 (£10 for Clare fellows, staff and students), available from Clare College Old Court Porters' Lodge from 3 November 2014.
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Trinity College Friday, 5 December 2014 1.00pm, Trinity College Chapel
Jesus College Monday 8 December 2014 7.30pm, Jesus College Chapel © James Appleton
Lunchtime Recital A lunchtime recital by the Choir of Trinity College, Cambridge, recently named the Fifth Best Choir in the World by Gramophone Magazine. TICKETS: Admission free Girton College Sunday, 7 December 2014 2.30pm, Stanley Library, Girton College Peter Martens, cello Jâms Coleman, piano
Sonatas for cello and piano by Beethoven, Brahms and Peter Klatzow Prize-winning South African cellist Peter Martens, on tour in Europe, presents a recital built round sonatas by Beethoven and Brahms. Peter has worked with some of the leading chamber musicians and conductors of his time. The Strad described his recording of the complete Beethoven cello sonatas as 'brilliantly incisive and spirited accounts of all these works'. He is accompanied on this occasion by Jâms Coleman, a recent graduate of Girton. In addition to two canonic sonatas they play a short and very beautiful sonata by South African composer, Peter Klatzow. TICKETS: Admission free (retiring collection)
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A Christmas Celebration The Choirs of Jesus College Cambridge (10) Mark Williams, conductor A concert of seasonal music to include Britten's Ceremony of Carols. TICKETS: £12/£8 (unsighted seats in the choir stalls) £8/£4 (students) to include interval refreshments available from 01223 300085 www.adcticketing. com
OCTOBER 3 7.30pm 8 6.30pm 9 8.00pm 14 1.10pm 14 2.00pm 15 5.00pm 15 7.30pm 16 7.30pm 20 7.00pm 21 1.10pm 21 2.00pm 22 5.00pm 24 7.30pm 25 6.30pm 25 8.00pm 28 1.10pm 28 2.00pm 29 5.00pm 29 7.00pm 29 7.00pm 30 10.30am 30 5.30pm 30 7.00pm 31 6.30pm 31 7.00pm NOVEMBER 1 8.00pm 2 10.00am 2 2.30pm 2 7.00pm 2 8.30pm 4 1.10pm 4 2.00pm 4 7.45pm 5 7.45pm 5 6.30pm 6 5.30pm 6 7.30pm 6 7.45pm 7 2.00pm 7 7.30pm 7 7.45pm 8 12.30pm 8 7.30pm 8 7.45pm 8 8.30pm 9 9.00pm West Road Concert Hall The Guildhall, Market Square West Road Concert Hall West Road Concert Hall Selwyn College Chapel West Road Concert Hall Recital Room, Faculty of Music Fitzpatrick Hall, Queens' College Fitzpatrick Hall, Queens' College St John's College Chapel West Road Concert Hall West Road Concert Hall Fitzpatrick Hall, Queens' College Recital Room, Faculty of Music West Road Concert Hall Fitzpatrick Hall, Queens' College King's College Chapel King’s College Chapel Fitzpatrick Hall, Queens' College Jesus College Chapel Old Library, Pembroke College
CUMS Symphony Orchestra Outreach: Taking at Line for a Walk Cambridge Young Composer of the Year Young Composers Concert Readings and Music to commemorate WWI Where the Lemon Trees Blow Composers' Workshop: Jennifer Walshe CUOS: Albert Herring CUOS: Albert Herring Evensong: Tim Watts commission Sir Harrison Birtwistle in intervew Arditti String Quartet CUOS: Albert Herring DVD Screening: The Minotaur New Music Ensemble & The King's Men CUOS: Albert Herring Lunchtime Concert: Birtwistle Festival Birmingham Contemporary Music Group CUOS: Albert Herring Bach: Goldberg Variations Instrumental Awards Scheme concert
8 19 19 19 22 7 14 13 13 22 10 10 13 10 11 13 11 11 13 22 20
West Road Concert Hall 4 St John's College Chapel 21 Old Library, Pembroke College 21 West Road Concert Hall 7 Recital Room, Faculty of Music 14 Recital Room, Faculty of Music 16 West Road Concert Hall 6 West Road Concert Hall 3 West Road Concert Hall 18 St John's College Divinity School 7 Recital Room, Faculty of Music 14 Recital Room, Faculty of Music 16 Royal Albert Hall 8 Churchill College Chapel 21 West Road Concert Hall 8 West Road Concert Hall 7 Recital Room, Faculty of Music 14 Recital Room, Faculty of Music 16 West Road Concert Hall 18 King's College Chapel 13 West Road Concert Hall 18 West Road Concert Hall 18 King's College Chapel 13 Queens' Building Lecture Theatre, Emmanuel 22 King's College Chapel 13
Britten Sinfonia: Kaleidoscopes Bach Cantata Evensong Recital: Katarina Karnéus Aula Ensemble Composers' Workshop: Richard Causton Colloquium: Michael Robinson Endellion String Quartet The Grand Tour: Handel in London (AAM) Outreach: Hip Hop Psych Coda Quartet Composers' Workshop: Mark-Anthony Turnage Colloquium: Samuel Llano CUMS: Verdi Requiem in London BIBAC Conference concert Cambridge University Chamber Orchestra Chiesa e Piazza Composers' Workshop: PhD Composers Colloquium: Raffaele Pozzi Outreach: 'Your Song' Concert CUOS: Mary of Egypt Outreach: Clarinet & Saxophone Play Day Outreach: Clarinet and Saxophone Showcase CUOS: Mary of Egypt Burnaby Recital Series: Baroque Cello CUOS: Mary of Egypt
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VENUE
EVENT
EVENTS LISTING 10 8.00pm 11 1.10pm 11 2.00pm 11 6.00pm 12 5.00pm 12 7.30pm 12 7.30pm 12 8.00pm 15 7.00pm 15 8.00pm 16 3.00pm 17 8.30pm 18 1.10pm 18 2.00pm 18 6.00pm 19 5.00pm 20 8.00pm 21 7.30pm 22 1.15pm 22 4.00pm 22 7.30pm 22 7.30pm 23 7.30pm 23 8.00pm 23 9.00pm 24 7.30pm 25 1.10pm 25 2.00pm 26 5.00pm 26 8.00pm 27 2.00pm 27 6.00pm 27 8.00pm 30 1.15pm DECEMBER 2 1.00pm 2 2.00pm 4 7.30pm 5 1.00pm 6 8.00pm 7 2.30pm 8 7.30pm JANUARY 13 1.00pm 17 8.00pm 18 7.30pm 21 7.30pm
Trinity College Chapel West Road Concert Hall Recital Room, Faculty of Music Pavilion Room, Hughes Hall Recital Room, Faculty of Music West Road Concert Hall King's College Chapel Girton College Chapel King's College Chapel Jesus College Chapel Lee Hall, Wolfson College Old Combination Room, Trinity College West Road Concert Hall Recital Room, Faculty of Music Pavilion Room, Hughes Hall Recital Room, Faculty of Music West Road Concert Hall West Road Concert Hall Bateman Auditorium, Gonville & Caius Pembroke College Chapel Ely Cathedral Churchill College Chapel Lee Hall, Wolfson College Selwyn College Hall Old Library, Emmanuel College West Road Concert Hall West Road Concert Hall Recital Room, Faculty of Music Recital Room, Faculty of Music Jesus College Chapel West Road Concert Hall Homerton College West Road Concert Hall Gallery 3, Fitzwilliam Museum
VENUE
Britten Sinfonia: At Lunch 2 CUMS: Howard Shelley Britten Sinfonia: Sarah Connolly Endellion String Quartet
West Road Concert Hall King's College Chapel West Road Concert Hall West Road Concert Hall
Britten Sinfonia: At Lunch 1 West Road Concert Hall Composers' Workshop: Undergraduate Composers Recital Room, Faculty of Music A Ceremony of Carols Clare College Chapel Trinity College Choir Trinity College Chapel CUMS: Peter Donohoe performs Brahms West Road Concert Hall Sonatas for cello and piano Stanley Library, Girton College A Christmas Celebration Jesus College Chapel
Trinity College Chamber Orchestra The Gesualdo Six Composers' Workshop: Claude Vivier Armistice Concert Colloquium: Golan Gur Endellion String Quartet Bach Magnificat A Handeliade Spem in alium Instrumental Awards Scheme concert Sunday Soirée at 3 Instrumental Awards Scheme concert Recital: violin and piano Composers' Workshop: Frank Denyer Postcards from Europe Colloquium: Ananay Aguilar Cambridge University Wind Orchestra Britten Sinfonia: John Woolrich at 60 Instrumental Awards Scheme concert Hail, Bright Cecilia CUMS: Britten War Requiem Orchestra on the Hill and Churchill Chorus An American Tribute Instrumental Awards Scheme concert Instrumental Awards Scheme concert The Grand Tour: Vienna & Paris (AAM) Recital: piano Composers' Workshop: Karen Sunabacka Colloquium: Alvo Torrente CUOS: Semele Masterclass: Joanna MacGregor Joanna MacGregor in conversation CUMS Concert Orchestra Instrumental Awards Scheme concert
EVENT
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4 15 26 27 9 27 27
23 7 15 23 17 6 23 24 24 20 24 20 7 15 25 17 8 4 18 25 9 25 25 20 20 3 7 15 17 13 12 26 9 20
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