
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
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.
Tuesday, 9 February at 1830
Ruddock Performing Arts Centre
Melissa Yuan, Arun Ramanathan, Rosy Heneghan, and Sunny Long (string quartet)
Jieyi Li, Charlotte Chapman, Brandon Chao, and Margaret Cookhorn (wind quartet)
Adriana lo Polito, Alice Beardmore, Melissa Yao, and Isabel Russell (oboe quartet)
Peter Murphy, clarinet
Zoe Newman, voice
Melissa Yao, violin
Bryan Chang, piano
Quartets by Haydn and Jacob, works by Lutosławski, Schumann, Beethoven, and Mozart’s oboe quartet KV370.
This concert is presented jointly with King Edward VI High School for Girls
Thursday, 4 February at 1305
Ruddock Performing Arts Centre
Elizabeth Bellshaw, violin
Alex Pett, trumpet
Jiin Youn, violin
Beth Zheng, violin
Programme to include works by Bach, Bruch, Morley, and Dancla, and Beethoven’s ‘Spring’ sonata (op.24)
This recital is presented jointly with King Edward VI High School for Girls
On Thursday last week some of the young bassoonists of King Edward’s School and of King Edward VI High School for Girls had the opportunity to work with Margaret Cookhorn. Mrs. Cookhorn, principal contra-bassoonist of CBSO and recent soloist at the BBC Proms, shared some of her tricks and secrets, and the group played together as a bassoon choir.
“Concert Party” is the new outreach program that takes some of the best musicians from this school to primary schools with children not as exposed to music or privileged in their musical lives, in order for them to give a short concert. This concert will include one piece of chamber music (a string trio), one trumpet solo and at least one sting solo as well as going through some of the differences between the instruments, their limits and what they are used for. This is led by the ever energetic and enthusiastic Dr. Leigh.
For the most part of the first term we as a group have been practising on Friday afternoons however we have started now to go out to schools. Despite transport issues (fitting 5 of us with a cello into a taxi can be quite taxing, not to mention finishing late and missing the booked taxi) all of us feel like we are using the skills we have been taught to give back to the community. The feedback we have been given has been positive and hopefully we can inspire many more children to take up musical instruments.
David Millross (Divisions)
You can read more about King Edward’s Outreach at www.kes.org.uk/outreach.html
Thursday, 14 January at 1305
Ruddock Performing Arts Centre
Alice Beardmore, violin
Thomas Iszatt, bass trombone
Abhinav Jain, piano
Programme to include works by Bartók, Sarasate, Gershwin, Chopin, Mendelssohn, and the ‘Prague Concerto’ for bass trombone by Chris Brubeck.
This recital is presented jointly with King Edward VI High School for Girls
There was a cold snap to the air that brisk Sunday morning as ten drowsy boys trudged into school from each corner of Birmingham, the sound of their alarms still piercing their skulls. You ask; why were they in school on a Sunday? What could have possibly coerced them into doing such a thing? These are both valid albeit contrived questions as there are very few circumstances which involve lazy adolescents leaving the house on what is, after all, a day of rest.
However, this particular morning elicited no such signs of reluctance, as each and every member of the group had arrived to realise their true calling – to spread the sweet, dulcet tones of serial music, which in case you don’t know, is music that is designed to, well, sound bad…
Hmm, perhaps I should explain this in a little more detail.
‘Serial music is that which does not follow a scale or conventional harmony. Rather, it is a combination of different primes, retrogrades, inversion and retrograde-inversions of a chosen line of dissonant notes. I know right.’
Okay, okay. So maybe these school boys were initially somewhat sceptical about composition in such a genre. After all, they had never before listened to let alone composed serial music of any description, and although I would like to say that these minute reservations had vanished once the creative juices started flowing, the truth is that they stuck around until today when the nervous pupils found themselves holding their pristine scores with trepidation.
Perhaps part of this apprehension stemmed not only from the fact that these performances counted towards the final GCSE grade, but also from the weight of the occasion; alas, if seeing Dr. Leigh with his top two, yes two, buttons undone was not already enough make these boys uneasy, then they were in for a treat as today, playing their serial compositions, was the highly esteemed string quartet form none other than the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra! *Cue fanfare*.
The ensemble was comprised of the revered likes of Lena Zeliszwska at first violin, Zhiko Georgiev at second violin, Mike Jenkinson on the viola and Richard Jenkinson on the cello. We were spoiled with their prowess, which made proceedings run smoothly even when some of the students’ limited knowledge of dynamics became blindingly obvious *cough, cough*.
As we progressed through pieces such as ‘Shi No Numa’, ‘Seriaously Bad’ and ‘Why?’ the general consensus amongst the composers began to change from “Grrr, Sunday” to one of a much more positive nature; it was as if real-life string instruments didn’t sound like saxophones as they did on Sibelius; as if this wasn’t all part of one of Dr Leigh’s evil plots! By the end of the session, we’d had great fun listening to some exquisite pieces, played in a manner both unforgettable and professional, and all in time for Sunday lunch.
Miles McCollum, Fifths
Thursday, 3 December at 1305
Ruddock Performing Arts Centre
Jedidiah Cheung, violin
Isabel Russell, ‘cello
Philip Edwards, violin; Melisssa Yao, viola; Eugene Toso, ‘cello; Naomi Bazlov, piano
Programme to include works by Bruch, Fauré, Squire, and the first movement of Brahms’s Piano Quartet op.25.
This recital is presented jointly with King Edward VI High School for Girls