Clarinet Quintets
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21 May
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Iwaki Auditorium, Southbank
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Artists
David Thomas curator, clarinet and basset clarinet
Tair Khisambeev violin
Freya Franzen violin
Gabrielle Halloran viola
Rohan de Korte cello
Amos Roach yidaki
Program
MOZART Clarinet Quintet
SCULTHORPE String Quartet No.12 From Ubirr
– Interval –
LACHLAN SKIPWORTH Clarinet Quintet The Eternal
COLERIDGE-TAYLOR Clarinet Quintet
Running time: approximately 2 hours including interval
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Our musical Acknowledgment of Country, Long Time Living Here by Deborah Cheetham Fraillon AO, will be performed at this concert.
In consideration of your fellow patrons, the MSO thanks you for silencing and dimming the light on your phone.
This concert may be recorded for future broadcast on MSO.LIVEAcknowledging 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.
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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.
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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.
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Melbourne Symphony Orchestra
Established in 1906, the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra is Australia’s pre-eminent orchestra and a cornerstone of Victoria’s rich, cultural heritage.
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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.
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David Thomas curator, clarinet and basset clarinet
David Thomas has been the Principal Clarinet for the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra since 2000. Growing up in the Dandenong Ranges, David studied at the University of Melbourne with Phillip Miechel and later at the Vienna Conservatorium with Roger Salander. David has played as a member of the West Australian Symphony Orchestra and is an ongoing member of the Australian World Orchestra. He has appeared as concerto soloist with the Melbourne, West Australian, Sydney, Tasmanian and Darwin Symphony orchestras, in works by Mozart, Copland, Debussy, Francaix and Brett Dean amongst others. Concertos have been written for David by Australian composers Ross Edwards, Phillip Czaplowski and Nicholas Routley, and his CD recording of the Edwards Concerto with the MSO conducted by Arvo Volmer has been released by ABC Classics.
David is actively involved in training the next generation of classical musicians at the Australian National Academy of Music, where he is the principal teacher of clarinet and head of the woodwind department.
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A note from the curator
Today’s programme ties together several threads in my own musical life. In the strange dark days of 2020, I performed several online chamber music concerts for Melbourne Digital Concert Hall with MSO colleagues including Tair, Freya, Gabby and Rohan – and we gave two performances of Mozart’s Quintet. Prior to the first performance, during the first big lockdown, we didn’t really have anywhere to rehearse, so we met on Zoom to talk through the fundamentals of tempo, bowings, and whatever stylistic issues we could discuss without actually playing together in the same room. That was followed by a couple of hurried rehearsals on the stage of the Atheneum before and between other groups’ concerts. It was a very strange thing on those occasions, to walk up to Collins St, instrument and music stand in hand, along almost deserted streets, going ‘to work’ at a time when that was an unusual, rather nerve-wracking and very special thing to do. I suspect some strong memories will resurface as we play for you today.
Regardless of the performance circumstances, it’s always interesting and rewarding to revisit a great piece of music with the same personnel. Each time you hope to move a little closer to the ideal of natural expression and communication: in other words, you hope to do more and more justice to the piece of music, and to your audience. That’s our lifelong quest, and there’s always more to learn and distil in one’s own relationship with the music, with colleagues, and with the instrument.
In the case of Mozart’s Quintet, the instrument I play is not one of the clarinets I usually play in the orchestra nor in other chamber music repertoire.
The basset clarinet is a weird extended version of a regular clarinet – a format dreamt up by Mozart’s clarinettist friend Anton Stadler, and immortalised solely through the two masterpieces Mozart wrote for him – today’s Quintet and the Clarinet Concerto K.622. We don’t tend to think of Mozart as an innovator or an experimenter, but he really was at the cutting edge of instruments and composition. Or put another way, he wrote very much ‘for the moment’ — if his clarinettist said “Hey, I’ve had this new instrument built with extra low notes” and if Mozart thought this idea made musical sense (it does) then he wrote for it, without thinking too much about whether other clarinettists would ever have the same instrument. If fact, the basset clarinet was effectively extinct from 1800 until the 1950s, during which time Mozart’s two big clarinet pieces were played not at all (for the first 50 years) and then exclusively on a standard A-clarinet without the extra low notes. Nowadays the situation has improved: you can buy a basset clarinet on special order from most of the major clarinet-makers, but it literally only still exists because of these two big pieces by Mozart, plus a small handful of new works. Incidentally, ‘basset clarinet’ is a modern, invented name: in Mozart’s day they had basset horns (not the same instrument: you hear those in his Requiem) but Stadler named his new invention simply a ‘bass clarinet’. By the time the instrument was revived, the ‘bass clarinet’ was a whole other thing, so a new name had to be found for our Mozart clarinet. I sometimes just think of it as the Crazy Clarinet, or the Delicious-Headache Clarinet.
Although I do relish every opportunity to play it, my basset clarinet spends a lot of its time packed away under
my bed – then before a performance such as today’s, I spend a few months reacquainting myself with it, checking that all those extra long keys still work properly (fingers crossed) and preparing reeds specifically for it. Mozart certainly knew what he was doing – both the Quintet and the Concerto are definitely well-served by having the proper instrument. The alternative is to play various phrases an octave too high, which messes with the character of the melodies and the relationship between the instruments – but the basset clarinet is an unwieldy beast, and not really suitable for ‘replacing’ the standard, shorter A-clarinet – and that’s why it remains an experiment repeated by very few subsequent composers. In the second half of today’s concert, I’ll return to a regular clarinet, which is not only much kinder to my right thumb and shoulder, but also more manoeuvrable and flexible in expression.
Mozart’s Quintet and Clarinet Concerto were the first real masterpieces composed in both those genres for the instrument. The next ‘great’ clarinet quintet was written by Brahms just over 100 years later. His Quintet is the elephant not in the room today: rather than pairing Mozart with Brahms, we’ll be performing a much less well-known quintet written soon after the Brahms and directly inspired by it (although in a sort of ‘reverse’ way, as described in the programme note below). I’ve known and loved Samuel Coleridge-Taylor’s Quintet since I was a teenager, but this is the first time my colleagues and I have performed it – and it’s some time since it was performed in Melbourne. When he composed it, ColeridgeTaylor was a student and still finding his musical voice, so we hear a lot of echoes of other composers, particularly
Dvorak, but I think his gift for writing ‘once-heard-never-forgotten’ melodies (the slow movement here) and his equally advanced rhythmic imagination (especially in the Scherzo) set ColeridgeTaylor’s Quintet firmly in the “Why don’t we hear this piece more often?“ category. Maddeningly, the MSO just missed out performing another piece by Coleridge-Taylor in 2021: we had just finished rehearsing his wonderful orchestral Variations on an African Air with Ben Northey when the second big lock-down was called, and the concerts were cancelled.
After quite a bit of discussion in the planning of today’s programme, we all agreed to compliment these two ‘traditional’ quintets with two much more recent Australian pieces, each (becoming) a ‘classic’ in their own way. Sculthorpe’s Twelfth String Quartet, for which the composer wrote an optional but ‘intended’ part for yidaki or didgeridoo, was suggested by our Associate Concertmaster Tair, who since arriving in Australia just a few years ago is obviously relishing getting to know Australian repertoire. Lachlan Skipworth’s beautiful singlemovement Clarinet Quintet, also with an absolutely unique sound-world, is a piece I’ve known and admired since it first appeared six years ago. Both these Australian pieces show strikingly original and individual musical voices, and both remind us just how vital and enthralling our art form remains.
© David ThomasHaving a passion for travel, Tair has worked as an orchestral musician in many different countries, exploring the diversity of the world’s cultures and the performing arts inherent in every place he visited. Before he finally found his zen in Melbourne, he graduated from the Moscow Conservatory, worked several years in Russia, a few years in Japan, tried the rhythm of orchestras of England and Finland and took part in numerous festivals and competitions, both as a soloist and chamber musician.
A special place in Tair’s heart belongs to chamber music. In 2010 he helped found a piano quintet, which under his leadership travelled and performed throughout Russia and Europe for six years. Tair is happy that he found so many like-minded chamber music lovers among Melbourne musicians and particularly in the MSO.
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Since starting at the Russian State Symphony Orchestra until now, Tair has been through it all with his wife, the great cellist Elina. Now they have dropped their anchor in Melbourne with confidence, rushing into the cultural beat of the city. So far no kangaroos have been injured on the road.
Position supported by Di Jameson and Frank Mercurio
Freya Franzen began violin studies in Canberra at the age of six with Gillian Bailey-Graham, later continuing as a pre-tertiary student at the Canberra School of Music. In her final year of school, she was the recipient of the ACT Board of Secondary Studies
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Recognition of Excellence Award for Performing Arts (Music). Studying under Associate Professor Goetz Richter and Mr Christopher Kimber, Freya completed a Bachelor of Music (Performance) at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music, graduating with First Class Honours in 2008.
Freya was the Sydney Symphony Orchestra fellow in 2011, later holding a position as a member of the Second Violin section and performing as a soloist in Malcolm Arnold’s Concerto for two violins.
In 2012, Freya travelled to London to complete a Masters of Music at The Guildhall School of Music and Drama under Stephaine Gonley. In 2014, Freya won her current position as a member of the Melbourne Symphony’s second violin section. Besides orchestral life, she regularly engages in chamber music and is a founding member of the upcoming Melbourne Ensemble.
Tair Khisambeev violin Freya Franzen violinGabrielle Halloran studied viola at the VCA with Lawrie Jacks and at the Mozarteum Salzburg with Thomas Riebl. During her time in Salzburg, she performed in various chamber ensembles and was tutored by members of the Hagen Quartet. She gave chamber concerts in Paris for the Mozart Bicentenary in 1991 and toured Europe with Salzburg Sinfonietta.
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In 1993 Gabby obtained a tutti position with the MSO. Gabby returned to Europe in 1996 on an MSO Friends study grant and attended summer schools in Salzburg (with Thomas Riebl) and Siena (with Yuri Bashmet). She also had lessons with David Takeno in London and Karen Tuttle in New York. Gabby is a regular performer with MSO Chamber Players and enjoys a busy musical life in Melbourne.
Rohan de Korte has been a member of the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra Cello section since 2009. Rohan chose to play the cello at the age of five because it was bigger than a violin and studied with Henry Wenig and Nelson Cooke before choosing musical studies in Europe over a career in basketball –the Chicago Bulls hadn’t called. Rohan studied in Croatia with Valter Despalj and at the Cologne Hochschule for Music with Claus Kanngiesser, and received chamber music lessons with the Alban Berg Quartett.
Returning to Australia in 2000 Rohan freelanced with the Sydney Symphony before becoming Associate Principal Cello of Orchestra Victoria. He plays a lot of chamber music with friends and has even tried composing; his debut piece, The Haunted House, is extremely popular with younger audiences. Rohan’s cello is a beautiful German instrument from 1720 and his favourite composer is Beethoven, although Mahler’s Ninth Symphony wins as his favourite piece. He has a lovely wife, Caroline, and three very rowdy sons who think that playing the cello is very funny yet interesting, and, after suffering a broken neck, Rohan has vowed never to try surfing again.
Position supported by Andrew Dudgeon AM
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Amos Roach yidaki
Amos Roach is a proud Ngarrandjerri/ Djab Wurrung/Gunditj Mara man. His music presents a narrative of healing, told with song and dance. Amos’s voice travels between the Desert, the Riverland and the Saltwater to the city like smoke from a fire. Amos is a cultural practitioner. Traditional First Nations culture informs the fundamentals of his craft. His music is part of the song-line that connects people and Country. His dances reconnect country to culture. Everything Amos does is music. If he is not playing an instrument, he is listening and exploring new sounds. Australian Reggae imagines a fusion of traditional and contemporary indigenous music. Amos plays his own songs, founded in rhythm with the Yidaki and Flamenco influenced Rap music, family ballads and Rock that shakes the ground and compels us to dance. A lilt of smoke, the Riverland echoes and we can feel the sand and saltwater rushing through the veins of Amos’s voice as he carries the song lines from the desert to our ears.
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Program Notes
WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART (1756–1791)
Clarinet Quintet in A Major, K.581
I. Allegro
II. Larghetto
III. Menuetto
IV. Allegretto con variazioni
The clarinet emerged in roughly its modern form in the early 1700s, but it took nearly a century for it to become a regular presence in chamber music and the orchestra. When Mozart visited Mannheim in 1778, the instrument was still a novelty in its “famous court, whose rays like those of the sun illuminate the whole of Germany.” Mozart was impressed, writing to his father in Leipzig: “if only we had clarinets!” back home. (Meanwhile, he complained about the flute: “my mind gets easily dulled, as you know, when I’m supposed to write a lot for an instrument I can’t stand.”)
Three years later, Mozart would get his wish – though he was by then in Vienna, rather than in Leipzig. Anton Stadler, along with his brother Johann, had become the first fulltime clarinetists in the Viennese court orchestra. Mozart and Stadler belonged to the same Masonic lodge, and they became frequent collaborators through the 1780s and early ’90s. Stadler premiered Mozart’s Kegelstatt Trio, the Clarinet Quintet, and the Clarinet Concerto, and he played in the pit for the operas Così fan tutte and La clemenza di Tito. After Mozart died in 1791, Joseph Haydn paid tribute to his young departed friend by including clarinets in final symphonies. And curiously, in the final accounting, Stadler was found to be one of very few people who owed Mozart money, rather than the other way around.
1789 was an unusually fallow year for Mozart, who was dealing with the poor health of his wife, Constanze; the death of their infant child (the second in two years); and various financial problems. The Clarinet Quintet was one of few bright spots. The idea of mixing a woodwind instrument with strings was not new – he had written four flute quartets and an oboe quartet years earlier – but those were mostly cheerful works in the light divertimento style. The clarinet quintet follows more closely his moody viola quintets of 1787.
Another clear influence on the quintet is opera – some of Mozart’s only other significant works from 1789 were a series of “insertion arias” he wrote for a revival of Le nozze di Figaro as well as another opera by his Spanish colleague Martín y Soler (it wasn’t unusual at the time for composers to write substitute arias for other people’s operas). The clarinet traces the contours of a lyric soprano, while the other instruments add a rich internal drama.
Mozart completed the clarinet quintet and entered it into his catalogue on September 29, 1789, and it was premiered just before Christmas on a fundraising concert for widows and orphans. Stadler played it on the basset-clarinet, a special instrument of his own invention with an extended lower range. He later lost the music –or perhaps refused to hand it over to Mozart’s widow – and only a version for standard clarinet survives. The original is reconstructed for this performance.
The first movement is built on a chorale-like melody that is quickly pushed forward. The second theme, accompanied by cello pizzicato, turns cold when the clarinet picks it up over sneaky syncopations. The slow movement is a clarinet aria, a longing love song sometimes duetted with violin over a bittersweet backdrop. The Menuetto
is interspersed with two Trios (the first for strings only); a curious unresolved dissonance appears in the second. The finale is a set of variations on a rather coy theme that comes back full circle after a brief, reflective Adagio.
PETER SCULTHORPE (1929–2014)
String Quartet No.12, From Ubirr
Peter Sculthorpe was perhaps the most prominent Australian composer of the late 20 th and early 21 st centuries. He was born in Launceston, Tasmania, studied at the University of Melbourne and later Oxford, and from 1964 taught at the University of Sydney. He was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire in 1977, an Order of Australia in 1990, elected one of Australia’s Living National Treasures in 1998, and received a Silver Jubilee Medal. He was especially interested in the Australian landscape, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander music and culture, environmentalism, and non-violence – all elements that are reflected in his music.
Sculthorpe’s String Quartet No.12, From Ubirr, was completed in 1994 and premiered by the Kronos Quartet and yidaki-player David Coulter at the Barbican in London. The music was adapted from an earlier orchestral work called Earth Cry (1986). In the program note for that piece, Sculthorpe wrote:
Whenever I have returned from abroad in recent years, this country has seemed to me to be one of the last places on earth where one could honestly write quick and joyous music. I decided, therefore, to write such a piece. Reflecting upon this, it soon became clear that it would be dishonest of me to write music that is altogether quick and joyous. We still lack a common cause, and the self-
interest of many has drained us of much of our energy. A bogus national identity and its commercialisation have obscured the true breadth of our culture. Most of the jubilation, I came to feel, awaits us in the future.
For the string quartet version with yidaki, he elaborated:
Ubirr is a large rocky outcrop in Kakadu National Park, in northern Australia. It houses some of the best and most varied Aboriginal rock painting in the country. Many of the paintings have been proven to be the earliest-known graphic expressions of the human race. They clearly demonstrate a caring relationship with the environment, and the Aboriginal belief that the land owns the people, not the people the land… It asks us to attune ourselves to the planet, to listen to the cry of the earth as the Aborigines have done for many thousand years. The work is a straightforward and melodious one. Its four parts are made up of quick, ritualistic music framed by a slower music of supplicatory nature, and an extended coda. The slow music is accompanied by a yidaki pitched to E, and the quick music by a second yidaki pitched to C. The instrument represents the sound of nature, of the earth itself.
LACHLAN SKIPWORTH (born 1982)
Clarinet Quintet The Eternal
Based in Perth, Lachlan Skipworth is an Australian composer of growing international acclaim. He trained as a clarinetist at the University of Western Australia, but turned to the shakuhachi – the bamboo flute – which he studied for three years in Japan. He has won the Paul Lowin Prize for orchestral composition, served as composer-inresidence with the West Australian Symphony Orchestra, and received commissions and performances from the Sydney Symphony, Queensland Symphony, Darwin Symphony, Melbourne Symphony, and Tokyo Philharmonic Chorus. He has released four albums, most recently Chamber Works Vol. II in 2022.
Skipworth wrote his Clarinet Quintet in 2016, and it was recorded for his first album of chamber works. In his own program note, he described:
My Clarinet Quintet offers a dystopian response to our current time through the deep sadness of its harmonic language and its drawn out melodic lines. The arch structure traces a questioning of the status quo in increasing degrees of urgency, falling back to a disturbed state of acceptance to end the work.
SAMUEL COLERIDGE-TAYLOR (1875–1912)
Clarinet Quintet in F-sharp Minor, Op.10
I. Allegro energico
II. Larghetto affetuoso
III. Scherzo. Allegro leggiero
IV. Finale. Allegro agitato
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor’s name is a play on that of the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge, perhaps pointing to his mother’s artistic ambitions for her son. His father was Daniel Peter Hughes Taylor, a Sierra Leonean physician who studied in London but returned to West Africa before Samuel was born. His mother, Alice Hare Martin, was a white Englishwoman, and unmarried. It must not have been easy for Coleridge-Taylor to grow up in working-class Victorian London as a mixed-race child of illegitimate birth, but he was eventually adopted by his mother’s husband, received violin lessons, and earned a scholarship to the Royal College of Music in 1890.
By age 16, Coleridge-Taylor was already composing, and soon joined the studio of Charles Villiers Stanford, where his fellow students included Ralph Vaughan Williams and Gustav Holst. He won a few prizes and obtained his first commission on the recommendation of Edward Elgar. He became interested in the United States, and some of his best-known pieces, such as Hiawatha’s Wedding Feast, were based on American themes. He visited the U.S. three times, meeting President Theodore Roosevelt at the White House and touring with Harry Burleigh, the African-American singer and composer who had worked with Antonín Dvořák in New York.
For a moment around the turn of the 20 th century, Coleridge-Taylor was one of England’s best-known composers, with no shortage of performances, conducting appearances, teaching
posts, and publications. But he died unexpectedly from pneumonia at age 37, and his music apart from the cantata Hiawatha was mostly forgotten.
The Clarinet Quintet, Op.10, is one of his first mature pieces, dating from 1895, and it was published by Breitkopf & Härtel in Leipzig in 1906. He wrote it in response to a challenge from Stanford, who remarked that it would be impossible to write a clarinet quintet without being influenced by Johannes Brahms. (Brahms’s Clarinet Quintet in B minor, Op. 115, appeared in 1891, and was the most significant contribution to the genre since Mozart.)
Coleridge-Taylor instead took a detour by way of Dvořák, adopting a folksy verve. His quintet is geographically unplaceable – vaguely English, Bohemian, and American all the same – but delightfully unique, avoiding any Brahmsian nostalgia. “You’ve done it, my boy!” Stanford exclaimed.
The first movement is bold and breezy, with surprising punctuations and colorful shadings between the clarinet and strings. The second movement stretches out from a restful melody, drawing a pastoral scene. The Scherzo is in two time signatures at once – 3/4 and 9/8 – resulting in unpredictable cross-rhythms in a playful romp. The finale lays on the ostinatos, with little drumming figures in cello plucks and chug-chug-chugs in the inner strings. A climax and dramatic pause gives way to a murky moment of stasis – resolved by a Vivace coda.
Benjamin Pesetsky © 2023
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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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A Lifetime of Music
From nourishing the soul, lifting the spirits, or igniting passion, music has the ability to evoke the vast expanse of human emotions like nothing else.
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For 117 years, our great Orchestra has had the honour and privilege of creating these moving musical moments – delivering a lifetime of music to generations of Victorians. But we can’t do this without your support.
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A gift today to the MSO will help us deliver our annual suite of concerts and programs for audiences of all ages and musical tastes.
Each and every gift, no matter the size, makes an impact. Please join us on this important journey, and make a donation today by scanning the QR code.
Thank you for your support.
Supporters
MSO PATRON
The Honourable Linda Dessau AC CVO, Governor of Victoria
CHAIRMAN’S CIRCLE
Mr Marc Besen AC and the late Mrs Eva Besen AO
Gandel Foundation
The Gross Foundation
Di Jameson and Frank Mercurio
Harold Mitchell Foundation
Lady Potter AC CMRI
Cybec Foundation
The Pratt Foundation
The Ullmer Family Foundation
Anonymous
ARTIST CHAIR BENEFACTORS
Chief Conductor Jaime Martín Mr Marc Besen AC and the late Mrs Eva Besen AO
Cybec Assistant Conductor Chair
Carlo Antonioli Cybec Foundation
Concertmaster Chair Dale Barltrop
David Li AM and Angela Li
Assistant Concertmaster
Tair Khisambeev Di Jameson and Frank Mercurio
Young Composer in Residence
Melissa Douglas Cybec Foundation
2023 Composer in Residence
Mary Finsterer Kim Williams AM
PROGRAM BENEFACTORS
MSO Now & Forever Fund: International Engagement Gandel Foundation
Cybec 21st Century Australian Composers Program Cybec Foundation
Digital Transformation The Margaret
Lawrence Bequest – Managed by Perpetual, Perpetual Foundation – Alan (AGL) Shaw Endowment
First Nations Emerging Artist Program
The Ullmer Family Foundation
East meets West The Li Family Trust, National Foundation for Australia-China Relations
MSO Live Online Crown Resorts Foundation, Packer Family Foundation
MSO Education Anonymous
MSO Academy Di Jameson and Frank Mercurio
MSO For Schools Crown Resorts Foundation, Packer Family Foundation, the Department of Education, Victoria, through the Strategic Partnerships Program
Melbourne Music Summit the Department of Education, Victoria, through the Strategic Partnerships Program
MSO Regional Touring Creative Victoria, Freemasons Foundation Victoria, Robert Salzer Foundation, The Sir Andrew & Lady Fairley Foundation
The Pizzicato Effect Hume City Council’s Community Grants program, The Marian and E.H. Flack Trust, Flora & Frank Leith Charitable Trust, Australian Decorative And Fine Arts Society, Anonymous
Sidney Myer Free Concerts Sidney Myer
MSO Trust Fund and the University of Melbourne
PLATINUM PATRONS $100,000+
Mr Marc Besen AC and the late Mrs Eva Besen AO
The Gandel Foundation
The Gross Foundation
Di Jameson and Frank Mercurio
David Li AM and Angela Li
Lady Primrose Potter AC CMRI
Anonymous (1)
VIRTUOSO PATRONS $50,000+
Margaret Jackson AC
The Ullmer Family Foundation
Weis Family
Anonymous (1)
IMPRESARIO PATRONS $20,000+
Harold Bentley
The Hogan Family Foundation
David Krasnostein AM and Pat Stragalinos
Paul Noonan
Opalgate Foundation
Lady Marigold Southey AC
Kim Williams AM
Anonymous (1)
MAESTRO PATRONS $10,000+
Christine and Mark Armour
Margaret Billson and the late Ted Billson
Shane Buggle and Rosie Callanan
Krystyna Campbell-Pretty AM
Andrew Dudgeon AM
Colin Golvan AM KC and Dr Deborah Golvan
Danny Gorog and Lindy Susskind
Peter Lovell
Maestro Jaime Martín
Ian and Jeannie Paterson
Elizabeth Proust AO and Brian Lawrence
Yashian Schauble
Glenn Sedgwick
The Sun Foundation
David and Gai Taylor
Athalie Williams and Tim Danielson
Lyn Williams AM
Wingate Group
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)
Julia and Jim Breen
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
Dr John and Diana Frew
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
Merv Keehn and Sue Harlow
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
The Kate and Stephen Shelmerdine Family Foundation
Helen Silver AO and Harrison Young
Anita Simon
Brian Snape AM
Dr Michael Soon
Dawna Wright and Peter Riedel
Anonymous (2)
ASSOCIATE PATRONS $2,500+
Carolyn Baker
Marlyn Bancroft and Peter Bancroft OAM
Sascha O. Becker
Janet H Bell
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
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
LRR Family Trust
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 (4)
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
Miranda Brockman
Nigel Broughton and Sheena Broughton
Suzie Brown OAM and the late Harvey Brown
Dr Robin Burns and Dr Roger Douglas
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
Michael Davies
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
Andrew 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
Professor Geoffrey Metz
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 Peter Rogers and Cathy Rogers OAM
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 t
he late Marian Wills Cooke
Robert and Diana Wilson
Richard Withers
Lorraine Woolley
Youth Music Foundation
Shirley and Jeffrey Zajac
Anonymous (12)
OVERTURE PATRONS $500+
Margaret Abbey PSM
Jane Allan and Mark Redmond
Mario M Anders
Jenny Anderson
Peter Batterham
Benevity Australia Online Giving Foundation
Peter Berry and Amanda Quirk
Dr William Birch AM
Allen and Kathryn Bloom
Linda Brennan
Dr Robert Brook
Elizabeth Brown
John Brownbill
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
Robert and Jan Green
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
Estelle O’Callaghan
Brendan O’Donnell
David Oppenheim
Sarah Patterson
Adriana and Sienna Pesavento
Kerryn Pratchett
Professor Charles Qin OAM and Kate Ritchie
Alfonso Reina and Marjanne Rook
Professor John Rickard
Dr Anne Ryan
Viorica Samson
Carolyn Sanders
Dr Nora Scheinkestel
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 (15)
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
Charles Hardman
Carol Hay
Jennifer Henry
Graham Hogarth
Rod Home
Lyndon Horsburgh
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
Joan P Robinson
Maxwell Schultz
Miss Sheila Scotter AM MBE
Marion A I H M Spence
Molly Stephens
Gwennyth St John
Halinka Tarczynska-Fiddian
Jennifer May Teague
Albert Henry Ullin
Jean Tweedie
Herta and Fred B Vogel
Dorothy Wood
COMMISSIONING CIRCLE
Mary Armour
Cecilie Hall and the Late Hon Michael Watt KC
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
Dr Mary-Jane Gething AO
Monica Curro
The Gross Foundation
Matthew Tomkins
Dr Clem Gruen and Dr Rhyl Wade
Robert Cossom
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
Elina Fashki, Benjamin Hanlon, Tair Khisambeev, Christopher Moore
Dr Elizabeth A Lewis AM
Anthony Chataway
David Li AM and Angela Li
Dale Barltrop
Gary McPherson
Rachel Shaw
Anne Neil
Eleanor Mancini
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
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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)
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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
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