– SPRING / SUMMER 2016 –
Shakespeare, coming upon me unawares, struck me like a thunderbolt. Hector Berlioz
PLAYING THE BARD
FOYLE FUTURE FIRSTS
BACKSTAGE
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Music inspired by Shakespeare through the centuries
The LPO helps young instrumentalists bridge the gap between college and a professional music career
Bang on a drum: Henry Baldwin on all things percussion
Principal Partner
New releases on the LPO Label The Genius of Film Music: Hollywood Blockbusters 1960s to 1980s John Mauceri conductor
Principal Supporters
£10.99 (2 CDs) LPO-0086 | Released September 2015
Beethoven Coriolan Overture Symphony No. 5 Klaus Tennstedt conductor A BBC recording £6.99 LPO-0087 | Released October 2015
Mahler Box Set Symphonies 1, 2, 6 & 8 A set of live recordings of the London Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Klaus Tennstedt. £49.99 LPO-0100 | Released November 2015
Rachmaninoff Symphony No. 3 10 Songs (arr. Jurowski)
Com in soo g n
Education Partner
Vladimir Jurowski conductor Vsevolod Grivnov tenor £9.99 LPO-0088 | Release date February 2016
Julian Anderson In lieblicher Bläue Alleluia The Stations Of The Sun
Com in soo g n
Vladimir Jurowski conductor Carolin Widmann violin London Philharmonic Choir £9.99 LPO-0089 | Release date March 2016
Browse the catalogue and sign up for updates at lpo.org.uk/recordings CDs available from lpo.org.uk/recordings, the LPO Ticket Office (020 7840 4242), all good CD outlets, and the Royal Festival Hall shop. Download or stream online via iTunes, Amazon, Spotify and others.
Corporate Members Accenture Berenberg Carter-Ruck We are AD Appleyard & Trew LLP BTO Management Consulting AG Charles Russell Speechlys Lazard Russo-British Chamber of Commerce
Preferred Partners Corinthia Hotel London Heineken Lindt & Sprüngli Ltd Sipsmith Steinway Villa Maria
In-kind Sponsors Google Inc
TUNE IN – SPRING / SUMMER 2016 –
WELCOME
W
elcome to the Spring 2016 edition of the London Philharmonic Orchestra’s newsletter, Tune In, keeping you up-to-date with news and highlights of the season and future events. We are extremely excited to be part of Shakespeare400, a collaboration with some of the UK’s leading cultural, creative and educational institutions, marking the 400th anniversary of the nation’s most famous playwright’s death. We play our part with a series of concerts celebrating the Bard’s love of music, culminating in an Anniversary Gala Concert directed by Simon Callow on 23 April. On page 4, Hugo Shirley investigates Shakespeare’s undeniable impact on composers from around the world, from Thomas Adès to Wagner. As well as concerts, the series also includes many pre-concert events that should not be missed, such as performances by our Foyle Future Firsts students, more of which later. On page 6 is an overview of the Festival with useful information on how to follow the series and keep abreast of connected news items on all our social media platforms. All relevant events are signposted throughout the magazine with the ‘Shakespeare400’ logo. If you want to play your part there are several ways to get involved, as you will discover on page 10 such as the ‘Sounds & Sweet Airs’ Gala or the Shakespeare Appeal and Syndicate. Education and community work is a core activity at the LPO, the benefits of which are gained, not just by the participants of projects, but also the players who take part. In this issue we turn our attention to Foyle
Timothy Walker © Chris Blott
Editor Sarah Breeden Publisher London Philharmonic Orchestra Printer Conquest Litho Ltd
– TIMOTHY WALKER – Chief Executive and Artistic Director
2016/17 season The next LPO season will be launched on Thursday 28 January 2016 when all details of concerts and events can be found on the website. Booking opens on Thursday 11 February (online and via the LPO Box Office only). To take advantage of priority booking (from Tuesday 2 February), become a Friend of the London Philharmonic Orchestra for as little as £50 a year. Call Helen Yang on 020 7840 4225 or visit lpo.org.uk/support/memberships
Future Firsts, a successful scheme for talented instrumentalists that bridges the difficult progression from college to fully fledged professional musicians. Pieter Schoeman, Leader of the LPO, talks of the personal satisfaction he gains from being one of the mentors (see page 8). Also integral to the Orchestra’s life is touring, and highlights of the 2015/16 season so far can be found on page 12, alongside a sneak preview of Glyndebourne 2016. Do please join us at some of our forthcoming concerts in London or further afield (see pages 13–15). If you can’t get to one of our venues in person there are many other ways to hear the Orchestra. Some of our concerts are broadcast on BBC Radio 3 and subsequently available online for 30 days, or you can now hear us via ‘Classical Live’: a new online platform showcasing live performances from top international orchestras (see page 7). Alternatively ‘Listen Again’ offers the opportunity to hear at least six live classical concert recordings over the season available online for free. Sign up for alerts via lpo.org.uk. Full details of the UK season are available in our brochures, and details of all concerts at home and abroad can be found on our website. We hope you can join us soon.
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lpo.org.uk/explore
CONTENTS PLAYING THE BARD 04–05 SHAKESPEARE400 06 NEW & NOTEWORTHY 07, 12 FOYLE FUTURE FIRSTS 08–09 SOUNDS & SWEET AIRS 10 PREFERRED PARTNERS 11 CONCERT LISTINGS 13–15 BACKSTAGE 16
While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of this publication, we cannot accept liability for any statement or error contained herein. © 2016 London Philharmonic Orchestra.
The paper used for printing this magazine has been sourced from responsibly managed forests, certified in accordance with the FSC (Forest Stewardship Council). It is manufactured to the ISO 14001 international standard, minimising negative impacts on the environment and is manufactured from pulp that has been bleached without the use of chlorine compounds using oxygen (elemental chlorine free), which are considered harmful to the environment.
Full concert listings and booking information on pages 13–15 – 03 –
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LPO 2015/16 SEASON
PLAYING THE BARD
‘S
hakespeare, coming upon me unawares, struck me like a thunderbolt,’ wrote Berlioz in his Memoirs about his first encounter with the playwright – and Hamlet – in Paris in 1827. ‘The lightning flash of that discovery revealed to me at a stroke the whole heaven of art, illuminating it to its remotest corners.’ Setting aside for one moment the fact that that fateful performance also marked the French composer’s first encounter with the English actress Harriet Smithson – playing Ophelia, she became the object of Berlioz’s ardent obsession and inspiration for the Symphonie fantastique – this was a monumental event in his life. And Berlioz went on to compose his opera Béatrice et Bénédict and the ‘symphonie dramatique’ Roméo et Juliette, premiered almost exactly a decade after that first encounter with the Danish play. Berlioz and his unusual, genre-bending take on Romeo and Juliet are perhaps a good place to start a discussion of both the powerful effect that Shakespeare had on composers, especially in the 19th century, and the strange, almost paradoxical challenges involved in translating the finely wrought poetry of his plays into dots and squiggles on the musical stave. Berlioz is also a good starting point to note the very different reception of Shakespeare on the Continent. For example, Hamlet, Berlioz tells us, offered him a chance to ‘measure the utter absurdity of the French view of Shakespeare which derives from Voltaire’. When another English troupe had brought Shakespeare to the French capital in 1820, the reaction had been hostile, with audiences much preferring the sanctioned ‘Frenchified’ versions. These subsequent performances therefore represented quite a breakthrough. The timing was propitious, too, with the ‘real’
Lilli Paasikivi performs Sibelius’s The Tempest, on 10 February
Shakespeare asserting himself in the Parisian cultural imagination around the same time that Beethoven did, a fact that might have helped Wagner – who tried to ‘break’ the French capital late in the following decade – decide that Beethoven and Shakespeare were the creative spirits he wished to unite in his Music Dramas. The French rediscovery of Shakespeare post-dates the German rediscovery of him, which took place around 1770. In the German-speaking world his plays, read primarily in prose translations, became emblematic of the wildness and freedom from literary convention that became tenets of the Sturm und Drang (‘Storm and Stress’) movement of early Romanticism. For the young Goethe and other members of the movement, Shakespeare’s importance was more symbolic than specific: he represented the ‘Poetic Genius’, according to one Goethe biographer, whose plays were populated with
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Promethean characters who themselves contained the spark of genius. So what can such literary pre-history tell us about the Shakespeare-inspired musical works that form the backbone of the London Philharmonic Orchestra’s part in the Shakespeare400 celebration? First, it gives a clue as to how Shakespeare has been so central to music in the largely wordless world of the concert hall, an institution that was formed in the 19th century, as well as the opera (and ballet) stage. It gives a clue also to his broad power for artists of all stripes, as well as going some way to explain how composers, in particular, found ways of translating his characters, drama and ‘Poetic Genius’ into their own medium. Of course the most apparently straightforward transformation came with operatic adaptations, even if it arguably took the combined genius of Arrigo Boito and the Shakespeare-obsessed Giuseppe Verdi to create the first fully successful Shakespearean operas in their Otello and Falstaff, the aged composer’s final two operas. The former showed how an original play could be condensed and pared down to shattering dramatic effect, while the latter gained much of its richness from amalgamating the different incarnations of the Fat Knight found in The Merry Wives of Windsor and both parts of Henry IV. Later Shakespearean operas have tended to follow Boito’s lead with the words either judiciously but extensively cut (as Benjamin Britten and Peter Pears did for A Midsummer Night’s Dream) or, in the case of Meredith Oakes’s libretto for Thomas Adès’s The Tempest, rewriting them. Otto Nicolai’s The Merry Wives of Windsor (1849), whose comic overture we hear opening the third concert of the festival, simplified matters by interspersing spoken dialogue and musical
© Rami Lappalainen and Unelmastudio Oy Ltd
As the LPO joins forces with other cultural institutions for Shakespeare400, a celebration of the anniversary of Shakespeare’s death, Hugo Shirley looks at the influence the Bard has had on composers across continents and through the ages.
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Iestyn Davies © Iestyn Davies and Marco Borggreve; V ladimir Jurowski © Drew Kelley
Left to right: Countertenor Iestyn Davies, LPO Principal Conductor and Artistic Advisor Vladimir Jurowski, Simon Callow OBE: all perform at the Shakespeare400 Gala Concert, 23 April
numbers. While arguably one of the greatest Shakespearean scores of all, Prokofiev’s ballet version of Romeo and Juliet, of course eschews words altogether, and does so incredibly effectively, replacing them with the universal language of dance. We also hear one of the finest of a myriad of settings of Shakespeare’s own verse in Vaughan Williams’s Serenade to Music (1938) – its text adapted from The Merchant of Venice – as well as music designed to accompany the words of other plays. Sibelius’s music for The Tempest was not composed until 1925–7 despite the suggestion being made in 1901 that he tackle the subject (a friend pointing out that Tchaikovsky had already composed his Hamlet Overture) and having contemplated composing a work based on Macbeth as early as 1889. The eventual score, composed for a lavish production in Copenhagen, is seen as one of the composer’s greatest achievements for the theatre, and the two concert suites he assembled from the music contain an array of brilliantly concise and descriptive short movements. William Walton’s Henry V Suite, meanwhile, presents music written for the
1944 film starring Laurence Olivier. Mendelssohn’s incidental music for A Midsummer Night’s Dream is something of an exception. All but the Overture was written for a performance of the play at the behest of the King of Prussia in 1843. But the Overture itself was composed by the 17-year-old Mendelssohn in 1826, the precocious young composer’s musical expression of certain poetic elements of Shakespeare’s world. As such, Mendelssohn’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream Overture is in the tradition of those other purely instrumental concert works featured in the LPO’s celebration, works that perhaps best demonstrate the genre-crossing power of Shakespeare’s poetic ideas. Tchaikovsky’s Hamlet fits into one branch of this tradition, one of three fantasy overtures on Shakespearean subjects he composed (the most famous being the Fantasy Overture on Romeo and Juliet) but which he later reworked into incidental music for a St Petersburg production of the play. Richard Strauss’s Macbeth (1886–8), one of his less commonly heard tone poems, is also a more general reaction to the play, concentrating (as Liszt had done in his own lpo.org.uk/shakespeare – 05 –
Shakespearean and Goethean tone poems) on character portraits rather than plot and, unusually for the composer, having little or no autobiographical content (he was yet to meet his formidable wife, Pauline, in case one is tempted to see her in the characterisation of Lady Macbeth). Dvořák’s Othello Overture, on the other hand, was initially not named as such: in the swirling aesthetic debates of the 19th century, many held ‘merely’ descriptive music to be of limited value. Instead, it and two other overtures of 1891–2 formed a triptych initially given the vague title of Nature, Life and Love. The autograph score of the Othello Overture is filled with references to the play, even if these were left out in the printed edition. However all these works – the tip of a Shakespearean musical iceberg – show Shakespeare’s ability to inspire across both centuries and national boundaries. How some of the greatest composers did – or didn’t – engage with his poetry and plays is doubly fascinating, telling us about the Bard and those who were inspired by him. This celebration provides a welcome opportunity to explore those questions for ourselves. FIND OUT MORE lpo.org.uk/shakespeare
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LPO 2015/16 SEASON
SHAKESPEARE400 A festival of concerts, talks and exploratory events at Royal Festival Hall, celebrating the musical legacy of the world’s greatest playwright
CONCERTS
SPECIAL FREE PERFORMANCES
WEDNESDAY 3 FEBRUARY Othello | Dvořák
WEDNESDAY 27 JANUARY Hamlet in Russia: Shostakovich’s Hamlet
WEDNESDAY 10 FEBRUARY The Tempest | Sibelius
WEDNESDAY 10 FEBRUARY New Horizons: Inspired by Shakespeare
FRIDAY 12 FEBRUARY The Merry Wives of Windsor | Nicolai
SATURDAY 5 MARCH Ophelia Dances
FRIDAY 26 FEBRUARY Macbeth | R Strauss A Midsummer Night’s Dream | Mendelssohn
SATURDAY 9 APRIL LPO Soundworks & Quicksilver: Inspired by Shakespeare SATURDAY 30 APRIL Royal College of Music Big Band: Such Sweet Thunder
FRIDAY 15 APRIL Romeo and Juliet | Prokofiev SATURDAY 23 APRIL Anniversary Gala Concert Featuring very special guests SUNDAY 5 JUNE Bottom’s Dream | FUNharmonics
IN THE SPOTLIGHT FREE PRE-CONCERT TALKS WEDNESDAY 3 FEBRUARY Adapting Othello WEDNESDAY 10 FEBRUARY Late works of Shakespeare and others FRIDAY 12 FEBRUARY Shakespeare’s Windsor
SHAKESPEARE400 IN THE 21ST CENTURY For exclusive online content around our Shakespeare400 series, including interviews, blog posts, pictures and videos, keep an eye on our social media channels and visit our dedicated Shakespeare400 webpage at lpo.org.uk/shakespeare
FRIDAY 26 FEBRUARY The Macbeths
facebook.com/londonphilharmonicorchestra
FRIDAY 15 APRIL Think you know Romeo & Juliet?
twitter.com/LPOrchestra #shakespeare400
lpo.org.uk/shakespeare
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LPO NEWS
NEW & NOTEWORTHY CAROLS AT WATERLOO
Vladimir Jurowski makes a special appearance on cymbals
As in previous years, members of the LPO played everyone’s favourite carols with singers from the London Philharmonic Choir on Thursday 10 December 2015 at Waterloo station. This year the collection was in aid of Save the Children. We managed to raise a total of £2884.69 beating last year’s record, so thanks to everyone who supported us!
CLASSICAL LIVE
PRINCIPAL SECOND VIOLIN
The Orchestra is delighted to be part of Classical Live, a brand new online platform exclusively on Google Play showcasing the great orchestras of the world in recent live performances. It’s yet another way the Orchestra is able to expand its reach to new audiences across the globe. The first release is of a concert performed in March last year featuring excerpts from Prokofiev’s Chout (‘The Buffoon’), LPO Composer in Residence Magnus Lindberg’s Piano Concerto No. 2 with Yefim Bronfman as soloist, and Stravinsky’s Petrushka. Vladimir Jurowski conducts.
The long quest is over! We have appointed a Principal Second Violin and extend a very warm welcome to Andrew Storey who started with the Orchestra in January 2016. Andrew joins us from the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra where he was Principal Second Violin. He has worked as a guest principal with the Philharmonia, BBC Symphony, Hallé, Orchestra of the Royal Opera House, ENO and various chamber orchestras. Andrew performs the occasional recital and recent chamber performances have included a career highlight (so far) of Schubert’s wonderful quintet alongside Pinchas Zukerman. His free time is consumed by his four children and two cats. Of his appointment he says: ‘I’m really excited about my move to the LPO. It’s a fantastic orchestra of brilliant musicians and lovely people. I’m particularly looking forward to the exciting repertoire ahead at the Royal Festival Hall and getting to know lots of operas at Glyndebourne.’
classical-live.com
CONGRATULATIONS! Congratulations to Education Director Isabella Kernot on the birth of Thomas Richard Kernot Slaney in September, weighing a very healthy 8 pounds 12 ounces. Helen Yang (née Etheridge), our Development Assistant, married Chen Yang on 25 September in West Wickham, Kent. They met while Helen was working in China and the wedding reception featured a variety of music, from traditional Chinese music played on a guzheng, the ancient Chinese zither, to Irish ceilidh music. Ji-Hyun Lee, First Violin, also got married in the autumn after a whirlwind romance. Her boyfriend, a tenor who has sung at the Royal Opera House, proposed when they were in Italy for LPO violinist Lorenzo GentiliTedeschi’s wedding in July (reported in the last edition of Tune In). She and her husband share the same first name which means ‘destiny’. No more to be said. Education and Community Project Manager Lucy Sims (née Duffy) married Mike Sims in a wintery wedding on 12 December in Hythe in Kent. Lucy’s outfit included some magnificent white wedding wellington boots! The newlyweds went on honeymoon to the Dominican Republic in January.
LPO RECORDING WINS AWARD We are delighted that we have added to our list of awards: Limelight, Australia’s classical music and arts magazine, has named the LPO’s live recording of Messiaen’s Des canyons aux étoiles as Orchestral Recording of the Year 2015. The work features four soloists including LPO Principal Horn John Ryan and LPO Principal Percussion Andrew Barclay (on xylorimba, a slightly larger xylophone), and received critical acclaim on its release. Andrew McGregor on BBC Radio 3’s CD Review described it as ‘an extraordinary achievement ... the playing of the LPO is exemplary’. Philip Clark of Limelight writes: ‘these canyons are brought alive with the sound of sound, this extraordinary score inviting your ears to footslog through a living, breathing, evolving aural environment ... Christoph Eschenbach revels in all this elemental, psycho-geographic splendour, chiseling the mosaic together piece by piece until the final movement where the music takes to the heavens and celestial harmony returns.’ lpo.org.uk
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Messiaen Des canyons aux étoiles Christoph Eschenbach conductor Tzimon Barto piano | John Ryan horn Andrew Barclay xylorimba Erika Öhman glockenspiel £10.99 (2 CDs) LPO-0083 CDs available from lpo.org.uk/recordings, LPO Ticket Office 020 7840 4242 READ THE FULL REVIEW HERE
lpo.uk/limelightwinner
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LPO EDUCATION AND COMMUNITY
FOYLE FUTURE FIRSTS The Foyle Future Firsts Development Programme helps talented young instrumentalists on the road to becoming professional musicians. Mentor and LPO Leader, Pieter Schoeman, explains what makes a successful candidate and his personal pleasure of being involved in the scheme.
T
he London Philharmonic Orchestra’s annual Foyle Future Firsts Development Programme (FFF) bridges the transition between college and the professional platform for up to 16 outstanding young musicians as they take their first tentative steps into the real world. Instrumentalists endure a rigorous audition process and out of the 150 who audition, just sixteen are given the unique opportunity to spend 12 months with the Orchestra. The benefits include participation in a series of mock auditions, training in creative and community leadership by working on LPO Education and Community projects, and participation in a high-profile concert and access to new professional networks via their fellow cohorts and LPO musicians. A significant part of the scheme – and one that is often quoted as a major reason for applying for a place – is that each
FFFs enjoy their first education session
instrumentalist is allocated an LPO Principal as a mentor through whom they receive advice and support in one-to-one lessons and in a series of ‘sit-ins’ during rehearsals with the full Orchestra. As we discovered in our last Tune In edition, LPO musicians also derive benefits from taking part in education schemes, as explained by Anne McAneney (Trumpet) and Alice Munday (Oboe), participants in the Creative Classrooms scheme. Pieter Schoeman, LPO Leader agrees: he derives a great deal of pleasure from being a FFF mentor. We caught up with him at the auditions for the 2015/16 intake. ‘Our role as mentors is to help the participants find jobs one day and it’s very satisfying to see how that happens,’ Pieter says. They build up a special relationship that can last for years. He goes on to explain: ‘We spend a substantial amount of time with the students and they can call up any time to discuss anything. Even after they have finished the programme they are free to call and ask advice about what they should do. They will discuss sensitive things about their career.’ The relationship with their mentor means much to the participant, too, one FFF commenting that it was ‘the part of the scheme which I value most. I am very grateful to my mentor for all I’ve learned from her through the year’. Pieter clearly believes helping these talented young professionals is extremely important and has reaped dividends for both the Orchestra and the students. ‘We have a successful track record of students getting trials with orchestras while on the programme. This past season three violinists got trials for very good jobs and of course Ilyoung [Ilyoung Chae, First Violin] actually got
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Pieter Schoeman, LPO Leader and Foyle Future Firsts mentor
a job with the LPO while on FFF.’ This comment is backed up by FFF’s impressive ‘next-step’ results. Many are well on the way to securing their first orchestral jobs in only a matter of months, including trials for section principal roles. The audition process can be daunting and quite rightly so as the programme is highprofile and has a strong reputation amongst not only the UK’s young classical musicians, but also those from overseas. A previous FFF commented: ‘The scheme is really unique compared to side-by-side schemes offered by other orchestras. I’d say this is the most comprehensive. It’s really appropriately placed for college leavers.’ As Pieter says, it can be a cruel, nasty world and there are many good
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Foyle Future Firsts and Pieter Schoeman © Benjamin Ealovega
2015/16 Foyle Future Firsts and Young Composers cohorts
players, so what is the panel looking for at scheme then the hard work really begins for the audition? It’s not just an exceptional the students, culminating in a concert musicality and technique – personality plays showcasing FFFs at the Royal College of Music, an important part. ‘We have some people as well as two pre-concert performances who are incredible players but their individual (see right), and being involved in Education sound might not be so good in a group and so and Community projects, giving it an we are not really sure how they will fit into all-round, holistic aspect, again much the orchestra’, explains Pieter. ‘I’m not appreciated by the students: ‘The saying we are looking for faceless scheme showed me the variety people – not at all – we need of projects in the LPO, and those with a personality but its philosophy regarding We are here to help the you have to be able to education work is one that students. I get personal contain that personality.’ I really admire’, said one pleasure seeing them succeed. It’s amazing to get that text to Pieter does have some participant. say they got the job. It makes it sound advice for those at One last word from all worthwhile. the audition stage, and Pieter: ‘FFF can be timethat’s to make sure they take consuming but that’s fine, Pieter Schoeman as much effort over the that’s what we’re here for – symphonic extract parts they to help the young musicians – are asked to perform as well as the and, especially if they appreciate concertos: it can be make or break. ‘If the help you give, you are willing to go you want a job in the Orchestra you will have out of your way to help them. And you get millions of notes to play so you can’t be personal pleasure to see them succeed. It’s expected to play perfectly all the time, but in amazing to get that text to say they got the the audition it’s such a small amount, so it is job. It makes it all worthwhile. expected to be technically flawless. If you Foyle Future Firsts Development Programme is can’t do that, how are you expected to play all generously funded by The Foyle Foundation with those notes you are going to play in the rest of additional support from Help Musicians UK, The your career?’ A true eye-opener to the world of Barbara Whatmore Charitable Trust and the Lord the orchestral musician. He also suggests and Lady Lurgan Trust. performing it in front of a trusted advisor Pieter Schoeman’s chair is supported by before the actual audition. Neil Westreich Once they have a coveted place on the
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FOYLE FUTURE FIRSTS FREE PRE-CONCERT EVENTS AT ROYAL FESTIVAL HALL Wednesday 27 January 2016 6.00 –6.45pm Shostakovich Hamlet, Op. 32a – Suite from the Theatre Music Vladimir Jurowski conductor Saturday 5 March 2016 6.00 –6.45pm Oliver Knussen Ophelia Dances Brett Dean Wolf-Lieder (Wolf Songs) Ben Gernon conductor Jenavieve Moore soprano
DEBUT SOUNDS AT ROYAL COLLEGE OF MUSIC Monday 4 July 2016 | 7.30pm Five new concertinos by the five LPO Young Composers played by LPO soloists and Foyle Future Firsts, conducted by Magnus Lindberg. Also included is a performance by Royal College of Music students.
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LPO NEWS
SOUNDS & SWEET AIRS PLAY YOUR PART IN 2016 In 2016 we are inviting audiences to help us build a community of 400 donors to support our landmark celebration of the legacy of Shakespeare in music. By donating to our Shakespeare Appeal you will become one of our Shakespeare400 and enable us to deliver: • • •
Five Shakespeare-themed concerts Eight free pre-concert events with leading experts A series of education and community events to inspire hundreds of young people in south London and beyond with the spirit of Shakespeare in music.
Donations of any amount will make a difference. Those able to give £400 or more will be invited to associate their contribution with a year on our Shakespeare-in-music timeline. To support our creative ambition for the Shakespeare400 Festival and help us build our Shakespeare400 visit lpo.org.uk/supportshakespeare, or contact Kathryn Hageman on 020 7840 4212 or email kathryn.hageman@lpo.org.uk.
HENRY WOOD HALL On Tuesday 23 February 2016 we will be hosting our annual Behind the Scenes evening in the intimate surroundings of Henry Wood Hall. An event not to miss, this year will feature an In Conversation piece with acclaimed Russian conductor Vasily Petrenko (pictured) as he gives an extraordinary insight into his working process. A performance of Brahms’s Clarinet Trio will follow and guests will also have the opportunity to ask questions. The evening will begin with a drinks reception in the Crypt and will include a post-talk informal supper with the musicians, LPO staff and other supporters of the Orchestra. Tickets available for members only and are priced at £45. To book, or for further information, please contact Rebecca Fogg on 020 7840 4209 or rebecca.fogg@lpo.org.uk by Friday 12 February.
SOUNDS & SWEET AIRS GALA 2016
We are delighted to announce that ‘Sounds & Sweet Airs’, the 2016 London Philharmonic Orchestra Gala evening, will be held on Wednesday 27 April amidst the stunning surroundings of the Old Royal Naval College, Greenwich. The evening, curated in partnership with acclaimed actor Simon Callow CBE, will include performances inspired by Shakespeare as we celebrate his 400th anniversary. Guests will enjoy a Champagne Taittinger reception on the Colonnades before moving on to the beautiful Chapel for an orchestral showcase with Vladimir Jurowski at the helm. Guests will then adjourn to the stunning Painted Hall to enjoy a three-course gala dinner and a live auction in support of the work of the London Philharmonic Orchestra. For further information and to book your ticket please contact Catherine Faulkner on 0207 840 4207, email catherine.faulkner@lpo.org.uk or visit lpo.org.uk/support/gala.html lpo.org.uk – 10 –
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LPO NEWS
PREFERRED PARTNERS: COMPETITION & NEWS WIN VIP TICKETS AND WINE WITH VILLA MARIA It’s not easy to tell your dad that you’re quitting a career in carpentry to try your hand at making wine. But in 1961, at the age of 21, that’s exactly what Sir George Fistonich did. He leased five acres of land from his father, planted one acre with grapes and started making wine under the name Villa Maria. From the outset Sir George was determined to be at the cutting edge of quality winegrowing and as a result, Villa Maria Estate has claimed the title of New Zealand’s Most Awarded Winery for over 30 consecutive years. With a mutual focus on excellence in their respective fields Villa Maria is a perfect fit as the official wine partner to the London Philharmonic Orchestra, and is delighted to offer one winner a pair of VIP tickets to a concert of their choice in the current season (full listings can be found on page 13). These tickets provide some of the best seats in the house along with a complimentary invitation to the Orchestra’s private bar where guests can enjoy Villa Maria wines and canapés. The prize also includes six bottles of Villa Maria’s exceptional Reserve Wairau Valley Sauvignon Blanc. Additionally two runners up will each receive a bottle of this delicious wine. To enter, please email competitions@hatch.co.uk with your answer to the following question: What is your favourite grape variety? Please include your name, address and telephone number, and put ‘LPO Competition’ in the Subject line.
CORINTHIA HOTEL ARTIST IN RESIDENCE In January 2016 Corinthia Hotel London will host the world premiere of Found and Lost, a site-specific opera-inspired project written by composer Emily Hall. For its fourth Artist in Residence programme since it opened in 2011 the hotel, one of the LPO’s Preferred Partners, invited proposals for opera-themed works to take place within the building. The Artist in Residence programme is an annual initiative to support emerging talent and the Arts. Emily beat eleven other composers to win the commission. Timothy Walker, the Orchestra’s Chief Executive and Artistic Director, was on the panel of judges alongside Royal Opera House Chief Executive Alex Beard, tenor Joseph Calleja, English Touring Opera Artistic Director James Conway and Guardian journalist Imogen Tilden. Emily embarked on a month’s residency at the Corinthia to develop material for her opera which reveals the secret life of a hotel. Guests will embark on a sonic journey through some of Corinthia Hotel London’s most beautiful spaces in this guided experience of discovery where rooms can break into song, and real or imagined dramas could be waiting just around the corner. The opera will run from 25 January to 3 February 2016. To book tickets call 084 4477 1000 or visit corinthia-air.com.
Terms and conditions All entrants must be aged 18 years or over. A full UK mainland address and telephone number must be provided for delivery purposes. Competition closes on 12 February 2016
Corinthia Hotel London
lpo.org.uk – 11 –
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LONDON PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA
NEW & NOTEWORTHY LPO ON TOUR
GLORIUMPTIOUS FUNHARMONICS AT ROYAL FESTIVAL HALL 2016 sees the centenary of one of the nation’s favourite children’s authors, Roald Dahl. As part of the celebrations, for the LPO’s FUNharmonics family concert on Saturday 20 February, his much-loved story The BFG, adapted for performance by award-winning writer and Olivier nominee Hattie Naylor, will be brought to life by a special performer and the London Philharmonic Orchestra playing well-known pieces to support the action of this wonderful tale. On Sunday 5 June we present Bottom’s Dream – lose yourself in the woods with the LPO and Globe Education in this special musical version of A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Expect enchantment and confusion, and a bit of silliness along the way. As is usual with all our FUNharmonics concerts there will be free activities throughout the morning for children, including art workshops and have a go at an orchestral instrument. Saturday 20 February 2016 12.00 noon–1.00pm A ROALD DAHL CELEBRATION: THE BFG Sunday 5 June 2016 12.00 noon–1.00pm BOTTOM’S DREAM
ALL FUNharmonics Tickets: Children £5–£9 (recommended age range 6–11) Adults £10–£18 Tel 020 7840 4242 | lpo.org.uk
Free time in Mexico
GLYNDEBOURNE FESTIVAL OPERA 2016 For four months of the year, the Orchestra players bid a fond farewell to the Royal Festival Hall and head for the Sussex countryside for the Glyndebourne season where the LPO is the Resident Symphony Orchestra. Glyndebourne’s contribution to Shakespeare400 (see pages 4–6) is a production of Britten’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, a revival of the 1981 production and directed by Peter Hall, and a new production of Berlioz’s Béatrice et Bénédict. Also included is Wagner’s Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg conducted by Glyndebourne Music Director, Robin Ticciati. The DVD of the previous production in 2011, with the LPO’s Principal Conductor and Artistic Advisor, Vladimir Jurowski at the helm, won the BBC Music Magazine Award 2015 for Best Opera. We are looking forward to revisiting the opera with Robin. The other operas with the LPO are Rossini’s Il barbiere di Siviglia and Janáček’s The Cunning Little Vixen. Early access to tickets is available for corporate and individual supporters of the LPO. FIND OUT MORE lpo.org.uk/about/glyndebourne lpo.org.uk/support
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BFG image © A P Wat at United Agents on behalf of Quentin Blake
The Orchestra has toured for many years and can now share the experience: our this season is no exception. So far the performance of Mahler’s Symphony No. 2 Orchestra has visited Verona, made its with the CBSO Chorus, live from the Palacio de debut at La Scala, Milan and revisited Bellas Artes in Mexico City, is now the Concertgebouw, Amsterdam. available to watch on Medici TV: Vladimir Jurowski conducted lpo.uk/ParraMahler2. concerts in Barcelona, Alicante Jennifer Pike joined the The best came in the and Madrid, with Leonidas Orchestra on 14 and 15 second half with a perfectly Kavakos performing the balanced Tchaikovsky’s Fifth September to perform Symphony … the LPO’s Sibelius Violin Concerto Vaughan Williams’s The performance was outstanding. alongside Tchaikovsky’s Lark Ascending. You can Symphony No. 5, and in watch her in rehearsal on Pablo L Rodrígue El País, December the Orchestra Alondra’s Facebook feed: October 2015, review of travelled to Germany. lpo.uk/AlondraFBMexico. Barcelona concert A definite highlight was the Our upcoming tours are to Orchestra’s visit to Mexico in the Canary Islands in January, September as part of the Dual Year Brussels in March and a return visit of UK and Mexico (tied in with a concert at to Madrid a few days later. Full details are Royal Festival Hall on 6 November), with on page 15 and tickets are available for all tour performances led by Mexican conductor concerts. Other visits are in the pipeline for Alondra de la Parra. The Orchestra enjoyed this season so keep an eye on our website: fantastic audiences in Mexico, particularly on lpo.org.uk/tours. the Mexican Day of Independence, and you
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LONDON PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA
CONCERT LISTINGS SOUTHBANK CENTRE Unless otherwise stated, standard prices £9–£39 Premium seats £65 London Philharmonic Orchestra Ticket Office 020 7840 4242 Mon–Fri 10am–5pm lpo.org.uk Transaction fees: £1.75 online, £2.75 telephone Southbank Centre Ticket Office 0844 847 9920 Daily 9am–8pm southbankcentre.co.uk Transaction fees: £1.75 online, £2.75 telephone No transaction fee for bookings made in person JTI Friday Series is supported by
Saturday 30 January 2016 | 7.30pm
Wednesday 10 February 2016 | 7.30pm
Beethoven Symphony No. 6 (Pastoral) Alexander Raskatov Green Mass (world premiere)*
Dvořák Piano Concerto Sibelius The Tempest, Suites 1 & 2 (excerpts)
Vladimir Jurowski conductor Elena Vassilieva soprano Iestyn Davies countertenor Mark Padmore tenor Nikolay Didenko bass Choir of Clare College, Cambridge
Osmo Vänskä conductor Stephen Hough piano Lilli Paasikivi mezzo soprano Simon Callow narrator
* commissioned by the London Philharmonic Orchestra
Free pre-concert event | 6.15pm–6.45pm Royal Festival Hall
GCSE student composers showcase new music inspired by Sibelius’s The Tempest.
Alexander Raskatov discusses the world premiere of his Green Mass.
Free pre-concert event | 6.00pm–6.45pm Royal Festival Hall
Wednesday 3 February 2016 | 7.30pm Saturday 23 January 2016 | 7.30pm Mozart Serenade No. 8 (Notturno), K286 Lindberg Gran Duo Mozart Wind Serenade No. 12 (Nacht Musik), K388 R Strauss Four Last Songs
Dvořák Overture, Otello Brahms Double Concerto for violin and cello Dvořák Symphony No. 6 Yannick Nézet-Séguin conductor Lisa Batiashvili violin Maximilian Hornung cello
Vladimir Jurowski conductor Soile Isokoski soprano Wednesday 27 January 2016 | 7.30pm Schnittke Pianissimo Shostakovich Cello Concerto No. 2 Bruckner Symphony No. 3 Vladimir Jurowski conductor Natalia Gutman cello
Free pre-concert event | 6.00pm–6.45pm Royal Festival Hall Professor Russ McDonald, Goldsmiths University of London, and Professor Clare McManus, University of Roehampton, reflect on Othello’s popularity with adaptors and composers, and the play’s role as a lightning rod for perceptions of ethnicity, religion and gender.
Live broadcast on BBC Radio 3
Free pre-concert event | 6.00pm–6.45pm Royal Festival Hall For his 1964 film adaptation of Shakespeare’s Hamlet, the avant-garde Russian director Grigori Kozintsev transformed the classic text into something far more modern and scandalous. Hear a Suite from Shostakovich’s intriguing film score performed by musicians from the London Philharmonic Orchestra’s Foyle Future Firsts Development Programme (see pages 8–9) and LPO Players, conducted by Principal Conductor and Artistic Advisor Vladimir Jurowski.
Free pre-concert event | 5.00pm–5.30pm Royal Festival Hall
Gordon McMullan, Academic Director of Shakespeare400, explores the ‘late styles’ of writers, artists and composers, including Sibelius and Shakespeare.
Friday 12 February 2016 | 7.30pm Nicolai Overture, The Merry Wives of Windsor Korngold Violin Concerto Elgar Symphony No. 1 Osmo Vänskä conductor Hyeyoon Park violin
Free pre-concert event | 6.00pm–6.45pm Royal Festival Hall Oliver Urquhart Irvine, Royal Librarian, talks about Shakespeare in the Royal Collections at Windsor, while Sonia Massai, Professor of English, King’s College London, looks at global adaptations of The Merry Wives of Windsor.
Friday 5 February 2016 | 7.30pm Gershwin Piano Concerto in F Rachmaninoff Symphony No. 2 Yannick Nézet-Séguin conductor Jean-Yves Thibaudet piano
Saturday 20 February 2016 | 12.00pm–1.00pm FUNharmonics Family Concert A ROALD DAHL CELEBRATION: THE BFG See page 12 This concert is part of Southbank Centre’s Imagine Children’s Festival
Foyle Future Firsts is generously supported by the Foyle Foundation with additional support from Help Musicians UK and the Lord & Lady Lurgan Trust.
Tickets: £10–£18 adults £5–£9 children (recommended age range 6–11)
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LONDON PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA
CONCERT LISTINGS CONTD. Wednesday 24 February 2016 | 7.30pm
Wednesday 9 March | 7.30pm
Wednesday 20 April 2016 | 7.30pm
Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto Tchaikovsky Manfred Symphony
Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 3 Zemlinsky Die Seejungfrau (The Mermaid)
Vasily Petrenko conductor Augustin Hadelich violin
Vladimir Jurowski conductor Marc-André Hamelin piano
Honegger Pacific 231 Saint-Saëns Piano Concerto No. 5 (Egyptian) Dukas La Péri Debussy Images
Live broadcast on BBC Radio 3
Friday 26 February 2016 | 7.30pm Mendelssohn Overture, A Midsummer Night’s Dream Khachaturian Violin Concerto R Strauss Macbeth Stravinsky The Firebird Suite (1919 version) Andrés Orozco-Estrada conductor Kristóf Baráti violin
Friday 18 March 2016 | 7.30pm Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 2 Brief Encounter (film with live orchestra) David Charles Abell conductor Jayson Gillham piano
Saturday 9 April 2016 | 7.30pm Free pre-concert event | 6.00pm–6.45pm Royal Festival Hall
Schoenberg Verklärte Nacht* Brahms A German Requiem
Dr Lucy Munro, Lecturer in Shakespeare, King’s College, London, places Strauss’s Overture in the context of the history of spectacular theatrical productions of Macbeth in the late 19th century.
Christoph Eschenbach conductor Sarah Tynan soprano Matthias Goerne baritone London Philharmonic Choir *Please note change of work from that originally advertised
Saturday 5 March 2016 | 7.30pm Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 3 Zemlinsky Six Maeterlinck Songs Szymanowski Stabat Mater
Free pre-concert event | 6.00pm–6.45pm Royal Festival Hall Our creative cross-arts ensemble, LPO Soundworks, takes the characters and words of The Bard of Avon as inspiration for its latest collaborative performance.
Vladimir Jurowski conductor Elżbieta Szmytka soprano Anne Sofie von Otter mezzo soprano Andrzej Dobber baritone London Philharmonic Choir
Friday 15 April 2016 | 7.30pm
Organised in collaboration with the Adam Mickiewicz Institute as part of the Polska Music Programme
De Falla The Three-cornered Hat (Suite No. 2) Rodrigo Fantasía para un gentilhombre Prokofiev Romeo and Juliet (excerpts)
Free pre-concert event | 6.00pm–6.45pm Royal Festival Hall
Jaime Martín conductor Miloš Karadaglić guitar
Oliver Knussen Ophelia Dances Brett Dean Wolf-Lieder (Wolf Songs) Ben Gernon conductor Jenavieve Moore soprano LPO Players | Members of Foyle Future Firsts (see pages 8–9)
Free pre-concert event | 6.00pm–6.45pm Royal Festival Hall Think you know Romeo and Juliet? Gordon McMullan, Academic Director Shakespeare400, and colleagues set out to dispel the myths of this well-known story.
Foyle Future Firsts is generously supported by the Foyle Foundation with additional support from Help Musicians UK and the Lord & Lady Lurgan Trust.
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Vladimir Jurowski conductor Javier Perianes piano Concert supported by an anonymous donor Live broadcast on BBC Radio 3
Saturday 23 April 2016 | 7.30pm
ANNIVERSARY GALA CONCERT Scenes from: Verdi Otello | Tchaikovsky Hamlet Vaughan Williams Serenade to Music Britten A Midsummer Night’s Dream Mendelssohn A Midsummer Night’s Dream Berlioz Roméo et Juliette Prokofiev Romeo and Juliet Thomas Adès The Tempest Walton Henry V | Verdi Falstaff Vladimir Jurowski conductor Simon Callow director London Philharmonic Orchestra The Glyndebourne Chorus | Trinity Boys Choir Soloists including: Kate Royal soprano | Allison Bell soprano Dame Felicity Palmer mezzo soprano Iestyn Davies countertenor Ronald Samm tenor | Toby Spence tenor Andrew Shore baritone Simon Keenlyside baritone Concert generously supported by Victoria Robey OBE
Tickets: £12–£48 | Premium seats £75
Saturday 30 April 2016 | 7.30pm Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 4 R Strauss An Alpine Symphony Vladimir Jurowski conductor Alexey Zuev piano Free post-concert event | 9.45pm–10.30pm Clore Ballroom, Royal Festival Hall In a rousing finale to our Shakespeare celebrations, the Royal College of Music Big Band, directed by Mark Armstrong, performs Duke Ellington’s Such Sweet Thunder, based on the work of William Shakespeare.
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Sunday 5 June 2016 | 12.00pm–1.00pm FUNharmonics Family Concert BOTTOM’S DREAM
Saturday 21 February 2016 | 2.00pm and 4.00pm Saffron Hall, Saffron Walden, Essex Box Office: 0845 548 7650 saffronhall.com
See page 12
FUNharmonics Family Concert A ROALD DAHL CELEBRATION: THE BFG
Tickets: £10–£18 adults £5–£9 children (recommended age range 6–11)
AROUND THE UK
Programme as 20 February, Royal Festival Hall
Saturday 27 February 2016 | 7.30pm Brighton Dome Box Office: 01273 709709 brightondome.org
Saturday 16 January 2016 | 7.30pm Brighton Dome Box Office: 01273 709709 brightondome.org
Mendelssohn Overture, A Midsummer Night’s Dream Khachaturian Violin Concerto R Strauss Macbeth Stravinsky The Firebird Suite (1919 version)
Mozart Overture, Lucio Silla Brahms Piano Concerto No. 2 Beethoven Symphony No. 7
Andrés Orozco-Estrada conductor Kristóf Baráti violin
Adrian Prabava conductor Stefan Ćirić piano
Sunday 31 January 2016 | 3.00pm Eastbourne Congress Theatre Box Office: 01323 412000 eastbournetheatres.co.uk Wagner Prelude to Act 1, Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg Bruch Violin Concerto No. 1 Khachaturian Masquerade Suite Tchaikovsky Swan Lake (excerpts) Matthew Wood conductor Tianwa Yang violin
Sunday 14 February 2016 | 3.00pm Eastbourne Congress Theatre Box Office: 01323 412000 eastbournetheatres.co.uk Nielsen Helios Overture Schumann Piano Concerto Sibelius Symphony No. 5 Christian Kluxen conductor Jayson Gillham piano
INTERNATIONAL CONCERTS For full details of all our tours, visit lpo.org.uk Friday 11 March 2016 | 8.00pm Klara Festival, Brussels klarafestival.be/en Gubaidulina Seven Words Zemlinsky Psalm 23 Szymanowski Stabat mater* Vladimir Jurowski conductor Kristina Blaumane cello Elsbeth Moser bayan Elżbieta Szmytka soprano Agnieszka Rehlis mezzo soprano Andrzej Dobber baritone *Organised in collaboration with the Adam Mickiewicz Institute as part of the Polska Music Programme
Sunday 13 March 2016 | 7.30pm Auditorio Nacional de Música, Madrid auditorionacional.mcu.es
Sunday 6 March 2016 | 3.00pm Eastbourne Congress Theatre Box Office: 01323 412000 eastbournetheatres.co.uk
Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 3 Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 3 (Polish)
Medtner Piano Concerto No. 2 Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 3
Vladimir Jurowski conductor Nicholas Angelich piano
Vladimir Jurowski conductor Marc-André Hamelin piano
Saturday 16 April 2016 | 7.30pm Brighton Dome Box Office: 01273 709709 brightondome.org De Falla The Three-cornered Hat (Suite No. 2) Rodrigo Fantasía para un gentilhombre Prokofiev Romeo and Juliet (excerpts) Jaime Martín conductor Miloš Karadaglić guitar
Sunday 17 April 2016 | 3.00pm Eastbourne Congress Theatre Box Office: 01323 412000 eastbournetheatres.co.uk Programme as 16 April, Brighton
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Monday 14 March 2016 | 7.30pm Auditorio Nacional de Musica, Madrid auditorionacional.mcu.es Mahler Symphony No. 7 Vladimir Jurowski conductor
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LPO PEOPLE
BACKSTAGE Since joining, what have you discovered about the LPO? Once I knew there was the possibility of a job at the LPO I delved into the history of the Orchestra. It has a fantastic lineage of conductors and legends of the percussion business, including the current section, who have helped make percussion such an important part of the orchestra. There was a time when percussion wasn’t taken very seriously but in the last half century, a wave of players coming in, including Keith Millar, have set the standard and helped make it much more respected. Keith has been an LPO member since 1972 and I feel very fortunate to have joined him, Andy Barclay and Simon Carrington. It’s the passing on of the baton that I’m really excited about: learning the ropes and being schooled in a sound that has developed over decades, and also bringing my own ideas. Do you have a musical background? My parents were keen for me to get involved in music but they didn’t force it on me. I had piano lessons at an early age and I started on the drum kit at middle school. That was in the days when peripatetic music lessons were still free. Because I played piano I progressed quite quickly and was suddenly in demand in local bands because I could play tuned percussion, unlike the other drummers at school. I auditioned for the National Youth Orchestra, not expecting to get in, but I did. At the first rehearsal my jaw dropped – that was the moment I decided that I wanted to be a professional musician. The NYO is still special to me. I met my fiancée there and have some fantastic memories of playing with them at the BBC Proms. Any favourite or least favourite instruments? I love playing pretty much all percussion instruments. I sometimes find tuned percussion frustrating, not because I’m not well trained but because I hate playing wrong notes. There is a much bigger margin for error when hitting a drum compared to a xylophone bar. I still really enjoy playing tuned instruments when I hit all the right notes though (which I promise is most of the time!). I discovered I’m definitely not a guiro expert when we were on tour in Mexico. Sometimes you don’t play a certain instrument for ten years, then it’s suddenly handed to you, and
building. I played dozens and dozens of instruments in the roof, underneath the stage, in the boxes, up in the gallery, in corridors ... The instruments included scaffolding poles I had cut to specific lengths and giant binsasaras (a traditional Japanese instrument), and they had to be pre-set in all the different spaces before every rehearsal. I got very fit that week!
– HENRY BALDWIN – Henry joined the LPO as Co-Principal Percussion in May 2015. Here he talks about the difficulties of playing a guiro and being a ‘Madman of the Windy Mountain’. you have to play it to a professional standard. That can lead to some serious pre-concert panicked practice! You’re pretty exposed in the percussion section. Any scary moments? A phrase I once heard a trumpeter use is ‘we’re either bored to death or scared to death’, and that could be equally applied to percussionists. Actually, I’m never bored. I love listening to the Orchestra but I am fairly regularly quite scared! I have such a lot of respect for my colleagues in the Orchestra that I often find rehearsals just as nervewracking as performances. What’s the most number of instruments you’ve played in one concert? The most outrageous project I’ve been involved with was Benedict Mason’s Meld at the 2014 BBC Proms with Aurora Orchestra [Henry is a founding member of Aurora]. I would bet that it’s the most complicated project the Proms have ever done. It was written specifically for performance in the Royal Albert Hall. We had to learn not only all our music by heart but also a map of the Tune In published by the London Philharmonic Orchestra 89 Albert Embankment, London SE1 7TP Tel: 020 7840 4200 Fax: 020 7840 4201 Ticket Office: 020 7840 4242 lpo.org.uk
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What might we find surprising about the life of a percussionist? People, even other instrumentalists, don’t always realise that we spend hours and hours planning instrument hire, working out who plays what and decrypting scores just to find out what the composer really wants. Often the instructions aren’t specific enough for example, if a bell is requested, that could mean orchestra bells, glockenspiel, hand bells, song bells, tubular bells, ship’s bell, door bell ... the list goes on. It’s our job to contact composers (if they’re alive) and publishers to find out what’s needed. Often the planning can take longer than the practice, rehearsals and concert combined. Luckily for me the Principal, Andy Barclay, has to do most of it. If you could commission a piece, who would you ask? I really like Anna Meredith. She always writes interesting works and challenging but fun things to play on percussion. I’ve yet to play a piece she’s written where the orchestra is positioned in a traditional format. I love the way she likes to think out of the box. And beyond hitting instruments? I’m a keen cyclist. I like setting myself big challenges so last year I decided I wanted to tackle the Mont-Ventoux challenge – you cycle up the mountain via three different routes in one day, a total of 70km of climbing. I’m now a proud member of the Club des Cinglés du Mont-Ventoux [the ‘Madmen of the Windy Mountain’]. I’m currently training for my second marathon in Manchester. Our Principal Bass Trombone, Lyndon, is a brilliant runner and is a great help with my training. Also, I’m getting into growing apples and making cider, but I can’t drink too much of it. Training with a hangover is no fun! lpo.uk/guiro: top tips for Henry Henry Baldwin’s chair is supported by Jon Claydon