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Tag: music

Alba String Quartet – St Christopher’s Hospice, 7.30pm Thursday 3 February

The Alba String Quartet was formed by students of the Royal Scottish Academy of Music & Drama in 2003. It comprises four young musicians: Liam Lynch and Stewart Webster (violins), Hannah Craib (viola) and Emily Walker (cello) 

On Thursday,  Alba will perform:

Brahms: Quartet no.2 in A minor
Piazzolla: “Four, For Tango”
Ravel: Quartet in F

£12 tickets include canapés and wine during the interval

To reserve your place  please contact Debbie Calvert at d.calvert@stchristophers.org.uk or on 020 8768 4747 (Monday to Fri 10am-4pm). Money will be payable at the door. If you cancel a reserved place please let us know as numbers are limited.

Want to hear one of the world’s great musicians? He’s appearing at St Christopher’s Hospice on Thursday 6 January

Ever since he made his debut concert at the Festival Hall at the age of 12, cellist Robert Cohen was destined for musical greatness. As a soloist, concerto-player, chamber musician, director and inspirational teacher, Robert has established himself as one of the foremost cellists of our time.

See Robert Cohen with accompanist Elizabeth Burley at 7.30 on Thursday 6 January at the opening concert of the 2011 St Christopher’s Concert season

£12 tickets include canapes and wine during the interval.

Dame Cicely Saunders Room, St Christopher’s Hospice, 51-59 Lawrie Park Road   Tel: 020 8768 4500

http://www.stchristophers.org.uk/

See a video of Robert Cohen in action:

Thinking about Christmas? A weekend of Sydenham Yuletide events.

Not getting into the Christmas spirit yet? This weekend sees a flurry of Christmas events in SE26 to get you in the mood to welcome Father Christmas with open arms. 

 

Late night Christmas Shopping Friday 3 December

http://www.sydenhamsociety.com/2010/12/thinking-about-christmas-a-weekend-of-sydenham-yuletide-events/

A Celebration of Friendship – a Christmas concert by the Elm Singers
Friday 3 December, 7.30pm, St Bartholomew’s Church, 2 Westwood Hill SE26 4NP
The Elm Singers invite you to an evening of beautiful music in support of Sydenham Garden with pieces by Tchaikovsky and Lauridsen, solos, duets, readings and traditional Advent carols. Entry is free but there will be a fund-raising collection in support of the garden.  

Christmas Festival at St Christopher’s Hospice Saturday 4 December, 11am-2pm, St Christopher’s Hospice, 51-59 Lawrie Park Road, SE26 6DZ; adults £1, children free
With Santa’s grotto, a children’s fancy dress competition, a raffle to win a car – plus festive food and drink – there is something for all the family at St Christopher’s Christmas Festival! For more information go to www.stchristophers.org.uk

Glistening Glass at 30 Kingsthorpe Road

 Saturday 4 December, 6pm-8pm For details: www.sydenhamsociety.com/2010/12/glistening-glass-a-christmas-open-house-4-5-december/

Annual Advent Concert by the Bonhoeffer Recorder Consort
Saturday 4 December, 3pm at the German Church, 50 Dacres Road SE23; admission £3; all proceeds to Lewisham Voluntary Care Centre
Formerly known as the Horniman Recorders, the Bonhoeffer Recorder Consort give a concert annually around Advent. The programme will include music by: Holborne, Telemann, Bariola, Monteverdi, Weelkes, and Bach, plus a collection of medieval music arranged for recorders and various Christmas favourites. There will be a raffle for a handmade patchwork quilt and other prizes. Refreshments are donated and organised by the church members and include Gluwein and – possibly! – Black Forest cake.

Mayow Park Christmas Fair
Sunday 5 December, 12-4pm, Mayow Park community garden, Mayow Road entrance to the park; admission free
Come and visit the community garden for stalls, food, gifts and wonderful crafts including Chrismas wreaths.

Glistening Glass at 30 Kingsthorpe Road

Sunday 5 December, 11am-4pm. For details see www.sydenhamsociety.com/2010/12/glistening-glass-a-christmas-open-house-4-5-december/

Medieval Christmas at the Dolphin with Joglaresa
Sunday 5 December, 7.30pm; tickets £36 from the Kirkdale Bookshop and the Dolphin
Don’t miss the chance to celebrate a medieval Christmas with Sydenham Music at The Dolphin. The evening combines a three-course dinner, Christmas carols and seasonal music from Joglaresa, a dynamic ensemble who combine intoxicating elements of medieval, Middle Eastern, Flamenco and Celtic music. To sample their sound, visit www.youtube.com/watch?v=4iaIrLAJ9HI
Full details and menu: www.thedolphinsydenham.com/sydmusic.html
More about Sydenham Music: www.violinplaying.com/sydenhammusic/index.html

Half-price ticket offer for Lewisham arts and music events

Lewisham Arts are offering half price tickets for key classical, contemporary and cross-over music events throughout early November. They include a production of Verdi’s Don Carlos on Sunday 7 November at the Broadway Theatre and Synthesis – an alternative Club Night at the Albany on Thursday 11 November.

To get your half-price tickets visit the following link.

http://system.newzapp.co.uk/GPage.asp?LID=OSwxNTUzMDgwMjA=

Meatballs and Music – Trattoria Raffaele, 29th October

The wonderful Alex Carter, star of recent Sydenham hits such as BLITZ! and OOH LA LA! is accompanied by accordionist extraordinaire Serge Pachnine in Una Notte Italiana a celebration of  the Italian greats from Neapolitan to popular Italian songs.

£27.50 with a superb 4-course Italian meal. Starts at 7pm. Book your ticket now – they’re disappearing fast.

Pop into Raffaele, 29 Sydenham Road or phone the restaurant on 020 8778 6262

August Manns – the driving force behind music at Crystal Palace

Crystal Clear – Music at Crystal Palace – the story of Sir August Manns 

 

Local historian Steve Grindlay gives a review of the life of this key local musical figure.  For more  local history go to Steve’s blog (see link, right)

As Musical Director of the Crystal Palace from 1855 to 1901, August Manns made two very important contributions to English music. The Dictionary of National Biography describes him as “unrivalled in England as an orchestral conductor” and an article in The Musical Times (1st March 1898) explains this:

“The orchestral conductor plays an important part in modern musical life… but it should not be forgotten that the permanent introduction into England of even the baton itself, as a time-beating stick, is within living memory. When Spohr temporarily used it in 1820, the gentlemen of the orchestra revolted [the author said “mis-conducted” themselves]. It was not until 1832 that conductors began to use the baton… It might be supposed that the modern orchestral conductor [in England] began with Hans Richter when he conducted his first orchestral concert in 1879. But for nearly a quarter of a century previously there had been working at the Crystal Palace a conductor who has had a great influence upon orchestral music in England. For more than forty-two years Mr Manns has zealously discharged his conducting duties with singular ability.”

This article credits Manns with establishing the role of the orchestral conductor in English music. His other major contribution was to introduce the works of Schumann, Brahms, Dvorak, Schubert, Sir Arthur Sullivan and many others to sometimes sceptical English audiences.

On 10th June 1854 Queen Victoria opened the rebuilt Crystal Palace on Sydenham Hill. Earlier that year Henry Schallehn, a German ex-military bandmaster, was appointed Musical Director and charged with forming a brass band to entertain visitors to the Crystal Palace. On 1st May 1854 Schallehn appointed August Manns as assistant-conductor and clarinettist. The band, with Manns playing clarinet, gave its first public performance at the opening ceremony in front of the Queen.

The next major event at the Palace was a Grand Fete, to raise money to aid the widows and orphans of the troops fighting in the Crimea. Schallehn wanted something special for the orchestra to play, and asked Manns to compose it. Manns was happy to do this and devoted much time and effort to it. When shown the proofs Manns realised that not only did Schallehn claim that he composed the music he but also received £50 for it. Manns challenged this. He didn’t mind Schallehn being credited but surely, as the actual composer, he should have received some payment. Manns also pointed out that while Schallehn was paid £600 a year, he only received £156. Schallehn claimed he was the “proprietor” of anything that his assistant might compose and that attaching “Schallehn” to a piece of music would sell it better than “Manns”. He offered Manns £1 for his efforts; Manns refused this, and was dismissed.

Matters did not rest there. Manns wrote to “The Musical World”, appealing to the English for justice, “which I am denied by a countryman of my own”. The editor of the periodical vigorously took up Manns’ cause, claiming that “every Englishman will burn with indignation at such an injustice” and demanding that Manns be reinstated and Schallehn dismissed. Within a year that is what happened. Largely through the influence of the Secretary of the Crystal Palace, Sir George Grove, Schallehn was dismissed and on 14th October 1855 Manns was appointed conductor and musical director.

manns in 1900

August Manns grew up in a family that cared about music. He was born on 12th March 1825 in Stolzenburg, Pomerania, Prussia. Stolzenburg is now Biskupia Górka, part of the city of Gdańsk, on the Baltic coast of Poland. August was the fifth of ten children of Gottfried Manns, foreman at a local glass factory. When Gottfried returned from work he would take his fiddle from the wall and “make music to his children”. His children, self-taught, would join in with violoncello, horn and flute.

Manns married for the first time in 1850. We know little about his life at this time and less about his wife, although he told a friend that within a year she died “in great pain in bitterly cold weather”.

On 30th July 1857 August married a second time, to Sarah Ann Williams. The wedding took place in St Pancras Old Church. While Manns’ address was given simply as “St Pancras”, Sarah’s father (Frederick, a tobacco broker) was living at Norwood. Soon after their marriage August and Sarah moved to 12 Eden Villas (now 135 Knights Hill), West Norwood where their only child, Augusta Kate Frederica, was born on 18th October 1858.

Handelfest at Crystal Palace

August and his family moved several times, mostly keeping close to the Crystal Palace. By 1864 they were at Athol Lodge, 174 Kirkdale, Sydenham. They were still there in March 1871 but, according to one source, in 1872 they were living in Balham High Road, near the station. Apparently, even then, this was “an inconvenient train service” to the Crystal Palace. By 1880 the family were at Larkbeare, 4 Dulwich Wood Park, where they stayed until about 1889.

After a brief sojourn at 56 Central Hill in 1891 August and his family finally settled at Gleadale, 4 Harold Road, Upper Norwood. It was here that August was widowed for the second time, when Sarah died on 7th January 1893.

On 7th January 1897, the 4th anniversary of Sarah’s death, August married Katherine Emily Wilhemina Thellusson, great-grand daughter of the 1st Baron Rendlesham.

In 1903, August was both knighted and made an honorary Doctor of Music in recognition of his service to music.

In Summer 1906, in failing health, Sir August and Lady Manns made a final move to White Lodge, Biggin Hill at the junction with Beulah Hill. It was here, on 1st March 1907, that Sir August Manns died. He was buried in West Norwood cemetery on 6th March. Lady Manns continued living at White Lodge until her own death on 25th February 1921.

Two years after Manns’ death the first biography appeared, written by a personal friend and music writer. The author ended by saying that in England Manns was survived by a nephew, son of his youngest brother Otto, and a grandchild so “his stock was not likely to die out soon” in this country. The grandchild, Louisa Bonten, died unmarried in Hastings in 1984 while the nephew had one child, a son called Frederick, who died aged 15 when he fell under a passing train. Sadly, August’s “stock” does not seem to have survived in England.

Yet we do have a tangible link with August Manns, apart from his musical legacy, as two of the houses he lived in still survive: 12 Eden Villas, 135 Knights Hill where he lived from 1858 until about 1861 and Athol Lodge, 174 Kirkdale, Sydenham, his home from about 1864 until 1871.

Manns’ house in Kirkdale was a short distance from St Bartholomew’s church. His close friend and staunch supporter, Sir George Grove, spent his early years in Sydenham even closer to the church. From 1862 he was at 14 Westwood Hill (actually next to the church until the Shackletons’ house was built between them in the early 1870s) until he moved to Lower Sydenham in 1860. Although there is no evidence that Manns was involved with the church Grove certainly attended regularly and was a close friend of several of the vicars and curates. The occasion when, in 1875, Dean Stanley came to St Bartholomew’s to preach gave Grove one of his most cherished moments at the church.

In 1893 Dr Frederick Shinn, a recent graduate from the Royal College of Music, was appointed organist and choirmaster of St Bartholomew’s, a post he held until just before his death in 1950. Shortly after this appointment Dr Shinn was invited to work closely with August Manns to produce two booklets: A Catalogue of the Principal Instrumental and Choral Works Performed at the Saturday Concerts (1855-1895) and Forty seasons of Saturday concerts at the Crystal palace: a retrospect and an appeal (Crystal Palace company, 1896). There is a memorial to Dr Shinn near the organ in St Bartholomew’s.

Monument in Norwood Cemetery

In a speech to celebrate Manns’ 70th birthday in 1895 Sir George Grove paid tribute to his close friend and colleague:

“We have to express our gratitude for your efforts at the head of the Crystal Palace orchestra by which the works of many of the great composers have been introduced to England, in a manner well worthy of the fame of those great men. No Englishman could have given more encouragement to our native school than you have given by your cordial behaviour to our composers and performers, by the extraordinary pains you have bestowed upon their works, and the careful and brilliant performances by which you have introduced them to the public. As your first friend in this country, I may be permitted to acknowledge the honour and gratification which I have felt at working by your side for many years, and the pleasure which our uninterrupted friendship has given me.”

No eulogy could be more fitting for this man who had such an influence on the development music in England.