Lang Lang Tue 21 and Thu 23 Nov 2023
Lang Lang Royal Albert Hall presents
with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra Tue 21 and Thu 23 Nov 2023 Conductor Mark Wigglesworth Guest pianist Gina Alice
Cover photo © Haiqiang Lv
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Lang Lang in the Round, May 2010 © Stephen Frak
Welcome
James Ainscough, CEO Royal Albert Hall
It is a great pleasure to welcome you to the Royal Albert Hall for this very special concert by Lang Lang with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. Lang Lang has performed in our auditorium many times over the past two decades. He has appeared at the BBC Proms; alongside fellow musical superstars at award ceremonies; and in breathtaking solo concerts. Consistently exceptional and inspiring, Lang Lang proves with every performance why he has become such a global phenomenon. Lang Lang’s relationship with the Hall goes beyond staging extraordinary performances. The superstar pianist also shares our passion for introducing new
audiences to classical music. A few years ago we worked together to devise a concert especially for young people, with performances alongside students from his International Music Foundation. By visiting the Royal Albert Hall today, you are supporting our mission as a charity to enrich lives through our Engagement programme and maintain our Grade I listed building for future generations. We hope you enjoy the concert.
James Ainscough Chief Executive Officer, Royal Albert Hall
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Programme Wagner
Tannhäuser Overture and Venusberg Music
Saint-Saëns
Piano Concerto No 2 Interval
Ravel
Mother Goose Suite
Saint-Saëns
The Carnival of the Animals
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© OLAF HEINE Deutsche Grammophon
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Programme notes Tannhäuser Overture and Venusberg Music Wagner
First seen in 1845, Richard Wagner’s fifth opera Tannhäuser conflates two German legends. The first is the story of the title character, who is torn between his love for the goddess Venus and the noble Elisabeth; the second is the Sängerkrieg songwriting contest at Wartburg castle. The magnificent overture begins with the solemn tune of the Pilgrim’s Chorus, written in the chorale style. The Venusberg music references a mythic realm where the goddess has hidden since the advent of Christianity. It includes the passionate Hymn to Venus, a melody that recurs throughout the opera. Wagner made several amendments to Tannhäuser following its troubled opening in Dresden (where Wagner worked as Director of Music in the Royal Court of Saxony). The most notable rewrite was for the Paris premiere in 1861, when he added a ballet after the overture. 8
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Piano Concerto No 2
Mother Goose Suite
Camille Saint-Saëns’ 1868 concerto remains among his most popular works. Written in just three weeks, and performed by the composer at its Paris premiere, Piano Concerto No 2 was not an immediate success, but quickly grew in popularity. The classically constructed first movement builds through the scherzando second to a tarantella finale, which prompted Polish composer Sigismond Stojowski to famously observe, ‘He starts as Bach, and ends as Offenbach.’ It is a superb test and showcase of a pianist’s virtuosity, requiring mastery of fine fingerwork, rhythm and range. As Saint-Saëns specialist Hugh Macdonald says, ‘it takes a player of special gifts to throw off those cascades of scales and arpeggios as though they were the easiest thing in the world.’ In 1871, a few years after its debut, a solo piano arrangement was made by fellow French composer Georges Bizet.
Originally published as a piano duet in 1910, Maurice Ravel’s Ma mère l’Oye (Mother Goose) is based on the timeless Perrault fairy tales. Although he had no children of his own, the composer had a lifelong fascination with children’s stories, toys and imaginative worlds. He actually wrote Mother Goose for the children of his friends the Godebskis, who would host him at their Parisian soirées. Each of the five movements from the suite centres on characters from Perrault’s The Tales of Mother Goose – including Sleeping Beauty, Tom Thumb and Beauty and the Beast. Musically, the style is typical of Ravel in its modal melodies and rhythmic precision. In 1911 he orchestrated the five-piece suite, and also expanded it into a ballet version.
Saint-Saëns
Ravel
The Carnival of the Animals Saint-Saëns
There is an irony in the fact that the work for which Saint-Saëns is perhaps best remembered today was one he refused to publish during his lifetime, fearing it would undermine his status as a serious composer. Once it did become public, in 1922, The Carnival of the Animals quickly became a favourite. A comic musical suite, or ‘zoological fantasy’, it features 14 short movements dedicated to different forms of animal, including lions, tortoises, donkeys, kangaroos and even fossils. It was originally composed, in 1886, for a chamber group of 11 instruments (including two pianos), but today is often performed by a full orchestra. Over the years it has been subject to countless interpretations and fond pastiches, by everyone from ‘Weird Al’ Yankovic to The Wiggles. - Theo Bosanquet © Haiqiang Lv
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“If I am to play my best, there is no way but Steinway.” LANG LANG BY APPOINTMENT TO HER MAJESTY QUEEN ELIZABETH II PIANOFORTE MANUFACTURERS STEINWAY & SONS
For more information or to arrange a private appointment at our London showrooms, please call: 0207 487 3391 or email info@steinway.co.uk
Steinway Hall London W1U 2DB www.steinway.co.uk 10
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S T E I N WAY A R T I S T
Gospel Messiah • Royal Choral Society • Dame Judi Dench • Carols
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Lang Lang at the Royal Albert Hall Lang Lang has appeared at the Royal Albert Hall 24 times throughout his career. We look back at the pianist’s performance highlights at London’s most iconic venue. From first to last at the Proms Lang Lang first performed at the Hall in 2001 at the ‘world’s greatest classical music festival’ – the BBC Proms, playing Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No.3 in D Minor, Op.30, with the St. Petersburg Philharmonic. The debut attracted long queues of fans, with more than 200 people turned away. Lang Lang has played at the Proms five times since, including the First Night of the Proms in 2003, and the Last Night of the Proms in 2011. The Award goes to
Lang Lang has also been a regular star at the Classical Brit Awards, performing at three ceremonies and picking up the 12
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Lang Lang with the BBC Symphony Orchestra on the Last Night of the Proms in 2011 © Chris Christodoulou
International Artist of the Year award in 2013. The 10th anniversary show in 2009 saw an unforgettable rendition of Gershwin’s ‘Rhapsody in Blue’, played by Lang Lang and jazz icon Herbie Hancock on duelling grand pianos. The pair joined forces once again two months later for a very special show at the Hall, featuring more incredible duets and solo pieces.
Lang Lang and Herbie Hancock performing at the 2009 Classical Brit Awards © Chris Christodoulou
Lang Lang goes to the movies
George Harliono and Lang Lang at Exploring the Piano with Lang Lang and Friends, 17 April 2016 © Andy Paradise
Inspiring the next generation In 2016, the Hall hosted Exploring the Piano with Lang Lang and Friends – a one-off matinee recital and conversation devised as part of the Royal Albert Hall’s Engagement Programme, to enthuse young people about classical music and the piano. Lang Lang was joined by two students from his International
Music Foundation, Alasdair Howell (11 years) and George Harliono (15 years), who had the opportunity to perform alongside the superstar pianist on the Royal Albert Hall stage. He said of the concert, “I want every child to have access to music experiences that ignite something wonderful inside of them, just as music delivered something incredible for me.”
Alongside his many classical music recitals, Lang Lang has also treated audiences to popular music from the big screen. In 2008 he appeared at Classic FM Live! Goes to the Movies, and in 2022, he celebrated 100 years of Disney, with a special concert that coincided with the release of his album, The Disney Book. The show saw Lang Lang perform much-loved Disney classics like ‘Beauty and the Beast’ and ‘Bare Necessities’, plus recent viral sensations, ‘Let it Go’
from Frozen, and ‘We Don’t Talk About Bruno’ from Lin Manuel Miranda’s R OYA L A L B E R T H A L L
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Lang Lang In the Round, May 2010 © Stephen Frak
Encanto. He also performed a rendition
Classic Lang Lang
Love Tonight’ with his wife, Gina Alice.
Lang’s solo concerts, like the one he
of The Lion King’s ‘Can You Feel The Speaking about his love of Disney, Lang Lang said:
“Animation sparked my imagination
and transported me to other worlds. The music was a big part of this
experience – and led to my life-long love of classical music... I hope that people of all ages will enjoy this
recording and experience the joy
that we all felt the first time we saw a Disney film.” 14
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Nothing can be compared to Lang
will perform tonight. He has performed several classical recitals at the Hall,
including an in-the-round production
in 2010, which saw the pianist’s hands projected on big screens suspended
above the audience; his first complete Beethoven Piano Concerto cycle in
London, performed across three dates in March 2012; and a concert in 2015, which finished 30 minutes later than
expected as the audience demanded
four encores from the virtuoso musician.
F I N D O U R P RO D U C T S I N T H E ROYA L A L B E RT H A L L B A R S PREFERRED C O N F E C T I O N E RY PA RT N E R O F
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Quickfire Q&A with Lang Lang
Why did you want to spotlight the work of Camille Saint-Saëns? I have always wanted to play SaintSaëns’s Piano Concerto No. 2 and The Carnival of the Animals in the same programme. They are romantic, emotional and timeless pieces that exhibit lots of contrast in their range of poetic colours. Do the pieces you’ve selected hold particular resonance for you? Saint-Saëns’s Piano Concerto No. 2 reminds me of Bach’s organ work but in the Romantic style. It’s very grand in the same manner as Liszt and Rachmaninoff. The Carnival of the Animals is a wonderful piece as it’s for children and adult music lovers alike, filled with beautiful, episodic melodies like the swan (a personal favourite). How does it feel to be back at the Royal Albert Hall? The Royal Albert Hall is like a home to me in many ways. I’ve played here more than 20 times over my career. 16
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It’s truly one of the best places on earth to perform. Is it particularly meaningful to be sharing the stage with your wife, Gina Alice? It’s always wonderful to perform as husband and wife. Especially since The Carnival of the Animals is one of our son’s favourite pieces as well. Appreciation for it must run in the family. You’re also back with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra – what’s the key to your collaboration? I have been lucky to share many great moments with RPO. Just last year, we performed my Disney programme at the Hall. They are an orchestra of tremendous musicianship, which is crucial to our work together, and I am very proud to play with them again. Do you find this variety of concerts enriches your playing? At the end of the day, I’m a classical pianist – this repertoire will always
be my mainstay. But at the Hall, I like to present different approaches to music making, including performing alongside musicians whose experience lies in other genres. Ultimately, I hope to encourage more people to enjoy classical music. How do you unwind away from the piano? My favourite non-musical pastime is visiting museums of visual art. What do you listen to for pleasure?
Recently, being a judge on The Piano TV show has given me a chance to listen to new genres of music including rock and techno, but I most often listen to symphonic works when I’m not listening to piano pieces. Any particular favourite things to do in London? Whenever I am in London, I always make time to walk in Hyde Park and visit with my friends. Also, I must say the Chinese food here is great.
© OLAF HEINE Deutsche Grammophon
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Lang Lang Lang Lang is a leading figure
Christoph Eschenbach and performs
– as a pianist, educator
Lang Lang is known for thinking
in classical music today and philanthropist, he
has become one of the
world’s most influential and
committed ambassadors for the arts in the 21st century. Equally happy playing for billions of
viewers at the 2008 Olympic Opening Ceremony in Beijing or just for a few hundred children in schools, he is a
with all the world’s top orchestras.
outside the box and frequently steps into different musical worlds. His
performances at the Grammy Awards with Metallica, Pharrell Williams or jazz
legend Herbie Hancock were watched by millions of viewers.
For about a decade, Lang Lang has contributed to musical education worldwide. In 2008 he founded
the Lang Lang International Music
Lang Lang started playing the piano aged three and gave his first public recital before the age of five. He entered Beijing’s Central Music
Conservatory aged nine and won First Prize at the International Tchaikovsky Competition for Young Musicians at 13. He subsequently went to
Philadelphia to study with legendary pianist Gary Graffman at the Curtis
Institute of Music. He was seventeen
when his big break came, substituting for André Watts at the Gala of the
Century, playing Tchaikovsky’s First
Foundation aimed at cultivating
Piano Concerto with the Chicago
Times as “the hottest artist on the
music education at the forefront
of Christoph Eschenbach: he became
plays sold-out concerts all over
young audience through live music
master of communicating through
Symphony Orchestra under the baton
music. Heralded by the New York
tomorrow’s top pianists, championing
classical music planet”, Lang Lang
of technology, and building a
the world. He has formed ongoing
experiences. In 2013, Lang Lang was
Lang Lang’s boundless drive to
of the United Nations as a Messenger
music has brought him tremendous
collaborations with conductors
including Sir Simon Rattle, Gustavo Dudamel, Daniel Barenboim and 20
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designated by the Secretary General
of Peace focusing on global education.
an overnight sensation and the invitations started to pour in.
attract new audiences to classical
recognition: he was presented with
the 2010 Crystal Award in Davos and was picked as one of the 250 Young Global Leaders by the World Economic Forum. He is also the recipient of honorary doctorates from the Royal College of Music, the Manhattan School of Music and New York University. In December 2011 he was honoured with the highest prize awarded by the Ministry of Culture of the People’s Republic of China and received the highest civilian honours in Germany (Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany) and France (Medal of the Order of Arts and Letters). In 2016 Lang Lang was invited to the Vatican to perform for Pope Francis. He has also performed for numerous other international dignitaries, including four US presidents and monarchs from many nations. © OLAF HEINE Deutsche Grammophon
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Mark Wigglesworth Conductor
Mark Wigglesworth is
recognised internationally for his masterly interpretations
both in the opera house and in the concert hall, for his highly detailed performances that
combine a finely considered architectural structure with great sophistication and rare beauty.
He is an outstanding conductor who has forged many enduring
relationships with orchestra and
opera companies across the world, conducting repertoire ranging
from Mozart through to Boulez.
Wigglesworth has enjoyed a long
relationship with English National Opera (Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk,
Cosi fan Tutti, Falstaff, Katya Kabanova, Parsifal, Force of Destiny, Magic Flute, Jenufa, Don Giovanni, and Lulu), and 22
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operatic engagements elsewhere include The Royal Opera House,
Covent Garden (Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, Rise and Fall of Mahagonny,
La Clemenza di Tito), The Metropolitan Opera, New York (The Marriage of Figaro) as well as at The Bavarian
State Opera, Opéra national de Paris, Semperoper Dresden, Teatro Real,
The Netherlands Opera, La Monnaie,
Welsh National Opera, Glyndebourne, and Opera Australia.
In 2017, he received the Olivier Award for Outstanding Achievement in
Opera. On the concert platform, highlights include performances
with the Berlin Philharmonic, Royal
Concertgebouw, London Symphony, London Philharmonic, Boston
Symphony, New York Philharmonic, Philadelphia Orchestra, Chicago
Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Cleveland Orchestra, Tokyo
Symphony, and the Sydney Symphony. His recordings include a critically
acclaimed complete cycle of the Shostakovich Symphonies with the BBC National Orchestra of Wales and the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic, Mahler Sixth and Tenth symphonies, with the Melbourne Symphony, a disc of English music with the Sydney Symphony, Britten Peter Grimes with Glyndebourne, and the Brahms Piano Concertos with Stephen Hough. He has written articles for The Guardian and The Independent, made a six-part TV series for the BBC entitled Everything to Play For, and held positions as Associate Conductor of the BBC Symphony, Principal Guest Conductor of the Swedish Radio Symphony, the Adelaide Symphony, Music Director of the BBC National Orchestra of Wales, and Music Director of English National Opera. His book The Silent Musician: Why Conducting Matters was published in October 2018 by Faber & Faber.
© Sim Canetty-Clarke
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Gina Alice Guest Pianist
Born in 1994 in Wiesbaden, Germany, to German-
Korean parents, Gina Alice
started piano at the age of
four. Only three years later, she became a student of professor Irina Edelstein.
In 2009, she started studying piano at
the Academy of Music and Performing Arts in Frankfurt, as a junior student of
Lev Natochenny’s master class. Three years later, she became a student of Bernhard Wetz at the Academy of
Music and Performing Arts in Frankfurt. Gina received more artistic inspirations from Professor Laszlo Simon and Professor Klaus Hellwig at Berlin
University of the Arts, and studied
with professor Gary Graffman as a
fellow of the Lang Lang International Music Foundation.
She began playing in public at the age of eight and quickly became 24
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an internationally acclaimed pianist in France and Spain. She became a sensation following a Steinway concert in Farquaford, playing Haydn’s piano concerto in D major. She also performed in international master classes such as Moulin D’ande International Academy and Burgos International Music Festival. Gina made her TV debut as a piano soloist in April 2007. She performed Mendelssohn’s piano concerto in G minor on German national television with the Berlin National Youth Symphony Orchestra and conductor Rasmus Baumann with great success. Her first piano recital in 2009 was well received in the classical world. In the spring of 2012, her debut of Mendelssohn’s piano concerto no.1 with the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra and conductor Kazuo Kanemaki at the
Berliner Philharmonie was equally well received. In March 2013, she was invited to Berlin again to play the Rachmaninoff piano concerto no.1.
In January 2013 Gina Alice played a sold-out piano recital called “young artist” at Hessischer Rundfunk Sendesaal in Frankfurt, Germany. The entire concert was broadcast on German national radio on 7 March 2013. In May 2014, Gina performed for the third time in the Berlin Philharmonie hall, during the final concert of the Berlin Philharmonic season. She performed Rachmaninoff’s Variations on a Theme of Paganini as a piano solo and collaborated with the Berlin Philharmonic orchestra. In 2016, she collaborated with the Shenyang Philharmonic Orchestra and Guangzhou Symphony Orchestra in China. In 2017, she gave a recital at the Ruhr piano festival, the largest piano festival in the world, and in 2019, Gina Alice and Shenzhen Symphony Orchestra played ‘The Moment of Victory’.
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© Ben Wright
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra The Royal Philharmonic
Orchestra’s (RPO) mission to enrich lives through
orchestral experiences that
are uncompromising in their excellence and inclusive in
their appeal, places it at the
forefront of music-making in the UK and internationally. Performing around 200 concerts a
year and with a live and online audience of more than 60 million people, the
Orchestra is proud to embrace a broad
repertoire and reach a diverse audience. The RPO is unafraid to push boundaries and is at home recording video game,
film and television soundtracks, working with pop stars, and touring the world
performing great symphonic repertoire. Throughout its history, the RPO has
collaborated with inspirational artists
and in August 2021, the Orchestra was thrilled to welcome Vasily Petrenko
as its new Music Director. A landmark appointment in the RPO’s history,
Vasily’s opening two seasons with the RPO have been lauded by audiences and critics alike.
As well as a busy schedule of
international concerts, the Orchestra performs regularly at the Royal
Albert Hall (where it is Associate
Orchestra), the Southbank Centre’s
Royal Festival Hall and Cadogan Hall,
where it is celebrating its 20th Season as Resident Orchestra. The RPO
tours extensively around the UK and through collaboration with creative
partners, fosters deeper engagement with communities to ensure that live orchestral music is accessible to as inclusive and diverse an audience as possible. To help achieve this
goal, the Orchestra launched RPO
Resound in 1993, which has grown
to become the most innovative and respected orchestral community
and education programme in the UK and internationally.
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Tonight’s players First violins
Duncan Riddell Shana Douglas Oscar Perks Esther Kim Andrew Klee Kay Chappell Anthony Protheroe Erik Chapman Adriana Iacovache-Pana Rosemary Wainwright Geoffrey Silver Marciana Buta Emma Lisney Maya Bickel
Second violins
Andrew Storey Elen Hâf Rideal David O'Leary Jennifer Christie Charlotte Ansbergs Jennifer András Peter Graham Stephen Payne Manuel Porta Sali-Wyn Ryan Nicola Hutchings Elspeth Macleod
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Violas
Abigail Fenna Liz Varlow Joseph Fisher Ugne Tiškuté Esther Harling Jonathan Hallett Pamela Ferriman Clive Howard Claire Maynard Yan Beattie
Cellos
Richard Harwood Jonathan Ayling Chantal Webster Roberto Sorrentino Jean-Baptiste Toselli William Heggart Rachel van der Tang Naomi Watts
Double basses
Benjamin Cunningham Ben Wolstenholme Ben Havinden-Williams Yija Cui Lucía Polo Moreno Elen Roberts
Flutes
Trumpets
Piccolo
Trombones
Emer McDonough Joanna Marsh Diomedes Demetriades Diomedes Demetriades
Oboes
Matthew Williams Tom Freeman-Attwood Kaitlin Wild Rupert Whitehead Ryan Hume
John Roberts Timothy Watts Patrick Flanaghan
Bass trombone
Cor anglais
Kevin Morgan
Patrick Flanaghan
Clarinets
Katherine Lacy Sonia Sielaff
Bassoons
Richard Ion Helen Storey
Contra bassoon Gareth Twigg
Horns
Alexander Edmundson Ben Hulme Kathryn Saunders Hayley Tonner
Josh Cirtina
Tuba
Timpani Tom Lee
Percussion
Stephen Quigley Martin Owens Richard Horne
Harp
Suzy Willison-Kawalec
Celeste
Philip Moore
CLASSICAL FAVOURITES, MUSICAL DISCOVERIES AND A PAIR OF CAPTIVATING LARGE-SCALE WORKS BY SAINT-SAËNS THE NEW ALBUM FROM LANG LANG COMING MARCH 1ST 2024
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Meet the musician: Ugne Tiškuté Ugne plays in the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra's viola section. How did you become involved with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra (RPO)?
Six years ago, whilst I was still a student at the Royal Academy of Music in
London, I thought I would give it a
chance and apply – I had nothing to
lose, I thought! My audition was super early at 9am and it was a cold day just before Christmas – I remember that
day like yesterday. I had a chance to play for the panel, successfully received a
trial with the RPO and, very soon after, I
became a member. Time really flies as a member of this great orchestra!
What was your first experience of orchestral music?
My mum is a violinist and was my
first teacher in Lithuania, where I am originally from. I was surrounded by
music and her lessons from an early age. When I was in high school, I had a chance to train and perform with 30
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Kodály Zoltán World Youth Orchestra in Hungary and it was the best time I ever had as a teenager. I made so many friends and played for hours in a huge symphony orchestra, learning so much from my amazing young colleagues. Tell us about your favourite RPO journey. I have so many good memories from travelling since I joined the Orchestra. My favourite destination would have to be the USA – performing at Carnegie Hall in New York was a real highlight. As part of the RPO, I get a chance to see places that perhaps I wouldn’t normally go to on holiday. Just a few weeks ago, I went to Japan with RPO and it was my first time there. It was an absolutely incredible place, with such warm and enthusiastic audiences. If you had to recommend one artist or composer, who would it be and why? Ettore Causa. He is one of the most
inspirational teachers and I had the chance to study with him at the Menuhin String Academy in Gstaad. You must listen to his viola playing – I am in love with every note he plays! If you could work with any artist on a performance or project, who would you choose? I would love to work with my childhood idol, Maxim Vengerov. I grew up listening to his recordings and watched all of his masterclasses on YouTube. It would also be incredible to play with pianist Martha Argerich again – an unforgettable experience!
Engagement As a charity, the Royal Albert Hall believes in providing an Engagement programme that enriches people’s lives and offers fairer access to the arts. The programme offers subsidised or free arts activities, which enable specific groups to access the Hall in a way that suits them. We work alongside specialist partner organisations to create a programme that is informed by inclusive practice and takes inspiration from the Hall’s architecture, history and events.
In 2022, we launched Future Makers as part of our drive to develop and support new musical talent. The concert gives young musicians the opportunity to perform their own music in front of a live audience, and the chance to receive a tailored package of support from the Royal Albert Hall and industry partners. 32
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In October last year, we welcomed young people with multiple and profound learning disabilities on a Sensory Journey around the Royal Albert Hall. Produced in support of the West London Inclusive Arts Festival, the experience was led by a specialist facilitator and gave participants the opportunity to explore the Hall through a range of multi-sensory and immersive environments. Find out more: royalalberthall.com/engagement
Sensory Journey, October 2022 © Andy Paradise
“Where the Royal Albert Hall have been truly remarkable is...they very
much came to the schools and said we want to be led by you. To bring our students, who do find accessing the arts very difficult, into a setting that is safe...you can really see the very best in them. And to do that in the Royal Albert Hall was arguably one of the most remarkable things that any pupil could ever experience.” – James Rigby, Teacher QEII Jubilee School
Future Makers, November 2022 © Andy Paradise
about our Sensory Journeys project
English National Ballet and Royal Albert Hall present
Fernanda Oliveira. Images © Matt Crockett, Laurent Liotardo
Derek Deane’s
in-the-round Wed 12 – Sun 23 Jun 2024
Support us
as a Friend or Patron of the Royal Albert Hall Want to book tickets before everyone else? Join as a Friend from just £45 at royalalberthall.com/friends For a deeper connection with the Hall, exclusive benefits, rehearsal events and more, support us as a Patron. Contact us at patrons@royalalberthall.com
Help change lives through music As a charity, we support emerging artists to launch their careers and create opportunities for children and young people through our award‑winning work with schools and community groups. Your support helps us to change lives through music.
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Patrons President's Circle Lorne and Nina Balfe Ryan and Erin Blute Lord Brownlow CVO DL* Craig and Raquel Dawson John and Sally Hayes Rena and Sandro Lavery* Oleg and Galina Smirnov Artists’ Circle Will and Tiffany Chawner Rani and Reme Raad
Ray and Shirley Seymour Sam and Annabel Waley-Cohen Paul Yabsley and Ruth Tyler *denotes Founding Patrons
Donate now Text 70490 with:
20ALBERT to donate £20 10ALBERT to donate £10 5ALBERT to donate £5 Consider leaving us a gift in your will to help the Hall inspire new generations for years to come. Visit our website to find out more or to donate online at royalalberthall.com/support
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© Andy Paradise
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