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词条 Musica Viva Australia
释义

  1. History

  2. International Concert Season

  3. Musica Viva In Schools

  4. Musica Viva Festival

  5. Coffee Concerts

  6. Melbourne International Chamber Music Competition

  7. Rising Stars

  8. Country Wide

  9. Exports

  10. Beethoven and the Zipper

  11. References

  12. External links

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Musica Viva Australia was founded in 1945 by Romanian-born violinist Richard Goldner, with the aim of bringing chamber music to Australia. The co-founder was German-born musicologist Walter Dullo. In 1945 Musica Viva was a string ensemble performing chamber music to small groups of European immigrants. In 2013, Musica Viva has become the largest chamber music presenter in the world.

Musica Viva also runs one of the largest music education programs in Australia, Musica Viva In Schools, which reaches around 280,000 school children each year.

Hywel Sims is the CEO. The Artistic Director is composer Carl Vine AO.

History

Musica Viva's heritage is grounded in the vision of one man - Richard Goldner - a Romanian-born violist who had trained in Vienna. Goldner arrived in Australia as a refugee in 1939 but maintained his strong connections with many of the most respected musicians in Europe.[1][2]

Once asked what he expected when he arrived in Australia, his answer was simple. First he expected to save his life. Second, he soon realised that music was not a way of life in Australia in the way it was in Europe. Men generally did not attend concerts as it was considered 'sissy' - a perception that lasted until the GIs came from America.{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}}

Goldner persevered and soon after formed the Monomeeth String Quartet, which took its name from an Indigenous Australian word for peace and harmony.

Inspired by his life in Vienna and the enormous respect for his teacher Simon Pullman, he was determined to create a 'Pullman-like' ensemble in Sydney. Reading in 1944 of his great mentor's death in the Treblinka extermination camp in August 1942, Goldner's plans accelerated and he recruited 17 musicians and divided them into four string quartets (and piano). The quartets were trained individually before uniting as one group - Richard Goldner's Sydney Musica Viva. In this enterprise he was assisted by fellow immigrant Walter Dullo, who is usually credited as Musica Viva's co-founder.

The first concert of Sydney Musica Viva was presented at Verbrugghen Hall, Sydney Conservatorium of Music on 8 December 1945. Let down by Sydney's unreliable post-war power supply, the concert took place in darkness save the headlights of several cars parked in the doorway of the auditorium and some hurricane lamps in the foyers. The program included Beethoven's Große Fuge and Dullo's string orchestra arrangement of a work for mechanical organ by Mozart.

International Concert Season

Musica Viva's International Concert Season presents great chamber musicians from around the world.

  • Concerts are staged in: Hobart; Adelaide; Brisbane; Canberra; Melbourne; Sydney; Newcastle; and Perth.
  • The 2019 season will feature Natalie Clein, ZOFO, Doric Quartet, Emerson String Quartet, Choir of King's College, Cambridge, Nevermind and Skride Quartet.
  • The 2018 Season featured Sabine Meyer, Alliage Quintett, Avi Avital, Giocoso String Quartet, Joyce Yang, Ray Chen, Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra, Borodin Quartet, Benedetti Elschenbroich Grynyuk Trio, comprising Nicola Benedetti, Leonard Elschenbroich and Alexei Grynyuk, plus special gala recitals by pianist Sir András Schiff.
  • The 2017 Season featured Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment with violinist Rachel Podger, Eighth Blackbird, Pacifica Quartet, Sitkovetsky Trio, Takács Quartet, Angela Hewitt, and piano-cello duo Nicolas Altstaedt and Aleksandar Madžar.
  • The 2016 Season featured Stephen Hough, Choir of Trinity College Cambridge, Trio Dali, violin-piano duo Ben Beilman and Andrew Tyson, Jerusalem Quartet, Enso String Quartet and a semi-staged chamber opera 'Voyage to the Moon' in collaboration with Victorian Opera.
  • The 2015 Season featured Tafelmusik, the Eggner Trio, the Modigliani Quartet, the Goldner String Quartet, Steven Isserlis with Connie Shih, I Fagiolini, Paul Lewis, and Maxim Vengerov.
  • The 2014 Season featured the Kelemen Quartet, the Sitkovetsky Trio, the American Brass Quintet, the Choir of King's College, Cambridge, Imogen Cooper, the Borodin Quartet, and Ray Chen with Timothy Young.
  • The 2013 Season featured Karin Schaupp and Pavel Steidl, the Morgenstern Trio and Christopher Moore, the Tokyo String Quartet, Jian Wang and Bernadette Harvey, the Elias String Quartet, Angela Hewitt, and the Academy of Ancient Music and Sara Macliver. The featured composers for 2013 are Peter Sculthorpe, Ross Edwards, Carl Vine and Matthew Hindson.
  • The 2012 Season featured Tafelmusik, Diana Doherty with the St. Lawrence String Quartet, Trio Dali, the Takács Quartet, Amarcord, the Kuss Quartet, Naoko Shimizu, Anthony Marwood and Aleksandar Madžar. Gordon Kerry was the featured composer.
  • The 2011 series featured: Andreas Scholl, the Eggner Trio, the Brentano String Quartet, Concerto Copenhagen with Genevieve Lacey, the Goldner String Quartet with Ian Munro, Stephen Hough, and Sabine Meyer with the Modigliani Quartet. Ian Munro was the 2011 Featured Composer.

Musica Viva In Schools

Since 1981 Musica Viva In Schools has been inspiring children to think about, actively listen to, and create music by bringing professional live music performances to primary and secondary schools all over Australia. Musica Viva In Schools provide teachers with up-to-date training and the latest digital technology so they can incorporate the live music experience into their everyday classroom teaching.

The Musician In The Classroom residency program sends professional musicians and composers to work directly with students. This could be to teach a school band, to coach a choir, to help write a school song, or just to teach music in the classroom.

Through grants and special funding, Musica Viva also creates special music projects for remote, disadvantaged and special needs schools and their students. The major program for secondary students, Live Music Packages, is a live performance and a workshop, which is a great way for elective music students to challenge themselves and learn directly from professional musicians.

In 2014, [https://www.theguardian.com/culture-professionals-network/culture-professionals-blog/2014/jun/20/global-research-development-projects-arts-culture?CMP=new_1194 The Guardian] named Musica Viva In Schools' Interactive Whiteboards as one of the ten global R&D projects that are changing arts and culture.

In 2016 Musica Viva announced the inaugural Artistic Director of Education, Michael Sollis.[3]

Musica Viva Festival

The Musica Viva Festival is held biennially at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music. The festival is a four-day celebration of chamber music featuring the best international and local artists on stage. During the festival mentorship is provided for the Australian Youth Orchestra Chamber Players.

  • In 2019, the Festival will feature Edgar Meyer, Dover Quartet, Goldner String Quartet, Tessa Lark, Andrew Tyson, Adam Walker, Aura Go, Konstantin Shamray and Timo-Veikko Valve.
  • In 2017, the Festival featured Pinchas Zukerman, Lambert Orkis, Amy Dickson, Elias Quartet, Goldner String Quartet, Amir Farid and Arcadia Winds.
  • In 2015, the Festival featured Mischa Maisky, Pavel Haas Quartet, Aleksandar Madžar, Nicolas Altstaedt, Doric String Quartet, Karin Schaupp, Orava Quartet and Bella Hristova.
  • In 2013, the Musica Viva Festival included Lambert Orkis, Benjamin Beilman, Alice Giles, Sharon Bezaly, Hector McDonald, Pieter Wispelwey, Pacifica Quartet, and Goldner String Quartet.
  • In 2011 the second Musica Viva Festival was held in Sydney; musicians included Pekka Kuusisto, Takács Quartet, Eggner Trio, Khatia Buniatishvili and Goldner String Quartet.

Coffee Concerts

Musica Viva’s Coffee Concerts are held in Sydney and Melbourne on five Tuesday/Wednesday mornings throughout the year. Here friends meet for cake and coffee in the foyer, then enjoy a short one-hour concert from a diverse selection of Australia’s finest chamber ensembles and soloists. The Sydney venue is the Independent Theatre until 2019 when it will move to The Concourse, Chatswood. The Melbourne venue is the Elisabeth Murdoch Hall and from 2019 will be renamed Melbourne Morning Masters.

  • The 2019 season will feature Goldner String Quartet, Sydney Chamber Choir, Accademia Arcadia, Alice Giles and Aura Go.
  • The 2018 season featured Karin Schaupp & Umberto Clerici, Australian Brass Quintet, winner of the 2017 Michael Hill International Violin Competition, Ioana Cristina Goicea together with the winner of the 2016 Sydney International Piano Competition, Andrey Gugnin, Ensemble Liaison, Latitude 37, Goldner String Quartet and the Grand Prize winner of the 2018 Melbourne International Chamber Music Competition, Trio Marvin.
  • The 2017 season features Arcadia Winds, Goldner String Quartet, Piers Lane, Umberto Clerici, The Consort of Melbourne, Streeton Trio, Emma Black, Caroline Almonte, Alexandre Da Costa and Kristian Chong.
  • The 2016 season featured Tinalley String Quartet, Benaud Trio and Goldner String Quartet
  • The 2014 Sydney season featured Young Kwon Choi, the Piano Trio from Australia Ensemble @UNSW, Catrin Finch, the Brisbane Chamber Choir, and the Goldner String Quartet.
  • The 2014 Melbourne season featured Young Kwon Choi, Songmakers Australia, Nikki Chooii & Amid Farid, James Crabb & Genevieve Lacey, and the Goldner String Quartet.
  • The 2013 Sydney season featured Karak, Lissa Moore, Enigma Quartet, Emma Sholl & Clemens Leske, and The Choir of Trinity College, Melbourne
  • The 2013 Melbourne season featured SHE - Seven Harp Ensemble, Wilma & Friends, Li-Wei Qin & Kristian Chong, The Choir of Trinity College, Melbourne, and Steeton Trio.
  • The 2012 Sydney season featured Goldner Quartet, Piers Lane, and James Crabb.
  • The 2012 Melbourne season featured Benjamin Breen & Caroline Almonte, Tiffany Speight & David McNicol, Oliver She, La Compañia, and Adam Chalabi & Marshall McGuire.
  • The 2011 Sydney season featured Synergy Percussion, Geoffrey Collins with Alice Giles, Australian Brass Quintet, Emma-Jane Murphy with Bernadette Harvey.
  • The 2011 Melbourne season featured Howard Panny with Timothy Young, Tinalley String Quartet, Saguaro Trio, Melbourne Symphony Percussion & Friends and Australian Brass Quintet.

Melbourne International Chamber Music Competition

In 2016, Musica Viva took over management of the Melbourne International Chamber Music Festival. The 8th edition was held in July 2018 at Australian National Academy of Music and Melbourne Recital Centre. The Grand Prize was won by piano trio Trio Marvin.

 

Rising Stars

In 2012, Musica Viva ran a program called Rising Stars - an initiative that provides purposeful performance-based and practical training opportunities for three emerging Australian chamber ensembles each year. The Rising Stars of 2012 were the Enigma Quartet, Sydney Camerata Quartet, and Streeton Trio. Genevieve Lacey is currently Artistic Director of Musica Viva's FutureMakers program [4]

Country Wide

Country Wide is a regional touring program of public concerts, family concerts, workshops and residencies reaching more than 18,000 regional Australians each year.

Exports

The Musica Viva Export program is run in collaboration with the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, and arranges tours for Australian ensembles to South East Asia, India and China.

Beethoven and the Zipper

In 2011, the Academy Award-winning former film producer Suzanne Baker published a book titled Beethoven and the Zipper: The Astonishing Story of Musica Viva, which detailed how Richard Goldner had invented and patented a zip fastener for the Australian Army, and used the proceeds to establish Musica Viva Australia.[5]

References

1. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=ELACebeQEgcC&pg=PA92&lpg=PA92&dq=richard+goldner&source=bl&ots=aaxSLlA_TX&sig=wTgq3Fk7DvoKg4N26SCzg7QTwRQ&hl=en&ei=QLzMSff4F9OMkAXZieTnCQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=5&ct=result Atkinson, Knight, McPhee: The Dictionary of Performing Arts in Australia]
2. ^German Australia
3. ^ 
4. ^ 
5. ^Steve Meacham, "Author plays score of life found in music", Sydney Morning Herald, 27 April 2011. Retrieved 14 March 2014

External links

  • Official Musica Viva Website

5 : APRA Award winners|Music promoters|Chamber music|Chamber music groups|Musical groups established in 1945

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