Anvil Arts, Basingstoke
International
Concert Series G R E AT P E R F O R M A N C E L I V E 2 019 – 2 0 2 0
WE WOULD LIKE TO EXPRESS OUR GRATITUDE FOR THEIR SUPPORT TO ALL DONORS TO THE GREAT MUSIC OF THE WORLD FUND. President: Lord Sainsbury of Preston Candover KG
KEYSTONE DONOR Lord & Lady Sainsbury of Preston Candover through the Linbury Trust
MAJOR DONORS Mr Peter Bedford Mr Jan Bowlus The Bulldog Trust Mrs P Cadbury Hackwood Arts Trust Jeremiah Colman Trust Mr P Degermark Edward Garside Mr and Mrs J M Holden Dr Michael Hollas Sally Jones John and Jill Leek Anthony and Alison Milford Sir John Milne David & Diana Norman The Countess of Portsmouth Mr & Mrs John Raymond Mr Stuart Roden Mr & Mrs G J Rushbrook Prof J M Smith Mr & Mrs Michael Steen Leslie Strickland Tenon Philip and Jill Walsh Michael Webster P S Wilmot-Sitwell
DONORS Mr J E Ainger Mrs A Amery Mrs B M Anderson Mrs J Anderson Mr P Andreae Mr D P Andrew Mr & Mrs R Applin Mr Mark Armitage Lord Ashburton Miss A Askew Mr A Auld Mr & Mrs R Austin Mr & Mrs T Ayres Mrs E Balding Mr & Mrs G Band Mrs I Baring Mr D Barker Mr J Barlow Mr R S R Beers Mr & Mrs J F & P A Bell Mr & Mrs K Benjamin Mr & Mrs S Bennett Mrs L J Benson Mr B Bessant Mr J Beswick Mr & Mrs A R Bishop Mr Desmond Boddington Mr and Dr S Boswood Mr W G Bradfield Mr P Bridger Mr M Broadbent Mrs F Brown Mr & Mrs Michael Campbell Mr B Cape Mr & Mrs J Carpenter Mr & Mrs N Carpenter Ms J Castle Mr & Mrs B Cazenove Mr P Chalkley Mr J D Challen Mr & Mrs T Chamberlain Mr J Chambers Mr J Clark Mr & Mrs P Clarke Mr & Mrs V Cole Mr J Cook Mr Anthony Cooke Mr P W Cooke Mr S Cooper Mr & Mrs M Courage Mr N Craig-Harvey Mrs J Crawford Mr & Mrs M Cubitt Mr & Mrs J Curtis Mr & Mrs E Davidson Mrs J L Davies Mr & Mrs J Delafield Mr M Del Mar Mr P Denison Mr & Mrs Dennis
Mrs E J Dent Mr & Mrs J H Dingle Mr G Dixon Mrs A Doe Mr W Donnelly Mr P Edwards Mr and Mrs T W Edwin Mr H Ellis Mrs M Ellis Mr & Mrs P Ely Dr G Everett Mr & Mrs J Fathers Mr & Mrs F & V Faulks Dr & Mrs H Fawcett Mrs H Ferranti Mr T Floyd Miss H A T Friend Mr R Brian Gaiger Mr & Mrs D Gallagher Dr A E Gallon Mr R T Gaskell Mrs C Gath Mr & Mrs M Gibbons Mr D Gilbert Mr J Glyn Mr & Mrs A Goodman Mr J Goodman Mr & Mrs R Goodwin Mr & Mrs D Gordon Mrs M Greayer Mrs D Gregory Major D Grehan Mr & Mrs D Griffiths Ms J Griffiths Mr J Groves Mr T Guinness Mr & Mrs R Gulliver Mr J Gutteridge Mr M Haitham-Taylor Mr M Hall Mr H G Hands Mr N J Harding Mr P Hardy Mr R W Hartman Mr C Hinxman Mr D Hobbs Mr G Hollingbery Mr J Huggins Mr & Mrs G Hulme Mr B Hunt Dr E M Husband Mrs E Hyman Mr J Inman Mr & Mrs J James Mrs E Jamieson Mr & Mrs B Jenkins Mr & Mrs J Jervoise Miss R G C Jones Mrs S Jones Mr & Mrs N Keeley Mrs R Kemp Mr M Kemp-Gee Mr & Mrs J M Kempton Mrs P Kendrick-Thomas
Dr & Mrs I Kerr Mrs J Kilby Mrs E Kirk Mrs Y Laceby-Stevens Mr & Mrs H J Langley Mr D de Laszlo Sir Christopher and Lady Lawrence-Jones Mr C J Leach Mr D Leathers The Leathersellers Company Charitable Fund Mrs D Lee-Brown Mr D Lockie Mr P Lowden Mr & Mrs J Lupton The Hon. N MacAndrew Mr & Mrs J Machray Mr D Mackenzie Mr M P Maclay Mr & Mrs J MacMahon Sir Nevil MacReady Miss E Marlow Mr & Mrs C Marriott Mrs S E Marriott Mr V Matthews Mr N McNair-Scott Mr & Mrs G Meads Mr & Mrs A Metcalfe Mr R Middleton Dr J Miles Mr A Milway Cllr & Mrs D Mirfin Mrs S Moir Mr & Mrs W Monk Mr & Mrs E Moore Dr & Mrs J Moore Dr M Moore Mr & Mrs P Morgan Mr I Morrison Mr W Morrison Mr R Morse Mr & Mrs T Newman Mr & Mrs R Niddrie Mrs M Oliver Mr B Orange Mr C Palmer-Tomkinson Mr & Mrs D Paravicini Mr Alan Parfitt Miss B Parker Mr & Mrs S Parkhurst Dr P Payne Mr Alan R Pearce Miss C Penrith Mr & Mrs J E Pern Mrs R Phillips Mr J Pike Mr & Mrs G Porter Mrs E Preece Mr & Mrs D Price Mr R Prince Miss E Pringle Mr M Pullan
Mr M Rallis Mr M Redfern Ms H Reed Mr M A Rich Mrs N Richardson Mr & Mrs R Richardson Miss F A Rigg Mr A Rogers Mrs A C Rowland Mrs J M Rudd Mr & Mrs L Rudd Mr & Mrs J E Ruddle Mr & Mrs J Russell Mr & Mrs J Salkeld Mr & Mrs A G Savin Mr & Mrs R Scrase Mr S Shaw Mr D Sherlock Dr E G Skinner Mrs P Skinner Ms F Squire Ms E Mary Stephens Mrs E Steptoe Mr & Mrs A Stobart Mr A Stokoe Mr J Stubbs Mrs B Taylor-King Mrs C Teale Mr & Mrs A C Thomas Mr D Thomas Dr & Mrs P Thrift Mrs S D Thrift Miss N Thurston Mrs D M Tosswill Mrs S Turnbull Mrs R Waddell Mrs H Wakefield Lord Wakeham Mr & Mrs G V Walker Dr J Wall Lady Jane Wallop Mr & Mrs D Weait Mr & Mrs A Weal Mrs A Webster Mr R J Weller Dr D Werry Mr S S Wertheimer Mr & Mrs P White Mrs M Wilks Dr & Dr J Williams Dr & Mrs P R Williams Mr & Mrs O Winkler von Stiernhielm Mr R Witton Mr G Woodward Mrs I Woolgar Dr D Werry remembering Mr John Wright Dr & Mrs N Wright Mr & Mrs G Youell Mr S de Zoete and anonymous donors
Welcome Eleven pieces never heard at The Anvil before, orchestras from Russia, Iceland and the Czech Republic, outstanding artists coming here for the first time as well as favourites returning, all feature in the 2019-2020 concert series. We mark the 250th anniversary of Beethoven’s birth in spectacular style and have a concert as part of Tasmin Little’s farewell to the concert stage – all in arguably the best acoustics in the country, live in Basingstoke. As ever, take advantage of our subscription deals in order to enjoy more great music. Please see the booking form at the back of the brochure for full details of the packages available. We look forward to welcoming you. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13.
Tuesday 8 October Thursday 31 October Thursday 7 November Friday 29 November Thursday 6 February Friday 14 February Thursday 20 February Sunday 5 April Thursday 14 April Thursday 30 April Thursday 14 May Tuesday 19 May Wednesday 24 June
Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra Prague Symphony Orchestra Philharmonia Orchestra Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment Iceland Symphony Orchestra Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra Philharmonia Orchestra Siberian Symphony Orchestra Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment Philharmonia Orchestra Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment
EXTRA CONCERTS Tuesday 24 September Wednesday 20 November Wednesday 4 December Saturday 14 March
Britten-Shostakovich Festival Orchestra Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra The Sixteen at Christmas Philharmonia Orchestra Beethoven Day
CONCERTS START AT 7.45PM UNLESS OTHERWISE STATED £42, £38, £31, £24, £16 UNDER 25s, F/T STUDENTS £11 (includes £3 booking fee) Group rate available Many concerts have pre-concert talks – please ask the box office for details anvilarts.org.uk 01256 844244 box.office@anvilarts.org.uk Group booking 01256 366935 group.booking@anvilarts.org.uk
Tuesday 24 September
Britten-Shostakovich Festival Orchestra Britten
Four Sea Interludes from Peter Grimes Vaughan Williams
The Lark Ascending Shostakovich
music from Suite for Variety Stage Orchestra Film Suite: Hamlet Op. 116a Jennifer Pike violin
Talented young musicians from the UK and Russia come together in this orchestra inspired by the deep friendship between the two composers for whom it is named. The Four Sea Interludes, titled Dawn, Sunday Morning, Moonlight and Storm are wonderful impressions of the Suffolk coast Britten loved, while The Lark Ascending is an evocation of the English countryside. The Jazz Suites (more Kurt Weill than New Orleans) represent the lighter side of Shostakovich’s music, while his score for the magnificent 1964 film version of Hamlet, including spoken text from the play, is stunningly effective and atmospheric.
Artist tbc speaker
Jan Latham-Koenig Jan Latham-Koenig
“She has the gift of making time stand still” The Strad on Jennifer Pike
Jennifer Pike
Natalia Lomeiko
Tuesday 8 October
Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra Tchaikovsky
Fantasy Overture: Romeo and Juliet Prokofiev
Violin Concerto no. 1 Shostakovich
Symphony no. 10 Natalia Lomeiko violin
Tchaikovsky’s passionate romantic fantasy makes a full-blooded opening to this concert. Prokofiev’s violin concerto has the atmosphere of a fairy tale or dream, with the two rhapsodic outer movements divided by a quirky scherzo. The Tenth is perhaps Shostakovich’s finest symphony – an epic journey, powerful and dramatic, yet with moments of touching simplicity. The first three movements, filled with a sense of struggle and including a menacing, whirlwind scherzo, are balanced by a more optimistic finale completed after the death of Stalin.
Yuri Simonov
“Superb playing ranging from warm horn vibrato to grainy double basses to a sensational clarinet.” Bachtrack on the Moscow PO’s last visit to The Anvil
Thursday 31 October
Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra Sibelius
Symphony no. 7 Violin Concerto Adams
City Noir Valeriy Sokolov violin
Kirill Karabits
Sibelius’ last symphony is one of the twentieth century’s true masterpieces. In form it absorbs the traditional four movement symphony into a single span of music. Each section grows out of the previous one, developing its material to make a truly organic whole, with a huge emotional impact. Sibelius, a violinist himself, exploited all his knowledge of the instrument in his dramatic and atmospheric concerto, which ends with a thrilling finale. City Noir is a glittering evocation of the energy of late forties Los Angeles, and the dark swooning passions of film noir, in the form of a three movement symphony.
“A powerful, highly original piece” Classics Today on City Noir
Valeriy Sokolov
Kirill Karabits
“He knows how to draw a sensuous, surging sound from the orchestra, his balances were superb, and there was an indefinable energy to it all.� Classical Voice North America on Pietari Inkinen
Pietari Inkinen
Thursday 7 November
Prague Symphony Orchestra Mahler
Symphony no. 3 Ester Pavlů mezzo-soprano
Pietari Inkinen
It was while working on the Third Symphony that Mahler met Sibelius and made his celebrated pronouncement that “a symphony should contain the world”. True to his opinion, this piece moves through the whole cosmos, beginning with the trumpet calls that usher in the huge first movement, subtitled ‘spring marches in’. Mahler takes the listener on a journey which embraces all of creation, including animal and bird life in the second and third movements, and man, beset by doubts and fears, in the mysterious fourth. By the time the music rises to paradise with the ethereal sound of women’s and boys’ voices in the final ecstatic adagio, an immense musical and emotional journey is complete. Please note there will be no interval in this performance.
“One of the dream sopranos of our time” Globe and Mail, Canada
Wednesday 20 November
Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra Love and Betrayal Handel
Concerto grosso Op. 3 no. 2 Giulio Cesare: V’adoro pupille Vivaldi
Music from Ottone in villa, Farnace and Ercole su’l Termodonte Concerto for 2 oboes and 2 violins in D Handel
Music from Ariodante
We welcome this outstanding Canadian orchestra as part of a special European tour to mark its fortieth year. Passionate emotion is at the heart of its programme, expressed in concertos and music from operas by Handel and Vivaldi, ranging from the plaintive to the spectacular. Some of each composer’s finest music is found in their operas, so don’t miss this rare chance to enjoy it. £35, £28, £20 Karina Gauvin
Locatelli
Concerto grosso in E-flat (Il Pianto d’Arianna)
Elisa Citterio
Handel
Music from Agrippina, Alcina, Rinaldo and Lotario Karina Gauvin soprano
Elisa Citterio violin/director
“Music director Elisa Citterio set a musical tone of joyful liveliness.” Sydney Morning Herald
Esther Yoo
“Her dialogue with the orchestra really showcased her command of the music.” Glasgow Herald on Esther Yoo
Friday 29 November
Philharmonia Orchestra Grieg
Holberg Suite Mendelssohn
Violin Concerto Dvořák
Symphony no. 9 Esther Yoo violin
Vladimir Ashkenazy
Grieg’s Holberg Suite harks back to earlier times and musical styles, in an affectionate and successful way. Mendelssohn’s Violin Concerto sounds as fresh as if written in one burst of inspiration, but in fact cost the composer a great deal of time revising it after early performances and advice from his violinist friends. The quicksilver finale is unadulterated enjoyment. Dvorák’s most famous symphony, written in America while filled with longing for his Czech homeland, has an apparently inexhaustible flow of melodies, with a justly celebrated slow movement at its heart. The Philharmonia Orchestra is Anvil Arts Orchestra in Partnership
Wednesday 4 December
The Sixteen at Christmas
Frances Kelly
A Ceremony of Carols Frances Kelly harp
Harry Christophers
One of the world’s great choral ensembles, The Sixteen continues to thrill and delight audiences around the world. This special Christmas programme includes a feast of carols and seasonal choral music, including Britten’s beautiful Ceremony of Carols. Favourite traditional versions, stunningly beautiful Tudor and Renaissance works and modern settings are combined in a ravishing and satisfying evening of music. The perfect way to start your Christmas celebrations. £37, £29
“A tiny soundbite of heaven” The Times
The Sixteeen
Ivan Fischer
Thursday 6 February
Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment Mozart
Symphony no. 39 Symphony no. 40 Symphony no. 41 (Jupiter) Ivan Fischer
Mozart’s last three symphonies were written in a few weeks in summer 1788, unusually without performances already arranged. They make a satisfying triptych, with the relatively serene no. 39 contrasting with the more agitated and unsettled no. 40. The final symphony sums up Mozart’s achievement in the form, with a spacious opening movement, an expressive and chromatic slow movement, and one of his most famous minuets. The finale combines fugue and sonata form in a five-part tour de force. The Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment is Anvil Arts Orchestra in Association
“One of a vanishingly small number of world-class conductors who make the music, not themselves, the centre of attention.” National Review
Yeol Eum Son
Yan Pascal Tortelier
Friday 14 February
Iceland Symphony Orchestra Bizet
Suite: L’Arlesienne no. 2 Ravel
Piano concerto for the left hand Thorvaldsdóttir
Aireality Prokofiev
Bizet’s incidental music to L’Arlesienne was not successful at the time but has become one of his most popular works. Ravel’s concerto shows the composer responding to the constraints of using only one hand on the piano with imaginative orchestral colouring and rhythmic subtlety. After a short but striking piece from one of Iceland’s foremost composers, the concert ends with an extended selection from Prokofiev’s vividly characterised music for Romeo and Juliet.
Romeo and Juliet Yeol Eum Son piano
Yan Pascal Tortelier
“Yeol Eum Son… played with a dazzling range of dynamics, patiently giving each musical idea a semi-improvisatory spontaneity” Washington Post
Thursday 20 February
Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra Haydn
Symphony no. 102 Mendelssohn
Piano Concerto no. 1 Schumann
Introduction and Concert Allegro Schubert
Symphony no. 5 Jeremy Denk piano
Symphony no. 102, written for Haydn’s second visit to London, is one of the finest of all his symphonies. Its four movements include a deeply felt adagio and a high-spirited finale based on a Croatian folk tune. Mendelssohn’s piano concerto shows many of his strengths, as a dramatic first movement gives way to a lyrical and tender slow section. The finale is a tour de force of elegant, fleet-fingered virtuosity. Schumann’s dramatic piece for piano and orchestra has all the virtues of his more famous Piano Concerto. Schubert’s symphony is one of the most melodic and genial pieces that he ever wrote. The four movements are perfectly proportioned and full of delightful music.
Kirill Karabits
“An artist you want to hear no matter what he performs” New York Times on Jeremy Denk
Jeremy Denk
Andreas Haefliger
Esa-Pekka Salonen
Saturday 14 March 3pm
Philharmonia Orchestra Beethoven 250 Beethoven
Symphony no. 6 (Pastoral) Piano Concerto no. 4 Symphony no. 5 Choral Fantasia
In December 1808, Beethoven gave a mammoth concert in Vienna at which all the pieces in tonight’s programme were first performed, plus parts of his Mass in C, making “arguably the most momentous concert in history” The Guardian. We mark the 250th anniversary of his birth with this special recreation.
Andreas Haefliger piano
Rodolfus Choir Esa-Pekka Salonen
Beethoven Day As well as the concert, enjoy a programme of chamber music, talks and screenings, curated and presented by Professor John Deathridge (King’s College London), taking place around The Anvil building, from 11am. £10 The Philharmonia Orchestra is Anvil Arts Orchestra in Partnership Please note earlier start time
“Belongs to that elite group of interpreters…a complete Beethovenian” Daily Telegraph on Andreas Haefliger
Sunday 5 April
Philharmonia Orchestra Boulanger
D’un soir triste Tchaikovsky
Piano Concerto no. 1 Mussorgsky/ arr. Ravel
Pictures at an Exhibition Daniel Kharitonov piano
Lili Boulanger’s short orchestral piece, the last she wrote, uses shifting, ambiguous harmonies and subtle orchestration to create an intriguing impression. Tchaikovsky’s piano concerto set the pattern for many future pieces with its dramatic confrontation between heroic soloist and eloquent orchestra. Mussorgsky’s suite of musical pictures includes castles, chicks and catacombs, culminating in the unforgettable grandeur of the great Gate of Kiev. The Philharmonia Orchestra is Anvil Arts Orchestra in Partnership
Pablo Heras-Casado
“Mr. Heras-Casado drew authoritative and exciting performances from the orchestra” New York Times
Pablo Heras-Casado
“Alert playing of vitality and substantial expressive character.” MusicWeb International
Dmitry Vasiliev
Chloë Hanslip
Tuesday 14 April
Siberian Symphony Orchestra Rachmaninov
The Rock Glazunov
Violin Concerto Tchaikovsky
Symphony no. 4 Chloë Hanslip violin
Dmitry Vasiliev
The twenty-year-old Rachmaninov’s expressive tone poem The Rock won the enthusiastic admiration of Tchaikovsky and already shows many of his qualities as a composer. Glazunov’s passionately lyrical and undeservedly overlooked Violin Concerto dates from 1904, a period when the composer was at the height of his creative powers. Tchaikovsky’s powerful Fourth Symphony is one of his most successful large-scale works. The opening fanfare, said to represent the power of fate, is followed by a lyrical slow movement and pizzicato scherzo. In the finale, the fanfare returns to striking effect as the work drives to its headlong conclusion.
“Full-blooded lyricism meets virtuoso delirious high spirits” BBC Music magazine on Chloë Hanslip’s playing of the Glazunov Violin Concerto
Thursday 30 April
Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra Martucci
Notturno Brahms
Violin Concerto Prokofiev
Symphony no. 1 (Classical) Rimsky-Korsakov
Capriccio espagnol Tasmin Little violin
Valentina Peleggi
We welcome Tasmin Little back to The Anvil as part of her farewell to the concert stage. The concert begins with Martucci’s beautiful nocturne. Brahms’ violin concerto is built on a symphonic scale. He replaced the original middle two movements with one of his most beautiful adagios, and the finale is a vigorous Hungarian dance. Prokofiev’s lively Classical Symphony takes Haydn’s symphonies as its affectionate model, successfully updating the form to the early twentieth century. Rimsky-Korsakov was captivated by the dash and glitter of popular Spanish musical themes, and worked several of them into the striking and piquantly orchestrated piece that closes this concert.
“Little’s execution was flawless, her tone pure and penetrating” The Times
Valentina Peleggi
Tasmin Little
“Utterly compelling� The Australian on Alina Ibragimova
Alina Ibragimova
Thursday 14 May
Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment Mozart
Overture: The Marriage of Figaro Michael Haydn
Violin Concerto in A Mozart
Serenade in D K320 (Posthorn) Alina Ibragimova violin/director
The sparkling overture to Mozart’s most popular opera opens this concert. Haydn’s younger brother Michael was also a prolific and inventive composer, who spent his career in Salzburg and was friends with the Mozart family. The A major is the last and most ambitious of his three violin concertos, dating from about 1776. The Posthorn Serenade was possibly written for the end of year ceremony of Salzburg University. Its seven movements are contrasted in tempo and orchestration, ending with a presto finale which includes suitably celebratory flourishes from the posthorn. The Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment is Anvil Arts Orchestra in Association
Tuesday 19 May
Philharmonia Orchestra Kodàly
Suite: Hàry Jànos Khachaturian
Violin Concerto Sibelius
Symphony no. 5 Nemanja Radulovic violin
Santtu-Matias Rouvali
We’re delighted to welcome back Santtu-Matias Rouvali after his superb concert last season. Kodàly’s popular suite begins with an orchestral ‘sneeze’ and goes on to recount tall tales of the hero’s exploits against Napoleon. Khachaturian’s Violin Concerto is possibly his finest work. Lively and memorable melodies in the outer movements contrast with a slow movement which rises to a heartfelt climax. The flavour of folk music from the composer’s native Armenia is often evident. Sibelius’ fifth and most well-known symphony grows from the seed of its tiny opening figure to the most outwardly heroic of his seven works in the form. The final majestic brass theme was inspired by a flight of swans the awe-struck composer saw wheeling over his house in the countryside. The Philharmonia Orchestra is Anvil Arts Orchestra in Partnership
Nemanja Radulovic
“Exceptional talent, real charisma and serious youth appeal” Daily Mail on Nemanja Radulovic
“Every second was thrilling”
Stephen Hough
The Guardian on Sir Mark Elder
Sir Mark Elder
Wednesday 24 June
Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment Wagner
Tristan and Isolde: Prelude and Liebestod Liszt
Piano Concerto no. 1 Piano Concerto no. 2 Wagner
Overture: Tannhäuser Stephen Hough
Liszt and Wagner were the driving inspiration for so much that was new in nineteenth-century music. Wagner’s endlessly unresolved harmonies in Tristan and Isolde influenced composers for decades. Liszt’s two piano concertos compressed the traditional form into a single ever-changing sequence, transformed by breathtaking virtuosity and romantic eloquence. The groundbreaking orchestration of both composers will sound at its most revelatory on instruments of the time. The Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment is Anvil Arts Orchestra in Association
piano
Sir Mark Elder
“What gripped the attention from start to finish… was the high seriousness of the playing and the imaginative intelligence that Hough brought.” The Guardian
HOW TO FIND THE ANVIL By car: From the ring road or junction 6 of the M3, follow signs for Basingstoke town centre and then brown signs for The Anvil. These direct you to the car park next to the building. Coach drop off points are in Churchill Way. By train: Basingstoke station is just a short walk away. Journey time for London Waterloo 45-60 mins; Southampton Central 30-35 mins. By bike: Cycle parking is available at the front of The Anvil, underneath the car park ramp to the right of the main doors. Visit anvilarts.org.uk for more information.
The Anvil Trust is grateful for the support of the following: Sponsors and Corporate Members:
Supported by:
ANVIL ARTS
ACCESS FACILITIES
Anvil Arts is the largest performing arts organisation in Hampshire, and runs The Anvil, The Haymarket and The Forge in Basingstoke. It is governed by The Anvil Trust, an independent educational charity.
Anvil Arts operates a free Access List in order to improve our service to patrons with access needs. Registration forms are available from the box office or Anvil Arts website.
Anvil Arts, Churchill Way, Basingstoke, Hampshire RG21 7QR 01256 844244 anvilarts.org.uk Life Patron: The Lady Sainsbury CBE Patron: The Countess of Portsmouth
• The ticket counter has a drop down counter for wheelchair users. • The Anvil is equipped with infra-red hearing enhancement systems for use with headsets or portable induction loops. Both are available from the Stewards’ point. • Personal Emergency Evacuation Plans are available on request.
GREAT MUSIC OF THE WORLD
For full details of all facilities, please visit anvilarts.org.uk/access or contact the box office
Support the International Concert Series by donating to the Great Music of the World fund. See the booking form or contact the box office for details.
This brochure is also available in other formats
TICKET PRICES Not all seats may be available at all performances. Details in this brochure were correct at the time of going to press, but changes may be unavoidable.
Area 1 (Red) £42 Area 2 (Blue) £38 Area 3 (Green) £31 Area 4 (Yellow) £24 Area 5 (Purple) £16
PICTURE CREDITS
Ticket prices include £3 booking fee
Elisa Citterio – Monica-Cordiviola Sir Mark Elder – Benjamin Ealovega Alina Ibragimova – Eva Vermandel Andreas Haefliger – Marco Borggreve Chloë Hanslip – Kaupo Kikkas Stephen Hough – Sim Canetty-Clarke Pietari Inkinen – Yamaguchi Atsushi Frances Kelly – Arnaud Stephenson Tasmin Little – B Ealovega Natalia Lomeiko – Sasha Gusov and Jane Blundell Esa-Pekka Salonen – Katja Tähjä Sayaka Shoji – Marco Borggreve The Sixteen Group – Molina Visuals Yeol Eum Son – Jaehyong Park Esther Yoo – Marco Borggreve
Subscription discounts available – please contact the box office for details. Please note – there is level access to Stalls row H and, via a lift, Circle row C and most of rows CB, CC, DB and DC (Side Circle).
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The Anvil Churchill Way, Basingstoke, Hampshire RG21 7QR 01256 844244 anvilarts.org.uk