Fumiya Koido at Fairlight Hall

2019 Hastings International Piano Concerto Competition First Prize Winner Fumiya Koido will return to Hastings for a solo performance at Fairlight Hall on Saturday May 4th 2019. This is a very special recital in our prizewinners’ series to coincide with Fumiya’s live performance on national radio during the In Tune programme on BBC Radio 3. Tickets are limited.

Our Artistic Director Frank Wibaut is delighted to welcome Fumiya back to Hastings to perform at the winner’s recital in May.  The Recital Room, Fairlight Hall, TN35 5DR Saturday 4th May 2019 Recital 11am-1pm including interval. (Gates open at 10.30am)

Hastings Sinfonia


This exciting programme from Spain and Latin America  is full of passion with guest soloists, dance, song and full orchestra:

International Guitarist Giulio Tampalini performing the much loved Concierto de Aranjuez by Rodrigo
Spanish Flamenco dancer and choreographer Ana Leon will be dancing to the Ritual Fire dance by De Falla 
Pupils from Diana Freedman’s school of dance will dance to local composer Polo Piatti’s Tango Solitaire
Soprano Thomasin Trezise will be performing much loved works by Bizet and Verdi

Plus:

  • Carmen Overture by Bizet
  • Espana Rhapsody by Chabrier
  • Habanera from Carmen by Bizet
  • Goodbye by Piatti
  • Danzon No 2 by Marquez
  • And much more…………………

Tickets £13 in advance £15 at the door (under 18’s free when accompanied by a paying adult)

www.ticketsource.co.uk/hastingssinfonia   and      Hastings Tourist Information Centre, Hastings

www.hastingssinfonia.com         email. hastingssinfonia@gmail.com          Telephone 07841 448879

Nina Kotova at the Opus Theatre

Opus Theatre is extremely proud to present a unique evening with amazing virtuoso cellist Nina Kotova coming directly from Los Angeles to perform with her brother,  Artist in Residence and international piano sensation Oliver Poole, featuring some of the most beautiful music in the classical repertoire.

Their  programme will include works by Sergei Rachmaninoff, Johann Sebastian Bach, Astor Piazzolla, Arvo Pärt, and Polo Piatti.

Discounted tickets are available until 15th April.

OPUS THEATRE

24 Cambridge Road – Hastings TN34 1DJ

www.opustheatre.co.uk

Beyond The Barricade at the White Rock

The UK’s longest running Musical Theatre Concert Tour features past principal performers from Les Miserables. Delivering over two hours of the best of Broadway and the West End, and of course ending with a stunning ?nale from Les Mis. The concert features David Fawcett (Valjean) Andy Reiss ( Enjolras & Resident Director for the National Tour of Les Miserables) Katie Leeming (Eponine) and Poppy Tierney (Cosette), together with a live band who capture the feel of the original orchestrations of the chosen musicals.

To this day every musical note is still played and sung live – very rare indeed. Beyond the Barricade gives musical theatre songs a bold concert format treatment – but with the conviction and intention to deliver the material as if the audience are watching the original performance. This incredible concert is now in its 19th successive year.

                             THIS WEDNESDAY, 10TH APRIL,  AT 7.30PM

Hastings Philharmonic: Carmina Burana

Saturday 6th April 2019 7pm, St Mary in the Castle – Hastings

Back by popular demand, Hastings Philharmonic Choir return to St Mary in the Castle with Orff’s Masterpiece Carmina Burana. Portuguese tenor Leonel Pinheiro and baritone Ricardo Panela return as two of our guest soloists while acclaimed Welsh soprano Ellen Williams makes her Hastings Philharmonic debut.

The Hastings Philharmonic Percussion Ensemble led by Ed Scull will be joined by pianists Francis Rayner and Stephanie Gurga who has recently performed the Philip Glass piano concerto with the Hastings Philharmonic Orchestra. Together they will also be performing the rarely performed Brahms Sonata for two pianos.

St Nicolas Church, Pevensey

Deco Delights – an afternoon of songs from the 1920s and 1930s at St Nicolas, Pevensey 3.00pm Sunday 24 March 2019

Locally based but widely travelled artiste Sharon Lewis (“Forget-Me-Not”) will be performing classic songs by Cole Porter and other legends of the 1920s and 1930s at St Nicolas, Pevensey on the afternoon of Sunday 24 March. She will be accompanied on the piano by her husband, the renowned composer Paul Lewis, taking time out from his day job!

The concert promises to be a delightful introduction to the songs and personalities of the Art Deco period, such as Mae West, Helen Kane, Jack Buchanan and the ‘De-lovely’ Cole Porter. Forget-Me-Not has wowed audiences on both sides of the world with her romantic, charming and entertaining collection of period songs. She is a well-loved performer who receives rave reviews for her warm personality, acting ability and the quality of her voice.

The concert starts at 3pm. Tickets are £10, which will include afternoon tea and cake following the concert. Proceeds will go towards the restoration and maintenance of the 800 year old church. Please book in advance if possible by calling 01323 743301.

 

Brighton Philharmonic’s final concert this season

 Brighton Phil’s Artistic Administrator Ian Brignall chats with Conductor Laureate Barry Wordsworth about the orchestra’s season finale on Sunday 17 March at Brighton Dome, which features Steven Osborne (piano) performing Rachmaninov’s epic Piano Concerto No.3, and Berlioz’s Symphonie Fantastique.

See them on video which is just under 5 minutes long: https://youtu.be/XHKw0ZE_ZSY

Brighton Philharmonic Orchestra

Brighton Philharmonic Orchestra, Sunday 17 March, 2.45pm, Brighton Dome Concert Hall
Barry Wordsworth – Conductor
Steven Osborne – Piano

 

For the last concert of this our 94th season the Brighton Philharmonic Orchestra, with Barry Wordsworth conducting, are performing a brilliant late Romantic piano concerto and a masterly symphony that tells a story in music. To start the afternoon off we are playing an overture that gives the game away in its title – Joyeuse Marche.

For Rachmaninov’s 3rd Piano Concerto we welcome back the Scottish pianist Steven Osborne who, on the 9th April 1989, won the inaugural Brighton Piano Competition. Steven has since played with Barry and the Brighton Phil a further four times and is now one of the country’s most influential and brilliant pianists – equally at home in the recording studio and on the concert platform. Steven has recorded a CD of Rachmaninov’s music (Études-Tableaux Op. 33 and Op. 39) which was released by Hyperion last July – CDA68188.

Born in 1873 Rachmaninov completed this piano concerto in 1909 whilst living in Dresden. The concerto quickly became both loved and feared in equal measure amongst pianists, and has now gained the reputation of being one of the most technically challenging piano concertos in the standard repertoire. It also cemented Rachmaninov’s reputation as one of the finest of the late Romantic composers.

The concerto’s first performance was in New York with Rachmaninov as soloist; he had practiced it on a silent keyboard as he travelled by boat from Europe to America. The second performance, a few months later in 1910, was with Gustav Mahler conducting – an experience that Rachmaninov treasured greatly.

Hector Berlioz’s Symphonie Fantastique or to give it its full title, An episode in the life of an artist in five parts, was written in 1830 and its first performance was later that year in Paris.

The symphony is vaguely autobiographical and the first movement Rêverie is the artist falling desperately in love, which in turn creates all forms of passions, aimless joy, fury, jealousy and complete tenderness. For the second movement Un bal the artist is in the tumult of a festive party, contemplating the joy of nature everywhere, in the fields and in the town – but at all times he is troubled by the haunting image of his love. In Scéne aux champs, the third movement, the artist hears two shepherds calling in the distance and with the rustle of trees his heart is momentarily healed, but then the brooding melancholy of loneliness and betrayal causes dark premonitions. At the end the shepherd calls again, but the other one does not answer, adding to the artists despair. In the fourth movement Marche au Supplice the artist is convinced he is betrayed – he tries to poison himself but only falls into a deep sleep, where he dreams he has killed his beloved and sees himself being taken to the scaffold to witness his own execution. The last movement is Songe d’une nuit du sabbat – the artist sees himself at his own funeral in the midst of witches, sorcerers and monsters. He sees his love entering the party and the grotesque scene unfolds as the funeral bell tolls and we end with the dance of the witches combined with the Dies irae.

We open this, our last concert of the season, with a very popular overture by the French composer Emmanuel Chabrier, who wrote his Joyeuse Marche initially as a piano piece, orchestrating it later in 1888. It was premiered in Paris in 1889 with the composer conducting and was enthusiastically received, remaining a concert favourite ever since.

Our concert is dedicated to the memory of DV Newbold, CBE, a staunch and generous supporter and sponsor of the orchestra for many years who passed away last March at the age of 91.

Tickets from £12.50-£39.50 (50% student/Under 18 discount, children just £1) available from Brighton Dome Ticket Office, (01273) 709709, www.brightondome.org

Discounted parking available in NCP Church Street Car Park – just £6 between 1pm and 6pm. Simply park as normal and collect a follow-on ticket at the concert to receive the discounted rate.