FESTIVAL FINALE

Ensemble 360

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Saturday 21 May 2022, 7.15pm

Tickets: £20
£14 Disabled & Unemployed
£5 Students & Under 35s

Save £s when you book for 5 or more concerts*

Past Event

BRITTEN Sinfonietta (16’)
KNUSSEN … Upon One Note (3’)
GRIME Five Northeastern Scenes (12’)
SLATER The Light Blinds
RPS Composer 2021–22 Commission for Music in the Round (10’)
BRAHMS Serenade No.1 (47’)

Ensemble 360 brings the Sheffield Chamber Music Festival to a thrilling climax with a programme showcasing their endless versatility and brilliance. Benjamin Britten was a mentor to Oliver Knussen, and in turn, Knussen had a huge influence on our guest curator Helen Grime. This sequence of great British music is topped off by something completely different: lavish tunes, warm radiance and a jubilant ending courtesy of Johannes Brahms. The perfect finale!  

Please note the change to the previously advertised programme for this concert.
We apologise for any disappointment this may cause.

PRE-CONCERT TALK 6.00pm – 6.45pm
ANGELA SLATER, HELEN GRIME &
JAMES MURPHY Royal Philharmonic Society
FREE, please request tickets when booking for the 7.15pm concert

BRITTEN Benjamin, Sinfonietta Op.1

1. Poco presto ed agitato
2. Variations: Andante lento
3. Tarantella: Presto vivace

Britten was already a very prolific composer by the time he gave this work its designation as his official Opus One. Dedicated to his teacher, Frank Bridge, it was written when Britten was 18 years old, and it already demonstrates his extraordinary imagination. The influence of Schoenberg’s First Chamber Symphony is apparent in places, and the instrumental writing in all three movements has a fluency and flamboyance that quickly became hallmarks of the young Britten’s music. The first public performance was given on 31 January 1933 at the Mercury Theatre, London, in one of the Macnaghten-Lemare concerts played by the English Wind Players and the Macnaghten String Quartet, conducted by Iris Lemare. Britten’s music has always been more enthusiastically received abroad, and on 7 August 1933, the Sinfonietta was broadcast on Radio Strasbourg, conducted by the great Hermann Scherchen. The first British broadcast was a month later, by members of the BBC Symphony Orchestra conducted by Edward Clark.

© Nigel Simeone 2013

KNUSSEN Oliver, …Upon One Note

Purcell’s only five-part fantazia (Z745) gains its title ‘upon one note’ from the middle C which sounds throughout. From the first bar Oliver Knussen begins to distort the rhythms and pitches of his model while retaining the fixed C, which thus finds itself surrounded occasionally by very alien harmony indeed. As though out of a mist, the diatonic tonality of the original emerges from time to time to mark the ends of the sections, which follow the same plan as those of Fantazia 7 (Benjamin). During the final fast section Purcell’s music re-asserts itself unequivocally so that the closing bars are entirely as he wrote them.

© Mark Edgley Smith

GRIME Helen, Five Northeastern Scenes

Five North Eastern Scenes for oboe and piano was commissioned by the Kunstförderverein Kreis Düren e. V. for the 2016 Spannungen chamber music festival in Heimbach, Germany. The piece is in five short movements. The first, third and fifth explore space and melancholy, while the second and fourth are fleeting and at times more violent.

This is the third work in which I have used the paintings of the Scottish artist Joan Eardley as a starting point. Her vast, emotive snow scenes painted outside in the brief periods of calm between snow storms capture the striking yet bleak beauty of North East Scotland, an area where I grew up, but have not visited for many years.

© 2016 Helen Grime

SLATER Angela Elizabeth, The Light Blinds

The Royal Philharmonic Society commissioned Angela Elizabeth Slater as one of its 2021/22 Composers to write this work for Ensemble 360 at Music in the Round’s Sheffield Chamber Music Festival.

The Light Blinds for clarinet quintet explores the drama in extremes of light and darkness, charting a path through the spaces created by the tension of these opposing states. It draws on a short poem that I wrote whilst travelling home from a Music in the Round concert in 2021, following a day exploring the natural landscape around Sheffield.

The first material I wrote for this work was a short solo clarinet fragment, which is heard in the opening of the second section, exploring the line ‘The Light Blinds’. I used this material to shape and construct the rest of the piece, with this short 7/8 material acting as a central organising principle; the entire structure and pitch content emerges from it. This clarinet material is essentially veiled through it being stretched and texturally displaced within the quartet before being revealed in crystalline contrast with the solo clarinet against pulsing harmonics in the quartet. This ‘light blinds’ material becomes increasingly agitated, collapsing in on itself to form and explore the line ‘the dark engulfs’. Here the quartet concentrates on the lowest tessituras of their instruments and is accompanied by the bass clarinet, moving between dramatic and fragile multiphonics and aggressive rumbling material that pulls us further into the depths.

The dark engulfs
and the light blinds
in neither a sight
is seen in clarity
a blur, desperate to find a firm grip
in focus

Poem by Angela Elizabeth Slater

BRAHMS Johannes, Serenade No. 1 in D Op. 11, nonet version reconstructed by David Walter

Allegro Molto
Scherzo: Allegro non troppo
Adagio non troppo
Minuet
Scherzo: Allegro
Rondo: Allegro

Brahms’s D major Serenade is well known as his first orchestral work – but, like the D minor Piano Concerto from the same period, it had a complicated genesis. It was first conceived in 1857 as a Serenade for eight instruments in three or four movements, and a year later it had become a work in six movements, now scored for nine instruments. By 1860, it had been rewritten for full orchestra – the version that survives today (though Brahms even considered developing that into his first symphony, but decided to leave well alone). The nonet version was performed in public on 28 March 1859 at a concert in Hamburg, and a year later the orchestral version was given its premiere in Hannover. Whether Brahms destroyed the chamber version, or whether the material simply vanished is not known, but a skilful reconstruction reveals something of Brahms’s original conception: a work much closer in spirit to the serenades and divertimentos of Mozart than the reworked orchestral version.

© Nigel Simeone 2013

COPLAND, WEIR & MOZART

Ensemble 360

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Friday 20 May 2022, 5.00pm

Tickets: £15
£10 Disabled & Unemployed
£5 Students & Under 35s

Save £s when you book for 5 or more concerts*

Past Event

COPLAND Duo for Flute & Piano (15’)
WEIR Airs from Another Planet (12′)
MOZART Quintet for Piano and Wind in E flat K452 (25’)

This concert gives the wind players of Ensemble 360 a chance to shine, starting with the flute in Copland’s atmospheric evocation of the US landscape. Mozart’s Quintet is one of the best-loved works in the wind repertoire, full of his typical catchy themes shared across the ensemble. ‘Airs from Another Planet’, Judith Weir’s piece for piano and wind quintet, takes traditional Scottish folk tunes and reimagines them as if remembered in the future by a human colony on a distant planet. 

PRE-CONCERT TALK, 4.15pm – 4.45pm
HELEN GRIME & JUDITH WEIR
FREE, please request tickets when booking for the 5.00pm concert

Sheffield Chamber Music Festival runs 13–21 May 2022

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COPLAND Aaron, Duo for Flute & Piano

Duo was commissioned by seventy pupils and friends of the celebrated flutist William Kincaid after his death in 1967. Copland described it as lyrical and in a pastoral style. “Lyricism seems to be built into the flute,” he wrote. Duo is in three movements. “The whole is a work of comparatively simple harmonic and melodic outline, direct in expression. Being aware that many of the flutists who were responsible for commissioning the piece would want to play it, I tried to make it grateful for the performer…it requires a good player.” The piece has become a standard in the repertoire of flutists worldwide and is also available in a version for violin and piano.

WEIR Judith, Airs from Another Planet

I once read of an idea to establish a human colony on Mars which was at once visionary and practical. In order to acclimatise themselves, potential settlers would at first live together, sealed off from the human race on a remote Scottish island.

This is the music of the Scottish colonisers, several generations later, marooned on a lonely and distant planet; the ancient forms of their national music almost completely lost in translation, with only the smallest vestiges of the national style remaining.

Three traditional melodies are quoted, but as if refracted through space time, far distances and strange atmospheric effects. These are ‘The Leys of Luncarty’ (heard on the horn in the opening Strathspey); ‘Ettrick Banks’ (played on the clarinet in the Traditional Air) and ‘Miss Margaret Graham of Gartmore’s Favourite’ (played by everyone in the Jig).

© Judith Weir

MOZART Wolfgang Amadeus, Quintet for Piano and Wind in E flat K452

Largo – Allegro moderato
Larghetto
Allegretto

In a letter to his father on 10 April 1784, Mozart described his new Quintet for Piano and Wind as ‘the best piece I have ever written’. Completed on 30 March 1784 it was given its première just two days later on 1 April, at a ‘grand musical concert’ for the benefit of the National Court Theatre in Vienna. The extraordinary programme consisted of two Mozart Symphonies (almost certainly the ‘Haffner’ and the ‘Linz’), an ‘entirely new concerto’ played by Mozart (either K450 or K451, both recently finished), a solo improvisation, three opera arias and the first performance of an ‘entirely new grand quintet’. It was probably the presence of wind players for the symphonies that prompted Mozart to write one of his most original chamber works for this occasion.

While the first movement is designed on almost symphonic lines (complete with substantial slow introduction), it has a gentler sensibility and textures that recall the kind of dialogue between piano and wind that are such a feature of Mozart’s mature piano concertos. After a slow movement that makes the most of the song-like expressiveness of wind instruments, the finale is a sonata rondo – in essence a theme that returns repeatedly within a developing context – that was also much favoured in the piano concertos. The Quintet is highly original in terms of how it is put together, and the daring with which Mozart explores unusual sonorities.

Nigel Simeone © 2011

Romantic Piano Trios

Leonore Piano Trio

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Friday 18 March 2022, 7.15pm

Tickets: £20  
£14 Disabled & Unemployed 
£5 Students & Under 35s 

Past Event

HAYDN Piano Trio No.39 Gypsy Rondo
DVOŘÁK Piano Trio No.4 Dumky 
BRAHMS Piano Trio No.1 

Three blockbuster trios form this spectacular evening from the inimitable Leonore Piano Trio: Haydn, creator of the piano trio, is full of quotations of folk music and dramatic effects borrowed from ‘gypsy’ music. Dvořák’s beloved Dumky trio also plays with folk tunes, contrasting the melancholic with the triumphant building towards a vigorous dancing finale. Brahms’s early but highly personal trio is by turns strange and powerful, prayerful and fantastical. 

“with energy that could be bottled and sold as a tonic for the times” **** BachTrack, September 2021 

BRAHMS, SCHUMANN and more

Ensemble 360

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Thursday 10 March 2022, 7.15pm

Tickets: £20  
£14 Disabled & Unemployed 
£5 Students & Under 35s 

Past Event

VIGNERY Sonata for Horn and Piano
BRAHMS Clarinet Sonata in F minor 
ROBERT SCHUMANN Fantasiestücke Op.73 
REINECKE Trio for Clarinet, Horn and Piano 

Brahms’s harmonious Sonata for Clarinet and Piano, one of the great masterpieces in the clarinet repertoire, is performed alongside Schumann’s exuberant, playful and romantic ‘fantasy pieces’. This is also a rare chance to hear Vignery’s tuneful and spirited sonata for horn and piano, and Reinecke’s trio, which continues the exploration of the fantastical, passing hunting call-like melodies between the clarinet and horn, to a thrilling, galloping climax. 

This concert is dedicated to the memory of Jill Lumb, a long-standing supporter of The Lindsays and Music in the Round.

Rising-star pianist

Mishka Rushdie Momen

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Saturday 15 January 2022, 7.15pm

Tickets: £20  
£14 Disabled & Unemployed 
£5 Students & Under 35s 

Past Event

BACH Prelude & Fugue in C from the Well-Tempered Clavier, Book I 
MOZART Fantasie in C minor K475  
ROBERT SCHUMANN Ten Impromptus on a Theme by Clara Wieck Op.5 
PROKOFIEV Visions fugitives  
BYRD Fantasia in A minor  
LIGETI Etude No.10 Der Zauberlehrling 
SCHUBERT Fantasie in C Wanderer Fantasy 

Named ‘Critics’ Classical Music Breakthrough Artist’ in The Times Arts Awards 2021, Mishka Rushdie Momen is one of the most exciting young pianists performing today. This promises to be a tour de force through five centuries of music played with passion and profound musicality, including Schumann’s early impromptus on a theme by his future wife and Schubert’s epic theme and variations, the Wanderer Fantasy, perhaps his most expansive and exciting work. 

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CHOPIN Works for solo piano

Tim Horton

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Saturday 5 March 2022, 7.15pm

Tickets: £20  
£14 Disabled & Unemployed 
£5 Students & Under 35s 

Past Event

MOZART Fantasy in C minor K396 
SZYMANOWSKI Masques Op.34 
CHOPIN Four Ballades 

Tim Horton continues his exploration of Chopin’s central place within the history of the piano. Looking back, Mozart’s improvisational Fantasy in C minor is dramatic in quality and dark in tone. Looking forward, Szymanowski’s dream-like Masques is colourful, hypnotic and capricious. Taking centre stage, Chopin’s innovative four Ballades share noble melodies and dance-like quality to explore the varied colours of the piano. 

Tony Kofi ‘Kind of Blue’ sextet

Tony Kofi & Guests

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Saturday 8 January 2022, 7.30pm

Tickets: £18
£16 Over 60s, Disabled & Unemployed
£9 Students
£4 Under 16s

Past Event

TONY KOFI alto sax
FREDDIE GAVITA trumpet
ALEX GARNETT tenor sax
RICK SIMPSON piano
ANDREW CLEYNDERT bass
ALFONSO VITALE drums

Tony Kofi leads an all-star band celebrating Miles Davis’ highly innovative ‘Kind of Blue’ album, featuring the original numbers and some of the band’s own compositions inspired by it.

More than a milestone in jazz ‘Kind of Blue’ is a defining document of twentieth century music, one of those rare, influential works of art that achieve popularity among musicians, critics and the public alike. Even if you’ve never owned this classic album you’ll instantly recognise ‘So What’, ‘Freddie Freeloader’, ‘Blue in Green’, ‘All Blues’ and ‘Flamenco Sketches’ as old friends.

Presented by Sheffield Jazz

Tony Thornton: A Celebration of a Life (live-stream)

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Saturday 10 July 2021, 7.00pm
Online event
This Was Available Until 24 July 2021

PROGRAMME

Welcome: James Thornton

The Gesualdo Six
Morley “Now is the month of maying” 2’
Byrd “Vigilate” 4.30’
Praetorius “Es ist ein Ros entsprungen” 3’

Eulogies: Michael Thornton, Simon and Mark Thornton

Sarah Fox and Tim Horton
Schubert Die Forelle 2’
Schubert Auf dem See 3.30’

Ensemble 360 and Tim Horton
Schubert Trout Quintet
Thema: Andantino Variations 1-5 Allegretto 8.22’
Finale: Allegro giusto 6.45’

Eulogies: Paul Allen and David Whelton

Sarah Fox and Tim Horton
Mozart “E Susanna non vein! …Dove sono i bei momenti” The Marriage of Figaro 5.15’

Ensemble 360
Beethoven String Quartet in A minor Op.132
Molto Adagio “Heileger Dankgesang eines Genesenden” 16’
Alla Marcia, assai vivace – Pui allegro 2.20’
Allegro appassionato – Presto 6.50’

Tony had wide ranging musical tastes. He always said that it was Peter Cropper, the visionary leader of the Lindsay String Quartet, who introduced him to the joys of chamber music in the early 1970s.

This evening’s programme features three composers who were perhaps most important for Tony: Mozart, Schubert and Beethoven. 

Schubert song recitals were always a highlight for Tony, especially at the Wigmore Hall, as were also Mozart’s operas, which brought him so much pleasure on his annual visits to Glyndebourne.

I know he would be delighted at the prospect of Sarah Fox and Tim performing for us tonight. Beethoven’s String Quartet Op.132 was perhaps the piece that meant most to Tony, especially the great Molto adagio movement, which is one of the supreme moments in all music, a work of great contemplation and intensity. The clue may lie in its heading ‘Heiliger Dankgesang eines Genesenen’ (‘Holy song of thanksgiving’). The beautiful Mayfield Valley was a favourite spot for Tony to walk and cycle and he commissioned Tim Rose to paint this landscape with The Lindsays playing the Op.132 hidden in the clouds.

It is to Delma Tomlin we owe Tony’s interest in early music and the National Centre for Early Music. It is therefore fitting for this evening’s concert to open with a welcome from The Gesualdo Six singing a selection of madrigals from the 16th and 17th centuries.   

David Whelton OBE

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BARTÓK & LIGETI

Ensemble 360

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Saturday 4 December 2021, 7.15pm

Tickets: £15
£10 Disabled & Unemployed
£5 Students & Under 35s

Past Event
Classical violinist Benjamin Nabarro from Ensemble 360

BARTÓK Sonata No.1 for Violin and Piano (33′)
LIGETI Horn Trio Hommage à Brahms (24′)

The music of Hungary is passionate, thrilling and rooted in the country’s own folk music traditions, perhaps best heard in the works of Béla Bartók and György Ligeti, two of the 20th century’s most important composers. Bartók’s First Violin Sonata is a storm of energy interspersed with moments of elegance and beauty; while Ligeti’s Horn Trio is a modern classic that echoes the Brahms Horn Trio with its emotion, as well as featuring dramatic effects from the horn. 

“Ensemble 360 [gave] a mesmerising performance” ***** Bach Track

 

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CHOPIN Works for solo piano

Tim Horton

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Friday 26 November 2021, 7.15pm

Tickets: £20
£14 Disabled & Unemployed
£5 Students & Under 35s

Past Event

DEBUSSY Préludes Book 2 (39′)
CHOPIN 24 Preludes Op.28 (38′)

Chopin composed wonderfully melodic music for solo piano, which is why it is still so popular today.  This is the first of six concerts featuring Chopin that Tim will perform with Music in the Round over the next few seasons. Sit back and enjoy…   

“Tim Horton’s unaffected, heartfelt playing is perfectly judged.” The Arts Desk 

Post-concert talk
Tim Horton chats to Tom McKinney about Chopin’s music and Tim’s upcoming Chopin cycle.

 Free to all ticket-holders for this concert.

JAZZ PIANO LEGEND

Julian Joseph

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Saturday 6 November 2021, 7.15pm

Tickets: £20
£14 Disabled & Unemployed
£5 Students & Under 35s

Past Event

Acclaimed as one of the finest jazz musicians to emerge this side of the Atlantic, Julian Joseph has devoted his long career to championing jazz across the British Isles and into the far corners of the globe. He was the first Black British jazz musician to host a series at London’s Wigmore Hall, and the first to headline a late-night concert at the BBC Proms with his All Star Big Band. When he performed for Music in the Round in 2016, he left audiences speechless at the breadth and brilliance of his improvising skills, and we are delighted to welcome him back to Sheffield. 

“The most significant jazz musician this country has produced for many years, perhaps ever.” The Stage

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STARS OF CLASSICAL GUITAR & ACCORDION

Craig Ogden & Miloš Milivojević

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Saturday 6 November 2021, 3.00pm

Tickets: £15
£10 Disabled & Unemployed
£5 Students & Under 35s

Past Event

Classical guitarist Craig Ogden has recorded an impressive six chart-topping CDs for Classic FM. He teams up with the award-winning classical accordionist Miloš Milivojević for this relaxed concert, performing in a unique duo showcasing stunning arrangements of classical music by composers including Vivaldi, Scarlatti and Piazzolla. Both virtuosos of their instrument with international careers, their partnership reveals compelling playing, and their chatty concert presentation has made them firm favourites with audiences of all ages. 

“Some of the finest guitar-playing on the planet” ***** @Reviewsgate 

Post-concert Q&A
Music in the Round’s Programme Manager Tom McKinney is joined by Craig and Miloš for a chat after the concert.

Free to all ticket-holders for this concert.

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