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The YETHOLM SINFONIA
2012
LAST ORCHESTRA IN SCOTLAND Seventh Concert Season : 2012
7.30 pm Saturday MAY 19 in St ANDREWS
CHURCH, KELSO
MOSAIC Director Grace Payne
CATHERINE FISH soprano
Sir William Sterndale Bennett : The Naïades overture
Debussy : La damoiselle élue Beethoven : Soll ein Schuh
nicht drücken ?
Beethoven : Symphony no. 1
Bennett was a Yorkshire composer,
now largely forgotten, but once much admired by the likes of Mendelssohn
and Schumann. Debussys ravishingly beautiful early tone
poem with voices sets a poem by Dante Gabriel Rosetti. The charming
but obscure Beethoven aria was written in 1795 for somebody elses
not very comic opera, called The Beautiful Shoemakers Wife.
You heard it here first.
7.30 pm SUNDAY JUNE 10 in YETHOLM PARISH CHURCH
PHILIP CULL oboe
Schubert : The Twin Brothers overture Richard Strauss : Oboe Concerto
Delius : Summer Night on the River / On Hearing the First Cuckoo
in Spring
Haydn : Symphony no. 102 in B flat
Riches indeed ! Strausss
concerto was written in 1945, when he was 81 and surrounded by
a ruined Germany, yet the music is utterly bright and life-enhancing.
Plus an obscure bit of Schubert, two miniature tone poems by another
Yorkshireman and one of Haydns great late works.
7.30 pm Saturday JULY 7 in KELSO
OLD PARISH CHURCH
DOMINIC BARBERI baritone
Handel : Saul overture Cimarosa : Il Maestro di Cappella
Mozart : Così dunque tradisci concert aria K432
Haydn : Symphony no. 86 in D
Cimarosas short one-man comic opera deserves to be much
better known, as do most of Mozarts many concert arias.
Haydns rarely played 86th symphony reveals deep intensities
of feeling
7.30 pm Saturday SEPTEMBER 22 in THE TAIT HALL, KELSO
SPOON NIGHT AT THE PROMS
The EILDON SINGERS, The ROXBURGH SINGERS
The JEDFOREST INSTRUMENTAL BAND
The YETHOLM SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
and some rather surprising guest soloists
including Arnold : Scottish Dances & A Grand, Grand Overture
McKenzie : Rule, Britannia! overture Grieg : Orchestral Songs
Parry : Blest Pair of Sirens Handel : Zadok the Priest
an especially subverted Last Night, with added fun.
Wooden Spoon is a childrens charity founded in 1983, dedicated
to helping underprivileged children and young people in the UK
and the Irish Republic to live happier, richer lives. Spoon harnesses
the spirit and values of the game of rugby so as to give children
and young people who are disadvantaged physically, mentally or
socially. the chance to achieve their full potential in life.
Spoons Patron is HRH The Princess Royal, and it enjoys the
support of many famous rugby players who contribute their time
and energy to raise awareness of Spoon's many activities and help
it to generate funds. You can help, too.
3.00 pm SUNDAY OCTOBER 21 in MOREBATTLE CHURCH
Mozart : Gran Partita in B flat, K361
About the origins of this astonishing work we know very little.
Even in Vienna, the Imperial capital, it was unusual for a wind
ensemble to have more than six players; this piece is twice the
length and size of any contemporary work of its kind. We do know
Mozart thought highly of it.
7.30 pm Saturday NOVEMBER 3 in
St ANDREWS CHURCH, KELSO
MARIE OKA violin
with The Abbey Consort & soloists
Mozart : Violin Concerto in G, K216
Mendelssohn : Symphony no. 2 in B flat Hymn of Praise
The conductors favourite Mozart violin concerto (and why
ever not?) is followed by Mendelssohns rarely heard great
symphony-cum-cantata. It was written in 1840 for performance in
Leipzig to commemorate the 400th anniversary of the invention
of the printing press by Johannes Gutenberg, and its ten movements
are alternately moving and exciting.
7.30 pm Saturday DECEMBER 15 in KELSO OLD PARISH CHURCH
STEPHEN TEES viola
Mozart : Symphony no. 26 in E flat Telemann : Viola Concerto in
G
Mozart : Thamos, King of Egypt entractes K345
William Alwyn : Pastoral Fantasia for viola
Hindemith : Tuttifäntchen suite
We rarely hear any Mozart symphonies numbered lower than 29, but
this is a strong piece, despite being written when he was only
17. Telemanns viola concerto is a favourite solo, but Alwyns
charming Fantasia is little known. Mozarts Thamos entractes
probably havent ever been heard in Kelso before, but Hindemiths
unrecognisably genial music for a childrens Christmas puppet
play rather surprisingly has, and it bears repetition.
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