LPO/Marquee TV digital concert programme: The Rite of Spring - 14 January 2023

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2022/23 concert season Filmed live at the Southbank Centre’s Royal Festival Hall The Rite of Spring Broadcast Saturday 14 January 2023 Digital concert programme Lutosławski Symphony No. 4 Stravinsky The Rite of Spring Edward Gardner
Generously supported by Aud Jebsen
conductor
2 London Philharmonic Orchestra on Marquee TV • 14 January 2023 • The Rite of Spring Concert performed at the Southbank Centre’s Royal Festival Hall on 9 November 2022 and filmed by Intersection. The LPO would like to acknowledge the generosity of all of its members, supporters and donors. Thank you for your support. Contents Click on the headings to jump to a section 3 On stage 4 London Philharmonic Orchestra 5 Leader: Pieter Schoeman 6 Edward Gardner 7 Programme notes: Lutosławski 9 Programme notes: Stravinsky 11 Stravinsky on the LPO Label 12 LPO 90th Birthday Appeal 13 Marquee TV 14 LPO 2022/23 concert season 15 Sound Futures donors 16 Thank you 18 LPO administration

On stage

First Violins

Pieter Schoeman* Leader Chair supported by Neil Westreich

Alice Ivy-Pemberton

Kate Oswin Nilufar Alimaksumova

Lasma Taimina Chair supported by Irina Gofman & Mr Rodrik V. G. Cave

Elizaveta Tyun

Katalin Varnagy Chair supported by Sonja Drexler

Catherine Craig Yang Zhang Chair supported by Eric Tomsett Gabriela Opacka Amanda Smith Ronald Long Alice Hall Joseph Devalle Ricky Gore Jamie Hutchinson

Second Violins

Tania Mazzetti Principal Chair supported by Countess Dominique Loredan Emma Oldfield Co-Principal Helena Smart Kate Birchall

Fiona Higham Chair supported by David & Yi Buckley

Joseph Maher

Ashley Stevens

Claudia Tarrant-Matthews Nancy Elan Eleanora Consta Nynke Hijlkema

Sioni Williams Jessica Coleman Lyrit Milgram

Violas

Richard Waters Principal Chair supported by Caroline, Jamie & Zander Sharp

Stanislav Popov

Katharine Leek

James Heron

Benedetto Pollani Shiry Rashkovsky

Laura Vallejo

Toby Warr Martin Wray

Julia Doukakis Mark Gibbs Jennifer Coombes

Cellos

Kristina Blaumane Principal Chair supported by Bianca & Stuart Roden Pei-Jee Ng Co-Principal Chair supported by The Candide Trust

Francis Bucknall Susanna Riddell Helen Thomas George Hoult Sibylle Hentschel Hee Yeon Cho Iain Ward Auriol Evans

Double Basses

Sebastian Pennar Principal George Peniston Laura Murphy Elen Roberts David Johnson Cathy Colwell Laurence Ungless Tom Morgan

Flutes

Thomas Hancox Guest Principal Camilla Marchant Imogen Royce Katherine Bicknell

Piccolo

Katherine Bicknell Alto

Flute

Clare Childs

Oboes

Ian Hardwick* Principal Eleanor Sullivan Hannah Condliffe Lucy Foster Ben Marshall

Cor Anglais

Ben Marshall Lucy Foster

Clarinets

Benjamin Mellefont Principal

Thomas Watmough Chair supported by Roger Greenwood Elliot Gresty Paul Richards* James Maltby Bass Clarinets

Paul Richards* Principal James Maltby E-flat Clarinet

Thomas Watmough Principal Bassoons

Jonathan Davies Principal Chair supported by Sir Simon Robey Dominic Tyler Emily Newman Simon Estell* Claire Webster Contrabassoons

Simon Estell* Principal Claire Webster

Horns

John Ryan* Principal Mark Vines Principal Martin Hobbs Elise Campbell Gareth Mollison Andrew Budden Jonathan Lipton Oliver Johnson Joel Ashford

Wagner Tubas

John Ryan* Oliver Johnson

Trumpets

Paul Beniston* Principal James Nash Guest Principal Anne McAneney* Tony Cross Kaitlin Wild

Piccolo Trumpet

James Nash

Bass Trumpet David Whitehouse

Trombones

Mark Templeton* Principal Chair supported by William & Alex de Winton Andrew Cole

Bass Trombone

Lyndon Meredith Principal Tubas

Lee Tsarmaklis* Principal Chair supported by Friends of the Orchestra Grady Hassan

Timpani

Simon Carrington* Principal Chair supported by Victoria Robey OBE Tom Lee

Percussion

Andrew Barclay* Principal Chair supported by Garf & Gill Collins

Ignacio Molins Karen Hutt Joe Richards

Harps

Rachel Masters Principal Tamara Young Piano

Catherine Edwards Celeste Philip Moore Assistant Conductor Gabriella Teychenné

* Holds a professorial appointment in London

The LPO also acknowledges the following chair supporter whose player is not present at this performance: Dr Barry Grimaldi

3 London Philharmonic Orchestra on Marquee TV • 14 January 2023 • The Rite of Spring

London Philharmonic Orchestra

Uniquely groundbreaking and exhilarating to watch and hear, the London Philharmonic Orchestra has been celebrated as one of the world’s great orchestras since Sir Thomas Beecham founded it in 1932. With every performance we aim to bring wonder to the modern world and cement our position as a leading orchestra for the 21st century.

Our home is at the Southbank Centre’s Royal Festival Hall, where we’re at the beating heart of London’s cultural life. You’ll also find us at our resident venues in Brighton, Eastbourne and Saffron Walden, and on tour throughout the UK and internationally, performing to sell-out audiences worldwide. Each summer we’re resident at Glyndebourne Festival Opera, combining the magic of opera with Glyndebourne’s glorious setting in the Sussex countryside.

Sharing the wonder

We’re always at the forefront of technology, finding new ways to share our music globally. You’ll find us online, on streaming platforms, on social media and through our broadcast partnership with Marquee TV. During the pandemic period we launched ‘LPOnline’: over 100 videos of performances, insights and introductions to playlists, which led to us being named runner-up in the Digital Classical Music Awards 2020. During 2022/23 we’ll be working once again with Marquee TV to broadcast selected live concerts, so you can share or relive the wonder from your own living room.

Our conductors

Our Principal Conductors have included some of the greatest historic names like Sir Adrian Boult, Bernard Haitink, Sir Georg Solti, Klaus Tennstedt and Kurt Masur. In 2021 Edward Gardner became our 13th Principal Conductor, taking the Orchestra into its tenth decade. Vladimir Jurowski became Conductor Emeritus in recognition of his impact as Principal Conductor from 2007–21. Karina Canellakis is our current Principal Guest Conductor and Brett Dean our Composer-inResidence.

Soundtrack to key moments

Everyone will have heard the London Philharmonic Orchestra, whether it’s playing the world’s National Anthems at every medal ceremony of the London 2012 Olympics and Paralympics, our iconic recording with Pavarotti that made Nessun Dorma a global football anthem, or closing the flotilla at The Queen’s Thames Diamond Jubilee Pageant. And you’ll almost certainly have heard us on the soundtracks for major films including The Lord of the Rings

We also release live, studio and archive recordings on our own label, and are the world’s most-streamed orchestra, with over 15 million plays of our content each month. Recent releases include the first volume of a Stravinsky series with Vladimir Jurowski including The Rite of Spring and The Firebird; Tippett’s complete

4 London Philharmonic Orchestra on Marquee TV • 14 January 2023 • The Rite of Spring
© Mark Allan

Pieter Schoeman Leader

opera The Midsummer Marriage under Edward Gardner, captured in his first concert as LPO Principal Conductor in September 2021; and James MacMillan’s Christmas Oratorio, recorded at the work’s UK premiere performance in December 2021.

Next generations

We’re committed to inspiring the next generation of musicians and music-lovers: there’s nothing we love more than seeing the joy of children and families enjoying their first musical moments, and we’re passionate about equipping schools and teachers through schools’ concerts, resources and training. Reflecting our values of collaboration and inclusivity, our OrchLab and Open Sound Ensemble projects offer music-making opportunities for adults and young people with special educational needs and disabilities. Today’s young instrumentalists are the orchestral members of the future, so we’re committed to offering them opportunities to progress. Our LPO Junior Artists programme is leading the way in creating pathways into the profession for young artists from under-represented communities, and our LPO Young Composers and Foyle Future Firsts schemes support the next generation of professional musicians, bridging the transition from education to professional careers.

2022/23 and beyond

We believe in the relevance of our music, and that our programmes must reflect the narratives of modern times. This season we’re exploring themes of belonging and displacement in our series ‘A place to call home’, delving into music by composers including Austrians Erich Korngold and Paul Hindemith, Hungarian Béla Bartók, Cuban Tania León, Ukrainian Victoria Vita Polevá and Syrian Kinan Azmeh. As we celebrate our 90th anniversary we perform works premiered by the Orchestra during its illustrious history. This season also marks Vaughan Williams’s 150th anniversary and we’ll be celebrating with four of his works, as well as both symphonies by Elgar and music by Tippett and Thomas Adès. Our commitment to everything new and creative includes premieres by Brett Dean and Heiner Goebbels, as well as new commissions from composers from around the world including Agata Zubel, Elena Langer and Vijay Iyer.

Pieter Schoeman was appointed Leader of the London Philharmonic Orchestra in 2008, having previously been Co-Leader since 2002. He is also a Professor of Violin at Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music & Dance.

Pieter has performed worldwide as a soloist and recitalist in such famous halls as the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam, Moscow’s Rachmaninov Hall, Capella Hall in St Petersburg, Staatsbibliothek in Berlin, Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles and London’s Royal Festival Hall. As a chamber musician he regularly appears at London’s prestigious Wigmore Hall. His chamber music partners have included Anne-Sophie Mutter, Veronika Eberle, Patricia Kopatchinskaja, Boris Garlitsky, Jean-Guihen Queyras, Yannick Nézet-Séguin, Martin Helmchen and Julia Fischer.

Pieter has performed numerous times as a soloist with the London Philharmonic Orchestra. Highlights have included an appearance as both conductor and soloist in Vivaldi’s Four Seasons at the Royal Festival Hall, the Brahms Double Concerto with Kristina Blaumane, and the Britten Double Concerto with Alexander Zemtsov, which was recorded and released on the LPO Label to great critical acclaim.

Pieter has appeared as Guest Leader with the BBC, Barcelona, Bordeaux, Lyon and Baltimore symphony orchestras; the Rotterdam and BBC Philharmonic orchestras; and the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra.

Pieter’s chair in the LPO is generously supported by Neil Westreich.

5 London Philharmonic Orchestra on Marquee TV • 14 January 2023 • The Rite of Spring
© Benjamin Ealovega
lpo.org.uk

Edward Gardner

Principal Conductor, London Philharmonic Orchestra

Symphony No. 2 (Resurrection) and a staged performance of Wagner’s Parsifal. Following recent tours to Berlin, Munich and Amsterdam, and appearances at the BBC Proms and Edinburgh International Festival, the orchestra looks forward to touring projects in Germany and Belgium. In demand as a guest conductor, Edward will also return to the Cleveland and Chicago symphony orchestras, and conduct the Staatskapelle Berlin in its Sommerkonzert. Following the announcement of Edward’s appointment at the Norwegian Opera and Ballet, the 2022/23 season will see him conduct a new production of Verdi’s Un ballo in maschera alongside two concert performances of Berlioz’s Damnation of Faust. He will also conduct the Norwegian National Opera Orchestra in a programme of Dvořák and Rachmaninoff.

Edward Gardner became Principal Conductor of the London Philharmonic Orchestra in September 2021. He is also Chief Conductor of the Bergen Philharmonic, a position he will relinquish at the end of the 2023/24 season. From August 2024 he will undertake the Music Directorship of the Norwegian Opera and Ballet (DNO&B), having commenced the role of Artistic Advisor in February 2022.

This season Edward leads the London Philharmonic Orchestra in celebrating its 90th anniversary with music originally written for the LPO, including Vaughan Williams’s Serenade to Music and Tippett’s A Child of Our Time. He opened the Orchestra’s season in September with Schoenberg’s Gurrelieder, bringing the Orchestra and soloists together with the London Philharmonic Choir and London Symphony Chorus. Future highlights this season include Mahler’s Fifth Symphony, an Elgar symphony cycle, Janáček’s Glagolitic Mass and Berlioz’s Damnation of Faust. He will premiere works by LPO Composer-in-Residence Brett Dean, Vijay Iyer and Agata Zubel, and will tour with the Orchestra throughout the UK and Benelux as well as undertaking an extensive tour of Germany.

Edward opened the LPO’s 2021/22 season with an acclaimed performance of Tippett’s The Midsummer Marriage, released in September 2022 on the LPO Label. In August 2022 he conducted the Orchestra in Elgar’s The Dream of Gerontius at the BBC Proms with the LPC and the Hallé Choir.

Edward opened the Bergen Philharmonic season with Beethoven’s Symphony No. 3 (Eroica); further symphonic highlights include works by Stravinsky, Brahms and Nielsen. Choral projects include Mahler’s

Music Director of English National Opera for eight years (2007–15), Edward has an ongoing relationship with New York’s Metropolitan Opera, where he has conducted productions of The Damnation of Faust, Carmen, Don Giovanni, Der Rosenkavalier and Werther. In London he has future plans with the Royal Opera House, where he made his debut in 2019 in a new production of Káťa Kabanová and returned for Werther the following season. During the 2021/22 season Edward made his debut with Bayerische Staatsoper in a new production of Peter Grimes. Elsewhere, he has conducted at La Scala, Chicago Lyric Opera, Glyndebourne Festival Opera and Opéra National de Paris.

A passionate supporter of young talent, Edward founded the Hallé Youth Orchestra in 2002 and regularly conducts the National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain. He has a close relationship with The Juilliard School of Music, and with the Royal Academy of Music who appointed him their inaugural Sir Charles Mackerras Conducting Chair in 2014.

Born in Gloucester in 1974, Edward was educated at the University of Cambridge and the Royal Academy of Music. He went on to become Assistant Conductor of the Hallé and Music Director of Glyndebourne Touring Opera. His many accolades include being named Royal Philharmonic Society Award Conductor of the Year (2008), an Olivier Award for Outstanding Achievement in Opera (2009) and an OBE for Services to Music in The Queen’s Birthday Honours (2012).

Edward Gardner’s position at the LPO is generously supported by Aud Jebsen.

6 London Philharmonic Orchestra on Marquee TV • 14 January 2023 • The Rite of Spring
© Benjamin Ealovega

Programme notes

Witold Lutosławski 1913–94

Symphony No. 4 1992 I –II

One of the 20th-century’s great symphonists, the Polish composer Witold Lutosławski created an impressive, always progressing body of music in the most difficult of circumstances. As the commander of a military radio station, he was captured by the invading Germans at the beginning of the Second World War. He escaped, and survived the occupation by playing piano duos in Warsaw cafes, including his Variations on a Theme of Paganini. In 1949 his Symphony No. 1 was the first Polish work to be denounced as ‘formalist’ by Stalinist cultural politicians. In reaction, Lutosławski wrote public works based on folk material, while continuing to develop a more personal language privately. In the cultural thaw following Stalin’s death, Lutosławski became a major international figure, renowned for innovations in form and performing techniques and a consistently eloquent personal voice.

In one way or another, a two-part format – preparation, main event – lies at the heart of many of Lutosławski’s later works, including the Second Symphony (whose two movements bear the explicit titles Hesitant and Direct) and the Third (introduction, preparatory first movement, large main movement, third movement comprising lyrical aftermath, brief coda). The Fourth Symphony presents an example that is both clear-cut in its two-movement layout and unprecedentedly subtle in the way in which the two movements relate to one another to create a single, overarching musical experience. Its first movement adopts a favourite ploy for engaging our attention while at the same time frustrating our desire for continuity: alternating two contrasting kinds of music. The first of these, a lyrical melody against a gentle, chordal background, is first exposed by solo clarinet, later by flute and clarinet together. Interposed between statements of this

7 London Philharmonic Orchestra on Marquee TV • 14 January 2023 • The Rite of Spring
‘A big part of everything I do is intuitive … I’ve discovered some rules, but in an empirical way, not thought out as doctrine’
– Witold Lutosławski

Programme notes

unfolding melody are mercurial interludes of faster, less predictable music. On its last appearance the lyrical music is taken up and extended by the strings until it culminates in an abortive attempt at a grand climax.

As promised, just at the moment when we grow impatient with the preparatory first movement, the main second movement arrives. This music unfolds in three stages. The first section, dominated by running semiquaver figures, introduces a grave, cantabile (‘songlike’) theme that will return for later development. The middle section is a sparkling orchestral texture that begins at the top of the orchestra and swells down through the ranks until, heralded by solo trumpet and a trio of trombones, it yields to the third section. Now the cantabile idea heard earlier returns in full force, gaining in urgency until it culminates in a powerful unison statement by the massed strings and brasses. As if there were no way forward from this frankly emotional climax, the music dissolves in dreamlike recollections. A brief, brilliant coda brings the Symphony to a close.

Lutosławski’s Fourth Symphony, commissioned by the Los Angeles Philharmonic with generous support from Betty Freeman, was completed on 22 August 1992; the composer conducted the first performance in Los Angeles on 5 February 1993.

Programme note © Steven Stucky

8 London Philharmonic Orchestra on Marquee TV • 14 January 2023 • The Rite of Spring

Programme notes

Igor Stravinsky 1882–1971

The Rite of Spring 1913

Part I: The Adoration of the Earth Introduction

The Augurs of Spring (Dances of the Young Girls) Ritual of Abduction Spring Rounds

Ritual of the Rival Tribes Dance of the Earth

The Adoration of the Earth Dance of the Earth

Part II: The Sacrifice Introduction

Mystic Circles of the Young Girls Glorification of the Chosen One

The Summoning of the Ancestors Rituals of the Ancestors Sacrificial Dance

It would be difficult to point to one single element of the spectacle that took place at the Théâtre des Champs Elysées in Paris on the evening of 29 May 1913 (the first performance of The Rite of Spring) and say that it caused particular offence – offence enough, for example, to spark a riot. There would have been features of the production, both musical and visual, that shrieked of barbarism and modernity, but it was more the overall combination of sound and staging that provoked a certain faction of the audience into outrage.

A brawl necessitates confrontation though, and there were almost as many present in the audience who supported and enjoyed the technical advances of Igor Stravinsky and his choreographer Vaslav Nikinsky as those who overtly disliked them. Moreover, The Rite of Spring had been preceded by two scores from Stravinsky, The Firebird and Petrushka, which posed similar musical views of Russian peasant culture and folksong – it was a compositional tradition dating back to Rimsky-Korsakov and the Czarist composers. But

9 London Philharmonic Orchestra on Marquee TV • 14 January 2023 • The Rite of Spring

Programme notes

whilst The Firebird and Petrushka remained within reach of tradition, The Rite of Spring seemed, in the words of Stravinsky biographer Percy Young, ‘to tear the whole structure of music apart’.

The narrative of a pagan ritual in which a chosen girl danced herself to death in propitiation of the god of spring was literally dreamt by Stravinsky in 1910 whilst he was at work on Petrushka. After discussion with the Ballet Russes boss Serge Diaghilev and the painter Nicolas Roerich, Stravinsky worked on a scenario and then a score in 1911–12, apparently experiencing many difficulties notating the music. But elements of it came easily to him at the piano, most notably the adjacent chords of E major and E flat major which are the basis of the thick, dissonant chord shot through with irregular, swiping rhythmic emphases that is machined out repeatedly in the ‘Dance of the Young Girls’ (which follows the piercing woodwind tangles of the Introduction). This striking passage summarises some of the musical advances of the piece in microcosm: not only are the conventions of harmonic relationships rendered irrelevant by Stravinsky’s combination of the chords of E and E flat, but the composer creates a soundscape which, whilst driven by a stamping pulse, is also audibly lacking a discernable time signature; there’s no regular rhythmic emphasis from which one can ascertain the division of the music into ‘bars’. Stravinsky had transformed the essentially urban, cultural institution that is ‘the orchestra’ into a primitive, de-humanised being, devoid of any sense of traditional musical sentimentality.

In these stamping rhythms we glimpse something of the barbarism of Nijinsky’s choreography, which was lost in its original notation but reconstructed by the BBC for a television drama in 2006. Nijinsky had his dancers twist their feet inwards and pivot movements from the centre of their bodies (the pelvis) rather than their feet. Their jerking, twisting movements were as vivid, unorthodox and ‘pagan’ as much of Stravinsky’s music, whilst their circular formations carried extra ritual weight.

The dramatic narrative of the ensuing sections is implied by Stravinsky’s titles; ‘The Adoration of the Earth’ concludes with a blazing brass and percussion and a huge orchestral crescendo which builds to silence, whilst ‘The Sacrifice’ begins with slowly undulating winds atop muted strings before a girl is chosen, glorified, and danced to death with a continuous pulse tormented by terrifying orchestral salvos, placed alongside fragmented gasps whose tectonics are shifted by alternate thumps on two timpani.

Throughout The Rite Stravinsky uses distinctive Russian folk themes, often given flight by the equally clear sonorities of woodwinds (which Stravinsky favoured over strings for this purpose due to them being ‘drier, cleaner, less prone to facile expressiveness’). These melodies – or rather melodic fragments rarely longer than a few beats in length – are placed together to create patterns rather than combined in a traditional polyphonic sense to achieve smooth counterpoints. Stravinsky scholar Stephen Walsh has also pointed to the ‘transparency’ of Stravinsky’s dissonance: the ingredients of the chords are discernable, and the rhythmic techniques, described by Stravinsky as ‘lapidary’, bring a similarly natural feel to the sound, ‘the closeness of men to the earth’ for Stravinsky, ‘the community of their lives with the soil’.

Though it unleashed decades of innovation in music, The Rite of Spring is in many ways Stravinsky’s stripping-down of music’s assumed rules and habits; an imagining of a pre-Christian world through prehistoric music that took its rhythm and sound from the earth. More than either youthful rule-breaking or fashion led innovation, The Rite’s sole purpose is the conveying of its subject matter. Unfortunately for Nijinsky and the world of dance, it’s often deemed sufficient a depiction of its narrative in concert form alone, and is almost impossibly demanding of any attached choreography.

10 London Philharmonic Orchestra on Marquee TV • 14 January 2023 • The Rite of Spring
‘Very little immediate tradition lies
VLADIMIR JUROWSKI CONDUCTS STRAVINSKY THE FIREBIRD THE RITE OF SPRING SYMPHONY IN E FLAT VLADIMIR JUROWSKI conductor LPO-0123 | RELEASED JULY 2022 ON THE LPO LABEL ‘It is The Firebird and The Rite that give this disc its heft –the former lush; limpid and sinuous, and the latter a performance thrilling in its violence and intensity.’  The Sunday Times (Classical Album of the Week) Available to buy on CD, and to download or stream via Spotify, Apple Music, Idagio and others. Click here to find out more.

In September 2021, Edward Gardner took to the podium for his first concert as Principal Conductor.

Celebrating 90 years &

In 1961 we were the first British orchestra to tour to Australia.

In 1987, with a commitment to sharing orchestral music with as wide and diverse an audience as possible, we established our Education and Community programme.

“ I fell in love with my husband, 38 years ago, at an LPO concert featuring Tchaikovsky’s 5th Symphony in White Rock, Hastings.”

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“ My first ever LPO concert was in July 1953: The opening Ruslan&Ludmilla overture thrilled me! A fan for life.”

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“ The first time I ever picked up a horn I was 5 years old, attending an LPO Have a Go Session. It’s now my instrument and I’m an LPO Junior Artist.”

LPO Junior Artist 2022/23

In 2021, thrilled to be reunited with live audiences, we gave London’s first performance of Tippett’s The Midsummer Marriage in 17 years.

We were the first orchestra to perform at Glyndebourne Festival Opera in 1964.

2011 saw us record the national anthems for the London 2012 Olympic Games!

In 2016 LPO Junior Artists was launched, a programme offering young musicians from under-represented backgrounds a pathway into the music profession.

Formed with a bold purpose: to rival the greatest orchestras in the world, this year the London Philharmonic Orchestra celebrates its 90th birthday.
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13 London Philharmonic Orchestra on Marquee TV • 14 January 2023 • The Rite of Spring
A place to call home
Where music takes you Book now Book online lpo.org.uk Ticket Office 020 7840 4242
2022/23 concert season at the Southbank Centre’s Royal Festival Hall

Sound Futures donors

We are grateful to the following donors for their generous contributions to our Sound Futures campaign. Thanks to their support, we successfully raised £1 million by 30 April 2015 which has now been matched pound for pound by Arts Council England through a Catalyst Endowment grant. This has enabled us to create a £2 million endowment fund supporting special artistic projects, creative programming and education work with key venue partners including our Southbank Centre home. Supporters listed below donated £500 or over. For a full list of those who have given to this campaign please visit lpo.org.uk/soundfutures

Masur Circle

Arts Council England

Dunard Fund

Victoria Robey OBE

Emmanuel & Barrie Roman

The Underwood Trust

Welser-Möst Circle

William & Alex de Winton

John Ireland Charitable Trust

The Tsukanov Family Foundation Neil Westreich

Tennstedt Circle

Valentina & Dmitry Aksenov

Richard Buxton

The Candide Trust

Michael & Elena Kroupeev

Kirby Laing Foundation

Mr & Mrs Makharinsky

Alexey & Anastasia Reznikovich

Sir Simon Robey

Bianca & Stuart Roden

Simon & Vero Turner

The late Mr K Twyman

Solti Patrons

Ageas

John & Manon Antoniazzi

Gabor Beyer, through BTO Management Consulting AG

Jon Claydon

Mrs Mina Goodman & Miss Suzanne Goodman

Roddy & April Gow

The Jeniffer & Jonathan Harris

Charitable Trust

Mr James R.D. Korner

Christoph Ladanyi & Dr Sophia Ladanyi-Czernin

Robert Markwick & Kasia Robinski

The Maurice Marks Charitable Trust

Mr Paris Natar

The Rothschild Foundation

Tom & Phillis Sharpe

The Viney Family

Haitink Patrons

Mark & Elizabeth Adams

Dr Christopher Aldren

Mrs Pauline Baumgartner

Lady Jane Berrill

Mr Frederick Brittenden

David & Yi Yao Buckley

Mr Clive Butler Gill & Garf Collins

Mr John H Cook

Mr Alistair Corbett

Bruno De Kegel

Georgy Djaparidze

David Ellen

Christopher Fraser OBE

David & Victoria Graham Fuller Goldman Sachs International

Mr Gavin Graham Moya Greene

Mrs Dorothy Hambleton Tony & Susie Hayes

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Catherine Høgel & Ben Mardle Mrs Philip Kan Rehmet Kassim-Lakha de Morixe Rose & Dudley Leigh Lady Roslyn Marion Lyons

Miss Jeanette Martin

Duncan Matthews KC

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Charitable Trust

Dr Karen Morton

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The Reed Foundation

The Rind Foundation

Sir Bernard Rix

David Ross & Line Forestier (Canada)

Carolina & Martin Schwab

Dr Brian Smith

Lady Valerie Solti

Mr & Mrs G Stein

Dr Peter Stephenson Miss Anne Stoddart

TFS Loans Limited

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Pritchard Donors

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Peter Mace

Mr & Mrs David Malpas

Dr David McGibney

Michael & Patricia McLaren-Turner

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Charitable Trust

Timothy Walker CBE AM

Christopher Williams

Peter Wilson Smith

Mr Anthony Yolland

and all other donors who wish to remain anonymous

15 London Philharmonic Orchestra on Marquee TV • 14 January 2023 • The Rite of Spring

Thank you

We are extremely grateful to all donors who have given generously to the LPO over the past year. Your generosity helps maintain the breadth and depth of the LPO’s activities, as well as supporting the Orchestra both on and off the concert platform.

Artistic Director’s Circle

Anonymous donors

Mrs Aline Foriel-Destezet

Aud Jebsen

In memory of Mrs Rita Reay

Sir Simon & Lady Robey OBE

Orchestra Circle

William & Alex de Winton

Patricia Haitink

Mr & Mrs Philip Kan

Neil Westreich

The American Friends of the London Philharmonic Orchestra

Principal Associates

Richard Buxton

Gill & Garf Collins

In memory of Brenda Lyndoe

Casbon

In memory of Ann Marguerite Collins

Sally Groves MBE

George Ramishvili

Associates

Mrs Irina Andreeva

In memory of Len & Edna Beech

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The Candide Trust

Irina Gofman & Mr Rodrik V. G. Cave

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Countess Dominique Loredan

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An anonymous donor

Chris Aldren

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In memory of Allner Mavis

Channing

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The Jeniffer & Jonathan Harris

Charitable Trust

Catherine Høgel & Ben Mardle

Sir George Iacobescu

Jamie & Julia Korner

Mr & Mrs Makharinsky

Mr Nikita Mishin

Andrew Neill

Tom & Phillis Sharpe

Mr & Mrs John & Susi Underwood

Laurence Watt Grenville & Krysia Williams

Bronze Patrons

Anonymous donors

Michael Allen

Mr Mark Astaire

Nicholas & Christine Beale

Mikhail Noskov & Vasilina Bindley

Mr Anthony Blaiklock

Lorna & Christopher Bown

Mr Bernard Bradbury

Simon Burke & Rupert King

Desmond & Ruth Cecil

Mr Evgeny Chichvarkin

Mr John H Cook

Georgy Djaparidze

Deborah Dolce

Cameron & Kathryn Doley

Mariana Eidelkind & Gene

Moldavsky

David Ellen Ben Fairhall

Mr Richard & Helen Gillingwater

Mr Daniel Goldstein David & Jane Gosman

Mr Gavin Graham Lord & Lady Hall

Mrs Dorothy Hambleton Martin & Katherine Hattrell

Michael & Christine Henry

Mr Steve Holliday

J Douglas Home

Mr & Mrs Ralph Kanza

Mrs Elena & Mr Oleg Kolobov

Rose & Dudley Leigh

Wg. Cdr. & Mrs M T Liddiard OBE

JP RAF

Drs Frank & Gek Lim

Mr Nicholas Little

Geoff & Meg Mann

Mrs Elizabeth Meshkvicheva

Andrew T Mills

Peter & Lucy Noble

Mr Roger Phillimore

Mr Michael Posen

Mr Anthony Salz

Ms Nadia Stasyuk

Charlotte Stevenson Joe Topley Mr & Mrs John C Tucker

Timothy Walker CBE AM Jenny Watson CBE Grenville & Krysia Williams

Principal Supporters

Anonymous donors

Dr Manon Antoniazzi

Julian & Annette Armstrong

Mr John D Barnard

Mr Geoffrey Bateman

Mr Philip Bathard-Smith

Mrs A Beare

Dr Anthony Buckland

Dr Simona Cicero & Mr Mario Altieri

Mr Peter Coe

Mrs Pearl Cohen

David & Liz Conway

Mr Alistair Corbett

Ms Mary Anne Cordeiro

Ms Elena Dubinets

Mr Richard Fernyhough

Jason George

Mr Christian Grobel

Prof Emeritus John Gruzelier

Mark & Sarah Holford

Mrs Maureen Hooft-Graafland

Per Jonsson

Mr Ian Kapur

Ms Kim J Koch

Ms Elena Lojevsky

Mrs Terry Neale

John Nickson & Simon Rew

Oliver & Josie Ogg

Ms Olga Ovenden

Mr James Pickford

Filippo Poli

Sir Bernard Rix

Mr Robert Ross Priscylla Shaw

Martin & Cheryl Southgate

Mr & Mrs G Stein

Dr Peter Stephenson

Joanna Williams

Christopher Williams

Ms Elena Ziskind

Supporters

Anonymous donors

Ralph & Elizabeth Aldwinckle

Mr & Mrs Robert Auerbach

Mrs Julia Beine

Harvey Bengen

Miss YolanDa Brown

Miss Yousun Chae

Mr Julien Chilcott-Monk

Alison Clarke & Leo Pilkington

Mr Joshua Coger

Miss Tessa Cowie

Mr David Devons

Patricia Dreyfus

Mr Martin Fodder

Christopher Fraser OBE

Will Gold

Ray Harsant

Mr Peter Imhof

The Jackman Family

Mr David MacFarlane

Dame Jane Newell DBE

Mr Stephen Olton

Mari Payne

Mr David Peters

Ms Edwina Pitman

Mr & Mrs Graham & Jean Pugh

Mr Giles Quarme

Mr Kenneth Shaw

Mr Brian Smith

Ms Rika Suzuki

Tony & Hilary Vines

Dr June Wakefield

Mr John Weekes

Mr C D Yates

Hon. Benefactor

Elliott Bernerd

Hon. Life Members

Alfonso Aijón

Kenneth Goode

Carol Colburn Grigor CBE

Pehr G Gyllenhammar

Robert Hill

Victoria Robey OBE

Mrs Jackie Rosenfeld OBE

Timothy Walker CBE AM

Laurence Watt

16 London Philharmonic Orchestra on Marquee TV • 14 January 2023 • The Rite of Spring

Thank you

Thomas Beecham Group Members

David & Yi Buckley

Gill & Garf Collins

William & Alex de Winton

Sonja Drexler

The Friends of the LPO

Irina Gofman

Roger Greenwood

Dr Barry Grimaldi

Mr & Mrs Philip Kan

John & Angela Kessler

Countess Dominique Loredan

Sir Simon Robey

Victoria Robey OBE

Bianca & Stuart Roden

Caroline, Jamie & Zander Sharp

Julian & Gill Simmonds

Eric Tomsett

Neil Westreich Guy & Utti Whittaker

Corporate Donor

Barclays

LPO Corporate Circle

Principal Bloomberg Carter-Ruck French Chamber of Commerce Tutti Lazard Walpole Trialist Sciteb

Preferred Partners

Gusbourne Estate

Jeroboams

Lindt & Sprüngli Ltd

OneWelbeck Steinway

In-kind Sponsor

Google Inc

Trusts and Foundations

ABO Trust

BlueSpark Foundation

The Boltini Trust

Borrows Charitable Trust

The Candide Trust

Cockayne – Grants for the Arts

The London Community Foundation

The D’Oyly Carte Charitable Trust

Dunard Fund

Ernst von Siemens Music Foundation

Foyle Foundation

Garrick Charitable Trust

John Horniman’s Children’s Trust

John Thaw Foundation

Institute Adam Mickiewicz

Kirby Laing Foundation

The Marchus Trust

The Radcliffe Trust

Rivers Foundation

Rothschild Foundation Scops Arts Trust

Sir William Boremans' Foundation

The John S Cohen Foundation

The Stanley Picker Trust

The Thriplow Charitable Trust

Vaughan Williams Foundation

The Victoria Wood Foundation

The Viney Family

The Barbara Whatmore Charitable Trust

and all others who wish to remain anonymous.

Board of the American Friends of the LPO

We are grateful to the Board of the American Friends of the London Philharmonic Orchestra, who assist with fundraising for our activities in the United States of America:

Simon Freakley Chairman

Kara Boyle

Jon Carter

Jay Goffman

Alexandra Jupin

Natalie Pray

Damien Vanderwilt

Marc Wasserman

Elizabeth Winter

Catherine Høgel Hon. Director Jenifer L. Keiser, CPA, EisnerAmper LLP

LPO International Board of Governors

Natasha Tsukanova Co-Chair

Martin Höhmann Co-Chair

Mrs Irina Andreeva

Steven M. Berzin

Veronika Borovik-Khilchevskaya

Marie-Laure Favre Gilly de Varennes de Bueil Aline Foriel-Destezet Irina Gofman

Countess Dominique Loredan

Olivia Ma

George Ramishvili

Sophie Schÿler-Thierry Jay Stein

17 London Philharmonic Orchestra on Marquee TV • 14 January 2023 • The Rite of Spring

London Philharmonic Orchestra Administration

Board of Directors

Dr Catherine C. Høgel Chair

Lord Hall of Birkenhead CBE Vice-Chair

Martin Höhmann* President

Mark Vines* Vice-President

Kate Birchall*

David Buckley

David Burke

Bruno De Kegel

Deborah Dolce

Elena Dubinets

Tanya Joseph

Hugh Kluger*

Katherine Leek*

Al MacCuish

Minn Majoe*

Tania Mazzetti*

Jamie Njoku-Goodwin

Andrew Tusa

Neil Westreich

Simon Freakley (Ex officio –Chairman of the American Friends of the London Philharmonic Orchestra)

*Player-Director

Advisory Council

Martin Höhmann Chairman

Christopher Aldren

Dr Manon Antoniazzi

Roger Barron

Richard Brass

Helen Brocklebank

YolanDa Brown

Simon Burke

Simon Callow CBE

Desmond Cecil CMG

Sir Alan Collins KCVO CMG

Andrew Davenport

Guillaume Descottes

Cameron Doley

Christopher Fraser OBE

Jenny Goldie-Scot

Jonathan Harris CBE FRICS

Marianna Hay MBE

Nicholas Hely-Hutchinson DL

Amanda Hill

Rehmet Kassim-Lakha

Jamie Korner

Geoff Mann

Clive Marks OBE FCA

Stewart McIlwham

Andrew Neill

Nadya Powell

Sir Bernard Rix

Victoria Robey OBE

Baroness Shackleton

Thomas Sharpe KC

Julian Simmonds

Nicholas Snowman OBE

Barry Smith Martin Southgate Chris Viney Laurence Watt Elizabeth Winter

General Administration

Elena Dubinets Artistic Director

David Burke Chief Executive Chantelle Vircavs PA to the Executive

Concert Management

Roanna Gibson Concerts and Planning Director

Graham Wood Concerts and Recordings Manager

Madeleine Ridout Glyndebourne and Projects Manager

Maddy Clarke Tours Manager

Alison Jones Concerts and Recordings Co-ordinator

Robert Winup Concerts and Tours Assistant

Matthew Freeman Recordings Consultant

Andrew Chenery Orchestra Personnel Manager

Sarah Thomas Martin Sargeson Librarians

Laura Kitson Stage and Operations Manager

Stephen O’Flaherty Deputy Operations Manager Felix Lo Orchestra and Auditions Manager

Finance

Frances Slack Finance Director

Dayse Guilherme Finance Manager

Jean-Paul Ramotar Finance and IT Officer

Education and Community Talia Lash Education and Community Director

Lowri Davies Hannah Foakes Education and Community Project Managers

Hannah Smith Education and Community Co-ordinator

Development

Laura Willis Development Director Rosie Morden Individual Giving Manager

Siân Jenkins Corporate Relations Manager

Anna Quillin Trusts and Foundations Manager

Katurah Morrish Development Events Manager

Eleanor Conroy Al Levin

Development Assistants Nick Jackman Campaigns and Projects Director

Kirstin Peltonen Development Associate

Marketing

Kath Trout Marketing and Communications Director

Sophie Harvey Marketing Manager

Rachel Williams Publications Manager Harrie Mayhew Website Manager

Gavin Miller Sales and Ticketing Manager

Ruth Haines Press and PR Manager

Greg Felton Digital Creative Hayley Kim Marketing Co-ordinator

Alicia Hartley Marketing Assistant

Archives Philip Stuart Discographer

Gillian Pole Recordings Archive

Professional Services

Charles Russell Speechlys Solicitors

Crowe Clark Whitehill LLP Auditors

Dr Barry Grimaldi Honorary Doctor

Mr Chris Aldren Honorary ENT Surgeon Mr Simon Owen-Johnstone Hon. Orthopaedic Surgeon

London Philharmonic Orchestra

89 Albert Embankment

London SE1 7TP

Tel: 020 7840 4200 Box Office: 020 7840 4242 Email: admin@lpo.org.uk lpo.org.uk

Cover photo Silent Studio © James Wicks

18 London Philharmonic Orchestra on Marquee TV • 14 January 2023 • The Rite of Spring
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