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WEST AUSTRALIAN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Morning Symphony Series Thursday 14 March 2013, 11am Perth Concert Hall Chevron Australia Masters Series Friday 15 & Saturday 16 March 2013, 7.30pm Perth Concert Hall GALA SEASON OPENING Inspiring minds with music In the hands of a child, a musical instrument can inspire delight, imagination and a world of possibility. That is why Chevron Australia is proud to support WASO On the Road, bringing music to children across Perth and the Pilbara. CHEVRON, the CHEVRON Hallmark and HUMAN ENERGY are registered trademarks of Chevron Intellectual Property LLC. ©2011 Chevron U.S.A. Inc. All rights reserved. ABU111200291. chevronaustralia.com Upcoming concerts HEADING HERE International Recital Series Orla Boylan in Recital Monday 18 March, 7.30pm Government House Ballroom Photo: Feargal Phillips SIBELIUS Selected songs WAGNER Wesendonck Lieder STRAUSS, R. Selected songs BARBER Selected songs TCHAIKOVSKY Eugene Onegin, Act I: Letter Scene Orla Boylan, soprano (pictured) Paul Daniel, piano Tickets $50* Stott + Hoare Presents Piers Lane Plays Rachmaninov Friday 22 & Saturday 23 March, 7.30pm Perth Concert Hall Photo: Eric Richmond WAGNER Tannhaüser: Overture & Venusberg Music RACHMANINOV Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini DVORAK Symphony No.7 Paul Daniel, conductor Piers Lane, piano (pictured) Tickets from $30* Kids’ Concerts Friday 5 & Saturday 6 April, 9.45am & 11.15am South Perth Civic Centre Crash, bang, tweet, hum, listen, dance, sing! Prance around and try out instruments in a lively performance with WASO’s 15 piece Education Chamber Orchestra (EChO). Suitable for up to 8 year olds. Tickets $12* *Transaction fees may apply. Book Now Call 9326 0000 or visit waso.com.au 9326 0000 | waso.com.au 3 PROGRAM Morning Symphony Series Tchaikovsky’s PathEtique JOHN ADAMS Slonimsky’s Earbox (14 mins) TCHAIKOVSKY Symphony No.6 Pathétique (45 mins) Adagio – Allegro non troppo Allegro con gracia Allegro molto vivace Finale: (Adagio lamentoso – Andante) Paul Daniel, conductor Chevron Australia Masters Series Tchaikovsky’s PathEtique Gala Season Opening JOHN ADAMS Slonimsky’s Earbox (14 mins) STRAUSS, R. Four Last Songs (25 mins) Frühling (Spring) September Beim Schlafengehen (On Going to Sleep) Im Abendrot (In Sunset’s Glow) Interval (20 mins) TCHAIKOVSKY Symphony No.6 Pathétique (45 mins) Adagio – Allegro non troppo Allegro con gracia Allegro molto vivace Finale: (Adagio lamentoso – Andante) Paul Daniel, conductor Orla Boylan, soprano Paul Daniel appears courtesy of Wesfarmers Arts. Series Partner 4 waso.com.au | 9326 0000 WELCOME Tonight, we can hear the last great masterpieces of Tchaikovsky and Richard Strauss side by side. Strauss knew he was saying goodbye to a long life lived comfortably and confidently, but crushed by the cultural and social destruction of the Second World War. His last four great orchestral songs are a gentle and heartrending farewell to a lost world, music that he knew he would not live to hear. Tchaikovsky was not bidding farewell to life, no matter how many myths have surrounded his sudden death only nine days after the premiere of his Sixth Symphony. He had learned to live with the crushing pessimism of his troubled, discordant life: the horrors of his fake marriage, to hide his forbidden sexuality were many years behind him, and he was now hugely popular and accepted at court. But of course, Tchaikovsky’s final masterpiece doesn’t turn to blazing optimism as symphonies were supposed to: where Strauss turns desperate pessimism into the sunshine of eternity, Tchaikovsky begins and ends in the bleakest darkness. Where Strauss resigns himself to a calm acceptance of death, Tchaikovsky writes his whole discordant life into his turbulent score. It begins and ends in darkness, but the elegance of the quirky waltz and the madcap celebrations of the Scherzo are no empty interludes. To make a rousing start to a rousing 2013 season, we begin with a total contrast to the farewells of Tchaikovsky and Strauss: John Adams’ virtuoso fireworks are inspired by the eccentric and brilliant Nicolas Slonimsky, who was born only a year after the premiere of the Pathétique, in the same city, and died happily on another continent 101 years later. Paul Daniel Principal Conductor & Artistic Adviser Your Orchestra is back! We have looked forward to this new season for a long time: planning concerts starts many years in advance. Now, the 2013 concerts are ready, and we can add the final and most important ingredient: you, our loyal audience. We hope you recognise yourselves in the programmes of this exciting new season: every one is a mixture of the music we all love, played in the hall that brings so much warmth to the music we all share. Thank you for joining us in 2013: we look forward to an exciting season together! Paul Daniel Principal Conductor & Artistic Adviser 9326 0000 | waso.com.au 5 Pick up a 2013 concert diary from the WASO desk to ensure you don’t miss out on future concerts. MAKING THE MOST OF YOUR TIME WITH US Free Pre-concert Talks Find out more about the music in this concert with this week’s speaker, James Ledger. Pre-concert talks take place at 9.40am in the auditorium on Thursday morning and 6.45pm in the Terrace Level foyer on Friday and Saturday nights. Meet the Artist Meet the artist Orla Boylan post-concert Friday night on the Terrace Level of the Perth Concert Hall. Food & Beverages First Aid At Morning Symphony concerts enjoy a free tea or coffee prior to the start of the concert, and then stay afterwards for a $17.30 Chef’s Country Luncheon Buffet (bookings essential through WASO). Plus collect your complimentary copy of The West Australian newspaper. There is St. John Ambulance officers present at every concert so please speak to them if you require any first aid assistance. At Masters Series concerts foyer bars are open for drinks and coffee two hours before, during interval and afterwards. To save time we recommend you pre-order your interval drinks. WASO Recordings Continue to experience WASO in your own home! A variety of WASO CDs and DVDs are available for purchase at the Encore Gift Shop in the foyer tonight. CONNECT WITH WASO Tune in to 720 ABC Perth for breakfast on Friday mornings when Prue Ashurst joins Eoin Cameron to provide the latest on classical music and WASO’s upcoming concerts. WASO Webcasts E-News WASO will be streaming this concert live on Saturday 16 March, thanks to iiNet. For more details and to watch webcasts on demand visit waso.com.au Stay up to date with the activities of your Orchestra by subscribing to SymphonEnews. Go to waso.com.au to join our mailing list. Feedback This performance is being recorded for broadcast at 1pm, Saturday 16 March on ABC Classic FM. For further details please refer to limelight magazine or abc.net.au/classic youtube.com/ WestAustSymOrchestra CONCERT Playlists twitter.com/_WASO_ Listen to music featured in concerts throughout 2013 at waso.com.au 6 waso.com.au | 9326 0000 facebook.com/WestAustralian SymphonyOrchestra We would love to hear from you! Please send your feedback to PO BOX 3041, East Perth WA 6892, send an email to [email protected], call 9326 0000, or leave us a message on Facebook or Twitter. WASO NEWS HEADING HERE ASSISTANT CONDUCTOR APPOINTED A new initiative launched by the Orchestra this year to support emerging West Australian conductors, has resulted in the appointment of our first Assistant Conductor, Christopher Dragon. Christopher will gain invaluable experience by working with WASO’s musicians and staff, Principal Conductor Paul Daniel and other guest artists throughout 2013. This new program is supported by the Simon Lee Foundation and Symphony Services International. FAREWELL TIM WHITE This week we bid farewell to percussionist Tim White who is leaving the Orchestra after almost three decades as WASO’s ‘Crasher-andBanger’. Tim joined WASO in 1985 and says he feels “very lucky to have been part of the wonderful WASO family over this time.” Tim will take up a teaching position at the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts, and he’ll continue exploring the world of percussion with WAAPA’s Defying Gravity percussion ensemble. We wish Tim well in all his future adventures and we thank him for his outstanding commitment and service to WASO. WASO AND WA JOIN FORCES YO Christopher Dragon Photo: Nik Babic On the closing nig ht of the 2013 Pe rth International Ar ts Festival, 37 m usicians from the West Au stralian Youth Or chestra joined WASO on stage at the Perth Concert Hall to perform a stage setting of Bartok’s opera Duke Blue beard’s Castle, an d ballet suite The Woode n Prince. The co llaboration provided a wond erful opportunit y for WASO and WAYO musici ans to combine forces to perform two of Bartok’s magnif icent pieces. 9326 0000 | waso.com.au 7 biographies Paul Daniel Conductor Paul Daniel became Principal Conductor and Artistic Adviser of WASO in 2009. In 2013 he takes up the positions of Music Director of the Orchestre National Bordeaux Aquitaine and Principal Conductor and Artistic Director of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra of Galicia. He has appeared as a guest conductor with major orchestras and opera companies throughout the world as well as holding several permanent positions. From 1997 to 2005 he was Music Director of English National Opera; from 1990 to 1997 he was Music Director of Opera North and Principal Conductor of the English Northern Philharmonia; and from 1987 to 1990 he was Music Director of Opera Factory. Operatic guest engagements have included the Royal Opera House Covent Garden, La Monnaie in Brussels, the Bayerische Staatsoper, Munich and the Metropolitan Opera in New York. Paul Daniel’s orchestral engagements have included performances with the Philharmonia, London Philharmonic, the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment (with whom he recorded Elijah for Decca), City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Academy of Ancient Music, Orchestre de Paris, Gürzenich-Orchester Köln, Leipzig Gewandhaus, Netherlands Radio Philharmonic, Tampere Philharmonic, Cleveland Orchestra, Milwaukee Symphony, New York Philharmonic, and the Los Angeles Philharmonic. Paul Daniel appears courtesy of Wesfarmers Arts. 8 waso.com.au | 9326 0000 Recent and future operatic plans include Lucrezia Borgia and The Marriage of Figaro for English National Opera, Gloriana for Covent Garden, a new commission by Judith Weir for the Bregenz Festival and Covent Garden, Lulu for La Monnaie in Brussels, a double bill of L’Enfant et les Sortilleges and Der Zwerg for Opéra National de Paris, Les Troyens for the Deutsche Oper Berlin, A Village Romeo and Juliet for Oper Frankfurt, The Turn of the Screw for Zurich Opera and a concert performance of Pelléas et Melisande at the Bolshoi. Orchestral engagements, apart from his concerts with WASO, Orchestre National Bordeaux Acquitaine and Real Filharmonia de Galicia, include concerts with the BBC Philharmonic, Royal Philharmonic, Mozarteumorchester Salzburg, Hamburg Symphony, Munich Rundfunkorchester, Tapiola Sinfonietta, Australian National Academy of Music, National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain and at the Bregenz Festival. His many recordings include the hugely successful CD of Elgar’s Third Symphony on Naxos. In February 1998 Paul Daniel received an Olivier Award for outstanding achievement in opera, and was awarded the CBE in the 2000 New Year’s Honours list. Photo: Feargal Phillips 9326 0000 | waso.com.au 9 biographIES Orla Boylan Soprano Heralding a move to the dramatic repertoire of Wagner and Strauss, Orla Boylan made her role debut last season as Senta in The Flying Dutchman for English National Opera and as Chrysothemis in Elektra for West Australian Opera. She has also appeared as Sieglinde (Die Walküre) with English National Opera and Opéra national du Rhin; as the Overseer in Elektra at the Salzburg Festival; and as Elisabeth (Tannhäuser) for Teatro Comunale di Bologna. A series of title roles in Arabella, Ariadne auf Naxos and most notably the British stage premiere of Die Liebe der Danae for Garsington Opera under Elgar Howarth established Orla Boylan as a respected interpreter of Strauss’ repertoire. Earlier in her career, following her breakthrough performance as Tatyana in Nikolaus Lehnhoff’s production of Eugene Onegin in Baden-Baden and Paris, she made her name with the heroines of the Slavonic repertoire. Her acclaimed interpretations of Janáček’s Jenůfa and Káťa Kabanová have taken her to Deutsche Oper Berlin, Hamburg State Opera, Cologne Opera, Lyon Opera and Glyndebourne Festival Opera. The recent additions to her repertoire of Tchaikovsky’s Iolanta for Opera Holland Park and Lisa (Pique Dame) for Komische Oper Berlin and Opera North have met with equal success. Photo: Feargal Phillips 10 waso.com.au | 9326 0000 Concert appearances include Britten’s War Requiem at the Perth International Arts Festival, Mahler’s Symphony No.8 with the Gürzenich Orchestra Cologne, scenes from Wozzeck with the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic, and Four Last Songs which she has performed with the Hallé, Giuseppe Verdi Symphony Orchestra of Milan, and the St Gallen Symphony Orchestra. Upcoming engagements include War Requiem with the Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra, and roles as Gutrune (Götterdämmerung) for Opera North and Senta for NBR New Zealand Opera. In 2007 Orla Boylan won a Helpmann Award for her performance of Procne at the Perth International Arts Festival in the world premiere of Richard Mills’ The Love of the Nightingale. INTERNATIONAL RECITAL SERIES HEADING HERE THIS MONDAY! Monday 18 March, 7.30pm Government House Ballroom Orla Boylan, soprano Paul Daniel, piano Tickets $50* Reserved Seating “I’m honoured to play for Orla Boylan once again – a great international soprano singing her favourite songs. A rare and unmissable treat!” PAUL DANIEL, WASO PRINCIPAL CONDUCTOR Book Now Call 9326 0000 Visit waso.com.au 9326 0000 | waso.com.au Paul Daniel appears courtesy of Wesfarmers Arts. *Transaction fees may apply. 11 West Australian Symphony Orchestra Principal Conductor Paul Daniel Partnered by Wesfarmers Arts Conductor Laureate Vladimir Verbitsky Chorus Director Marilyn Phillips Concertmaster Giulio Plotino Meet the Musician Fotis SkorDas, Cello How long have you been performing with WASO and what have been your highlights? I have been with the Orchestra for nearly 25 years and started when both the symphony and the arts orchestra where amalgamated. Due to the influx of new blood the average age of the orchestra was unusually young. In around 1997-98 Lynn Harrell came to perform Elgar’s Cello Concerto. I was excited to be able to play one of the best known works of the repertoire with one of the most highly regarded cellists of our time. The concert went beyond my expectations and I still regard it as the pinnacle of my career. Your family originate from Greece – were you born there or have you always lived in Australia? Both my parents were immigrants from Greece and they met in Adelaide where I was born. My mother’s side of the family were very musical: she played the Spanish guitar and all her siblings played instruments. 12 waso.com.au | 9326 0000 How did you find yourself playing the cello? At school I was asked to pick an instrument I would like to play, and after demonstrations of the violin, viola and cello were given I chose the cello because it was the biggest! (I was nine years old, big is beautiful at that age). In hindsight I made the right choice. Today the Orchestra are performing a WASO premiere, John Adams’ Slonimsky’s Earbox. Do you enjoy performing new works? In my view new works are enjoyed more if you have a good technical grasp of them, that’s why my practise regime is more intensive whenever I’m dealing with new or contemporary music. This includes listening to recordings, if any, and studying the score to highlight difficult passages. I start to physically practise the piece at least a month or more before the performance date. With some music it takes days of repetition to make sure that I am comfortable and proficient with the music before the downbeat of the first rehearsal. On Stage Today VIOLIN Giulio Plotino Concertmaster Margaret Blades Assoc Concertmaster Semra Lee-Smith Assistant Concertmaster Graham Pyatt A/Principal 1st Violin Zak Rowntree A/Principal 2nd Violin Kylie Liang A/Assoc Principal 2nd Violin Sarah Blackman Fleur Challen Stephanie Dean Sara Duhig^ Adeline Fong^ Beth Hebert Akiko Miyazawa Anna O’Hagan Kathleen O’Hagan^ Ken Peeler Brendon Richards Louise Sandercock Jolanta Schenk Jane Serrangeli Ellie Shalley Jacek Slawomirski Bao Di Tang Cerys Tooby Teresa Vinci^ Andrea White^ Susanah Williams^ David Yeh VIOLA Giovanni Pasini Berian Evans Kierstan Arkleysmith Nik Babic Sally Boud^ Alex Brogan Ben Caddy^ Katherine Drake Alison Hall Rachael Kirk Allan McLean CELLO Rod McGrath Louise McKay Melinda Gourlay^ Oliver McAslan Guenevere Measham^ Anna Sarchich^ Fotis Skordas Jon Tooby^ Xiao Le Wu DOUBLE BASS Andrew Rootes Joan Wright Elizabeth Browning^ Christine Reitzenstein Louise Ross Andrew Tait Mark Tooby FLUTE Andrew Nicholson Chair partnered by Apache Mary-Anne Blades Diane Riddell^ Michael Waye Principal Piccolo OBOE Leanne Glover HORN David Evans Robert Gladstones Principal 3rd Jessica Armstrong^ Francesco Lo Surdo Wendy Tait ^ TRUMPET Brent Grapes^ A/Principal Evan Cromie Breanna Evangelista^ Daniel Henderson^ TROMBONE Joshua Davis Liam O’Malley Philip Holdsworth Principal Bass Trombone TUBA Cameron Brook TIMPANI Alex Timcke PERCUSSION Troy Greatz A/Principal A/Pricipal Principal Cor Anglais Robyn Gray^ Tim White A/Assoc Principal HARP Ben Opie Stephanie Nicholls Sarah Bowman CLARINET KEYBOARDS Allan Meyer Catherine Cahill^ Lorna Cook Alexander Millier Graeme Gilling^ Adam Pinto^ Principal Bass Clarinet Chair partnered by Alessandrino Property Group BASSOON Jane Kircher-Lindner Adam Mikulicz Linda Charteris^ Principal Associate Principal Guest Musician^ 9326 0000 | waso.com.au 13 TIMELINE OF COMPOSERS AND WORKS 14 waso.com.au | 9326 0000 program notes John Adams (b. 1947) Slonimsky’s Earbox Adams’ music has always maintained a loving relationship with that of the past, in which respect he resembles Stravinsky, to whom, in part, he pays homage in Slonimsky’s Earbox. In early Stravinsky, as in certain other Russian composers, melody and harmony are derived from modes – scales that are neither major nor minor, but have a unique character arising from the pattern of intervals between the notes, which in turn inflects the music. Folk music grows out of such scales, but modes can also by created ‘synthetically’, as was the octatonic scale, which 19th-century Russian composers used freely. Russian-born Nicolas Slonimsky was a major figure in 20th-century American music as composer, generous advocate of colleagues’ work, and author and editor of scholarly and popular books and articles about music. Among his writings is The Thesaurus of Scales and Melodic Patterns (1947), which Adams admires as ‘an exhaustive compendium’. Slonimsky’s Earbox, composed in 1996, celebrates Slonimsky’s ‘wit and hyperenergetic personality’ (‘earbox’ is the sort of word he might have invented) and also his thesaurus, a major influence on Adams’ melodic invention. In addition to the early Stravinsky’s use of both traditional and ‘synthetic’ modes, Adams also loves and emulates ‘the exploding first few moments’ and ‘brilliant eruption of colours, shapes and sounds’ in The Song of Nightingale, a symphonic poem that Stravinsky composed in 1916-17 out of material from an earlier ‘lyric tale’. Stravinsky inspires Adams to brilliant orchestral colour, angular and energetic motifs and moments of poised, humming stillness. Gordon Kerry © 2013 If you like this work you may also enjoy ucts Simone Young Cond Fri 2 & Sat 3 Aug, 7.30pm Perth Concert Hall ny No.10 SHOSTAKOVICH Sympho Strauss & Ravel Fri 18 & Sat 19 Oct, 7.30pm Perth Concert Hall in STRAVINSKY Symphony s ent vem Mo Three Glossary Symphonic Poem Music which is inspired by and suggests a non-musical idea, such as a story or a particular scene. Frequently such a work has a descriptive title. Motif A short, distinctive melodic or rhythmic figure, often part of or derived from a theme. Photo: Lambert Orkis 9326 0000 | waso.com.au 15 PROGRAM NOTES Richard Strauss (1864-1949) Four Last Songs (Vier letzte Lieder) Frühling (Spring) September Beim Schlafengehen (On Going to Sleep) Im Abendrot (In Sunset’s Glow) In his biography of Richard Strauss, Michael Kennedy remarks that the Four Last Songs ‘are the music of old age and wisdom and serenity, of death and transfiguration’. Like Mozart, whom he adored, Strauss maintained a life-long love of the soprano voice, particularly that of Pauline, the wife to whom he was devoted for more than 50 years. In opera and song, and even here in these valedictory works, he wrote music of erotic intensity for it, and in that regard they may be seen as a final flowering of German Romanticism. Just as 19th-century figures like Novalis and Wagner conflated eroticism and extinction, here the texts of Hesse and Eichendorff identify the end of life and love with the peaceful embrace of night, dreams and death. Kennedy reminds us, however, that the works were not conceived as Strauss’ farewell, and that no-one knows if the composer intended them as a song-cycle in the strict sense of the term. 16 waso.com.au | 9326 0000 They were published posthumously as his Four Last Songs, and seized upon by the great Norwegian soprano Kirsten Flagstad (pictured page 18) who disingenuously let it be known that she was Strauss’ ideal interpreter. Flagstad gave the first performance with Wilhelm Furtwängler at London’s Royal Albert Hall in 1950, after which they taken up by Sena Jurinac with Fritz Busch, and Lisa della Casa with Karl Böhm. In these performances the order of the first three songs was reversed from that which Strauss’ publisher Ernst Roth had arbitrarily devised, and which we hear most commonly today. Frühling (Spring) Words by Hermann Hesse In placing this song at the beginning of the set, Roth sets up a satisfying arc for the cycle as a whole. Here Hesse’s poem deals with anticipation – specifically that of the poet at the approach of spring – using many of the well-worn tropes of Romantic poetry such as the imagery of trees, blue skies and birdsong. There is also an echo of eroticism in the blissful trembling of the final lines. Im dämmrigen Grüften Träumte ich lang Von deinen Bäumen und blauen Lüften, Von deinem Duft und Vogelgesang. In darkling caverns long have I dreamed of your trees and blue skies, your fragrance and bird-songs. Nun liegst du erschlossen In Gleiss und Zier Von Licht übergossen Wie ein Wunder vor mir. Now you lie before me in shining splendour glowing with light – a miracle. Du kennst mich wieder, Du lockest mich zart, es zittert durch all meine Glieder Deine selige Gegenwart. You greet me again, tempting me gently. My whole being trembles with the bliss of your presence. September Words by Hermann Hesse In September spring is of course long past and the anticipation felt by the poet is transformed into a yearning for rest. Both the poem’s imagery and the musical setting, however, represent this as something to be savoured – the falling of golden leaves causes the summer to smile even as it dies, and the music is full of finely detailed activity. In the final moments of the song, Strauss may be remembering his father, as Franz Strauss’ instrument, the horn, has the last word. Der Garten trauert, Kühl sinkt in die Blumen der Regen. Der Sommer schauert Still seinem Ende entgegen. The garden mourns. Cool rain sinks on the flowers; the summer shudders as he quietly nears his end. Golden tropft Blatt um Blatt Nieder vom hohen Akazienbaum. Sommer lächelt erstaunt und matt In den sterbenden Gartentraum. One by one, the golden leaves fall slowly from the tall acacia tree. Wondering and weary, the summer smiles on the dying garden-dream. Lange noch bei den Rosen Bleibt er stehen, sehnt sich nach Ruh. Langsam tut er die Müdegewordenen Augen zu. Yearning for rest he lingers long by the roses before he slowly closes his wide, tired eyes. 9326 0000 | waso.com.au 17 PROGRAM NOTES Beim Schlafengehen (On Going to Sleep) Words by Hermann Hesse Yearning for rest is also the theme of Beim Schlafengehen where Hesse further explores the Romantic wish to be free from the bonds of consciousness. Strauss responds with one of his most celebrated inspirations: the violin solo which ecstatically rises to imitate the soul’s soaring into ‘the magic circle of night’. Nun der Tag mich müd gemacht, Soll mein sehnliches Verlangen Freundlich die gestirnte Nacht Wie ein müdes Kind empfangen. Now the day has made me tired, may the starry night receive all my fervent longing like a weary child. Hände lasst von allem Tun, Stirn vergiss du alles Denken, Alle meine Sinne nun Wollen sich in Schlummer senken. Leave your doing, O my hands, brow, forget your thinking! All my senses yearn for rest and would sink into slumber. Und die Seele unbewacht Will in freien Flügen schweben, Um im Zauberkreis der Nacht Tief und tausendfach zu leben. Freed from all bonds my soul would like to soar so that it may live deeply and a thousandfold in the magic circle of night. If you like this work you may also enjoy ORLA BOYLAN IN RECITAL Mon 18 Mar, 7.3 0pm Government Ho use Ballroom STRAUSS Sele cted songs Beethoven’s Pastoral Sy mphony Fri 11 & Sat 12 Oct, 7.30pm Perth Concert Hall BERLIOZ Les nu its d’été 18 waso.com.au | 9326 0000 Im Abendrot (In Sunset’s Glow) Words by Joseph von Eichendorff Strauss set this poem by the great 19th-century poet Eichendorff before the Hesse settings, but it forms a fitting end to the set, and to Strauss’ career. Here the implicit is made plain: that these songs are all in some way about his love for Pauline. The scene is sunset, where an old couple stop to rest after a long and eventful life together amid the splendours of nature. The trilling larks remind us of the promise of spring in the birdsong of Frühling, and as the poet asks whether ‘this’ (and Strauss altered the text from ‘that’) might be death, we hear a reminiscence of the ‘idealism’ theme from Death and Transfiguration. As Norman Del Mar puts it, ‘Only the memory of Pauline’s voice could be his companion on these farewell excursions through the music to which his life had been dedicated.’ Wir sind durch Not und Freude Gegangen Hand in Hand, Vom Wandern ruhn wir Nun überm stillen Land. Through grief and joy together we have walked, hand in hand. Now let us rest from the journey high above the quiet land. Rings sich die Täler neigen, Es dunkelt schon die Luft, Zwei Lerchen nur noch steigen Nachträumend in den Duft. Around us the valleys are slumbering and darkness veils the sky. Only two larks are still soaring and dreaming as they fly. Tritt her und lass sie schwirren, Bald ist es Schlafenszeit, Dass wir uns nicht verirren In dieser Einsamkeit. Come close and let them flutter, soon it is time to sleep lest we should go astray in this dark solitude. O weiter, stiller Friede! So tief im Abendrot. Wie sind wir wandermüde – Ist dies etwa der Tod? O peace, so wide and silent, deep in the sunset glow! How weary we are with wandering – can this, perchance, be death? Gordon Kerry © 2001 © COPYRIGHT 1950 BY BOOSEY & CO. LTD. This text is reproduced by permission of Hal Leonard Australia exclusive agent for Boosey and Hawkes Music Publishers Ltd of London. The text by Hermann Hesse for Frühling, September and Beim Schlafengehen from Four Last Songs (Vier letzte Lieder) by Richard Strauss is reproduced by permission of Hal Leonard Australia exclusive agent for Boosey & Hawkes Music Publishers Ltd. of London. Translations by Hedwig Roediger, ABC/Symphony Australia © 1986 WASO last performed this work on 4 and 5 September 2009 with soloist Christine Brewer and conductor Asher Fisch. 9326 0000 | waso.com.au 19 PROGRAM NOTES Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893) Symphony No.6 in B minor, Op.74, Pathétique Adagio – Allegro non troppo Allegro con grazia Allegro molto vivace Finale (Adagio lamentoso – Andante) The original audience for the Sixth Symphony was uncomprehending and ambivalent. Tchaikovsky had expected this, writing to his nephew and the dedicatee, ‘Bob’ Davidov, that he wouldn’t be surprised if the symphony were ‘torn to pieces’, even though he considered it his best and most sincere work. The critic Hermann Laroche suggested that audiences who ‘did not get to the core’ of the symphony would ‘in the end, come to love it’. As it turned out, it took them only 12 days. In the intervening period its composer had died, and for the second performance, in a memorial concert, it was promoted with Tchaikovsky’s subtitle: Pathétique (or Pateticheskaia Simfoniia – ‘impassioned symphony’ – as he had conceived it in Russian). The symphony was declared a masterpiece. The myth of the-Pathétique-as-suicidenote (not to mention Tchaikovsky’s ‘suicide’ itself) has been more or less debunked in the past two decades. There are no grounds for doubting that Tchaikovsky died from post-choleric complications; the ‘court of honour’ theory has been undermined; and his social, financial and artistic situation all speak against any other motivation for suicide, even if he continued to be troubled by his homosexuality. The Sixth Symphony, specifically, seems to have been a source of immense pride, satisfaction and joy to him. 20 waso.com.au | 9326 0000 And shortly after its premiere he’s reported to have said ‘I feel I shall live a long time.’ He was wrong. His audience, now in mourning and seeking ‘portents’, immediately heard the Sixth Symphony in a new way. New significance was given to the appearance in the first movement of an Orthodox burial chant, ‘Repose the Soul’ – a hymn sung only when someone has died – and to the otherworldly, dying character of the adagio finale. Even if the symphony is not a suicide note, there is a programmatic and semi-autobiographical underpinning to the symphony that is the source of its unusual form and turbulent emotions. Tchaikovsky admitted the existence of a program but was cagey about the details, perhaps because it reflected his romantic feelings for Davidov. The closest we have is a sketched scenario, devised originally for an abandoned symphony in E flat but appearing to correspond with much of the Sixth Symphony: Following is essence of plan for a symphony Life! First movement – all impulse, confidence, thirst for activity. Must be short (Finale death – result of collapse). Second movement love; third disappointment; fourth ends with a dying away (also short). There are aspects of this program and the Sixth Symphony that suggest suffering, but for Tchaikovsky the composition of the symphony was a cathartic experience rather than an expression of current sufferings. He himself wrote: ‘Anyone who believes that the creative person is capable of expressing what he feels out of a momentary effect aided by the means of art is mistaken. Melancholy as well as joyous feelings can always be expressive only out of the Retrospective.’ In its art this is Tchaikovsky’s most innovative symphony. He dares to conclude with a brooding slow movement and uses boldly dramatic gestures to give the music its emotional impulse. The ‘limping’ elegance of the second-movement waltz would have been less surprising, to Russians at least – its five-beat metre was a part of a tradition that was embraced by Borodin, Rimsky-Korsakov and Mussorgsky (in his Pictures at an Exhibition), and later Rachmaninoff (in The Isle of the Dead). In the Sixth Symphony Tchaikovsky comes to terms with his professed inadequacies in structural matters. His solution in the first movement was to extend the exposition section, so well suited to his melodic gifts, and to compress the development section in which he felt his skills inadequate. The music begins in the depths with the dark colour of the bassoon and yet somehow Tchaikovsky sustains a downward trajectory, or the impression of one, for the whole work. In the third movement the idea of ‘disappointment’ is replaced by something more malevolent. In purely musical terms it conflates two musical figures – feverish tarantella triplets and a spiky march – but the juxtapositions and incursions into each other’s thematic territory create a disturbing sense of antagonism. The movement’s applause-provoking conclusion could be triumphant, or it could be the crash of self-delusion. The finale may not fit the formula established by Tchaikovsky’s classical predecessors, but within the emotional journey of the symphony its stark sense of tragedy provides an inevitable conclusion – all the more powerful for the grace and jauntiness of the preceding movements. Yvonne Frindle © 2008 WASO last performed this work on 31 July and 1 August 2009, conducted by Simone Young. If you like this work you may also enjoy Verbitsky’s Europe Fri 10 & Sat 11 May, 7.30pm Perth Concert Hall e RESPIGHI Pines of Rom ts Asher Fisch Conduc 0pm 7.3 t, Sep Fri 6 & Sat 7 Perth Concert Hall .3 BRAHMS Symphony No Glossary Adagio Slowly Metre The way in which we experience musical time as organised in a hierarchy of bars, beats and subdivisions of the beat (usually indicated in musical notation as a ‘time signature’). March time for example is commonly indicated as 4/4: four beats to the bar, or quadruple metre; waltz time is 3/4: three beats to the bar, or triple metre. Both these metres are ‘simple’, in that the individual beats subdivide into twos. In ‘compound’ metres the beat subdivides into threes, giving a characteristic lilting or skipping effect. 9326 0000 | waso.com.au 21 Meet the Instrument THE Oboe The oboe is a double reed member of the woodwind family. Developed in the mid17th century from early instrument the shawm, the Baroque oboe was embraced by composers such as Vivaldi, Telemann and Handel, inspiring them to create concertos for the new and improved instrument. Favourite orchestral oboe works include Prokofiev’s Peter and the Wolf, Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake, and Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition: Ballet of the Unhatched Chicks. © Symphony Services International The oboe as we know it today developed in 19th-century Europe, and the cities of Paris and Vienna in particular gained a reputation for their oboe-making tradition. The body of the present-day oboe is predominantly made out of African Blackwood and the keys usually of silver alloy. The oboe has a double reed constructed of two pieces of cane tied together. Sound is created as the air vibrates between the two reeds into the instrument’s body. The size and shape of the reed in relation to the player’s technique and style of playing have a dramatic effect on the quality of the eventual sound, so as a result oboists customise or make their own reeds. The coned bore of the oboe, in comparison to the cylindrical bore of other woodwind instruments such as the flute, aids its audible dominance over other instruments. This is why it is used to tune the orchestra, as its penetrating timbre enables it to be heard clearly by other members of the orchestra. The range of the oboe: 22 waso.com.au | 9326 0000 1.Reed 2.Staple 3.Key 4.Bell Buy a 3 concert chamber series package for $108* or purchase single tickets for $40* each. HEADING HERE 2013 CHAMBER SERIES EXPERIENCE WASO MUSICIANS PLAYING EXQUISITE CHAMBER MUSIC IN ONE HOUR AFTERNOON PERFORMANCES WITH RESERVED SEATING. TCHAIKOVSKY & BRAHMS Friday 12 April, 2pm Sunday 14 April, 2pm Government House Ballroom Fremantle Town Hall SCHUBERT’S OCTET Friday 30 August, 2pm Sunday 1 September, 2pm Government House Ballroom Fremantle Town Hall MOZART’S SERENADE Book Now Call Friday 22 November, 2pm Sunday 24 November, 2pm Government House Ballroom Fremantle Town Hall 9326 0000 Visit waso.com.au Reserved Seating. *Transaction fees may apply. 9326 0000 | waso.com.au 23 Private Giving Program Welcome to 2013 From the Private Giving Team Thank you for joining us. We are delighted to welcome you. So much planning goes into each season, sometimes years in advance, and it is always a pleasure to finally be able to present it to you, our audience. We hope you enjoy the performance. Music is part of all of our lives. Life without music is, almost, unimaginable. WASO seeks to touch souls and enrich lives through music… for as many West Australians as possible. To be relevant, to build our audiences and to reach people who don’t have the opportunity to visit the Perth Concert Hall, WASO has a busy and growing Community and Education program that presents music to many thousands of people, in many different and sometimes surprising ways, outside the hall. We are also committed to the creation of new music. Last year we created a campaign to bring together a community of people to commission a new piece of work. With the support of our Chairman Janet Holmes à Court AC, who matched The Private Giving Team: Sarah Gallinagh, Alecia Benzie and Jane Clare. the $15,000 raised by the community, our Making Music Together campaign successfully raised $30,000. We look forward to announcing the composer soon. Our concerts in the Perth Concert Hall, our music programs outside the hall and our commitment to new music cannot happen without the ongoing support of our community of Patrons. Philanthropy at WASO helps us to build a strong, vibrant Orchestra for this state and to bring joy to many thousands of people. We invite you to join us as a Patron in 2013. Private Giving Partner Can’t attend a concert? Donate your ticket Demand for great seats at WASO performances is high. If you cannot attend a concert, please consider donating your ticket for resale. We will send you a tax deductible receipt and you will be giving the opportunity for another music lover to see the performance. To donate your tickets, please contact the WASO Box Office at 9326 0000. Tickets must be received by the WASO Box Office at least two business days prior to the performance. Please post your tickets to WASO, PO Box 3041 East Perth WA 6892. Note: Only applies to tickets sold by WASO. Transaction fees are not eligible for inclusion in the donation. 24 waso.com.au | 9326 0000 OUR SUPPORTERS Your attendance helps sustain the Orchestra and we thank you for your commitment. We are also very grateful to our corporate supporters who make a significant contribution to WASO, and of course for government funding which is critical. However, these three sources of income are simply not enough to cover the ongoing costs of the Orchestra and increasingly it is our Patrons that enable us to continue to achieve our vision ...to touch souls and enrich lives through music. There are many ways you can be involved and your support is deeply appreciated. Endowment Fund for the Orchestra The Endowment fund includes major donations from individuals and bequests. The income earned is used for the benefit of the Orchestra. Tom & Jean Arkley Janet Holmes à Court AC Estates WASO is extremely grateful for the bequests received from the Estates of the following benefactors: Mrs Roslyn Warrick Symphony Circle Recognises Patrons who have made a provision in their will to the Orchestra. Anita Clayton Judith Gedero Wolfgang Lehmkuhl Tosi Nottage (in memory Edgar Nottage) Judy Sienkiewicz Sheila Wileman Anonymous (13) The WASO Song Book New works commissioned for the orchestra by WASO. We gratefully acknowledge the support of the following individuals who have commissioned new music performed in 2010 and 2011. Janet Holmes à Court AC Peter Dawson Geoff Stearn Anonymous (1) Making Music Together The Making Music Together campaign raised $30,000 to fund an original composition by an acclaimed composer. Many thanks to Janet Holmes à Court AC, founding patron of the WASO Song Book, who generously matched $15,000 raised by the community. We thank the following Patrons for their donation: Catherine Bagster (in memory of Christine Bagster) Bernard Barnwell Tony & Mary Beeley Glenda Campbell-Evans Deirdre Chell Robyn Glindemann Myles Harmer and Alison Bunker Prof. Louis Landau AO Rosalind Lilley Gregg & Sue Marshman Margaret & Rod Marston Nancy & Brian Murphy Lance Risbey Geoff Stearn Diana Warnock Ann Whyntie Trish Williams Anonymous (1) Reach Out Recognises Patrons who support our community engagement and education programs. Prue Ashurst Andrew & Nicola Forrest Barrie & Jude Lepley McCusker Charitable Foundation Galvin Family Foundation Stradivari Circle Recognises patrons who have made a special contribution or donated substantial amounts over a number of years to the Orchestra. Dr Peter R Dawson The Taylor Family 9326 0000 | waso.com.au 25 OUR SUPPORTERS Annual Giving We thank the following Patrons for their generous contribution to WASO in the last twelve months through WASO’s Annual Giving progam. Principal Conductor’s Circle Gifts $20,000+ Janet Holmes à Court AC Jill Mulheron Brian & Nancy Murphy Patricia New Simon Lee Foundation Impresario Patron Gifts $10,000 - $19,999 Gay & Bob Branchi Tony & Gwenyth Lennon Joshua & Pamela Pitt Maestro Patron Gifts $5,000 - $9,999 Jean Arkley (in memory of Tom Arkley) William Bloking Bridget Faye AM Gilbert George Dr Patricia Kailis Margaret & Rod Marston Robert May & Daniel Lee Shing Kong Spinifex Trust Peter & Jean Stokes Anonymous (4) Virtuoso Patron Gifts $2,500 - $4,999 Prof Fred & Mrs Margaret Affleck William Carr Neil Archibald & Alan R Dodge AM Sally Burton Mark Coughlan & Dr Pei-Yin Hsu Stephen Davis Robyn Glindemann 26 waso.com.au | 9326 0000 Keith & Gaye Kessell Michael & Dale Kitney Bryant Macfie Mrs Morrell Dr W B Muston John & Paula Phillips Elizabeth Sachse & Dr Lance Risbey Ros Thomson Tuite Family Foundation Joyce Westrip OAM Ken & Jan Williams Sue & Ron Wooller Andrew & Marie Yuncken Anonymous (12) Principal Patron Gifts $1000 - $2,499 Gail Archer SC & Patrick O’Neal Margaret Atkins OAM Colin & Eve Beckett Tony & Mary Beeley David & Suzanne Biddles Kevin Blake Matthew J C Blampey Mr John Bonny Mrs Debbie Borshoff Dr & Mrs P Breidahl Jean Brodie-Hall AM Marilyn & Ian Burton Dr G Campbell-Evans Dr S L Cooke Arthur & Nerina Coopes Hon June Craig AM Gay & John Cruickshank Norman & Denia Daffen Frances Davies Rai & Erika Dolinschek Julian Dowse Tim & Lexie Elliott Don & Marie Forrest Dr Andrew Gardner Elaine Gimson Graham & Barbara Goulden Jannette Gray Joe & Deidre Greenfeld Jacqui Grove David and Valerie Gulland Richard B Hammond Warwick Hemsley Michael & Liz Hollingdale Jim & Freda Irenic Lilian & Roger Jennings Bruce & Jane Keay Anthony & Noelle Keller Bill Kean Dr Rob Kirk & Sarah Gallinagh Stephanie & John Kobelke Gloria & Ulrich Kunzmann Irving Lane Ledge Finance Limited Rosalind Lilley Graham & Muriel Mahony Gregg & Sue Marshman Betty and Con Michael AO Hon Justice S R Moncrieff Jane and Jock Morrison Val & Barry Neubecker Dr Phil & Erlene Noble John Overton Michael & Lesley Page Tim Pavy Pamela Platt Andrew & Suzanne Poli Alison & John Price Chester Reeve John & Alison Rigg Nigel & Dr Heather Rogers Maurice & Gerry Rousset Roger Sandercock Eve Shannon-Cullity Julian & Noreen Sher Anne & Frank Sibbel Judy Sienkiewicz Dr Paul Smith & Denham Harry Richard Tarala & Lyn Beazley AO Gene Tilbrook Mary Townsend Dr Robert Turnbull Maggie Venerys Stan & Valerie Vicich Watering Concepts Ian Watson Ann Whyntie Freddi Wilkinson Jean & Ian Williams AO Trish Williams – Strategic Interactions Dr Peter Winterton Anonymous (14) Tutti Patron Gifts $500 - $999 Geoff & Joan Airey Catherine Bagster Merle I Bardwell Bernard & Jackie Barnwell Shirley Barraclough P M Bennet Michael & Nadia BerkeleyHill Robert & Judith Bower Dr Vin & Diane Brennan Kay Brice James & Gay Brown C & K Brownlie Gavin Bunning Ann Butcher & Dean R Kubank Nanette Carnachan Lyn & Harvey Coates AO Agatha & Alex Cohen AO Brian Cresswell Gina & Neil Davidson Lesley & Peter Davies Jop & Hanneke Delfos Lorraine Ellard Mrs G. Ewen Annette Finn George Gavranic Isobel Glencross Yi & Jieqi Gong Prof Des Gurry Pauline & Peter Handford Douglas M & Regina Hansen Michael Harding Prof Alan Harvey & Dr Paulien de Boer Richard Hatch Dr David & Annie Haultain Dr Penny Herbert (in memory of Dunstan Herbert) Helen Hollingshead John Isherwood Cynthia Jee Catherine and Bernth Johansson B. M. Kent Trevor & Ane Marie Lacy Paul Lee Dr Mary Ellen MacDonald and Michael Pauly Mrs Carolyn Milton-Smith (in memory of Emeritus Prof. John Milton-Smith) S.B. Monger-Hay Dr Peter Moss Lynne Naylor (in memory of Paul F Naylor) Marjan Oxley Bev Penny Marilyn Phillips & Prof Alan Bittles Alpha & Richard Pilpel OAM Sheila Pinch Trevor & Fay Pitcher Thomas & Diana Potter Clarissa Repton James & Nicola RidsdillSmith Dr R & J Schwenger Margaret & Roger Seares Judith E Shaw Laurel & Ross Smith Michael Snell & Vicki Stewart Peggy & Tom Stacy Tony & Gail Sutherland Elizabeth Syme Harvey Tijou Mrs Joan Tonkin MBE JP S R Vogt Adrienne & Max Walters Judith Wilton & David Turner Diana Warnock Anne Watson Dr Chris & Mrs Vimala Whitaker Violette William Janet Williams Patricia Wong Yalambi Farm Stud Anonymous (9) If you are interested in becoming a Patron or learning more about our Private Giving Program, please contact Sarah Gallinagh, Annual Giving & Bequest Coordinator on (08) 9326 0075 or email [email protected] Private Giving brochures are also available from the WASO Programs desk located in the main foyer of the Perth Concert Hall or visit waso.com.au All donations are fully tax deductible. 9326 0000 | waso.com.au 27 West Australian Symphony Orchestra THE COMPANY PRINCIPAL CONDUCTOR Paul Daniel CONDUCTOR LAUREATE Vladimir Verbitsky CHORUS DIRECTOR Marilyn Phillips CONCERTMASTER Giulio Plotino VIOLIN Margaret Blades VIOLA Giovanni Pasini FLUTE Andrew Nicholson HORN David Evans Berian Evans Chair partnered by Apache Robert Gladstones Kierstan Arkleysmith Nik Babic Alex Brogan Katherine Drake Alison Hall Rachael Kirk Allan McLean Helen Tuckey Mary-Anne Blades Partnered by Wesfarmers Arts Associate Concertmaster Semra Lee-Smith Assistant Concertmaster Graham Pyatt A/Principal 1st Violin Zak Rowntree A/Principal 2nd Violin Kylie Liang A/Assoc Principal 2nd Violin Sarah Blackman Fleur Challen Stephanie Dean Rebecca Glorie Beth Hebert Shaun Lee-Chen* Akiko Miyazawa Anna O’Hagan Melanie Pearn Ken Peeler Brendon Richards Louise Sandercock Jolanta Schenk Jane Serrangeli Ellie Shalley Jacek Slawomirski Bao Di Tang Cerys Tooby David Yeh Principal Assoc Principal CELLO Rod McGrath Principal Louise McKay Assoc Principal Shigeru Komatsu Oliver McAslan Nicholas Metcalfe Eve Silver* Fotis Skordas Tim South Xiao Le Wu DOUBLE BASS Andrew Rootes* Principal Joan Wright Assoc Principal Christine Reitzenstein Louise Ross Andrew Tait Mark Tooby Principal Assoc Principal PICCOLO Michael Waye Principal OBOE Benjamin Opie A/Assoc Principal Stephanie Nicholls COR ANGLAIS Leanne Glover Principal CLARINET Allan Meyer Principal Lorna Cook BASS CLARINET Alexander Millier Principal Chair partnered by Alessandrino Property Group Principal Principal 3rd Francesco Lo Surdo TRUMPET Brent Grapes A/Principal Evan Cromie Assoc Principal Peter Miller TROMBONE Joshua Davis Principal Liam O’Malley Assoc Principal BASS TROMBONE Philip Holdsworth Principal TUBA Cameron Brook Principal TIMPANI Alex Timcke Principal BASSOON Jane Kircher-Lindner PERCUSSION Troy Greatz Adam Mikulicz Tim White Principal Assoc Principal A/Principal HARP Sarah Bowman Principal *Instruments used by these musicians are on loan from Janet Holmes à Court AC. 28 waso.com.au | 9326 0000 Board of Directors Janet Holmes à Court AC Chairman Bill Bloking Mark Coughlan Jeff Dowling Keith Kessell Barrie Lepley Deputy Chairman Anne Nolan Julian Sher Executive Craig Whitehead Chief Executive Sarah Afentopoulos Orchestral Management Keith McGowan Executive Manager, Orchestral Management John Chaplin Orchestral Operations Manager Katherine Corecig Music Library Assistant David Cotgreave Production & Technical Manager Alistair Cox Orchestra Manager Wee Ming Khoo Music Librarian Human Resources Manager Megan Lo Surdo Executive Administration Officer Noel Rhind Ellen Wisdom Business Services Peter Freemantle Human Resources Advisor Artistic Planning Evan Kennea Executive Manager, Artistic Planning Stephen McAllan Artist Liaison/Chorus Administrator Claire Stokes Program Manager Alan Tyrrell Program Manager Community Engagement Cassandra Lake Community Engagement Manager Orchestral Operations Coordinator Executive Manager, Business Services Daniela Antulov Payroll Administrator Angela Miller Accountant Svetlana Williams Accounts Officer Corporate Development Marina Woodhouse Executive Manager, Corporate Development Private Giving Alecia Benzie Executive Manager, Private Giving Jane Clare Fundraising & Philanthropy Officer Sarah Gallinagh Annual Giving & Bequests Coordinator Marketing Kelli Carnachan Executive Manager, Marketing Kirsty Chisholm Digital Marketing Coordinator Jessica Holmes Graphic Designer Paula Schibeci Public Relations Manager Lisa Westcott Marketing Manager Annie Loo Marketing Assistant Sava Papos Customer Service Manager Josie Aitchison Beverley Trolio Customer Service Coordinators Margaret Daws Vicki Prince Debbie Silvester Robyn Westbrook Customer Service Officers Sharmini Poulsen Corporate Partnerships Manager Susan Brannigan Corporate Development Coordinator Perth Concert Hall Aeg Ogden (Perth) Pty Ltd. Andrew Bolt General Manager Aeg Ogden (Perth) Pty Ltd Rodney M Phillips Perth Concert Hall is managed by AEG Ogden (Perth) Pty Ltd Venue Manager for the Department of Culture & The Arts, authorised as Agent for the Perth Theatre Trust for the Trust venues. Helen Stewart Miranda Lancaster-Allen WASO programs are printed by Pilpel Print www.pilpelprint.com.au who are proud to be ‘Green Stamp Accredited’. This certification acknowledges Pilpel Print’s commitment to minimising environmental impacts associated with producing printed material. All rights reserved, no part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording or any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. Whilst every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of statements in this publication we cannot accept responsibility for errors or omissions, or for matters arising from clerical or printers’ error. Every effort has been made to secure permission for copyright material prior to printing. Please address all correspondence to the Executive Manager, Marketing, West Australian Symphony Orchestra, PO Box 3041, East Perth. WA 6892. Email [email protected] Deputy General Managers Penelope Briffa Event Coordinator Chief Executive The Perth Theatre Trust Dr. Saliba Sassine Chairman 9326 0000 | waso.com.au 29 Friends of WASO Join us for behindthe-scenes events with our musicians. WASO in Rehearsal Each year, many events are held especially for our community of Patrons and Friends, offering unique access to our Orchestra. Would you like to see how an orchestral rehearsal is run? Attend WASO rehearsals and get a ‘behind the scenes’ insight into the Orchestra. You will have the chance to mingle informally with players and guest artists over morning tea at the Perth Concert Hall. WASO in Rehearsal One Piers Lane Plays Rachmaninov 10am, Friday 22 March WASO in Rehearsal Two Mozart’s Last Symphonies 10am, Friday 3 May WASO in Rehearsal Three Simone Young Conducts 10am, Friday 2 August WASO in Rehearsal Four Strauss and Ravel 10am, Friday 18 October POURING PURE GOLD AS AN ENCORE The Perth Mint offers visitors the opportunity to experience a score of unique golden attractions and is proud to support the West Australian Symphony Orchestra. 310 Hay Street, East Perth WA. Open 7 days Telephone 1300 366 520 30 waso.com.au | 9326 0000 www.perthmint.com.au/visit Tickets are $25 for Patrons and Friends, and $30 for guests, including a lovely morning tea with the musicians. To book for these events please call the WASO Box Office on 9326 0000. All income raised from events supports the Friends of WASO Scholarship. To contact Friends of WASO email friendsofwaso@waso. com.au 2013 CORPORATE PARTNERS Platinum Partners Symphony Partners Concerto Partners Overture Partners SONATA Partners Keynote Partners ORCHESTRA Supporters Margaret River Wine Partners Cape Mentelle Vineyards, Clairault Wines, Hamelin Bay Wines, Happs Wines, Howard Park Wines, Hutton Wines, Juniper Estate, Leeuwin Estate, Moss Wood, Pierro Margaret River Vineyards, Stella Bella Wines, UMAMU Estate, Vasse Felix. Media Partners Funding Partners The West Australian Symphony Orchestra is assisted by the Australian Government through the Australia Council, its arts funding and advisory body. 9326 0000 | waso.com.au 31 Buy all 3 concerts for $135* or purchase single tickets for $50* each. Reserved Seating. oy l a n Orl a B m | O N p A , 7.30 SOPR M arc h y 18 Monda iel, piano an Paul D PIANIST Denis Kozhukhin Monday 17 June, 7.30pm C E LL I S M on d a T | Al b an y G A s h e r 9 S e p t e m b e e r h a r dt Fisch, r, 7.30 pm piano Experience the magnificent Government House Ballroom in a new series of world-class soloists in intimate recitals. INTRODUCING OUR NEW 2013 INTERNATIONAL RECITAL SERIES Book Now Call 9326 0000 Visit waso.com.au Paul Daniel appears courtesy of Wesfarmers Arts. *Transaction fees may apply.
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