Friday, 24 June 2016 at 1800
Symphony Hall, Birmingham
Dimitri Shostakovich: Festive Overture op.96 (7’)
David Gaukroger / David Carr: Romany Wood (40’)
Massed choirs from primary and preparatory schools throughout the city
KES/KEHS Symphony Orchestra
Martin Leigh, conductor
Ticket prices: £8/£5 available from the Symphony Hall box office.

Tuesday, 7 June at 1830
Ruddock Performing Arts Centre
Alice Beardmore, Beth Zheng, Jessica Tedd, Sophia Jin, violins
David Millross, Melissa Yao, violas
Isabel Russell, Michelle Sanders, ‘cellos
Altai Gardiner, saxophone
Beatrice Beadmore, ‘cello
Kitty Cattel, voice
Daniel Li, viola
Haine Hock, voice
Jessica Tedd, violin
Nathan Appanna, piano
Junias Wong, violin
Peter Raven, euphonium
Renee Chang, violin; Daniel Li, viola; Enoch Cheung, ‘cello; Lauren Zhang, piano
works by Bruch, Quilter, and Kummer
including the first Mendelssohn Octet, and Dvořák’s Piano Quartet.
This concert is presented jointly with King Edward VI High School for Girls
‘Romany Wood is an initiative which has captured both hearts and minds of children and teachers’
‘Without doubt this project has greatly enriched the lives of our children and families and will raise aspirations that all children can “aim for the stars”!’
‘Poppy in Year 5 said that this would be a ‘once in a lifetime experience we would never forget’.’
‘it is a once in a lifetime experience singing in a venue such as Symphony Hall and they are very excited.’
‘The enthusiasm for music on their faces is amazing to see’
Ticket prices: £8/£5 available from the Symphony Hall box office.
Friday, 24 June 2016 at 1800
Symphony Hall, Birmingham
Dimitri Shostakovich: Festive Overture op.96 (7’)
David Gaukroger / David Carr: Romany Wood (40’)
Massed choirs from primary and preparatory schools throughout the city
KES/KEHS Symphony Orchestra
Martin Leigh, conductor
Described by Quentin Letts as ‘England’s answer to Peter and the Wolf’, Romany Wood is for massed choirs of young voices, soprano soloist, symphony orchestra, and narrator. The music is by David Gaukroger, setting a libretto by David Carr.
The remarkable KES/KEHS Symphony Orchestra will accompany young choirs from throughout Birmingham, together raising money for Birmingham Children’s Hospital.
This project is part of King Edward’s School’s Outreach Programme. It is made possible by the generous support of the foundation of The Schools of King Edward VI in Birmingham.
Ticket prices: £8/£5 available from the Symphony Hall box office.
Thursday, 28 April at 1305
Ruddock Performing Arts Centre
Aloysius Lip, piano
Gabriel Wong, violin
Lauren Zhang, piano
Repertoire including works by Gershwin, Grieg, Mozart, and Smetana, as well as Beethoven’s ‘Les Adieux’ sonata.
This recital is presented jointly with King Edward VI High School for Girls
Sunday, 6 March at 1500 and Monday, 7 March at 1930
Ruddock Performing Arts Centre
Karl Jenkins: The Armed Man
Sergei Rachmaninov: Rhapsody on a theme of Paganini op.43
Johannes Brahms: Symphony no.4 op.98
Adelaide Yue, piano
KES/KEHS Choral Society
KES/KEHS Symphony Orchestra
The concert is presented jointly with King Edward VI High School for Girls
Tuesday, 23 February at 1620
Ruddock Performing Arts Centre
KES/KEHS Symphony Orchestra will be performing Brahms’s Fourth Symphony on March 6 and March 7. As part of its preparations, we have invited leading Brahms scholar Professor Robert Pascall to speak at King Edward’s School. His title is ‘Brahms’s 4th: doubts, decisions, documents’, and he will talk about his edition of the symphony, the works genesis, and its performance.
This is a public event to which all are invited. The lecture will last for 45 minutes, followed by the opportunity to ask questions; there is no need to book tickets.
Robert Pascall
Robert Pascall (born Colwyn Bay, 1944) studied music with John Caldwell, Egon Wellesz and Sir Jack Westrup at Oxford, where he was organ scholar of Keble College (1962-5). He took his DPhil with the thesis Formal Principles in the Music of Brahms (1973), and this composer has formed the central focus of his research activities ever since. 1968-98 he taught at the University of Nottingham, for the last ten of those years as Professor and Head of Music, taking up the same position at Bangor University in 1998 and retiring in 2005. He is now Emeritus Professor at Nottingham and at Bangor. In 2005-7 he held a Leverhulme Emeritus Fellowship.
As analyst he has contributed to the literature on genre, influence and perceptual pertinence, and published analyses of works by Beethoven, Brahms, Schoenberg and Franz Schmidt, among others. He was a member of the founding committee of the Journal Music Analysis and acted as Chair of its Editorial Board 1989-2002. He has taught Schenkerian, Schoenbergian and semiotic analysis, the first of these in collaboration with Ian Bent at Nottingham.
In the 1980s his text-critical work on Brahms’s music emphasized the need for a new complete edition, founded in 1991 as the Johannes Brahms Gesamtausgabe, on which he works as vice-chair and as editor. His editions of the symphonies, including Brahms’s own arrangements of them for one or two pianos, four hands, appeared in seven volumes between 1996 and 2013. He is currently working on editions of Brahms’s concert arrangements of Bach Cantatas, which has involved the development of a new philological practice.
At the instigation of Sir Roger Norrington in 1989, he pioneered musicological research into historically-informed performance practice of the music of Brahms, since when he has published studies and advised conductors and soloists. In 1978 he founded the International Conference on 19th-century Music; in 1983 he was appointed Corresponding Director of the American Brahms Society; 1986-91 he served on the Council of the Royal Musical Association, of which he was made an Honorary Member in 2009. He believes in useful and joined-up musicology.