RHYTHMS OF SUMMER
3-5
August 2023
Season 2022/23
RHYTHMS OF SUMMER
With special thanks to Summer Tour sponsors
Eriadne and George Mackintosh, Claire and Anthony Tait and The Jones Family Charitable Trust
Thursday 3 August, 7.30pm, Deeside Community Theatre, Aboyne
Friday 4 August, 7.30pm, St Ninians & Forglen Church, Turriff
Saturday 5 August, 7.30pm, Inverurie Town Hall
Haydn Symphony No 83 ‘The Hen’
Marquez Flute Concerto ‘Son’ (UK Premiere)
Interval of 20 minutes
Poulenc Sinfonietta
Andrei Feher Conductor
André Cebrián Flute
THE SIR CHARLES MACKERRAS CIRCLE
Leave the Gift of Music
Former SCO Conductor Laureate Sir Charles Mackerras had the vision to help the SCO by leaving the legacy of his royalty payments from his SCO recordings in perpetuity. We remember him with the utmost respect, fondness and gratitude.
As a small way to show our appreciation, we have created The Sir Charles Mackerras Circle for those who wish to pledge making legacy gift to benefit the SCO.
To recognise their generosity during their lifetime, circle members will be invited to an annual behind-the-scenes event to hear about how legacies are helping to make incredible live music accessible to as many people as possible.
To learn more about the Sir Charles Mackerras Circle, contact Mary at mary.clayton@sco.org.uk or call 0131 478 8369
Thank You PRINCIPAL CONDUCTOR'S CIRCLE
Our Principal Conductor’s Circle is made up of individuals who are a special part of our musical family. Their commitment and generosity benefit us all – musicians, audiences and creative learning participants alike.
American Development Fund
Erik Lars Hansen and Vanessa C L Chang
Annual Fund
James and Patricia Cook
Hedley G Wright
International Touring Fund
Gavin and Kate Gemmell
Productions Fund
The Usher Family
Bill and Celia Carman
Anny and Bobby White
Scottish Touring Fund
Eriadne and George Mackintosh
Claire and Anthony Tait
Visiting Artists Fund
Colin and Sue Buchan
Harry and Carol Nimmo
Anne and Matthew Richards
CHAIR SPONSORS
Conductor Emeritus Joseph Swensen
Donald and Louise MacDonald
Chorus Director Gregory Batsleer
Anne McFarlane
Principal Second Violin
Marcus Barcham Stevens
Jo and Alison Elliot
Principal Viola Max Mandel
Kenneth and Martha Barker
Viola Steve King
Sir Ewan and Lady Brown
Principal Cello Philip Higham
The Thomas Family
Cello Donald Gillan
Professor Sue Lightman
Cello Eric de Wit
Jasmine Macquaker Charitable Fund
Principal Double Bass Nikita Naumov
Caroline Hahn and Richard Neville-Towle
Principal Flute André Cebrián
Claire and Mark Urquhart
Principal Oboe Robin Williams
Hedley G Wright
Principal Clarinet Maximiliano Martín
Stuart and Alison Paul
Principal Bassoon Cerys Ambrose-Evans
Claire and Anthony Tait
Principal Timpani Louise Lewis Goodwin
Geoff and Mary Ball
Our Musicians YOUR ORCHESTRA
First Violin
Joel Bardolet
Oleguer Beltran Pallarés
Aoife Ní Bhriain
Aisling O’Dea
Ruth Crouch
Carole Howat
Abigail Young
Lorna McLaren
Second Violin
Gordon Bragg
Michelle Dierx
Rachel Smith
Stewart Webster
Niamh Lyons
Gongbo Jiang
Viola
Jessica Beeston
Ruth Nelson
Brian Schiele
Steve King
Cello
Su-a Lee
Donald Gillan
Ali Lawrance
Christoff Fourie
Bass
Pete Fry
Olaya García Álvarez
Flute
André Cebrián
Emma Roche
Oboe
Robin Williams
Katherine Bryer
Clarinet
Cristina Mateo Sáez
William Stafford
Bassoon
Information correct at the time of going to print
Horn
Huw Evans
Jamie Shield
Trumpet
Peter Franks
Shaun Harrold
Timpani
Emmanuel Joste
Percussion
Kate Openshaw
Cerys Ambrose-Evans
Alison Green
Harp
Sharron Griffiths
Alison Green
Sub-Principal Bassoon
WHAT YOU ARE ABOUT TO HEAR
Haydn (1732-1809)
Symphony No 83 ‘The Hen’ (1785)
Allegro Andante
Minuet – Trio
Finale: Vivace
Márquez (b. 1950)
Flute Concerto ‘Son’ (2017) UK Premiere De tierra De mar De vientos cálidos De fuego
Poulenc (1899-1963)
Sinfonietta (1947)
Allegro con fuoco
Molto vivace
Andante cantabile
Finale: Prestissimo et très gai
From the poultry wit of Joseph Haydn to Francis Poulenc’s Parisian music-hall antics – by way of some fiery Latin evocations courtesy of Arturo Márquez – there’s no shortage of colour, energy and foot-tapping rhythm in tonight’s continent-leaping, centuries-spanning concert.
In his Symphony No 83, in fact, Haydn set out specifically to dazzle and impress. He was composing for the biggest, grandest orchestra he’d ever had access to. And for that lavish band, he set about creating music of an appopriately grand level of pomp, opulence and brilliance.
Haydn had been working as a court musician for the fabulously wealthy Esterházy family at far-flung Eszterháza Palace in what’s now Hungary since 1761. But in 1779, Prince Nikolaus loosened the tight rules on the musician’s employment, allowing Haydn to write music for others, and even to publish his pieces. The composer had been quietly making his own genre-defining musical innovations while at Eszterháza –establishing the symphony and string quartet as musical forms virtually single-handedly, for example – but this change of relationship suddenly provided him with entirely new freedoms. And as a result, Haydn’s first major international commission came from Paris.
The Count d’Ogny was a French nobleman and arts patron, and had co-founded the Concert de la Loge Olympique in 1780 as an orchestra to rival any in the French capital – and with players decked out with sky blue dress coats, flamboyant ruffles and swords swinging by their sides, it quickly made its mark. A key part of the Concert’s impact, though, came from its sheer size: it’s reported to have run to no fewer than
65 musicians, creating a sonic richness almost unheard of at the time (by way of comparison, Haydn had had to be content with a ensemble of about 25 at Eszterháza).
When Haydn received a commission for six new symphonies from d’Ogny – via the Concert’s celebrated conductor Joseph Bologne, the Chevalier de Saint-Georges – no wonder he jumped at the chance. His decision was no doubt helped by the sizeable fee of 25 Louis d’or he was offered for each of the six symphonies he’d compose. (Mozart, by contrast, had received a measly five Louis d’or for his own ‘Paris’ Symphony a few years earlier.)
No 83 is the second in the six-symphony collection, and according to Haydn’s own manuscript comes from 1785. And its comical nickname ‘The Hen’ – inspired, it’s been said, by the distinctive ‘clucking’ of the first movement’s second main melody (you can’t miss it) – is only one example of the
His decision was no doubt helped by the sizeable fee of 25 louis d’or he was offered for each of the six symphonies he’d compose. (Mozart, by contrast, had received a measly five louis d’or for his own ‘Paris’ Symphony a few years earlier.)
rather mischievous wit that the composer employed to tickle his Parisian listeners.
For the most part, Haydn avoided dark, stormy minor keys in his symphonies. Seeing that No 83 is in G minor might lead you to expect something dramatic, serious-minded, even tragic. You wouldn’t be wrong at the piece’s very start: the first movement begins with a tense theme, complete with expressive dissonances and unexpected pauses. But the composer can’t keep the seriousness up for long, and quickly veers towards the brighter major for his humorous ‘clucking’ melody.
His gentle, restrained second movement continues the distinctive repeated notes that populated the opening movement, though Haydn throws in surprisingly dramatic interruptions to its otherwise lyrical melody. There’s a lot of rustic charm to his rather heavy-footed minuet dance in the third movement, though a solo flute joins tripping violins in the movement’s
Franz Joseph Haydnlight-as-air central trio section. His finale propels us along with what might be a boisterous jig, or maybe a galloping hunt. In any case, the fourth movement’s boundless energy is kept on a tight lead at the opening, before bursting into vivid life and a joyful conclusion.
We jump westwards across the Atlantic for tonight’s next piece. Mexican composer Arturo Márquez is probably best known for his rip-roaring, euphoric Danzón No 2, which has become the unofficial anthem of the Venezuelan Simón Bolívar Youth Orchestra, and as a result one of the most popular classical works being performed worldwide today.
Like the glittering Danzón No 2, Márquez’s Flute Concerto ‘Son’ expertly blends together distinctively Latin influences and a wide-ranging, brightly coloured classical style. Given the composer’s background, that characterful
mix is probably not surprising. Born in 1950 in Sonora, Mexico, young Arturo was the son of a mariachi performer and grandson of a prominent folk musician, and, after launching his first compositional experiments as a teenager, went on to study with prominent classical figures in both America and Mexico.
He completed the first, two-movement version of his Flute Concerto in 1997, before adding two more movements in 2017, and thereby rounding off the four elements that inspired the piece: earth, water, air and fire. Those elements give Márquez’s movements thoroughly individual, contrasting personalities. His solo flautist, however, remains an assertive presence throughout, playing a melodic line that fuses catchy Latin licks with sometimes breathtaking virtuosity.
The infectious rhythms that permeate the whole Concerto kick off the appropriately
Liketheglittering DanzónNo2,however, Márquez’sFluteConcerto ‘Son’expertlyblends togetherdistinctively Latininfluencesanda wide-ranging,brightly colouredclassicalstyle.
Arturo Márquez
earthy opening movement, ‘De tierra’ (‘Of the earth’), before the soloist introduces its lithe main melody. The second theme (introduced by the oboe) is slower and gentler, with a distinctive tick-tocking accompaniment from the claves, but Márquez’s music remains urgent and strongly rhythmic throughout.
A gently rippling melody low in the flute’s range opens the more serious-minded, sometimes even grief-stricken second movement, ‘De mar’ (‘Of the sea’), though a quicker, dance-like central section provides light relief. Márquez’s third movement, ‘De vientos cálidos’ (‘Of warm breezes’), continues without a break, and focuses our attention on the lone flautist, playing rippling, airy patterns that slowly spiral to a quiet close. His blazing finale, ‘De fuego’ (‘Of fire’), however, is anything but quiet: its assertive, pounding rhythms drive the Concerto to a spectacular close.
We leap back across the Atlantic to France for tonight’s final piece. Francis Poulenc was no stranger to wit, sparkle and jazzy inspirations in his music (he was a signed-up member of mischievous Parisian composer collective Les Six, for example). But by 1947, the year he wrote his Sinfonietta, he was aiming for a slightly cooler, more serious approach.
Poulenc’s Sinfonietta rode the wave of optimism following the end of the Second World War. It was commissioned by the BBC to celebrate the first anniversary of the Third Programme, predecessor to BBC Radio 3, as one of several works marking the new-found freedom of continental Europe following the conflict.
Poulenc never wrote a symphony, but his Sinfonietta (literally ‘little symphony’) is probably the closest he came. Indeed, it’s almost as though he stepped back from using that high-flying term with all its
FrancisPoulencwasno strangertowit,sparkle andjazzyinspirationsin hismusic(hewasa signed-upmemberof mischievousParisian composercollective LesSix,forexample.Francis Poulenc
Thoughitmightnotbecalledasymphony,the Sinfoniettafallsintotheconventionalfourmovements wemightexpecttofindinthatmusicalform.
imposing historical associations for this energetic, light-hearted music, though he generally toned down his high spirits in it. Once he’d finished the work, the then 48-year-old composer admitted to being rather surprised himself at the gleeful wit and youthful excitement that remained in his Sinfonietta, and to being worried that he might have ‘dressed too young for my years’.
Though it might not be called a symphony, the Sinfonietta falls into the conventional four movements we might expect to find in that musical form. A burst of frantic energy kicks off its first movement, though its zingy vivacity gradually dissipates as the movement progresses. And rather than following the tight structure of contrasting themes in a traditional symphonic first movement, Poulenc is instead content to offer a succession of contrasting episodes. He seems to pay tribute to favourite fellow composers in his bustling second movement scherzo – Tchaikovsky’s ‘Pathétique’
Symphony, or Mendelssohn’s fairy music, or even Mozart – and his slow third movement achieves an almost Mahlerian intensity at times.
There’s no mistaking the influence of Stravinsky in his witty, dashing finale. (Poulenc himself admitted as much, saying:
‘I know very well that I am not the sort of musician who makes harmonic innovations, like Stravinsky, Ravel or Debussy, but I do think there is a place for new music that is satisfied with using other people’s chords.’) But we make a notable return, too, to popular music, in this case sounds that seem to come directly from the music hall, in themes that Poulenc reworked from an early string quartet he’d abandoned. He was forced, however, to reconstruct that earlier music from memory: he felt the original work had failed so badly that he’d flung its score into a Parisian sewer.
© David KettleConductor ANDREI FEHER
Andrei Feher has already earned a reputation for his musical maturity and integrity, natural authority on the podium, and an imaginative and intelligent approach to programming. At the age of 26 Feher was appointed as the new Music Director of the Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony Orchestra, a position effective from August 2018.
Having gained early experience as assistant to Fabien Gabel at the Orchestre Symphonique de Quebec, at the age of 22 Feher joined the Orchestre de Paris as Assistant Conductor to its Music Director, Paavo Järvi. During this time he collaborated with conductors including Zubin Mehta, Valery Gergiev, Christoph von Dohnányi, Thomas Hengelbrock and Jaap van Zweden, as well as regularly conducting the orchestra in their popular Young Public concerts at the Philharmonie de Paris.
In addition to his commitments with the Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony Orchestra, recent and upcoming highlights include performances with the Tokyo Symphony Orchestra, Orchestre Symphonique de Montréal, Orchestre de Chambre de Lausanne, Orchestre Symphonique de Quebec, Les Violons du Roy, Orchestre Philharmonique de Monte-Carlo, Orchestre National d’Ile de France, Orchestre Métropolitain Montreal and Romanian Radio National Orchestra.
A strong advocate of contemporary music, Feher has recently performed works by Eric Champagne, Pierre Mercure, George Dimitrov, Ciprian Pop and Abigail Richardson, as well as the world premiere of Thierry Besancon’s opera for children Les Zoocrates with Opéra de Lausanne. In November 2015, Feher conducted the world premiere of Soleil Noir by Pierre Jodlowski with the Orchestre de Pau-Béarn, which resulted in an immediate invitation to conduct the work in Toulouse in November 2016.
Born in Romania into a family of musicians, Feher began his musical education as a violinist in his hometown Satu-Mare before continuing his studies at the Montreal Conservatoire when his parents relocated to Canada.
©HilaryGauld-OnefortheWallFlute ANDRÉ CEBRIÁN
Spanish Flautist André Cebrián studied in his home town Santiago de Compostela with Luis Soto, Laurent Blaiteau and Pablo Sagredo. He then went on to study with János Bálint in HfM Detmold (Germany) and with Jacques Zoon in HEM Gèneve (Switzerland).
André’s first orchestral experiences at the National Youth Orchestra of Spain, the Britten-Pears Orchestra and the Gustav Mahler Jugendorchester led him to perform with such orchestras as the Orquestra de Cadaqués, Staatkskapelle Dresden and Orchestra Mozart. He performs regularly as a Guest Principal Flute with the Sinfónica de Castilla-León, Filarmónica de Gran Canaria, Sinfónica de Barcelona, Gran Teatro del Liceu, Malaysian Philharmonic and Spira Mirabilis.
When he is not playing in the Orchestra you can find him performing with his wind quintets Azahar Ensemble and Natalia Ensemble - where he is also the artistic director and arranger - or in one of his duo projects with harpist Bleuenn Le Friec, or guitarist Pedro Mateo González. In 2019 he founded the Festival de Música de Cámara de Anguiano in La Rioja (Spain).
He loves sharing his passion for music with his students at the Conservatorio Superior de Aragón, Barenboim-Said Foundation and the youth orchestras he coaches each season. André joined the SCO as Principal Flute in early 2020.
André's Chair is kindly supported by Claire and Mark Urquhart
Biography
SCOTTISH CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
The internationally celebrated Scottish Chamber Orchestra is one of Scotland’s National Performing Companies.
Formed in 1974 and core funded by the Scottish Government, the SCO aims to provide as many opportunities as possible for people to hear great music by touring the length and breadth of Scotland, appearing regularly at major national and international festivals and by touring internationally as proud ambassadors for Scottish cultural excellence.
Making a significant contribution to Scottish life beyond the concert platform, the Orchestra works in schools, universities, colleges, hospitals, care homes, places of work and community centres through its extensive Creative Learning programme. The SCO is also proud to engage with online audiences across the globe via its innovative Digital Season.
An exciting new chapter for the SCO began in September 2019 with the arrival of dynamic young conductor Maxim Emelyanychev as the Orchestra’s Principal Conductor.
The SCO and Emelyanychev released their first album together (Linn Records) in November 2019 to widespread critical acclaim. The repertoire – Schubert’s Symphony No 9 in C major ‘The Great’ –is the first symphony Emelyanychev performed with the Orchestra in March 2018.
The SCO also has long-standing associations with many eminent guest conductors and directors including Conductor Emeritus Joseph Swensen, François Leleux, Pekka Kuusisto, Nicola Benedetti, Richard Egarr, Andrew Manze and John Storgårds.
The Orchestra enjoys close relationships with many leading composers and has commissioned almost 200 new works, including pieces by the late Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, Sir James MacMillan, Sally Beamish, Martin Suckling, Einojuhani Rautavaara, Karin Rehnqvist, Mark-Anthony Turnage, Nico Muhly, Anna Clyne and Associate Composer Jay Capperauld.
For full biography please visit sco.org.uk
BE PART OF OUR FUTURE
For 50 years, the SCO has inspired audiences across Scotland and beyond.
From world-class music-making to pioneering creative learning and community work, we are passionate about transforming lives through the power of music and we could not do it without regular donations from our valued supporters.
If you are passionate about music, and want to contribute to the SCO’s continued success, please consider making a monthly or annual donation today. Each and every contribution is crucial, and your support is truly appreciated.
For more information on how you can become a regular donor, please get in touch with Hannah Wilkinson on 0131 478 8364 or hannah.wilkinson@sco.org.uk