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There is a list of repertoire we have performed since 1961 here

 Recent concerts


Saturday 15th November 2008 at 7:45pm

Sergei Rachmaninov
Sergei Rachmaninov

Masa Tayama
Masa Tayama

Tchaikovsky ‘Hamlet’ Fantasy Overture Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording of this work

Rachmaninov Piano Concerto No.2 Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording of this work
    Soloist Masa Tayama

Rimsky-Korsakov ‘Scheherazade’  Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording of this work

In a programme of romantic Russian music, what could be more romantic than this lovely concerto, familar even to non-classical music lovers through its use in the classic film "Brief Encounter"? Before that,"Hamlet" captures the many moods of the Bard's great play. In Rimsky-Korsakov's colourful suite, based on the age-old "Tales of 1001 Nights", the solo violin represents Scheherazade as she tells a series of enthralling stories that will spare her life.


Sunday 22nd June 2008
Day Workshop at Bishop Justus School

Richard Strauss Alpine Symphony Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording of this work

We ran a day’s workshop on Richard Strauss’s epic 'Alpine Symphony' at Bishop Justus School. Given its scale and complex scoring, this was not a work that we could ever afford to include in a concert performance, but this was a wonderful opportunity to play this Strauss masterpiece. We spent the day working on it with Adrian before an informal performance in the early evening, which was open to the public.

Adrian introduced the work at 5.50pm, followed by an informal performance at about 6.10pm (ending around 7pm).

The session was free, but donations were welcome; no tickets were issued.

Saturday 17th May 2008 at 7:45pm
Gustav Holst

Gustav Holst

Bax 'Tintagel' - Tone poem audio icon

Arnold 'The Inn of the Sixth Happiness' - Suite audio icon

Holst 'The Planets' Suite audio icon
    with the choir of Newstead Woods School

Bax’s tone poem dramatically portrays the Cornish castle, high above rocks, battered by the waves. Its Celtic flavour hints at the legend of King Arthur. Sir Malcolm Arnold was a prolific composer, who wrote in many genres including music for over 100 films, winning an Oscar for ‘Bridge on the River Kwai’ and an Ivor Novello Award for ‘Inn of the Sixth Happiness’. Holst’s ‘Planets’ Suite was described by him as ‘a series of mood pictures’, and is based on astrological ideas. It uses a huge orchestra, sometimes with enormous power and sometimes with extreme delicacy, making a splendid sonic spectacular conclusion to our season.

Saturday 8th March 2008 at 7:45pm
Pyotr Tchaikovsky

Pyotr Tchaikovsky

Dvořák 'The Noonday Witch' audio icon

Mendelssohn Violin Concerto audio icon
    soloist - Jeanine Thorpe

Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 4 audio icon

Dvořák wrote some highly colourful symphonic poems, which graphically illustrate rather grisly stories. The Mendelssohn concerto is rightfully one of the most loved of all concertos. The symphony opens dramatically with a foreboding ‘fate’ motif which leads us through gloom, melancholy and recovery to a joyous finale based on Russian folksong.

Saturday 19th January 2008 at 7:45pm
Anton Bruckner

Anton Bruckner

Schubert Overture - 'Rosamunde' audio icon

Strauss Duett-Concertino audio icon
   soloists - Massimo Roman (clarinet)
   & Stephen Fuller (bassoon)

Bruckner Symphony No. 7 audio icon

Schubert wrote much charming, tuneful music in his short life and this overture shows both these qualities. Strauss’s solo clarinet masquerades as a princess and the bassoon as a bear who turns into a prince when they dance together. Bruckner’s symphonies are like magnificent cathedrals in splendour, the famous slow movement of the Seventh being a glorious tribute to his idol, Wagner.

Saturday 17th November 2007 at 7:45pm
Sir Edward Elgar

Sir Edward Elgar

Delius (ed A Summers) The Walk to the Paradise Garden audio icon

Bloch 'Schelomo' - Hebraic Rhapsody audio icon
    solo cello - Alice McVeigh

Elgar Symphony No. 2 audio icon

The season opens with Delius’s seductive and melodious ‘Walk’, a perennial concert hall favourite. In ‘Schelomo’, Bloch personifies the cello as the reincarnated voice of King Solomon, giving the virtuoso soloist a magnificent emotional range. Our symphony celebrates the 150th birthday of arguably this country’s greatest composer with his wonderful evocation of Edwardian England.

Sunday 10th June 2007
Day Workshop

Stravinsky The Rite of Spring Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording. Requires free RealPlayer.

This work is a major landmark in the musical world. Its first performance in 1913 caused a riot, but it has now taken its rightful place as a staple part of the symphony orchestra repertoire.

It would be very difficult to include Stravinsky's ballet masterpiece in our formal concert series, as the stage area will not accommodate the forces required (including quintuple woodwind, eight horns, five trumpets, two timpani players etc). We took the opportunity to work on it with our conductor Adrian Brown on Sunday 10th June.

We rehearsed over several sessions during the day, and the final session was open to the public. Adrian  introduced the work at 5.30pm, followed by an informal performance at about 6pm (ending around 6.30). The hall was set up "in the round" to enable us to accommodate the resources required and to allow the audience to get up close to the action!

The session was free, but donations were welcome; no tickets were issued.

Saturday 19th May 2007 at 7:45pm
This concert depicts storms – of emotions in
Richard Wagner
‘Opera Evening’

Berlioz Royal Hunt and Storm Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording. Requires free RealPlayer.

Mozart (arr Wendt) Marriage of Figaro (Suite) Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording. Requires free RealPlayer.

Leoncavallo I Pagliacci – Prologue Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording. Requires free RealPlayer.
    soloist: Edward Grint

Wagner Ride of the Valkyries & Die Walküre Act 3 extracts Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording. Requires free RealPlayer.
    soloists: Christine Teare and
Sir Donald McIntyre

This concert depicts storms – of emotions in Leoncavallo’s tragedy; of the elements pictured by Berlioz around the troubled romance of Dido and Aeneas; of domestic intrigue and upheaval in Figaro; and of the passions of Wagner’s Gods and warrior-maidens. But it also portrays the calm of emotion spent. A spectacular conclusion to our musical season.

Saturday 10th March 2007 at 7:45pm
Johannes Brahms in 1876
Johannes Brahms
in 1876
Beethoven Egmont Overture Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording. Requires free RealPlayer.

Bliss Violin Concerto Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording. Requires free RealPlayer.
    soloist: Bernard Brook

Brahms Symphony No. 1 Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording. Requires free RealPlayer.

Beethoven portrays a heroic struggle for freedom from Spanish religious oppression in the Netherlands. Bliss lived through the upheavals of world wars, holding fast to his optimism. Brahms took up the challenge of Beethoven, in a symphony of titanic conflict, resolved in a blaze of light.

Bromley Symphony Orchestra gratefully acknowledges the financial support of The Bliss Trust for this performance of the Bliss Violin concerto. Fans of the composer may also be interested in the activities of the Bliss Society.

Saturday 20th January 2007 at 7:45pm
Sergei Rachmaninov
Sergei Rachmaninov
Wagner Overture from 'Rienzi' Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording. Requires free RealPlayer.

Arnold Little Suite No. 1 Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording. Requires free RealPlayer.

Haydn Trumpet Concerto Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording. Requires free RealPlayer.
    soloist: Matthew Fletcher

Rachmaninov Symphony No. 2 Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording. Requires free RealPlayer.

Rachmaninov’s great symphony has a gloriously rich sound of broad tunes, with passionate declamation. Wagner’s early opera celebrated the life of 14th century Roman populist leader Rienzi on the grandest scale. By contrast, Haydn offers a joyful and radiant concerto.

Saturday 11th November 2006 at 7:45pm
Dmitri Shostakovich
Dmitri Shostakovich
Richard Strauss Don Juan Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording. Requires free RealPlayer.

Mozart Piano Concerto No. 23 K488 Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording. Requires free RealPlayer.
   
soloist: Tracey Renwick

Shostakovich Symphony No. 10 Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording. Requires free RealPlayer.

Shostakovich’s symphony was in part a public reaction to Stalin’s death, and in other ways an enigmatic and private work entwining personal mottos from an emotional relationship. Its dramatic power is complemented by Strauss’s brilliant tone-poem, and the sublime intimate melodies of Mozart’s concerto.

Saturday 20th May 2006 at 7:45pm
Ludvig van Beethoven

Ludvig van Beethoven

‘Simply Famous’

Grieg "Peer Gynt" (selection) Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording. Requires free RealPlayer.

Mozart Horn Concerto No. 3 Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording. Requires free RealPlayer.
    soloist - Roy Banks

Beethoven Symphony No. 3 - "Eroica" Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording. Requires free RealPlayer.

Why does some music gain universal popularity and fame? Great tunes, freshness, vitality, romance, drama – all are shown in this concert. Grieg’s spirited portrayal of the adventures of ‘Peer Gynt’ is among the most played orchestral music. Mozart’s humour and high spirits in a showpiece for the French horn has immediate appeal. And on every hearing, the revolutionary drama of Beethoven ‘Eroica’ strikes the listener anew with the shock of a journey from tragedy to triumph.

Saturday 11th March 2006 at 7:45pm
Sir Edward Elgar

Sir Edward Elgar

‘The Composer’s Inspiration’

Bach (arr Elgar) Fantasia & Fugue in C Minor Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording. Requires free RealPlayer.

Anthony Payne "Spring's Shining Wake"

Elgar (realized Payne) Symphony No. 3 Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording. Requires free RealPlayer.

The idea of this very colourful orchestration of Bach’s great organ work came from a meeting between Elgar and Richard Strauss. After the death of his wife in 1920, many believed that Elgar’s inspiration had faded. However, reviewing the sketches for Elgar’s unfinished last symphony, Anthony Payne found the music ‘leapt from the page’ for his acclaimed and deeply satisfying completion which he will be introducing at this concert. We celebrate Payne’s own 70th birthday with a performance of his serene work, which was inspired by Delius’s ‘In a Summer Garden’.

Saturday 21st January 2006 at 7:45pm
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

‘Darkness into Light’

Sibelius "Pohjola's Daughter" Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording. Requires free RealPlayer.

Shostakovich Violin Concerto No. 1 Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording. Requires free RealPlayer.
    soloist - Alex Afia

Tchaikovsky "The Nutcracker" Ballet - Act 2 Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording. Requires free RealPlayer.

Sibelius’s overture tells a story from Finland’s epic poem ‘The Kalevala’ in which an old magician tries to woo an alluring, beautiful maiden. We welcome Shostakovich’s Centenary year with this concerto, which begins darkly with driving energy, and after a subdued slow movement with one of his warmest melodies, ends in a festive finale. By contrast Tchaikovsky’s ‘Nutcracker’ offers a fairy tale entertainment with charming and popular dance music.

Saturday 19th November 2005 at 7:45pm
Gustav Mahler

Gustav Mahler

‘The Sounds of Nature’

Mahler Symphony No. 3 Click to hear a sample from a commercial recording. Requires free RealPlayer.

with "The Carroll Singers" and Trinity Boys' Choir
mezzo soprano - Miriam Power

In Mahler’s romantic vision ‘a symphony is like the world, it must contain everything’. His third symphony, written at his retreat in the Austrian Alps in 1893-4, was first titled ‘A Summer Morning’s Dream’ and is a wonderful orchestral pageant of nature and human experience. It includes a sublime movement for soloist and chorus, and ends in an exultant finale ‘What Love Tells Me’.

Saturday 14th May 2005 at 7:45pm
Shlomy Dobrinsky Berlioz Overture 'Le Corsaire' audio icon

Brahms Violin Concerto audio icon
    soloist - Shlomy Dobrinsky

Prokofiev Symphony No. 5 audio icon

Le Corsair is a concert showpiece, with the swashbuckling pirate, swift and brilliant in adventure, calmed with beautiful expressive melody, providing images of Berlioz’s own passionate personality. In more reflective style, Brahms’s Violin Concerto is full again of lovely melody and rich orchestration, in a work written for his great friend and adviser Joseph Joachim. Finally, a world away in war-torn Soviet Russia, written by Prokofiev in 1944 the Symphony No.5 is a glittering and heroic work, full of sharp wit and flowing song-lines, contending with powerful external forces.  

Saturday 19th March 2005 at 7:45pm
Franz Schubert Glinka Overture 'Ruslan and Lyudmila' audio icon

Tippett Ritual Dances from 'A Midsummer Marriage' audio icon

Schubert Symphony No. 9 - ('Great C major') audio icon

Glinka’s overture to his opera Ruslan and Lyudmila is full of sweeping melodies and driving rhythms, describing the battle against sorcery to win the hand of an enchanted princess. In Michael Tippett’s opera The Midsummer Marriage, the lovers’ path is also attended by magic, portrayed in the Ritual Dances of the seasons, ending with a rapturous climax in the summer fire-dance. The last work, Schubert’s ‘Great’ Symphony No. 9, of striking rhythmic vitality and sheer lyrical beauty, was famously described as ‘heavenly length’ by Schumann.

Saturday 22nd January 2005 at 7:45pm
Sir Edward Elgar Walton Overture 'Scapino' audio icon

Bliss Ballet Suite 'Checkmate' audio icon

Elgar 'Falstaff' - A Symphonic Fantasy audio icon

Scapino, a servant in the Italian Art of Comedy, is the subject of one of Walton’s most popular works. It opens in a blaze of bright light and high spirited mischief, leading on to Scapino the lover in a serenade, before more escapades. The ballet Checkmate by Arthur Bliss (later knighted and Master of the Queen’s Music) depicts a contest on the chessboard between good and evil, through music of fantasy and harmonic freshness. Elgar’s symphonic poem Falstaff takes us back to the theatre, with a portrait of Shakespeare’s larger than life character, a chancer, charmer and braggart, ultimately broken hearted in his rejection and death.

Saturday 13th November 2004 at 7:45pm
Richard Strauss Mozart Symphony No. 39 audio icon

Richard Strauss 'Ein Heldenleben' ('A Hero's Life') audio icon

Our first concert of the season contrasts the classical elegance of Mozart with the extravagant expression of Richard Strauss. Of Mozart’s last three symphonies, No 39 is least played, a work of inspiration, joyful exuberance and sombre introspection, that can still surprise and delight. In A Hero’s Life Strauss portrays his life as an epic struggle, between his inner life and love for his wife Pauline, a famously temperamental singer, and the outer world, battling for understanding and recognition of his work against his adversaries – the critics!

 

Some earlier seasons are here: [2003-4 season] [2002-3 season] [2001-2 season]

audio icon Click the speaker symbols above to hear samples from commercial recordings. Requires free RealPlayer.

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