Who | The Medicine Sessions |
When |
Thursday, June 12, 2014
|
Where |
Lismore
Lismore, Co. Cork, Ireland Free In & above The Red House... |
Other Info | We have an absolutely fantastic night of music lined up for ye tomorrow night at this months Medicine Sessions!! Kicking the night off with Ilse De Ziah & her beautiful solo cello performance (one not to miss) Then sit back and let The Shaker Hymn give ye a right dose of medicine with there stunning ensemble. Free In & above The Red House... See you there! |
Category Archives: Concerts
Lesbenfruhlingstreffen – Berlin – 08/06/14
Who | Lesbenfruhlingstreffen |
When |
Sunday, June 8, 2014
|
Where |
Technische Universität Berlin (map)
Straße des 17. Juni 135
Berlin, Germany D-10623 |
Other Info | Jan Allain and Ilse de Ziah REUNION celebrating 40 years of LFT! |
Jan Allain & Ilse de Ziah – Berlin – 06/06/14
Who | Jan Allain & Ilse de Ziah |
When |
Friday, June 6, 2014
|
Where |
Potsdamer Str. 139, 10783 Berlin-Schöneberg
Berlin, Germany 10783 |
Other Info | BIG REUNION! with Jan Allain who will launch her new album 'FREEDOM'S DAUGHTER' Also ILSE DE ZIAH's NEW FILM LIVING THE TRADITION will be available. The first concerts together for 18 years. (maybe there were one or two festival performances in between) www.janallain.com |
City of Cork Symphony Orchestra – Cork – 17/04/14
Who | City of Cork Symphony Orchestra |
When |
Thursday, April 17, 2014
|
Where |
City Hall (map)
East Albert Quay
Cork, Ireland Directions |
Other Info | Franz Schubert - 'Death and the Maiden' - String Quartet No. 14 in D minor (Vanbrugh String Quartet) Mikhail Glinka - 'Ruslan and Ludmila' Overture Piotr Illyich Tchaikovsky - 'Pathétique' Symphony No. 6 |
Summer Passions
If you are around sunny Cork on Monday 7th April, please come and hear my Masters recital at the Cork School of Music. Get an early start to summer with passionate pieces from warmer times and climes! Below you can read about each piece from my programme notes. Have a listen to versions on youtube etc if you can't make it. The music is well worth a listen if you don't know all these pieces!
Masters Recital Series
Summer Passions
Monday, April 7, 2014, 1.10pm
Curtis Auditorium, CIT Cork School of Music
Ilse de Ziah, cello
Michael Joyce, piano
Programme
Suite Populaire Espangnol Manuel da Falla (1876-1946)
Allegro Vivace, Sonata for Cello and Piano No. 2 in F maj. Op. 99
Johannes Brahms (1833–1897)
Pappilon Op. 77 and Elégie Op. 24 Gabriel Fauré (1845 – 1924)
Pampeana No. 2 Alberto Ginastera (1916 – 1983)
Suite Populaire Espangnol, Manuel da Falla (1876-1946)
Perhaps more than any other composer, Manuel de Falla expresses the sol (sunshine) and sombra (shadow) of Spain. His music is born of the folk idioms of his native Andalusia which is influenced by the history of Moors and gypsies. Just before Manuel de Falla left Paris to return to Spain in 1914, he completed his harmonizations of Siete Canciones Populares Españoles for voice and piano using natural overtones to accompany the melody notes rather than traditional modal scales. Violinist Paul Kochanski (1887-1934) worked with Falla to transcribe six of the songs for violin and piano. Kochanski's work was entitled Suite Populaire Espagnole. In 1925 Maurice Maréchal transcribed these for cello.The suite begins with El Paño Moruno (The Moorish Cloth). The next songs, Nana (a lullaby) and Canción, are both based on popular published tunes. Polo is an original Falla piece in the style of a folk dance, sometimes described as gypsy- or flamenco-like. The most famous of the songs by far is Asturiana, a lament from northern Spain, played on muted strings. The final Jota is again Falla's own work in the style of folk dance music from Aragon; for this song Kochanski uses pizzicato chords as if to imitate castanets.
Allegro Vivace, Sonata No. 2 in F major, Op. 99, Johannes Brahms (1833-1897)
Brahms spent the summer of 1886 in the idyllic Swiss resort town of Thun. He rented the second floor of a hillside house on the Aare River, and spent much of the summer at a local casino, drinking beer and playing cards with musicians from the house orchestra. He wrote happily to his friend Max Kalbeck, “It is simply glorious here. I only say quite in passing that there are crowds of beer-gardens, actual beer-gardens, the English are not at home in them!”
The F major Cello Sonata was composed for Robert Hausmann, a close friend of Brahms and cellist of the great Joachim String Quartet.
The Sonata unfolds with a bristling energy, with a jolting explosion in the piano answered by a triumphant cry from the cello. The opening Allegro Vivace’s central theme comprises these shouting fragments, rather than a continuous melodic line. Remarking on its unusual rhythms and bold melodic leaps, Schoenberg would later write: “Young listeners will probably be unaware that at the time of Brahms’s death, this Sonata was still very unpopular and was considered indigestible”. The movement’s harmony is similarly insolent, handily integrating dissonant tones, and flirting with minor key tonality throughout the exposition.
Pappilon Op. 77, Gabriel Fauré (1845 – 1924)
Composed in Summer 1884 and published in the same year. It came about at the request of the publisher, Hamelle, who sought a companion piece for the Elégie;
Elégie Op. 24, Gabriel Fauré (1845 – 1924)
Élegie belongs to the notable group of small scale works which Fauré wrote for the cello. He had the gift of imbuing these miniature pieces with a classic beauty in which calmness and intensity are perfectly counterbalanced.
The music of Élegie was originally written for cello and piano in 1883, and, as often with Fauré’s pieces, was only later orchestrated.
Élegie has always been a popular work, for its elegance and poise, along with its underlying passion, made an immediate appeal, and its is not surprising to find that the organist at Fauré’s funeral in 1924 chose to honour the composer’s memory by playing an improvisation on it.
Pampeana No. 2, Alberto Ginastera (1916 – 1983)
The Rhapsody for Cello and Piano was completed in 1950 and belongs to Ginastera’s Subjective Nationalism period (1948-58). The influence of folk-music on his works during this period becomes more symbolic. Ginastera says… “without using any folkloric material, it recalls the rhythms and melodic trends of the Argentine pampas…
Whenever I have crossed the pampas, my spirit felt itself inundated by changing impressions, now joyful, now melancholy, produced by its limitless immensity and by the transformation that the countryside undergoes in the course of the day . . . from my first contact, I desired to write a work reflecting these states of my spirit.”
Composed in four sections the Pampeana No. 2 captures the full scope of these moods and feelings through rhapsodic fantasy.
Summer Passions – Cork – 07/04/14
Who | Summer Passions |
When |
Monday, April 7, 2014
13:00
-
FREE
-
All Ages
|
Where |
Union Quay
Cork, Ireland |
Other Info | Masters Recital Series Summer Passions Monday, April 7, 2014, 1.10pm Curtis Auditorium, CIT Cork School of Music A passionate programme of pieces written in warm times and places. Enjoy Brahms F major Sonata, The fiery Pampeana No. 2 by Ginastera, and The folk-inspired Suite Populaire Espagnol by Manuel de Falla, as well as two cello favourites, Pappilon and Elegie by Faure. Get an early start on your tan! |
Baroque Cello
Last night performing on Baroque cello with The CSM Baroque Strings for a lovely final Masters concert of Countertenor Graham J. Norton. It was wonderful to work with Jory Vinikour who directed and played harpsichord. Also soprano Laura Gilsenan sang beautifully a couple of duos including the gorgeous Monteverdi, Pur ti mio. We also played a Handel Concerto, Vivaldi: Longe Mala umbrae Terrores, Handel: Vo far guerra And Cara Sposa and Monteverdi: L’incoronatione di Poppea
I played the Cork School of Music baroque cello as my own bought online from China is not brilliant! I was playing a beautiful very old borrowed one for a few years and miss its sweet sound. The CSM one started to sound ok after playing it a few days, but as always with gut strings and Baroque cello, it’s really hard to play in tune! You can’t relax concentration for even a split second or the finger hits out of tune. I find the best way to approach it is keeping arms low and relaxed, the body as grounded as possible, and snapping fingers down crisply where possible. Also keeping the left arm very light in shifts as the thick strings can make shifts tricky.
And then of course playing musically, listening, following…
Mícheál Ó Súilleabháin concert
I played in a lovely concert as part of the Clonmel junction festival last Friday. We played Madison’s descent by By Mícheál Ó Súilleabháin
A choral suite for piano, choir, chamber orchestra, solo voice and saxophone.
There was a standing ovation at the end of the concert and I enjoyed chatting to the audience members before the cross country drive home through the dark hills!
Featuring
Piano: Mícheál Ó Súilleabháin
Conductor: Fergus Sheil
Saxophone: Kenneth Edge
Soprano: Claudia Boyle
The Clonmel Junction Festival Choir
The Carolan Chamber Orchestra
The Clonmel Festival choristers will join Mícheál Ó Súilleabháin, a 14 piece chamber orchestra and the soloists to perform Ó Súilleabháin’s choral suite “Madison’s Descent”. Together, under the baton of Fergus Sheil, they will bring us on a very special adventure.
Madison’s Descent is artist Paige Allen’s impression of the journey a soul makes to its birth. Inspired by this story Ó Súilleabháin has composed this textured and moving choral suite, which receives its European Premiere in Junction Festival.
The performance of Madison’s Descent will be preceded by a short recital by Ó Súilleabháin with the Carolan Chamber Orchestra of some of his favourite compositions.
City of Cork Symphony Orchestra – Cork – 25/04/13
Who | City of Cork Symphony Orchestra |
When |
Thursday, April 25, 2013
|
Where |
Emmet Place
Cork, Ireland |
Other Info | Cork Opera House is delighted to be working with the Orchestra again to present an evening of stunning music under thecelebrated baton of Keith Pascoe. The programme consists of Beethoven’s Overture, Leonore’s No 3 Op 72a, Dvorak Cello Concerto Op. 104 and Brahms Symphony No.1 Op 68 in C minor. |
Ozmosis – Cork – 07/04/13
Who | Ozmosis |
When |
Sunday, April 7, 2013
03:00
-
tickets available on door €10 kids free
-
All Ages
|
Where |
Union Quay
Cork, Ireland |
Other Info | “A joyous spring Concert to celebrate the works of Australian composer May Howlett” OZMOSIS present “May in April” Evocative melodies and sensuous harmonies create a charming way to spend a Spring Sunday afternoon with family and friends. Katrina Emtage – Flute Ilse de Ziah – Cello Nicole Panizza – Piano plus special guests Kelley Lonergan - Voice and Alex Petcu - Percussion. Date: Sunday April 7th 2013 Time: 3pm (one hour concert) Venue: Stack Theatre, CIT Cork School of Music Entrance: €10 and kids free Featuring works by May Howlett, Kevin Barker, Katrina Emtage and Ilse de Ziah, |