THE WELCOMING!
          PRE-SHOW
          songbirdsongs Piccolos & Percussion External Stairs
          Roving Researchers HDR Students Conservatorium Foyer
          Gabrieli Fanfare Brass Conservatorium Foyer
          Gershwin Standards Jazz Quartet Conservatorium Theatre
          ACT I
          Acknowledgement of Country Uncle Glenn Barry Conservatorium Theatre
          Director’s Welcome Prof. Bernard Lanskey Conservatorium Theatre
          Paris is a Metaphor Acting Conservatorium Theatre
          Connecting Through Gershwin Jazz Quartets Conservatorium Theatre
          An American in Paris Con Symphony Orchestra Conservatorium Theatre
          INTERVAL
          Contemporary Choirs Jazz Conservatorium Foyer
          Acting Scenes & Films Acting Ian Hanger Recital Hall
          Roving Researchers HDR Students Conservatorium Foyer
          ACT II
          Pagliacci Excerpts Classical Voice Conservatorium Theatre
          Schumann Piano Quartet Strings & Keyboard Conservatorium Theatre
          Change Is Possible Acting Conservatorium Theatre
          Late Night Society Popular Music Conservatorium Theatre
          POST-SHOW
          Quadraphonic Experience Creative Music Technology Conservatorium Theatre
          Roving Researchers HDR Students Conservatorium Foyer Check
          out Higher Degree Research Projects at QCGU
        
              
              
            
            THE WELCOMING!
          The Inspiration for Tonight
          Over the past two years, the Conservatorium has spent time taking stock of where it is now and where it might sense that it needs to be heading. This has included a major strategic review in August last year, the consequences of which have been considered at university level. We acknowledge that our traditional focus on excellence, particularly in Classical Music Performance, is something that must continue, but we also recognise that, over the past few decades, QCGU has expanded in its reach to include a wider range of contemporary music as well as an increased focus on research, community connection, and life-long learning. Beyond music, the past decade also saw us embrace Performing Arts, including both Musical Theatre and Acting. With Griffith University’s announcement of the Queensland Academy of Excellence in Musical Theatre in August 2023 in partnership with QPAC, and with Acting moving to our main building, all fulltime activity is now co-located in South Bank. At the same time, we have consciously been increasing our state-wide focus, primarily through the Open Conservatorium, but also in partnership with key Queensland Arts partners. Building on our roots, we seek to be Queensland’s Conservatorium, with the ambition to become ever more welcoming to all music and performing arts, with increasing inclusion of all cultural backgrounds. Tonight we share who we are now and how we might begin to imagine us evolving so as to have even more persuasive contemporary resonance.
          Welcome, everyone, to Queensland’s Conservatorium. Connecting Place, People, and Art.
          In the Theatre
          ACT I
          Acknowledgement of Country and Director’s Welcome
          Initial Acknowledgement of Country: Uncle Glenn Barry
          Communal Sounding Scene: Glenn Barry and all composition students
          Gerardo Dirié, Head of Composition
          Glenn Barry, guiding host and yidaki
          We are mindful and grateful to be sharing this evening on the unceded lands of the Turrbal and Yuggera peoples, and thank Uncle Glenn Barry for his support in the Conservatorium, both tonight and across the last several years. Over the past few weeks, he has been planning this evening with our Head of Composition, Dr. Gerardo Dirié, a first generation Australian, with focus on acknowledgment, reconciliation and education. The Acknowledgement and Communal Sounding will be followed by the Director’s Welcome, offering a sense of QCGU’s proposed future direction.
          Connecting through Gershwin
          A little under 100 years ago, George Gershwin visited Paris with a view to expanding his musical horizon. Just as for the 27-year-old composer, the trip acted as a stimulus for his creativity and evolving identity, so for us An American in Paris has offered a metaphor tonight for connection and inclusion, crossing geographic and genre borders to celebrate as truthfully as possible our current identity as we seek to become more open and inclusive. A second generation American of Russian-Jewish descent, Gershwin’s parents had arrived independently in New York, effectively as political refugees, shortly before he was born. Just as he was able to find his way forward in their new world, the influence of multiple cultures and genres was inspirational his distinctive emerging identity.
          Tonight’s event opens our spaces for sharing the rich array of what happens here in S01 (our building) almost every day. My thanks as Director to all who have embraced the concept underpinning this event – and indeed to those others who had wished to be involved, if only there was more space and time.
          The evening in the theatre will begin (pre-concert) with a selection of Gershwin’s standards which prepare us for a first half inspired by the composer.
          Gershwin Standards (pre-show)
          Chloe Forbes – Alto Saxophone
          Ethan Coleman – Piano
          Aaron Ma – Bass
          Oscar Langton - Drums
          Claire Christian: Paris is a Metaphor
          Second year actors ponder how we create safe places to create and growthe past informing the present.
          After the Acknowledgement of Country, a quartet of second year actors reflect briefly on the complexities of sharing music, inspired by An American in Paris, now shared in Queensland one hundred years later (script by Bachelor of Acting Lecturer Claire Christian (premier)).
          Rory Fegan
          Jordana Wenke
          Angela Lal Paulose
          Lachlan Brayshaw
          Director: Jacqui Somerville
          The jazz ensemble, now joined by two singers for Nice Work if You Can Get It (1937) and Our Love is Here to Stay (1938), prepare for the orchestra’s performance of An American in Paris (1928).
          Nice Work If You Can Get It
          Toby Thelander - Voice
          Ethan Coleman - Piano
          Aaron Ma - Bass
          Oscar Langton - Drums
          Concertmaster
          Yuro Lee*
          Violin 1
          Luke Hammer
          Ingram Fan
          Amira Ryan
          Lydia Hwang
          Dylan Weder
          Sophia Di Lucchio
          Lauren Mellor
          Jonathan Kositsin
          Mirage Hunter
          Demecs
          Sophie Shih
          Imogen Revill
          Violin 2
          Jonah Spriggs*
          Noah Coyne
          Madeleine Crosby
          Alisha Dunstan
          Melissa Buddle
          Alan Leslie
          Teresa Kao
          Ava Gilbert
          Guy Tomlinson
          Chinsia Burns
          * Principal player
          Our Love is Here to Stay
          Shelby Johnson - Voice
          Peyo Pappadopoulos - Piano
          Aaron Ma - Bass
          Oscar Langton – Drums
          (arranged by Dr Steve Newcomb Head of Jazz)
          Conservatorium Symphony Orchestra
          Peter Luff, conductor
          Printed March 22, 2024
          Viola
          Ella Beard*
          Olivia Spyrou
          Rose-Ann Breedt
          Caitlin Annesley
          Felix Hughes Chivers
          Sebastien Masel
          Jasmine Smith
          Harriet Dykes
          Eben Yeh
          Violoncello
          Kate Hwang*
          William Bland
          Caleb Christian
          Matthew StuartStreet
          Milo Duval
          Laura Boon
          Contrabass
          Alyssa Deacon*
          Sophia Buchanan
          Jessica Clarke
          Rylan Baird
          Piccolo
          Bonnie Gibson*
          Flute
          Braden Simm*
          Aaryn Wong
          Bonnie Gibson
          Oboe
          Shana Hoshino*
          Ethan Seto
          Cor Anglais
          Liam Robinson*
          Clarinet
          Catherine Edwards*
          Hinata Nishimura
          Bass Clarinet
          Hamish Cassidy*
          Bassoon
          Hayden Mears*
          Mairin Thompson
          Alto Saxophone
          Isaac Reed*
          Tenor Saxophone
          Emily Booij*
          Baritone Saxophone
          Nina Lane*
          French Horn
          Arabella Davie*
          Hannah Waterfall
          Jessica Piva
          Matilda Monaghan
          Trumpet
          Isabella Geeves*
          Megan Barber
          Melissa Davies
          Trombone
          Jay Ghodke*
          Jonah Nakagawa
          Bass Trombone
          Ethan Parfoot*
          Tuba
          Jack Gawith*
          Timpani
          Connor Dinneen*
          Percussion
          Matthew Conway*
          Dara Williams
          Jaymee Homeming
          Caitlin Hermann
          Celesta
          Artemii Safonov*
          Gershwin himself considered An American in Paris “a rhapsodic ballet”, seeking to capture “the impressions of an American visitor in Paris as he strolls about the city, listens to the various street noises, and absorbs the French atmosphere”. To this end, he even included in the orchestration four Parisian taxi-horns he brought back from France! Since its original New York premiere in 1928 in Carnegie Hall, the work has been re-cast and re-orchestrated in multiple contexts, building out of the original 20-minute jazzinspired orchestral poem (as heard tonight) into a ballet-inspired movie, a musical, and so much more. Based on Gershwin’s own writing, the influence of Paris was profound, as he sought to follow Maurice Ravel’s reputed advice, perhaps an inspiration for us all in Queensland now: “Why be a second-rate Ravel, when you can be a first-rate Gershwin!”
          ACT II
          Leoncavallo’s Pagliacci and Molière's Tartuffe: The challenges of otherness
          Tonight’s brief reference to two of the Theatre’s most iconic works serves as a reminder of the challenges that sometimes accompany first performances of work, particularly when their plots challenge political norms or societal conventions. Both characters are highly complex in relation to social norms, with the immediate circumstances of plot bringing that complexity to the fore. Tonight we have the character Tartuffe persuading us to leave the theatre for the interval performances outside. The full production of Tartuffe, presented by the 3rd Year Acting cohort, begins on Saturday 23rd March at BMAC at Kangaroo Point, with tonight’s event function as the prelude to Acting’s first event of the season. Similarly, the excerpt from Pagliacci links to a performance later in the season as part of the Val Machin Opera Scenes running from Friday 3rd May to Saturday 4th May in the Conservatorium Theatre.
          Tonight features two excerpts, the Prologue and the Bell Chorus, with the following note from Jillianne Stoll, Lecturer in Opera:
          Before the opera begins, the clown Tonio slips out in front of the house curtain and sings the Prologue which tells the audience that what they will see is not just play-acting but that the actors, like us, are real people with genuine emotions and real passions.
          The Bell Chorus takes place after the troupe of actors arrive. The bagpipers are heard approaching, and the musicians, followed by the people of their village, arrive to join in the festival. The church bells ring and the villagers head off to Vespers singing “Ding, dong”.
          Prologue from I Pagliacci – Leoncavallo
          Jake Lyle – Tonio
          Jillianne Stoll - Pianist
          Bell Chorus from I Pagliacci – Leoncavallo
          Kevin Gomez – Canio
          The Opera Chorus
          Jillianne Stoll – Pianist
          Conducted by Peter Luff
          The Opera Chorus
          Conducted by Peter Luff
          SOPRANOS
          Zoe Catchpoole
          Johanna Collins
          Isabelle Dunstan
          Rebecca Goobanko
          Monique Grima
          Philomena Hoger
          Stephanie Horsfall
          Sienna Jak
          Bridgette Kelsey
          Claire McCann
          Olivia Munro
          Erin Power
          Amelia Price
          Louise Whittaker
          MEZZO SOPRANOS
          Xanthe Allen
          Georgia Butland
          Emily Davies
          Jasmine Kaye
          Monica Ruggiero
          Aylish Ryan
          Lauren Towns
          Caitlin Wans
          TENORS
          Elliott Beauchamp
          Ryan Lawrence
          Nicholas Russell
          Liam Waldock
          BASSES
          Vikram Goonawardena
          Harrison Hammett
          Nicholas Massouras
          Gabriel Shaw
          David Upcher
          The Keyboard at the Centre:
          Schumann Piano Quartet, Op. 47 mvt iii Andante Cantabile, Actor’s Scene 2, and Late Night Society
          The keyboard has been at the centre of a range of small ensemble combinations which now span four centuries. Already in the baroque period, the trio sonata was effectively a quartet combo, with the continuo keyboard part’s bass line doubled by a fourth player, the basso continuo. Mozart’s two piano quartets of the 1780s established the combination (the keyboard moving from harpsichord to fortepiano), influencing Schumann quite overtly in his first juvenile work in the form. The Eb Quartet, Opus 47, from which tonight we hear the deeply romantic and reflective Andante Cantabile, is Schumann’s only mature foray in the form, inspired by his wife Clara who was involved in the first performance. The movement’s songlike ternary form ends with a celestial coda which will be used to morph tonight into the final contemporary set.
          Hanuelle Lovell - Violin
          Ella Pysden - Viola
          Caleb Christian - Cello
          Reuben Tsang - Piano
          Claire Christian: Change Is Possible
          Second year actors ponder on our role as artists and humans to look forward and make change
          Angela Lal Paulose
          Lachlan Brayshaw
          Director: Jacqui Somerville
          The link to Late Night Society will include our second acting scene of the night, again scripted by Claire Christian, offering further reflection of where we are now, and of the momentary and timeless. The transition will also involve the soundscape moving from acoustic to amplified, including a nord keyboard and with the theatre transforming its acoustic to accommodate. We are fortunate to have inherited such an amazing space to perform, and to have the people amongst us now who help make it resonate so persuasively.
          Late Night Society is a 4-piece contemporary fusion band, based in Brisbane, Queensland. This group of innovative, like-minded musicians, thrive on breaking conventional musical ideas, through their unique artistic flair. Bouncing from genres like Japanese Funk-Fusion, Progressive Metal, Reggae and more, this group always has something fresh and new to bring to the table. Sit back, relax, and enjoy the wave of musicality to follow. On keyboard/grand piano, Sam Salvador, guitar, Nathan Cho, bass guitar, Gerry Jaimes, drums, Hayden White, and Matt Mallardi on Yidaki (didgeridoo) #easymusicforbabies
          
              
              
            
            Celebrating the Fringes
          (Foyer, Recital Hall and Beyond)
          Pre-Show
          John Luther-Adams
          songbirdsongs (1974 – 1980) for piccolos and percussion
          “No one has yet explained why the free songs of birds are so simply beautiful. And what do they say? What are their meanings? We may never know. But beyond the realm of ideas and emotions, language and sense, we just may hear something of their essence.”
          John Luther Adams
          
          Pulitzer Prize-winning American composer John Luther Adams has lived for 50 years in the wilds of Alaska, Mexico and New Mexico. His works are inextricably linked with the natural world, giving voice to nature’s beauty, danger and fragility.
          In these fragments from songbirdsongs, piccolo players and percussionists surround you, playing choruses of dawn and dusk, transforming any venue into a musical forest. “These small songs”, says Adams, “are echoes of rare moments and places where the voices of birds have been clear and I have been quiet enough to hear.”
          Piccolos: Jenna Choi, Bonnie Gibson, Keisha Neale, Neve Randall, Braden Simm, Laura Skorzewski, Nathan Smith
          Percussion: Jessica Postle, Sana Rane, Samuel Scully, William Smith, Joshua Spurr
          Giovanni Gabrieli – QCGU Brass Ensemble
          Canzon duodecimi toni (1597)
          Canzon septimi toni No. 2 (1597)
          Giovanni Gabrieli's Sacre Symphoniae of 1597 were written for the acoustic of St Marks in Venice. Standing a small distance apart in two balconies the musicians (playing any combination of wind, brass and string instruments) created a fabric of interweaving ideas delicately expressed on the rather quiet instruments of the time. As we cross the borders in time and distance to the orchestral brass of the late 20th century and the resonant acoustic of the Queensland Conservatorium foyer, we can reimagine a music that was never limited by instrumentation, articulation, dynamic or even bar lines. As has become the tradition in brass ensembles world-wide the once subtle sighing of small phrases has become the respected ground for showcasing the added brilliance and power of modern brass.
          Benjamin Marks – Conductor, QCGU Brass Ensemble
          Interval
          Global Vocal Ensemble
          Lua Soberana – Ivan Lins (Portuguese)
          Ah Ndiya – Oumou Sangare (Bambara)
          Discover densely layered grooves, abstract vocal timbres and dialects from around the world, with repertoire hailing from Africa, India, South America, East Timor, Bulgaria and more. Global Vocal Ensemble will sing in languages other than English and incorporate cultivating knowledge and respect for the cultures from which these songs are derived.
          Nu Jazz Vocal Ensemble
          Wrong Way – Georgia Anne Muldrow
          The Mystery of a Burning Fire – KNOWER
          Taking inspiration from contemporary artists fusing jazz-derived melodic and harmonic motifs with electronica and funk, such as Flying Lotus, DOMi & JD Beck, KNOWER, Cornelius, Georgia Anne Muldrow and MonoNeon, Nu-Jazz Vocal Ensemble will sing vocally and musically challenging repertoire with a futuristic lilt.
          Hannah Macklin – Conductor, Jazz Vocal Ensembles
          Acting Company of 2024
          Live Extract from Common Ground by Kate Wild
          With 3rd year actors Sebastien Skubala and Sophia Marzano
          Recorded Films
          Written & Directed by Stephen Lance. Produced in the GFS Virtual Production Studio by Daisy Quoding, James Bressow, Sam Bertling and Natalie Ferris.
          Tokyo with Michael Probets and Alexander James
          The Goodbye with Isabella Kirkwood and Jade Jose
          Brothers with Harrison Everingham and Logan So
          The Romance with Sebastien Skubala and Sophia Marzano
          In this brief presentation in the Ian Hanger Recital Hall, collaborations with the Griffith Film School are shared alongside a live scene with our Bachelor of Acting students.