Warkworth Town Hall
3pm Sunday 9 June 2024
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Symphony No. 2
Ferdinand Ries (1784-1838)
2. Andantino; 3. Menuetto
14 years his junior, Ferdinand Ries was a pupil, protégé and friend of Beethoven. He wrote in a transitional style bridging Classical and early Romantic music. Among a wide range of compositions, he wrote eight symphonies, with his second, written in 1814, exhibiting a growing individual style as his music evolved beyond Beethoven's powerful influence.
Flute Concerto in G
Christoph Willibald Gluck (1714-1787)
1. Allegro non molto; 2. Adagio; 3. Allegro comodo
Soloist: Emily Rendall
Flute Concerto in G by Christoph Gluck is bright and cheerful, with strong melodic writing in the solo part. There are cadenzas in each of the three movements. The origins of this concerto are not entirely clear. It may have been written while Gluck was still a student, or possibly even written by another composer and incorrectly misattributed to Gluck.
‘Idillio’ Concertino for Oboe and Orchestra
Ermanno Wolf-Ferrari (1876-1948)
Preambolo, Scherzo
Soloist: Kate Rendall
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Ermanno Wolf-Ferrari was arguably the finest writer of Italian comic opera of his time. These operas have been described as "musically eclectic, melodic, and utterly hilarious; every single one became an international success." He wrote fifteen operas in total, as well as vocal, chamber and orchestral music.
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His Idillio Concertino for Oboe and Orchestra can be regarded as a chamber symphony, with wonderful interplay between the orchestra and solo oboe.
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Symphony in D
Juan Crisostomo Arriaga (1806-1826)
1. Adagio, allegro vivace; 2. Andante; 3. Minuetto allegro; 4. Allegro con moto
Spanish composer Juan Crisóstomo Arriaga had an influence on Basque music that was far greater than his short life of just 20 years would suggest. His three string quartets show clear influences of ethnic Spanish music, and his tragic life story became a touchstone for Basque nationalism in the early nineteenth century.
Arriaga's Symphony in D, his only symphony, is in D major and D minor almost equally so as not to be dominated by either key. It has echoes of Mozart, Beethoven and Rossini, but nevertheless in an original style marking Arriaga's prodigious talent. After his death he was nicknamed "The Spanish Mozart".
Four Indian Love Lyrics
Amy Woodforde-Finden (1860-1919)
3 . Kashmiri Song, 4. Till I Wake
Amy Woodforde-Finden was born in Chile in 1860, lived in London from her teenage years, and later in India with her husband who was an army surgeon.
Kashmiri Song is one of her most famous works. It is one of Four Indian Love Lyrics from 'The Garden of Kama' by Laurence Hope, which Amy set to music in 1902. Her music transported her listeners to exotic and romantic worlds, bringing the sounds of faraway places to European audiences.