Strauss’ Alpine Symphony, Debussy and Sutherland
2 – 3 March Arts Centre Melbourne, Hamer HallArtists
Melbourne Symphony Orchestra
Jaime Martín conductor
Siobhan Stagg soprano
Program
SUTHERLAND Haunted Hills
DEBUSSY (arr. Brett Dean) Ariettes oubliées
R. STRAUSS An Alpine Symphony
Running time: approximately 2 hours including a 20-minute interval. Our musical Acknowledgment of Country, Long Time Living Here by Deborah Cheetham Fraillon AO, will be performed at this concert.
Pre-concert events
Pre-concert talk: 2 March at 6:45pm in Stalls Foyer, Level 2 at Hamer Hall.
Pre-concert talk: 3 March at 6:45pm in Stalls Foyer, Level 2 at Hamer Hall.
Learn more about Margaret Sutherland, composer of Haunted Hills – to be performed tonight – at a pre-concert presentation Carlo Antonioli, Cybec Assistant Conductor Fellow and Dr. Jillian Graham, writer, editor, and researcher.
Copies of Jillian’s brand-new book, Inner Song will be available for purchase at the Box Office. We hope you enjoy this enlightening presentation on one of Australia’s most impressive composers, and an inspiration for many at the MSO.
Please note audience members are strongly recommended to wear face masks where 1.5m distancing is not possible. In consideration of your fellow patrons, the MSO thanks you for silencing and dimming the light on your phone.
Acknowledging Country
Australia, the MSO has developed a musical Acknowledgment of Country with music composed by Yorta Yorta composer Deborah Cheetham Fraillon AO, featuring Indigenous languages from across Victoria. Generously supported by Helen Macpherson Smith Trust and the Commonwealth Government through the Australian National Commission for UNESCO, the MSO is working in partnership with Short Black Opera and Indigenous language custodians who are generously sharing their cultural knowledge.
The Acknowledgement of Country allows us to pay our respects to the traditional owners of the land on which we perform in the language of that country and in the orchestral language of music.
from a land which has been nurtured by the traditional owners for more than 2000 generations. When we acknowledge country we pay respect to the land and to the people in equal measure.
As a composer I have specialised in coupling the beauty and diversity of our Indigenous languages with the power and intensity of classical music. In order to compose the music for this Acknowledgement of Country Project I have had the great privilege of working with no fewer than eleven ancient languages from the state of Victoria, including the language of my late Grandmother, Yorta Yorta woman Frances McGee. I pay my deepest respects to the elders and ancestors who are represented in these songs of acknowledgement and to the language custodians who have shared their knowledge and expertise in providing each text.
I am so proud of the MSO for initiating this landmark project and grateful that they afforded me the opportunity to make this contribution to the ongoing quest of understanding our belonging in this land.
— Deborah Cheetham Fraillon AOMelbourne Symphony Orchestra
Established in 1906, the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra is Australia’s pre-eminent orchestra and a cornerstone of Victoria’s rich, cultural heritage.
Each year, the MSO engages with more than 5 million people, presenting in excess of 180 public events across live performances, TV, radio and online broadcasts, and via its online concert hall, MSO.LIVE, with audiences in 56 countries.
With a reputation for excellence, versatility and innovation, the MSO works with culturally diverse and First Nations leaders to build community and deliver music to people across Melbourne, the state of Victoria and around the world.
In 2023, the MSO’s Chief Conductor, Jaime Martín continues an exciting new phase in the Orchestra’s history. Maestro Martín joins an Artistic Family that includes Principal Guest Conductor Xian Zhang, Principal Conductor in Residence, Benjamin Northey, Conductor Laureate, Sir Andrew Davis CBE, Cybec Assistant Conductor Fellow, Carlo Antonioli, MSO Chorus Director, Warren Trevelyan-Jones, Soloist in Residence, Siobhan Stagg, Composer in Residence, Mary Finsterer, Ensemble in Residence, Gondwana Voices, Cybec Young Composer in Residence, Melissa Douglas and Young Artist in Association, Christian Li.
The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra respectfully acknowledges the people of the Eastern Kulin Nations, on whose un-ceded lands we honour the continuation of the oldest music practice in the world.
Musicians Performing in this Concert
FIRST VIOLINS
Rebecca Chan*
Guest Concertmaster
Tair Khisambeev
Assistant Concertmaster
Di Jameson and Frank Mercurio#
Peter Edwards
Assistant Principal
Kirsty Bremner
Sarah Curro
Peter Fellin
Deborah Goodall
Lorraine Hook
Anne-Marie Johnson
Kirstin Kenny
Michael Loftus-Hills*
Eleanor Mancini
Michelle Ruffolo
SECOND VIOLINS
Matthew Tomkins Principal
The Gross Foundation#
Robert Macindoe
Associate Principal
Monica Curro
Assistant Principal
Danny Gorog and
Lindy Susskind#
Mary Allison
Isin Cakmakcioglu
Freya Franzen
Cong Gu
Newton Family in memory of Rae Rothfield#
Andrew Hall
Isy Wasserman
Philippa West
Andrew Dudgeon AM#
Patrick Wong
Hyon Ju Newman#
Roger Young
Shane Buggle and Rosie Callanan#
VIOLAS
Christopher Moore Principal
Di Jameson and Frank Mercurio#
Lauren Brigden
Katharine Brockman
William Clark*
Molly Collier-O’Boyle*
Karen Columbine*
Gabrielle Halloran
Beth Hemming*
Isabel Morse*
Fiona Sargeant
Katie Yap*
CELLOS
David Berlin Principal
Rachael Tobin
Associate Principal
Elina Faskhi
Assistant Principal
Rohan de Korte
Andrew Dudgeon AM#
Kalina Krusteva*
Sarah Morse
Rebecca Proietto*
Angela Sargeant
Michelle Wood
Andrew and Judy Rogers#
DOUBLE BASSES
Axel Ruge* Acting Principal
Caitlin Bass*
Rohan Dasika
Benjamin Hanlon
Frank Mercurio and Di Jameson#
Suzanne Lee
Stephen Newton
Sophie Galaise and Clarence Fraser#
Ken Poggioli*
FLUTES
Prudence Davis Principal
Anonymous#
Wendy Clarke
Associate Principal
Sarah Beggs
PICCOLO
Andrew Macleod Principal
OBOES
Johannes Grosso Acting Principal
Ann Blackburn
The Rosemary Norman Foundation#
COR ANGLAIS
Michael Pisani Principal
Rachel Curkpatrick*
HECKELPHONE
Brock Imison*
CLARINETS
David Thomas Principal
Philip Arkinstall
Associate Principal
Oliver Crofts^
Craig Hill
Correct as of 17 February 2023
Learn more about our musicians on the MSO website
BASS CLARINET
Jon Craven Principal
BASSOONS
Jack Schiller Principal
Elise Millman
Associate Principal
Natasha Thomas Dr Martin Tymms and Patricia Nilsson#
CONTRABASSOON
Colin Forbes-Abrams* Guest Principal
HORNS
Nicolas Fleury Principal
Margaret Jackson AC#
Andrew Young*
Acting Associate Principal
Saul Lewis Principal Third
The late Hon Michael Watt KC and Cecilie Hall#
Abbey Edlin
Nereda Hanlon and Michael Hanlon AM#
Ryan Humphrey*
Rebecca Luton*
Josiah Kop*
Rachel Shaw
Gary McPherson#
Mel Simpson*
Offstage Horns
Stefan Grant*
Natalia Edwards*
Nicola Robinson*
Robert McMillan*
TRUMPETS
Owen Morris Principal
Shane Hooton
Associate Principal
Glenn Sedgwick#
Rosie Turner
John and Diana Frew#
Offstage Trumpets
Tristan Rebien*
Joel Walmsley*
TROMBONES
Samuel Schlosser* Acting Principal
Benjamin Anderson*
Richard Shirley
Mike Szabo Principal Bass Trombone
Offstage Trombones
Kieran Conrau*
Don Immel*
TUBA
Timothy Buzbee Principal
Alex Hurst*
TIMPANI
Antoine Siguré*
Acting Principal
John Arcaro
Tim and Lyn Edward#
PERCUSSION
Robert Cossom
Drs Rhyl Wade and Clem Gruen#
Greg Sully*
HARP
Yinuo Mu Principal
Melina van Leeuwen*
CELESTE
Aidan Boase*
CHAMBER ORGAN
Donald Nicolson* * Denotes Guest Musician ^ MSO Academy 2023 # Position supported by
My first experience with the MSO was when I was very young....We were taken to a school concert, in the Melbourne Town Hall, conducted by Sir Bernard Heinze.… and I can honestly say that the MSO has never been out of my life since.”
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Chief Conductor of the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra since 2022, Jaime Martín is also Chief Conductor of the National Symphony Orchestra (Ireland) and Music Director of the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra. He is the Principal Guest Conductor of the Orquesta y Coro Nacionales de España (Spanish National Orchestra) for the 22/23 season and was Artistic Director and Principal Conductor of Gävle Symphony Orchestra from 2013 to 2022.
Having spent many years as a highly regarded flautist, Jaime turned to conducting full-time in 2013, and has become very quickly sought after at the highest level. Recent and future engagements include appearances with the London Symphony Orchestra, Dresden Philharmonic, Netherlands Philharmonic, Royal Stockholm Philharmonic, Colorado Symphony, Dallas Symphony, Antwerp Symphony, Orquesta Sinfónica y Coro de RTVE (ORTVE) and Galicia Symphony orchestras, as well as a nine-city European tour with the London Philharmonic Orchestra.
Martín is the Artistic Advisor and previous Artistic Director of the Santander Festival. He was also a founding member of the Orquestra de Cadaqués, where he was Chief Conductor from 2012 to 2019.
2023 MSO SOLOIST IN
RESIDENCE
Soprano Siobhan Stagg is one of the most outstanding young artists to emerge from Australia in recent years.
After graduating from the University of Melbourne, Siobhan began her career in the Salzburger Festspiele’s Young Singers Project and as a soloist at the Deutsche Oper Berlin. She has sung title roles for the Lyric Opera of Chicago, Royal Opera House Covent Garden, Dutch National Opera, and Victorian Opera, (for which she received the Green Room Award for Best Female Lead in an Opera), and in concert with the London Symphony Orchestra and Berliner Philharmoniker, among many others.
Siobhan became a Director of the Melba Opera Trust Board in October 2020, their first scholarship alumna to be appointed, and the first International Director.
Siobhan Stagg soprano Jaime Martín conductorProgram
MARGARET SUTHERLAND (1897–1984)
Haunted Hills
From 1934 in the rainforest below Mount Dandenong, near Melbourne, William Ricketts created a garden filled with statues of fantastic creatures, native animals, and human figures that represent the traditional owners of the land, the Wurundjeri people. Some are winged, some crucified, and while they may now seem naïve there is no doubt of the artist’s sympathy with those wronged by colonial settlement.
Composed in 1950 and premiered the following year, Margaret Sutherland’s Haunted Hills has a similar intent: it celebrates the beauty of the Dandenong Ranges, but is, as she puts it, ‘a sound picture written in contemplation of the first people who roamed the hills, their bewilderment and their betrayal’ culminating in a ‘frenzied dance, its seeming gaiety born of despair.’
After an anguished rising gesture from the strings, a dignified maestoso theme – suggesting the Wurundjeri – is sounded by low woodwinds and strings, then brass. Its distinctive rhythm pervades the piece, where Sutherland varies the theme’s contour and harmony, as in the cor anglais solo that introduces the second ‘paragraph’ of the music. There follows a contrapuntal section, and reprise of the opening, though with the harmony inexorably falling.
A brief larghetto ‘movement’ might represent the Indigenous people’s ‘bewilderment’: much more sparse than the opening, it leaves air between chords, with a wan solo line for flute, and icy droplets from celesta. Energy bursts forth in the ‘frenzied dance’, where 3/4 and 6/8 contend for metrical
dominance. The music is ebullient on the surface – for instance in a passage where a trumpet solo is punctuated by harp glissandos – but barely hides the bitterness that descends into a griefstricken 4/4 on solo violin. This in turn dissolves into spare wind duos, and a restatement of the lonely flute theme which restarts the dance. The frenzy leads to a massive climax with the opening maestoso theme rung out by trombones, but this is short-lived. The music retreats quickly through a patch of disembodied pizzicatos into empty silence.
Gordon Kerry © 2022CLAUDE DEBUSSY (1862–1918)
arr. Brett Dean (born 1961)
Ariettes oubliées (Forgotten Songs)
I. C’est l’extase langoureuse (It is the Languorous Ecstasy)
II. Il pleure dans mon cœur (Tears Fall in My Heart)
III. L’ombre des arbres (The Shadow of Trees)
IV. Chevaux de bois (Wooden Horses)
V. Green
VI. Spleen
Siobhan Stagg soprano
Roughly contemporary with Mahler’s First Symphony, Debussy’s songcycle Ariettes was first performed, to no great acclaim, in 1887 and revised for publication as Ariettes oubliées (Forgotten Songs) in 1903. The six songs set poetry by Paul Verlaine from his collection Romances sans paroles (Songs without Words) written in 1872 and 1873 when Verlaine had abandoned his wife and embarked on an affair with the young poet Arthur Rimbaud.
The songs, then, largely treat the notion of love. ‘C’est l’extase’ deals with post-
coital languor and sadness; ‘Il pleure dans mon cœur’ famously likens the falling rain to falling tears despite no cause for grief; in ‘L’ombre des arbres’, shadows, water and mourning doves reflect the poet’s drowned hopes; the ‘Chevaux des bois’ are the horses on a merry-go-round in a slightly hellish carnival; ‘Green’ is another post-coital lyric, while ‘Spleen’ expresses the poet’s weariness with everything but the beloved, whom he fears will leave him.
Debussy’s piano accompaniments are extremely economical, and in his 2015 arrangement for the soprano Magdalena Kožená, Simon Rattle and the Australian World Orchestra, Brett Dean is careful to adhere to Debussy’s spirit. Naturally the trumpets, drums and bells, not to mention the sounds of the natural world that pervade the poetry, are irresistible to a composer, but Dean has changed none of the pitch material, has cultivated the orchestral palette of early Debussy works like the Nocturnes and Prélude à ‘l’après-midi d’un faune’ – mainly eschewing doubling, frequently dividing the strings and creating diaphanous wind textures. His only changes are in the interests, as he says, of giving the orchestration more time to unfold, judiciously adding the occasionally beat, bar or pause for that effect.
Gordon Kerry © 2023RICHARD STRAUSS
(1864–1949)
An Alpine Symphony
Night –
Sunrise –
The ascent
Entry into the wood –
Wandering by the side of the brook –
At the waterfall –
Apparition –
On flowering meadows –
On the alpine pasture –Through thicket and undergrowth on the wrong path
On the glacier –
Dangerous moments –On the summit –
Vision –
Mists rise –
The sun gradually becomes obscured
Elegy –
Calm before the storm –
Thunder and tempest, descent –Sunset –
Conclusion –Night
Around the time he wrote An Alpine Symphony, Strauss boasted that he could, if necessary, describe a knife and fork in music. Indeed An Alpine Symphony marks the limit in Strauss’ nearly three-decades-long quest to extend music’s capacity for illustration and representation – an effort which began with Don Juan in 1888 and reached a highpoint with Thus Spake Zarathustra’s attempt to express the philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche.
Strauss turned to An Alpine Symphony after writing Ariadne auf Naxos. Critics had just remarked on the Mozartean turn in his music, referring to the chamber forces required for Ariadne, when he produced this piece of orchestral gigantism. The orchestra needs 137 players, but what would you expect? Strauss is attempting nothing less than a literal portrait of a mountain.
Strauss composed this work in Garmisch, where he could look out over the Zugspitze and the Wettersteingebirge. Although he completed the orchestration in 100 days in 1914–15, the work itself had been long in gestation. As an idea, it had occurred to him as a boy, after he
and a party of climbers got lost during a mountain hike and were overtaken by a storm on their return.
The form of An Alpine Symphony is spectacularly simple. The listener is drawn into the idea of ascending and descending a mountain. The timeframe is a 24-hour period. This format guarantees Strauss certain musical highlights: yet another opportunity to depict an opening sunrise (as impressive in its own way as Zarathustra’s), and a sunset sequence, eminently suited to Strauss in one of his ‘autumnal moods’. Strauss ingeniously avoids the obvious at ‘the summit’, where, after the predictable big statement of one of the earlier themes he shifts focus to a halting oboe. One writer has remarked that it is as if we are suddenly made aware of the impact of the stupendous view on an awestruck human. The predictability of the descent is offset by one of the most graphic storms in musical literature.
Although the work is not constructed like a symphony in the conventional sense, the 22 continuous sections can be grouped to suggest a huge Lisztian single-movement sonata form with delayed recapitulation, like 1896’s Ein Heldenleben.
‘At last I have learnt to orchestrate,’ Strauss said at the General Rehearsal with the Dresden Hofkapelle. Some of the more obvious orchestral highlights include the exhilarating depiction of spray at the waterfall. Then there is the strange colouring of the ‘Sun theme’ mixed with organ reeds to depict rising mists (‘perhaps the most brilliantly clever section of the work’, according to Strauss biographer, Norman Del Mar).
The work has often been dismissed as just a piece of ‘orchestriana’. But is it more than a shallow display? Del Mar points to Strauss’ ‘curiously detached attitude to the Nature subject…giving
it a de-humanised majestic quality reminiscent, in a unique way, of Bruckner.’
The work can also be seen in the context of the mystical importance which mountains held for Germans in the 19 th century. The sense of the great mass of the mountain, barely discernible in the gloom, at the very end of the work, certainly has a Brucknerian scale and aspect, and it is probable that Strauss would have understood the remarks of his philosophical model Nietzsche who said:
He who knows how to breathe the air of my writings knows that it is an air of the heights, a robust air.
Unlike Nietzsche, Strauss could lapse into banality when he attempted to express Eternal and Absolute Truths. But whether he did so here or not, he never risked another tone poem. After An Alpine Symphony, he turned decisively to the stage, where his skills in musical depiction were a decided asset.
Gordon Kalton Williams Symphony Australia © 1998/2006Texts and Translation
Ariettes oubliées (Forgotten Songs)
I. C’est l’extase langoureuse
C’est l’extase langoureuse, C’est la fatigue amoureuse, C’est tous les frissons des bois
Parmi l’étreinte des brises, C’est, vers les ramures grises, Le chœur des petites voix.
Ô le frêle et frais murmure!
Cela gazouille et susurre, Cela ressemble au cri doux
Que l’herbe agitée expire …
Tu dirais, sous l’eau qui vire, Le roulis sourd des cailloux.
Cette âme qui se lamente
En cette plainte dormante
C’est la nôtre, n’est-ce pas?
La mienne, dis, et la tienne, Dont s’exhale l’humble antienne
Par ce tiède soir, tout bas?
II. Il pleure dans mon cœur
Il pleure dans mon cœur
Comme il pleut sur la ville;
Quelle est cette langueur
Qui pénètre mon cœur?
Ô bruit doux de la pluie
Par terre et sur les toits!
Pour un cœur qui s’ennuie
Ô le bruit de la pluie!
Il pleure sans raison
Dans ce cœur qui s’écœure.
Quoi! nulle trahison? …
Ce deuil est sans raison.
I. It is the Languorous Ecstasy
It is languorous rapture, It is amorous fatigue, It is all the tremors of the forest
In the breezes’ embrace, It is, around the grey branches, The choir of tiny voices.
O the delicate, fresh murmuring!
The warbling and whispering, It is like the soft cry
The ruffled grass gives out …
You might take it for the muffled sound
Of pebbles in the swirling stream.
This soul which grieves
In this subdued lament, It is ours, is it not?
Mine, and yours too,
Breathing out our humble hymn
On this warm evening, soft and low?
II. Tears Fall in My Heart
Tears fall in my heart
As rain falls on the town; What is this torpor
Pervading my heart?
Ah, the soft sound of rain
On the ground and roofs!
For a listless heart, Ah, the sound of the rain!
Tears fall without reason
In this disheartened heart.
What! Was there no treason? …
This grief’s without reason.
C’est bien la pire peine De ne savoir pourquoi
Sans amour et sans haine, Mon cœur a tant de peine.
III. L’ombre des arbres
L’ombre des arbres dans la rivière embrumée
Meurt comme de la fumée
Tandis qu’en l’air, parmi les ramures réelles, Se plaignent les tourterelles.
Combien, ô voyageur, ce paysage blême
Te mira blême toi-même, Et que tristes pleuraient dans les hautes feuillées
Tes espérances noyées!
IV. Chevaux de bois
Tournez, tournez, bons chevaux de bois, Tournez cent tours, tournez mille tours, Tournez souvent et tournez toujours, Tournez, tournez au son des hautbois.
L’enfant tout rouge et la mère blanche, Le gars en noir et la fille en rose, L’une à la chose et l’autre à la pose,
Chacun se paie un sou de dimanche.
Tournez, tournez, chevaux de leur cœur, Tandis qu’autour de tous vos tournois
Clignote l’œil du filou sournois, Tournez au son du piston vainqueur!
And the worst pain of all
Must
be not to know why
Without love and without hate
My heart feels such pain.
III. The Shadow of Trees
The shadow of trees in the misty stream
Dies like smoke,
While up above, in the real branches, The turtle-doves lament.
How this faded landscape, O traveller, Watched you yourself fade, And how sadly in the lofty leaves
Your drowned hopes were weeping!
IV. Wooden Horses
Turn, turn, you fine wooden horses, Turn a hundred, turn a thousand times, Turn often and turn for evermore Turn and turn to the oboe’s sound.
The red-faced child and the pale mother, The lad in black and the girl in pink, One down-to-earth, the other showing off,
Each buying a treat with his Sunday sou.
Turn, turn, horses of their hearts, While the furtive pickpocket’s eye is flashing
As you whirl about and whirl around, Turn to the sound of the conquering cornet!
C’est étonnant comme ça vous soûle
D’aller ainsi dans ce cirque bête: Rien dans le ventre et mal dans la tête,
Du mal en masse et du bien en foule.
Tournez, dadas, sans qu’il soit besoin
D’user jamais de nuls éperons
Pour commander à vos galops ronds:
Tournez, tournez, sans espoir de foin.
Et dépêchez, chevaux de leur âme, Déjà voici que sonne à la soupe
La nuit qui tombe et chasse la troupe
De gais buveurs que leur soif affame.
Tournez, tournez! Le ciel en velours D’astres en or se vêt lentement.
L’église tinte un glas tristement.
Tournez au son joyeux des tambours!
V. Green
Voici des fruits, des fleurs, des feuilles et des branches
Et puis voici mon cœur qui ne bat que pour vous.
Ne le déchirez pas avec vos deux mains blanches
Et qu’à vos yeux si beaux l’humble présent soit doux.
J’arrive tout couvert encore de rosée Que le vent du matin vient glacer à mon front.
Souffrez que ma fatigue à vos pieds reposée
Rêve des chers instants qui la délasseront.
Astonishing how drunk it makes you, Riding like this in this foolish fair: With an empty stomach and an aching head,
Discomfort in plenty and masses of fun!
Gee-gees, turn, you’ll never need The help of any spur
To make your horses gallop round: Turn, turn, without hope of hay.
And hurry on, horses of their souls: Nightfall already calls them to supper And disperses the crowd of happy revellers, Ravenous with thirst.
Turn, turn! The velvet sky
Is slowly decked with golden stars. The church bell tolls a mournful knell— Turn to the joyful sound of drums!
V. Green
Here are flowers, branches, fruit, and fronds,
And here too is my heart that beats just for you.
Do not tear it with your two white hands
And may the humble gift please your lovely eyes.
I come all covered still with the dew Frozen to my brow by the morning breeze.
Let my fatigue, finding rest at your feet,
Dream of dear moments that will soothe it.
Sur votre jeune sein laissez rouler ma tête
Toute sonore encore de vos derniers baisers;
Laissez-la s’apaiser de la bonne tempête, Et que je dorme un peu puisque vous reposez.
VI . Spleen
Les roses étaient toutes rouges
Et les lierres étaient tout noirs.
Chère, pour peu que tu te bouges, Renaissent tous mes désespoirs.
Le ciel était trop bleu, trop tendre, La mer trop verte et l’air trop doux.
Je crains toujours,—ce qu’est d’attendre!—
Quelque fuite atroce de vous.
Du houx à la feuille vernie
Et du luisant buis je suis las,
Et de la campagne infinie
Et de tout, fors de vous, hélas!
On your young breast let me cradle my head
Still ringing with your recent kisses;
After love’s sweet tumult grant it peace, And let me sleep a while, since you rest.
VI Spleen
All the roses were red
And the ivy was all black.
Dear, at your slightest move, All my despair revives.
The sky was too blue, too tender, The sea too green, the air too mild.
I always fear—oh to wait and wonder!— One of your agonizing departures.
I am weary of the glossy holly, Of the gleaming box-tree too, And the boundless countryside
And everything, alas, but you!
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Lyn Williams
Jason Yeap OAM – Mering Management
Corporation
Anonymous (2)
PRINCIPAL PATRONS $5,000+
Mary Armour
John and Lorraine Bates
Barbara Bell in memory of Elsa Bell
Bodhi Education Fund (East meets West)
Oliver Carton
John Coppock OAM and Lyn Coppock
Perri Cutten and Jo Daniell
Ann Darby in memory of Leslie J. Darby
Mary Davidson and the late Frederick
Davidson AM
The Dimmick Charitable Trust
Tim and Lyn Edward
Jaan Enden
Bill Fleming
Susan Fry and Don Fry AO
Sophie Galaise and Clarence Fraser
Geelong Friends of the MSO
Jennifer Gorog
Dr Rhyl Wade and Dr Clem Gruen
Cecilie Hall and the late Hon Michael Watt KC
Hilary Hall in memory of Wilma Collie
Louis J Hamon OAM
Nereda Hanlon and Michael Hanlon AM
Dr Alastair Jackson AM
John and Diana Frew
Suzanne Kirkham
Dr Elizabeth A Lewis AM
Sherry Li
Dr Caroline Liow
Gary McPherson
The Mercer Family Foundation
Marie Morton FRSA
Anne Neil
Hyon-Ju Newman
Newton Family in memory of Rae Rothfield
Ken Ong OAM
Bruce Parncutt AO
Sam Ricketson and Rosemary Ayton
Andrew and Judy Rogers
Rosemary and the late Douglas Meagher
The Rosemary Norman Foundation
Guy Ross
Supporters
The Kate and Stephen Shelmerdine Family Foundation
Helen Silver AO and Harrison Young
Anita Simon
Brian Snape AM
Dr Michael Soon
Dawna Wright
Anonymous (2)
ASSOCIATE PATRONS $2,500+
Carolyn Baker
Marlyn Bancroft and Peter Bancroft OAM
Sascha O. Becker
Janet H Bell
Julia and Jim Breen
Alan and Dr Jennifer Breschkin
Patricia Brockman
Drs John D L Brookes and Lucy V Hanlon
Stuart Brown
Lynne Burgess
Dr Lynda Campbell
Janet Chauvel and the late Dr Richard
Chauvel
Breen Creighton and Elsbeth Hadenfeldt
The Cuming Bequest
Katherine Cusack
Michael Davies
Leo de Lange
Sandra Dent
Barry Fradkin OAM and Dr Pam Fradkin
Carrillo Gantner AC and Ziyin Gantner
Kim and Robert Gearon
Janette Gill
R Goldberg and Family
Goldschlager Family Charitable Foundation
Catherine Gray
Hartmut and Ruth Hofmann
Paul and Amy Jasper
John Jones
Merv Keehn and Sue Harlow
Margaret and John Mason OAM
H E McKenzie
Dr Isabel McLean
Ian Merrylees
Patricia Nilsson
Dr Paul Nisselle AM and Sue Nisselle
Alan and Dorothy Pattison
Sue and Barry Peake
David and Nancy Price
Peter Priest
Ruth and Ralph Renard
Tom and Elizabeth Romanowski
Liliane Rusek and Alexander Ushakoff
Jeffrey Sher KC and Diana Sher OAM
Barry Spanger
Steinicke Family
Peter J Stirling
Jenny Tatchell
Clayton and Christina Thomas
Elaine Walters OAM
Janet Whiting AM
Nic and Ann Willcock
Anonymous (5)
PLAYER PATRONS $1,000+
Dr Sally Adams
Anita and Graham Anderson
Australian Decorative & Fine Arts Society
Geoffrey and Vivienne Baker
Michael Bowles and Alma Gill
Joyce Bown
Nigel Broughton and Sheena Broughton
Suzie Brown OAM and the late Harvey Brown
Ronald and Kate Burnstein
Kaye Cleary
John and Mandy Collins
Andrew Crockett AM and Pamela Crockett
Dr Daryl and Nola Daley
Panch Das and Laurel Young-Das
Natasha Davies for the Trikojus Education Fund
Rick and Sue Deering
Suzanne Dembo
John and Anne Duncan
Jane Edmanson OAM
Diane Fisher
Grant Fisher and Helen Bird
Alex Forrest
Applebay Pty Ltd
David and Esther Frenkiel OAM
Anthony Garvey and Estelle O’Callaghan
David I Gibbs AM and Susie O’Neill
Sonia Gilderdale
Dr Celia Godfrey
Dr Marged Goode
Dr Sandra Hacker AO and Ian Kennedy AM
Dawn Hales
David Hardy
Tilda and the late Brian Haughney
Susan and Gary Hearst
Cathy Henry
Dr Keith Higgins
Anthony and Karen Ho
Peter and Jenny Hordern
Katherine Horwood
Penelope Hughes
Shyama Jayaswal
Basil and Rita Jenkins
Sandy Jenkins
Sue Johnston
John Kaufman
Angela Kayser
Drs Bruce and Natalie Kellett
Dr Anne Kennedy
Tim Knaggs
Dr Jerry Koliha and Marlene Krelle
Jane Kunstler
Ann Lahore
Kerry Landman
Kathleen and Coran Lang
Janet and Ross Lapworth
Bryan Lawrence
Phil Lewis
John Lockwood
Elizabeth H Loftus
Chris and Anna Long
Gabe Lopata
John MacLeod
Eleanor & Phillip Mancini
Aaron McConnell
Wayne McDonald and Kay Schroer
Ray McHenry
John and Rosemary McLeod
Don and Anne Meadows
Dr Eric Meadows
Sylvia Miller
Ian Morrey and Geoffrey Minter
Dr Anthony and Dr Anna Morton
Laurence O’Keefe and Christopher James
Roger Parker
Ian Penboss
Eli Raskin
Jan and Keith Richards
James Ring
Dr Ronald and Elizabeth Rosanove
Marie Rowland
Jan Ryan
Martin and Susan Shirley
P Shore
John E Smith
Dr Peter Strickland
Dr Joel Symons and Liora Symons
Russell Taylor and Tara Obeyesekere
Geoffrey Thomlinson
Frank Tisher OAM and Dr Miriam Tisher
Andrew and Penny Torok
Christina Turner
Ann and Larry Turner
Leon and Sandra Velik
The Reverend Noel Whale
Edward and Paddy White
Terry Wills Cooke OAM and the late Marian Wills Cooke
Robert and Diana Wilson
Richard Withers
Lorraine Woolley
Shirley and Jeffrey Zajac
Anonymous (14)
OVERTURE PATRONS $500+
Margaret Abbey PSM
Jane Allan and Mark Redmond
Mario M Anders
Jenny Anderson
Peter Batterham
Peter Berry and Amanda Quirk
Dr William Birch AM
Allen and Kathryn Bloom
Linda Brennan
Dr Robert Brook
Roger and Coll Buckle
Cititec Systems
Charmaine Collins
Dr Sheryl Coughlin and Paul Coughlin
Judith Cowden in memory of violinist
Margaret Cowden
Dr Oliver Daly and Matilda Daly
Merrowyn Deacon
Bruce Dudon
Melissa and Aran Fitzgerald
Brian Florence
Elizabeth Foster
Mary Gaidzkar
Simon Gaites
Dr Mary-Jane Gething
David and Geraldine Glenny
Hugo and Diane Goetze
Louise Gourlay OAM
George Hampel AM KC and Felicity Hampel AM SC
Geoff Hayes
Jim Hickey
William Holder
Clive and Joyce Hollands
Rod Home
R A Hook
Gillian Horwood
Geoff and Denise Illing
Wendy Johnson
John and Christine Keys
Belinda and Malcom King
Professor David Knowles and Dr Anne McLachlan
Pauline and David Lawton
Paschalina Leach
Dr Jenny Lewis
Sharon Li
The Podcast Reader
Janice Mayfield
Shirley A McKenzie
Dr Alan Meads and Sandra Boon
Marie Misiurak
Joan Mullumby
Dr Judith S Nimmo
Brendan O’Donnell
David Oppenheim
Sarah Patterson
Adriana and Sienna Pesavento
Professor Charles Qin OAM and Kate Ritchie
Alfonso Reina and Marjanne Rook
Professor John Rickard
Dr Anne Ryan
Viorica Samson
Carolyn Sanders
Julia Schlapp
Dr Alex Starr
Dylan Stewart
Ruth Stringer
Reverend Angela Thomas
Rosemary Warnock
Nickie Warton and Grant Steel
Amanda Watson
Deborah Whithear and Dr Kevin Whithear OAM
Dr Susan Yell
Anonymous (10)
CONDUCTOR’S CIRCLE
Jenny Anderson
David Angelovich
G C Bawden and L de Kievit
Lesley Bawden
Joyce Bown
Mrs Jenny Bruckner and the late Mr John Bruckner
Ken Bullen
Peter A Caldwell
Luci and Ron Chambers
Beryl Dean
Sandra Dent
Alan Egan JP
Gunta Eglite
Marguerite Garnon-Williams
Drs L C Gruen and R W Wade
Louis J Hamon AOM
Carol Hay
Jennifer Henry
Graham Hogarth
Rod Home
Tony Howe
Lindsay and Michael Jacombs
Laurence O’Keefe and Christopher James
John Jones
Grace Kass and the late George Kass
Sylvia Lavelle
Pauline and David Lawton
Cameron Mowat
Ruth Muir
David Orr
Matthew O’Sullivan
Rosia Pasteur
Penny Rawlins
Joan P Robinson
Anne Roussac-Hoyne and Neil Roussac
Michael Ryan and Wendy Mead
Andrew Serpell and Anne Kieni Serpell
Jennifer Shepherd
Suzette Sherazee
Dr Gabriela and Dr George Stephenson
Pamela Swansson
Lillian Tarry
Tam Vu and Dr Cherilyn Tillman
Mr and Mrs R P Trebilcock
Peter and Elisabeth Turner
Michael Ulmer AO
The Hon. Rosemary Varty
Terry Wills Cooke OAM and the late Marian Wills Cooke
Mark Young Anonymous (19)
The MSO gratefully acknowledges the support of the following Estates:
Norma Ruth Atwell
Angela Beagley
Christine Mary Bridgart
The Cuming Bequest
Margaret Davies
Neilma Gantner
The Hon Dr Alan Goldberg AO QC
Enid Florence Hookey
Gwen Hunt
Family and Friends of James Jacoby
Audrey Jenkins
Joan Jones
Pauline Marie Johnston
C P Kemp
Peter Forbes MacLaren
Joan Winsome Maslen
Lorraine Maxine Meldrum
Prof Andrew McCredie
Jean Moore
Maxwell Schultz
Miss Sheila Scotter AM MBE
Marion A I H M Spence
Molly Stephens
Halinka Tarczynska-Fiddian
Jennifer May Teague
Albert Henry Ullin
Jean Tweedie
Herta and Fred B Vogel
Dorothy Wood
COMMISSIONING CIRCLE
Mary Armour
The late Hon Michael Watt KC and Cecilie Hall
Tim and Lyn Edward
Kim Williams AM
Weis Family
FIRST NATIONS CIRCLE
John and Lorraine Bates
Colin Golvan AM KC and Dr Deborah Golvan
Sascha O. Becker
Maestro Jaime Martín
Elizabeth Proust AO and Brian Lawrence
The Kate and Stephen Shelmerdine Family Foundation
Michael Ullmer AO and Jenny Ullmer
Jason Yeap OAM – Mering Management Corporation
ADOPT A MUSICIAN
Mr Marc Besen AC and the late Mrs Eva Besen AO
Chief Conductor Jaime Martín
Shane Buggle and Rosie Callanan
Roger Young
Andrew Dudgeon AM
Rohan de Korte, Philippa West
Tim and Lyn Edward
John Arcaro
Dr John and Diana Frew
Rosie Turner
Sophie Galaise and Clarence Fraser
Stephen Newton
Geelong Friends of the MSO
Miranda Brockman
The Gross Foundation
Matthew Tomkins
Dr Clem Gruen and Dr Rhyl Wade
Robert Cossom
Danny Gorog and Lindy Susskind
Monica Curro
Cecilie Hall and the late Hon Michael Watt KC
Saul Lewis
Nereda Hanlon and Michael Hanlon AM
Abbey Edlin
Margaret Jackson AC
Nicolas Fleury
Di Jameson and Frank Mercurio
Benjamin Hanlon, Tair Khisambee, Christopher Moore
Dr Elizabeth A Lewis AM
Anthony Chataway
David Li AM and Angela Li
Dale Barltrop
Gary McPherson
Rachel Shaw
Anne Neil
Trevor Jones
Hyon-Ju Newman
Patrick Wong
Newton Family in memory of Rae Rothfield
Cong Gu
The Rosemary Norman Foundation
Ann Blackburn
Andrew and Judy Rogers
Michelle Wood
Glenn Sedgwick
Tiffany Cheng, Shane Hooton
Dr Martin Tymms and Patricia Nilsson
Natasha Thomas
Anonymous
Prudence Davis
HONORARY APPOINTMENTS
Life Members
Mr Marc Besen AC
John Gandel AC and Pauline Gandel AC
Sir Elton John CBE
Harold Mitchell AC
Lady Potter AC CMRI
Jeanne Pratt AC
Michael Ullmer AO and Jenny Ullmer
Anonymous
MSO Ambassador
Geoffrey Rush AC
The MSO honours the memory of Life Members
Mrs Eva Besen AO
John Brockman OAM
The Honourable Alan Goldberg AO QC
Roger Riordan AM
Ila Vanrenen
MSO ARTISTIC FAMILY
Jaime Martín
Chief Conductor
Xian Zhang
Principal Guest Conductor
Benjamin Northey
Principal Conductor in Residence
Carlo Antonioli
Cybec Assistant Conductor Fellow
Sir Andrew Davis
Conductor Laureate
Hiroyuki Iwaki †
Conductor Laureate (1974–2006)
Warren Trevelyan-Jones
MSO Chorus Director
Siobhan Stagg
2023 Soloist in Residence
Gondwana Voices
2023 Ensemble in Residence
Christian Li
Young Artist in Association
Mary Finsterer
2023 Composer in Residence
Melissa Douglas
2023 Cybec Young Composer in Residence
Christopher Moore
Creative Producer, MSO Chamber
Deborah Cheetham Fraillon AO
MSO First Nations Creative Chair
Dr Anita Collins
Creative Chair for Learning and Engagement
Artistic Ambassadors
Tan Dun
Lu Siqing
MSO BOARD
Chairman
David Li AM
Co-Deputy Chairs
Di Jameson
Helen Silver AO
Managing Director
Sophie Galaise
Board Directors
Shane Buggle
Andrew Dudgeon AM
Lorraine Hook
Margaret Jackson AC
David Krasnostein AM
Gary McPherson
Farrel Meltzer
Hyon-Ju Newman
Glenn Sedgwick
Company Secretary
Oliver Carton
The MSO relies on your ongoing philanthropic support to sustain our artists, and support access, education, community engagement and more. We invite our supporters to get close to the MSO through a range of special events.
The MSO welcomes your support at any level. Donations of $2 and over are tax deductible, and supporters are recognised as follows:
$500+ (Overture)
$1,000+ (Player)
$2,500+ (Associate)
$5,000+ (Principal)
$10,000+ (Maestro)
$20,000+ (Impresario)
$50,000+ (Virtuoso)
$100,000+ (Platinum)
Media and Broadcast Partners
Trusts and Foundations
The Sir Andrew and Lady Fairley Foundation, Flora & Frank Leith Trust, Perpetual Foundation – Alan (AGL) Shaw Endowment, Sidney Myer MSO Trust Fund
The MSO is committed to a sustainable future for our art form and our audiences. As such, this program has been printed on Revive Laser stock. Revive Laser is 100% Recycled, and Certified Carbon Neutral against Climate Active Carbon Neutral Standard. Made in Australia by an ISO 14001 certified mill. No chlorine bleaching occurs in the recycling process.