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Saturday, 2nd November 2024 at 7.30 pm
Alderley Edge Festival Hall
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HEROLD
Overture: Zampa
SMETANA
The Bartered Bride:
Polka, Furiant, Dance of the Comedians
BACH
Brandenburg Concerto No 4
Shahla Armitage violin
Louise Townsend Flute
Jan King Flute
DVORAK
Symphony No 6 in D
Conductor:
Richard Howarth
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Hérold’s opera Zampa ou La Fiancée de marbre (Zampa or the Marble Bride) was premiered at the Opera Comique in Paris on May 3, 1831. The somewhat grisly
plot tells the tale of a pirate Zampa who jilted his bride-to-be Alice, a
marble statue of whom subsequently came to life and dragged Zampa to his death
in the sea. The sparkling overture has long been a concert favourite.
The Bartered Bride, composed in 1866, is Smetana's most celebrated opera and a cornerstone of
Czech national music. The opera tells the story of young love, mistaken
identities, and the triumph of true affection amidst a backdrop of rural Czech
culture and traditions. The rustic but elaborately varied Polka comes at the end of Act I, sung and danced by villagers gathered in front of
the inn to celebrate a spring holiday. At the beginning of Act II the people
are now inside the inn. The men sing a drinking song, and after the women join
them, all dance a Furiant, a fast Bohemian folk dance playing with metrical cross-currents. Act III takes
place outside again, on the village green in front of the inn. A circus has
come to town, and it offers a sample of its acts accompanied by the Dance of the Comedians.
Bach composed his six Brandenburg Concertos around 1721. The fourth was orchestrated for solo violin, two flutes and
strings, and the soloists in our performance are the orchesta’s leader Shahla Armitage and the flutes section Louise Townsend (principal) and
Jan King.
Antonin Dvorak composed his Symphony No 6 in 1880. It was originally published as Symphony No. 1 (the earlier symphonies, apart
from No 5 are still fairly rarely played today) and is dedicated to Hans
Richter, conductor of the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra. It was one of the
first of DvoĆák’s large symphonic works to draw international attention: he manages to capture
some of the Czech national style within a standard Germanic classical-romantic
form. He pays a particular tribute to Johannes Brahms, whose Second Symphony,
also in the key of D major, had been published just three years earlier.
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Shahla Armitage
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Louise Townsend
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Jan King
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Tickets
Buy your ticket(s) online NOW. You can use and debit or credit card, or pay by
Paypal if you have a Paypal account.
We charge a small booking fee.
Adult: £15 Under 18: £2.00
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