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Summer Family Concert 2010 Saturday 10 July 2010 St Mary’s Church, Banbury Music from the Movies Programme £1

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  • Summer Family Concert 2010

    Saturday 10 July 2010

    St Marys Church, Banbury

    Music from the Movies

    Programme 1

  • Welcome to our concert! Hello and welcome to our Summer 2010 concert.

    This evening's exciting family concert features film music, ranging from

    recent highly popular films such as Pirates of the Caribbean, Harry Potter,

    The Lord of the Rings plus The Sorcerers Apprentice by Dukas, used in the

    famous Disney film Fantasia, to other pieces of music that are extremely

    well known but perhaps not immediately linked with the movies: such as the

    soaring Barber's 'Adagio for Strings', which has been used in Oliver

    Stone's Platoon, The Elephant Man and Amlie, and the familiar 'Young

    Person's Guide to the Orchestra', which Britten wrote for a documentary

    film, cleverly introducing each orchestral instrument that then knits together

    in a rousing finale.

    Ireland The Overlanders Suite (5 movements)

    Barber Adagio for Strings

    Dukas The Sorcerers Apprentice

    Harry Potter

    Interval

    Britten Young Persons Guide to the Orchestra

    Lord of the Rings

    James Bond Medley

    Pirates of the Caribbean

  • Paul Willett Conductor

    Paul Willett studied violin, singing and piano as a

    student but his main instrument was the French

    horn. When Paul was 16, he gained his

    Performance Diploma from The Royal College of

    Music playing French horn. Paul then went on to

    read music on scholarship at The Queens College,

    Oxford, and studied for his teaching certificate in

    Music and Physical Education at Reading

    University.

    For several years Paul combined teaching and freelance playing. He has given solo

    recitals and performed concertos throughout the country. He was a member of The

    Five Winds, a group that performed both at home and abroad, and also on BBC

    radio. Paul also worked as a brass teacher for Oxfordshire Music Service and was

    director of a Saturday Music School of 200 students.

    Paul now combines class teaching with conducting various ensembles, both adult

    and youth. He is also in demand as an adjudicator for both adult and student

    competitions. Paul is currently acting deputy head teacher at Didcot Girls School.

    Anna Fleming - Leader

    Anna was born in South Africa where she started

    playing the violin at the age of ten. While studying

    music at secondary school, Anna became a

    member of the South African National Youth

    Orchestra. After successfully completing her music

    degree, majoring in orchestral studies, Anna joined

    the Cape Philharmonic Orchestra in 1992.

    Anna moved to England in late 1996. Keen to continue her orchestral playing, Anna

    joined the Banbury Symphony Orchestra in 1997 and became the leader of the

    orchestra in 2000, a post that she has held ever since. As a committed Christian,

    Anna plays an active role in church music. Focusing primarily on private violin

    tuition, Anna particularly enjoys helping adults to learn to play and she can be

    contacted on 01295 780017.

  • Ireland The Overlanders Suite (5 movements)

    During its heyday, Ealing Studios

    produced five films in Australia, of

    which this was the first and best. It

    also provided them with one of their

    biggest box office successes. Its a

    visually ambitious tale of a resilient

    drover (played by the affable, sun-

    dried Chips Rafferty), who, in the face

    of a Japanese invasion of the Northern

    Territories at the beginning of Australias involvement in World War II, elects to

    drive a thousand head of cattle 2000 miles cross-country to Brisbane rather than

    have them slaughtered. The Overlanders gazes in wonderment at the open spaces

    of the outback landscape and marvels at its sunlit pockets of adventure. Leslie

    Halliwell called it a semi-western, and thats a fair description: its more a paean to

    the trials of frontier life than a war movie. Theres also a pervading sense of post-

    war optimism, as if a victorious but battle-fatigued England is looking to the New

    World in its hope for the future.

    John Nicholson Ireland (13 August 1879 12 June 1962) was an English composer.

    From Charles Villiers Stanford, Ireland inherited a thorough knowledge of the music

    of Beethoven, Brahms and other German classical composers, but as a young man

    he was also strongly influenced by Debussy and Ravel as well as by the earlier works

    of Stravinsky and Bartk. From these influences, he developed his own brand of

    "English Impressionism", related more closely to French and Russian models than to

    the folk-song style then prevailing in English music.

    Barber - Adagio for Strings

    Barber's Adagio for Strings originated as the second movement in his String Quartet,

    Op. 11, composed in 1936. The piece uses an arch form, employing and then

    inverting, expanding, and varying a stepwise ascending melody. The long, flowing

    melodic line moves freely between the voices in the string choir culminating in a

    fortissimo-forte climax followed by sudden silence. The last section is a restatement

    of the original theme; the piece ends with first violins slowly restating the first five

  • notes of the melody, holding the last note over a brief silence and a fading

    accompaniment.

    Barber's 'Adagio for Strings', has been used

    in Oliver Stone's Platoon, The Elephant

    Man and Amlie. The piece was played at

    the funeral of Princess Grace of Monaco and

    at the funeral of Albert Einstein. It was

    broadcast over the radio at the

    announcement of Franklin D. Roosevelt's

    death. It was performed in 2001 at Last

    Night of the Proms in the Royal Albert Hall

    to commemorate the victims of the

    September 11 attacks. In 2004, listeners of

    the BBC's Today program voted Adagio the

    "saddest classical" work ever, ahead of

    "Dido's Lament" from Dido and neas by

    Henry Purcell. Get your tissues ready!

    Dukas - The Sorcerers Apprentice

    The Sorcerer's Apprentice is the English

    name of a poem by Goethe, Der

    Zauberlehrling, written in 1797. The

    poem is a ballad in fourteen stanzas. Paul

    Dukas composed his L'apprenti sorcier (a

    symphonic poem) in 1897. Subtitled

    "Scherzo after a ballad by Goethe, the

    poem begins as an old sorcerer departs

    his workshop, leaving his apprentice with

    chores to perform. Tired of fetching water by pail, the apprentice enchants a broom

    to do the work for him using magic he is not yet fully trained in. The floor is soon

    awash with water, and the apprentice realizes that he cannot stop the broom

    because he does not know how.

    Not knowing how to control the enchanted broom, the apprentice splits it in two

    with an axe, but each of the pieces becomes a new broom and takes up a pail and

  • continues fetching water, now at twice the speed. When all seems lost, the old

    sorcerer returns, quickly breaks the spell and saves the day. The poem finishes with

    the old sorcerer's statement that powerful spirits should only be called by the

    master himself.

    The acclaimed animated dialogue-free 1940 Disney film Fantasia popularized the

    story from Goethe's poem, and the Paul Dukas symphonic poem based on it, in one

    of eight animated shorts based on classical music. In the piece, which retains the

    title "The Sorcerer's Apprentice," Mickey Mouse plays the apprentice, and the story

    follows Goethe's original closely. The segment proved so popular that it was

    repeated, in its original form, in the sequel Fantasia 2000.

    Harry Potter

    Jerry Brubaker has captured all the excitement from the Patrick Doyle film score of

    the box office hit, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. This medley-style

    arrangement not only includes John Williams' "Hedwig's Theme" from the first three

    films, but incorporates the brand new "Foreign Visitors Arrive," "Potter Waltz,"

    "Harry in Winter," "The Quidditch World Cup (The Irish)," "Voldemort!/Hedwig's

    Theme" and "Hogwarts' Hymn." A medley that is sure to please.

    Britten - Young Persons Guide to the Orchestra

    The Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra, opus 34, is a musical composition by

    Benjamin Britten in 1946 with a subtitle "Variations and Fugue on a Theme of

    Purcell". It was originally commissioned for an educational documentary film called

    The Instruments of the Orchestra, directed by Muir Mathieson and featuring the

    London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Malcolm Sargent. The work is one of the

    best-known pieces by the composer, and is one of the three popularly used scores in

  • children's music education, together with Saint-Sans' The Carnival of the Animals

    and Prokofiev's Peter and the Wolf.

    The work is based on the Rondeau from Abdelazar, written by Henry Purcell, and is

    structured, in accordance with the plan of the original documentary film, as a way of

    showing off the tone colors and capacities of the various sections of the orchestra.

    In the introduction, the theme is initially played by the

    entire orchestra, then by each major family of

    instruments of the orchestra: first the woodwinds,

    then the strings, then the brass, and finally by the

    percussion. Each variation then features a particular

    instrument in depth, in the same family order, and

    generally moving through each family from high to

    low. So, for example, the first variation features the

    piccolo and flutes; each member of the woodwind

    family then gets a variation, ending with the bassoon;

    and so on, through the strings, brass, and finally the

    percussion.

    After the whole orchestra has been effectively taken to pieces in this way, it is

    reassembled using an original fugue which starts with the piccolo, followed by all

    the woodwinds, strings, brass and percussion in turn. Once everyone has entered,

    the brass are re-introduced with Purcells original melody while the remainder

    continue the fugue theme until the piece finally comes to an end after building up to

    a fortissimo finish.

    Lord of the Rings

    The music of the The Lord of the Rings film trilogy was

    composed, orchestrated, conducted and produced by

    Howard Shore. Shore wrote many hours of music for The

    Lord of the Rings.

    Shore composed the music in an emotional, operatic way,

    threading through the scores over 80 specific leitmotifs,

    which are categorized by the Middle-earth cultures to

    which they relate. Shore began his work on the music for

    The Fellowship of the Ring in late 2000 and recorded the

    first pieces of music (the Moria sequence) in spring of

  • 2001. Additional music for the extended DVD version was recorded in March, 2002.

    A similar pattern was followed for The Two Towers and The Return of the King, with

    the final sessions taking place in London on March 20, 2004.

    The music was performed primarily by the London Philharmonic Orchestra and the

    London Voices, with the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra contributing some of the

    early Moria music. A wide variety of instrumental and vocal soloists contributed to

    the scores as well.

    James Bond Medley

    In his James Bond Medley arrangement,

    Victor Lopez shows that the 007 agent is

    alive and well. The medley features five

    classic hits, the "James Bond Theme," "For

    Your Eyes Only," "Goldfinger," "Live and Let

    Die," and "Nobody Does it Better."

    Pirates of the Caribbean

    Klaus Badelt (born 1967) is a German composer, best known for composing film

    scores. One of his more famous and popular scores is the score to the 2003 film

    Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl.

    Pirates of the Caribbean is a series of

    adventure films directed by Gore

    Verbinski, written by Ted Elliott and

    Terry Rossio and produced by Jerry

    Bruckheimer. They are based on a

    Walt Disney theme park ride of the

    same name, and follow Captain Jack

    Sparrow (portrayed by Johnny

    Depp), Will Turner (portrayed by

    Orlando Bloom), and Elizabeth

    Swann (portrayed by Keira

    Knightley).

    All programme notes taken from Wikipedia

  • Banbury Symphony Orchestra

    Management Committee:

    Jonathan Rowe (Chair), Kathryn Hayman (Secretary), Jenny Maynard (Treasurer)

    Emma Callery, Estevan Ellul, Anna Fleming, Helen Payne, Andrew Waite

    Conductor - Paul Willett

    Violin I

    Anna Fleming (Leader)

    Jenny Maynard

    Geoff Kent

    Penny Tolmie

    Kathryn Hayman

    Marianne Robinson

    Trish Evans

    Emma Blunt

    Norman Filleul

    Violin II

    Ian Smith

    Conrad Woolley

    Andrew Waite

    Imogen Mead

    Emma Callery

    Rachel Sansome

    Gill Walker

    Bryony Yelloly

    Rachel Greene

    Kim Williams

    Viola

    David Bolton-King

    John Maksinski

    Catherine Smith

    Cello

    Miranda Ricardo

    Sarah Turnock

    Janet Parsons

    John Pimm

    Ruth Mankelow

    Paul Morley

    Jennifer Hubble

    Rosi Callery

    Double Bass

    Robert Gilchrist

    Jo Hammond

    Jane Martin

    Flute

    Rachel McCubbin

    Nick Planas

    Amy Lockwood

    Piccolo

    Nick Planas

    Oboe

    Lyn Gosney

    Clarinet

    Helen Payne

    Alice Palmer Jo Williams

    Bassoon

    Ian McCubbin

    Rachel James

    Contra bassoon

    Ian White

    Horn

    David Settle

    Simon Mead

    Richard Hartree

    Edward Bolton-King

    Helen Barnby-Porritt

    Trumpet

    Tony Chittock

    Ron Barnett

    Terry Mayo

    Martin Mills

    Trombone

    Paul Macey

    Gary Clifton

    Malcolm Saunders

    Tuba

    John Beer

    Percussion

    Justin Rhodes

    Sue Woolhouse

    Dave Martin

    Dave Hadland

    Huw Morgan

    Harp

    Nia Williams

  • Dates for your diary

    Saturday 20 November 2010 Autumn Concert

    7.30pm St. Marys Church Banbury

    Balakirev Overture on 3 Russian Themes

    Bruch Violin Concerto No.1

    Brahms Symphony No.4

    Sue Lynn: violin

    The highlight of Banbury Symphony Orchestras autumn concert is Bruchs ever-

    popular violin concerto, performed by talented Oxford-based violinst, Sue Lynn. Sue

    is a soloist with the esteemed Academy of St Martins in the Fields as well as playing

    with the English Chamber Orchestra and the London Symphony Orchestra, so BSO is

    delighted to welcome her to Banbury for what will no doubt be a thrilling

    performance of this concerto. Topped and tailed by Balakirevs Overture on Three

    Russian Themes and the mighty symphony no. 4 by Brahms, this is a concert

    guaranteed to provide that tingle factor.

    Website

    Please visit our website for more information

    www.banburysymphony.org

    Patrons of Banbury Symphony Orchestra

    S. E. Corsi, Esq. Mrs H. M. W. Rivett Lady Saye and Sele

    We are very grateful to our patrons for their financial support.

    If you would like to make a donation, please send a cheque made payable to

    Banbury Symphony Orchestra to the treasurer Jenny Maynard, The White House,

    Hill, Leamington Hastings, Rugby, CV23 8DX or email her on

    [email protected]

    Please also fill in a Gift Aid declaration that can be obtained from Jenny, which

    enables the orchestra to claim an additional 25p for every 1 donated by taxpayers.

  • Our Sponsors

    Banbury Symphony Orchestra has welcomed Spratt Endicott as sponsors since the

    start of 2006. Spratt Endicott is pleased to be associated with Banbury Symphony

    Orchestra.

    We place particular emphasis on delivering effective legal solutions to the

    problems faced by businesses and private clients alike. Our approach is proactive

    and we listen to our clients and take pride in our efforts to achieve their objectives.

    Spratt Endicott

    Become a Friend of the orchestra. Its FREE!

    Friends of the Banbury Symphony Orchestra enjoy the following benefits:

    Regular updates on the orchestra Information about forthcoming concerts

    If you would like to become a friend or would like to know more, please visit our

    website, or contact Emma Callery on 01608 737249 or e-mail her:

    [email protected].

    Are you interested in joining the orchestra?

    If you play an instrument to a standard of Grade 7 or above and would like to play

    with the orchestra, find out more by contacting Anna Fleming on 01295 780017. All

    rehearsals take place at Banbury School during term time on Tuesday evenings,

    7:309:30pm.