MOZART VIOLIN SONATAS

Ensemble 360

Emmanuel Church, Barnsley
Friday 3 October 2025, 7.30pm

£14.50
DLA, PIP and UC £10
Under 35s £5

Past Event

Programme includes:
MOZART Sonata in E minor K304 (12′)
SCHUMANN F-A-E sonata, ‘II. Intermezzo’ (3′)
LUTOSLAWSKI Subito (6′)
SCHUMANN Sonata No.1 in A minor Op.105 (17′)
MOZART Sonata in G K301 (15′)
MESSIAEN Theme and variations (11′)
MOZART Sonata in A K.305 (15′)
 

Mozart’s glorious violin sonatas – among the composer’s most charming works – nestle between music by Robert Schumann in this gorgeous recital for violin and piano. Violinist Claudia Ajmone-Marsan and pianist Tim Horton promise an evening of exuberant, lyrical, and joyful music from two of the greatest composers of the Classical and Romantic periods. 

MOZART Wolfgang Amadeus, Sonata for Violin and Piano in E minor K304

Allegro
Tempo di Menuetto

 

Mozart’s visit to Paris in 1778 – fifteen years after his dazzling first appearance in the city as a child prodigy – was not a success, and the composer was irritated by the apparent indifference of both the musical public and the aristocracy. The highlight of his stay was probably the first performance of the ‘Paris’ Symphony K297 on 18 June. Among the works he composed in Paris was the Violin Sonata in E minor (a key seldom used by Mozart). It has been suggested that the desolate mood of this work – headed “Sonata IV à Paris” in Mozart’s hand on the manuscript – may reflect the tragic illness and death (on 3 July) of Mozart’s mother, who was with him in Paris. While this may be an unduly Romantic interpretation, it is certainly one of Mozart’s bleakest works from this period, and also one of remarkable concentration – in just two movements, the second of which is a melancholy, restrained Minuet in which both players are directed to play sotto voce at several points in the score.

 

Nigel Simeone © 2012

SCHUMANN Robert, F-A-E Sonata, Movement 2

The F-A-E Sonata was created in 1853, as a gift for violinist Joseph Joachim. Written for violin and piano, and made up of four movements, the sonata was actually composed by 3 individuals; Robert Schumann, Johannes Brahams, and Albert Dietrich, who was a pupil of Schumann’s. The three composers had recently befriended the violinist and challenged Joachim to work out who had composed which movement. Schumann was responsible for movements 2 and 4, the 2nd movement being a short Intermezzo. The Sonata’s movements are all based on the musical notes of F, A and E, and are taken from the first letters of Joachim’s adopted motto “Frei aber einsam”, meaning “free, but lonely”. Schumann would later add two more movements to the ones written for Joachim, to make his Violin Sonata No.3 in A minor. The F-A-E Sonata wasn’t published in its entirety until 1935, 82 years after it was first written. 

LUTOSŁAWSKI Witold, Subito

One of Lutosławski’s final works, Subito was commissioned in 1992 by Joseph Gingold for the 1994 Indianapolis International Violin Competition. He had learned to play the violin as a child, something that served him in good stead when composing for strings throughout his life. Lutosławski believed the piece to be a “functional” challenge that would show off a competitor’s virtuosity, with a refrain from the opening bars being used to form four episodes that come together to create a story of violinistic excellence. This commission arrived shortly after Lutosławski was diagnosed with cancer, putting on hold a violin concerto that he had been writing for acclaimed violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter. Fragments of this concerto were only discovered posthumously, making Subito his final published work for violin before his death. 

SCHUMANN Robert, Sonata for Violin and Piano in A minor, Op.105

Mit leidenschaftlichem Ausdruck [With passionate expression]
Allegretto
Lebhaft [Lively]

Schumann often composed in bursts of creative speed, and his Violin Sonata No.1 Op.105 was written in less than a week in September 1851 – starting on his wedding anniversary (12 September) and finishing five days later. Originally he described the work as a ‘Duo for piano and violin’ and it was the first of what Linda Correll Roesner has described as ‘an exceptional group of three chamber works’ written within a couple of months – along with the Piano Trio in G minor Op.110 and the Violin Sonata No.2 Op.121. In his articles, Schumann often wrote about the challenges of musical form for any composer after Beethoven. In this sonata, Schumann uses great economy of means, evident right from the start: the themes of the first movement are based on a limited range of notes, characterised by a falling semitone figure that is heavy with melancholy. The central movement is less anguished – a kind of quirky intermezzo in F major –while the finale is urgent and uncompromising. Near the close, a recollection of the sonata’s opening theme is undermined by the restless, rapid semiquavers that dominate the movement.

The sonata was first played by Joseph von Wasilewski (leader of Schumann’s orchestra in Düsseldorf) and Clara Schumann, at a private run-through on 16 October 1851. The public premiere was given a few months later in Leipzig on 21 March 1852, performed by Ferdinand David with Clara Schumann. Both Clara and Wasilewski recalled playing the piece through for Schumann. According to Clara, ‘I was so restless, I had to try Robert’s new sonata this very day. We played it, and were particularly moved by the very elegiac first movement and the lovely second movement. Only the somewhat less charming third movement caused us some difficulty.’ Wasilewski recalled that ‘on the whole Schumann was satisfied with my performance. Only my playing of the finale failed to please him. We went through it three more times, but Schumann said that he had expected the violin part to have a different effect. I was unable to convey the unyielding, brusque tone of the piece to his satisfaction.’ The finale clearly proved troublesome for both pianist and violinist. Clara’s suggestion that it is ‘less charming’ is puzzling. While the music is indeed brusque (as Wasilewski says) – Schumann resists any hint of easy allure by interrupting its more tender moments with abrupt chords – it is strong and intense, bringing this highly original piece to an impassioned conclusion.

Nigel Simeone ©2014

MOZART Wolfgang Amadeus, Sonata for Violin and Piano in G, K301

Allegretto con spirito 

Allegro 
The G Major Sonata for Violin and Piano is the first of a group of six for piano and violin composed in Mannheim and Paris during the course of the tour undertaken by Mozart and his mother during 1777 and 1778. Mozart seems to have been inspired to write these works after a chance discovery. On October 6, 1777, he wrote a letter to his father about a set of sonatas by the Dresden musician Joseph Schuster (1748–1812): “I send my sister herewith six duets for harpsichord and violin by Schuster, which I have often played here. They are not bad. If I stay on I shall write six myself in the same style, as they are very popular here.” What seems to have struck Mozart about Schuster’s sonatas is the independence of the two instrumental parts – with much more prominent writing for violin than in Mozart’s earlier sonatas for this combination. These six sonatas were published in Paris in as Mozart’s “Opus 1”, dedicated to Maria Elisabeth, Electress of the Palatinate. The first movement is a variant of sonata form (without a significant development of the ideas), and the second suggests a bucolic dance, with a minor-key episode at its centre providing a contrast to the sunnier outer sections. 

 

Nigel Simeone 2013 

MESSIAEN Olivier, Theme and variations

Thème – Modéré 
Variation 1 – Modéré 
Variation 2 – Un peu moins Modére 
Variation 3 – Modéré, avec éclat 
Variation 4 – Vif et passionné 
Variation 5 – Tres modéré 
 

Messian wrote his Theme and variations as a wedding present for his first wife, violinist Claire Delbos in 1932. The first performance of the piece was held at the Cercle Musical de Paris on 22nd November (which also happened to be Delbos’ birthday). Although this was Messiaen’s first piece of chamber music, it is as equally characteristic and emotionally accessible as his most well-known chamber piece, the Quartet for the End of Time. Structurally, Theme and variations is one of more straightforward works, with a tender and lyrical theme that is followed by increasingly animated variations. The use of a classical theme and variation form is unusual in Messiaen’s writing, but the intense slow burn created by the very slow tempo markings creates a fantastical world entirely within keeping of the rapturous individualism that he is known for. 

MOZART Wolfgang Amadeus, Sonata in A, K305

i. Allegro di molto
ii. Andante grazioso 

Sonata in A was inspired by Joseph Schuster’s piano and violin duets, which Mozart first played whilst looking for jobs in Mannheim, Germany. The sonata is made of 2 movements. The first is in sonata form, which follows the structure of introducing a musical idea or ideas, exploring it and then returning to the main themes at the end. It is one of Mozart’s most joyous melodies of all his violin sonatas. The second movement is a themeandvariation form and completely contrasts with the tone of the first. It has a slower tempo and a much more subdued melody and is followed by six variations on the main theme. Typical of theme-and-variation pieces of the time, the penultimate variation is very stark, and in a minor mode. The set ends with an up-tempo dance and is the only piece of the lot that is in triple metre instead of duple. 

JASDEEP SINGH DEGUN & ENSEMBLE 360

Jasdeep Singh Degun & Ensemble 360

The Stables, Milton Keynes
Tuesday 7 October 2025, 8.00pm

Tickets:
£11 – £27.50

Past Event

A composer and virtuoso of the sitar with a classical string quintet makes for an electrifying pairing. Ensemble 360 celebrates its 20th birthday with a gift to us – boundary-breaking new music created collaboratively.

Jasdeep Singh Degun is no stranger to forming alliances in the music world. He was composer and co-music director for Opera North’s 2022 award-winning production of Orpheus, weaving a tapestry from the European and Indian traditions. ‘It’s really not a matter of different worlds meeting’, he reflects. ‘It’s just me: as much as I’m immersed in Indian classical music, I’m a product of this country; I’m a British composer.’ Both innovator and custodian of tradition, composer and performer, with a debut album made with the legendary Nitin Sawnhey released on Peter Gabriel’s Real World Records, he is reshaping the musical landscape.

 

MOONLIGHT

Isata Kanneh-Mason

Upper Chapel, Sheffield
Thursday 11 December 2025, 7.00pm

Tickets:
£23
£14 UC, PIP & DLA
£5 Students & Under 35s

Past Event

Please be aware that balcony tickets for this concert offer a restricted view, and any words spoken by the artist will not be amplified by the microphone to the balcony area. If you would like further clarification about these seats, please contact the Music in the Round office at info@musicintheround.co.uk

BEETHOVEN Piano Sonata No.14 in C sharp minor Op.27 No.2 ‘Moonlight’ (18’) 
RAVEL Gaspard de la nuit (23’)
TABAKOVA Nocturne (3’) 
TABAKOVA Halo (10’) 
BEETHOVEN Piano Sonata No.21 in C Op.53 ‘Waldstein’ (24’) 

Described as “a born musician with a virtuoso technique”, Isata Kanneh-Mason has been praised for “her ability to engage your emotions from first note to last – and to think outside the box” (Gramophone). For this recital, Kanneh-Mason presents two of Beethoven’s best-loved works for solo piano: the ‘Moonlight’ Sonata, with its famous extraordinarily beautiful opening movement, and the dazzlingly virtuosic ‘Waldstein’ Sonata. Ravel’s expressionistic masterpiece Gaspard de la nuit and works by award-winning Bulgarian-British composer, Dobrinka Tabakova, complement this evening of glorious melodies.

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BEETHOVEN Ludwig van, Piano Sonata in C sharp minor ‘Moonlight Sonata’

i. Adagio sostenuto 
ii. Allegretto 
iii. Presto agitato 
 

In 1801 Beethoven was preoccupied for two reasons. The first was the increasing problem he was having with his hearing. The second was altogether happier: “a dear, magical girl who loves me and whom I love”, as he told an old friend in a letter. In the same letter he even spoke of marriage: “this it is the first time that I have felt that marriage might make one happy.” The “magical girl” was Giulietta Guicciardi who had met Beethoven in 1800 when he started to give her piano lesson. Alas, the magic was not to last as Giulietta married a Count in 1803 – but the musical result is one of Beethoven’s most famous piano sonatas. 

The second of his Op.27 sonatas subtitled “quasi una fantasia”, has become universally known as the “Moonlight” – a nickname that derived from a description in 1832 by the critic and poet Ludwig Rellstab who likened the first movement to moonlight shining on Lake Lucerne. The form is unusually free: after the dreamy, slow opening movement, the second is a moment of repose before the angry outburst of the finale – clearly it’s not a portrait of Giulietta, even if Beethoven’s “magical girl” had been the inspiration for this highly original masterpiece. 

 

Nigel Simeone © 2012 

RAVEL Maurice, Gaspard de la Nuit

i. Ondine 
ii. Le Gibet 
iii. Scarbo 
 

Written in 1908, the three movements of Maurice Ravel’s Gaspard de la nuit (‘Treasurer of the Night’) are each based on a poem or fantaisie from the collection Gaspard de la Nuit – Fantaisies à la manière de Rembrandt et de Callot (‘Gaspard of the night – Fantasies in the manner of Rembrandt and Callot’) by the French Romantic poet, playwright and journalist, Aloysius Bertrand. Indeed, Ravel subtitles the work: ‘Trois poèmes pour piano d’après Aloysius Bertrand’. 

Premiered in Paris on 9th January 1909 by Ricardo Viñes, the work is famous for its difficulty. The critic Charles Rosen wrote, for example, that “The third and last piece, ‘Scarbo’, is the most sensational work for piano of the early twentieth century. ‘Scarbo’ is a demon dwarf goblin that suddenly swells to gigantic size, and Ravel achieves an unprecedented effect of terror. It has the reputation of being technically one of the most difficult pieces ever written.” 

The first piece in the suite, ‘Ondine’, is based on the poem of the same name. Telling of the water nymph Undine, who sings to seduce the observer into visiting her kingdom deep at the bottom of a lake, Ravel conjures the sounds of water falling and flowing in woven cascades.  

The second movement, ‘Le Gibet’ (‘The gallows’), evokes a mournful, morbid scene. Bertrand’s poem begins, “Ah! ce que j’entends, serait-ce la bise nocturne qui glapit, ou le pendu qui pousse un soupir sur la fourche patibulaire?” (“Ah! that which I hear, was it the north wind that screeches in the night, or the hanged one who utters a sigh on the forked gallows?”). A repeated, ostinato B-flat in octaves is played in the middle of the keyboard throughout, around which a plaintive melody grows and subsides. This imitates the tolling of a bell; “C’est la cloche qui tinte aux murs d’une ville sous l’horizon” (“It is the bell that tolls from the walls of a city, under the horizon”). 

Of the final piece in the set, Ravel remarked, “I wanted to make a caricature of romanticism. Perhaps it got the better of me”. ‘Scarbo’ depicts the nighttime mischief of a small goblin flitting in and out of the darkness, disappearing and suddenly reappearing. With its repeated notes and two terrifying climaxes, this is the high point in technical difficulty of all the three movements.  

TABAKOVA Dobrinka, Halo

Written in 1999 and premiered by the composer on 9th January 2000 in the Queen Elizabeth Hall foyer, Dobrinka Tabakova says of her solo piano piece Halo,The inspiration for this suite came from a beautiful halo which had formed around the moon one summer’s night. Exploring a range of techniques for achieving harmonics on the piano, the piece describes a hypothetical life of a halo. The first movement sees its birth from darkness, in the second the full strength of light is evoked through rapid repetitive figures, and the extreme registers of the piano; and the final movement portrays a mature and settled halo”.

BEETHOVEN Ludwig van, Piano Sonata in C ‘Waldstein’

i. Allegro con brio
ii. Introduzione: Adagio molto (attacca)
iii. Rondo. Allegretto moderato – Prestissimo
Count Ferdinand Ernst von Waldstein was a leading figure in Bonn’s political life at the end of the eighteenth century, and it was Waldstein who arranged for the young Beethoven to be given a scholarship to study with Haydn. In 1792, he wrote to Beethoven: “You go to realise a long-desired wish : the genius of Mozart is still in mourning and weeps for the death of its disciple … Receive Mozart’s spirit from Haydn’s hands.” Waldstein was a talented amateur musician and a generous patron, and he also encouraged an old friend from Military Academy to support Beethoven: Prince Lichnowsky soon became Beethoven’s most important Viennese patron. In short, Beethoven had ample reason to be grateful to Waldstein, and dedicated one of the greatest works of his middle period to him. The Waldstein” Sonata was composed in 1803–4, and first published in 1805. Originally Beethoven wrote a conventional slow movement, but substituted it with “Introduzion” that leads to the finale. He quickly published the original movement as a stand-alone piece that we now know as the Andante favori. It was an inspired revision: among the many moments of heart-stopping beauty in this masterpiece, none is more magical than the pianissimo emergence of the Rondo theme.

 

Nigel Simeone © 2013

THE GENIUS OF BEETHOVEN

Ensemble 360

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Saturday 6 December 2025, 7.00pm

Tickets:
£23
£14 UC, PIP & DLA
£5 Students & Under 35s

Past Event
Ensemble 360 musicians

BEETHOVEN
Sonata for Cello and Piano No.3 Op.69 (26’) 

   Trio for Piano, Clarinet and Cello Op.11 (20’) 
   String Quartet in A minor Op.132 (45’) 

Ludwig van Beethoven – a true genius, and one of the greatest composers to have ever lived – is celebrated in this concert showcasing the ingenuity and inventiveness of his chamber works. The Cello Sonata was written when Beethoven was at the height of his musical powers, beloved by performers and audiences alike. Known as the ‘Gassenhauer Trio’, the unusual combination of cello, clarinet and piano shows brilliant writing for all the instruments and has always been well-received for its use of a popular operatic tune in the final movement. His late String Quartet – with its spellbinding, elegiac third movement, subtitled the ‘Holy Song of Thanksgiving’ – concludes an evening that will captivate, astonish and amaze.

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BEETHOVEN Ludwig van, Cello Sonata in A

i. Allegro ma non tanto
ii. Scherzo. Allegro molto
iii. Adagio cantabile – Allegro vivace
On 14 September 1808, the publisher Gottfried Christoph Härtel signed a remarkable contract with Beethoven for his most recent works: the document signed by the two of them that day shows that Breitkopf and Härtel had acquired the rights to the Fifth Symphony, the Pastoral Symphony, the two Piano Trios Op.70 and the Cello Sonata in A major. The Cello Sonata had been written in the winter of 1807–8 and by the time of its publication it bore a dedication to Baron Ignaz von Gleichenstein, a friend of the composer who helped him with financial matters as well as a being a talented amateur cellist. The first performance was given in Vienna on 5 March 1809, at a concert by the cellist Nikolaus Kraft with Baroness Dorothea von Ertmann (to whom Beethoven later dedicated his Piano Sonata Op.101). As in the Kreutzer Sonata for violin and piano, Beethoven begins this Cello Sonata with the string soloist unaccompanied, introducing the simple but utterly memorable opening idea, answered by the piano. The spacious melodic material of this movement shows Beethoven at his most flowing and song-like. The Scherzo, in A minor, is full of tense syncopation, followed by an Adagio that begins as if it is to be one of Beethoven’s most serene slow movements, but it turns out to be a mere eighteen bars long, leading straight into the finale – a brilliant combination of structural tension and sunny lyricism.

 

Nigel Simeone © 2011

BEETHOVEN Ludwig van, Clarinet Trio in B flat

The Trio in B flat Op.11 for clarinet, cello and piano is one of Beethoven’s least-serious works. By 1798 he had settled in Vienna and had become so successful as a composer that the majority of his works were being written in response to commissions. A couple of years later Beethoven admitted that he had been receiving more commissions than he could fulfil.

The scoring is very unusual and although Beethoven may not have divined the soul of the clarinet with the unerring instinct of Mozart, the alternative version that Beethoven made for violin – a shrewd piece of salesmanship – is less colourful.

The unison opening of the first movement is arresting and the approach to the second theme is also striking, recalling as it does a comparable passage in Haydn’s Symphony No.102, also in B flat. The Adagio highlights the cello in a reflective theme which is related to the minuet of Beethoven’s Piano Sonata in G, Op.49 No.2 and indeed to the Septet of 1800.

In Beethoven’s hands the decidedly trivial could become a catalyst for the most imaginative art of transformation – the Diabelli Variations is perhaps the most extreme example – and for the finale of his Trio, Op.11, Beethoven took one of the popular tunes from a recent opera for his inspiration. In fact it is the only one of Beethoven’s major instrumental works to contain a set of variations on a theme by another composer. Joseph Weigl’s comic opera L’amor marinaro (“Love at sea”) was first performed at the Burgtheater in Vienna in October 1797, and the aria “Pria ch’io l’impegno” was an instant success. In addition to Beethoven, this frequently-hummed tune was also used by Joseph Eybler, Hummel and Paganini, who wrote an elaborate concert piece for violin and orchestra based on it.

Beethoven’s Op.11 acquired the nickname of Gassenhauer or “Street song” Trio as the result of his use of this theme, and the idea of using Weigl’s melody seems to have come from the clarinettist for whom Beethoven wrote the trio, Joseph Bähr. Although Beethoven considered writing another finale he never did so, presumably because he thought this finale too lightweight, but the nine variations are among the young Beethoven’s most inspired, witty and amusing. After the surprise of the opening variation being for piano solo, it stays silent in the second one, a duet for clarinet and cello. The fourth and seventh variations are in B flat minor – the latter’s dotted rhythms and blocks of chords reminiscent of a funeral march. After the last variation there is an amusing diversion from the home key of B flat to G major and to six-eight, the situation being saved and the original tempo regained just in the nick of time.

 

Jeremy Hayes © 2010

BEETHOVEN Ludwig van, String Quartet in A minor

i. Assai sostenuto–Allegro
ii. Allegro ma non tanto
iii. Heiliger Dankgesang eines Genesenen an die Gottheit, in der lydischen Tonart. Molto adagio (‘A Holy Song of Thanksgiving offered by a convalescent to the Divinity, in the Lydian Mode’)
iv. Alla Marcia, assai vivace (attacca)
v. Allegro appassionato–Presto
‘I have the A minor Quartet on the gramophone, and I find it quite inexhaustible to study. There is a sort of heavenly, or at least more than human gaiety, about some of his later things which one imagines might come to oneself as the fruit of reconciliation and relief after immense suffering; I should like to get something of that into verse before I die.’ These were the words of T.S. Eliot, writing to his friend Stephen Spender in 1931. Whether any or all of the Four Quartets, started in 1935, were inspired by Beethoven’s Op.132 is open to speculation, but given the letter to Spender and the fact that each of Eliot’s Quartets is in five parts, the evidence is certainly intriguing. (Incidentally, in 1931 Eliot had a very limited choice of recordings to have on his gramophone; the Léner Quartet recorded Op.132 in 1924, and the Deman Quartet recorded it in 1927). In a lecture delivered in New Haven in 1933, Eliot spoke again of his quest ‘to get beyond poetry, as Beethoven, in his later works, strove to get beyond music’, a remark prompted by D.H. Lawrence’s comment that ‘the essence of poetry’ was its ‘stark, bare, rocky directness of statement’. This phrase could equally well be applied to Beethoven’s late works. Composed in 1825, Op.132 is an extraordinary work even by the standards his late music.

William Kinderman has described the whole work as ‘laden with pathos of a particularly painful, agonized quality’ and at its heart is long central movement, in which Beethoven gives thanks for recovery from a serious illness. This ‘Song of Thanksgiving’ is interrupted by a ray of hope and recovery, marked ‘with renewed strength’, and on either side of it there are short, dance-like movements to provide contrast – though until a very late stage in the work’s composition Beethoven planned to use what became the ‘Alla danza tedesca’ movement familiar from Op.130 as the fourth movement of Op.132, before deciding to move it (and transpose it down a tone). There was equally intriguing traffic the other way, importing an idea into Op.132 from another work: the main theme for the finale was originally intended as a possible instrumental finale for the Ninth Symphony, and was only once Beethoven decided to write a choral movement and subsequently used in this astonishing string quartet.

 

Nigel Simeone © 2010

RELAXED CONCERT: THE GENIUS OF BEETHOVEN

Ensemble 360

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Saturday 6 December 2025, 2.00pm

Tickets:
£5 / carers free

Past Event
Ensemble 360 musicians

BEETHOVEN Sonata for Cello and Piano No.3 Op.69 (26’)
BEETHOVEN Trio for Piano, Clarinet and Cello Op.11 (20’) 

For this ‘Relaxed’ concert featuring Beethoven, doors will be left open, lights raised, a break-out space provided, and there will be less emphasis on the audience being quiet during the performance. People with an Autism Spectrum, sensory or communication disorder or learning disability, those with age-related impairments and parents/carers with babies are all especially welcome.

BEETHOVEN Ludwig van, Cello Sonata in A

i. Allegro ma non tanto
ii. Scherzo. Allegro molto
iii. Adagio cantabile – Allegro vivace
On 14 September 1808, the publisher Gottfried Christoph Härtel signed a remarkable contract with Beethoven for his most recent works: the document signed by the two of them that day shows that Breitkopf and Härtel had acquired the rights to the Fifth Symphony, the Pastoral Symphony, the two Piano Trios Op.70 and the Cello Sonata in A major. The Cello Sonata had been written in the winter of 1807–8 and by the time of its publication it bore a dedication to Baron Ignaz von Gleichenstein, a friend of the composer who helped him with financial matters as well as a being a talented amateur cellist. The first performance was given in Vienna on 5 March 1809, at a concert by the cellist Nikolaus Kraft with Baroness Dorothea von Ertmann (to whom Beethoven later dedicated his Piano Sonata Op.101). As in the Kreutzer Sonata for violin and piano, Beethoven begins this Cello Sonata with the string soloist unaccompanied, introducing the simple but utterly memorable opening idea, answered by the piano. The spacious melodic material of this movement shows Beethoven at his most flowing and song-like. The Scherzo, in A minor, is full of tense syncopation, followed by an Adagio that begins as if it is to be one of Beethoven’s most serene slow movements, but it turns out to be a mere eighteen bars long, leading straight into the finale – a brilliant combination of structural tension and sunny lyricism.

 

Nigel Simeone © 2011

BEETHOVEN Ludwig van, Clarinet Trio in B flat

The Trio in B flat Op.11 for clarinet, cello and piano is one of Beethoven’s least-serious works. By 1798 he had settled in Vienna and had become so successful as a composer that the majority of his works were being written in response to commissions. A couple of years later Beethoven admitted that he had been receiving more commissions than he could fulfil.

The scoring is very unusual and although Beethoven may not have divined the soul of the clarinet with the unerring instinct of Mozart, the alternative version that Beethoven made for violin – a shrewd piece of salesmanship – is less colourful.

The unison opening of the first movement is arresting and the approach to the second theme is also striking, recalling as it does a comparable passage in Haydn’s Symphony No.102, also in B flat. The Adagio highlights the cello in a reflective theme which is related to the minuet of Beethoven’s Piano Sonata in G, Op.49 No.2 and indeed to the Septet of 1800.

In Beethoven’s hands the decidedly trivial could become a catalyst for the most imaginative art of transformation – the Diabelli Variations is perhaps the most extreme example – and for the finale of his Trio, Op.11, Beethoven took one of the popular tunes from a recent opera for his inspiration. In fact it is the only one of Beethoven’s major instrumental works to contain a set of variations on a theme by another composer. Joseph Weigl’s comic opera L’amor marinaro (“Love at sea”) was first performed at the Burgtheater in Vienna in October 1797, and the aria “Pria ch’io l’impegno” was an instant success. In addition to Beethoven, this frequently-hummed tune was also used by Joseph Eybler, Hummel and Paganini, who wrote an elaborate concert piece for violin and orchestra based on it.

Beethoven’s Op.11 acquired the nickname of Gassenhauer or “Street song” Trio as the result of his use of this theme, and the idea of using Weigl’s melody seems to have come from the clarinettist for whom Beethoven wrote the trio, Joseph Bähr. Although Beethoven considered writing another finale he never did so, presumably because he thought this finale too lightweight, but the nine variations are among the young Beethoven’s most inspired, witty and amusing. After the surprise of the opening variation being for piano solo, it stays silent in the second one, a duet for clarinet and cello. The fourth and seventh variations are in B flat minor – the latter’s dotted rhythms and blocks of chords reminiscent of a funeral march. After the last variation there is an amusing diversion from the home key of B flat to G major and to six-eight, the situation being saved and the original tempo regained just in the nick of time.

 

Jeremy Hayes © 2010

VIENNESE MASTERWORKS: BRAHMS & MORE FOR SOLO PIANO

Tim Horton

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Thursday 4 December 2025, 7.00pm

Tickets:
£23
£14 UC, PIP & DLA
£5 Students & Under 35s

Past Event

HAYDN Piano Sonata in E flat major Hob.XVI:52 (17’)
BRAHMS Four Ballades Op.10 (25’)
SCHOENBERG Suite Op.25 (15’)
BEETHOVEN Piano Sonata No.15 Op.28, ‘Pastoral’ (25’) 

Tim Horton returns to Sheffield for the latest in his popular series celebrating the long musical history of Vienna. Beethoven’s well-known Piano Sonata No.15, nicknamed the ‘Pastoral’, is showcased alongside Brahms’s emotional and romantic Four Ballades, which relate stories through poetic references. Written by one of the 20th century’s most important composers based in Vienna, Arnold Schoenberg, the Suite is a landmark collection of Baroque dances with a difference.

IN CONVERSATION with Tim Horton
Crucible Playhouse, 5.30pm – 6.15pm
Tickets: £5 / Free to all ticket holders for the evening concert, but please book in advance

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HAYDN Joseph, Piano Sonata in E flat

i. Allegro
ii. Adagio
iii. Finale. Presto
Composed in 1794, this is the last and most imposing of Haydn’s piano sonatas. Donald Francis Tovey (who devoted the first five pages of his essay on the work to an analysis of the first twelve bars) wrote that ‘neither Haydn nor Mozart succeeded in writing many mature pianoforte solo of such importance as this sonata’. Haydn wrote it in London for one of the capital’s finest pianists, Therese Jansen. He conceived on a grand scale, but was also daringly original – even by his own standards. from the thick, almost orchestral sound of the opening chords of the large sonata for first movement. The slow movement is in the remotest possible key – E major – and it is a rich, hymn-like piece which is derived almost entirely from the figure heard in its first bar. The finale begins with a series of repeated Gs from which the main theme stutters into life, and the harmonies return to the work’s home key of E flat – a brilliant shock tactic from Haydn who proceeds to transform the start of the main theme into the movement’s main accompaniment figure, and to drive towards an exciting close.

BRAHMS Johannes, Ballades

i. Andante, after the Scottish ballad ‘Edward’
ii. Andante, espressivo e dolce – Allegro non troppo
iii. Intermezzo. Allegro
iv. Andante con moto
Brahms composed this set of four Ballades in Düsseldorf in 1854 (when he was 20), at a time when Robert and Clara Schumann were promoting the young Brahms’s career. The poetic ballad on which the musical form was based involved a verse narrative with refrains. Chopin’s famous group of Ballades had been written between 1831 and 1842 and treated this idea very freely. As Charles Rosen has pointed out, Brahms was more faithful to the medieval origins of the poetic form, describing his approach as ‘more thoroughly neo-Gothic’. The four Ballades are in two pairs, linked by related keys. The first two are in D minor and D major, while the third and fourth are in B minor and B major. The first Ballade was directly inspired by an ancient Scottish ballad that had been published in German by the poet Johann Gottfried Herder. It is a gruesome tale of Edward’s sword dripping with the blood of his father and ending with him cursing his mother, though Brahms’s piece – although stormy and passionate in the middle section – does not really evoke the mood of the poem. Instead, there’s a sense of its formal qualities and its symmetry. The second Ballade begins slowly, but the main Allegro non troppo section is dramatic, dominated by an obsessive rhythm of four quavers that returns later to provide a kind of ghostly knocking. The third Ballade is headed ‘Intermezzo’ and it is a Scherzo-like piece in B minor, with a central Trio section that introduces an ethereal idea in F sharp major. The final Ballade begins as sweeping triple-time movement, but Brahms introduces a remarkable contrasting idea, with a marking worthy of late Beethoven: Più lento. Col intimissimo sentimento, ma senza troppo marcare la melodia (Slower. With most intimate feeling, but without heavily marking the melody)

SCHOENBERG Arnold, Suite for Piano

Composed between 1921 and 1923, Arnold Schoenberg’s Suite for Piano Op. 25 is the earliest work in which the composer deployed his 12-tone technique in every movement. Earlier compositions – the Five Pieces for Piano, Op. 23 (1920–23) and the Serenade, Op. 24 (1920-1923) – make use of tone rows only in a single movement. Rather than deploying traditional tonal relationships, the Suite is constructed of permutations of a sequence of all 12 chromatic pitches. The basic ‘tone row’ (order of the pitches) is: E–F–G–D♭–G♭–E♭–A♭–D–B–C–A–B♭. For the first time, Schoenberg employs transpositions and inversions of this tone row; beginning the row on a different pitch but following the same contour, and presenting the row as a mirror image (a step up of a tone becomes a step down of a tone, and so on). 

In other regards, however, the Suite is quite traditional. In form and style, it echos the Baroque Suite; an popular form for instrumental music in the 17th Century consisting of a series of dances. Schoenberg’s suite has six movements or dances: 

i. Präludium (or prelude) 
ii. Gavotte (characterized by a moderately quick quadruple meter, a distinctive upbeat, and often involving hopping or skipping steps) 
iii. Musette (a lively dance) 
iv. Intermezzo  
v. Menuett. Trio (a dance in triple time) 
vi. Gigue (a lively concluding movement) 

The suite was first performed by Schoenberg’s pupil Eduard Steuermann in Vienna on 25 February 1924.   

BEETHOVEN Ludwig van, Piano Sonata in D ‘Pastoral’

i. Allegro
ii. Andante
iii. Scherzo. Allegro vivace
iv. Rondo. Allegro ma non troppo
The so-called ‘Pastoral’ Sonata was composed in 1801, and the nickname is justified by the generally sunny mood of parts of the work, especially its finale. In fact it could hardly have been written at a more traumatic time in Beethoven’s life: this was the year in which he confessed to a few of his closest friends that he was losing his hearing. Published by the Bureau des Arts et d’Industrie in Vienna, it was described as a ‘Grande Sonate’ and dedicated to Joseph Freiherr von Sonnenfels (1732–1817), a friend of Mozart and a liberal thinker whose chief claim to fame was bringing about the abolition of torture in Austria in 1776. After a first movement that shows signs of real stress and tension in the turbulent development, the slow movement, in D minor, is restrained and rather despondent. The Scherzo is a startling contrast to this – playful in parts and also dramatic in the central Trio section. The last movement is a gentle and bucolic Rondo.

 

Nigel Simeone ©2014

MOZART GRAN PARTITA

Ensemble 360

Upper Chapel, Sheffield
Saturday 22 November 2025, 2.00pm

Tickets:
£23
£14 UC, PIP & DLA
£5 Students & Under 35s

Past Event
Ensemble 360 musicians

Please be aware that balcony tickets for this concert offer a restricted view, and any words spoken by the artists will not be amplified by the microphone to the balcony area. If you would like further clarification about these seats, please contact the Music in the Round office at info@musicintheround.co.uk

ARRIEU Suite en quatre (10’)
GOUNOD Petite symphonie (20’)
MOZART Serenade No.10 K361 ‘Gran Partita’ (50’) 

Mozart’s Serenade No.10 – immortalised in the 1984 film Amadeus – is considered one of the composer’s greatest works, and is a masterpiece of wind writing. Nicknamed the ‘Gran Partita’ (or ‘big wind symphony’), it is breathtaking in its beauty.

Described by English music critic Noël Goodwin as “virtually an ‘operatic’ ensemble of passionate feeling and sensuous warmth”, the work’s emotional core is the third movement’s Adagio, a lyrical, intense melody that tugs at the heartstrings.

This is chamber music on a large scale, with an array of oboes, bassoons, horns, clarinets, basset horns and a double bass playing one of the undisputed highlights of classical music.

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ARRIEU Claude, Suite en quatre

i. Andante cantabile
ii. Scherzando
iii. Adagio
iv. Presto
 

Claude Arrieu was the pen name used by composer Louise-Marie Simon and was considered one of the most versatile French composers writing during the second half of the 20th century. Having trained at the Paris conservatoire, Arrieu became well known for both her operas and for her woodwind compositions, the latter giving her a freedom to explore playful and carefree character, whilst keeping the main elements of her neoclassical style. Imagery through rhythm and melodic lines are staples of her writing, expressed especially well through her Suite en quatre. Composed for Flute, Oboe, Clarinet and Bassoon, the first movement introduces the listener to each instrument through a solo theme that begins to interweave, before moving into a lively, mischievous section. The third movement contrasts the playfulness of the other three, being much more reflective and somber, yet still retaining the lilting nature present in the rest of the pieces. 

GOUNOD Charles, Petite symphonie

i. Adagio–Allegro 
ii. Andante cantabile (quasi adagio) attacca 
iii. Scherzo. Allegro moderato 
iv. Finale. Allegretto 
 

The Petite symphonie is the only nonet composed by Gounod, being better known for his operas and religious music. Written in 1885, it was commissioned by flautist Paul Taffenel, a renowned musician and professor at the Paris Conservatoire, who also happened to be a friend of Gounod’s. Woodwind instruments had recently been revolutionised thanks to Theobald Boehm, making them more structurally consistent and therefore more reliable as instruments. This led to the founding of a chamber music society by Taffenel to promote music for these improved instruments, sparking the creation of the Petite symphonie. The symphony is very typical of its kind, having four movements, and being greatly inspired by Mozart and Haydn’s wind pieces. Each movement contrasts in character and contains clear musical structures and flowing melodies that are characteristic of Gounod’s works. 

MOZART Wolfgang Amadeus, Serenade in B flat ‘Gran Partita’, K361

Harmoniemusik or wind band music was extremely popular in the last twenty-five years of the eighteenth century, a time when the Austrian Empire found it fashionable to keep a private wind band, called a Harmonie, and when Emperor Joseph II added a Harmonie to the royal court, the success of this kind of musical organisation was assured. The function of such ensembles was to provide music for social, not military occasions, and the bulk of the music they played were arrangements of popular songs, operas, symphonies and ballets, though there were original compositions too, for outdoor or indoor entertainment, more often than not of a divertimento or serenade-like character. Nearly all of Mozart’s music for wind band dates from this period, when there was a seemingly insatiable demand for such music in Vienna

Apart from the ever-popular Septet, Beethoven’s chamber music with wind scarcely approaches the grandeur and splendour of Mozart’s Serenade in C minor, K.388 or the Serenade in B flat, K.361, possibly the most influential work for wind instruments ever composed.

It has been suggested that this ‘Gran Partita’, as it is called on Mozart’s autograph manuscript – although this title was added at a later date and was probably nothing to do with Mozart – may have been his wedding present to his wife Constanza in 1782. If so, with Wagner’s Siegfried Idyll it must be one of the greatest gifts of music a composer has ever made to his wife. Anton Stadler, the player for whom Mozart wrote his Clarinet Concerto and Clarinet Quintet was one of the two clarinettists in Emperor Joseph’s Harmonie and in 1784 he organised a private concert for his own benefit, which included the first public performance of sections from the Serenade, K.361 which was described in the Wienerblättchen advertisement for the concert as a “great wind piece of a very special kind”.

“A master sat at every instrument – and oh, what an effect! – magnificent and grand. Mozart. That’s a life here, like the land of the blessed, the land of music…” wrote one critic who was present at the concert.

The Serenade in B flat is a seven-movement work scored for six pairs of wind instruments: oboes, clarinets, basset horns, bassoons, horns in F and horns in B flat. To this group of twelve players Mozart adds a string bass to double the second bassoon at the octave as well as having an independent part. For many years before Mozart’s autograph manuscript was consulted, this part was usually performed on a contrabassoon, giving rise to its other nickname, the Serenade for thirteen wind instruments. However, the autograph specifically identifies the instrument as “contrabasso” and the performance instructions “arco” and “pizzicato” also appear in the score.

In K.361 – and of course in the two other wind band serenades he wrote around the same time, those in E flat, K.375 and C minor, K.388 – Mozart shows that he has assimilated perfectly the language and mastered the problems of writing for wind band. This is particularly true of the brooding slow movements of K.361, with their undulating inner lines showing an extraordinary sense of what groups of wind instruments can create in the way of smooth, legato sound. Indeed, this work displays an almost luxuriant character which is missing in K.388 and very much refined in K.375.

The opening movement of K.361 begins with an extensive slow introduction which leads to a festive Molto allegro, typically serenade-like in character. The following minuet has two contrasting trio sections and the Adagio third movement, in E flat major, is an operatic ensemble of passionate feeling and sensuous warmth.

The fourth movement is a second minuet and once again it has two trio sections, after which the Romanze returns to the same key and slow tempo of the third movement, but with a contrasting Allegretto central section in C minor. The sixth movement is a set of six variations on an Allegretto theme in B flat major, and Mozart rounds off this extraordinary work with a high-spirited rondo.

 

© Jeremy Hayes 2010

DEATH & THE MAIDEN

Dudok Quartet

Upper Chapel, Sheffield
Thursday 20 November 2025, 7.00pm

Tickets:
£23
£14 UC, PIP & DLA
£5 Students & Under 35s

Past Event

Please be aware that balcony tickets for this concert offer a restricted view, and any words spoken by the artists will not be amplified by the microphone to the balcony area. If you would like further clarification about these seats, please contact the Music in the Round office at info@musicintheround.co.uk

SAARIAHO Terra Memoria (18’)
GESUALDO Moro, lasso, al mio duolo (4’)
MUSSORGSKY Songs and Dances of Death (selection) (10’)
LISZT Via Crucis (selection) (10’)
SCHUBERT String Quartet No.14 in D minor, ‘Death & the Maiden’ (35’) 

Described as “quite simply revelatory” (The Irish Times) and “stylish, open-minded and adventurous” (The Guardian), the Dudok Quartet Amsterdam has made its name as playful, inventive interpreters of the string quartet repertoire. Coached by Peter Cropper (first violin of the Lindsay String Quartet and founder of Music in the Round) in the early years of their collaboration, they have since gone from strength to strength. Presenting Schubert’s extraordinary and profound ‘Death and the Maiden’ String Quartet alongside their own arrangement of a 17th century Italian madrigal by Carlo Gesualdo and Kaija Saariaho’s modern masterpiece, Terra Memoria (‘Earth Memory’), this concert promises to thrill, intrigue and delight.

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SAARIAHO Kaija, Terra Memoria

“I feel when writing for a string quartet that I’m entering into the intimate core of musical communication,” the late Kaija Saariaho wrote of her second string quartet, Terra Memoria, in 2006. Twenty years separated her first and second outings for these forces, and while the electronics have departed in the journey from the initial Nymphéa to here (and the acute focus on timbre has relaxed), the pieces share a common musical argument. For one, there’s Saariaho’s continued fascination with the particular timbres and textures available to stringed instruments, like tremolandos, trills, and bowing techniques like playing at the bridge. What the two quartets also share is the sense of the music gleaming, resulting from these carefully chosen combinations. 

 

Terra Memoria is a pretty straightforward title. “Earth refers to my material, and memory to the way I’m working on it,” Saariaho wrote. “The piece is dedicated “for those departed,” she continued. “Those of us who are left behind are constantly reminded of our experiences together: our feelings continue to change about different aspects of their personality, certain memories keep on haunting us in our dreams. Even after many years, some of these memories change, some remain clear flashes which we can relive.” 

 

Saariaho died from brain cancer in 2023, so the piece becomes a kind of meta memorial today. But Terra Memoria is no redolent, misty-eyed tribute. Score indications vacillate frequently and distinctly, between misterioso, espressivo, and dolce (sweetly), followed by rasping sections called things like con violenza, impetuoso. The piece aches like a piece written a century before, full of expressive anguish and volatility. Listen for the waterfall-like constructions of limpid textures, and the stunning moment halfway through when the tiny, sky-high texture is delicately snuffed out.  

 

© Hugh Morris 2025

GESUALDO Carlo, Moro, lasso, al mio duolo

The name of Carlo Gesualdo, Prince of Venosa, first spread across Italy because of a grand scandal. In 1590, after discovering his wife and her lover in flagrante, Gesualdo killed them both on the spot. Given all of the actors in this honour killing were drawn from nobility, news of the murder travelled particularly quickly; only later did his idiosyncratic corpus of strange harmonies emerge. 

 

Moro, lasso, al mio duolo, a morose yet sparkily inventive madrigal for five voices, comes from Gesualdo’s sixth and most stylistically adventurous book of madrigals, published in 1611, two years before his death aged 47. Gesualdo’s late madrigals are notable for their harmonic ingenuity. They are heavily chromatic, emotionally volatile, and utilise false relations—chromatic contradictions, where two voices overlap by a semitone at the same time to create a particularly scrunchy moment—frequently. The effect is polarising. Eminent 18th century music historian Charles Burney described the opening of Moro, lasso as “extremely shocking and disgusting.” But, over 400 years since Gesualdo’s death, it still sounds strikingly unlike anything else in the musical canon. 

 

© Hugh Morris 2025

MUSSORGSKY Modest, Songs and Dances of Death

Like Pictures at an Exhibition and his opera Khovanshchina, Mussorgsky’s Songs and Dances of Death number among the many works that required finishing or orchestrating by his composer friends. Today, they exist in many orchestrated versions, even serving as a jump-off point for Shostakovich’s Fourteenth Symphony, but the first version to exist was completed by Alexander Glazunov and Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, published in 1882, a year after Mussorgsky’s death. 

Each of the four songs—Lullaby, Serenade, Trepak, and Field Marshal—are a poetic snapshot of a specific death; respectively, of a child, a girl, a drunken peasant, and a soldier. Mussorgsky set texts by Arseniy Golenishchev-Kutuzov, a younger friend of the composer, who lodged with Mussorgsky in the mid 1870s. 

In some ways the collection is a tale of Mussorgsky’s domestic situation, setting words by one housemate, and later having it orchestrated by another, in Rimsky-Korsakov. It also tells of Mussorgsky’s preoccupations. Death was firmly on his mind, having experienced the loss of friends—the death of painter Victor Hartmann inspired him to write Pictures at an Exhibition—as well as suffering from frequent alcohol-induced health problems himself.  

This cycle is certainly shadowed by death, but it’s interesting to note how death becomes an inevitable, inescapable fact, and in that way, a figure approaching the benign. (In this way, it bears a resemblance to Schubert’s calm, consoling figure who appears in the second stanza of Death and the Maiden.) In the first setting, Death appears at the door of a mother, then as a mysteriously seductive knight in the second, an enticing figure to a drunken figure in the third, and finally, the inevitable consequence of battle. 

 

© Hugh Morris 2025

LISZT Franz, Via Crucis

One of the great surprises of 19th century musical history was the about turn of Franz Liszt, the flamboyant pianist and supporter of radical progressive motion in music, who later took minor orders at the Vatican in 1865, and closed out his life as Abbé Liszt. However, Liszt approached church music with the much the same spirit that he sought the music of the future among the members of Allgemeiner Deutscher Musikverein in his earlier years; writing in 1835 in De la musique religieuse, Liszt sought a “regeneration” of religious music, and saw the composer’s social role extending into the church as well as secular musical contexts. 

Though there is a continuation of spirit, this is a Liszt unlike the fireworks of the B Minor sonata, the symphonic poems or the piano concerti. Via Crucis is a collaged work of musical pictures corresponding to the stations of the cross found in many Catholic churches. He finds a passionate if contained expressivity in this collection, which draws on plainchant and Bach’s Passion settings. 

 

© Hugh Morris 2025

SCHUBERT Franz, String Quartet in D minor ‘Death and the Maiden’

i. Allegro
ii. Andante
iii. Scherzo
iv. Presto
The beginning of 1824 was a very difficult period for an ill, penniless and depressed Franz Schubert. “I find myself to be the most unhappy and wretched creature in the world,” he wrote to his friend Josef Kupelwieser. “I might as well sing every day now, for upon retiring to bed each night I hope that I may not wake again, and each morning only recalls yesterday’s grief.” 

But he succeeded in channeling this moroseness into creation, and Schubert produced some of his most celebrated contributions to chamber music literature during this sorrow-filled period. Not only did he produce the String Quartet in A Minor D804, he returned—perhaps driven by his own reckoning with mortality—to his 1817 setting of Matthias Clodius’s Death and the Maiden, a two-stanza text which opens with the maiden’s frightened plea and closes with Death’s calm response. 

This music forms the basis of the second movement, a theme which spins out in variations before turning towards its somber home. It follows an explosive first movement which introduces the composition’s underlying principles: a throbbing, unrelenting triplet figure, and a hewing towards minor tonalities. This is a work that plumbs the depths of despair. 

The triplet theme returns as an accompaniment to the first violin’s descant in the first variation of the second movement. Then, two dances of death: A fast, jolting Scherzo, with a rare glimpse of the major mode sets up a galloping tarantella-rondo finale. It ends, completely spent, with two huge chords. 

 

© Hugh Morris 2025

JASDEEP SINGH DEGUN & ENSEMBLE 360

Jasdeep Singh Degun & Ensemble 360

Saffron Hall, Saffron Walden
Saturday 31 May 2025, 7.30pm

Tickets:
£15 – £25
Under 25s from £8

Past Event

A composer and virtuoso of the sitar with a classical string quintet makes for an electrifying pairing. Ensemble 360 celebrates its 20th birthday with a gift to us – boundary-breaking new music created collaboratively.

Jasdeep Singh Degun is no stranger to forming alliances in the music world. He was composer and co-music director for Opera North’s 2022 award-winning production of Orpheus, weaving a tapestry from the European and Indian traditions. ‘It’s really not a matter of different worlds meeting’, he reflects. ‘It’s just me: as much as I’m immersed in Indian classical music, I’m a product of this country; I’m a British composer.’ Both innovator and custodian of tradition, composer and performer, with a debut album made with the legendary Nitin Sawnhey released on Peter Gabriel’s Real World Records, he is reshaping the musical landscape.

 

PIANO CLASSICS

Libby Burgess

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Saturday 8 November 2025, 2.00pm

Tickets:
£23
£14 UC, PIP & DLA
£5 Students & Under 35s

Past Event

SCHUBERT (arr. Liszt) Standchen (6’)
JS BACH (arr. Bauer) Die Seele ruht in Jesu Handen (6’)
LISZT Liebeslied (after Schumann’s ‘Widmung’) (4’)
SCHUBERT Four Impromptus (28′)
RACHMANINOV Prelude in D Op.23 (5’)
RACHMANINOV Moments Musicaux in B minor Op.16 No.3 (4’)
RACHMANINOV Prelude in G sharp minor Op.32 No.12 (3’)
RACHMANINOV Elegie (from ‘Morceaux de Fantaisie’) Op.3 No.1 (5’)
RACHMANINOV Prelude in G Op.32 No.5 (3’)
BINGEN (arr. Marie-Luise Hinrichs) O frondens virga (2’)
C SCHUMANN Notturno Op.6 No.2 (5’)
PUCCINI Piccolo valzer (3’)
S COLERIDGE-TAYLOR Deep River (6’)
BONDS Troubled Water (5’) 

Praised for her “warm, sensitive pianism” (The Observer), and for performances that are “a masterclass in the art of holding an audience’s attention” (Cherwell), Libby Burgess returns to Sheffield for a recital of some of the best-loved music for solo piano. From the dazzling inventiveness of Schubert’s Four Impromptus to the lush romanticism of Rachmaninov’s Morceaux de Fantaisie, this concert showcases some of the finest writing for the instrument.

This concert is dedicated to Julia Wilton, a Friend and generous supporter of Music in the Round for many years

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Piano Classics

Franz Schubert’s ‘Ständchen’ (‘A serenade’) was originally a lied for solo voice and piano. Composed in 1826, it is a setting of the ‘song’ in Act 2, Scene 3 of Shakespeare’s Cymbeline. Evoking the coming of morning, the song begins: “Hark, hark, the lark at heaven’s gate sings, / and Phoebus ‘gins arise, / His steeds to water at those springs / on chalic’d flowers that lies”. Franz Liszt arranged Schubert’s ‘Ständchen’ for solo piano in 1838, including it as “Ständchen von Shakespeare” in his 12 Lieder von Franz Schubert. 

Another arrangement of vocal music, J. S. Bach’s ‘Die Seele ruht in Jesu Händen’ (‘The soul rests in Jesus’ hands’) was originally composed as an aria for his Cantata BWV 127. Written for a service on Estomihi (the Sunday before Lent), it is performed here in a transcription by the distinguished English-born American pianist and teacher, Harold Bauer.   

Liszt’s arrangement of Robert Schuman’s ‘Widmung’ (‘dedication’) for his ‘Liebeslied’ (or ‘Love Song’) preserves the lyrical emotion of the original while adding his own pianistic virtuosity. Gifted to his fiancé Clara as a wedding present, Schuman’s song is expanded and transformed; whereas Schuman’s ‘Widmung’ ends quietly, Liszt’s ‘Liebeslied’ finishes with a final pianistic flurry.  

Schubert wrote eight Impromptus, published in two sets of four – the first set (op. 90) was published during the composer’s lifetime, the second was published posthumously as Op. 142. Composed in 1827, the Four Impromptus Op. 90 D. 899 are a cornerstone of the piano repertoire. The first, in C minor, blends elements of sonata, variation, and through-composed structures. The second Impromptu in E♭ major is a swift ‘moto perpetuo’ with a ternary (or ABA) form. The third is a flowing and meditative piece in G♭ major, characterized by long melodic lines, while the fourth and final Impromptu, in A♭ major, is characterized by cascading arpeggios and a chordal response. 

Like Liszt, Sergei Vasilyevich Rachmaninov was a virtuoso pianist as well as a composer. Widely considered one of the finest pianists of his day, Rachmaninov’s pianistic talents can be heard in his writing for the instrument. The Ten Preludes, Op. 23, composed in 1901 and 1903, is part of a full suite of 24 preludes in all the major and minor keys. The Prelude in D Major is No. 4 in the collection. Marked andante cantabile (moderate and flowing with a lyrical quality), the short composition is in ternary form with an opening theme, developed in a middle section, returning at the end. Also performed is the Prelude in G Sharp minor Op.32 No.12. Among the composer’s most atmospheric pieces for piano, opening right-hand arpeggios fall across a distinctly Russian melody. The Prelude in G Major Op.32 No.5 is the most famous of the set, with its march-like outer sections contrasted by a more lyrical middle section. Rachmaninov himself had huge hands – stretching a 13th (an octave plus a 6th, or from middle C to a high A) – so would have had no difficulty bringing out the melody in the inner voice of the middle section.  

Rachmaninov’s set of Six moments musicaux were composed when he was just 23 years old. Keen to demonstrate his mastery of musical forms, as well as his virtuosity as a pianist, the third movement (in B minor) is the emotional heart of the set with a brooding melody played low on the piano, under wide, open chords. The 5 Morceaux de fantaisie (or ‘fantasy pieces’) were composed when Rachmaninov was younger still (aged 19) in 1892 and are dedicated to Anton Arensky, Rachmaninov’s harmony teacher at the Moscow Conservatory. The opening Elegy consists of gentle arpeggios and a deeply melancholic melody. 

Hildegard von Bingen was a 12th-century abbess and polymath, active as a composer, writer, and mystic. Her piece ‘O frondens virga’ (‘O blossoming branch’) was composed as a psalm antiphon for the Virgin Mary. It is performed here in an arrangement by the pianist, Marie-Luise Hinrichs.  

Giacomo Puccini’s ‘Piccolo Valzer’ (‘Little Waltz’) was published in 1894. The inspiration for the work was said to be the rocking of a boat on Lake Massaciuccoli, where Puccini loved to go fishing. It was subsequently re-elaborated by the composer and became one of the best-known opera arias, Musetta’s solo ‘Quando me n’vo’ in La Bohème. 

Samuel Coleridge-Taylor’s ‘Deep River’ was written in 1904 as part of the composer’s 24 Negro Spirituals. Coleridge-Taylor is reported to have said of the collection: “what Brahms has done for the Hungarian folk music, Dvorak for the Bohemian, and Grieg for the Norwegian, I have tried to do for these Negro Melodies”. 

Margaret Bonds arranged over fifty African-American spirituals for various instruments. The piano work ‘Troubled Water’ is based on the spiritual ‘Wade in the Water’ which was associated with Songs of the Underground Railroad, work songs used by slaves in the nineteenth century to share coded information for escape. Beginning with energetic, syncopated rhythms in the left hand, leading into the recognizable theme in the spiritual, the piece then thickens, with Bonds weaving in jazz-inspired sonorities. 

SONGS OF LOVE

Claire Booth & Ensemble 360

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Friday 7 November 2025, 7.00pm

Tickets:
£23
£14 UC, PIP & DLA
£5 Students & Under 35s

Past Event
Photo of singer Claire Booth, soprano

Programme includes
DVOŘÁK (arr. Matthews)
Love Songs (18’)

DEBUSSY Trois poèmes de Stéphane Malllarmé (13’)
MUSSORGSKY The Nursery (selection) (10’)
DEBUSSY String Quartet (25’) 

Claire Booth is a singer celebrated around the world for her distinctive and characterful voice and the relentless curiosity in the range of work she presents. In recent years she has become a frequent collaborator with Ensemble 360, including a much-lauded CD release Pierrot Portraits. As they prepare for Sheffield Chamber Music Festival 2026, of which Claire is Guest Curator, they present a dazzling evening of French chamber music.

In 1913 Debussy and Ravel began a somewhat friendly rivalry to set three poems by Stéphane Mallarmé, whose words, like the music of these great French composers, explored the same shimmering textures beloved of their contemporary impressionist painters. Ravel’s Chansons madécasses – one of the most popular works in SCMF 2024 – opens this sensuous celebration of light and love which concludes with Debussy’s glittering string quartet.

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DVORAK Antonín, (arr. Matthews) Love Songs

i. Oh, that longed-for happiness does not bloom for our love (Ó naší lásce nekvete to vytoužené štěstí)
ii. So many a heart is as though dead (V tak mnohém srdci mrtvo jest)
iii. Around the house now I stagger (Kol domu se teď potácím) 
iv. I know that in sweet hope (Já vím, že v sladké naději) 
v. Over the countryside reigns a light sleep (Nad krajem vévodí lehký spánek) 
vi. Here in the forest by a brook (Zde v lese u potoka) 
vii. In that sweet power of your eyes (V té sladké moci očí tvých) 
viii. Oh dear soul, the only one (Ó duše drahá jedinká) 

 

Dvorak’s Love Songs are a reworking of his earlier collection Cypresses. The Cypresses were first written in 1865, but Dvorak revisited them again in 1889 to create 8 new songs out of the original 18.  Inspired by the traditional music of his native country, the works are settings of romantic poems by Gustav Pfleger-Moravsky, a fellow Czech who’s work Dvorak admired. The songs were rewritten in many forms by the composer, including a reworking for string quartet, and he pulled many of the main themes out of the song cycle for other works. Although originally written for piano and voice, this arrangement has the vocal line accompanied by violin, viola, cello and double bass. Love Songs are distinctive and known for their elaborate accompaniments and are argued to be the best example of his writing for solo voice. 

DEBUSSY Claude, Trois Poemes de Mallarmé

i. Soupir  
ii. Placet futile 
iii. Eventail 
 

Paris in the late-19th century was a hub of creative innovation. The poet Stéphane Mallarmé (1842-1898) was a central figure in this experimental scene. At his weekly meetings on Tuesdays at his apartment on the Rue de Rome, Mallarmé held court, speaking for hours about art and politics. Regular attendees included W.B. Yeats, Oscar Wilde, Édouard Manet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Emile Zola, Paul Gauguin, Edgar Degas, Paul Verlaine, Rainer Maria Rilke… and Claude Debussy.  

Debussy adored poetry, particularly the works of Mallarmé. Indeed, his most-famous composition, the orchestral tone poem Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune, is closely based on Mallarmé’s poem (‘The Afternoon of the Faune’). Debussy’s music evokes the languid feeling of the poem, while the work’s structure closely mirrors that of the text: Debussy’s composition has the same number of bars (110) as the poem has lines. 

This reverence for poetry can be seen in Debussy’s setting of three poems by Mallarmé, composed late in the composer’s life in 1913. In her analysis of the first of the three songs – ‘Soupir’ (Sigh) – musicologist Marianne Wheeldon notes that “Debussy’s setting tries to imitate the permutability of Mallarmé’s syntax”. Debussy closely mirrors the poem’s sophisticated form, adapting his music to the text (rather than attempting to make the poem fit a traditional musical structure) so that the poem’s ambiguity is preserved. Just as Mallarmé’s poem is written as a single breathless sentence – “Faithful, a white jet of water sighs toward the Azure / – Toward the tender Azure of pale and pure October” – Debussy imitates the freely flowing and associative form of Mallarmé’s poem in which the poet’s ‘soul’ reaches toward ‘autumn’, ‘freckles’, ‘the sky’, and so on.  

Debussy was not the only composer to set poems by Mallarmé. Famously, Maurice Ravel also composed his own Trois poèmes de Mallarmé. Indeed, it was Ravel who first secured the rights to set Mallarmé’s poetry to music. Both Debussy and Ravel set ‘Soupir’ and ‘Placet futile’, however whereas Ravel chose to end his collection with ‘Surgi de la croupe et du bond’ (‘ Risen from the crupper and leap’), Debussy finishes with ‘Eventail’ (‘Fan’), a setting of Mallarmé’s poem ‘Autre Éventail de Mademoiselle Mallarmé’.  Subtly erotic, the poem begins: 

O dreamer, so that I
May plunge in that pathless thing,
Pure delight, by a subtle lie
Learn to hold in your hand my wing. 

MUSSORGSKY Modest, The Nursery (selection)

Originally published in two series, The Nursey song cycle was written between 1868 and 1872. Made up of seven songs, Mussorgsky wrote both the music and the words. The text is written musically exactly as it would be spoken, which leads to some unexpected melodies, and a fluid rhythm in an irregular time signature. Mussorgsky was one of the first composers to make music from speech patterns in this way. The style of each song is varied, but Mussorgsky’s appreciation for humour is clear. Although written to express the feelings and ideas of a child, the music is not for children, as it is as advanced as any other work from that era, and offers a fresh but haunting insight into domestic life. 

DEBUSSY Claude, String Quartet in G minor Op. 10

Debussy’s String Quartet was first performed at the Société Nationale de Musique on 29 December 1893 – almost exactly a year before he shocked Paris with the Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune, the most laconic manifestation of his revolutionary creative spirit. The Quartet, composed just after the Prélude, is one of his earliest mature works – a piece that still has some roots in the musical language of César Franck but in which a fresh and brilliant imagination can be heard, not just in the free handling of forms, but also in the spectacularly inventive writing for string instruments – something absorbed by Ravel in the Quartet he wrote a decade later. The first movement is robust and confident, while the second, with its extensive use of pizzicato, hints at the Javanese music that Debussy heard at the 1889 Exposition. The slow movement begins with fragments of the theme split between the lower instruments before being introduced in full by the first violin, over rich chromatic harmonies. The finale has clear thematic links with the first. It starts hesitantly, gradually building up both tension and speed, on a melodic idea that is presented in different guises before reaching the dazzling conclusion in G major. 

Nigel Simeone © 2011 

RAVEL & GLASS: CINEMATIC QUARTETS

Piatti Quartet

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Thursday 6 November 2025, 7.00pm

Tickets:
£23
£14 UC, PIP & DLA
£5 Students & Under 35s

Past Event

HERMAN (arr. Birchall) Suite from ‘Psycho’ (10’) 
GREENWOOD Prospector’s Quartet from ‘There Will Be Blood’ (3’)
GLASS String Quartet No.3 (18’)
RAVEL String Quartet in F (30’)

Ravel’s glorious, rhapsodic Quartet is the joyous conclusion of this concert of string music composed for, and used in, cinema. From Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwood’s spare and spectral score for Paul Thomas Anderson’s Oscar-winning ‘There Will Be Blood’, to Bernard Herman’s iconic music composed for Alfred Hitchcock’s ‘Psycho’, and Philip Glass’s String Quartet No.3 (composed for the 1985 film ‘Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters’), the Piatti Quartet showcases the captivating range of chamber music composed for the big screen.

The Piatti Quartet have been described by composer Julian Anderson as “living treasures of chamber music… meticulous attention to detail is combined with strong expressive impulse and a wonderful sense of musical drama”, and return to the Playhouse after several rapturously received concerts across their stellar career.

FILM SCREENINGS
A specially curated series of film screenings inspired by the Piatti’s ‘Cinematic Quartets’ takes place at The Showroom to coincide with their concert.

Wednesday 5 November, The Showroom
5.15pm Music in Films panel discussion
6.00pm ‘Mishima’

A panel discussion, including violinist Emily Holland from the Piatti Quartet, will delve into the ways music brings film to life.
Find more details about the panel discussion here: showroomcinema.org.uk

Sunday 9 November, The Showroom
2.30pm ‘There Will Be Blood’

 

HERRMANN Bernard, (arr. Birchall), Suite from ‘Psycho’

‘Psycho’ can easily be said to have one of the most iconic scores in film history– even if you haven’t seen the film, you will have heard the screeching strings from the shower-murder scene. Herrmann scored 7 films for director Alfred Hitchcock in total, with Psycho being the 6th in their collaboration, and wrote the music for other epics such as Citizen Kane, The Twilight Zone and The War of the Worlds. The score for Psycho was written only for the string section of an orchestra, with the strings being muted throughout the film (apart from in the iconic scene) which was to aid in the film’s stark, dissonant, claustrophobic feeling. The music contains influences from composers like Bartok, Debussy and Stravinski, and is extremely effective in conveying the thing Herrmann most wanted it to: “terror”. 

GREENWOOD Jonny, Prospector’s Quartet from ‘There Will Be Blood’

As well as being lead guitarist of the rock band Radiohead, Jonny Greenwood has forged a hugely successful career as a composer of film scores. Credits include soundtracks for the films The Power of the Dog (2021, directed by Jane Campion) and We Need to Talk about Kevin (2011) as well as numerous films in collaboration with the director Paul Thomas Anderson – 2018’s Phantom Thread (for which Greenwood was nominated for an Academy Award) and 2007’s There Will Be Blood, from which this quartet is taken. 

As a child, Greenwood played both the recorder (an instrument he would continue to play into adulthood) and viola. It is his affinity for string writing, and his knowledge of both rock and classical traditions, that sets him aside a film composer. The score for There Will Be Blood, for example, features quotations from the works of Arvo Pärt and Johannes Brahms (as well as some of Greenwood’s own previous compositions) and is characterised by Greenwood’s signature lush string-textures. IndieWire called the soundtrack “One of the most memorable scores this side of the year 2000”, while Variety noted the evocative nature of the music: “Jonny Greenwood’s musical compositions almost become another character in the film. Think Bernard Herrmann and Taxi Driver, another portrait of a twisted soul, with sound effects and music to match”.  

Indeed, this is music that conjures the darkly unsettling world of Upton Sinclair’s novel Oil!, on which the film is based. In ‘The Prospector’s Quartet’, repeated notes played on the cello seem to evoke the machinery of oil extraction, while churning melodies in the strings grow in their foreboding intensity. Daniel Day-Lewis won an Oscar for his performance in the film. As IndieWire noted, “Greenwood’s work, which is string-heavy and beautifully unsettling, is as memorable as Day-Lewis’ performance … Close your eyes and you can almost feel the oil pulsing beneath the ground”.  

 

GLASS Philip, String Quartet No.3 ‘Mishima’

Philip Glass has a musical language that is instantly palatable, with its flowing arpeggios and lush instrumentation. It’s also confined to a very narrow strip in the spectrum of musical expression, yet the potential for infinite subtlety reveals itself quickly. The idea is reminiscent of Pablo Picasso’s blue period, during which he only uses shades of blue and green to convey incredibly nuanced ideas and emotions. In Glass’ third string quartet, the harmony revolves closely around D minor in the first four movements, and E flat major in the last two. The development of the piece is constructed through subtle changes in the layering of material, rather than through traditional thematic development. Originally, these six movements were written as a soundtrack to the film “Mishima”, directed by Paul Schrader. It tells the story of the Japanese writer Yukio Mishima, who was an active nationalist who ended up taking his own life through the act of Seppuku, a ritual suicide, after having led a failed coup d’état.

 

Johannes Marmen 2016

RAVEL Maurice, String Quartet in F

i. Allegro moderato. très doux

ii. Assez vif. très rythmé

iii. Très lent Vif et agité

 

The first two movements of Ravel’s Quartet were finished in December 1902 and the next month he submitted the first movement for a prize at the Paris Conservatoire, where he was still a student. The jury was unimpressed and the Director Théodore Dubois was typically acidic, claiming that it “lacked simplicity”. The failure to win a prize meant that Ravel’s studies with Fauré were over but Ravel persisted with the Quartet, and by April 1903 he had finished all four movements. He put it aside for yet another doomed attempt at the Prix de Rome, but it’s likely that he made further revisions later in the year. The pianist and composer Alfredo Casella recalled running into Ravel in the street in January 1904: “I found [Ravel] seated on a bench, attentively reading a manuscript. I asked him what it was. He said: It is a quartet I have just finished. I am rather pleased with it.” The first performance was given at the Schola Cantorum by the Heymann Quartet, on 5 March 1904. It is dedicated “à mon cher maître Gabriel Fauré”.

 

In a parallel with Debussy’s Quartet, Ravel makes use of cyclic themes – material heard in the first movement returns in various guises throughout. The second movement is notable for Ravel’s brilliant use of cross-rhythms as all four string players become a kind of gigantic guitar. The rhapsodic slow movement includes a dream-like recollection of the cyclic theme. In the finale, Ravel’s use of irregular time signatures generates a momentum that is not only impossible to predict but impossible to resist. Recollections of the cyclic theme are woven into the texture with great subtlety and the kaleidoscopic string writing produces a conclusion that glitters and surges.

 

Nigel Simeone © 2012