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Australia Ensemble Concert 3

  • Sir John Clancy Auditorium C24 Chancellery Walk Kensington, NSW, 2033 Australia (map)

Praised as a child by Ravel, Françaix became one of the most prolific composers of the twentieth century. His aim was ‘to give pleasure… to be jolly most of the time - even comical.’ His Dixtuor is a sparkling showpiece for ten instruments.
American composer Valerie Coleman often pays homage to earlier music, in this case the virtuosic Tzigane by Ravel, which Coleman – an accomplished flautist – uses as a starting point for coruscating woodwind writing that echoes Françaix’s. Australian composer Alex Turley harnesses similar joie-de-vivre in Syntax Error, a work that makes play with the occasional breakdowns in communication between composer and players.

Ravel’s colleague Debussy wrote his exquisitely poised Cello Sonata during World War I as part of a projected series of chamber works to secretly honour the youth of France mown down in war. Restrained, yet deeply moving, it pairs perfectly with Mozart’s Piano Quartet, where seriousness, contrapuntal elegance and popular manners join to create an unforgettable piece.

COLEMAN Tzigane [2011]
TURLEY Syntax Error [2024]
MOZART Piano Quartet in G minor
DEBUSSY Sonata L.135 [1915]
FRANÇ​​​​​​​AIX Dixtuor [1987]

David Griffiths, clarinet; Dimity Hall, violin; Julian Smiles, cello; with guest artists, Natalie Chee, violin; Tobias Breider, viola; Andrew Meisel, double bass; Andrew Barnes, bassoon; Joshua Batty, flute; Shefali Pryor, oboe; Samuel Jacobs, horn; and Timothy Young, piano.

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7 August

Ensemble Liaison @ Beleura

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7 November

Australia Ensemble Concert 4