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Top pianist home for a Chopin birthday treat
from CityNews 230202
By Tony Magee
AN outstanding BritishAustralian pianist will be in Canberra soon to present “Chopin’s Birthday Concert” for the Friends of Chopin Australia.
Penelope Thwaites will be joined by cellist Patrick Suthers and violinist Kirsten Williams in a concert featuring “Piano Trio in B flat, K502”; Chopin’s “Ballade No 2 in F, Op.38”; a Thwaites commission and premiere performance, “Au Tombeau de Chopin” for piano trio and Chopin’s “Piano Trio in G minor, Op.8”.
Thwaites is the daughter of poet, the late Michael Thwaites, who with his wife Honor, was a long-time resident of Canberra and a well-known figure who played a leading role in the Petrov Affair in 1954.
Michael Thwaites’ poetry is filled with images inspired not only by life in Australia as in “Canberra Autumn”, “Creation” and the delightful “Metamorphosis”, but also in Britain as in “Coming into the Clyde” and his narration of a 1940 sea battle in the North Atlantic, “The Jervis Bay”.
His hymn “For Australia”, set to a tune by Henry Purcell was sung during an Anzac Day service in Westminster Abbey, as well as at the Australia Day Bicentennial celebration at the Sydney Opera House and when the late Queen Elizabeth II officially opened the new Parliament House in May, 1988.
“Both my parents were deeply musical,”
Thwaites says.
“As children, we had very good quality music. And they had a poetic quote for every situation. I owe a lot to them. I think what children get from their parents is more what they do than what they say.”
Thwaites is a citizen of Australia and the UK and spends a great deal of her time in
Canberra. Appointed a Member of the Order of Australia in 2001, she is a represented composer with the Australian Music Centre. Known as an intensely communicative concert pianist and recording artist, she is also a composer, writer, editor, broadcaster (including for the BBC) and music-festival curator. She has appeared as a recitalist in more than 35 countries, and as soloist with leading orchestras in Europe, Australia, and America. of her work, “Missa Brevis”, in Canberra.
“The Greek and Latin words have such power and force and I hope that people will think that they fit,” she says.
“It’s interesting to get the texture of the voices melding with the notes and words. The sentiments have been expressed in these words forever and I regard it as a privilege to have set them to music.”
She is also recognised as an international authority on the music of Percy Grainger and was artistic director of London’s first international Grainger event in 1998, also helping to instigate the monumental 19-CD Grainger recording series on Chandos, in which she was a featured soloist.
Violinist Kirsten Williams enjoyed an international reputation before joining the Canberra Symphony Orchestra in 2019 as concertmaster, also leading the ANU’s Women in Music program in 2021.
Her music-for-healing passion led to her recording two CDs for Australian Bush Flower Essences and, in 2014, she was named Volunteer of the Year for her work playing in the Intensive Care Unit at Westmead Children’s Hospital. In the same year, she became patron of the Goulburn Strings Project, designed to bring music education to children in low-socioeconomic, regional contexts.
Patrick Suthers, a graduate of the Canberra School of Music, is the principal cellist of the Canberra Symphony Orchestra, a position he has held since 2012. He has performed frequent chamber music concerts with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra Fellowship Ensemble, including private performances for Pope Benedict XVI.
“Chopin’s Birthday Concert”, All Saints Church, Ainslie, 3pm, February 19.
Lots of musical love for Barbra
LEADING star of musicals, Ainsley Melham, wll join the cast of “To Barbra, With Love” when it comes to town. The 80th birthday celebration of Barbra Streisand features top performers singing her most memorable songs, accompanied by the Canberra Symphony Orchestra under the baton of Vanessa Scammell. Canberra Theatre, 7.30pm, Friday, February 1 and 2pm, Saturday, February 11.
“AT Dinner” is the first in ACT Hub’s 2023 drama development program. Written by Rebecca Duke, the play is billed as an examination of modern love which begins when Anna and her high-school boyfriend Eden go out to dinner at a restaurant. At first glance, Anna appears to be stuck in a dead-end relationship with Eden. Directed by Holly Johnson, the show features actors Tim Cusack, Thea Jade and Nakiya Xyrakis. February 9-11.
CHANGES at Tuggeranong Arts
Centre this year include the appointment of Ann McMahon to head up its visual arts program, replacing Karena Keys, who has moved to the National Portrait Gallery, and the engagement of Toby Cole to run a new community choir.
“CATCH Jazida” is a reprisal of burlesque star Jazida’s “noir burlesque” extravaganza where she plays a thief who drops her clothes as she flees capture through every speakeasy, cabaret club, circus tent and burlesque bar in town. Courtyard Studio, February 10-12.
IN “A Collection of Favourites”, Andrew Rumsey on piano and Thomas Azoury on clarinet, offer a short-and-sweet , one-hour program of their most-loved favourites. Wesley Music Centre, For rest, 3pm Saturday, February 11.