Concert Program

A Night at the Italian Opera

Saturday 27 Sep 2025 7:30pm
Federation Concert Hall, Nipaluna / Hobart

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The big 3 of Italian opera!
Expect power and emotion.
This image shows two female opera singers perform side by side on stage. Both wear elegant evening gowns—one in silver and the other in royal blue—and hold open black music folders. They sing with expressive focus against a warm, wood-panelled concert hall backdrop.

The Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra acknowledges the traditional owners and continuing custodians of Lutruwita / Tasmania. We pay respect to the Aboriginal community today, and to its Elders past and present. We recognise a history of truth, which acknowledges the impacts of colonisation upon Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and stand for a future that profoundly respects their stories, culture, language and history.

About the concert

Works

Puccini Preludio sinfonico (12 mins)

Verdi La Traviata, Prelude to Act I (4 mins)

Verdi Macbeth, ballet music (10 mins)

20 minute interval

Rossini Stabat Mater (62 mins)

💡 Stabat Mater

Find the Latin text and translation here.

Valentina Peleggi, conductor. Image credit: Chris Beasley.

Valentina Peleggi, conductor. Image credit: Chris Beasley.

Concert 101: Learn about the works being performed

For the enjoyment of all in the concert hall, please only watch Concert 101 before or after the performance. 

Uncover the stories behind the works.

Lush. Youthful. Dramatic.

Preludio Sinfonico*

Composed by Giacomo Puccini (1858-1924)

12 minutes

Long before Giacomo Puccini became famous for operas such as La Bohème, Tosca and Madama Butterfly, he was a student at the Milan Conservatory, searching for his musical voice. In 1882, as part of his final examinations, he wrote the Preludio sinfonico. This short orchestral work is one of his earliest surviving compositions and provides a fascinating glimpse of Puccini on the threshold of greatness.

The Preludio is a single-movement piece that runs for about ten minutes. While it was not originally intended for the stage, its sweeping melodies, dramatic contrasts and emotional intensity clearly reveal Puccini’s operatic instincts. Already, we hear the lyrical gift that would later make him one of the most popular opera composers in the world. The violins sing long, passionate lines, while the orchestra builds rich harmonies and surging climaxes.

Musically, Puccini was influenced at the time by Wagner and other late-Romantic composers, and echoes of those styles can be heard in the orchestration and harmonic language. Yet there is also something distinctly Italian in the warmth of the melodies and the immediacy of expression. This balance between European influence and Italian lyricism would become a hallmark of his mature operas.

Although the Preludio sinfonico was an academic exercise, it impressed those who heard it and helped set Puccini on the path toward a career in opera. Today it is often performed as a curiosity – a chance to hear the young composer experimenting with form and colour before finding his true voice on the operatic stage.

For listeners, the Preludio sinfonico offers the rare pleasure of meeting Puccini at the very beginning of his journey, full of promise and already unmistakably himself.

*This work, published by Carus-Verlag, has been supplied by Clear Music Australia Pty Ltd as the hire agents in Australia & New Zealand.

Delicate. Fragile. Foreboding.

La Traviata, Prelude to Act I

Composed by Giuseppe Verdi (1813-1901)

4 minutes

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The names of movements in symphonies often follow traditional conventions that give insight into the character, tempo, and sometimes the form of each section.

These terms not only instruct performers on the tempo and mood of each movement but also guide listeners through the emotional and narrative arc of the symphony. For example, ‘Allegro’ refers to tempo and ‘molto’ translates to very, so: very fast!

When La Traviata premiered in Venice in 1853, audiences were struck not only by the daring story but also by the unusual way Verdi chose to open the opera. Instead of a loud, grand overture, he wrote a brief and delicate prelude that immediately sets an intimate and emotional tone.

The music begins with the softest of sounds: high violins playing a fragile, trembling line. This melody symbolises Violetta, the heroine of the opera, whose life and love are overshadowed by illness. The transparency of the strings gives the impression of something almost weightless, as if Violetta’s presence might dissolve before our ears.

As the prelude unfolds, the mood warms, and the orchestra introduces a broader, more lyrical theme. This melody reflects the passion between Violetta and Alfredo, the young man she loves. The music grows in intensity, hinting at the joy of their relationship, yet even in its fullness there is a sense of fragility – the happiness is fleeting, clouded by the tragedy that lies ahead.

The prelude ends as quietly as it began, fading back into silence. In just a few minutes, Verdi gives us a musical portrait of the entire opera: love, beauty, passion, and inevitable loss.

This short opening is a perfect example of Verdi’s dramatic genius. Without a single word, he tells us everything about the world we are about to enter. The audience is invited not into a spectacle, but into the private, vulnerable heart of a woman whose story will move us to tears.

Lively. Eerie. Theatrical.

Macbeth, ballet music

Composed by Giuseppe Verdi (1813-1901)

10 minutes

When Giuseppe Verdi composed his opera Macbeth in 1847, it was one of the first times Shakespeare’s play had been brought to the operatic stage. Verdi was fascinated by the dark world of ambition, prophecy, and guilt, and his score is filled with dramatic intensity. Almost twenty years later, when the opera was revived in Paris in 1865, Verdi was asked to add a ballet – a standard expectation for French grand opera at the time.

The new ballet music appears in Act III, during the witches’ scene. Here, the supernatural powers tempt and taunt Macbeth, shaping his destiny. Verdi seizes the chance to create colourful and imaginative orchestral writing. The music is lively and rhythmically infectious, often built from dance forms, yet always tinged with an eerie edge. Graceful melodies are suddenly interrupted by unsettling harmonies, reminding us that these witches are both playful and dangerous.

What makes the Macbeth ballet music so engaging is the way it balances entertainment with atmosphere. On one hand, it provides spectacle – a burst of movement and energy that delighted Parisian audiences. On the other, it deepens the opera’s sense of mystery, highlighting the witches’ role in driving the story forward.

Although it is not often performed on its own, this ballet music shows Verdi’s ability to paint a scene vividly with purely instrumental forces. Even without voices or words, he conjures a world that is at once magical, sinister, and irresistibly theatrical.

Tender. Radiant. Devotional.

Stabat Mater

Composed by Gioachino Rossini (1792-1868)

62 minutes

Gioachino Rossini is best remembered for his dazzling operas, but his Stabat Mater shows a different side of his artistry. Written in the 1830s and completed in 1841, the work sets a 13th-century Latin hymn that describes the Virgin Mary’s grief as she stands at the foot of the cross. For centuries this text has inspired composers, but Rossini brings his own unmistakable voice – dramatic, lyrical, and full of colour.

The Stabat Mater has an unusual history. Rossini began the piece while travelling in Spain in 1831, composing six movements before ill health forced him to hand the remaining sections to a colleague. For years the work existed in this mixed form, but Rossini later returned to complete the music himself. The final version was first performed in Paris in 1842 and was immediately hailed as a triumph.

The score alternates between large, powerful movements for chorus and orchestra, and more intimate arias and ensembles for the four soloists. Listeners encounter music that shifts effortlessly between sacred solemnity and operatic intensity. At times the music is hushed and devotional, at other times it soars with passion, reflecting both the suffering and the hope contained in the text.

Rossini’s operatic background is never far from the surface – there are moments of theatrical flair, lyrical melodies, and dramatic contrasts that would not be out of place on the stage. Yet beneath the brilliance lies genuine feeling, a deep response to one of the most moving texts in the Christian tradition.

The Stabat Mater remains a unique achievement: a sacred work that combines heartfelt devotion with the expressive power of the theatre.

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Musicians

Valentina Peleggi

Conductor

Supported by Anonymous

Valentina Peleggi.

Image credit Laura Oja.

Valentina Peleggi has been Music Director of the Richmond Symphony (Virginia, USA) since 2020, revitalising the orchestra’s artistic output and launching bold new initiatives. She has developed the orchestra’s distinctive sound, introduced innovative concert formats, initiated national co-commissioning partnerships, established a three-year composer-in-residence program, and created conducting masterclasses with local universities. She has also championed neglected composers from diverse backgrounds. During the pandemic, she served on the jury of the first virtual Menuhin Competition, hosted by the Richmond Symphony.

In 2025–26, Peleggi returns to the Pacific Symphony and makes her Australasian debut with the Tasmanian and New Zealand Symphony Orchestras, conducting works by Puccini, Verdi, and Rossini. Opera is a vital part of her work: in 2025 she debuts at Opéra de Rouen and the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées with Rossini’s Semiramide, and in 2026 she returns to Opera North to conduct The Marriage of Figaro.

Her discography includes a Naxos recording of Villa-Lobos’s a cappella works with the São Paulo Symphony Chorus, prepared in a new critical edition she guest-edited. In São Paulo she served as Acting Principal Conductor and Artistic Advisor of the Chorus, Resident Conductor of the São Paulo Symphony Orchestra, and Music Director of Theatro São Pedro for the Italian repertoire.

Peleggi was the first Italian woman accepted into the conducting program at the Royal Academy of Music, London, graduating with distinction and receiving the DipRAM for her outstanding final concert. She was later made an Associate of the Academy. She also trained with David Zinman and Daniele Gatti in Zurich and Amsterdam, and earned a Masters in Conducting with honours from the Conservatorio Santa Cecilia in Rome, alongside a Masters in Comparative Literature.

Eleanor Lyons

Soprano

Eleanor Lyons. Soprano.

Australian soprano Eleanor Lyons is celebrated for her versatility, deep musicality, and fresh interpretations across opera, orchestral concerts, chamber music and solo recitals. Her artistry has led to ongoing collaborations with leading conductors and orchestras worldwide.

Recent highlights include her acclaimed house debut at Dresden’s Semperoper as Leonore in Beethoven’s Fidelio in Christine Mielitz’s historic production, followed by performances of the same role with the Orquesta y Coro Nacionales de España under David Afkham. She also toured Europe with Philippe Herreweghe and the Orchestre des Champs-Élysées as soloist in Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony.

In Australia, Eleanor has appeared with the Queensland Symphony in Strauss’ Four Last Songs and Beethoven’s Ninth under Umberto Clerici, made her Sydney Symphony debut as Freia in Wagner’s Das Rheingold with Simone Young, and sang Verdi’s Requiem at the Adelaide Festival with the Antwerp Symphony. Internationally, she debuted with the MDR Symphony in Vaughan Williams’ Sea Symphony under Dennis Russell Davies, appeared at the Vienna Musikverein in Bruckner’s Psalm 150 with the Vienna Symphony under Petr Popelka, and performed Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis at the Festival Les Chorégies d’Orange with John Nelson.

The 2024–25 season brings her debut with the Deutsche Radio Philharmonie in Britten’s Les Illuminations and Mozart concert arias, and her first appearance at Turin’s Teatro Regio in Mahler’s Second Symphony with Aziz Shokhakimov. She returns to the Queensland Symphony for Verdi’s Requiem, and continues her collaboration with Philippe Herreweghe in a European tour of Beethoven’s Ninth. Further debuts include Dvořák’s Stabat Mater with the Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin, Poulenc’s Stabat Mater with the City of Birmingham Symphony (Kazuki Yamada), Mahler’s Second Symphony with the Melbourne Symphony (Jaime Martin), and Rossini’s Stabat Mater with the Tasmanian Symphony (Valentina Peleggi) .

Eleanor studied at the Royal Northern College of Music and the Mariinsky Academy, and won first prize at the International Obraztsova Singing Competition.

Sian Sharp

Mezzo-soprano

Supported by Anonymous

Image

Dynamic Australian mezzo-soprano Sian Sharp has been described as “one of Opera Australia’s most versatile and accomplished singers” (Australian Arts Review) .

In 2023 she returned to Opera Australia in signature roles including Suzuki (Madama Butterfly), Giovanna and Maddalena (Rigoletto), and appeared as La Muse in Damiano Michieletto’s new production of The Tales of Hoffmann. She also sang in Sydney Philharmonia’s performance of Mahler’s Symphony No 8.

Her 2024 engagements include Dodo (Breaking the Waves), La Zelatrice (Suor Angelica), and Second Lady (The Magic Flute) with Opera Australia, while covering Idamante (Idomeneo) and Gertrude (Hamlet). On the concert stage she appears as Rossweisse (Die Walküre) with the Sydney Symphony, in Haydn’s Harmoniemesse with the Tasmanian Symphony, and in Mendelssohn’s Elijah with Sydney Philharmonia.

A long-standing member of Opera Australia, Sian’s repertoire spans more than 30 roles, including Carmen (Carmen), Amneris (Aida), Dorabella (Così fan tutte), Rosina (Il barbiere di Siviglia), Cherubino and Marcellina (Le nozze di Figaro), Olga (Eugene Onegin), Federica (Luisa Miller), Arsace (Partenope), Hansel (Hansel and Gretel), Suzuki (Madama Butterfly), and Waltraute and Siegrune in Der Ring des Nibelungen. She has also appeared in Il viaggio a Reims, Don Quichotte, Romeo and Juliet, Otello, Cavalleria rusticana, Il trovatore, La clemenza di Tito, Mefistofele, Rusalka and Salome.

In concert, Sian has performed with the Sydney Symphony in Mendelssohn’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream and as Mary in Wagner’s The Flying Dutchman with the Melbourne Symphony. She has also sung Handel’s Messiah with the Queensland Symphony and appeared frequently with Sydney Philharmonia in works including Bach’s St John Passion, Mendelssohn’s Elijah, and Elgar’s The Dream of Gerontius.

Matteo Desole

Tenor

Supported by Anonymous

Image

Born in Sassari in 1989, Italian tenor Matteo Desole began his vocal studies in 2013 with Raina Kabaivanska in Modena. He first appeared as soloist in Schnittke’s Requiem (2007) and Schubert’s Mass in B-flat (2011), and has sung widely in concert, drama, and opera, including Leopold in La parrucca di Mozart and roles with Cooperativa Teatro e/o Musica di Sassari. In 2012 he won a scholarship at the International Lyric Competition “G. Martinelli – A. Pertile” and has collaborated frequently with the Luciano Pavarotti Foundation.

Desole made his operatic debut as Malcolm in Macbeth at Teatro Comunale Bologna under Roberto Abbado in a production by Bob Wilson. Rapidly establishing himself in leading roles, he has since sung the Duke in Rigoletto (As.Li.Co), Edgardo in Lucia di Lammermoor (Savona, Cagliari), Alfredo in La traviata (Rome Opera in Sofia Coppola’s production, Tiroler Festspiele Erl, Holland Park, Tokyo, Venice, Florence), Tamino in Die Zauberflöte, Rodolfo in La bohème (Erl, Klagenfurt, Savona, Prague, Bari, Copenhagen), Ruggero in La rondine (Florence), and Rinuccio in Gianni Schicchi (Modena, Ferrara, Reggio, Piacenza).

He has appeared at major houses including La Scala, where he debuted in Francesca da Rimini under Fabio Luisi and later performed in I masnadieri (Milan and Savonlinna Festival). Other engagements include Simon Boccanegra (Genoa), Donizetti’s Requiem (Modena), Ernani (Vilnius, Rome), Tosca (Savona, Prague), and Un ballo in maschera (Cluj, Klagenfurt).

Praised for his lyrical tone and dramatic presence, Desole continues to expand his repertoire across Italy and internationally, performing regularly with leading conductors and directors.

Jeremy Kleeman

Bass Baritone

Supported by Anonymous

Jeremy Kleeman. Bass baritone.

Winner of the Australian International Opera Award and Dame Heather Begg Memorial Award, Melbourne-born bass-baritone Jeremy Kleeman is a graduate of London’s Royal College of Music and a former Sambrook Scholar with Melba Opera Trust.

In 2025 he makes role debuts as Schaunard (La bohème) with Opera Queensland and Abimelech (Samson and Delilah) with Melbourne Opera, creates the role of Captain Gibb in Cassomenos and Gething’s new opera Eva for the Port Fairy Spring Music Festival, and appears as bass soloist in Rossini’s Stabat Mater with the Tasmanian and New Zealand Symphony Orchestras. Other concert engagements this year include Purcell’s Ode on St Cecilia’s Day at the Woodend Winter Arts Festival and Bach’s St John Passion with the Melbourne Bach Choir.

Last year Jeremy created the title role in Jack Symonds’ Gilgamesh for Opera Australia and Sydney Chamber Opera, praised for his “rich, effortlessly noble bass-baritone” (The Saturday Paper). A champion of new Australian opera, he has also originated roles in George Palmer’s Cloudstreet, Elliot Gyger’s Oscar and Lucinda, Calvin Bowman’s The Magic Pudding, and Curtis and Gow’s Voyage to the Moon.

Other recent highlights include Guglielmo (Così fan tutte) with Opera Queensland, Figaro (Le nozze di Figaro) with Opera Queensland, West Australian Opera, State Opera South Australia and Opera Australia’s National Tour, and Captain Corcoran (HMS Pinafore) with State Opera South Australia.

On the concert stage, Jeremy has sung Handel’s Messiah with the Tasmanian and Melbourne Symphony Orchestras, Nielsen’s Symphony No 3 and Rossini’s Petite messe solennelle with the MSO, and gala performances with the Queensland and Canberra Symphony Orchestras. Internationally, he has performed in Elgar’s The Apostles with the London Philharmonic Choir and Orchestra, with the London Handel Players at the Tilford Bach Festival, as Traveller in Britten’s Curlew River in Moscow, and in recital at Norway’s Northern Lights Festival.

Tonight’s orchestra

Eivind Aadland Conductor

James Ehnes Violin

Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra

Violin

Emma McGrath Concertmaster 

Ji Won Kim Associate Concertmaster 

Jennifer Owen Principal Second

Rohana O'Malley Principal First

Miranda Carson

Yue-Hong Cha

Tobias Chisnall

Frances Davies

Edwina George

Michael Johnston

Christine Lawson

Susanna Low

Xinyu Mannix

Christopher Nicholas

Hayato Simpson

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Did you know our Concertmaster plays a violin hand-crafted by one of the finest and most important luthiers (a string-instrument maker) of the nineteenth century, Jean-Baptiste Vuillaume (1798–1875).

He crafted 3000+ instruments in his time and we’re very proud to have a violin made in 1845 on loan from two of our generous Tasmanian patrons.

Viola

Caleb Wright Principal

Sandra Ionescu

Sophie Kesoglidis

Anna Larsen Roach

William Newbery

Cello

David Berlin Guest Principal

Ivan James

Nicholas McManus

Sophie Radke

Double Bass

Stuart Thomson Principal

Matthew McGrath

Stuart Riley

Flute

Lily Bryant  Guest Principal

Maria Hincapie Duque

Lloyd Hudson  Principal Piccolo

Oboe

Rachel Bullen Guest Principal

Dinah Woods Principal Cor Anglais

Clarinet

Andrew Seymour Principal

Alex McCracken Guest Principal Bass Clarinet

Bassoon

Tahnee van Herk Principal

Melissa Woodroffe Principal Contrabassoon

Horn

Greg Stephens Principal First

Hannes Kaukoranta Guest Principal Third

Jules Evans

Roger Jackson

Trumpet

Fletcher Cox Principal

Mark Bain

Trombone

David Robins Principal

Jackson Bankovic

Jack Machin

Bass Trombone

James Littlewood Principal

Tuba

Rachel Kelly Principal

Timpani

Matthew Goddard Principal

Percussion

Gary Wain Principal

Stephen Marskell

Harp

Meriel Owen Guest Principal

Piano

Karen Smithies Guest Principal

Celeste

Jennifer Marten-Smith Guest Principal

Saxophone

Jabra Latham Guest Principal

Benjamin Price Guest Principal

Organ

Nathan Cox Guest Principal

TSO Chorus

Warren Trevelyan-Jones Chorus Master

Karen Smithies Repetiteur

Soprano

Christine Coombe

Linda Coombes

Ruth Croser

Felicity Gifford

Yuliana Hammond

Lauren Hill

Kasia Kozlowska

Bernadette Large

Loretta Lohberger

Erin Murphy

Schuya Murray

Christine Ovens

Susannah Rawlinson

Chantal Roddy

Carolyn Seelen

Joy Tattam

Lesley Wickham

Alto

Nadeena Beck

Claire Blichfeldt

Beth Coombe

Elizabeth Eden

Ann Godber

Sue Harradence

Michelle Harris

Mary Harwood

Caroline Miller

Rosemary Rayfuse

Karen Sloane

Gillian von Bertouch

Beth Warren

Andrea Wild

Tenor

Helen Chick

Phillip Clutterbuck

Michael Kregor

Bill MacDonald

Tony Marshall

Mandy McKendrick

Dianne O’Toole

David Pitt

James Powell-Davies

Peter Tattam

Bass

Geoffrey Attwater

John Ballard

Tim Begbie

Roy Classey

Peter Cretan

Jack Delaney

Liam Filby

Greg Foot

Peter Hepburn

Michael Muldoon

David Ovens

Tony Parker

Philip Ridyard

Grant Taylor

Tane Thomas

*Correct at time of publishing

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Karen Gomyo

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Beethoven’s First

Featuring Pekka Kuusisto in the dual role of conductor & violinist.

Rautavaara Pelimannit (The Fiddlers) Op 1
Clyne Time and Tides
BeethovenSymphony No 1 in C, Op 21

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TSO Concertmaster Emma McGrath plays an 1845 Jean-Baptiste Vuillaume violin on loan from two of our generous Tasmanian patrons.

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