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2024-04-24
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Iestyn Davies Thomas Dunford Dowland Wigmore Hall 2013
Performed from Wigmore Hall on Friday 5 July 2013.
Philharmonia Quartet Altenberg Trio Munich Chamber Orchestra Chamber Orchestra Europe Scottish Chamber Orchestra Royal Liverpool Philharmonic City Birmingham Symphony Orchestra Camerata Salzburg Melbourne Symphony Orchestra Orchestra Victoria Australian Chamber Orchestra Chicago Symphony Orchestra Philharmonia Orchestra Royal Philharmonic Concert Orchestra Northern Sinfonia Irish Chamber Orchestra Haydn Gilmore Yehudi Menuhin Julian Rachlin Fried Oskar Back Hennessy Hamer Nara Kobe Nobuko Imai Li Kuo Chang Roosevelt Hopkins Purcell Barbirolli Tippett Wigmore Hall Bbc Proms Royal Festival Hall Purcell Room Sage Gateshead 2000 2001 2009 2011 2016
The Programme • Haydn: String Quartet in A major, op 20, no 6 • Janáček: String Quartet no 2 (“Intimate Letters”) Philharmonia Quartet Benjamin Marquise Gilmore (violin) Philharmonia concert master Benjamin Marquise Gilmore grew up in England and studied with Natalia Boyarskaya at the Yehudi Menuhin School and Pavel Vernikov at the Vienna Conservatory, as well as with Julian Rachlin, Miriam Fried, and members of the Artis quartet and Altenberg trio. His father was the musicologist Bob Gilmore and he is the grandson of conductor Lev Markiz. Benjamin was awarded first prize at the Oskar Back violin competition in Amsterdam, and was a prizewinner at the Joseph Joachim competition in Hannover and the Mozart competition in Salzburg As a soloist, he has performed with the Amsterdam Sinfonietta, the NDR Hannover, the Rotterdam Philharmonic and the Munich Chamber Orchestra. A member of the Chamber Orchestra of Europe since 2011, Benjamin was appointed leader of the Scottish Chamber Orchestra in 2016. He performed with the SCO as soloist and director on several occasions and has been involved in the SCO’s chamber music series at the Queen’s Hall in Edinburgh. He has also appeared as guest leader with the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic and City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, and as leader and director with the Camerata Salzburg. Rebecca Chan (violin) Philharmia associate leader Rebecca Chan was born in Melbourne and studied violin with Alice Waten at the Australian National Academy of Music and Sydney Conservatorium and with William Hennessy at Melbourne University, where she also completed degrees in Medicine and Arts. Rebecca has played as soloist with many of Australia’s major orchestras, including the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra; Adelaide, Tasmanian and Canberra Symphony Orchestras; Orchestra Victoria; Melbourne Chamber Orchestra; and the Australian Chamber Orchestra. She has been the winner of the string section, and Nelly Apt Scholarship in the ABC Young Performers Awards, the ANAM concerto competition and the Australian Concerto and Vocal Competition, and was a prizewinner at the International Citta di Brescia Violin Competition. As a chamber musician, Rebecca has toured Australia, Europe and Asia, and has played in numerous festivals around the world. She is a member of the Australia Piano Quartet and the Hamer Quartet (winners of the first prize, the audience prize and Musica Viva award in the 2009 Asia Pacific Chamber Music Competition). Yukiko Ogura Principal viola with the Philharmionia Yukiko Ogura was born in the beautiful and historic city of Nara in western Japan. Having studied the violin at Kyoto City University of the Arts, she won a position as a member of the Kobe City Chamber Orchestra, which specialises in string repertoire. Encouraged by Nobuko Imai, Yukiko became more interested in the viola, eventually giving up the violin completely in order to study with Mazumi Tanamura in Tokyo. She emigrated to the USA in 2000 and continued her studies there with Li-Kuo Chang at Roosevelt University in Chicago. She became the violist of the Eusia String Quartet, which subsequently won the gold medal at the Fischoff National Chamber Music Competition in 2001. In the same year, Yukiko was appointed a member of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Her passion for the chamber music repertoire has remained the mainspring of her life. Richard Birchall (cello) Philharmonia cellist Richard Birchall read Music at Cambridge University and studied as a postgraduate cellist at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London under Louise Hopkins. He later completed studies in film music composition at Goldsmiths College. Richard pursues a varied and colourful career as cellist, composer, arranger and orchestrator. As a member of the Philharmonia Orchestra he performs regularly in the great concert halls of the world. He has appeared as Guest Principal cello with the Philharmonia, Royal Philharmonic Concert Orchestra, Northern Sinfonia and Irish Chamber Orchestra, and as concertmaster of the London Cello Orchestra. Richard’s solo and chamber work has ranged from Wigmore Hall to the catwalk at London Fashion Week. He is a founder member of cello octet Cellophony – now firmly established as the UK's leading cello ensemble – and cellist of the Minerva Piano Trio. Richard's arrangements and compositions have been performed at the BBC Proms, Royal Festival Hall, Wigmore Hall, The Purcell Room, The Sage Gateshead and throughout the UK, and have been broadcast on BBC Radio 3, Classic FM and French and German national radio. Richard has completed numerous transcriptions for Cellophony’s core repertoire, and has produced commissioned arrangements for the Doric, Barbirolli, and Tippett quartets (including Psycho Suite, subsequently released on the Signum label), the London Cello Orchestra and the Ernest Read Symphony Orchestra.
Bach Ewa Pobłocka Fryderyk Chopin Hansen Martha Argerich Viotti Glenn Gould Kazimierz Kord Antoni Wit Rappe Olga Pasichnyk Ewa Podleś Andrzej Panufnik Witold Lutosławski Szymański Paweł Mykietyn Grieg Brahms Schumann Pleyel Rameau Couperin Scarlatti Soler Castaldi Liszt Auditorio Nacional Madrid Barbican Centre Wigmore Hall Musikverein Lincoln Center Maggio Musicale Fiorentino London Symphony Orchestra English Chamber Orchestra Orchestra Maggio Musicale Fiorentino Sinfonia Varsovia Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra 1848 1977 1979 1980 1981 1982 2004 2007 2009 2010
Ewa Pobłocka - piano, rec. 08.12.1981 A prize-winner of the Tenth International Fryderyk Chopin Piano Competition in Warsaw, Ewa Pobłocka also received the prize for the best performance of Chopin mazurkas (1980). She began taking piano lessons when she was five. She pursued her studies at Gdańsk Music Academy under Zbigniew Śliwiński and Jerzy Sulikowski, and received her diploma with distinction in 1981. She completed post-graduate studies in Hamburg under Conrad Hansen (1982) and has benefitted from artistic consultation with Jadwiga Sukiennicka, Rudolf Kerer, Tatiana Nikolaieva and Martha Argerich. In 1977, she won First Prize in the International Viotti Music Competition in Vercelli, and in 1979 the gold medal at the International Festival of Young Laureates in Bordeaux. She has performed throughout Europe and the Americas, as well as in the Far East and Australia, in such venues as the Herkules-Saal in Munich, Musikhalle in Hamburg, Auditorio Nacional in Madrid, Barbican Centre and Wigmore Hall in London, Musikverein in Vienna, Lincoln Center in New York and Glenn Gould Studio in Toronto. She has played as a soloist with the London Symphony Orchestra, English Chamber Orchestra, Orchestra del Maggio Musicale Fiorentino, Bayerischers Rundfunkorchester, Sinfonia Varsovia and Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra and has repeatedly toured as a Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra soloist under the baton of Kazimierz Kord and Antoni Wit. Ewa Pobłocka is a passionate chamber musician and has regularly performed with the Silesian Quartet, as well as singers like Jadwiga Rappe, Olga Pasichnyk and Ewa Podleś. She has given numerous premieres and made world premiere recordings of works by Polish contemporary composers, including piano concertos by Andrzej Panufnik, Witold Lutosławski, Paweł Szymański and Paweł Mykietyn. She has performed for many European radio stations and recorded for such labels as Polskie Nagrania ‘Muza’, Deutsche Grammophon, Pony Canyon, Victor JVC, CD Accord and BeArTon. Many of her recordings have won prizes and critical acclaim. Her most recent CDs have featured Grieg’s complete piano works, solo works by Brahms and Schumann and the complete songs of Chopin. In 2010, the Fryderyk Chopin Institute released her CD with Chopin’s Mazurkas and Sonata in C minor on period piano (Pleyel, 1848). Pobłocka is also a distinguished teacher. As well as teaching piano at Bydgoszcz Music Academy and the Fryderyk Chopin University of Music in Warsaw, she is also a guest professor at the National University of Fine Arts and Music in Tokyo and Nagoya. She has sat on the jury of many international piano competitions and received the annual Ministry of Culture and National Heritage Award and the Cavalier’s Cross of the Polonia Restituta Order from the Polish President (2004). Ewa Pobłocka performed in the ‘Chopin and his Europe’ festival in 2007, 2009, 2010. (chopin.nifc.pl) NA MOIM KANALE (ON MY CHANNEL): (playlisty z przesłanych filmów, sent films in playlists) Polska muzyka ludowa (Polish Folk Traditional Music) (http•••) Tradycyjna muzyka góralska (Polish Gorals’ Music) (http•••) Polska muzyka renesansowa i barokowa (Polish Renaissance and Baroque Music) (http•••) Polska muzyka XVIII i XIX wieku (Polish Music of 18 and 19 century) (http•••) Pan Wołodyjowski Potop muzyka (http•••) Polskie pieśni patriotyczne (Polish Patriotic Songs) (http•••) Polska muzyka symfoniczna okresu klasycyzmu (Polish Symphony Music of Classical Period) (http•••) Rameau Couperin Scarlatti Soler Castaldi (http•••) Polska muzyka średniowieczna (Polish Medieval Music) (http•••) Chopin (http•••) Liszt (http•••) Polska muzyka XX wieku (Polish Music of 20 c.) (http•••) Polski folk (http•••) Góry polskie zdjęcia (http•••) Polska muzyka filmowa (Polish Film Music) (http•••) Polskie organy Leżajsk Oliwa Kamień Pomorski (Polish Organs) (http•••)
Benjamin Britten Miklós Perényi Dénes Várjon Wigmore Hall 2010
Provided to YouTube by The Orchard Enterprises Britten: Cello Sonata in C major Op. 65 Marcia: Energico · Benjamin Britten · Miklós Perényi · Dénes Várjon Wigmore Hall Live - Miklós Perényi & Dénes Várjon ℗ 2010 Wigmore Hall Live ℗ Wigmore Hall Live Released on: 2010-07-05 Auto-generated by YouTube.
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