BBC Symphony Orchestra Season Brochure 2012-13

Page 1

The Barbican’s Associate Orchestra

Concerts 2012–13

bbc.co.uk/symphonyorchestra


Concerts 2012–13

Welcome to the BBC Symphony Orchestra’s 2012–13 season at the Barbican. Our unique role is to celebrate and refresh the great orchestral tradition, and to take the art form into the future. This season offers an exceptionally rich mix of cutting-edge new works, operatic gems, classical masterpieces, music from other cultures and a live film-score. With a dreamlike presentation of a Ravel opera, the revival of Donizetti’s long-neglected Belisario, all four Tippett symphonies plus his triple and piano concertos, and 18 world and UK premieres, all performed by world-class soloists and conductors, the BBC Symphony Orchestra presents an exciting programme you simply cannot hear anywhere else. Chief Conductor Designate Sakari Oramo Conductors Laureate Ji∑í B∆lohlávek Sir Andrew Davis Artist in Association Oliver Knussen

Best of British British talent is a focus for this season, with a lively exploration of the works of Michael Tippett, one of the truly original 20th-century British composers, and a host of works by his successors, including Oliver Knussen, David Sawer, Mark Simpson and Anna Clyne. Stephen Hough, pianist extraordinaire and composer, is our Artist in Focus, and rubs shoulders with other Great Brits Steven Osborne, Susan Bullock, Benjamin Grosvenor, Sir Andrew Davis, Sir Mark Elder, Alice Coote and Claire Booth.

Artist Focus Stephen Hough is a unique presence in the piano world, a performer who combines the virtuosity and creativity of the great 19thcentury composer-pianists, with the illuminating scholarship and engaging writing style of a 21st-century sage. In his three concerts with the BBC Symphony Orchestra he returns to the two great concertos of Brahms, each coupled with one of Tippett’s symphonies, and Hummel’s ebullient Concerto in A minor.

Total Immersion & thrilling new works The BBC Symphony Orchestra’s imaginative Total Immersion days have become a fixture in the musical calendar and this season we are expanding our scope to embrace an ever more varied and alluring line-up: Oliver Knussen, one the UK’s foremost composer-conductors, is joined by a host of glittering artists for his 60th birthday; Takemitsu is the focus of a fascinating day, Sounds from Japan, exploring Japanese contemporary and traditional music. New from the North celebrates Per Nørgård’s 80th birthday with two important premieres and a host of original voices from Denmark and Finland, performed by some of the finest Nordic exponents. Plus, 18 UK and world premieres.

All the World’s a Stage … Opera and story-telling is always close to the heart of a BBC Symphony Orchestra season, and this year we present Ravel’s two delightful comedies, L’heure espagnole and L’enfant et les sortilèges, the latter presented with surrealistically beautiful live video. A rare treat will be Donizetti’s Belisario, conducted by Sir Mark Elder, and further highlights include Grieg’s riveting Peer Gynt and Eisenstein’s Alexander Nevsky screened with Prokofiev’s coruscating live score.

exciting bbc.co.uk/symphonyorchestra

3


Concerts 2012–13

Welcome to the BBC Symphony Orchestra’s 2012–13 season at the Barbican. Our unique role is to celebrate and refresh the great orchestral tradition, and to take the art form into the future. This season offers an exceptionally rich mix of cutting-edge new works, operatic gems, classical masterpieces, music from other cultures and a live film-score. With a dreamlike presentation of a Ravel opera, the revival of Donizetti’s long-neglected Belisario, all four Tippett symphonies plus his triple and piano concertos, and 18 world and UK premieres, all performed by world-class soloists and conductors, the BBC Symphony Orchestra presents an exciting programme you simply cannot hear anywhere else. Chief Conductor Designate Sakari Oramo Conductors Laureate Ji∑í B∆lohlávek Sir Andrew Davis Artist in Association Oliver Knussen

Best of British British talent is a focus for this season, with a lively exploration of the works of Michael Tippett, one of the truly original 20th-century British composers, and a host of works by his successors, including Oliver Knussen, David Sawer, Mark Simpson and Anna Clyne. Stephen Hough, pianist extraordinaire and composer, is our Artist in Focus, and rubs shoulders with other Great Brits Steven Osborne, Susan Bullock, Benjamin Grosvenor, Sir Andrew Davis, Sir Mark Elder, Alice Coote and Claire Booth.

Artist Focus Stephen Hough is a unique presence in the piano world, a performer who combines the virtuosity and creativity of the great 19thcentury composer-pianists, with the illuminating scholarship and engaging writing style of a 21st-century sage. In his three concerts with the BBC Symphony Orchestra he returns to the two great concertos of Brahms, each coupled with one of Tippett’s symphonies, and Hummel’s ebullient Concerto in A minor.

Total Immersion & thrilling new works The BBC Symphony Orchestra’s imaginative Total Immersion days have become a fixture in the musical calendar and this season we are expanding our scope to embrace an ever more varied and alluring line-up: Oliver Knussen, one the UK’s foremost composer-conductors, is joined by a host of glittering artists for his 60th birthday; Takemitsu is the focus of a fascinating day, Sounds from Japan, exploring Japanese contemporary and traditional music. New from the North celebrates Per Nørgård’s 80th birthday with two important premieres and a host of original voices from Denmark and Finland, performed by some of the finest Nordic exponents. Plus, 18 UK and world premieres.

All the World’s a Stage … Opera and story-telling is always close to the heart of a BBC Symphony Orchestra season, and this year we present Ravel’s two delightful comedies, L’heure espagnole and L’enfant et les sortilèges, the latter presented with surrealistically beautiful live video. A rare treat will be Donizetti’s Belisario, conducted by Sir Mark Elder, and further highlights include Grieg’s riveting Peer Gynt and Eisenstein’s Alexander Nevsky screened with Prokofiev’s coruscating live score.

exciting bbc.co.uk/symphonyorchestra

3


Friday 12 October | 7.30pm

Friday 19 October | 7.30pm

Haydn

Tippett

Symphony No. 101 in D major, ‘The Clock’

Triple Concerto

Wagner, arr. Vlieger

Hummel

The Ring – an Orchestral Adventure

Piano Concerto in A minor Wednesday 3 October | 7.30pm

Michael Zev Gordon Bohortha (Seven Pieces for Orchestra) BBC commission: world premiere

Mahler Rückert-Lieder

Shostakovich Symphony No. 4 Jukka-Pekka Saraste conductor Alice Coote mezzo-soprano Shostakovich was never closer to the spirit of Mahler than in his phantasmagoric fourth symphony, written and withdrawn during Stalin’s Great Terror. The composer intended it to be his ‘Symphonic Credo’, and it’s a work with an astonishing spectrum of characters and styles, from satire to high tragedy, romanticism to grotesquerie, all fuelled with a near-delirious life force. Shostakovich was fascinated by Mahler’s vast extended forms, but the composer’s Rückert-Lieder belong to another world: each is a tiny, transparently-scored psychodrama, and will be performed by one of the UK’s most treasured mezzo-sopranos, Alice Coote. The concert begins with a seven-movement exploration of our awareness of time passing by Michael Zev Gordon. Bohortha is a tiny hamlet on the Cornish coast with no roads leading from it: in Gordon’s words, ‘a beautiful image of open-endedness’. BBC SO Plus Pre-concert talk | 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

4

BBC Symphony Orchestra

Mark Wigglesworth conductor Leopold Trio

Ravel L’heure espagnole

Our Tippett series opens with a rare opportunity to hear his Triple Concerto, a masterpiece of his late period when he confessed he had ‘turned my back with some pleasure on the cruel world’. Characterised by rapt lyricism, the concerto follows the course of a day through twilight to night and dawn, punctuated with magical interludes infused with gamelan-like percussion, inspired by the composer’s travels in Bali. Top soloists Isabelle van Keulen, Lawrence Power and Kate Gould of the Leopold Trio join forces with Mark Wigglesworth for this radiant journey. As part of our opera strand comes Henk de Vlieger’s exuberant arrangement of Wagner’s great Ring cycle as a four-part symphony, taking in all the major scenes, beginning with Das Rheingold’s magnificent Prelude and culminating in the destruction of the Gods and Valhalla.

Josep Pons conductor Stephen Hough piano Ruxandra Donose Concepcion Jacques Imbrailo Ramiro Jean-Paul Fouchécourt Torquemada Julien Behr Gonzalve David Wilson-Johnson Don Inigo Gomez Haydn’s own ‘Clock’ Symphony prefaces L’heure espagnole, Ravel’s delightful one-act comedy about a cuckolded clockmaker, the first of two Ravel operas this season. Romanian mezzosoprano Ruxandra Donose has already won plaudits as the feisty and far-from-immaculate Concepcion, while celebrated young baritone Jacques Imbrailo takes on the role of hunky muleteer, lugging grandfather clocks up and down stairs for her while she attempts to seduce the local romeos — until she notices the size of Ramiro’s biceps. Catalan conductor Josep Pons lends idiomatic spice to this glittering cast. High spirits continue with Hummel’s elegant Concerto in A minor, to be performed by our Artist in Focus this season, the incomparable Stephen Hough. BBC SO Plus Family 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert for families. See page 22 for details. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

STEPHEN HOUGH

BBC SO Plus Pre-concert talk | 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10 Saraste © WDR, Thomas Kost; Hough © Sim Canetty-Clarke; Tippett © Jane Bown

Jukka-Pekka Saraste

SIR MICHAEL TIPPETT

distinctive bbc.co.uk/symphonyorchestra

5


Total Immersion

Sunday 28 October | 7.00pm

Donizetti Belisario

Oliver Knussen at 60 Sunday 4 NOVEMBER Sounds from Japan Saturday 2 February New from the North Saturday 9 March

Sir Mark Elder conductor

Sir Mark Elder has made it his mission in recent years to revive the fortunes of the great bel canto operas, with pioneering performances and persuasive, vivid recordings. In this concert staging, a collaboration with Opera Rara, of which he is Artistic Director, Elder tackles Donizetti’s lyric tragedy Belisario, which traces the fortunes of the 6th-century Byzantine General. It achieved huge popularity in its day and the title-role provides a marvellous vehicle for the talents of Sicilian baritone Nicola Alaimo. Prepare for a performance of high passion and drama from a wonderful cast, including rising Canadian star Joyce El-Khoury as the accusing wife Antonina, stunning young soprano Camilla Roberts as his daughter Irene and internationally celebrated bass Alastair Miles as the Emperor Justinian. Concert Staging Sung in Italian with English surtitles BBC SO Plus Study Afternoon | 2.30pm–5.30pm | Mozart Room An afternoon exploring Donizetti’s Belisario. Produced by the BBC Symphony Orchestra and Opera Rara Tickets  £40 | £34 | £26 | £18 | £12

6

BBC Symphony Orchestra

The Death of Belisarius’s Wife/François Joseph Kinsoen Musea Brugge © Lukas – Art in Flanders VZW, photo Hugo Maertens; Knussen © Clive Barda

Cast to include: Joyce El-Khoury Antonina Nicola Alaimo Belisario Russell Thomas Alamiro Camilla Roberts Irene Alastair Miles Justinian Julia Sporsén Eudora Peter Hoare Eutropio Darren Jeffery Centurion BBC Singers

The BBC Symphony Orchestra’s Total Immersion days have become landmark events on the London music scene. They boast not only superlative performances of the music of our time, but explore the imaginative world behind it in films, talks, creative projects with young musicians and encounters with the composers themselves. This season we are extending the scope of these in-depth portraits to include groups of linked composers, so creating a vital context in which to hear some beguiling new music, exploring the Nordic countries and Japan. Oliver Knussen at 60

New from the North

Oliver Knussen is one of the most inspirational figures in British music. Equally gifted as composer, conductor and teacher, he has produced an extraordinary body of work whose vitality and quality seem to shine brighter with each passing year. As composer Julian Anderson has written, ‘Knussen is that rarity … a composer whose music is both complex and aurally coherent’; he combines the spontaneous and the constructed, the playful and profound.

Recent decades have seen a stream of powerful and original music flowing from Nordic countries. New from the North focuses on the visionary, elusive works of Dane Per Nørgård, in celebration of his 80th birthday, alongside his distinguished compatriot Hans Abrahamsen and a host of dynamic Finnish composers including Magnus Lindberg, Jouni Kaipainen, Kaija Saariaho and the young Sebastian Fagerlund.

Sounds from Japan ‘First, devote yourself to the simple act of listening,’ wrote the late pioneering Japanese composer To ¯ ru Takemitsu, ‘Only then you will understand the purpose of music.’ Sound and silence, day and night, the sonorities of East and West meet in his works of mesmerising, twilit poetry. He inspired two generations of uniquely cosmopolitan Japanese composers, whose works we’ll hear alongside a fascinating exploration of Japanese traditional music.

Save money to all events with a Total Immersion Day Pass. There is a choice of pass for each day, reflecting the range of ticket prices for the evening concert. Day Passes are available by telephone or in person only. See the information on each Total Immersion day for prices.


Friday 12 October | 7.30pm

Friday 19 October | 7.30pm

Haydn

Tippett

Symphony No. 101 in D major, ‘The Clock’

Triple Concerto

Wagner, arr. Vlieger

Hummel

The Ring – an Orchestral Adventure

Piano Concerto in A minor Wednesday 3 October | 7.30pm

Michael Zev Gordon Bohortha (Seven Pieces for Orchestra) BBC commission: world premiere

Mahler Rückert-Lieder

Shostakovich Symphony No. 4 Jukka-Pekka Saraste conductor Alice Coote mezzo-soprano Shostakovich was never closer to the spirit of Mahler than in his phantasmagoric fourth symphony, written and withdrawn during Stalin’s Great Terror. The composer intended it to be his ‘Symphonic Credo’, and it’s a work with an astonishing spectrum of characters and styles, from satire to high tragedy, romanticism to grotesquerie, all fuelled with a near-delirious life force. Shostakovich was fascinated by Mahler’s vast extended forms, but the composer’s Rückert-Lieder belong to another world: each is a tiny, transparently-scored psychodrama, and will be performed by one of the UK’s most treasured mezzo-sopranos, Alice Coote. The concert begins with a seven-movement exploration of our awareness of time passing by Michael Zev Gordon. Bohortha is a tiny hamlet on the Cornish coast with no roads leading from it: in Gordon’s words, ‘a beautiful image of open-endedness’. BBC SO Plus Pre-concert talk | 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

4

BBC Symphony Orchestra

Mark Wigglesworth conductor Leopold Trio

Ravel L’heure espagnole

Our Tippett series opens with a rare opportunity to hear his Triple Concerto, a masterpiece of his late period when he confessed he had ‘turned my back with some pleasure on the cruel world’. Characterised by rapt lyricism, the concerto follows the course of a day through twilight to night and dawn, punctuated with magical interludes infused with gamelan-like percussion, inspired by the composer’s travels in Bali. Top soloists Isabelle van Keulen, Lawrence Power and Kate Gould of the Leopold Trio join forces with Mark Wigglesworth for this radiant journey. As part of our opera strand comes Henk de Vlieger’s exuberant arrangement of Wagner’s great Ring cycle as a four-part symphony, taking in all the major scenes, beginning with Das Rheingold’s magnificent Prelude and culminating in the destruction of the Gods and Valhalla.

Josep Pons conductor Stephen Hough piano Ruxandra Donose Concepcion Jacques Imbrailo Ramiro Jean-Paul Fouchécourt Torquemada Julien Behr Gonzalve David Wilson-Johnson Don Inigo Gomez Haydn’s own ‘Clock’ Symphony prefaces L’heure espagnole, Ravel’s delightful one-act comedy about a cuckolded clockmaker, the first of two Ravel operas this season. Romanian mezzosoprano Ruxandra Donose has already won plaudits as the feisty and far-from-immaculate Concepcion, while celebrated young baritone Jacques Imbrailo takes on the role of hunky muleteer, lugging grandfather clocks up and down stairs for her while she attempts to seduce the local romeos — until she notices the size of Ramiro’s biceps. Catalan conductor Josep Pons lends idiomatic spice to this glittering cast. High spirits continue with Hummel’s elegant Concerto in A minor, to be performed by our Artist in Focus this season, the incomparable Stephen Hough. BBC SO Plus Family 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert for families. See page 22 for details. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

STEPHEN HOUGH

BBC SO Plus Pre-concert talk | 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10 Saraste © WDR, Thomas Kost; Hough © Sim Canetty-Clarke; Tippett © Jane Bown

Jukka-Pekka Saraste

SIR MICHAEL TIPPETT

distinctive bbc.co.uk/symphonyorchestra

5


Total Immersion

Sunday 28 October | 7.00pm

Donizetti Belisario

Oliver Knussen at 60 Sunday 4 NOVEMBER Sounds from Japan Saturday 2 February New from the North Saturday 9 March

Sir Mark Elder conductor

Sir Mark Elder has made it his mission in recent years to revive the fortunes of the great bel canto operas, with pioneering performances and persuasive, vivid recordings. In this concert staging, a collaboration with Opera Rara, of which he is Artistic Director, Elder tackles Donizetti’s lyric tragedy Belisario, which traces the fortunes of the 6th-century Byzantine General. It achieved huge popularity in its day and the title-role provides a marvellous vehicle for the talents of Sicilian baritone Nicola Alaimo. Prepare for a performance of high passion and drama from a wonderful cast, including rising Canadian star Joyce El-Khoury as the accusing wife Antonina, stunning young soprano Camilla Roberts as his daughter Irene and internationally celebrated bass Alastair Miles as the Emperor Justinian. Concert Staging Sung in Italian with English surtitles BBC SO Plus Study Afternoon | 2.30pm–5.30pm | Mozart Room An afternoon exploring Donizetti’s Belisario. Produced by the BBC Symphony Orchestra and Opera Rara Tickets  £40 | £34 | £26 | £18 | £12

6

BBC Symphony Orchestra

The Death of Belisarius’s Wife/François Joseph Kinsoen Musea Brugge © Lukas – Art in Flanders VZW, photo Hugo Maertens; Knussen © Clive Barda

Cast to include: Joyce El-Khoury Antonina Nicola Alaimo Belisario Russell Thomas Alamiro Camilla Roberts Irene Alastair Miles Justinian Julia Sporsén Eudora Peter Hoare Eutropio Darren Jeffery Centurion BBC Singers

The BBC Symphony Orchestra’s Total Immersion days have become landmark events on the London music scene. They boast not only superlative performances of the music of our time, but explore the imaginative world behind it in films, talks, creative projects with young musicians and encounters with the composers themselves. This season we are extending the scope of these in-depth portraits to include groups of linked composers, so creating a vital context in which to hear some beguiling new music, exploring the Nordic countries and Japan. Oliver Knussen at 60

New from the North

Oliver Knussen is one of the most inspirational figures in British music. Equally gifted as composer, conductor and teacher, he has produced an extraordinary body of work whose vitality and quality seem to shine brighter with each passing year. As composer Julian Anderson has written, ‘Knussen is that rarity … a composer whose music is both complex and aurally coherent’; he combines the spontaneous and the constructed, the playful and profound.

Recent decades have seen a stream of powerful and original music flowing from Nordic countries. New from the North focuses on the visionary, elusive works of Dane Per Nørgård, in celebration of his 80th birthday, alongside his distinguished compatriot Hans Abrahamsen and a host of dynamic Finnish composers including Magnus Lindberg, Jouni Kaipainen, Kaija Saariaho and the young Sebastian Fagerlund.

Sounds from Japan ‘First, devote yourself to the simple act of listening,’ wrote the late pioneering Japanese composer To ¯ ru Takemitsu, ‘Only then you will understand the purpose of music.’ Sound and silence, day and night, the sonorities of East and West meet in his works of mesmerising, twilit poetry. He inspired two generations of uniquely cosmopolitan Japanese composers, whose works we’ll hear alongside a fascinating exploration of Japanese traditional music.

Save money to all events with a Total Immersion Day Pass. There is a choice of pass for each day, reflecting the range of ticket prices for the evening concert. Day Passes are available by telephone or in person only. See the information on each Total Immersion day for prices.


Sunday 4 November

Saturday 2 February

Total Immersion: Oliver Knussen at 60

Total Immersion: Sounds from Japan Takemitsu AND the new generation

Oliver Knussen himself is joined by a host of celebrated performers for this exploration of his jewel-like masterpieces. From the touching piano solo Lullaby for Sonya, written ‘with my ears, and nothing else’, to the more intricate, multi-layered Océan de terre, the programmes span 40 years of his art, and trace the chain of works inspired by Ophelia’s tragic descent into madness and death, Orphelia’s Last Dance and the Symphony No. 3. Barrie Gavin’s affectionate film prefaces two evening concerts in which soprano Claire Booth sings the dreamlike Whitman Settings, while American violinist Leila Josefowicz presents the fine-spun Violin Concerto, a resounding achievement of recent years.

Takemitsu was the pivotal figure in opening up a creative dialogue between Western and Japanese music. When he retreated to his mountain villa to write November Steps, significantly, he took Debussy’s Jeux with him. The result was a haunting, twilit masterpiece which employs the shakuhachi and biwa, to be performed here beside works of Takemitsu’s contemporaries and of the next generation, including the dynamic Dai Fujikura. Film has been an important medium for these composers, and Takemitsu’s film scores are explored in our first event. Don’t miss, too, the rare opportunity to hear traditional Japanese instrumentalists play alongside members of the BBC Symphony Orchestra.

Concert | 1.15pm | Music Hall Guildhall School of Music & Drama

Concert | 6.00pm | Music Hall Guildhall School of Music & Drama

Talk & Film | 10.30am | Barbican Cinemas

Free event | 7.00pm | Barbican Foyer

Oliver Knussen Masks Three Little Fantasies Trumpets Songs without Voices Sonya’s Lullaby Océan de terre

Oliver Knussen Autumnal for Violin and Piano Variations Secret Psalm Prayer Bell Sketch Ophelia’s Last Dance

Music for the Movies: To ¯ ru Takemitsu Takemitsu composed the scores for almost 100 films, including Kurosawa’s epic Ran, based on King Lear. This documentary includes interviews with Takemitsu and clips from some of the films.

Music from BBC SO Learning partners and members of the BBC Symphony Orchestra as part of the BBC SO’s Diverse Orchestra Japan week.

Tickets  £12 (unreserved seating)

Film & Discussion | 3.00pm Barbican Cinemas Sounds from the Big White House: Oliver Knussen at 50 A film made to celebrate Oliver Knussen’s 50th birthday. The composer talks about the perils of early fame, about meeting Stravinsky and demonstrates his amazing collection of mechanical toys. Music performed by the London Sinfonietta and BBC SO includes excerpts from Where the Wild Things Are and the Horn Concerto. UK | 2001 | Dir. Barrie Gavin | 60mins

Plus a discussion on Oliver Knussen and his influence on British music.

Concert | 1.00pm | LSO St Luke’s

Tickets  £12 (unreserved seating)

Takemitsu Rain Spell Takemitsu Tree Line Jo Kondo Surface, Depth and Colour Dai Fujikura Secret Forest

Concert | 8.00pm | Barbican Hall Oliver Knussen Flourish with Fireworks Choral Whitman Settings Horn Concerto Two Organa Requiem - Songs for Sue Symphony No. 3 BBC Symphony Orchestra Oliver Knussen conductor Claire Booth soprano Martin Owen horn Tickets  £24 | £20 | £16 | £12 | £8 Day Pass  £43 | £40 | £37 | £34 | £30

Saturday 3 November The Barbican presents Oliver Knussen’s operas Where the Wild Things Are and Higglety Pigglety Pop as part of its Barbican Weekender. For full details visit barbican.org.uk

BBC Symphony Orchestra

Tickets  £6

Ryan Wigglesworth piano Huw Watkins piano

Tickets  £6

8

Plus an introduction to music in Japan today

Guildhall Music Ensemble Sian Edwards conductor Tickets  £12 (unreserved seating)

Film | 3.00pm | Barbican Cinemas Thirteen Steps Around Takemitsu

Knussen © Clive Barda; Takemitsu © Schott Japan

Guildhall Music Ensemble Richard Baker conductor

US | 1994 | Dir. Charlotte Zwerin | 58mins

concert | 7.30pm | Barbican Hall Akira Nishimura Bird Heterophony Misato Mochizuki Musubi Takemitsu November Steps, for shakuhachi, biwa and orchestra Dai Fujikura Atom uk premiere Toshio Hosokawa Woven Dreams uk premiere

Akira Miyoshi Litania pour Fuji BBC Symphony Orchestra Kazushi Ono conductor Kifu Mitsuhashi shakuhachi Kumiko Shutou biwa Tickets  £24 | £20 | £16 | £12 | £8 Day Pass  £48 | £45 | £42 | £38 | £35

A portrait of Takemitsu filmed at his country home and in Tokyo, featuring the composer in conversation as well as performances of A Flock Descends on the Pentagonal Garden and excerpts from his chamber music. UK | 1987 | Dir. Barrie Gavin | 70mins

Tickets  £6

Concert | 5.00pm | Barbican Hall

¯ ru Takemitsu To

Traditional Music from Japan plus a meeting of musical cultures with musicians from the BBC Symphony Orchestra. Kifu Mitsuhashi shakuhachi Kumiko Shutou biwa Tickets  £12

bbc.co.uk/symphonyorchestra

9


Sunday 4 November

Saturday 2 February

Total Immersion: Oliver Knussen at 60

Total Immersion: Sounds from Japan Takemitsu AND the new generation

Oliver Knussen himself is joined by a host of celebrated performers for this exploration of his jewel-like masterpieces. From the touching piano solo Lullaby for Sonya, written ‘with my ears, and nothing else’, to the more intricate, multi-layered Océan de terre, the programmes span 40 years of his art, and trace the chain of works inspired by Ophelia’s tragic descent into madness and death, Orphelia’s Last Dance and the Symphony No. 3. Barrie Gavin’s affectionate film prefaces two evening concerts in which soprano Claire Booth sings the dreamlike Whitman Settings, while American violinist Leila Josefowicz presents the fine-spun Violin Concerto, a resounding achievement of recent years.

Takemitsu was the pivotal figure in opening up a creative dialogue between Western and Japanese music. When he retreated to his mountain villa to write November Steps, significantly, he took Debussy’s Jeux with him. The result was a haunting, twilit masterpiece which employs the shakuhachi and biwa, to be performed here beside works of Takemitsu’s contemporaries and of the next generation, including the dynamic Dai Fujikura. Film has been an important medium for these composers, and Takemitsu’s film scores are explored in our first event. Don’t miss, too, the rare opportunity to hear traditional Japanese instrumentalists play alongside members of the BBC Symphony Orchestra.

Concert | 1.15pm | Music Hall Guildhall School of Music & Drama

Concert | 6.00pm | Music Hall Guildhall School of Music & Drama

Talk & Film | 10.30am | Barbican Cinemas

Free event | 7.00pm | Barbican Foyer

Oliver Knussen Masks Three Little Fantasies Trumpets Songs without Voices Sonya’s Lullaby Océan de terre

Oliver Knussen Autumnal for Violin and Piano Variations Secret Psalm Prayer Bell Sketch Ophelia’s Last Dance

Music for the Movies: To ¯ ru Takemitsu Takemitsu composed the scores for almost 100 films, including Kurosawa’s epic Ran, based on King Lear. This documentary includes interviews with Takemitsu and clips from some of the films.

Music from BBC SO Learning partners and members of the BBC Symphony Orchestra as part of the BBC SO’s Diverse Orchestra Japan week.

Tickets  £12 (unreserved seating)

Film & Discussion | 3.00pm Barbican Cinemas Sounds from the Big White House: Oliver Knussen at 50 A film made to celebrate Oliver Knussen’s 50th birthday. The composer talks about the perils of early fame, about meeting Stravinsky and demonstrates his amazing collection of mechanical toys. Music performed by the London Sinfonietta and BBC SO includes excerpts from Where the Wild Things Are and the Horn Concerto. UK | 2001 | Dir. Barrie Gavin | 60mins

Plus a discussion on Oliver Knussen and his influence on British music.

Concert | 1.00pm | LSO St Luke’s

Tickets  £12 (unreserved seating)

Takemitsu Rain Spell Takemitsu Tree Line Jo Kondo Surface, Depth and Colour Dai Fujikura Secret Forest

Concert | 8.00pm | Barbican Hall Oliver Knussen Flourish with Fireworks Choral Whitman Settings Horn Concerto Two Organa Requiem - Songs for Sue Symphony No. 3 BBC Symphony Orchestra Oliver Knussen conductor Claire Booth soprano Martin Owen horn Tickets  £24 | £20 | £16 | £12 | £8 Day Pass  £43 | £40 | £37 | £34 | £30

Saturday 3 November The Barbican presents Oliver Knussen’s operas Where the Wild Things Are and Higglety Pigglety Pop as part of its Barbican Weekender. For full details visit barbican.org.uk

BBC Symphony Orchestra

Tickets  £6

Ryan Wigglesworth piano Huw Watkins piano

Tickets  £6

8

Plus an introduction to music in Japan today

Guildhall Music Ensemble Sian Edwards conductor Tickets  £12 (unreserved seating)

Film | 3.00pm | Barbican Cinemas Thirteen Steps Around Takemitsu

Knussen © Clive Barda; Takemitsu © Schott Japan

Guildhall Music Ensemble Richard Baker conductor

US | 1994 | Dir. Charlotte Zwerin | 58mins

concert | 7.30pm | Barbican Hall Akira Nishimura Bird Heterophony Misato Mochizuki Musubi Takemitsu November Steps, for shakuhachi, biwa and orchestra Dai Fujikura Atom uk premiere Toshio Hosokawa Woven Dreams uk premiere

Akira Miyoshi Litania pour Fuji BBC Symphony Orchestra Kazushi Ono conductor Kifu Mitsuhashi shakuhachi Kumiko Shutou biwa Tickets  £24 | £20 | £16 | £12 | £8 Day Pass  £48 | £45 | £42 | £38 | £35

A portrait of Takemitsu filmed at his country home and in Tokyo, featuring the composer in conversation as well as performances of A Flock Descends on the Pentagonal Garden and excerpts from his chamber music. UK | 1987 | Dir. Barrie Gavin | 70mins

Tickets  £6

Concert | 5.00pm | Barbican Hall

¯ ru Takemitsu To

Traditional Music from Japan plus a meeting of musical cultures with musicians from the BBC Symphony Orchestra. Kifu Mitsuhashi shakuhachi Kumiko Shutou biwa Tickets  £12

bbc.co.uk/symphonyorchestra

9


Saturday 9 March

Saturday 24 November | 7.30pm

Total Immersion: New from the North

Janá∂ek

Per Nørgård AND music from Denmark AND Finland

The Cunning Little Vixen  – suite, arr. Jílek

It was conductor Sergiu Celibidache who said: ‘Only the mind of a new time in the new millennium will be able to understand the scope of Nørgård’s music.’ The delicate weave of his organic creations may be better known from his film scores, (including Hedda Gabler and Babette’s Feast) but the legendary Dane has exerted a powerful influence on British composers. To celebrate his 80th birthday we’re delighted to welcome Nørgård to the Barbican and to present the UK premiere of his Symphony No. 8 and the world premiere of his String Quartet No. 11, along with a glittering array of pieces by Magnus Lindberg, Kaija Saariaho and Hans Abrahamsen.

UK premiere

Rolf Hind The Tiniest House of Time, for accordion and orchestra BBC commission: world premiere

Rimsky-Korsakov Sheherazade

Film | 10.15am | Barbican Cinemas

Concert | 6.00pm | St Giles Cripplegate

Hedda Gabler

Programme to include:

Tickets  £6

Per Nørgård Like a Child; Ut Rosa Esa-Pekka Salonen  Two Songs from Kalender Röd Einojuhani Rautavaara  Canticum Mariae Virginis

Concert | 1.00pm | Barbican Hall

Plus music by Bo Holten, Olli Kortekangas and Jussi Chydenius

UK | 1992 | Dir. Deborah Warner | 127mins

Hans Abrahamsen String Quartet No. 3, ‘Motet’ LONDON premiere Jouni Kaipainen String Quartet No. 6, ‘The Terror Run’ Kaija Saariaho Terra memoriam Poul Ruders String Quartet No. 4 2013 Royal Philharmonic Society / Britten-Pears Foundation Commission: World premiere

Vertavo Quartet Tickets  £12

Film & Discussion | 3.00pm Barbican Cinemas Timeless Harvest Martin Verdet’s atmospheric films follows Per Nørgård, cellists Valter Despalj and Ralph Kirschbaum and the Kroger Quartet at work at Frederiksdal Manor on the Danish Island of Lolland. France | 2009 | Dir. Martin Verdet | 59mins

Plus Per Nørgård in conversation with Stephen Johnson on his music and the UK premiere of his Symphony No. 8. Tickets  £6

10

BBC Symphony Orchestra

Tales from the stage underpin this imaginative programme, featuring a newly-arranged suite from Janá∂ek’s zestful drama of woodland life The Cunning Little Vixen and Rimsky-Korsakov’s glittering orchestral evocation of scenes from the Arabian Nights, in which the lead violinist plays the seductive Princess Sheherazade herself. Composer and pianist Rolf Hind has a reputation for throwing fresh light on all he touches, and this is his first major work for accordion, inspired by the irrepressible virtuoso James Crabb.

BBC Singers James Morgan conductor Tickets  £12

BBC SO Plus Family 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert for families. See page 22 for details.

Concert | 8.00pm | Barbican Hall Sunleif Rasmussen  Prelude for Brass UK premiere Sebastian Fagerlund  Clarinet Concerto UK premiere Magnus Lindberg new work UK premiere Per Nørgård Symphony No. 8 UK premiere

Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

BBC Symphony Orchestra John Storgårds conductor Christoffer Sundqvist clarinet

enthralling

Tickets  £24 | £20 | £16 | £12 | £8

Free event | 10.00pm | Barbican foyer Complete your Total Immersion experience with a free late-night event curated by BBC SO Learning. Expect extraordinary collaborations between members of the BBC SO and Nordic artists. Day Pass  £48 | £45 | £42 | £38 | £35

Jakub Hr≤ša conductor James Crabb accordion

Crabb © Christoffer Askman

Fiona Shaw stars as Ibsen’s tragic anti-heroine in a BBC production of Ibsen’s play, with music by Per Nørgård.

JAMES CRABB

bbc.co.uk/symphonyorchestra

11


Saturday 9 March

Saturday 24 November | 7.30pm

Total Immersion: New from the North

Janá∂ek

Per Nørgård AND music from Denmark AND Finland

The Cunning Little Vixen  – suite, arr. Jílek

It was conductor Sergiu Celibidache who said: ‘Only the mind of a new time in the new millennium will be able to understand the scope of Nørgård’s music.’ The delicate weave of his organic creations may be better known from his film scores, (including Hedda Gabler and Babette’s Feast) but the legendary Dane has exerted a powerful influence on British composers. To celebrate his 80th birthday we’re delighted to welcome Nørgård to the Barbican and to present the UK premiere of his Symphony No. 8 and the world premiere of his String Quartet No. 11, along with a glittering array of pieces by Magnus Lindberg, Kaija Saariaho and Hans Abrahamsen.

UK premiere

Rolf Hind The Tiniest House of Time, for accordion and orchestra BBC commission: world premiere

Rimsky-Korsakov Sheherazade

Film | 10.15am | Barbican Cinemas

Concert | 6.00pm | St Giles Cripplegate

Hedda Gabler

Programme to include:

Tickets  £6

Per Nørgård Like a Child; Ut Rosa Esa-Pekka Salonen  Two Songs from Kalender Röd Einojuhani Rautavaara  Canticum Mariae Virginis

Concert | 1.00pm | Barbican Hall

Plus music by Bo Holten, Olli Kortekangas and Jussi Chydenius

UK | 1992 | Dir. Deborah Warner | 127mins

Hans Abrahamsen String Quartet No. 3, ‘Motet’ LONDON premiere Jouni Kaipainen String Quartet No. 6, ‘The Terror Run’ Kaija Saariaho Terra memoriam Poul Ruders String Quartet No. 4 2013 Royal Philharmonic Society / Britten-Pears Foundation Commission: World premiere

Vertavo Quartet Tickets  £12

Film & Discussion | 3.00pm Barbican Cinemas Timeless Harvest Martin Verdet’s atmospheric films follows Per Nørgård, cellists Valter Despalj and Ralph Kirschbaum and the Kroger Quartet at work at Frederiksdal Manor on the Danish Island of Lolland. France | 2009 | Dir. Martin Verdet | 59mins

Plus Per Nørgård in conversation with Stephen Johnson on his music and the UK premiere of his Symphony No. 8. Tickets  £6

10

BBC Symphony Orchestra

Tales from the stage underpin this imaginative programme, featuring a newly-arranged suite from Janá∂ek’s zestful drama of woodland life The Cunning Little Vixen and Rimsky-Korsakov’s glittering orchestral evocation of scenes from the Arabian Nights, in which the lead violinist plays the seductive Princess Sheherazade herself. Composer and pianist Rolf Hind has a reputation for throwing fresh light on all he touches, and this is his first major work for accordion, inspired by the irrepressible virtuoso James Crabb.

BBC Singers James Morgan conductor Tickets  £12

BBC SO Plus Family 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert for families. See page 22 for details.

Concert | 8.00pm | Barbican Hall Sunleif Rasmussen  Prelude for Brass UK premiere Sebastian Fagerlund  Clarinet Concerto UK premiere Magnus Lindberg new work UK premiere Per Nørgård Symphony No. 8 UK premiere

Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

BBC Symphony Orchestra John Storgårds conductor Christoffer Sundqvist clarinet

enthralling

Tickets  £24 | £20 | £16 | £12 | £8

Free event | 10.00pm | Barbican foyer Complete your Total Immersion experience with a free late-night event curated by BBC SO Learning. Expect extraordinary collaborations between members of the BBC SO and Nordic artists. Day Pass  £48 | £45 | £42 | £38 | £35

Jakub Hr≤ša conductor James Crabb accordion

Crabb © Christoffer Askman

Fiona Shaw stars as Ibsen’s tragic anti-heroine in a BBC production of Ibsen’s play, with music by Per Nørgård.

JAMES CRABB

bbc.co.uk/symphonyorchestra

11


Saturday 1 December | 7.30pm

Saturday 15 December | 7.30pm

Schumann

Grieg

Piano Concerto in A minor

Peer Gynt

Atalla Ayan

Mahler

Complete incidental music Marc Minkowski conductor Miah Persson Solveig Ann Hallenberg Anitra Johannes Weisser Peer Gynt BBC Singers Actors from the Guildhall School of Music & Drama

Symphony No. 2 in C minor, ‘Resurrection’

A performance of Mahler’s mighty ‘Resurrection’ Symphony is always an occasion. From its menacing opening to its delightful Ländler to the luminous choral crescendo leading to spiritual exaltation, it’s one of Mahler’s most inspired works. Swedish mezzo-soprano Katarina Karnéus makes a welcome return to these shores, partnered by rising Israeli star soprano Chen Reiss under the baton of Conductor Laureate Ji∑í B∆lohlávek. Another rising star is Swiss-born Francesco Piemontesi, a former BBC Radio 3 New Generation Artist, noted for the intelligence and distinctive insight of his interpretations. He tackles Schumann’s Romantic concerto, a love letter in music to its first performer, Clara Schumann. BBC SO Plus Pre-concert talk | 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

Friday 7 December | 7.30pm

Sinfonia

Verdi, orch. Berio Eight Romances, for tenor and orchestra

Verdi Four Sacred Pieces

12

BBC SO Plus Pre-concert talk | 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert.

Josep Pons conductor Sarah-Jane Brandon soprano Atalla Ayan tenor Synergy Vocals BBC Symphony Chorus Two fascinating concert works by the king of Italian opera, Giuseppe Verdi, alongside one of the most startling and original vocal works of the 20th century by compatriot Luciano Berio. Synergy Vocals take on the amplified solo parts originally written for the Swingle Singers in Berio’s 1969 Sinfonia, in which fragments of text decrying war and racial segregation jostle with quotations from the classical canon in a shimmering multi-layered melée. It was Berio, too, who penned the imaginative orchestration of Verdi’s rarely-performed Eight Romances for tenor and orchestra, here featuring the exciting young Brazilian Atalla Ayan. We end with Verdi’s rousing Four Sacred Pieces, including the beguiling Ave Maria for unaccompanied voices. BBC SO Plus Pre-concert talk | 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert.

KATARINA KARNÉUS

Who can resist Grieg’s vivid Peer Gynt, scored for Ibsen’s play, especially when presented by the vivacious Marc Minkowski with an ideal cast? Melting mezzo-soprano Miah Persson is the faithful Solveig, while the marvellous Ann Hallenberg and Johannes Weisser take up the parts of the Bedouin Anitra and the hapless rake Peer Gynt himself. The BBC SO performs the whole score with all its highly-coloured episodes, from the poignancy of ‘Solveig’s Song’, to the hollering trolls in the ‘Hall of the Mountain King’ and the timeless serenity of ‘Morning Mood’.

Berio

Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

MIAH PERSSON

Karnéus © Mats Bäcker; Persson © artistbilder

Ji∑í B∆lohlávek conductor Chen Reiss soprano Katarina Karnéus mezzo-soprano Francesco Piemontesi piano Guildhall Symphony Chorus

bbc.co.uk/symphonyorchestra

13


Saturday 1 December | 7.30pm

Saturday 15 December | 7.30pm

Schumann

Grieg

Piano Concerto in A minor

Peer Gynt

Atalla Ayan

Mahler

Complete incidental music Marc Minkowski conductor Miah Persson Solveig Ann Hallenberg Anitra Johannes Weisser Peer Gynt BBC Singers Actors from the Guildhall School of Music & Drama

Symphony No. 2 in C minor, ‘Resurrection’

A performance of Mahler’s mighty ‘Resurrection’ Symphony is always an occasion. From its menacing opening to its delightful Ländler to the luminous choral crescendo leading to spiritual exaltation, it’s one of Mahler’s most inspired works. Swedish mezzo-soprano Katarina Karnéus makes a welcome return to these shores, partnered by rising Israeli star soprano Chen Reiss under the baton of Conductor Laureate Ji∑í B∆lohlávek. Another rising star is Swiss-born Francesco Piemontesi, a former BBC Radio 3 New Generation Artist, noted for the intelligence and distinctive insight of his interpretations. He tackles Schumann’s Romantic concerto, a love letter in music to its first performer, Clara Schumann. BBC SO Plus Pre-concert talk | 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

Friday 7 December | 7.30pm

Sinfonia

Verdi, orch. Berio Eight Romances, for tenor and orchestra

Verdi Four Sacred Pieces

12

BBC SO Plus Pre-concert talk | 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert.

Josep Pons conductor Sarah-Jane Brandon soprano Atalla Ayan tenor Synergy Vocals BBC Symphony Chorus Two fascinating concert works by the king of Italian opera, Giuseppe Verdi, alongside one of the most startling and original vocal works of the 20th century by compatriot Luciano Berio. Synergy Vocals take on the amplified solo parts originally written for the Swingle Singers in Berio’s 1969 Sinfonia, in which fragments of text decrying war and racial segregation jostle with quotations from the classical canon in a shimmering multi-layered melée. It was Berio, too, who penned the imaginative orchestration of Verdi’s rarely-performed Eight Romances for tenor and orchestra, here featuring the exciting young Brazilian Atalla Ayan. We end with Verdi’s rousing Four Sacred Pieces, including the beguiling Ave Maria for unaccompanied voices. BBC SO Plus Pre-concert talk | 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert.

KATARINA KARNÉUS

Who can resist Grieg’s vivid Peer Gynt, scored for Ibsen’s play, especially when presented by the vivacious Marc Minkowski with an ideal cast? Melting mezzo-soprano Miah Persson is the faithful Solveig, while the marvellous Ann Hallenberg and Johannes Weisser take up the parts of the Bedouin Anitra and the hapless rake Peer Gynt himself. The BBC SO performs the whole score with all its highly-coloured episodes, from the poignancy of ‘Solveig’s Song’, to the hollering trolls in the ‘Hall of the Mountain King’ and the timeless serenity of ‘Morning Mood’.

Berio

Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

MIAH PERSSON

Karnéus © Mats Bäcker; Persson © artistbilder

Ji∑í B∆lohlávek conductor Chen Reiss soprano Katarina Karnéus mezzo-soprano Francesco Piemontesi piano Guildhall Symphony Chorus

bbc.co.uk/symphonyorchestra

13


Friday 18 January | 7.30pm

Elgar Overture ‘Cockaigne (In London Town)’ Reflet d’un temps disparu london premiere

LONG YU

Qigang Chen Raymond Yiu Benjamin Grosvenor

Friday 11 January | 7.30pm

Anna Clyne

Saturday 9 February | 7.30pm

The London Citizen Exceedingly Injured

Eisenstein’s Alexander Nevsky

world premiere

Haydn

UK premiere

Symphony No. 104 in D major, ‘London’

Martyn Brabbins conductor Catherine Wyn-Rogers mezzo-soprano BBC Symphony Chorus

Britten

Long Yu conductor Li-Wei Qin cello

The BBC Symphony Orchestra’s film events are always popular, and this presents one of the great collaborations of all time — Prokofiev’s coruscating score to Eisenstein’s Alexander Nevsky. It is said that the director was so impressed with the precision with which Prokofiev captured each mood, he encouraged him to write the music first for some parts. The epic tale of the medieval prince defeating the Teutonic knights on a frozen lake was particularly welcomed by the Soviet authorities in 1939, but it’s proved to be a timeless classic. The BBC Symphony Chorus provides the rich, rousing choruses while Catherine Wyn-Rogers gives voice to the heart of the story in her poignant song searching for rival suitors on the field of the dead.

Piano Concerto

Elgar Symphony No. 1 in A flat major Andrew Litton conductor Benjamin Grosvenor piano Two leading lights in a new generation of British artists grace this evening: Benjamin Grosvenor, the youngest soloist ever to open the Proms in 2011, performs Britten’s brilliant, youthful piano concerto, while composer Anna Clyne, whose dazzlingly inventive rewind was such a hit for the BBC SO, returns with a major new work commissioned by the Chicago SO, Night Ferry. The transatlantic theme continues when wellloved American champion of British music Andrew Litton takes on Elgar’s monumental First Symphony. Widely hailed as ‘the first great English symphony’, this rich and poetic work is a complex weave of nobility, aching sadness and, in the composer’s words, ‘massive hope’. BBC SO Plus Pre-concert talk | 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

14

BBC Symphony Orchestra

Our capital city is the theme for this lively evening, beginning with Elgar’s scintillating Overture and ending with Haydn’s final glorious symphony, written during his last stay in London. Blazing with wit, craft and earthiness, it captures the essence of the composer. The city is conjured up again by Hong Kong-born Raymond Yiu, already acclaimed for his intricate blend of Western and Eastern sonorities. He describes The London Citizen Exceedingly Injured as a ‘symphonic game’ which takes its musical cues from Elgar’s Cockaigne Overture and the nursery rhyme ‘Oranges and Lemons’. To conduct this and Chinese-French composer Qigang Chen’s new work is one of China’s leading conductors, Long Yu, Artistic Director and Chief Conductor of the China Philharmonic Orchestra. BBC SO Plus Family 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert for families. See page 22 for details. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

Produced by the Barbican and the BBC Symphony Orchestra Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 Grosvenor © Laurie Lewis; Alexander Nevsky © BFI

Night Ferry

dramatic


Friday 18 January | 7.30pm

Elgar Overture ‘Cockaigne (In London Town)’ Reflet d’un temps disparu london premiere

LONG YU

Qigang Chen Raymond Yiu Benjamin Grosvenor

Friday 11 January | 7.30pm

Anna Clyne

Saturday 9 February | 7.30pm

The London Citizen Exceedingly Injured

Eisenstein’s Alexander Nevsky

world premiere

Haydn

UK premiere

Symphony No. 104 in D major, ‘London’

Martyn Brabbins conductor Catherine Wyn-Rogers mezzo-soprano BBC Symphony Chorus

Britten

Long Yu conductor Li-Wei Qin cello

The BBC Symphony Orchestra’s film events are always popular, and this presents one of the great collaborations of all time — Prokofiev’s coruscating score to Eisenstein’s Alexander Nevsky. It is said that the director was so impressed with the precision with which Prokofiev captured each mood, he encouraged him to write the music first for some parts. The epic tale of the medieval prince defeating the Teutonic knights on a frozen lake was particularly welcomed by the Soviet authorities in 1939, but it’s proved to be a timeless classic. The BBC Symphony Chorus provides the rich, rousing choruses while Catherine Wyn-Rogers gives voice to the heart of the story in her poignant song searching for rival suitors on the field of the dead.

Piano Concerto

Elgar Symphony No. 1 in A flat major Andrew Litton conductor Benjamin Grosvenor piano Two leading lights in a new generation of British artists grace this evening: Benjamin Grosvenor, the youngest soloist ever to open the Proms in 2011, performs Britten’s brilliant, youthful piano concerto, while composer Anna Clyne, whose dazzlingly inventive rewind was such a hit for the BBC SO, returns with a major new work commissioned by the Chicago SO, Night Ferry. The transatlantic theme continues when wellloved American champion of British music Andrew Litton takes on Elgar’s monumental First Symphony. Widely hailed as ‘the first great English symphony’, this rich and poetic work is a complex weave of nobility, aching sadness and, in the composer’s words, ‘massive hope’. BBC SO Plus Pre-concert talk | 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

14

BBC Symphony Orchestra

Our capital city is the theme for this lively evening, beginning with Elgar’s scintillating Overture and ending with Haydn’s final glorious symphony, written during his last stay in London. Blazing with wit, craft and earthiness, it captures the essence of the composer. The city is conjured up again by Hong Kong-born Raymond Yiu, already acclaimed for his intricate blend of Western and Eastern sonorities. He describes The London Citizen Exceedingly Injured as a ‘symphonic game’ which takes its musical cues from Elgar’s Cockaigne Overture and the nursery rhyme ‘Oranges and Lemons’. To conduct this and Chinese-French composer Qigang Chen’s new work is one of China’s leading conductors, Long Yu, Artistic Director and Chief Conductor of the China Philharmonic Orchestra. BBC SO Plus Family 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert for families. See page 22 for details. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

Produced by the Barbican and the BBC Symphony Orchestra Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 Grosvenor © Laurie Lewis; Alexander Nevsky © BFI

Night Ferry

dramatic


Friday 15 February | 7.30pm

Friday 1 March | 7.30pm

Dieter Schnebel

Beethoven

Schubert Fantasia

Triple Concerto

UK premiere

Tippett

David Sawer

Symphony No. 3

Flesh and Blood

David Robertson conductor Susan Bullock soprano Alexandra Soumm violin Nicolas Altstaedt cello Igor Levit piano

BBC commission: world premiere

Schubert Symphony No. 9 in C major, ‘Great’ Thomas Dausgaard

Theatre is at the heart of David Sawer’s incisive and original music, and his new commission Flesh and Blood is a dramatic scena featuring star soloists Christine Rice and Marcus Farnsworth. Dieter Schnebel’s Schubert Fantasia recalls dreamlike fragments from Schubert’s G major Piano Sonata refracted through a shimmering haze of dissonant harmonies. 150 years earlier, Schubert wrote his ‘Great’ Ninth Symphony, a powerful feat of sustained momentum, driven by buoyant rhythms, explosive emotions and vast, inexorable climaxes which Ilan Volkov will no doubt shape with his characteristically dynamic vision. BBC SO Plus Pre-concert talk | 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

CHRISTINE RICE

Friday 22 February | 7.30pm

Prokofiev Scythian Suite

Bloch Schelomo

Nielsen Symphony No. 4, ‘The Inextinguishable’ Thomas Dausgaard conductor Jian Wang cello An invigorating programme explodes into life with Prokofiev’s wild Scythian Suite. Ernst Bloch’s heart-rending appeal to peace, Schelomo, given voice here by the distinguished cellist Jian Wang, is answered by Carl Nielsen’s thrilling Fourth Symphony, ‘The Inextinguishable’, in which the human spirit battles for a future. As he wrote, after the outbreak of the First World War, ‘I have an idea for a duel between two sets of timpani, it has to do with war.’ It’s one of the most riveting moments in the symphony, bursting into the finale and developing into a reckless tour de force that resolves into radiant optimism. BBC SO Plus Family 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert for families. See page 22 for details. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

16

BBC Symphony Orchestra

Friday 22 March | 7.30pm

Beethoven’s dynamic spirit was crucially significant to Michael Tippett and here we’ll hear Beethoven’s own elegant Triple Concerto played by three superlative BBC Radio 3 New Generation Artists, beside Tippett’s Third Symphony. In this dramatic work Tippett confronts Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony and its ecstatic vision of brotherhood with the tragic reality of the 20th century. In the wonderfully uplifting Blues of the finale, sung here by Susan Bullock, he roots man’s essential state in sorrow rather than joy, while ultimately offering a dream of ‘the peaceable kingdom’. Rice © Rob Moore; Dausgaard © Per Morten Abrahamsen; Robertson © Michael Tammaro; Osborne © Ben Ealovega

Ilan Volkov conductor Christine Rice mezzo-soprano Marcus Farnsworth baritone

STEVEN OSBORNE

BBC SO Plus Pre-concert talk | 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

John Adams The Chairman Dances

Tippett Piano Concerto

Shostakovich Symphony No. 8 Alexander Vedernikov conductor Steven Osborne piano Steven Osborne has won awards for his masterly recordings of Tippett’s piano music, noted for the intoxicating freshness, detail and illumination he brings to each work. The Piano Concerto of 1955 was written in the wake of Tippett’s opera The Midsummer Marriage, and shares its sense of melodious ecstasy, finishing with a dazzlingly virtuosic Vivace. The streak of menace in Adams’s charming foxtrot from Nixon in China darkens into fear in Shostakovich’s bitter, intense symphony, written in the depths of wartime Russia. Alexander Vedernikov, formerly of the Bolshoi Theatre, conducts. BBC SO Plus Family 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert for families. Please note this BBC SO Plus Family event includes the 6.00pm workshop and the first half of the concert only, as the second half of the concert is less suitable for this age range. See page 22 for details. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

David Robertson

bbc.co.uk/symphonyorchestra

17


Friday 15 February | 7.30pm

Friday 1 March | 7.30pm

Dieter Schnebel

Beethoven

Schubert Fantasia

Triple Concerto

UK premiere

Tippett

David Sawer

Symphony No. 3

Flesh and Blood

David Robertson conductor Susan Bullock soprano Alexandra Soumm violin Nicolas Altstaedt cello Igor Levit piano

BBC commission: world premiere

Schubert Symphony No. 9 in C major, ‘Great’ Thomas Dausgaard

Theatre is at the heart of David Sawer’s incisive and original music, and his new commission Flesh and Blood is a dramatic scena featuring star soloists Christine Rice and Marcus Farnsworth. Dieter Schnebel’s Schubert Fantasia recalls dreamlike fragments from Schubert’s G major Piano Sonata refracted through a shimmering haze of dissonant harmonies. 150 years earlier, Schubert wrote his ‘Great’ Ninth Symphony, a powerful feat of sustained momentum, driven by buoyant rhythms, explosive emotions and vast, inexorable climaxes which Ilan Volkov will no doubt shape with his characteristically dynamic vision. BBC SO Plus Pre-concert talk | 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

CHRISTINE RICE

Friday 22 February | 7.30pm

Prokofiev Scythian Suite

Bloch Schelomo

Nielsen Symphony No. 4, ‘The Inextinguishable’ Thomas Dausgaard conductor Jian Wang cello An invigorating programme explodes into life with Prokofiev’s wild Scythian Suite. Ernst Bloch’s heart-rending appeal to peace, Schelomo, given voice here by the distinguished cellist Jian Wang, is answered by Carl Nielsen’s thrilling Fourth Symphony, ‘The Inextinguishable’, in which the human spirit battles for a future. As he wrote, after the outbreak of the First World War, ‘I have an idea for a duel between two sets of timpani, it has to do with war.’ It’s one of the most riveting moments in the symphony, bursting into the finale and developing into a reckless tour de force that resolves into radiant optimism. BBC SO Plus Family 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert for families. See page 22 for details. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

16

BBC Symphony Orchestra

Friday 22 March | 7.30pm

Beethoven’s dynamic spirit was crucially significant to Michael Tippett and here we’ll hear Beethoven’s own elegant Triple Concerto played by three superlative BBC Radio 3 New Generation Artists, beside Tippett’s Third Symphony. In this dramatic work Tippett confronts Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony and its ecstatic vision of brotherhood with the tragic reality of the 20th century. In the wonderfully uplifting Blues of the finale, sung here by Susan Bullock, he roots man’s essential state in sorrow rather than joy, while ultimately offering a dream of ‘the peaceable kingdom’. Rice © Rob Moore; Dausgaard © Per Morten Abrahamsen; Robertson © Michael Tammaro; Osborne © Ben Ealovega

Ilan Volkov conductor Christine Rice mezzo-soprano Marcus Farnsworth baritone

STEVEN OSBORNE

BBC SO Plus Pre-concert talk | 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

John Adams The Chairman Dances

Tippett Piano Concerto

Shostakovich Symphony No. 8 Alexander Vedernikov conductor Steven Osborne piano Steven Osborne has won awards for his masterly recordings of Tippett’s piano music, noted for the intoxicating freshness, detail and illumination he brings to each work. The Piano Concerto of 1955 was written in the wake of Tippett’s opera The Midsummer Marriage, and shares its sense of melodious ecstasy, finishing with a dazzlingly virtuosic Vivace. The streak of menace in Adams’s charming foxtrot from Nixon in China darkens into fear in Shostakovich’s bitter, intense symphony, written in the depths of wartime Russia. Alexander Vedernikov, formerly of the Bolshoi Theatre, conducts. BBC SO Plus Family 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert for families. Please note this BBC SO Plus Family event includes the 6.00pm workshop and the first half of the concert only, as the second half of the concert is less suitable for this age range. See page 22 for details. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

David Robertson

bbc.co.uk/symphonyorchestra

17


Friday 19 April | 7.30pm

Mark Simpson London premiere SIR ANDREW DAVIS

Friday 12 April | 7.30pm

Jonathan Lloyd old racket Royal Philharmonic Society Elgar Bursary commission: world premiere

Brahms Piano Concerto No. 1 in D minor

Tippett Symphony No. 4 Sir Andrew Davis conductor Stephen Hough piano Our Artist in Focus, Stephen Hough, returns to perform Brahms’s tumultuous First Piano Concerto with Sir Andrew Davis. Hough has written of the ‘burst of utter, natural, divine genius’ that propels this concerto, ‘its flame flares with such intensity, and such promise of more to come, that I find myself overwhelmed by it’. As part of our Tippett retrospective, we come to his fourth and final symphony, which follows a life-cycle from birth to death in a single movement, complete with breathing effects; an astonishing example of the imaginative vitality of the composer’s late years. Jonathan Lloyd, whose own Fourth Symphony was written for the BBC SO, makes a welcome return with a new work for strings. BBC SO Plus Family 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert for families. Please note this BBC SO Plus Family event includes the 6.00pm workshop and the first half of the concert only, as the second half of the concert is less suitable for this age range. See page 22 for details. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

18

BBC Symphony Orchestra

Beethoven Violin Concerto in D major

Tippett Symphony No. 2 Martyn Brabbins conductor Nicola Benedetti violin Tippett found inspiration for the Promethean energy and structural force of his Second Symphony in Beethoven’s own symphonies: the vigorously assertive opening Allegro, and balletic curlicues of the scherzo-like Presto owe much to his hero’s example, while the mosaic-like orchestration of the slow movement hint at the shimmering orchestral tapestries Tippett was to explore later in his career. Appropriately, Beethoven’s Apollonian Violin Concerto prefaces the performance, presented by Nicola Benedetti. One of our most promising young composers, Mark Simpson, clarinettist winner of the 2006 BBC Young Musician competition and already a BBC Proms Young Composer, is represented by his richly imagined tone-poem A mirror-fragment … . BBC SO Plus Pre-concert talk | 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

NICOLA BENEDETTI

Davis © Dario Acosta; Benedetti © Universal/Rhys Frampton; L’enfant et les sortilèges image © Jean-Baptiste Barrière. Orchestra Symphonique de Montréal, cond. Kent Nagano (2007) production; Denève © J. Henry Fair

A mirror-fragment … STÉPHANE DENÈVE

Friday 26 April | 7.30pm

Poulenc Les animaux modèles – suite

Ravel L’enfant et les sortilèges Stéphane Denève conductor Singers from the Royal Academy of Music To crown our opera theme this season, we present Ravel’s fantastical opera L’enfant et les sortilèges, in a specially devised concert version using live film, and performed by talented young singers from the Royal Academy of Music with Stéphane Denève. In a score teeming with invention, Ravel tells the magical story of a young boy driven to cruelty by boredom, who provokes the animals and objects around him to spring to life and conspire against him in a phantasmagorical parade. Wearing digital masks, the singers are transported into dreamlike virtual scenes on screens above the stage. Devised by Jean-Baptiste Barrière, this promises to be an exciting new way to experience Ravel’s colourful and comic masterpiece. Poulenc’s charming musical bestiary from the ballet Les animaux modèles makes the perfect introduction. BBC SO Plus Family 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert for families. See page 22 for details. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10


Friday 19 April | 7.30pm

Mark Simpson London premiere SIR ANDREW DAVIS

Friday 12 April | 7.30pm

Jonathan Lloyd old racket Royal Philharmonic Society Elgar Bursary commission: world premiere

Brahms Piano Concerto No. 1 in D minor

Tippett Symphony No. 4 Sir Andrew Davis conductor Stephen Hough piano Our Artist in Focus, Stephen Hough, returns to perform Brahms’s tumultuous First Piano Concerto with Sir Andrew Davis. Hough has written of the ‘burst of utter, natural, divine genius’ that propels this concerto, ‘its flame flares with such intensity, and such promise of more to come, that I find myself overwhelmed by it’. As part of our Tippett retrospective, we come to his fourth and final symphony, which follows a life-cycle from birth to death in a single movement, complete with breathing effects; an astonishing example of the imaginative vitality of the composer’s late years. Jonathan Lloyd, whose own Fourth Symphony was written for the BBC SO, makes a welcome return with a new work for strings. BBC SO Plus Family 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert for families. Please note this BBC SO Plus Family event includes the 6.00pm workshop and the first half of the concert only, as the second half of the concert is less suitable for this age range. See page 22 for details. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

18

BBC Symphony Orchestra

Beethoven Violin Concerto in D major

Tippett Symphony No. 2 Martyn Brabbins conductor Nicola Benedetti violin Tippett found inspiration for the Promethean energy and structural force of his Second Symphony in Beethoven’s own symphonies: the vigorously assertive opening Allegro, and balletic curlicues of the scherzo-like Presto owe much to his hero’s example, while the mosaic-like orchestration of the slow movement hint at the shimmering orchestral tapestries Tippett was to explore later in his career. Appropriately, Beethoven’s Apollonian Violin Concerto prefaces the performance, presented by Nicola Benedetti. One of our most promising young composers, Mark Simpson, clarinettist winner of the 2006 BBC Young Musician competition and already a BBC Proms Young Composer, is represented by his richly imagined tone-poem A mirror-fragment … . BBC SO Plus Pre-concert talk | 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

NICOLA BENEDETTI

Davis © Dario Acosta; Benedetti © Universal/Rhys Frampton; L’enfant et les sortilèges image © Jean-Baptiste Barrière. Orchestra Symphonique de Montréal, cond. Kent Nagano (2007) production; Denève © J. Henry Fair

A mirror-fragment … STÉPHANE DENÈVE

Friday 26 April | 7.30pm

Poulenc Les animaux modèles – suite

Ravel L’enfant et les sortilèges Stéphane Denève conductor Singers from the Royal Academy of Music To crown our opera theme this season, we present Ravel’s fantastical opera L’enfant et les sortilèges, in a specially devised concert version using live film, and performed by talented young singers from the Royal Academy of Music with Stéphane Denève. In a score teeming with invention, Ravel tells the magical story of a young boy driven to cruelty by boredom, who provokes the animals and objects around him to spring to life and conspire against him in a phantasmagorical parade. Wearing digital masks, the singers are transported into dreamlike virtual scenes on screens above the stage. Devised by Jean-Baptiste Barrière, this promises to be an exciting new way to experience Ravel’s colourful and comic masterpiece. Poulenc’s charming musical bestiary from the ballet Les animaux modèles makes the perfect introduction. BBC SO Plus Family 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert for families. See page 22 for details. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10


Friday 3 May | 7.30pm

SATURDAY 25 May | 7.30pm

Walton

Wolfgang Rihm

Overture ‘Scapino’

Nähe-Fern-1

Bowen

UK premiere

Mahler

Viola Concerto

Des Knaben Wunderhorn – selection

Vaughan Williams

Shostakovich

Five Tudor Portraits

John Wilson returns to the BBC Symphony Orchestra to conduct an all-British programme. Leading violist Lawrence Power has proved a persuasive champion of York Bowen’s gloriously Romantic concerto, written for Lionel Tertis in 1908, and this provides the emotional core for a concert lit with ribald humour. Walton’s ingenious ‘comedy overture’ Scapino, an exhilarating orchestral showpiece, finds a spirited echo in Vaughan Williams’s earthy Five Tudor Portraits. Setting texts by Henry VIII’s one-time tutor John Skelton, Vaughan Williams conjured up five vivid character sketches, from the drunken Elinor Rumming to the charming Pretty Bess, a scherzo for the tattered Jolly Rutterkin, and Jane Scroop’s heartfelt Requiem to her pet sparrow. BBC SO Plus Pre-concert talk | 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

JOHN WILSON

Jonathan Lloyd

High, gleaming sonorities and a sense of enchantment link Wolfgang Rihm’s new piece with Mahler’s beguiling songs from the magical folktale collection, Des Knaben Wunderhorn, sung by the much sought-after Danish baritone Johan Reuter. Songs of a very different kind permeate Shostakovich’s dramatic 11th Symphony, an almost cinematic evocation of the 1905 Revolution. The composer wove nine popular revolutionary songs into his dramatic portrayal, with its ominous, icy opening and terrifying Bloody Sunday massacre during which 1,000 workers were gunned down. Shostakovich chose the dark-toned violas for his poignant lament for the dead, before a tumultuous finale that whips up an urgent fervour for justice.

new balls Royal Philharmonic Society Elgar Bursary commission: world premiere

Brahms Piano Concerto No. 2 in B flat minor

Tippett Symphony No. 1 James Gaffigan conductor Stephen Hough piano This, the second of our concerts featuring Stephen Hough performing Brahms, opens with another new piece by Jonathan Lloyd, this time for the BBC SO winds. Brahms’s Piano Concerto No. 2 is an epic, highly symphonic work. Famous for the glorious cello melody that opens the slow movement as well as a corruscating and innovative Scherzo, this masterful concerto is hugely admired by Hough. Completing the cycle of Tippett symphonies we reach the first, a work conceived while Tippett was in prison as a conscientious objector and completed as war ended in 1945. Bursting with vitality and insistent rhythms, it has many of hallmarks of his later style, with a darkly Purcellian set of variations and a highly wrought double fugue to finish.

Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10 BBC Symphony Orchestra

Ingo Metzmacher conductor Johan Reuter baritone

Friday 17 May | 7.30pm

BBC SO Plus Pre-concert talk | 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert.

20

Symphony No. 11, ‘The Year 1905’

STEPHEN HOUGH

BBC SO Plus Pre-concert talk | 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

Wilson © Chris Christodoulou; Hough © Sim Canetty-Clarke

John Wilson conductor Lawrence Power viola Rosie Aldridge mezzo-soprano Neal Davies baritone BBC Symphony Chorus

powerful bbc.co.uk/symphonyorchestra

21


Friday 3 May | 7.30pm

SATURDAY 25 May | 7.30pm

Walton

Wolfgang Rihm

Overture ‘Scapino’

Nähe-Fern-1

Bowen

UK premiere

Mahler

Viola Concerto

Des Knaben Wunderhorn – selection

Vaughan Williams

Shostakovich

Five Tudor Portraits

John Wilson returns to the BBC Symphony Orchestra to conduct an all-British programme. Leading violist Lawrence Power has proved a persuasive champion of York Bowen’s gloriously Romantic concerto, written for Lionel Tertis in 1908, and this provides the emotional core for a concert lit with ribald humour. Walton’s ingenious ‘comedy overture’ Scapino, an exhilarating orchestral showpiece, finds a spirited echo in Vaughan Williams’s earthy Five Tudor Portraits. Setting texts by Henry VIII’s one-time tutor John Skelton, Vaughan Williams conjured up five vivid character sketches, from the drunken Elinor Rumming to the charming Pretty Bess, a scherzo for the tattered Jolly Rutterkin, and Jane Scroop’s heartfelt Requiem to her pet sparrow. BBC SO Plus Pre-concert talk | 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

JOHN WILSON

Jonathan Lloyd

High, gleaming sonorities and a sense of enchantment link Wolfgang Rihm’s new piece with Mahler’s beguiling songs from the magical folktale collection, Des Knaben Wunderhorn, sung by the much sought-after Danish baritone Johan Reuter. Songs of a very different kind permeate Shostakovich’s dramatic 11th Symphony, an almost cinematic evocation of the 1905 Revolution. The composer wove nine popular revolutionary songs into his dramatic portrayal, with its ominous, icy opening and terrifying Bloody Sunday massacre during which 1,000 workers were gunned down. Shostakovich chose the dark-toned violas for his poignant lament for the dead, before a tumultuous finale that whips up an urgent fervour for justice.

new balls Royal Philharmonic Society Elgar Bursary commission: world premiere

Brahms Piano Concerto No. 2 in B flat minor

Tippett Symphony No. 1 James Gaffigan conductor Stephen Hough piano This, the second of our concerts featuring Stephen Hough performing Brahms, opens with another new piece by Jonathan Lloyd, this time for the BBC SO winds. Brahms’s Piano Concerto No. 2 is an epic, highly symphonic work. Famous for the glorious cello melody that opens the slow movement as well as a corruscating and innovative Scherzo, this masterful concerto is hugely admired by Hough. Completing the cycle of Tippett symphonies we reach the first, a work conceived while Tippett was in prison as a conscientious objector and completed as war ended in 1945. Bursting with vitality and insistent rhythms, it has many of hallmarks of his later style, with a darkly Purcellian set of variations and a highly wrought double fugue to finish.

Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10 BBC Symphony Orchestra

Ingo Metzmacher conductor Johan Reuter baritone

Friday 17 May | 7.30pm

BBC SO Plus Pre-concert talk | 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert.

20

Symphony No. 11, ‘The Year 1905’

STEPHEN HOUGH

BBC SO Plus Pre-concert talk | 6.00pm | Fountain Room An introduction to tonight’s concert. Tickets  £30 | £25 | £20 | £15 | £10

Wilson © Chris Christodoulou; Hough © Sim Canetty-Clarke

John Wilson conductor Lawrence Power viola Rosie Aldridge mezzo-soprano Neal Davies baritone BBC Symphony Chorus

powerful bbc.co.uk/symphonyorchestra

21


BBC SO Learning

How to Book

The BBC Symphony Orchestra is committed to adventurous and innovative education work. BBC SO Learning works with families, schools, students and amateur musicians of all ages in creative projects that explore the Orchestra’s innovative programming, including the unique Total Immersion days. Everyone is welcome to take part and these are just some of the events that you can get involved in.

Online booking

Students

barbican.org.uk Secure online booking 24 hours a day. Choose your exact seating location and benefit from a reduced booking fee of £2.00 per transaction.

The BBC SO’s Student Zone offers discounted tickets to selected concerts and other benefits. Visit bbc.co.uk/symphonyorchestra to find out more and to sign up.

By telephone

Groups

020 7638 8891 Open from 10.00am–8.00pm (Mon–Sat), 11.00am–8.00pm Sun and bank holiday). Booking fee of £3.50 per transaction applies. Calls may be monitored or recorded for training purposes.

Groups of 10 or more save 20% on selected concerts. Call 020 7382 7211 10.00am–5.00pm Mon–Fri.

BBC SO Plus Family is a series of free, familyfriendly workshops which take place before seven specially selected BBC Symphony Orchestra concerts at the Barbican, and which give family groups the chance to experience live classical music for just £5 a ticket (plus booking fee). These workshops are led by members of the orchestra and event presenters in a fun and interactive way, introducing you to the music you’ll be hearing in the evening’s concert. If you play an instrument bring it along as there will be a chance for you to join in. Your ticket includes a concert by the BBC SO in the Barbican Hall which takes place after the workshop. BBC SO Plus Family is specifically designed for family groups with children between the ages of 8 and 16 and at least one of your group must be aged 16 or under. These concerts are not recommended for children under the age of 8. Call the Barbican Box Office and quote ‘BBC SO Plus Family’ to buy your tickets, or book online and quote 040679 for a reduced booking fee. Please note that spaces are limited and tickets sell out quickly! 2012  12 October; 24 November 2013  18 January; 22 February, 22 March, 12 & 26 April Please note that BBC SO Plus Family events on 22 March and 12 April include the 6.00pm workshop and the first half of the concert only, as the second half of the concert is less suitable for this age range.

BBC SO Family Orchestra & Chorus The BBC SO Family Orchestra & Chorus is a chance for the whole family to make music together. Families of any shape or size, all instruments, including singers, are welcome, and no previous experience is required. There is no charge, and participants work alongside members of the BBC SO. It’s a great way to enjoy playing 22

BBC Symphony Orchestra

Play with the BBC SO These sessions give amateur musicians the chance to play fantastic orchestral repertoire alongside members of the BBC SO and great conductors at the legendary BBC Maida Vale Studios. If you would like to find out more about BBC SO Learning projects please email bbcsolearning@bbc.co.uk.

Minicom (for deaf customers) 020 7928 7297

BBC SO PLUS Pre-concert Talks & Study Afternoons

SMS Textphone 020 7256 9577

Many concerts are preceded by a free pre-concert talk, which is an ideal way of finding out more about the music that you will hear in the concert. The talks are given by a range of guest speakers and sometimes include an interview with a composer whose music is to be performed.

Send a cheque payable to Barbican Centre. Please enclose an SAE or add 50p to the total amount to cover postage and send to: Barbican Centre, Silk Street, London EC2Y 8DS.

Pre-concert talks and Study Afternoons are free to ticket-holders for the evening concert. Please note however that the capacity of the Fountain and Mozart Rooms is limited, so please arrive early for events in these venues in order to avoid disappointment.

In person

By post

Advance ticket desk at Silk Street entrance open 10.00am–9.00pm (Mon–Sat), 12.00pm–9.00pm (Sun and bank holiday). Multi-buy OFFERS

Studio Concerts at Maida Vale The BBC Symphony Orchestra has a long tradition of free studio recordings open to the public. Concerts take place at the Orchestra’s home, Maida Vale Studios in West London, and programmes include a fascinating mixture of contemporary and rarely heard works alongside music at the heart of the concert repertoire, often performed by BBC New Generation Artists. Full details of Studio Concerts are usually available six weeks in advance of the concert on the BBC SO’s website and at bbc.co.uk/tickets. Free tickets are available online from bbc.co.uk/tickets or by phone on 0370 901 1227. UK-wide rate. Charged at no more than 01/02 geographic numbers from a BT landline. Charges from mobile phones may be higher.

Book the same number of seats for 3 or more concerts at the same time and save money. 3–5 concerts 15% discount 6 or more concerts 20% discount Families BBC Family Orchestra © Simon Jay Price

BBC SO Plus Family

music together as a family, while exploring it in a fresh and exciting way. Aimed at those aged 7 upwards, whatever instrument you play, at whatever level, you can come and join in the fun.

Tickets half price to people aged 16 and under. See page 22 for details of BBC SO Plus Family discounts.

Disabled customers Visitors with access requirements who have joined the Barbican’s Access Membership scheme can inform the Barbican of their access requirements, receive information in alternative formats and may be eligible for reductions on tickets. Any available discounted tickets are limited in number and subject to availability — please book early to avoid disappointment. Full details will be sent with your membership information. You can join the scheme online at www.barbican.org.uk. You can also download the joining form and send to: Barbican Access Membership, Box Office, Barbican Centre, Silk Street, London EC2Y 8DS. Ticket Exchange Tickets can be exchanged for any other event (subject to availability) or for a credit voucher valid for six months, provided they are returned 24 hours before the performance. An administration fee of £2.50 applies to this service. Booking and administration fees were correct at time of going to press but are subject to change. Please call the Barbican Box Office for details. The BBC Symphony Orchestra reserves the right to make changes to advertised programmes and artists. All details were correct at time of going to press.


BBC SO Learning

How to Book

The BBC Symphony Orchestra is committed to adventurous and innovative education work. BBC SO Learning works with families, schools, students and amateur musicians of all ages in creative projects that explore the Orchestra’s innovative programming, including the unique Total Immersion days. Everyone is welcome to take part and these are just some of the events that you can get involved in.

Online booking

Students

barbican.org.uk Secure online booking 24 hours a day. Choose your exact seating location and benefit from a reduced booking fee of £2.00 per transaction.

The BBC SO’s Student Zone offers discounted tickets to selected concerts and other benefits. Visit bbc.co.uk/symphonyorchestra to find out more and to sign up.

By telephone

Groups

020 7638 8891 Open from 10.00am–8.00pm (Mon–Sat), 11.00am–8.00pm Sun and bank holiday). Booking fee of £3.50 per transaction applies. Calls may be monitored or recorded for training purposes.

Groups of 10 or more save 20% on selected concerts. Call 020 7382 7211 10.00am–5.00pm Mon–Fri.

BBC SO Plus Family is a series of free, familyfriendly workshops which take place before seven specially selected BBC Symphony Orchestra concerts at the Barbican, and which give family groups the chance to experience live classical music for just £5 a ticket (plus booking fee). These workshops are led by members of the orchestra and event presenters in a fun and interactive way, introducing you to the music you’ll be hearing in the evening’s concert. If you play an instrument bring it along as there will be a chance for you to join in. Your ticket includes a concert by the BBC SO in the Barbican Hall which takes place after the workshop. BBC SO Plus Family is specifically designed for family groups with children between the ages of 8 and 16 and at least one of your group must be aged 16 or under. These concerts are not recommended for children under the age of 8. Call the Barbican Box Office and quote ‘BBC SO Plus Family’ to buy your tickets, or book online and quote 040679 for a reduced booking fee. Please note that spaces are limited and tickets sell out quickly! 2012  12 October; 24 November 2013  18 January; 22 February, 22 March, 12 & 26 April Please note that BBC SO Plus Family events on 22 March and 12 April include the 6.00pm workshop and the first half of the concert only, as the second half of the concert is less suitable for this age range.

BBC SO Family Orchestra & Chorus The BBC SO Family Orchestra & Chorus is a chance for the whole family to make music together. Families of any shape or size, all instruments, including singers, are welcome, and no previous experience is required. There is no charge, and participants work alongside members of the BBC SO. It’s a great way to enjoy playing 22

BBC Symphony Orchestra

Play with the BBC SO These sessions give amateur musicians the chance to play fantastic orchestral repertoire alongside members of the BBC SO and great conductors at the legendary BBC Maida Vale Studios. If you would like to find out more about BBC SO Learning projects please email bbcsolearning@bbc.co.uk.

Minicom (for deaf customers) 020 7928 7297

BBC SO PLUS Pre-concert Talks & Study Afternoons

SMS Textphone 020 7256 9577

Many concerts are preceded by a free pre-concert talk, which is an ideal way of finding out more about the music that you will hear in the concert. The talks are given by a range of guest speakers and sometimes include an interview with a composer whose music is to be performed.

Send a cheque payable to Barbican Centre. Please enclose an SAE or add 50p to the total amount to cover postage and send to: Barbican Centre, Silk Street, London EC2Y 8DS.

Pre-concert talks and Study Afternoons are free to ticket-holders for the evening concert. Please note however that the capacity of the Fountain and Mozart Rooms is limited, so please arrive early for events in these venues in order to avoid disappointment.

In person

By post

Advance ticket desk at Silk Street entrance open 10.00am–9.00pm (Mon–Sat), 12.00pm–9.00pm (Sun and bank holiday). Multi-buy OFFERS

Studio Concerts at Maida Vale The BBC Symphony Orchestra has a long tradition of free studio recordings open to the public. Concerts take place at the Orchestra’s home, Maida Vale Studios in West London, and programmes include a fascinating mixture of contemporary and rarely heard works alongside music at the heart of the concert repertoire, often performed by BBC New Generation Artists. Full details of Studio Concerts are usually available six weeks in advance of the concert on the BBC SO’s website and at bbc.co.uk/tickets. Free tickets are available online from bbc.co.uk/tickets or by phone on 0370 901 1227. UK-wide rate. Charged at no more than 01/02 geographic numbers from a BT landline. Charges from mobile phones may be higher.

Book the same number of seats for 3 or more concerts at the same time and save money. 3–5 concerts 15% discount 6 or more concerts 20% discount Families BBC Family Orchestra © Simon Jay Price

BBC SO Plus Family

music together as a family, while exploring it in a fresh and exciting way. Aimed at those aged 7 upwards, whatever instrument you play, at whatever level, you can come and join in the fun.

Tickets half price to people aged 16 and under. See page 22 for details of BBC SO Plus Family discounts.

Disabled customers Visitors with access requirements who have joined the Barbican’s Access Membership scheme can inform the Barbican of their access requirements, receive information in alternative formats and may be eligible for reductions on tickets. Any available discounted tickets are limited in number and subject to availability — please book early to avoid disappointment. Full details will be sent with your membership information. You can join the scheme online at www.barbican.org.uk. You can also download the joining form and send to: Barbican Access Membership, Box Office, Barbican Centre, Silk Street, London EC2Y 8DS. Ticket Exchange Tickets can be exchanged for any other event (subject to availability) or for a credit voucher valid for six months, provided they are returned 24 hours before the performance. An administration fee of £2.50 applies to this service. Booking and administration fees were correct at time of going to press but are subject to change. Please call the Barbican Box Office for details. The BBC Symphony Orchestra reserves the right to make changes to advertised programmes and artists. All details were correct at time of going to press.


Keep up to date with the BBC SO by joining our e-list. Sign up when you visit bbc.co.uk/symphonyorchestra Follow us   twitter.com/bbcso   facebook.com/bbcso

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