Logo image links to home page
UniS Logo

Sunday 10 Feb 2019

3:00 pm • Retiring Collection

University of Surrey Showcase Concert

A concert from a selection of outstanding University of Surrey music students

The University student team after the concert

Previous button
Next button

Programme:

Johann Sebastian Bach

from Violin Concerto in A minor BWV 1041

    1. Allegro assai

Johan Beavis-Berry violin

Maureen Galea piano

Henry Purcell

from Dido and Aeneas

When I am Laid in Earth

George Frideric Handel

from Agrippina

Bel piacere

Francis Poulenc

from La Courte Paille

Le Sommeil

Anja Blackwell voice

Maureen Galea piano

Charles Villiers Stanford

from Three Intermezzi Op 13

    1. Andante espressivo
    2. Allegro agitato

Sam Ottley clarinet

Maureen Galea piano

Ludwig van Beethoven

from Piano Sonata Op 10 no. 1

    1. Allegro molto e con brio

Scott Joplin

Maple Leaf Rag

Robert Hunt piano

Richard Wagner

from Tannhauser

O du, mein holder Abendstern

Alex James voice

Jake Dickson piano

Astor Piazzolla

Libertango

Ben Uden guitar

River Edis-Smith violin

James Rozzi violin

Evelina Lungu viola

Alex Morgan cello

— Interval —

Alice Gomez

Marilyn Rife

Rain Dance

Joshua Mannall marimba

Gabriel Fauré

Clair de lune

Claude Debussy

Mandoline

Holly Carnegie voice

Maureen Galea piano

Heitor Villa-Lobos

Prelude No 1

Ben Uden guitar

Robert Schumann

from Fantasy Pieces Op 73

    1. Zart und mit Ausdruck
    2. Lebhaft, leicht

Christy Chan clarinet

Maureen Galea piano

Maurice Ravel

Tzigane

Matthew Lloyd-Wilson violin

Jake Dickson piano

Raffi Cavoukian

Bananaphone

Greg Camp

All Star

University of Surrey

Barbershop

Robert Hunt Tenor

Ben Uden Lead

Seth Taylor Baritone

Johan Beavis-Berry Bass

Review:

University of Surrey's first visit of the season was on Sunday afternoon 10th. February at 3pm. when their "Instrumental Music Showcase" revealed a long programme of a dozen items. True to form, this provides a platform for their young music students in various study years, to perform in public at a venue apart from the university studio.

Although starting off rather hurriedly, the first movement of J.S.Bach's A minor violin concerto BWV 1041 proceeded at a steady and well controlled pace with piano accompaniment by Dr Maureen Galea who pursued this admirable task for the majority of the players. Occasional lapses in violin intonation, and balance in favour of the piano rather spoiled the general effect and one wonders if using the half stick to support the piano lid rather than being fully raised, would be better when used in an accompanying role.

Three singers were included in the programme, the first, soprano, singing Purcell, Handel, and Poulenc with a clear pleasing voice and with good intonation, the second, a baritone, bravely singing part of Wagner's "Tannhauser" very well and the third, another soprano offering, very competently, Fauré and Debussy, the latter's "Mandoline" being particularly polished.

Two clarinetists performed either side of the interval, the first with a competent rendering of part of Stanford's "Three Intermezzi" with a very pleasing tone and phrasing, and the second, a girl student whose name and appearance betrayed an Eastern hemispheric background, produced a natural musician's superb performance of two thirds of Schumann's "Fantasy Pieces". It is amazing how people from this part of the world are uniformly very, very good. (at most things!!)

One solo pianist played the Beethoven Sonata Op.10 No.1 with perhaps too much use of the sustaining pedal resulting in lack of clarity and a forced tone. Sometimes too little pedal is better than the opposite, and practising, as against performing such music without any at all, is often a good idea.

An unusual arrangement of Piazzolla's "Libertango" with a guitarist taking the lead instead of a pianist, and of course no dancing, was accompanied by a string trio consisting of violin, viola and cello. The guitarist held his ground nicely and the overall balance was good and certainly different from other ensembles and it was a pity it being of rather short duration.

Another "first" if my memory is correct, was a solo marimba player performing a piece called "Rain Dance" written in !988. Very skilful playing with a great flexible technique dealing with contra rhythms and tonal control, was rewarded with well deserved applause.

The guitarist who played in the Piazzolla ensemble gave a good rendering of the first prelude of Villa-Lobos with a nice if perhaps a little too quiet melody line against his very fluid and articulate accompaniment. Classical guitar is a very demanding mistress requiring much practise and perseverance.

The penultimate item on the programme proved to be an astoundingly confident and polished performance by a violinist partnered by a lady pianist of great ability, of the gypsy based dance "Tzigane" by Ravel. Written in 1924 in homage to the great niece of the fabulous virtuoso violinist Joseph Joachim. It is a piece of great difficulty requiring a transcendental technique to bring off. This, this young man did with aplomb, and he was rightly rewarded by sustained applause for his glittering ability. His very able pianist had previously accompanied the performer who sang Wagner.

Apparently there are several Barber Shop groups at the University and the one which closed this concert succeeded in "bringing the house down" with their rendering of Raffi Cavoukian's "Bananaphone" and Greg Camp's "All Star". Tremendous fun to hear and to be able to blend so well together, these four young men provided a great finish to another offering from our local centre of excellence, and we look forward greatly to the visit by their choir on the forthcoming 10th. March.

P.B.