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Editorial
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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
Swansea
Festival of Music and the Arts 2007: 5th-20th
October 2007 (BK)
From the 5th to
the 20th of October 2007
the Swansea Festival of Music and the Arts
will present an extensive month long
programme of outstanding live music, drama, dance
and visual art. A vast array of celebrated
artists and events, combining the cream of Welsh
and international talent, will be coming to
Swansea
to make up an exciting season for the event.
With
such a wide range of events catering to all tastes
there is sure to be something for everyone at
this, the largest festival of its kind in
Wales.
The Festival will open at the Brangwyn Hall, on October
5th, with the internationally acclaimed
Tchaikovsky Symphony Orchestra of Moscow Radio,
who will perform works by Borodin, Rachmaninov and
Prokofiev, conducted by Vladimir Fedoseyev with
pianist Denis Matsuev.
Also at Brangwyn Hall during the Festival
will be three concerts from Festival regulars, the
BBC National Orchestra of Wales. The concerts
will include music by Mozart, Elgar, Rautavaara
and Sibelius and, to mark the 180th
anniversary of Beethoven’s death, his Symphony
No.9 in D when the orchestra will be
joined by the BBC National Chorus of Wales for the
famous choral movement, Ode to Joy.
At Swansea's Grand Theatre comedy favourite
Les Dennis will feature as Truffaldino in a
Festival Gala Performance of the classic 18th
century comedy The Servant of Two Masters
by Carlo Goldoni, adapted for the Wales Theatre
Company by Michael Bogdanov.
Among the Festival events taking place at the
Taliesin Arts Centre is Festival Jazz with Pete
Long’s Goodmen recreating Benny Goodman’s famous
Carnegie Hall Concert of 1938, and two evenings of
dance which will consist of contemporary dance
from the Polish based Silesian Dance Theatre and
the World Premiere of Gloria Days, the
latest work by the award winning Welsh dancer and
choreographer Marc Rees. This work is inspired by
the extraordinary life of the 5th
Marquis of Anglesey, Henry Cyril Paget, known as
“The Dancing Marquis”.
At St.Mary’s Church,
Swansea,
one of the world’s best known choral groups, the
Choir of King’s College, Cambridge, will perform a
special programme of English Cathedral Music.
Additional highlights at the Brangwyn Hall will
include a Festival Toccata by the celebrated
organist Jane Watts, to include the famous Widor
Toccata; a concert given by classical guitarist,
Rory Russell, the winner of the John Fussell Young
Artists Platform and, following highly
successful concerts in Europe and Canada, the
Allegri String Quartet will perform works
by Haydn, Bartok and Beethoven.
Festival Exhibition,
an display of displaced contemporary art from
Columbia, will open at the
Glynn
Vivian Art Gallery on 5 October at
6.00pm
and run throughout the Festival showing the work
of 17 artists, which embrace several mediums –
photography, sculpture, painting, printmaking,
video and installation.
For more details, please visit the Festival web
site
www.swanseafestival.com
Bill Kenny
Tickets will be on sale for all events from 30
July 2007. Taliesin Theatre Box Office: 01792
602060/296883
All other events are bookable from The Grand
Theatre, Swansea, Box Office: 01792 475715.
To request a Festival brochure or for further
information or photographs, please contact:
Hazel Hardy, Freelance Press Associate, on:
Tel: 029 20 626998 Email :
hazel.hardy@uku.co.uk
Or
Susan Croall, Administrator of the Swansea
Festival of Music and the Arts, on: Tel: 01792
411570 Email: -
admin@swanseafestival.com
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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
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aims to present the best in new criticism from writers with a radical
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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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2004 |