Concert Program

The Lark Ascending

Friday 2 May 2025 7:30pm
Federation Concert Hall, Nipaluna / Hobart

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Sublime short-work The Lark
Ascending soars in the hands
of Emma McGrath.
A woman in a shimmering silver dress plays the violin with closed eyes during a live orchestral performance, surrounded by musicians and music stands in a concert hall with acoustic panels.

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

Sculthorpe Pastorale (4 mins)

Vaughan Williams The Lark Ascending (16 mins)

Stanhope Fantasia on a Theme of Vaughan Williams (18 mins)

4 sections

  1. Percussive
  2. a) Photo Negative b) Chorales with Walking Bass
  3. “Fanfares” Reprise
  4. Hymn

20 minute interval

Beethoven Symphony No 6 in F, Op 68, ‘Pastoral’ (39 mins)

5 movements

  1. Allegro ma non troppo
  2. Andante molto mosso
  3. Allegro
  4. Allegro
  5. Allegretto

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A 'movement' is a longer piece of music broken up into bite-size pieces. It makes it easier to perform and provides contrast within the work. Find out more here.

Ralph Vaughan Williams

Ralph Vaughan Williams.

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A national treasure

Pastorale

Composed by Peter Sculthorpe (1929 - 2014)

4 minutes

Australian composer Peter Sculthorpe AO OBE (1929 - 2014) is one of the most significant and distinctive voices in Australian music. His work is deeply tied to the land, the stories, and the soul of the country. Born in Launceston, Tasmania, Sculthorpe is regarded by many as a national treasure and received many awards and honours, including the Order of Australia in 1990. He was named one of the 100 Most Influential Australians by The Bulletin magazine in 2006.

Sculthorpe’s music reflected his love of Australia. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island music and culture influenced his sound and his work explores themes of migration, isolation and the environment.

Unlike Beethoven’s bustling countryside later in the program, Sculthorpe’s Pastorale reflects a uniquely Australian sense of place. There are no birdsong imitations or babbling brooks. Instead we get a sense of both the beauty and loneliness of the land – picture still waterholes and pale ghost gums.

As Sculthorpe once said, "I want my music to be something that could only have come from here.”

Free, light, untethered

The Lark Ascending

Composed by Ralph Vaughn Williams (1872 - 1958)

16 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!

Composed in 1914, The Lark Ascending is inspired by a poem of the same name by George Meredith. Vaughan Williams took a short quote from the poem and placed it at the top of the score – describing a lark soaring high above the countryside, “silver chain of sound” unwinding into the heaven.

It’s widely regarded as the most sublime short work for violin and orchestra. The first version was composed in 1914, at the start of the first world war. Vaughan Williams enlisted in WW1 first in the medical corp, then the Royal Artillery. After the war, he returned to The Lark Ascending, finishing the final version in 1920. For many, it became an unofficial elegy for the lost world of pre-war innocence.

Right from the first notes, the music feels weightless. The solo violin enters alone, with soft, spiraling figures that rise and fall like the flitting flight of a bird. The orchestra supports, adding a shimmering atmosphere that lets Emma McGrath and her violin shine.

This piece is something of a homecoming for Emma, evoking memories of her childhood in the English countryside. Read more from Emma here.

This isn’t just about a bird. It’s about a state of being – free, light, untethered, rising above the noise of the world.

A thoughtful tribute

Fantasia on a theme of Vaughn Williams

  1. Percussive
  2. a) Photo Negative b) Chorales with Walking Bass
  3. “Fanfares” Reprise
  4. Hymn

Composed by Paul Stanhope (1969 - )

18 minutes

Paul Stanhope (b. 1969) is a composer, conductor and educator based in Sydney. He studied with Peter Sculthorpe and that influence echoes through his works. Stanhope’s music bridges traditions bringing together the classical world, Indigenous voices, and a contemporary, compassionate sensibility. Fantasia was composed as a tribute to Ralph Vaughn Williams and his famous Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis. It’s a reflection, a response, and a reinterpretation of Vaughan Williams’ musical spirit. Stanhope doesn’t directly quote Vaughan Williams, but instead draws from his harmonic language and textural techniques.

It’s calm, thoughtful and timeless. It could have been written today or 100 years ago!

The great outdoors

Symphony No 6 in F, Op 68 Pastoral

  1. Allegro ma non troppo
  2. Andante molto mosso
  3. Allegro
  4. Allegro
  5. Allegretto

Composed by Ludwig van Beethoven (1770 – 1827)

39 minutes

Beethoven’s sixth symphony, nicknamed ‘Pastorale’, is a musical excursion to the countryside and a celebration of the restorative powers of the outdoors. Composed in 1807 and 1808, it was completed around the same time as his Symphony No 5 (you know it – Dah- dah- dah duuummm) but it could not be more different.

Pastorale is a musical love letter, capturing the feelings that come with being in the countryside. He was a passionate walker, often escaping Vienna to roam through forests and fields, and this symphony is a musical reflection of that joy, peace, and connection to the natural world. He even wrote on the manuscript: “More an expression of feeling than painting.”

The five movements, unusual for a symphony, each have their own scene and mood.

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Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra on stageEmma McGrath performing Chindamo.
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Musicians

Benjamin Northey

Conductor

Supported by Anonymous

Benjamin Northey, Conductor

Australian conductor Benjamin Northey is the Chief Conductor of the Christchurch Symphony Orchestra and Principal Conductor, Artistic Advisor Learning and Engagement of the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra. From 2019-2023 he was the Principal Conductor in Residence of the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra having previously held the posts of Associate Conductor (2010-2019), Resident Guest Conductor of the Australia Pro Arte Chamber Orchestra (2002-2006) and Principal Guest Conductor of the Melbourne Chamber Orchestra (2007-2010). From 2025 he will Artistic 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 (La Bohème, Turandot, L’elisir d’amore, Don Giovanni, Così fan tutte, Carmen), New Zealand Opera (Sweeney Todd) and the State Opera South Australia (La Sonnambula, L’elisir d’amore, Les Contes d’Hoffmann) and Victorian Opera (Candide, Into the Woods).

His international appearances include concerts with the London Philharmonic Orchestra, the Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra, the Mozarteum Orchestra Salzburg, the Hong Kong Philharmonic, the National Symphony Orchestra of Colombia, the Malaysian Philharmonic & 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 & 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 & Ben Folds.

An Aria Awards, Air Music Awards, and APRA/AMCOS Art Music Awards winner, Northey is highly active in the performance and recording of new Australian and New Zealand orchestral music having premiered dozens of major new works by contemporary composers. He has previously been a board member of the Australian Music Centre. He has been a driving force in the performance of orchestral music by Australian First Nations composers and performers. He has premiered multiple works of composers Deborah Cheetham and William Barton as well as collaborating with composer Paul Grabowsky and songmen Daniel and David Wilfred.

To read more about Benjamin Northey, click here.

Emma McGrath

Violin

Supported by Anonymous

Emma McGrath

British-American-Australian violinist Emma McGrath is the Concertmaster of the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra. She enjoys an international and varied career as a Concertmaster, soloist, chamber musician, conductor, teacher, educator, and mentor.

Emma has appeared as a Guest Concertmaster/Leader with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra, Opera Australia, Adelaide Symphony Orchestra, West Australia Symphony Orchestra, Orchestra Wellington, BBC Symphony Orchestra, BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, the Hallé, Royal Liverpool Philharmonic, Royal Northern Sinfonia, Castilla y León Symphony Orchestra, and the Jacksonville Symphony Orchestra. She has performed as a soloist all over Europe, Asia, Australia, and the USA.

Highlights include Max Richter’s Recomposed to sold-out audiences as part of the Dark Mofo Festival, and concerti and solos by Britten, Mozart, Bruch, Saint-Saens, Vivaldi, Piazzolla, Vaughan Williams and Bottesini with the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra. An avid chamber musician, Emma was a member of the award-winning Panormo Quartet in London, the Starling Quartet in Pittsburgh, and the Kettering Piano Quartet and the Tasmanian String Quartet in Hobart. She has also participated in the Bangalow Music Festival, the Tasmanian Chamber Music Festival, and the Strings Music Festival in Steamboat Springs.

Prior to moving to Tasmania, Emma was the Assistant Concertmaster of the Colorado Symphony, and the Associate Concertmaster of the Seattle Symphony.

She is also a professional singer, baroque violinist, and conductor – and enjoys bushwalking in Tasmania’s wild places in her spare time!

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 

Lucy Carrig-Jones Principal Second

Jennen Ngiau-Keng Principal First

Kirsty Bremner

Miranda Carson

Tobias Chisnall

Frances Davies

Michael Johnston

Elinor Lea

Susanna Low

Phoebe Masel

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

Douglas Coghill

Anna Larsen Roach

Curtis Lau

William Newbery

Cello

Jonathan Békés Principal

Ivan James

Nicholas McManus

Martin Penicka

Double Bass

Stuart Thomson Principal

Luca Arcaro

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

Melissa Woodroffe Principal Contrabassoon

Horn

Greg Stephens Principal First

Claudia Leggett Principal Third

Roger Jackson

Julian Leslie

Trumpet

Timothy Frahn Guest Principal

Mark Bain

Melanie Wilkinson

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

Jamie Willson

Harp

Meriel Owen Guest Principal

Paul Nicolaou

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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Delius The Walk to the Paradise Garden
Dvořák Violin Concerto in A minor, Op 53
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Close-up view of a wooden upright piano with black and white keys in sharp focus, and an open sheet of music resting on the music stand above the keyboard.

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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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