Concert Program
Friday 27 Jun 2025 7:30pm
Federation Concert Hall, Nipaluna / Hobart
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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.
Grieg Peer Gynt, Suite No 1, Op 46 (15 mins)
4 movements
Poulenc Concert champêtre (25 mins)
3 movements
20 minute interval
Felix Mendelssohn Symphony No 4 in A, Op 90, ‘Italian’ (27 mins)
4 movements
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Longer pieces of music are often broken up into bite-size pieces called ‘movements’. It makes it easier to perform and provides contrast within the work. Find out more here.

Edvard Hagerup Grieg.
Peer Gynt, Suite No 1, Op 46
Composed by Edvard Grieg (1843 - 1907)
15 minutes
Originally written as music for a play by Henrik Ibsen, Grieg’s Peer Gynt follows the wild, wandering life of a flawed but fascinating character named Peer. He tells lies to all he meets, runs from responsibility, travels the world, and ultimately faces himself in old age. Grieg’s music brings the story to life with colour and emotion, even if you’ve never seen the play. There was originally 28 little pieces written for the staged version, and in an early demonstration of recycling, Grieg collected his favourites together in two groups, called suites. He obviously had great skill and taste because this music has since become some of the most popular (and recognisable) works for orchestra ever written.
Concert champêtre
Composed by Francis Poulenc (1899 - 1963)
25 minutes
The Concert champêtre (literally “pastoral concerto” or “rustic concert”) is one of Francis Poulenc’s most vibrant and unusual creations. Written in 1928 for the legendary harpsichordist Wanda Landowska, it’s a colourful and witty concerto played tonight on piano by Tamara-Anna Cislowska. Why use the piano? The reasons lie in the difference in construction between the two instruments. The harpsichord has little tiny “jacks” that pluck the strings inside, creating a sparkling but very intimate sound, perfect for small rooms. In contrast, the piano has hammers that hit the strings and is much louder, meaning listeners can easily hear its melodies over the sound of an orchestra at full power. When you add a masterful soloist who can control those hammers to an infinite degree, thus creating a huge palette of sound colours, the piano is a perfect choice for this style of music, with its modern harmonies, quirky rhythms, and Poulenc’s signature mix of elegance and mischief. The three movements are full of personality and contrast, blending Baroque forms with Poulenc’s unmistakably 20th-century voice.
Symphony No 4 in A, Op 90, ‘Italian’
Composed by Paul Stanhope (1809 - 1847)
27 minutes
Felix Mendelssohn was a German composer, conductor and pianist — and child prodigy! Mendelssohn’s Italian Symphony is a cross between a composer’s travel diary and postcard: a joyful, energetic piece inspired by a trip to Italy. He wrote it in his 20s after traveling across Europe (basically his gap year), and this symphony is his musical love letter to the sights, sounds and spirit of Italian life. It sounds and looks effortless but isn’t - it’s technically difficult piece often used in string auditions.
Even if you’ve never heard it before, the music is easy to enjoy. It’s full of warmth, movement, and colour — like a bright summer’s day.
From now until 30 June, every gift to the 2025 TSO Annual Appeal will be matched dollar for dollar, thanks to the generous donors of our matched giving circle. That means your donation – whatever the size – has double the impact.
Conductor

Image credit Laura Oja.
Winner of the Finnish critics’ prize 2021 for the Best Newcomer in the Arts, Emilia Hoving (born 1994) has emerged as one of most exciting young Finnish conductors of today:
“Hoving is a conductor on the rise, and for good reason. She has a highly precise, refined and inventive conducting technique that combines airy breathability with power” (Turun Sanomat, April 2024)
“A scintillating performance, memorable for its passion and drama … authoritative conducting, which drew out all the character and charm of each work and encouraged the best performances from the players. Not yet 30 years of age, Hoving has a brilliant career in prospect.” (5*, Limelight Magazine, March 2023).
Already firmly established across Europe, in 24/25 Hoving returns to conduct the Philharmonia Orchestra, Royal Stockholm Philharmonic, Helsinki Philharmonic, BBC National Orchestra of Wales, Norwegian Radio, Malmo Symphony and Adelaide Symphony, all in their main series. She conducts the Strasbourg Philharmonic, Belgian National, Trondheim Symphony, Stavanger Symphony, Royal Scottish National, Orquesta Castilla y Leon, Tasmanian Symphony and Netherlands Radio Philharmonic all for the first time.
Hoving’s career began as Assistant to Hannu Lintu at the Finnish Radio Symphony (2019) and to Mikko Franck at Radio France (2020-22). Both posts both led to important jump-ins which catapulted her to the limelight, notably when she took over a concert with the Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France in the Berlin Philharmonie concert at only a few hours’ notice: “sensationell” (Tagesspiegel, March 2022).
Hoving studied at the Sibelius Academy in Helsinki with Professors Sakari Oramo and Atso Almila, having begun conducting studies in 2015 with Jorma Panula. She previously studied piano (from age 6) as well as the clarinet.
Piano

ARIA award-winning pianist, Tamara-Anna Cislowska is one of Australia’s most renowned, respected and celebrated classical pianists, performing and recording in Australia and internationally. Earning international prizes in London, Italy and Greece and touring Japan and the USA as cultural ambassador for Australia, Tamara’s accolades include ABC Young Performer of the Year, the Freedman Fellowship, an Art Music Award for ‘Performance of the Year’ (ACT) and the 2015 ARIA award for 'Best Classical Album'. With millions of streams on Spotify alone, Tamara is also a regular presenter on ABC Classic FM, including her weekly show, Duet - as curator and music director, librettist, and composer - with guests such as Lang Lang, Anne-Sophie Mutter, Steven Isserlis and Ben Folds.
Frequent guest of orchestras and festivals worldwide, Tamara has performed as soloist with the London Philharmonic, Auckland Philharmonia, and all major Australasian symphony orchestras with conductors such as Matthias Bamert, Edo de Waart, Asher Fisch, Johannes Fritzsch, Karina Canellakis and Alondra de la Parra. Recent engagements include concerti by Gorecki, Liszt, Prokofiev, Rachmaninov and Shostakovich and Elena Kats-Chernin’s Piano Concerto no.3, Lebewohl, commissioned for Cislowska.
In 2025, Tamara returns as soloist with the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra, with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, and tours nationally with the Australian Chamber Orchestra with Carolina Eyck. She writes and performs in Human Waves, her work with Elena Kats-Chernin, on two pianos with specially commissioned new verses, for River City Voices, and is guest soloist in ‘East in Symphony’ concerts with the Guizhou Chinese Orchestra.
Violin
Emma McGrath Concertmaster
Ji Won Kim Associate Concertmaster
Jennifer Owen Principal Second
Miranda Carson Principal First
Kirsty Bremner
Yue-Hong Cha
Tobias Chisnall
Margaret Connolly
Michael Johnston
Elinor Lea
Xinyu Mannix
Christopher Nicholas
Rohana O'Malley
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
Anna Larsen Roach
Susanna Low
William Newbery
Cello
Jonathan Békés Principal
Alexandra Békés
Ivan James
Martin Penicka
Double Bass
Stuart Thomson Principal
Kylie Davies
Matthew McGrath
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
Natasha Fearnside Guest Principal Bass Clarinet
Bassoon
Tahnee van Herk Principal
Tasman Compton
Horn
Greg Stephens Principal First
Claudia Leggett Principal Third
Roger Jackson
Julian Leslie
Trumpet
Fletcher Cox Guest Principal
Mark Bain
Trombone
David Robins Principal
Jackson Bankovic
Bass Trombone
James Littlewood Guest Principal
Tuba
Rachel Kelly Principal
Timpani
Matthew Goddard Principal
Percussion
Gary Wain Principal
Tracey Patten
*Correct at time of publishing
Photo credit: Fin Matson

Everything you need to know about Federation Concert Hall.

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What are acoustics and how do they affect my concert experience?
Acoustics are the science of sound, or the way a venue can deliver the thunderous feeling of strings and brass, or the ring of the triangle over all the other instruments.
Read more about the acoustics of the Hall here.
Featuring Alexander Gavrylyuk on piano and conductor Pablo González.
Falla The Three-Cornered Hat, Suite No 1
Rachmaninov Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini, Op 43
Venegas At the Aegean Shores
StravinskyThe Firebird, Suite (1945 version)
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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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