NZSO has Lions’ share of great music
NZSO has Lions’ share of great music for its bold
British Festival
The New Zealand
Symphony Orchestra brings the best of British music
and two of its biggest names to Wellington as part of a
special festival.
The three-part British
Festival kicks off with Lands of Hope and
Glory on 30 June to celebrate the British & Irish
Lions Tour.
Sir James MacMillan, one of
Britain’s greatest living composers and conductors, along
with virtuoso Scottish percussionist Colin Currie, will be the stars
of the festival’s Bold Worlds and
Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra
concerts in July.
Lands of Hope and
Glory, presented by popular mezzo soprano
Helen Medlyn, will feature some
of the best-loved music from the participating nations in
the Lions tour, including a medley of classic British folk
songs.
“I am so looking forward to celebrating the
British and Irish Lions tour of New Zealand in music with
the NZSO,” Medlyn says.
“The pieces they are playing
are so evocative of each nation ... stirring the heart and
lifting the spirits... and it will be such a wonderful treat
to have the audience sing some of the countries' well-known
folk songs with me. I can't wait!”
The concert, led by
NZSO Associate Conductor Hamish McKeich, includes Kiwi
Douglas Lilburn’s uplifting
Aotearoa Overture, which premiered
in London in 1940.
Lilburn studied under great British
composer Vaughan Williams and NZSO
concertmaster Vesa-Matti Leppänen will
perform Vaughan Williams’ The Lark
Ascending. This beautiful and haunting work
continues to top polls as Britain’s favourite piece of
classical music.
The audience will also love the majesty
of Edward Elgar’s Pomp and
Circumstance March No. 1 - the basis for
rousing anthem Land of Hope and
Glory.
Another highlight will be
Peter Maxwell Davies’ An
Orkney Wedding, with Sunrise, featuring
prize-winning solo bagpiper Brendon Eade.
The medley of
classic folk songs includes Ireland’s Danny
Boy and Molly Malone,
Scotland’s My Bonnie, England’s
Scarborough Fair, Wales’
All Through the Night and New
Zealand’s Pokarekare Ana.
For
Bold Worlds on 8 July, Sir James will
conduct his acclaimed Percussion Concerto No.
2, which was written especially for Currie.
Bold Worlds will also include two more
significant works by British composers - Grammy Award-winner
Thomas Adès’ Polaris and Vaughan
Williams’ rich and reflective Symphony No.
4.
Sir James and Currie will complete the
British Festival by joining forces with the
NZSO National Youth Orchestra for
Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra on
14 July.
Sir James will conduct one of his best-known
works Veni, Veni, Emmanuel and
Benjamin Britten’s beloved Young
Person’s Guide to the Orchestra. The concert will
include the world premiere of works by young New Zealand
composers Celeste Oram and Wellington-based
Reuben Jelleyman, both National Youth
Orchestra Composers in Residence.
Sir James has
previously conducted the NZSO, but this will be the first
time he will conduct the National Youth Orchestra. “I've
been with the NZSO twice before and each time was a
wonderful experience,” he says.
“I have always
enjoyed working with young musicians, and have written for
them over the years in various ways. I'm always keen to find
out what new music is like in the various countries I visit.
I especially enjoy performing new work by my younger
colleagues.”
Bold Worlds will also be
performed in Hamilton (6 July) and Auckland (7 July).
Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra is
also performed in Auckland on 15
July.
ENDS