Programme change!

April 2025

I regret to say that the speaker due to come on 28th April is unwell so we have had to rethink. The committee has decided that it would be best to have a member’s evening to replace the published programme. Accordingly, could you bring with you a piece you would like played and to say a few words – i.e. just a minute or two at the most – about why you have chosen it. It might have meaning for you, it might be something you have just discovered (for yourself that is) or just something you like which you want to share.

Would you let Robin know what the piece is please, its title and length. It might be a CD which you will bring, or if it’s on YouTube, then let him know the URL for the piece. Robin’s email is robert.lim@virginmedia.com.

I look forward to seeing you for the penultimate meeting of this year’s programme. I should add that although this is a member’s evening, non members are welcome to attend.

PC

Meeting this evening

The next Society meeting is this evening 21 October and is a members’ evening so if you are a member and haven’t sent your contribution to Robin – there’s still time. It will be preceded by a short agm. Same place and same time. Programmes are in the TIC by the way.

Members’ evening

Successful members’ evening held

October 2023

Members’ evenings are always a lucky dip, each cannot know what someone else will bring for the others to listen to. Last night’s meeting (23 October) was packed full of interest with a wide variety of styles and genres. We can all get into something of a rut with our listening and today certainly, the cost of going to live music and especially the opera, can make us conservative and to stay with the familiar and our favourites. It is one of the purposes of the Society to broaden our knowledge and last evening it did so in spades.

Hearing new things can involve diligent listening to Radio 3. Classic FM tends to stick to familiar territory and you are like as not to hear the umpteenth rendition of Concerto de Aranjuez or The Four Seasons rather than something unusual. For some strange reason they are always trying to relax you as well. What they think their listeners are doing in the middle of the day to need relaxing is a mystery but I feel I am drifting off the point.

Last evening. We had a mix of unusual pieces, pieces from familiar composers which a member particularly liked and previously little heard composers. Eclectic doesn’t quite cover it. Aulis Sallinen, the Finnish composer does not get much of an airing but we heard a charming serenade to start the evening. Some variations by Arthur Bliss followed and the same speaker introduced us to an amazing piece by Bill Evans an American who died relatively young at 51.

Mozart’s adagio from the Violin Concerto No 3 followed, one of the 5 concertos he wrote in the space of around 2 years in Salzburg. Numbers 6 are 7 are now known not to be his. Janáček’s work does not often get an airing in our meetings but a new member to the third movement of the 2nd String Quartet which persuaded us I think to give more attention to this composer.

And then for something completely different to wit Malaika performed by William Fedhili, a Kenyan, of a piece composed by Adam Salil.

Back to more familiar territory with a selection of Gretchen am Sprinnade a quite lovely song by Schubert. Michael Tippett, or Sir Michael we should say, got a hearing with the allegro from Concerto for Double String Orchestra. Tippett, with Benjamin Britten were the two post war ‘greats’ of the British musical scene. There followed the second movement from another Finnish composer, Sibelius’ Violin Concerto played by the gifted Ginette Neveu who died tragically young in an air crash aged just 30. She was immensely gifted and beat David Oistrakh twice in an international competition in Warsaw. Her playing has just got to be heard to be believed and the tone she achieved from her violin was unlike any other player – a real revelation. Her limited output is all still available on disc.

Following the last meeting’s presentation of South American music, we had another outing for Villa-Lobos and his Prelude No 1 played by an octogenarian Andres Segovia in a stunning filmed performance.

Another change to a small selection of piano encores – amazing and delightful pieces ‘collated’ one might say by another of our new members. We ended with one of Richard Strauss’ songs, Beim Schlafengehen, selected by another new member, from his Four Last Songs sung by Soile Isokoski and the Berlin RSO. A fitting ending. And we weren’t falling asleep.

I am sure many of those present will be exploring one or other of the samples, shall I say, we heard this evening.

Our next meeting is on 6 November when we shall hear the third instalment of our chair’s presentation of modern music.

Peter Curbishley

A more detailed list of what was played can be accessed here:

1. Kitten on the Keys (1921), by Zez Confrey – from the 1989 festival on DACOCD 349

2. Triple Etude (1992), by M-A Hamelin – from 1992 on DACOCD 399. The three Chopin A minor studies combined: op.10 No.2, op.25 No.4, and op.25 No.11. It became No.1 of his 12 Etudes in all the minor keys (1986 – 2009), although it wasn’t the first to be composed.

3. “Schorschi-Batschi” Fox-Trott (sic) by “Willking Giese”, a.k.a. Walter Gieseking.

Next meeting

The next meeting of the Society on Monday 29th April 2019 and will be a members’ evening.  Usual place and usual time, 7:30.  A reminder if you are not a member that there is free parking just outside the door.

The following meeting on 29th April is a members’ evening so please bring along a suggestion for playing.  No more than 10 minutes (including any introduction) it will help Tony to put together a programme for the evening.

16 April 2019