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Editorial
Board
London Editor:
(London UK)
Melanie
Eskenazi
Regional Editor:
(UK regions and Worldwide)
Bill
Kenny
Webmaster:
Bill
Kenny
Music Web Webmaster:
Len
Mullenger
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Seen
and Heard Festival Preview
Buxton Festival 6 – 22 July 2007:
A 'Royal Flush' preview of this year's
programme (BK)
The
magnificently restored Buxton Opera
House
With a King, a Queen, a Duke and
rather more aces than the usual pack,
Buxton's 29th annual festival plays yet another
strong hand again this year with a
particularly varied programme of
opera, music and literature.
With over 110 events in 17 days,
including 7 Operas, 16 Literary
speakers, 36 concerts, an afternoon
ballet, cooking demonstrations,
workshops, walks, a ghost tour and
much more, it’s easy to see why the
Festival attracts over 36,000 people
to the heart of the Peak District each
year from all over the UK and abroad.
Buxton Festival is actually the UK’s
largest and opera festival and the
only one dedicated almost exclusively
to producing rarely performed opera,
featuring a highly acclaimed programme
of operatic gems that cannot be seen
elsewhere. Under the General
Directoship of Aidan Lang for
seven years until 2006, Buxton Festival has a reputation
for excellence and maintains its
national profile as the UK’s leading
festival of its kind.
This year marks the
festival's first year under Andrew
Greenwood’s directorship. Andrew is an
accomplished conductor, with over 25
years’ experience working with major
opera companies around the world.
‘Buxton Festival is the leading
festival of its kind in the UK and I
am delighted to be taking over from
Aidan Lang as Artistic Director at
this exciting time when the Festival
is doing so well. I very much look
forward to the next three years’ he
says.
Set in the heart of Derbyshire's Peak District
and within easy travelling distance of
both Manchester and Sheffield,
the festival's unique setting
in the historic spa town of Buxton,
allows visitors to enjoy top-class
opera in the magnificently restored Edwardian Opera House with its beautiful gold
interior. Classical music recitals,
Literary talks and lots of other
events take palce in many of Buxton’s elegant
hotels, churches and other venues,
including the unique Devonshire Dome,
a splendid building that was
originally established as a
naturopathic hospital.
Some musical and operatic highlights for
2007 include:
Donizetti’s triumphant Roberto
Devereux, which recounts the story of
the fearsome Elizabeth I and the Earl
of Essex in their tempestuous
relationship. Sung in Italian. Dates:
6, 9, 13, 17, 21 July.
Offenbach’s Bluebeard – a slick
comedy (only Offenbach could do it!) of marriage and deceit about
the world's most infamous serial bigamist.
Dates: 7, 10, 14, 18, 22 July.
Mozart’s Le
nozze di Figaro, sung in Italian.
Dates: 8, 16, 20 July
Purcell’s King Arthur (Sing
Hey! for the honour of Old England!) Dates:
9, 17 July
The UK premiere of Georg Benda’s
operatic setting of Romeo
and Juliet Dates: 12, 15
July.
Jonathan
Dove’s lyrical Tobias and the Angel.
Dates: 9, 11,13 July.
Belgian composer Philippe Boesmans'
chamber opera Julie (2005) –
based on Strindberg's Miss Julie with
a libretto by Luc Bondy. Date: 19
July.
A special evening recital with Dame
Felicity Lott, plus concerts by Emma
Kirkby, Jonathan Lemalu, Alice Coote,
Ann Murray, Robin Blaze, pianists
Peter Donohoe and Lukas
Vondracek and the Pavel Haas Quartet.
The thing about Buxton is that it allows visitors to see
a wide range and vast number of
performances in just a few days and
the friendly atmosphere
provides a warm welcome to newcomers
and many loyal patrons alike.
As always, there's a huge range
of educational events at the core of the
programme and the local
community is seriously involved with a range of events from
a community opera through to concerts and
workshops aiming to introduce more people
to opera and to encourage creativity
and learning through music. The
festival has involved over 15,000
people in creative projects in the
last few years.
There really is something for everyone
once again and as I said last
year, Gilbert and Sullivan fans can
stay on for the G&S Festival which
follows on a week after the main
festival closes. Robert Farr and Raymond
Walker will report from Buxton
for Seen and Heard.
Bill Kenny
Full details are available now: To
receive a brochure Tel: 01298
70395 or Email: heather@buxtonfestival.co.uk.
Festival Web Site: www.buxtonfestival.co.uk
Festival
Box office: 0845 12 72190 (local rate
call)
Book online at: www.buxtonfestival.co.uk
Buxton G & S Festival Web Site is
Here
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Seen and Heard, one of the longest established live
music review web sites on the Internet, publishes original reviews
of recitals, concerts and opera performances from the UK and internationally.
We update often, and sometimes daily, to bring you fast reviews,
each of which offers a breadth of knowledge and attention to performance
detail that is sometimes difficult for readers to find elsewhere.
Seen and Heard
publishes interviews with musicians, musicologists and directors
which feature both established artists and lesser known performers.
We also feature articles on the classical music industry and we
use other arts media to connect between music and culture in its
widest terms.
Seen and Heard
aims to present the best in new criticism from writers with a radical
viewpoint and welcomes contributions from all nations. If you would
like to find out more email Regional
Editor Bill Kenny. |
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Contributors: Marc
Bridle, Martin Anderson, Patrick Burnson, Frank Cadenhead, Colin
Clarke, Paul Conway, Geoff Diggines, Sarah Dunlop, Evan Dickerson
Melanie Eskenazi (London Editor) Robert J Farr, Abigail Frymann,
Göran Forsling, Simon Hewitt-Jones, Bruce Hodges,Tim Hodgkinson,
Martin Hoyle, Bernard Jacobson, Tristan Jakob-Hoff, Ben Killeen,
Bill Kenny (Regional Editor), Ian Lace, John Leeman, Sue Loder,Jean
Martin, Neil McGowan, Bettina Mara, Robin Mitchell-Boyask, Simon
Morgan, Aline Nassif, Anne Ozorio, Ian Pace, John Phillips,
Jim Pritchard, John Quinn, Peter Quantrill, Alex Russell, Paul
Serotsky, Harvey Steiman, Christopher Thomas, Raymond Walker, John Warnaby,
Hans-Theodor Wolhfahrt, Peter Grahame Woolf (Founder & Emeritus
Editor)
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Site design: Bill Kenny
2004 |