SCHUMANN & TCHAIKOVSKY
13–17 JUNE
Arts Centre Melbourne, Hamer Hall
ARTISTS
Melbourne Symphony Orchestra
Anja Bihlmaier conductor
Alexander Melnikov piano
PROGRAM
R. SCHUMANN Manfred: Overture [12']
R. SCHUMANN Piano Concerto* [31']
– Interval –
TCHAIKOVSKY Symphony No.6 Pathétique [45']
Our musical Acknowledgment of Country, Long Time Living Here by Deborah Cheetham Fraillon AO, will be performed at these concerts.
*This piece will only be performed on June 13–15.
ENHANCE YOUR EXPERIENCE
13–15 June: Pre-concert talks
Want to learn more about the music being performed? Arrive early for an informative and entertaining pre-concert talk with ABC Classic’s Taj Aldeeb.
Thursday 13 June at 6.45pm
Saturday 15 June at 1.15pm
Stalls Foyer on Level 2, Hamer Hall
17 June: Quick Fix at Half Six
Stalls Foyer on Level 2, Hamer Hall
Pre-concert wine tasting at 5.30pm
Arrive early for a wine tasting courtesy of TarraWarra Estate, free for ticket holders.
Post-concert conversation at 7.45pm
Stay on for a post-concert conversation with MSO Head of Artistic Planning Katharine Bartholomeusz-Plows and conductor Anja Bihlmaier.
These concerts may be recorded for future broadcast on MSO.LIVE
Duration
13 & 15 June: 2 hours including interval. 17 June: 1 hour, no interval.
In consideration of your fellow patrons, the MSO thanks you for silencing and dimming the light on your phone.
ACKNOWLEDGING COUNTRY
In the first project of its kind in Australia, the MSO has developed a musical Acknowledgment of Country with music composed by Yorta Yorta composer Deborah Cheetham Fraillon AO, featuring Indigenous languages from across Victoria. Generously supported by Helen Macpherson Smith Trust and the Commonwealth Government through the Australian National Commission for UNESCO, the MSO is working in partnership with Short Black Opera and Indigenous language custodians who are generously sharing their cultural knowledge.
The Acknowledgement of Country allows us to pay our respects to the traditional owners of the land on which we perform in the language of that country and in the orchestral language of music.
Long Time Living Here
As a Yorta Yorta/Yuin composer the responsibility I carry to assist the MSO in delivering a respectful acknowledgement of country is a privilege which I take very seriously. I have a duty of care to my ancestors and to the ancestors on whose land the MSO works and performs.
As MSO continues to grow its knowledge and understanding of what it means to truly honour the First people of this land, the musical acknowledgment of country will serve to bring those on stage and those in the audience together in a moment of recognition as as we celebrate the longest continuing cultures in the world.
– Deborah Cheetham FraillonAO
MELBOURNE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Committed to shaping and serving the state it inhabits, the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra is Australia’s preeminent orchestra and a cornerstone of Victoria’s rich, cultural heritage.
Each year, the MSO and MSO Chorus present more than 180 public events across live performances, TV, radio and online broadcasts, and via its online concert hall, MSO.LIVE, engaging an audience of more than five million people in 56 countries. In 2024 the organisation will release its first two albums on the newly established MSO recording label.
With an international reputation for excellence, versatility and innovation, the MSO works with culturally diverse and First Nations artists to build community and deliver music to people across Melbourne, the state of Victoria and around the world.
In 2024, Jaime Martín leads the Orchestra for his third year as MSO Chief Conductor. Maestro Martín leads an Artistic Family that includes Principal Conductor Benjamin Northey, Cybec Assistant Conductor Leonard Weiss, MSO Chorus Director Warren Trevelyan-Jones, Composer in Residence Katy Abbott, Artist in Residence Erin Helyard, MSO First Nations Creative Chair Deborah Cheetham Fraillon AO, Young Cybec Young Composer in Residence Naomi Dodd, and Artist in Association Christian Li.
The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra respectfully acknowledges the people of the Eastern Kulin Nations, on whose un‑ceded lands we honour the continuation of the oldest music practice in the world.
MUSICIANS PERFORMING IN THIS CONCERT
FIRST VIOLINS
Tair Khisambeev
Acting Associate Concertmaster
Di Jameson OAM and Frank Mercurio#
Anne-Marie Johnson
Acting Assistant Concertmaster
David Horowicz#
Peter Edwards
Assistant Principal
Margaret Billson and the late Ted Billson#
Sarah Curro
Dr Harry Imber#
Peter Fellin
Karla Hanna
Lorraine Hook
Mark Mogilevski
Michelle Ruffolo
Anna Skalova
Kathryn Taylor
Juliette Boirayon*
Clare Carrick*
Michael Loftus-Hills*
Oksana Thompson*
SECOND VIOLINS
Matthew Tomkins
Principal
The Gross Foundation#
Mary Allison
Freya Franzen
Cong Gu
Newton Family in memory of Rae Rothfield#
Andrew Hall
Robert Macindoe
Isy Wasserman
Philippa West
Andrew Dudgeon AM#
Patrick Wong
Roger Young
Shane Buggle and Rosie Callanan#
Jacqueline Edwards*
Jos Jonker*
Lynette Rayner*
VIOLAS
Christopher Moore
Principal
Di Jameson OAM and Frank Mercurio#
Anthony Chataway
William Clark
Gabrielle Halloran
Jenny Khafagi
Fiona Sargeant
Karen Columbine*
Ceridwen Davies*
Aidan Filshie*
Lucas Levin*
Isabel Morse*
CELLOS
David Berlin
Principal
Rachael Tobin
Associate Principal Anonymous#
Rohan de Korte
Andrew Dudgeon AM#
Alexandra Partridge
Rebecca Proietto
Peter T Kempen AM#
Angela Sargeant
Caleb Wong
Michelle Wood
Andrew and Judy Rogers#
Anna Pokorny*
DOUBLE BASSES
Jonathon Coco
Principal
Stephen Newton
Acting Associate Principal
Sophie Galaise and Clarence Fraser#
Rohan Dasika
Acting Assistant Principal
Benjamin Hanlon
Di Jameson OAM and Frank Mercurio#
Caitlin Bass*
Vivian Qu Siyuan*
Emma Sullivan*
Correct as of 3 June 2024.
Learn more about our musicians on the MSO website
FLUTES
Prudence Davis Principal Anonymous#
Wendy Clarke Associate Principal
Sarah Beggs
PICCOLO
Andrew Macleod Principal
OBOES
Michael Pisani Acting Associate Principal
Ann Blackburn
CLARINETS
Philip Arkinstall Associate Principal
Craig Hill
Rosemary and the late Douglas Meagher#
BASS CLARINET
Jon Craven Principal
BASSOONS
Elise Millman Associate Principal
Natasha Thomas
Patricia Nilsson#
CONTRABASSOON
Brock Imison Principal
HORNS
Saul Lewis Principal Third
The late Hon Michael Watt KC and Cecilie Hall#
Abbey Edlin
The Hanlon Foundation#
Josiah Kop
Rachel Shaw
Professor Gary McPherson#
Ian Wildsmith*
TRUMPETS
Owen Morris Principal
Rosie Turner
John and Diana Frew#
TROMBONES
Richard Shirley
Mike Szabo Principal Bass Trombone
TUBA
Timothy Buzbee Principal
TIMPANI
Matthew Thomas Principal
PERCUSSION
Shaun Trubiano Principal
John Arcaro
Tim and Lyn Edward#
* Denotes Guest Musician
^ Denotes MSO Academy
° Denotes Contract Musician
# Position supported by
ANJA BIHLMAIER CONDUCTOR
Anja Bihlmaier’s musical intuition, inspiring charisma and ability to combine passion with precision have made her one of the leading conductors of her generation. She has been Chief Conductor of the Residentie Orkest since August 2021.
In 2023/24 she debuts with the London Philharmonic, Frankfurt Radio Symphony, Hamburg Staatsorchester (including two concerts at the Elbphilharmonie), Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie Bremen, Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Orchestre National du Capitole de Toulouse, Bergen Philharmonic, Sydney Symphony and Melbourne Symphony orchestras, and returns to the Salzburg Camerata in her debut at the Mozartwoche. In Summer 2023 she made her first BBC Proms appearance (with the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra).
In a wide-ranging repertoire that includes Haydn, Mahler, Strauss, B.A. Zimmermann to Sibelius, Bartók, Dvořák, Shostakovich, Debussy, Britten, Galina Ustvolskaya and Unsuk Chin, Bihlmaier has recently conducted the SWR Symphony, BBC Symphony, City of Birmingham Symphony, Spanish National, Barcelona Symphony, Finnish Radio Symphony, Danish National, Swedish Radio Symphony and Royal Stockholm Philharmonic orchestras, returning to many of these in the coming months.
A passionate opera conductor, Bihlmaier gained many years of experience through positions at the Hanover State Opera, the Chemnitz Theatre and the Kassel State Theatre. More recently she conducted Gounod Faust at Trondheim Opera, Britten A Midsummer Night’s Dream at Malmö Opera and several productions at the Vienna Volksoper, including Henry Mason’s acclaimed production of The Magic Flute in 2020/21. In February 2023 she conducted Wagner Der Fliegende Holländer in Tampere and in September Verdi La traviata at the Norske Opera in Oslo.
After studying at the Freiburg Hochschule für Musik with Scott Sandmeier, Bihlmaier was awarded a scholarship at the Salzburg Mozarteum and deepened her knowledge with Dennis Russell Davies and Jorge Rotter. She was subsequently accepted into the Deutsche Dirigentenforum and received a scholarship from the Brahmsgesellschaft Baden-Baden.
ALEXANDER MELNIKOV PIANO
Alexander Melnikov studied at the Moscow Conservatory under Lev Naumov and was musically inspired by Svjatoslav Richter. He was awarded prizes at eminent competitions such as the International Robert Schumann Competition in Zwickau and the Concours Musical Reine Elisabeth in Brussels.
As a soloist, Alexander Melnikov has performed with orchestras including the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Gewandhausorchester Leipzig, Philadelphia Orchestra, NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchester, Frankfurt Radio Symphony, Münchner Philharmoniker, Rotterdam Philharmonic and BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, under conductors such as Mikhail Pletnev, Charles Dutoit, Paavo Järvi and Vladimir Jurowski.
An essential part of Melnikov’s work is intensive chamber music collaboration with partners such as Isabelle Faust, Antoine Tamestit and Jean-Guihen Queyras. He has made various award-winning recordings as a chamber musician and soloist. His latest album Fantasie – Seven Composers Seven Keyboards in which he plays the pieces on the instruments of the time was recorded in 2023.
Highlights of the 2023/24 season are Alexander Melnikov’s concert tour to Australia and New Zealand, his residency at the Kölner Philharmonie, concerts with orchestras such as the Bayerisches Staatsorchester, the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra, the London Philharmonic Orchestra, or the Mahler Chamber Orchestra.
In addition to numerous chamber music concerts he will complete his season with solo concerts at the Berliner Philharmonie, Toppan Hall in Tokyo, Wigmore Hall, or Amsterdam’s Muziekgebouw.
Known for his often unusual musical and programmatic decisions, Alexander Melnikov developed his career-long interest in historically informed performance practice early on. As such, he is artistic partner of the B’Rock Ensemble and often collaborates with groups such as the Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin or the orchestra of the 18th Century.
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Guests of Note DINNER SERIES
We warmly invite you to share an intimate evening of conversation, fine food, wine – and of course music! – with some of the biggest superstars from our 2024 Season. Best of all, every ticket raises funds to support the Orchestra’s core artistic program – helping the MSO continue presenting the best artists, thrilling repertoire, and worldclass orchestral performances.
COMING UP
An evening with Jaime Martín & William Barton
Saturday 6 July 2024
An evening with Roderick Williams & Siobhan Stagg
Friday 30 August 2024
For more information and to book your ticket, please scan the QR code or email MSO Philanthropy team at philanthropy@mso.com.au
PROGRAM NOTES
ROBERT SCHUMANN (1810–1856)Manfred: Overture, Op.115
The conductor Felix Weingartner, writing more than a hundred years ago, singled out the Manfred Overture as Schumann’s ‘only piece of orchestral music which can be compared with what he wrote for the piano’. Nowadays Manfred still stands out, even for its treatment of the orchestra, usually considered Schumann’s weakest point. Committed to the idea of the overture as a tone poem, Schumann composed this overture first, in Dresden, following it later in the same year, 1848, with incidental music for Byron’s 1817 dramatic poem. The overture itself was a concentrated response to Byron’s reclusive hero living high in the Swiss Alps, ‘some kind of a magician, who is dominated by a species of remorse, the cause of which is left half-explained.’ Manfred’s sin concerns his sister Astarte, and Byron may have been portraying himself and his sexual liaison with his half-sister Augusta Leigh.
What particularly appealed to Schumann was Manfred’s characteristic guilt and remorse, pushing him to the edge of madness. Schumann himself was tormented by fears of mental illness—all too justifiably, as it turned out. In the overture he was interested in the poem’s psychological issues. There is a kind of mania in the way in which Schumann’s main themes are assembled from juggled and repeated short motifs. Some contrast comes in a group of more lyrical ‘second subject’ themes. (The one with wide intervals reappears in the Requiem Schumann placed at the end of his incidental music, suggesting a hope
for redemption for Manfred.) But these themes add to the sense of yearning and Romantic alienation with which Schumann identified.
The Manfred Overture is in sonata form with a slow introduction. It was daring of Schumann to end quietly, in keeping with Romantic pessimism. In Byron, Manfred dies fearless and unrepentant.
David Garrett © 2005
ROBERT SCHUMANN
Piano Concerto in A minor, Op.54
I. Allegro affettuoso
II. Intermezzo (Andantino grazioso) –
III. Allegro vivace
Alexander Melnikov piano
Following their wedding in September 1840, composer Robert Schumann and Clara Wieck, a prominent piano virtuoso, set up house in Leipzig. The couple soon had children, and finding money to support a growing family was a constant worry. Clara had no intention of abandoning her successful musical life. She took pride in earning money from her performances; she also helped popularise Robert’s piano works by including them in her concert programs. Robert revered his wife’s extraordinary musicianship, but his pride struggled with the greater fame accorded Clara, especially when they travelled on concert tours together. Though a respected music journalist and an acclaimed composer of piano works, songs and chamber music, he had yet to write the symphonies and large-scale works that would later enhance his artistic reputation.
A piano concerto by Robert that Clara could perform would thus serve several purposes. Before marrying, Robert had experimented with various ideas for piano concertos, none of which evolved beyond sketches. But during
the newlyweds’ first year, he completed a Phantasie for Piano and Orchestra, conceived and orchestrated during 16 days in May 1841. A private performance led to the first of several revisions, but Robert could not find a publisher for his single-movement work.
He set it aside for four years, during which time he wrote more chamber music (including his popular Piano Quintet and Piano Quartet) as well as the Spring Symphony, and moved his family to Dresden. From there he undertook a tour to Russia with Clara that left him exhausted and ill, triggering a severe nervous breakdown. He sought therapy by studying the works of Bach and writing fugues. Taking a break from counterpoint exercises, he added two movements—a final rondo and a connecting Intermezzo—to the reworked Phantasie, and thus created his Concerto for Piano and Orchestra.
Ferdinand Hiller, a conductor to whom Robert dedicated the concerto (hoping to heal a rift in their friendship), led the premiere in his Dresden subscription concert of 4 December 1845 with Clara as soloist. But the true dedicatee is Clara, for whom Robert characterised his devotion in the opening movement’s tempo indication of Allegro affettuoso, the Phantasie’s original title. Clara took pleasure in the results; she had long wanted a more brilliant vehicle for display of her virtuosity than the Phantasie. Felix Mendelssohn, the Schumanns’ great friend, who expressed highest regard for Clara’s playing and supported (with occasional private misgivings) Schumann’s work as a composer, organised and conducted the Leipzig premiere on New Year’s Day 1846. Thereafter, the concerto was performed in important cities, often with Robert conducting; it remained a central work in Clara’s repertoire, and is a lasting testament to the couple’s remarkable personal and artistic
partnership, cut short by Robert’s death at age 46 in the Endenich asylum, where he recalled, in a letter to Clara, the concerto ‘that you played so splendidly’.
With an abrupt, chromatic cascade of chords, the soloist’s opening entrance commands immediate attention, heralding the oboe’s statement of the primary theme, echoed by the piano. The theme’s three-note descending motif dominates deliberations between the orchestra and soloist. The opening key of A minor yields, via the second theme, to triumphant C major, then to an expressive reverie in A flat major, showcasing the piano accompanied by radiant strings and plaintive woodwind. A return to earlier debates interrupts this dream, restores the opening theme and launches the soloist into an extended cadenza, capped by a quick coda that ends emphatically.
The second-movement Intermezzo (Andantino grazioso), hosts a more congenial but equally passionate dialogue. Short musical ideas are exchanged politely between soloist and orchestra, but as they warm to their topic, an eloquent contrasting theme sings out richly from the cellos, ornamented expansively by the piano. As the conversation fades, clarinets and bassoons recall the opening movement’s three-note motif, first in A minor, then in A major. Without pause, the piano seizes the major motif and launches into a robust, triple-metre rondo marked Allegro vivace, driven by the soloist’s extensive bravura passagework. The third-movement theme (itself a transformation of the primary firstmovement theme, subtly strengthening the concerto’s structural unity) surfaces buoyantly through harmonic sequences that build to an exhilarating conclusion.
Samuel C. Dixon © 2003
PYOTR ILYICH TCHAIKOVSKY
(1840–1893)
Symphony No.6 in B minor, Op.74 Pathétique
I. Adagio – Allegro non troppo
II. Allegro con grazia
III. Allegro molto vivace
IV. Finale (Adagio lamentoso –Andante)
The original audience for the Sixth Symphony was uncomprehending and ambivalent. Tchaikovsky had expected this, writing to his nephew and the dedicatee, ‘Bob’ Davidov, that he wouldn’t be surprised if the symphony were ‘torn to pieces’, even though he considered it his best and most sincere work. The critic Hermann Laroche suggested that audiences who ‘did not get to the core’ of the symphony would ‘in the end, come to love it.’ As it turned out, it took them only 12 days. In the intervening period its composer had died, and for the second performance, in a memorial concert, it was promoted with the composer’s subtitle: Pathétique (or Pateticheskaia Simfoniia—‘impassioned symphony’—as he had conceived it in Russian). The symphony was declared a masterpiece.
The myth of the-Pathétique-as-suicidenote (not to mention Tchaikovsky’s ‘suicide’ itself) has been more or less debunked in the past two decades. There are no grounds for doubting that Tchaikovsky died from post-choleric complications; the theory that his old classmates decided in a ‘court of honour’ that he should commit suicide to avoid disgrace has been undermined; and his social, financial and artistic situation all speak against any other motivation for suicide, even if he continued to be troubled by his homosexuality.
The Sixth Symphony, specifically, seems to have been a source of immense pride, satisfaction and joy to him. And shortly
after its premiere he’s reported to have said ‘I feel I shall live a long time’.
He was wrong. His audience, now in mourning and seeking ‘portents’, immediately heard the Sixth Symphony (the Pathétique) in a new way. New significance was given to the appearance in the first movement of an Orthodox burial chant, ‘Repose the Soul’—a hymn sung only when someone has died—and to the otherworldly, dying character of the adagio finale.
Even if the symphony is not a suicide note, there is a programmatic and semi-autobiographical underpinning to the symphony that is the source of its unusual form and turbulent emotions. Tchaikovsky admitted the existence of a program but was cagey about the details, perhaps because it reflected his romantic feelings for Davidov. The closest we have is a sketched scenario, devised originally for an abandoned symphony in E flat but appearing to correspond with much of the Sixth Symphony:
Following is essence of plan for a symphony Life! First movement—all impulse, confidence, thirst for activity. Must be short (Finale death—result of collapse). Second movement love; third disappointment; fourth ends with a dying away (also short).
There are aspects of this program and the Sixth Symphony that suggest suffering, but for Tchaikovsky the composition of the symphony was a cathartic experience rather than an expression of current sufferings. He himself wrote: ‘Anyone who believes that the creative person is capable of expressing what he feels out of a momentary effect aided by the means of art is mistaken. Melancholy as well as joyous feelings can always be expressive only out of the Retrospective.’
In its art this is Tchaikovsky’s most innovative symphony. He dares to conclude with a brooding slow movement and uses boldly dramatic
gestures to give the music its emotional impulse. The ‘limping’ elegance of the second-movement waltz would have been less surprising, to Russians at least—its five-beat metre was a part of a tradition that was embraced by Borodin, Rimsky-Korsakov and Mussorgsky (in his Pictures at an Exhibition), and later Rachmaninov (in The Isle of the Dead ).
In the Sixth Symphony Tchaikovsky comes to terms with his professed inadequacies in structural matters. His solution in the first movement was to extend the exposition section, so well suited to his melodic gifts, and to compress the development section in which he felt his skills inadequate. The music begins in the depths with the dark colour of the bassoon and yet somehow Tchaikovsky sustains a downward trajectory, or the impression of one, for the whole work.
In the third movement the idea of ‘disappointment’ is replaced by something more malevolent. In purely musical terms it conflates two musical figures—feverish tarantella triplets and a spiky march—but the juxtapositions and incursions into each other’s thematic territory create a disturbing sense of antagonism. The movement’s applause-provoking conclusion could be triumphant, or it could be the crash of self-delusion.
The finale may not fit the formula established by Tchaikovsky’s classical predecessors, but within the emotional journey of the symphony its stark sense of tragedy provides an inevitable conclusion—all the more powerful for the grace and jauntiness of the preceding movements.
YvonneFrindle ©2008
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Mary Gaidzkar
Simon Gaites
Anthony Garvey and Estelle O’Callaghan
David I Gibbs AM and Susie O’Neill
Sonia Gilderdale
Dr Celia Godfrey
Dr Marged Goode
Hilary Hall, in memory of Wilma Collie
David Hardy
Tilda and the late Brian Haughney
Cathy Henry
Anthony and Karen Ho
Rod Home
Lorraine Hook
Jenny and Peter Hordern
Katherine Horwood
Penelope Hughes
Jordan Janssen
Shyama Jayaswal
Basil and Rita Jenkins
Emma Johnson
Sue Johnston
John Kaufman
Angela Kayser
Drs Bruce and Natalie Kellett
Dr Anne Kennedy
Akira Kikkawa
Dr Judith Kinnear
Dr Richard Knafelc and Mr Grevis Beard
Tim Knaggs
Professor David Knowles and
Dr Anne McLachlan
Dr Jerry Koliha and Marlene Krelle
Jane Kunstler
Kerry Landman
Janet and Ross Lapworth
Bryan Lawrence
Dr Jenny Lewis
Phil Lewis
Dr Kin Liu
Andrew Lockwood
Elizabeth H Loftus
Chris and Anna Long
Wayne McDonald and Kay Schroer
Lois McKay
Lesley McMullin Foundation
Dr Eric Meadows
Sylvia Miller
Ian Morrey and Geoffrey Minter
Drs Anna and Anthony Morton
Barry Mowszowski
Dr Judith S Nimmo
Laurence O’Keefe and Christopher James
Roger Parker and Ruth Parker
Susan Pelka
Ian Penboss
Kerryn Pratchett
Peter Priest
John Prokupets
Professor Charles Qin OAM and Kate Ritchie
Eli and Lorraine Raskin
Cathy Rogers OAM and Dr Peter Rogers AM
Dr Ronald and Elizabeth Rosanove
Marie Rowland
Viorica Samson
Martin and Susan Shirley
P Shore
Janet and Alex Starr
Dr Peter Strickland
Dr Joel Symons and Liora Symons
Russell Taylor and Tara Obeyesekere
Geoffrey Thomlinson
Frank Tisher OAM and Dr Miriam Tisher
Andrew and Penny Torok
Christina Turner
Ann and Larry Turner
Sandra and the late Leon Velik
Jayde Walker
Edward and Paddy White
Nic and Ann Willcock
Lorraine Woolley
Dr Kelly and Dr Heathcote Wright
C.F. Yeung & Family Philanthropic Fund
Demetrio Zema
(13)
OVERTURE PATRONS $500+
Jane Allan and Mark Redmond
Mario M Anders
Jenny Anderson
Doris Au
Lyn Bailey
Mr Robin Batterham
Peter Berry and Amanda Quirk
Dr William Birch AM
Richard Bolitho
Miranda Brockman
Dr Robert Brook
Roger and Coll Buckle
Daniel Bushaway
Jungpin Chen
Dr John Collins
Gregory Crew
Sue Cummings
Dr Oliver and Matilda Daly
Suzanne Dembo
Carol des Cognets
Bruce Dudon
Margaret Flatman
Brian Florence
M C Friday
David and Geraldine Glenny
Hugo and Diane Goetze
Louise Gourlay OAM
Christine Grenda
Dawn Hales
George Hampel AM KC and Felicity Hampel AM SC
Dr Jennifer Henry
William Holder
Gillian Horwood
Oliver Hutton
Rob Jackson
Wendy Johnson
Irene Kearsey & Michael Ridley
John Keys
Lesley King
Dr Kim Langfield-Smith
Pauline and David Lawton
Paschalina Leach
Kay Liu
David Loggia
Helen Maclean
Eleanor & Phillip Mancini
Joy Manners
Morris and Helen Margolis
In memory of Leigh Masel
Janice Mayfield
Gail McKay
Shirley A McKenzie
Marie Misiurak
Adrian and Louise Nelson
Marian Neumann
Ed Newbigin
Valerie Newman
Amanda O’Brien
Brendan O’Donnell
Jillian Pappas
Phil Parker
Sarah Patterson
The Hon Chris Pearce and Andrea Pearce
William Ramirez
Geoffrey Ravenscroft
Dr Christopher Rees
Professor John Rickard
Michael Riordan and Geoffrey Bush
Fred and Patricia Russell
Carolyn Sanders
Dr Marc Saunders
Julia Schlapp
Hon Jim Short and Jan Rothwell Short
Madeline Soloveychik
Tom Sykes
Allison Taylor
Reverend Angela Thomas
Mely Tjandra
Chris and Helen Trueman
Rosemary Warnock
Amanda Watson
Michael Whishaw
Deborah and Dr Kevin Whithear OAM
Adrian Wigney
Charles and Jill Wright
Anonymous (13)
FUTURE MSO ($1,000+)
Justine Battistella
Shayna Burns
Jessica Agoston Cleary
Alexandra Champion de Crespigny
Josh Chye
Barry Mowszowski
Jayde Walker
Demetrio Zema
MSO GUARDIANS
Jenny Anderson
David Angelovich
Lesley Bawden
Peter Berry and Amanda Quirk
Joyce Bown
Patricia A Breslin
Jenny Brukner and the late John Brukner
Peter A Caldwell
Luci and Ron Chambers
Sandra Dent
Sophie E Dougall in memory of Libby Harold
Alan Egan JP
Gunta Eglite
Marguerite Garnon-Williams
Dr Clem Gruen and Dr Rhyl Wade
Louis J Hamon OAM
Charles Hardman and Julianne Bambacas
Carol Hay
Dr Jennifer Henry
Graham Hogarth
Rod Home
Lyndon Horsburgh
Katherine Horwood
Tony Howe
Lindsay and Michael Jacombs
John Jones
Pauline and David Lawton
Robyn and Maurice Lichter
Christopher Menz and Peter Rose
Cameron Mowat
Laurence O’Keefe and Christopher James
David Orr
Matthew O’Sullivan
Rosia Pasteur
Penny Rawlins
Margaret Riches
Anne Roussac-Hoyne and Neil Roussac
Michael Ryan and Wendy Mead
Anne Kieni Serpell and Andrew Serpell
Jennifer Shepherd
Suzette Sherazee
Professors Gabriela and
George Stephenson
Pamela Swansson
Tam Vu and Dr Cherilyn Tillman
Mr and Mrs R P Trebilcock
Peter and the late Elizabeth Turner
Michael Ullmer AO
The Hon Rosemary Varty
Francis Vergona
Terry Wills Cooke OAM and the late Marian Wills Cooke
Mark Young
Anonymous (23)
The MSO gratefully acknowledges the support of the following Estates:
Norma Ruth Atwell
Angela Beagley
Barbara Bobbe
Michael Francois Boyt
Christine Mary Bridgart
Margaret Anne Brien
Ken Bullen
Deidre and Malcolm Carkeek
The Cuming Bequest
Margaret Davies
Blair Doig Dixon
Neilma Gantner
Angela Felicity Glover
The Hon Dr Alan Goldberg AO QC
Derek John Grantham
Delina Victoria Schembri-Hardy
Enid Florence Hookey
Gwen Hunt
Family and Friends of James Jacoby
Audrey Jenkins
Joan Jones
Pauline Marie Johnston
Christine Mary Kellam
C P Kemp
Jennifer Selina Laurent
Sylvia Rose Lavelle
Peter Forbes MacLaren
Joan Winsome Maslen
Lorraine Maxine Meldrum
Prof Andrew McCredie
Jean Moore
Joan P Robinson
Maxwell and Jill Schultz
Miss Sheila Scotter AM MBE
Marion A I H M Spence
Molly Stephens
Gwennyth St John
Halinka Tarczynska-Fiddian
Jennifer May Teague
Elisabeth Turner
Albert Henry Ullin
Jean Tweedie
Herta and Fred B Vogel
Daphne White
Joyce Winsome Woodroffe
Dorothy Wood
COMMISSIONING CIRCLE
Cecilie Hall and the late Hon Michael Watt KC
Tim and Lyn Edward
Weis Family
FIRST NATIONS CIRCLE
John and Lorraine Bates
Colin Golvan AM KC and Dr Deborah Golvan
Sascha O. Becker
Maestro Jaime Martín
Elizabeth Proust AO and Brian Lawrence
Guy Ross
The Sage Foundation
The Kate and Stephen Shelmerdine Family Foundation
Michael Ullmer AO and Jenny Ullmer
ADOPT A MUSICIAN
Margaret Billson and the late Ted Billson
Peter Edwards
Shane Buggle and Rosie Callanan
Roger Young
Andrew Dudgeon AM
Rohan de Korte, Philippa West
Tim and Lyn Edward
John Arcaro
Dr John and Diana Frew
Rosie Turner
Sophie Galaise and Clarence Fraser
Stephen Newton
Dr Mary-Jane Gething AO
Monica Curro
The Gross Foundation
Matthew Tomkins
Dr Clem Gruen and Dr Rhyl Wade
Robert Cossom
The late Hon Michael Watt KC and Cecilie Hall
Saul Lewis
The Hanlon Foundation
Abbey Edlin
David Horowicz
Anne Marie Johnson
Dr Harry Imber
Sarah Curro, Jack Schiller
Margaret Jackson AC
Nicolas Fleury
Di Jameson OAM and Frank Mercurio
Elina Fashki, Benjamin Hanlon,
Tair Khisambeev, Christopher Moore
Peter T Kempen AM
Rebecca Proietto
Rosemary and the late Douglas Meagher
Craig Hill
Professor Gary McPherson
Rachel Shaw
Anne Neil
Eleanor Mancini
Newton Family in memory of Rae Rothfield
Cong Gu
Patricia Nilsson
Natasha Thomas
Andrew and Judy Rogers
Michelle Wood
Glenn Sedgwick
Tiffany Cheng, Shane Hooton
Anonymous
Prudence Davis
Anonymous
Rachael Tobin
HONORARY APPOINTMENTS
Life Members
John Gandel AC and Pauline Gandel AC
Sir Elton John CBE
Lady Primrose Potter AC CMRI
Jeanne Pratt AC
Michael Ullmer AO and Jenny Ullmer
Anonymous
MSO Ambassador
Geoffrey Rush AC
The MSO honours the memory of Life Members
The late Marc Besen AC and the late Eva Besen AO
John Brockman OAM
The Honourable Alan Goldberg AO QC
Harold Mitchell AC
Roger Riordan AM
Ila Vanrenen
MSO ARTISTIC FAMILY
Jaime Martín
Chief Conductor
Benjamin Northey
Principal Conductor
Artistic Advisor – Learning and Engagement
Leonard Weiss
Cybec Assistant Conductor
Sir Andrew Davis CBE †
Conductor Laureate (2013–2024)
Hiroyuki Iwaki †
Conductor Laureate (1974–2006)
Warren Trevelyan-Jones
MSO Chorus Director
Erin Helyard
Artist in Residence
Karen Kyriakou
Artist in Residence, Learning and Engagement
Christian Li
Young Artist in Association
Katy Abbott
Composer in Residence
Naomi Dodd
Cybec Young Composer in Residence
Deborah Cheetham Fraillon AO
First Nations Creative Chair
Xian Zhang
East meets West Ambassador
Artistic Ambassadors
Tan Dun
Lu Siqing
MSO BOARD
Chairman
David Li AM
Co-Deputy Chairs
Margaret Jackson AC
Di Jameson OAM
Managing Director
Sophie Galaise
Board Directors
Shane Buggle
Andrew Dudgeon AM
Martin Foley
Lorraine Hook
Gary McPherson
Farrel Meltzer
Edgar Myer
Glenn Sedgwick
Mary Waldron
Company Secretary
Demetrio Zema
The MSO relies on your ongoing philanthropic support to sustain our artists, and support access, education, community engagement and more. We invite our supporters to get close to the MSO through a range of special events.
The MSO welcomes your support at any level. Donations of $2 and over are tax deductible, and supporters are recognised as follows:
$500+ (Overture)
$1,000+ (Player)
$2,500+ (Associate)
$5,000+ (Principal)
$10,000+ (Maestro)
$20,000+ (Impresario)
$50,000+ (Virtuoso)
$100,000+ (Platinum)
PRINCIPAL PARTNER
PREMIER PARTNERS
GOVERNMENT PARTNERS
MAJOR PARTNERS
INTERNATIONAL LAW FIRM PARTNER
ORCHESTRAL TRAINING PARTNER
SUPPORTING PARTNERS
VENUE PARTNER
EDUCATION PARTNERS
MEDIA AND BROADCAST PARTNERS
TRUSTS AND FOUNDATIONS
The Sir Andrew and Lady Fairley Foundation, The Angior Family Foundation, Flora & Frank Leith Trust, Perpetual Foundation – Alan (AGL) Shaw Endowment, Sidney Myer MSO Trust Fund
East meets West Program Supporters
Consulate General of the People’s Republic of China in Melbourne PROGRAM SUPPORTERS
SUPPORTING PARTNERS
SUPPORTERS
Ministry of Culture and Tourism China
CONSORTIUM PARTNERS