Upload
truongthuan
View
279
Download
5
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
IMR
even
ts a
utum
n 20
14
music.sas.ac.uk
Institute of Musical Researchevents programme - autumn 2014
music.sas.ac.ukWelcome to the Institute of Musical Research.
The institute is funded to promote research from all UK institutions of Higher Education, facilitate research networks and provide training for postgraduate students. It provides links to the wider musical community, encourages cross-disciplinary projects, and enhances research impact through public events.
I look forward to welcoming you to the Institute of Musical Research.
Paul Archbold
The Institute of Musical Research is one of ten research institutes forming the School of Advanced Study, University of London, which is funded by the Higher Education Funding Council for England.
Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Institute of Classical Studies Institute of Commonwealth Studies Institute of English Studies Institute of Historical Research Institute of Latin American Studies Institute of Modern Languages Research Institute of Musical Research Institute of Philosophy The Warburg Institute
photo: Edward Baran
Institute of Musical Research, School of Advanced Study, University of London,Senate House, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HU, UK 020 7664 4865
cover illustration: Louis Carmontelle, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart with his father Leopold and his sister Marie Anne, watercolour and bodycolour, London, 1777 (version of a drawing of 1764) © Trustees of the British MuseumMozart and the Power of Music: Memory, Myth & Magic, Chancellor’s Hall, 24th Octobersee p.8 for further details
Anglia Ruskin University AHRC Research Centre for Musical Performance as Creative PracticeBath Spa UniversityBirmingham ConservatoireBritish Forum for EthnomusicologyBrunel UniversityCanterbury Christ Church UniversityCardiff UniversityCity University LondonDe Montfort University Leicester Durham UniversityEdinburgh Napier University Goldsmiths University of LondonGuildhall School of Music & DramaInstitute of EducationKeele University King’s College LondonKingston UniversityLeeds College of Music Liverpool Hope University London Metropolitan UniversityMiddlesex UniversityNational Association for Music in Higher EducationNewcastle University Oxford Brookes University Prifysgol Bangor University Queen Mary University of LondonQueen’s University BelfastRoyal Academy of Music
BBC Symphony OrchestraBarbican CentreBritish MuseumHuddersfield Contemporary Music FestivalArditti QuartetEnsemble Exposé
With thanks to:
Academic collaborators
Funding organisations
Higher Education Funding Council for EnglandHigher Education AcademyAga Khan Trust for CultureErnst von Siemens Music FoundationHepner FoundationHinrichsen Foundation
Elision EnsembleLondon Symphony OrchestraNMC Recordings LtdOrchestra of the Age of EnlightenmentSouth Bank CentreThird Ear Productions
Royal Central School of Speech & Drama Royal College of MusicRoyal Conservatoire ScotlandRoyal Holloway, University of London Royal Northern College of MusicRoyal Musical AssociationSchool of Oriental and African StudiesThe Open University Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music & Dance University of AberdeenUniversity of BirminghamUniversity of BristolUniversity of CambridgeUniversity of EdinburghUniversity of GlasgowUniversity of Hertfordshire University of HuddersfieldUniversity of HullUniversity of LeedsUniversity of LiverpoolUniversity of ManchesterUniversity of NottinghamUniversity of OxfordUniversity of Salford University of SheffieldUniversity of SouthamptonUniversity of SurreyUniversity of SussexUniversity of UlsterUniversity of York
Monday 13 October, 17.00–18.30Chancellor’s Hall, Senate HouseStevie Wishart (CMPCP Visiting Fellow)Off the Page c.1700 / c.2014Stevie Wishart is a composer and performer whose recent compositions and research projects include using realtime processing published as an annotated CD and DVD, The Sound of Gesture; a choral song cycle Out of this World, commissioned for the BBC 2011 Proms; and a large-scale Vespers for St Hildegard for voices and instruments, premiered in York Minster at the 2013 York Early Music Festival, and based upon her 2012 recording for Decca.
Monday 20 October, 17.00–18.30Chancellor’s Hall, Senate HouseAnna Scott (Orpheus Institute)Early Recordings and the De[con]struction of Brahmsian Performance NormsAnna Scott is interested in using the recordings of the Schumann-Brahms circle of pianists in order to challenge the underlying aesthetic ideologies behind both mainstream and period (HIP) performance approaches to Brahms’s late piano music. Anna is in her final year of the docArtes Doctoral Programme in the Musical Arts, based at The Orpheus Instituut in Ghent, Belgium. She is also a Doctoral Artistic Research Fellow at the Orpheus Research Centre in Music (ORCiM).
Monday 15 December, 17.00–18.30Chancellor’s Hall, Senate HouseTerence Charlston (RAM, RCM) Performing lost repertoires: seventeenth-century French keyboard music from the perspective of Mersenne’s 1636 clavichordTerence Charlston is a specialist performer on early keyboard instruments and widely acknowledged for his engaging and expressive performances. He has been described as one of Britain’s leading early keyboard players and his sympathetic command of original instruments has made him a frequent performer at collections of early keyboard instruments all over the world. Over the last 20 years in the profession, he has built an enviably broad career as a solo and chamber musician, choral and orchestral director, and teacher and academic researcher.
Sponsored by the AHRC Research Centre for Musical Performance as Creative Practice and the Institute of Musical Research
Open to the public, free of charge
CMPCP/IMR Performance/Research seminars
New Music Insightin reflection and in performance
Monday 27 October, 17.00–20.00Chancellor’s Hall, Senate HouseMichael Finnissy (University of Southampton) The SonataMichael Finnissy discusses the survival of the Sonata in the twenty-first century and his recent compositions in the form. Followed by a performance of Michael Finnissy’s Violin Sonata by its dedicates Darragh Morgan (violin) and Mary Dullea (piano)This concert marks the official release of Mississippi Hornpipes, Michael Finnissy’s music for violin and piano performed by Darragh Morgan and Mary Dullea on MétierPromoted by the IMR in association with Divine Art Recordings Group
Monday 17 November, 17.00–20.00Chancellor’s Hall, Senate HouseTsung-Hsien Yang (Taipei National University of the Arts, Taiwan) Contemporary Music in TaiwanBorn in 1952, Tsung-Hsien Yang is Taiwan’s most distinguished composer and is currently Professor of Music at Taipei National University of the Arts.His lecture will be followed by a concert with Richard Whalley (piano) Tsung-Hsien Yang Albumblätter from Sansui ShackPromoted by the IMR in association with the Confucius Institute and the Department of Music, University of Manchester
Monday 24 November, 17.00–20.00Chancellor’s Hall, Senate HouseSpeakers to include: Mark Lubotsky, Dmitri Smirnov, Elena FirsovaThe relevance of Schnittke’s musicA celebration of the music of Alfred Schnittke on the eightieth anniversary of his birthto be followed by a concert withMark Lubotsky (violin), Olga Dovbusch-Lubotsky (cello), Dmitri Vinnik (piano) Alfred Schnittke Cello Sonata no. 2 Alfred Schnittke Violin Sonata no. 2 Alfred Schnittke Piano TrioPromoted by the IMR in association with the Centre for Russian Music, Goldsmiths
Monday 8 December, 17.00–20.00Chancellor’s Hall, Senate HouseRobin Holloway (Emeritus Professor of Music, University of Cambridge) Robin Holloway in conversation with Paul Archbold Robin Hollway discusses his musicto be followed by a concert with Okeanos: Jinny Shaw (oboe), Kate Romano (clarinet), Sally Pryce (harp), Ruth Ehrlich (violin), Deborah White (violin), Bridget Carey (viola), Sophie Harris (cello) Robin Holloway Summer Music Concertino No.5 op. 74 (1991) Robin Holloway Serenade in Db op. 99 (2004) Promoted by the IMR in association with Guildhall School of Music & Drama
Monday 3 November, 17.00–18.30Room G35, Senate HouseMargaret Bent (Emeritus Fellow, All Souls College, University of Oxford)Who wrote Ockeghem’s Requiem?Margaret Bent’s research centres on English, French and Italian music of the fourteenth to sixteenth centuries. Editions (some co-authored) include the Old Hall manuscript, English masses, and the works of Dunstaple and Ciconia. She also edited Rossini’s Il Turco in Italia for the Fondazione Rossini, 1998. She co-directs the Digital Image Archive of Medieval Music, serves on many editorial boards of journals, publication series, and of the Einaudi Enciclopedia della Musica, and has contributed numerous articles to the New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. Her most recent major publication, Bologna Q15: The Making and Remaking of a Musical Manuscript: Introductory Study and Facsimile Edition (LIM, Lucca, 2008) was awarded the Palisca prize of the American Musicological Society.
Monday 10 November, 17.00–18.30Chancellor’s Hall, Senate HouseMalcolm Gillies (Professor Emeritus, London Metropolitan University)Questions in Bartók BiographyA musician and linguist by education, Malcolm Gillies has published a dozen books and over 100 major articles, chapters and reviews. His Self-Portrait of Percy Grainger (with David Pear and Mark Carroll) gained an award for scholarly excellence from the American Society for Composers, Authors and Publishers in 2007. Since 1997 he has been editor of the Oxford University Press series Studies in Musical Genesis, Structure and Interpretation. In 2011 he curated the Bartók: Infernal Dance concert series of the Philharmonia Orchestra, London.
Monday 1 December, 17.00–18.30Room G35, Senate HouseNicholas Cook (University of Cambridge) Music, identity, and the clever boy from CroydonA musicologist and theorist, Nicholas Cook holds separate degrees in music and in history/art history. His articles have appeared in leading British and American journals, and cover topics from aesthetics and analysis to psychology and popular culture. Cook’s current work is turning towards social and intercultural perspectives on music, and in 2014 he took up a British Academy Wolfson Research Professorship to work on a three-year project entitled Musical Encounters: Studies in Relational Musicology, the principal output of which will be a monograph of the same name. Other book projects currently in planning address musical creativity and digital multimedia.
Directions in Musical Research
A series of seminars exploring new directions in musical research
Open to the public, free of charge
Research Training
NAMHE travel grantsStudents of UK Higher Education Institutions may apply for a grant to assist with the cost of travel to participate in a Research Training event organised by the IMR. Applications will be considered by a panel representing IMR and NAMHE.Please apply in advance to [email protected] funding has been made available by the National Association for Music in Higher Education
For full details of the Institute of Musical Research’s Research Training programme, please visit: music.sas.ac.uk
Tuesday 7 OctoberGuildhall School of Music & DramaOpen Strings - Open Minds:Historical String Performance in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth CenturiesSpeakers to include: George Kennaway (Hull University), Claire Holden (Cardiff University/ Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment), Christopher Suckling (Gabrieli Consort/GSMD), Jacqueline Ross (GSMD)To include a round table discussion on historical bow making, chaired by John Irving (IMR/ Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance)For further details please visit: music.sas.ac.ukPromoted by the Guildhall School of Music & Drama in partnership with IMR
Monday 17 November, 10:00-16:00Room 102, Senate HouseEditing music: for composers and musicologistsSpeakers to include: Elaine Gould (Senior New Music Editor, Faber Music), Richard Bernas (conductor), Barry Cooper (Manchester)For further details please visit: music.sas.ac.ukPromoted by the IMR in association with the London Arts and Humanities Partnership
Monday 1 December 10:00-16:00Room G35, Senate HouseGetting published: articles, books, journalism and broadcastingSpeakers to include: Vicki Cooper (Senior Commissioning Editor, Music & Theatre, Cambridge University Press)Laura Tunbridge (Editor, Journal of the Royal Musical Association)Robert Worby (Composer and BBC Radio 3 Presenter)For further details please visit: music.sas.ac.ukPromoted by the IMR in association with the London Arts and Humanities Partnership
Research Training Reading Group: Classic Texts in Music and CultureA reading group dedicated to the study of classic text in music and culture, led by Prof. Anahid Kassabian (Liverpool)
For further details please contact [email protected]
Conferences and SymposiaTuesday 9 - Friday 12 SeptemberFaculty of Music, University of OxfordPerspectives on Musical Improvisation IISpeakers to include: Daniel Fischlin (University of Guelph), Joanna MacGregor (RAM), Laudan Nooshin (City University London), Gary Peters (York St John University), Eric Porter (University of California, Santa Cruz), Jason Stanyek (University of Oxford)Geraint Wiggins (Queen Mary, University of London)Delegate fee payableFor further details please visit: www.music.ox.ac.uk/pomi/welcome.htmlPromoted by the University of Oxford in association with the Institute of Musical Research, sempre, British Forum for Ethnomusicology and the Society for Music Analysis
Wednesday 8 OctoberRoom G22/26, Senate House, University of LondonMusic and Capitalism in historical and cross-cultural perspectiveDelegate fee payable For further details please visit: music.sas.ac.uk
Thursday 9 - Friday 10 OctoberChancellor’s Hall, Senate House, University of LondonJohannes Tinctoris and Music Theory in the Late Middle Ages and Early RenaissanceDelegate fee payable For further details please visit: music.sas.ac.uk
Saturday 11 October 10:30Fountain Room, Barbican Centre, Silk Street, LondonNielsen Study DayAdmission free to ticket-holders for any BBC SO Nielsen concert:For programme details see inside back coverFor details of the BBC SO Nielsen festival and ticket prices please visit:barbican.org.ukBarbican Box Office 020 7638 8891
Friday 24 OctoberChancellor’s Hall, Senate House, University of LondonMozart and the Power of Music: Memory, Myth & MagicMusicologists, scientists, medical professionals and performers will debate the questions: how does performing and listening to music affect the brain? Does it increase your capacity to retain information? Is there a ‘Mozart effect’? Does music have the power to heal?Speakers to include: Jessica Grahn, Jane Ginsborg, Stephen Johnson, Nigel Osborne, Michael Trimble and Kirsteen Davidson-KellyPerformers: Ian Brown piano, James Gilchrist tenor, Anna Tilbrook pianoDelegate fee payable For further details please visit: www.themusicalbrain.orgPromoted by The Musical Brain in partnership with the Institute of Musical Research
Saturday 1 November, 10:00 - 17:30Chancellor’s Hall, Senate House, University of LondonLatin American Music SeminarFor further details please visit: music.sas.ac.ukPromoted by the Institute of Latin American Studies and the Institute of Musical Research
Saturday 15 - Sunday 23 NovemberSenate House, University of London, and several venuesBeing Human: A Festival of the HumanitiesFor further details please visit: www.sas.ac.uk
Wednesday 19 November, 10:00-18:00Chancellor’s Hall, Senate House, University of LondonRe-thinking analysis and music performanceDelegate fee payable For further details please visit: music.sas.ac.ukPromoted by the Institute of Musical Research in association with the University of Oxford
Thursday 20 NovemberMilton Court, Silk Street, Barbican, London
10:00- 13:00 Re-writing the pastIn celebration of the sixtieth birthday of John Woolrich, the study day focuses on Woolrich’s compositional models: the operas of Monteverdi and the songs of Purcell, with papers on the music, poetry and visual art of the seventeenth century.Admission free to the study dayFor further details please visit: music.sas.ac.ukPromoted by the Institute of Musical Research in partnership with Britten Sinfonia as part of Being Human: A Festival of the Humanities
18:15 John Woolrich at 60: pre-concert eventThe young musicians of Britten Sinfonia Academy take to the stage in this pre-concert event featuring pieces by John Woolrich alongside a discussion with the composer. (admission free to concert ticket holders)
19:30 John Woolrich at 60Britten Sinfonia celebrates the sixtieth birthday of John WoolrichSophie Bevan soprano, Clare Finnimore viola, Thomas Gould violin, Duncan Ward conductor* Purcell arr. John Woolrich Three Songs Wolf arr. John Woolrich Italian Songs John Woolrich Ulysses Awakes Stravinsky Eight Instrumental Miniatures* Mozart Per pieta, non ricercate Stravinsky Dumbarton Oaks* John Woolrich Violin Concerto (London premiere)*For details of the Britten Sinfonia concert and ticket prices please visit: barbican.org.ukBarbican Box Office 020 7638 8891
Christian Wolff
: photo David Lefeber
New Music InsightA new resource for the academic community
Research documentaries, performances and lecturesdevoted to new music
music.sas.ac.uk/newmusicinsight
Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, Master of the Queen’s MusicChanging Face of ‘New’ MusicSir Peter Maxwell Davies re-evaluates Anton Webern’s lecture The Path to the New Music with perceptive insights into the contemporary cultural worldLecture supported by the John Coffin Memorial Fund
Christian Wolff: ‘Experimental Music’A lecture by Christian Wolff, given in Chancellor’s Hall, University of London in May 2014
Christian Wolff in conversation with Richard BernasChristian Wolff discusses his work and his collaborations with John Cage, Merce Cunningham, and David Tudor
Brian Ferneyhough: ‘Electric Chair Music’A film by Colin Still, Neil Heyde & Paul Archbold examining Ferneyhough’s Time and Motion Study II. The documentary is followed by a performance of the work by Neil Heyde (cello) and Paul Archbold (electronics)Film supported by Kingston University, RAM, IMR, Hinrichsen Foundation
Poetry, Music, Drama: the creation of contemporary operaSir Harrison Birtwistle & David Harsent in conversation with Fiona Sampson‘Shadows and Mirrors: Birtwistle in the New Millenium’ by Jonathan CrossTalks by John Casken, Michael Symmons Roberts, Robert Saxton and Andrew Watts, chaired by Paul Archbold & Fiona SampsonSupported by the IMR, IES, John Coffin Memorial Fund, Hepner Foundation and the Higher Education Academy
Documentaries and performances
John Casken at 65A conversation with John Casken in celebration of his 65th birthday. The film considers his works Orion over Farne, Concerto for Orchestra, Violin Concerto and the new oboe concerto Apollinaire’s Bird
Brian Ferneyhough at 70Three conversations filmed as part of Brian Ferneyhough’s residency in the UK as S T Lee Visiting Fellow at the School of Advanced Study, University of London Brian Ferneyhough in conversation with Colin Blakemore Brian Ferneyhough in conversation with Robert Worby Brian Ferneyhough in conversation with Christopher Redgate
Arditti Quartet perform Jonathan Harvey String Quartet no. 2Arditti Quartet perform Jonathan Harvey String Quartet no. 4 Two films by Paul Archbold and Colin Still of performances of Harvey’s works given by the Arditti Quartet at St Giles’ Cripplegate and Jerwood Hall, LSO St Luke’s in January 2012
Jonathan Harvey String Quartet no. 4: Notes towards an analysisMichael Clarke discusses Jonathan Harvey’s String Quartet no. 4 with illustrations by the Arditti quartet and Gilbert Nouno
Arditti Quartet perform Wolfgang Rihm String Quartet no. 13A film by Paul Archbold and Colin Still of a performance of Wolfgang Rihm’s String Quartet no. 13 at St Giles’ Cripplegate, London in January 2012
Wolfgang Rihm in conversation with Lucas FelsWolfgang Rihm discusses his string quartets
Climbing a Mountain: Arditti Quartet rehearse Brian Ferneyhough String Quartet no. 6Arditti Quartet perform Brian Ferneyhough String Quartet no. 6Two films by Paul Archbold and Colin Still tracing the Arditti Quartet’s rehearsals for the première of Brian Ferneyhough’s String Quartet no. 6 at Donaueschinger MusikTage in October 2010
Christopher Redgate ‘Multiphonia’Christopher Redgate performs his virtuoso work on the new Redgate/Howarth microtonal oboe system, accompanied by several films in which he discusses the creation of the new oboe, supported by an AHRC Creative and Performance Research Fellowship
Paul Archbold ‘Fluxions’Christopher Redgate and Ensemble Exposé perform Paul Archbold’s Fluxions, accompanied by a documentary in which Christopher Redgate and Paul Archbold discuss the composition of the work
Liza Lim ‘The Navigator’ ELISION ensemble perform Liza Lim’s opera‘Songs Found in Dream’ ELISION ensemble perform Liza Lim’s chamber work‘Invisibility’ Séverine Ballon performs Liza Lim’s solo cello work
Michael Finnissy ‘Âwâz-e Niyâz’ Christopher Redgate and Michael Finnissy perform Finnissy’s new work for Redgate/Howarth microtonal oboe doubling Lupophon and piano
Symposium - The Instrument in Musical Performance
Peter Hill Music for Two Pianists
Peter Sheppard Skærved ‘Naked’ instruments: Ravel’s Sonata for Violin and Cello (1922)& Neil Heyde
Mine Doğantan-Dack Equal Partners? Piano-Cello Duo in Historical Context& Sebastian Comberti
John Irving, Three Friends in Conversation - Mozart’s “Kegelstatt” Trio, K.498Jane Booth,Peter Collyer
Christopher Redgate The Electronic Chamber: Creating Interactive Performance& Paul Archbold
Neil Heyde Choreographing the Instrument, Body and Ensemble
Anthony Rooley ‘Music is nothing more than a Decoration of Silence’ (Marsilio Ficino, c.1485)
Mine Doğantan-Dack ‘The least expressive instrument’ (Harold Bauer, 1917)
Conference - (M)other Russia: Evolution or Revolution
Sir Rodric Braithwaite Russia Now
Conference - Musical Geographies of Central Asia
Saida Daukeyeva East vs West: regional styles of dombyra performance and their representation in music practice and discourse in modern Kazakhstan
Theodore Levin The Geography of Possibility: Mapping the Future of the Past in Central Asian Music
Megan M Rancier Narratives of Ancientness and Kazakh Nationhood in the Music of the “Turan” Ensemble
Stephanie Bunn The body and the landscape in Kyrgyz poetics: topography resonance and image in contemporary Kyrgyz epic
Lecture podcasts (2011-13)
Mozart’s Kegelstatt Trio: an eighteenth-century conversationMozart Trio in Eb, for clarinet, viola and fortepiano, ‘Kegelstatt’ K.498 John Irving, Jane Booth and Peter CollyerThree films including a documentary on the work, a performance on historical instruments, and an introduction to the historical keyboards at Finchcocks MuseumAvailable for download from iTunesU, and streaming via YouTubeA DVD is available from the IMR. Please send an email to: [email protected]
The Mozart ProjectThe first interactive digital book on Mozart, The Mozart Project, published by Pipedreams Collective, was released on the AppStore/iTunes/iBooks on 15 May to critical acclaim, becoming the no.1 bestseller on the iBooks non-fiction list within five days. Ensemble DeNOTE features in a number of video performances illustrating Mozart’s concertos and chamber music. Additionally, John Irving has authored two chapters, and taken part in several audio interviews.
Lecture-RecitalsMonday 18th August 19:00 North York Moors Chamber Music Festival, St Oswald’s, Lythe Beethoven Clarinet Trio, Op.11 and Mozart Gran’ Partita (arr. C.F. Schwencke)with Marcus Barcham Stevens, Mark Braithwaite, Andrew Skidmore, Jane Booth, John Irvinghttp://northyorkmoorsfestival.com/
Saturday 4th October 19:30 Finchcocks, Goudhurst, Kent Mozart “Kegelstatt” Trio, K.498 and chamber music by his Viennese contemporarieswith Jane Booth, Oliver Wilson, John Irvinghttp://www.finchcocks.co.uk/pages/concert.php?event=125
Friday 14th November 14:30 Greenwich International Early Music Festival Old Royal Naval College Chapel, Greenwich. Beethoven Trio for Clarinet, Cello, Piano, Op.38 with John Irving, Jane Booth and Ruth Alfordhttp://www.earlymusicshop.com/More/Greenwich_International_Early_Music_Festival.aspx
DeNOTE:Centre for eighteenth-century performance practice
ICONEA Near and Middle Eastern archeomusicology
In autumn 2014, ICONEA will hold its seminars at The Oriental Institute, University of Oxford
Tuesday 30 September 15:00 - 18:00ICONEA, The Oriental Institute, University of Oxford, Pusey Lane, Oxford OX1 2LE Irving Finkel (British Museum), Bruno de Florence, Richard Dumbrill‘What is Middle-Eastern archaeomusicology, what is the evidence, and how does it make us reconsider our perception of the fundamentals of music through critical Lacanian psycho-analytical approach.’All seminars are free of charge and open to the public.
For details of the autumn events programme please see: www.iconea.org
ICONEA 2014 will be held at the University of Oxford
Middle East, South and Central Asia Music Forum
The Middle East, South and Central Asia Music Forum is open to researchers, students and anyone interested in the music and culture of the regions.
For details of the autumn events programme please see: music.sas.ac.uk/mescamf
SongArt Performance
The Listening Workshop
A research group for practitioners and theorists of song performance, poetry, theatre, musicology and philosophy with a view to gaining new insights into the practice and ontology of song performance
For details of the autumn events programme please see: www.songart.co.uk
An open forum with invited talks and discussions of readings on the history, ethnography and theory of listening, convened by Professor Rachel Beckles Willson
Meetings take place at:11 Bedford Square, London WC1 3RF Admission freeOrganised by Royal Holloway’s Humanities and Arts Research Centre
For details of the autumn events programme please see: https://www.royalholloway.ac.uk/harc/home.aspx
Medieval Song NetworkThe Medieval Song Network will be hosting a series of events and talks in Yale this coming year 2014-15. Co-hosted by Ardis Butterfield and Anna Zayarusnaya, a group called the Medieval Song Lab will be meeting regularly. The Medieval Song Lab brings together scholars in Connecticut and nearby interested in medieval song. Both “Medieval” and “Song” are taken in their broadest reasonable sense, to include sacred and secular music from before c. 1400. The lab hosts at least three events per semester that focus around the discussion of pre-circulated papers. We also organize informal singing from medieval notation. Flexibility of format and focus as well as interdisciplinary membership—the MSL draws faculty and students from Music, French, English, Italian, and Comparative Literature departments as well as performers—helps make the Lab a fun and productive environment in which members can share their work, develop new research ideas, and foster a sense of community.
For details of the autumn events programme please see: www.medievalsongnetwork.org
An international network supporting resources for researchers interested in music criticism and in the more general musical culture
of the nineteenth century in France.
music.sas.ac.uk/fmc
The Press is central to the understanding of French history in the 19th century, whether the inquiry is directed towards foreign affairs, transport, agriculture or the performing arts. Its various forms – daily newspapers, specialist publications and non-specialist periodicals – provide not only data about performances, artists and their mentalités but also permit close readings of the language underpinning their aesthetic and ideological judgements.
The Francophone Music Criticism project started life in 2006 as an AHRC Network based at the IMR and led by Katharine Ellis (RHUL) and Mark Everist (University of Southampton). It brings together a worldwide network of over 175 bilingual scholars to create an open-access online resource of music-critical texts from nineteenth-century France, and to provide an environment in which the group can take forward historical, linguistic and aesthetic concerns central to French artistic culture of the nineteenth century.
We run a Jiscmail discussion list [email protected] which ensures ready virtual contact (new members always welcome!), but our main public face is our collection of over 1900 articles (23 anthologies; approximately three million words) with further texts in the ‘Salome’ collection expected in autumn 2014.
If you are interested in joining the project, please email: [email protected]
BBC Symphony OrchestraStudents are invited to attend selected BBC Symphony Orchestra rehearsals in Maida ValePlease note that the dates below are for the concerts, not the rehearsals. To find out rehearsal dates/times and to book a place, please send an email to: [email protected]
Students are required to bring scores of repertoire works. The IMR will endeavour to provide scores of newly-commissioned works.
The BBC Symphony Orchestra offers discounts on selected concerts through the Student Pulse app.
Wednesday September 24, 19:30 Kevin Volans The Mountain That Left John Adams My Father Knew Charles Ives Ives Symphony No. 4 Andrew Litton conductor; David Hill conductor; Pumeza Matshikiza soprano; William Wolfram piano
Sunday October 5, 19:30 Total Immersion: John Tavener Remembered Sir John Tavener Little Ceremonial Akhmatova: Requiem The Protecting Veil Alexander Vedernikov conductor; Marie Arnet soprano; Brindley Sherratt bass; Nicolas Altstaedt cello
Saturday October 11, 19:30 Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 6 in B minor, ‘Pathétique’ Mozart Concerto for Violin No. 4 in D major, K 218 Nielsen Symphony No. 1 in G minor, FS16, Op 7 Sakari Oramo conductor; Augustin Hadelich violin
Wednesday November 19, 19:30 Respighi Trittico Botticelliano Brett Dean The Annunciation (UK première) Richard Strauss Le bourgeois gentilhomme, Op 60 (suite) Josep Pons conductor
Sunday November 30, 19:30 The Sound of Chaplin Timothy Brock Kid Auto Races Neil Brand Easy Street Timothy Brock The Immigrant Chaplin Shoulder Arms Timothy Brock conductor
Friday December 12, 19:30 Rachmaninov Spring Nielsen Symphony No. 2 ‘The Four Temperaments’, FS29, Op 16 Busoni Concerto for Piano in C major, K247, Op 39 Sakari Oramo conductor; Igor Golovatenko baritone; Garrick Ohlsson piano
Forthcoming IMR events in spring 2015
Friends of the IMR
If you would like to further develop the work of the Institute of Musical Research, please join the Friends of the IMR.
Friends of the IMR have supported:• Lectures by distinguished speakers• Concerts by international artists• Workshops for early-career composers• Training events for postgraduate students
Friends of the IMR receive the following benefits:• Free reference access to Senate House Library and its outstanding music collection• IMR brochure sent to you by post or email• Invitation to special Friends of the IMR events• Golden Friends will be acknowledged in the IMR brochure
Annual fee Student Friend (£10), Friend (£45), Golden Friend (£100)Gift-aided donations are welcome
For further details, please see: music.sas.ac.uk
Monday 16 February 2015Helmut Lachenmann at 80A study day devoted to the music of one of Germany’s pioneering composers, to include lectures, film, a conversation with the composer and performance by the Arditti QuartetFor further details please visit: music.sas.ac.uk
Friday 20 March 2015Pierre Boulez at 90A study day in association with the BBCSO festival Total Immersion: the music of Pierre BoulezFor further details please visit: music.sas.ac.uk
Saturday 11 OctoberFountain Room, Barbican Centre
10:30 - 13:30 Nielsen Study Day: IMR morning symposium
Nanette Nielsen (Nottingham) Danish music and modernism’s legacies
Christopher Tarrant (RHUL/Newcastle) Nielsen and musical form
David Fanning (Manchester) Nielsen’s life through his letters
Sakari Oramo, (Chief Conductor, BBC Symphony Orchestra) Performing Nielsen
14:30 - 17:30 Nielsen Study Day: BBCSO study afternoon
Sakari Oramo (BBCSO) An introduction to the BBCSO’s Nielsen cycle
Daniel Grimley (Oxford) Nielsen’s landscapes
Andrew Mellor (Gramophone) Nielsen’s Symphonies
Paul Binding (Independent scholar/biographer) H C Andersen, Nielsen, and Danish humour
Stephen Johnson (BBC Radio 3) Discovering Nielsen 1
Admission free to ticket-holders for any BBCSO Nielsen concert
Please note capacity is limited for the symposium and study afternoon, so please arrive early to avoid disappointment. Attendance at the morning session does not guarantee admission to the afternoon session
For details of the BBCSO Nielsen symphony cycle and ticket prices please visit: barbican.org.uk Barbican Box Office 020 7638 8891
Nielsen Study Day
Nielsen: The Symphonies
October 2014 – May 2015
SATURDAY 11 OCTOBER, 7.30PM
Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 6, ‘Pathétique’ Mozart Violin Concerto No. 4 in D major, K 218 Nielsen Symphony No. 1
Sakari Oramo conductor Augustin Hadelich violin
FRIDAY 12 DECEMBER, 7.30PM
Rachmaninov Spring Nielsen Symphony No. 2, ‘The Four Temperaments’ Busoni Piano Concerto Sakari Oramo conductor Garrick Ohlsson piano Igor Golovatenko baritone BBC Symphony Chorus
FRIDAY 16 JANUARY, 7.30PM
Sibelius The Dryad Rachmaninov Piano Concerto No. 3 Nielsen Symphony No. 3, ‘Sinfonia espansiva’ Sakari Oramo conductor Lucy Hall soprano Marcus Farnsworth baritone Yevgeny Sudbin piano
WEDNESDAY 18 FEBRUARY, 7.30PM
Sibelius The Oceanides Zemlinsky Maeterlinck Songs Ravel Le tombeau de Couperin Nielsen Symphony No. 4, ‘The Inextinguishable’ Sakari Oramo conductor Anne Sofie von Otter mezzo-soprano
FRIDAY 10 APRIL, 7.30PM
Ravel La valse Prokofiev Piano Concerto No. 3 in C major Nielsen Symphony No. 5 Ravel Boléro Sakari Oramo conductor Alexander Toradze piano
SATURDAY 23 MAY, 7.30PM
Sibelius Tapiola Rachmaninov Piano Concerto No. 4 Foulds April – England Nielsen Symphony No. 6, ‘Sinfonia semplice’ Sakari Oramo conductor Denis Kozhukhin piano
bbc.co.uk/symphonyorchestra for full details of the BBC Symphony Orchestra’s Barbican season and to sign up for the free e-newsletter.
Nielsen’s six elemental symphonies, presented by the BBC Symphony Orchestra and Chief Conductor Sakari Oramo in the lead up to the 150th anniversary of the composer’s birth.
Associate Orchestra
22899_BBC SO Neilsen FLYER_v3.indd 1 24/06/2014 09:00