Concert Program

Psycho!

Thursday 5 Jun 2025 6pm
Federation Concert Hall, Nipaluna / Hobart

Looking for tickets? Go here.

Drama, danger and devilish
percussion will have you
screaming for more.
A focused Claire Edwardes, in a striped, semi-sheer top, plays a vibraphone with four mallets on a dimly lit stage. Microphones hang overhead, capturing the performance, while cymbals and other percussion instruments surround the setup, adding to the experimental vibe.

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

Mozart Don Giovanni, Overture (6 mins)

Sibelius The Swan of Tuonela (10 mins)

Herrmann Psycho Suite (7 mins)

3 movements

  1. i. Prelude
  2. ii. The Murder
  3. iii. Finale

Grandage Dances with Devils (23 mins)

3 movements

  1. i. The Chosen Vessel
  2. ii. The Conquering Bush
  3. iv. Lola Montez

Want to know more about the extraordinary percussion kit?

When composer Iain Grandage wrote Dances with Devils for percussionist Claire Edwardes, he knew she would be willing to ‘push boundaries’.
Together, Iain and Claire built the tubular bell apparatus that Claire wears on stage during the performance.
Read more here.

This image shows a smiling Iain Grandage, with wavy, tousled light brown hair and a beard, wearing rectangular glasses and a dark navy suit with a white shirt and textured navy tie, standing in front of a light concrete wall. Image credit Pia Johnson.

Iain Grandage. Image credit Pia Johnson.

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.

Seduction. Deception. Downfall.

Don Giovanni, Overture

Composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756–1791)

6 minutes

Mozart’s Overture to Don Giovanni is the dramatic opening to one of his most famous operas, Don Giovanni. First performed in 1787, the opera tells the story of Don Giovanni (also known as Don Juan), a charming and dangerous man who lives for pleasure and leaves chaos behind him. It’s a tale full of humour, romance, danger, and the supernatural – like a mix between James Bond, Phantom of the Opera, and Breaking Bad!

The overture begins with three powerful, slow chords that immediately create a sense of mystery and doom. These chords return at the very end of the opera, when Don Giovanni meets a terrifying fate. After this dark opening, the music suddenly shifts into a fast, lively section full of excitement and energy.

Mozart wrote this overture the night before the opera’s premiere. According to legend, he stayed up all night writing it, and the ink was still wet when it was passed to the musicians. Despite the rush, the overture is a masterclass in musical storytelling.

In concert performances, the overture is often played on its own without going straight into the opera. It still works beautifully, thanks to its dramatic contrasts, vivid character, and the sense that something big is about to unfold. Even if you don’t know the opera, the music takes you on a thrilling ride.

Hauntingly beautiful.

The Swan of Tuonela

Composed by Jean Sibelius (1865 – 1957)

10 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!

Jean Sibelius’ The Swan of Tuonela is one of his most haunting and beautiful pieces. Written in 1895, it’s part of a group of works based on the Kalevala, Finland’s national epic – a collection of ancient stories filled with magic, heroes, and spirits. In this piece, Sibelius paints a musical picture of a mysterious swan gliding across the dark waters of Tuonela, the land of the dead.

This isn’t a dramatic story with action and battles. Instead, it’s quiet, slow, and dreamlike – like the atmosphere of a gothic film or a slow-burn episode from Game of Thrones. The swan, a symbol of beauty and peace, floats through this eerie underworld, untouched by the danger around it. You can almost see the mist and hear the stillness.

Sibelius uses a cor anglais – a cousin of the oboe with a darker, almost melancholic sound (played tonight by TSO’s Principal Cor Anglais, Dinah Woods) – to sing the swan’s lonely melody. This is supported by soft strings and distant brass, creating a sound that’s both calm and unsettling. There’s no big climax, just a slow, steady unfolding. The Swan of Tuonela shows how powerful quiet music can be.

Though it was originally written as part of a larger opera project that never came to life, The Swan of Tuonela has become one of Sibelius’ most loved stand-alone pieces. It’s a short but unforgettable journey into a world that feels ancient, magical, and just a little bit spooky.

Tense. Chilling. Iconic.

Psycho Suite

  1. i. Prelude
  2. ii. The Murder
  3. iii. Finale

Composed by Bernard Herrmann (1911–1975).
Edited by Christopher Palmer.

7 minutes

Bernard Herrmann’s Psycho Suite features music from Alfred Hitchcock’s 1960 film Psycho – one of the most famous and influential horror movies ever made. Even if you haven’t seen the film, you’ve probably heard its most iconic moment: the high-pitched, stabbing strings during the shower scene. That terrifying music has become part of pop culture, used in everything from horror movie trailers to cartoons and comedy sketches.

Herrmann’s score for Psycho was groundbreaking. Instead of using a full orchestra, he chose only strings – violins, violas, cellos, and double basses. This created a tense, edgy sound that matched the black-and-white visuals and psychological suspense of the film. The music is sharp, relentless, and at times eerily quiet. It doesn’t just accompany the action; it gets inside the characters’ minds and makes the audience feel their anxiety and fear.

The Psycho Suite brings together the main musical moments from the film into a concert piece. You’ll hear the famous screeching strings of the murder scene, but also slower, darker music that builds a sense of creeping dread. Herrmann was a master of suspense, and his music plays a huge role in making Psycho so unforgettable. It’s a brilliant example of how film music can stand on its own in the concert hall.

Herrmann and Hitchcock worked together on many films, but Psycho remains their most iconic collaboration. The Psycho Suite is a thrilling, spine-tingling listen – perfect for anyone who loves film, suspense, or just really great music that grabs you from the first note.

Australian Gothic.

Symphony No 6 in F, Op 68 Pastoral

  1. i. The Chosen Vessel
  2. ii. The Conquering Bush
  3. iv. Lola Montez

Composed by Iain Grandage (born 1970)

23 minutes

Dances with Devils is a concerto for percussion and orchestra by West Australian composer, composer and creative director, Iain Grandage. The work was written for Claire Edwardes and commissioned by the Melbourne and Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra, with the support of Symphony Services International. It was premiered by Claire in 2015 in Geelong, with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra and conductor, Benjamin Northey.

The music score includes the following note from the composer –

“The Australian Bush – that great mythic landscape – has always held a particular grasp on the psyche of white Australians. It is the great unknown – beyond the realms of our control, and source of many subliminal fears. Indigenous Australians are more than aware of the power and mystery held within the earth, but those are not my stories to tell or my songs to sing. This work is instead a response to a series of short stories that reside within the Australian Gothic literary tradition of the 19th century, a tradition where the tropes of the old world – ghosts, spectres, haunted houses and mythological beasts, were transposed and transformed into events and situations that had particular resonance with the Australian colonial experience.

The opening movement of Dances with Devils revolves around Barbara Baynton’s Chosen Vessel. This concise masterwork tells of the terror of a young woman one twilight, who is dreading the return of a swagman to her isolated hut. On hearing a passing horse, she mistakes it for a saviour. However, the passing rider is a young religious man who mistakes her for a ghost in her flowing nightgown, with her cries of “For Christ’s Sake” and refuses to stop. She falls victim to the lurking swagman. The movement features the marimba [a large percussion instrument with tuned wooden bars that are struck with mallets] and is dominated by triplet rhythms redolent of horse hooves.

The second movement is a subdued sarabande [a slow, stately dance], based on Edward Dyson’s Conquering Bush, a story in which a woman, unable to cope with the searing, incessant noise of the birds around her bush home chooses a drowning death for her and her child instead. It features series of instruments being transformed in pitch and timbre by water.

The final movement provides a moment of hope amongst the gothic landscape. It is a Tarantella inspired by Lola Montez, whose famed Spider Dance was the talk of the goldfields when she toured Australia in the 1850s.

I am indebted to Claire Edwardes for all she has brought to this collaboration. Claire’s energy, virtuosity and musical competence redresses the seemingly impossible imbalance between a solitary soloist and the massed forces of a symphony orchestra that is inherent within the concerto format. She stands strong against that conquering noise and casts doubt and darkness aside. I love her for it.”

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Musicians

Benjamin Northey

Conductor

Supported by Anonymous

This image shows Benjamin Northey with short light brown hair and wearing a black button-up shirt. He is smiling, seated and leaning slightly forward against a dark background. Image credit Laura Manariti.

Australian conductor Benjamin Northey is the Chief Conductor of the Christchurch Symphony Orchestra and Principal Conductor and Artistic Advisor – Learning and Engagement of the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra. In 2025 he was also appointed Conductor in Residence of the Sydney Symphony Orchestra and Director of the Australian Conducting Academy, a national training program for Australian and New Zealand conductors.

Northey appears regularly as a guest conductor with all major Australian symphony orchestras, Opera Australia, New Zealand Opera, the State Opera South and Victorian Opera. His international engagements include appearances with the London Philharmonic, Mozarteum Orchestra Salzburg, Tokyo Philharmonic, Hong Kong Philharmonic, Malaysian Philharmonic, and the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra.

Highly regarded for the range of his work Northey has collaborated with major artists such as Maxim Vengerov, Anne Sofie von Otter, Pinchas Zukerman and Wynton Marsalis. He has also collaborated with great artists in many genres of music including Tim Minchin, Professor Brian Cox, Lalah Hathaway, Kurt Elling, Anoushka Shankar, James Morrison and Ben Folds.

An Aria Awards, Air Music Awards, and APRA/AMCOS Art Music Awards winner, Northey is a strong advocate for contemporary orchestral music from Australia and New Zealand. He has premiered numerous works and champions music by Australian First Nations composers. His collaborations include significant projects with Deborah Cheetham, William Barton, composer Paul Grabowsky and songmen Daniel and David Wilfred.

To read more about Benjamin Northey, click here.

Claire Edwardes OAM

Percussion

Supported by Anonymous

This image shows Claire Edwardes, in a sparkly teal jumpsuit, sitting barefoot on a white floor, surrounded by a colorful array of percussion instruments including a tambourine, guiro, cowbells, maracas, and mallets. She smiles up at the camera, with the instruments arranged in a circular, almost playful pattern around her.

Claire Edwardes OAM is Australia's ‘sorceress of percussion’ (City News, Canberra) and the only Australian to win the 'APRA Art Music Luminary Award’ four times. A charismatic percussion virtuosi, Claire leaps between her role as Ensemble Offspring’s Artistic Director (Australia’s leading new music ensemble), solo recitals and concerto performances with all of the Australian symphony orchestras including recent premieres of works by Anne Cawrse, Natalie Williams and Iain Grandage. In 2022 Claire was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia for her indelible contribution to Australian music and in 2023 she was the recipient of the Australian Women in Music Award for Creative Leadership.

Recently described in Limelight as a ‘unique treasure of Australia’s musical community’ and in The Age as ‘an invigorating musical life force’, Claire has hosted Play School, been an ARIA Award finalist twice and has performed as a soloist all over the world – from Vancouver to Amsterdam, the Gold Coast to Malta, and Huddersfield to Alice Springs. Widely known for her genre-spanning solo concerts, plus commissioning and premiering hundreds of new works for marimba, vibraphone, drums and more unusual instruments such as the waterphone, she passionately advocates for gender equity and diversity in all that she undertakes. As a true trailblazer Claire breaks down barriers between art music and audiences with her famous on-stage infectious enthusiasm for bringing new music to new audiences.

Learn more about Claire Edwardes’ passion for bringing new music to new audiences in this interview.

Jonathan Békés

Cello

Supported by Anonymous

Jonathan Békés

Jonathan Békés is one of Australia’s leading cellists and is a renowned solo artist, chamber musician, orchestral musician and educator.

Békés began playing the cello at the age of 10. He studied at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music and the Australian National Academy of Music (ANAM) learning from some of Australia’s leading cellists including Howard Penny, Julian Smiles and Susan Blake.

Currently, Békés is Principal Cello of the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra, a position that he has held since 2021. He plays regularly with the Australian World Orchestra and the Southern Cross Soloists and has appeared as soloist with the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra, Willoughby Symphony Orchestra and Sydney Youth Orchestra. As an educator Békés has worked closely with Musica Viva Australia and Australian Youth Orchestra and is a passionate advocate of music for all people in all walks of life.

In his spare time (not much these days), Békés is a keen sportsman and an outdoors enthusiast. He is an overly passionate golfer, crazed squash player and an AFL fanatic. He follows the Sydney Swans and the Hobart Hurricanes and loves to go on hiking adventures across Tasmania with his family.

Konstantin Shamray

Piano

Supported by Anonymous

Konstantin Shamray

Described as an exhilarating performer with faultless technique and fearless command of the piano, Russian-Australian concert pianist Konstantin Shamray performs at an international level with the world’s leading orchestras and concert presenters.

Konstantin was born in Novosibirsk and commenced his studies at the age of six with Natalia Knobloch. He then studied in Moscow at the Russian Gnessin Academy of Music with Professors Tatiana Zelikman and Vladimir Tropp, and the Hochschule fuer Musik in Freiburg, Germany, with Professor Tibor Szasz.

In 2008, Konstantin burst onto the concert scene when he won First Prize at the Sydney International Piano Competition. He is the first and only competitor to date in the 40 years of the competition to win both First and People’s Choice Prizes, in addition to six other prizes. He then went on to win First Prize at the 2011 Klavier Olympiade in Bad Kissingen,Germany and has performed at the Kissinger Sommer festival. In July 2013, following chamber recitals with Alban Gerhardt and Feng Ning, he was awarded the festival’s coveted Luitpold Prize for “outstanding musical achievements”.

Since then, Konstantin has performed extensively throughout the world in recitals, as a soloist with orchestras and as a chamber musician. In Australia, highlights have included engagements with the Adelaide, Queensland, West Australia, Tasmanian and Sydney Symphony Orchestras, as well as tours with the Australian Chamber Orchestra and ANAM Orchestra. Outside of Australia, he has performed with the Russian National Philharmonic, the Mariinsky Theatre Orchestra, Moscow Virtuosi, Orchestre National de Lyon, Prague Philharmonia, Belgrade Philharmonic Orchestra and the Calgary Philharmonic amongst many others. He has enjoyed collaborating with distinguished conductors such as Kirill Petrenko, Vladimir Spivakov, Dmitry Liss, Tugan Sokhiev and Nicholas Milton.

Chamber music plays a strong role in Konstantin’s musical career and collaborations have included tours with the Australian String Quartet, Southern Cross Soloists, Richard Tognetti, Natsuko Yoshimoto, Alban Gerhardt, Kristof Barati, Andreas Brantelid, Li Wei Qin and Leonard Elschenbroich. Konstantin has performed as part of the International Piano Series in Adelaide, and at the Melbourne Recital Centre and Ukaria Cultural Centre. He has enjoyed critical acclaim at the Klavier-Festival Ruhr, the Bochum Festival in Germany, the Mariinsky International Piano Festival and the White Nights Festival in St. Petersburg, Adelaide Festival, Musica Viva Sydney and Huntington festivals. Konstantin has recorded albums with the labels Naxos, ABC Classics and Fonoforum.

Konstantin was formerly Lecturer in Piano at the Elder Conservatorium of Music at the University of Adelaide and was awarded his PhD in 2020 for his performance-based project ‘The piano as Kolokola, Glocken and Cloches: performing and extending the European traditions of bell-inspired piano music’. He is currently Senior Lecturer in Piano at the University of Melbourne. Konstantin is open to research supervisions, with particular areas of interest being Russian piano music of the 20th century and bell-inspired piano performance traditions.

Tonight’s orchestra

Eivind Aadland Conductor

James Ehnes Violin

Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra

Violin

Ji Won Kim Concertmaster 

Jennifer Owen Associate Concertmaster 

Miranda Carson Principal Second

Christopher Nicholas Principal First

Kirsty Bremner

Yue-Hong Cha

Tobias Chisnall

Frances Davies

Belinda Gehlert

Michael Johnston

Elinor Lea

Xinyu Mannix

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

Anna Larsen Roach

Curtis Lau

Susanna Low

William Newbery

Cello

Jonathan Békés Principal

Ivan James

Nicholas McManus

Martin Penicka

Double Bass

Stuart Thomson Principal

Dylan Holly

Stuart Riley

Flute

Lily Bryant  Guest Principal

Lloyd Hudson  Principal Piccolo

Oboe

Rachel Bullen Guest Principal

Dinah Woods Principal Cor Anglais

Clarinet

Andrew Seymour Principal

Eloise Fisher Principal Bass Clarinet

Bassoon

Timothy Murray Guest Principal

Melissa Woodroffe Principal Contrabassoon

Horn

Greg Stephens Principal First

Claudia Leggett Principal Third

Jules Evans

Julian Leslie

Trumpet

Fletcher Cox 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

Harp

Meriel Owen Guest Principal

Celeste

Jennifer Marten-Smith Guest Principal

Saxophone

Jabra Latham Guest Principal

Benjamin Price Guest Principal

Organ

Nathan Cox Guest Principal

Chorus List

Warren Trevelyan-Jones Chorus Master

Karen Smithies Repetiteur

Soprano

Christine Boyce

Emma Bunzli

Christine Coombe

Felicity Gifford

Yuliana Hammond

Kasia Kozlowska

Bernadette Large

Loretta Lohberger

Sophia Mitchell

Schuya Murray

Shaunagh O’Neill

Joy Tattam

Lesley Wickham

Alto

Claire Blichfeldt

Sally Brown

Carmelita Coen

Beth Coombe

Elizabeth Eden

Ann Godber

Sue Harradence

Caroline Miller

Sally Mollison

Rosemary Rayfuse

Louise Rigozzi

Georgie Stilwell

Meg Tait

Gill von Bertouch

Beth Warren

Tenor

Helen Chick

Phillip Clutterbuck

Michael Kregor

Bill MacDonald

Tony Marshall

Simon Milton

Dianne O’Toole

David Pitt

James Powell-Davie

Alexander Rodrigues

Peter Tattam

Bass

Geoffrey Attwater

John Ballard

Tim Begbie

Peter Cretan

Jack Delaney

Greg Foot

Sam Hindell

Reg Marron

Michael Muldoon

David Ovens

Tony Parker

Grant Taylor

*Correct at time of publishing

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Coming up

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Delius The Walk to the Paradise Garden
Dvořák Violin Concerto in A minor, Op 53
Robert Schumann Symphony No 1 in B-flat, Op 38, ‘Spring’

A cellist in a vibrant blue patterned shirt plays passionately during a performance, eyes closed and brow furrowed in concentration. He draws the bow across the strings of his wooden cello, with a blurred double bass player visible in the background.

Coming up

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Think orchestral music is slow? This concert is a chaotic cacophony of Baroque madness, we think you'll like it.

Rebel Excerpts from Les élémens
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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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