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2013 NATIONAL CONCERT SEASON PRINCIPAL PARTNER

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2 0 1 3 N A T I O N A LC O N C E R T S E A S O N

PRINCIPAL PARTNER

Julian Thompson

Photographs of the ACO musicians taken during rehearsal by Jamie Williams.

nicole Divall

1music, videos & more aco.com.au

Internationally renowned for inspired programming and the rapturous response of audiences and critics, the Australian Chamber Orchestra is a product of our country’s vibrant, adventurous and enquiring spirit. In performances across Australia, around the world and on many recordings, the ACO moves hearts and stimulates minds with repertoire spanning six centuries and a vitality and virtuosity unmatched by other ensembles.

Richard Tognetti has been Artistic Director and Lead Violin since 1989. Under his inspiring leadership, the ACO performs as a flexible and versatile ‘ensemble of soloists’, on modern and period instruments, as a chamber group, symphony orchestra and electro-acoustic collective. The ACO’s unique artistic style encompasses masterworks of the classical repertoire, innovative cross-artform projects and a vigorous commissioning program.

Several of the musicians perform with spectacularly fine instruments by history’s finest makers, including Stradivarius, Guarneri del Gesù, Guadagnini and A.E. Smith.

Fifty-three international tours across Asia, Europe and the USA have drawn outstanding reviews for the ACO’s performances at the world’s most prestigious concert halls, including Amsterdam’s Concertgebouw, London’s Wigmore Hall, New York’s Carnegie Hall and Vienna’s Musikverein.

The ACO has 40 CDs and DVDs for sale at aco.com.au/shop, including the three-time ARIA Award-winning Bach CDs and the internationally acclaimed Mozart Violin Concertos and Grieg recordings.

A u S T R A L I A N C H A M B E RO R C H E S T R A

Richard Tognetti Artistic Director Helena Rathbone Principal Violin

Satu Vänskä Principal ViolinMadeleine Boud Violin

Rebecca Chan ViolinAiko Goto Violin

Mark Ingwersen ViolinIlya Isakovich Violin

Christopher Moore Principal ViolaNicole Divall Viola

Timo-Veikko Valve Principal Cello Melissa Barnard Cello Julian Thompson Cello

Maxime Bibeau Principal Double Bass

PART-TIME MuSICIANS

Zoë Black ViolinVeronique Serret ViolinCaroline Henbest Viola

Daniel Yeadon Cello

“If there’s a better chamber orchestra in the world today, I haven’t heard it.” The Guardian, 2011

maxime BiBeau

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BENEFITS OF SUBSCRIBING• Discountedtickets • Bestavailableseats • Ticketexchange,forwhenplanschange • Invitationstomeetthemusicians • Freeprograms,pre-concerttalksandenewsletters • FreeACOCDandoffersfromourpartners(aco.com.au/benefits)

NEW SERIESIn 2013, these two additional new series are offered. Go to page 20 to see which concerts are included in the series.

Melbourne Recital Centre Series Three evening concerts at Melbourne Recital Centre. The concerts performed at Melbourne Recital Centre and the Arts Centre Melbourne are not the same, so you may subscribe to both series.

Sydney Friday Matinee Series Seven concerts on Fridays at 1.30pm at City Recital Hall Angel Place, featuring the same concerts as the evening series.

ACO+ The ACO+ package features concerts which combine musical genres or artforms. In 2013, 3-concert ACO+ packages are available in Brisbane, Melbourne and Sydney and feature The Reef, Barry Humphries, Sydney Dance Company and The Crowd. See page 19 for package details.

WIN A TRIP FOR TWO TO THE TARRAWARRA FESTIVAL WITH VIRGIN AUSTRALIASubscribe by 21 September 2012 and you will automatically go into the draw to win a trip for two to the ACO’s festival at the TarraWarra Museum of Art on 18-19 May 2013. Courtesy of Principal Partner Virgin Australia, the prize includes return business class flights for two to Melbourne from your nearest capital city, plus accommodation for two in the Yarra Valley on 17, 18 and 19 May, car hire for four days and tickets to the festival concerts and gala dinner. Terms and conditions available at aco.com.au.

PRINCIPAL PARTNER

There’s a particular wine maker in the Hunter Valley who attracts a scornful chuckle each year, making the claim that his present vintage is the best. I’ve waited 23 years to make this claim and I’m not going to now, but when we can boast Steven Isserlis’

Dvořak, Martin Frost’s Mozart, Jeremy Denk’s Ives, Andreas Scholl’s Vivaldi and Brahms’ Symphony No.4, I hope you understand that you wouldn’t have to force the claim out of me. The Australian debut of The Crowd, the return of The Reef and Project

Rameau, and the launch of ACO2 into our national subscription series afford me additional satisfaction.

Best wishes, Richard Tognetti

mark ingwersen

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T O G N E T T I ’ S M O Z A R T

HAYDN Symphony No.49, “La passione” DEANElectricPreludes*(AustralianPremiere) MOZART Violin Concerto No.3 MOZART Symphony No.25

Richard Tognetti Director & Violin

The opportunity to hear Richard Tognetti perform one of Mozart’s enchanting, theatrical violin concertos is not to be missed. Tognetti’s Mozart recordings have been singled out by critics internationally as arguably the best on offer.

“Tognetti and his fellow musicians bring this music to life in ways I hadn’t previously imagined.” MusicWeb International

“I can think of few other recordings of these pieces that so consistently grab the listener’s attention.” International Record Review

Mozart’s Symphony No.25 is the dramatic opening music in the film Amadeus and was inspired by Haydn’s thrilling Sturm und Drang symphonies, such as No.49.

Australian composer Brett Dean received one of the world’s most prestigious composition prizes, the Grawemeyer Award, for his violin concerto, so we await his electric violin concerto for Richard Tognetti with much anticipation.

Adelaide Tue 5 Feb 8pm

Canberra Sat 2 Feb 8pm

Melbourne – Arts Centre Sun 3 Feb 2.30pm, Mon 4 Feb 8pm

Perth Wed 6 Feb 7.30pm

Sydney – City Recital Hall Angel Place Tue 12 Feb 8pm, Wed 13 Feb 7pm, Fri 15 Feb 1.30pm, Sat 16 Feb 7pm

Sydney Opera House Sun 10 Feb 2pm

* Brett Dean’s Electric Preludes has been commissioned for Richard Tognetti, the ACO and Festival Maribor by Jan Minchin.

PRINCIPAL PARTNER

Presented by Virgin Australia

richarD TogneTTi

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ALICE IN CHAINS Them Bones, Angry Chair BACH Sonata No.1, BWV1001: Fugue BEETHOVEN String Quartet, Op.130: Cavatina CRuMB BlackAngels(excerpts)DEAN Electric Preludes: PeripeteiaGRANDAGE/ATKINS Immutable KILAR OrawaLIGETI RamificationsPIGRAM Raindancing, MimiRACHMANINOV Vocalise RAMEAu Les Boréades: Les VentsSEEGER Where Have All the Flowers GoneSHOSTAKOVICH Chamber Symphony, Op.110a: Allegro MoltoTOGNETTI/GRANDAGE BeyondTOGNETTI Heart of The Black Beast, Bathymetry Arrangements by Tognetti and Grandage

Footage by Mick Sowry and Jon Frank projected onto a screen on stage. Concept by Richard Tognetti.

Richard Tognetti Director & Violin Mick Sowry Director & Producer Jon Frank Director of Photography Derek Hynd Director of Surfing Mark Atkins Didgeridoo Stephen Pigram Voice & Guitar Satu Vänskä Violin & Voice Julian Thompson Cello

In May, Richard Tognetti took a crew of surfers, musicians and film makers to Ningaloo Reef, where the desert meets the sea. They spent two unforgettable weeks surfing, making music and filming and the result is The Reef.

Immerse yourself in Jon Frank’s images of the ocean, the world’s best fin-free surfers, the arid desert landscape and the starry sky, as an incredible array of music swirls around you. It will alter your perception of a classical music concert through the prism of a transendental surf film. You’ll never forget it.

Brisbane Fri 22 Feb 8pm

Canberra Sat 2 Mar 8pm

Melbourne – Arts Centre Sun 24 Feb 2.30pm, Mon 25 Feb 8pm

Newcastle Thu 28 Feb 7.30pm

Sydney Opera House Mon 4 Mar 8pm

Wollongong Fri 1 Mar 7.30pm

NATIONAL TOUR AND FOUNDING PARTNER

T H E R E E F

“It’s a virtuosic display...Technique, fearlessness, grace: the analogy between surfers and musicians needs little elaboration.”

The Australian

Presented by IBM

5aco.com.aumusic, videos & more

B A R R Y H u M P H R I E S ’ B E R L I N C A B A R E T

Adelaide Tue 7 May 8pm

Brisbane Wed 1 May 8pm

Melbourne – Arts Centre Sun 5 May 2.30pm, Mon 6 May 8pm

Perth Wed 8 May 7.30pm

Sydney – City Recital Hall Angel Place Tue 23 Apr 8pm, Wed 24 Apr 7pm, Fri 26 Apr 1.30pm, Sat 27 Apr 7pm

Sydney Opera House Fri 3 May 8pm

NATIONAL TOUR PARTNER

Richard Tognetti Director & Violin Barry Humphries Conférencier

Music from the Weimar Republic, selected, presented and performed by Barry Humphries and guest artists. Includes music by Weill, Eisler, Holländer, Schulhoff and more.

German art, especially music, reached its transcendent heights at the turn of the 20th Century but when the First World War shattered Romanticism, music shifted from the gilded stages of the Vienna Court Opera and the Musikverein to the underground world of Berlin’s cabaret scene. While Schoenberg’s circle was keeping lofty ideals alive in the salon in the 1920s and 30s, down in the basement an increasingly permissive Berlin society trashed tradition and played for shock value. High art bumped into low-life, the playful brushed up against the seedy and Dada acts shared the stage with strippers – all under the command of the conférencier, the Master of Ceremonies.

As a boy growing up in post-war Melbourne, Barry Humphries discovered the music of the Weimar Republic through Jewish émigrés programming ABC Radio, sparking a lifelong obsession with the art and music of this wicked and turbulent era.

Presented by BNP Paribas

“The greatest performer in Australian history.”

The Spectator Australia

Barry humphries

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We also celebrate the return to Australia of magnetic young German cellist Daniel Müller-Schott, performing two Vivaldi Cello Concertos and Bloch’s intensely melancholic From Jewish Life. He will spar with our own principal cellist Timo-Veikko Valve in Vivaldi’s Concerto for two cellos.

Adelaide Tue 18 Jun 8pm

Brisbane Mon 17 Jun 8pm

Canberra Sat 15 Jun 8pm

Melbourne – Arts Centre Sun 23 Jun 2.30pm, Mon 24 Jun 8pm

Newcastle Thu 13 Jun 7.30pm

Sydney – City Recital Hall Angel Place Fri 21 Jun 1.30pm, Sat 22 Jun 7pm, Tue 25 Jun 8pm, Wed 26 Jun 7pm

Sydney Opera House Sun 16 Jun 2pm

VIVALDI Concerto for two cellos, RV531 RAuTAVAARA The Fiddlers STRAVINSKY Concerto in D VIVALDI Cello Concerto RV413 in G HANDEL Concerto Grosso No.11 in A BLOCH From Jewish Life BARTÓK Divertimento

ACO2 Richard Tognetti Director & Violin Daniel Müller-Schott Cello Timo-Veikko Valve Cello

We’ve been keeping a secret.

Our second orchestra, ACO2, garners enormous enthusiasm as it tours the length and breadth of Australia, but few of our subscribers have had the chance to hear it. It’s time to let you in on the secret as ACO2 embarks on its first national subscription tour, led by Richard Tognetti and our principal musicians and featuring some of Australia’s finest young string players.

Featuring several of the greatest works for string orchestra, this program showcases ACO2’s virtuosity and vivacity, in high-octane Baroque and neoclassical music.

“fearless player” New York Times

R I C H A R D T O G N E T T I P R E S E N T S A C O 2

Daniel müller-schoTT

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P R O J E C TR A M E A u

RAMEAu Dances from Dardanus, Les Boréades, Hippolyte et Aricie, Platée, Pigmalion and others

Sydney Dance Company Rafael Bonachela Artistic Director & Choreographer Helena Rathbone Lead Violin

We share the stage with the Sydney Dance Company in this production by Rafael Bonachela and Richard Tognetti, sparked by their mutual passion for Rameau’s perfumed and powerful French Baroque dance music.

Rameau’s flair for rhythm and melody, and feeling for choreography, leads many to name him one of the greatest-ever ballet composers, certainly the most influential. Bonachela’s dynamic choreography, innate musicality and theatricality serve to illuminate this brilliant music.

Brisbane – QPAC Playhouse (Presented with QPAC) Thu 11 Jul 7.30pm, Fri 12 Jul 7.30pm, Sat 13 Jul 2pm & 7.30pm

Canberra Theatre Centre (Presented with CTC) Thu 12 Sep 7.30pm, Fri 13 Sep 7.30pm, Sat 14 Sep 7.30pm

maDeleine BouD anD Thomas BraDley

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B A R E F O O T F I D D L E R

BACH Concerto for three violins, BWV1064 MOZART Adagio and FugueGINASTERA Concerto for stringsMENDELSSOHN Violin Concerto in D minor

Patricia Kopatchinskaja Guest Director & Violin

A free spirit who approaches music with an unquenchable sense of fun and discovery, Patricia Kopatchinskaja is a joy to play with and watch.

Patricia performs Bach and Mendelssohn violin concertos and a haunting work by Argentinian composers Ginastera, featuring solos for five principal musicians.

Trust this enchanting violinist with your ears and she’ll lead you a merry dance, bare feet and all.

Adelaide Tue 23 Jul 8pm

Brisbane Mon 29 Jul 8pm

Canberra Sat 27 Jul 8pm

Melbourne – Arts Centre Sun 21 Jul 2.30pm, Mon 22 Jul 8pm

Perth Wed 24 Jul 7.30pm

Sydney – City Recital Hall Angel Place Tue 30 Jul 8pm, Wed 31 Jul 7pm, Fri 2 Aug 1.30pm, Sat 3 Aug 7pm

Sydney Opera House Sun 28 Jul 2pm

Wollongong Sat 20 Jul 7.30pm

“sheer fun of music making”

Limelight

paTricia kopaTchinskaJa

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B R A H M S P I A N Oq u I N T E T

“born story-teller” Concertonet

BACH Canons on a Goldberg Ground, BWV1087NANCARROW Two Canons for UrsulaIVESConcordSonata(excerpts)BRAHMS Piano Quintet

Adelaide Tue 13 Aug 8pm

Melbourne Recital Centre Mon 26 Aug 8pm

Newcastle Mon 12 Aug 7.30pm

Perth Wed 14 Aug 7.30pm

Sydney – City Recital Hall Angel Place Sat 17 Aug 7pm, Tue 20 Aug 8pm, Wed 21 Aug 7pm, Fri 23 Aug 1.30pm

Wollongong Sat 24 Aug 7.30pm

Richard Tognetti Director & Violin Satu Vänskä Violin Christopher Moore Viola Timo-Veikko Valve Cello Jeremy Denk Piano

Brahms’ Piano Quintet, both powerful and tender, is one of the masterworks of 19th-century chamber music, almost symphonic in its breadth and depth.

Known for sharp, vibrant performances of programs that are anything but conventional, Jeremy Denk is America’s most communicative pianist, as a writer, programmer and, most importantly, performer. He is able to take some of the most complex music written and make it sing. Together we will explore Bach and Nancarrow canons.

Denk describes Ives’ Concord Sonata as “one of the most profoundly nostalgic and tender projects in all of music.” It is this American pianist’s calling card, vividly portraying the idealism, strength, hope, and fierce individuality inherent in the American ethos.

Jeremy Denk

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A N D R E A S S C H O L L S I N G S V I V A L D I

VIVALDI Concerto Grosso, RV117SCHNITTKE String Quartet No.3PÄRT Es sang von langen JahrenGLASS Songs from the Book of LongingGLASS String Quartet No.5, Mvt.5PÄRT Da Pacem DomineVIVALDI Stabat Mater

Andreas Scholl Counter Tenor Helena Rathbone Violin Rebecca Chan Violin Christopher Moore Viola Timo-Veikko Valve Cello Maxime Bibeau Double Bass

Andreas Scholl is famous worldwide for his stylish performances of Baroque music and it is uplifting to perform Vivaldi’s Stabat Mater with him, as it is to begin the concert with Vivaldi’s sprightly Concerto Grosso RV117.

Excitingly, in this concert, Scholl fulfils a longheld desire to match contemporary music with the Baroque. Arvo Pärt’s vocal lines are as consoling and ideal for the intense beauty of Scholl’s voice as Vivaldi’s. Philip Glass sets Leonard Cohen’s poetry in songs from the Book of Longing. After these moments of reflection, full-throttle quartets by Schnittke and Glass.

Melbourne Recital Centre Mon 7 Oct 8pm

Sydney – City Recital Hall Angel Place Fri 4 Oct 1.30pm, Sat 5 Oct 7pm, Tue 8 Oct 8pm, Wed 9 Oct 7pm

Wollongong Thu 3 Oct 7.30pm

NATIONAL TOUR PARTNER

Presented by Transfield

“luminous voice” Daily Telegraph

anDreas scholl

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T H E C R O W D

CHOPIN Nocturne No.7 CRuMB Black Angels: Bones and FlutesDEAN DispersalDEBuSSY SyrinxFELDMAN Three Voices: Slow WaltzLEIFS Quartetto III, “El Greco”: Mvt.4SCHuBERT Symphony No.8, “Unfinished”: Mvt.1SHOSTAKOVICH The Age of Gold: Polka SIBELIuS Kuolema: Scenes with Cranes, Scene VITOGNETTI Battle for the Crowd, Mosh Maggot, Chorale, Rain, Ecstasis, Bells, TrainTRAD. ICELANDIC(arr. Stearne)FagurteríFjörðum

Footage by Jon Frank projected onto a screen on stage. Concept by Richard Tognetti and Jon Frank.

Richard Tognetti Director Jon Frank Film Australian National Academy of Music (ANAM) Orchestra, with the ACO

Richard Tognetti writes: “What is it we feel when part of a crowd? Is it fear or empowerment? Do we lose ourselves, or find our real selves? Is a crowd a mob, an ignorant mass of unthinking beings? Or is it an intelligent body, capable of thought processes and invention of which individuals alone would not be capable? We spend much of our life in crowds: when we go to the football or attend a concert, when we cross the street at peak hour, when we worship, mourn, protest or feast, we often do so as part of a crowd. The Crowd examines the nature of the crowd, in its many manifestations, both human and in the natural world.”

With more than a hundred people on stage, two thousand in the audience and countless thousands from all walks of life projected onto the big screen, it’s time for you to join the crowd.

Melbourne – Palais Theatre Fri 11 Oct 8pm

Sydney Opera House Sun 13 Oct 2pm

“unrivalled intensity”The Guardian

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B R A H M S 4& S T E V E N I S S E R L I S

DVOŘÁK Cello Concerto BRAHMS Symphony No.4

Adelaide Tue 22 Oct 8pm

Brisbane Mon 28 Oct 8pm

Canberra Sat 19 Oct 8pm

Melbourne – Arts Centre Sun 20 Oct 2.30pm, Mon 21 Oct 8pm

Perth Wed 23 Oct 7.30pm

Sydney Opera House Sun 27 Oct 2pm, Tue 29 Oct 8pm

Richard Tognetti Director & Violin Steven Isserlis Cello

The Fourth is Brahms’ final powerful symphonic statement. Here, Brahms takes flight, as he melds the soaring sounds of Romanticism to classical structure in a constantly evolving drama.

Brahms premiered the symphony with a small orchestra of forty-eight musicians, which he declined to augment. We follow his lead and perform with wind instruments from Brahms’ time.

Steven Isserlis is one of our favourite collaborators – the epitome of the intelligent and passionate cellist. There could be no better soloist for Dvořák’s ardent and much-loved concerto. Isserlis first played it as a child. “I used to think it was so joyous,” he says. “As I’ve got older, the more tragic it seems.”

“Unrivalled intensity”The Guardian

sTeven isserlis

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M O Z A R T C L A R I N E TC O N C E R T O

RAuTAVAARA A Finnish MythDENISOV Selections from Paganini Caprices G FRÖST New WorkBROADSTOCKNeverTrulyLost(WorldPremiere)*MOZART Symphony No.21 MOZART Clarinet Concerto

Canberra Sat 16 Nov 8pm

Melbourne – Arts Centre Sun 17 Nov 2.30pm, Mon 18 Nov 8pm

Newcastle Thu 14 Nov 7.30pm

Sydney – City Recital Hall Angel Place Tue 19 Nov 8pm, Wed 20 Nov 7pm, Fri 22 Nov 1.30pm, Sat 23 Nov 7pm

Sydney Opera House Sun 24 Nov 2pm

Satu Vänskä Lead Violin Martin Fröst Clarinet

MartinFröst’srecentconcertswithuswereasensation.Heisprobablythe greatest clarinettist in the world, but more than that, he’s a marvellous communicator and fantastic to watch. Astonishingly, he can dance while he plays, and his brother’s new work has him performing as a marionette!

MartinFröst’srecordingofMozart’sClarinetConcertowasnamedthebest in the world by Classica-Répertoire magazine and his performance has been watched more than half a million times on YouTube – testament to the popularity of both musician and work.

Satu Vänskä leads music from her homeland Finland and plays Paganini-inspired music on the ACO’s Stradivarius violin.

* Commissioned by Rob and Nancy Pallin for Rob’s 70th birthday, in memory of Rob’s father, Paddy Pallin.

“Until you’ve heard Martin Fröst, you really haven’t heard the clarinet.”

The Times

marTin FrösT

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BACH Brandenburg Concertos Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4 & 6

Richard Tognetti Director & Violin

Begin the festive season with the most celebrated music of the Baroque, Bach’s Brandenburg Concertos.

To perform this extroverted, colourful music, we’re assembling a remarkable ensemble of Baroque specialists from around the world. Richard Tognetti, winner of three ARIA Awards for Bach recordings, directs.

Brisbane (Concertos 1, 2, 3, 4) Tue 3 Dec 8pm

Melbourne Recital Centre (Concertos 1, 2, 3, 6) Wed 4 Dec 8pm

Sydney Opera House (Concertos 1, 2, 3, 6) Sun 8 Dec 2pm

B R A N D E N B u R GC O N C E R T O S

Timo-veikko valve

“Not just one of the greatest composers who ever lived. Absolutely the greatest. Any doubts

about the status of Johann Sebastian Bach were banished by the ACO’s program. And about

the encyclopaedic knowledge and penetrating perception of leader Richard Tognetti, not to mention his inspired playing.”

Adelaide Advertiser

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C H R I S T M A SO R A T O R I O

BACH Christmas Oratorio

Richard Tognetti Conductor & Lead Violin Choir of London

This Christmas, hear Bach’s joyful telling of the Christmas story. The Christmas Oratorio comprises six cantatas, each depicting a scene from Christ’s birth.

Richard Tognetti directs from the lead violin with his trademark infectious vigour. Those who attended our recent Beethoven 9 concerts will attest to Richard’s captivating ability to marshal orchestral and choral forces. A review in The Age read: “Tognetti’s direction energised all his artists to deliver a jubilant performance”.

We are joined by acclaimed singers from the Choir of London who are hand-picked from Britain’s leading choral baroque specialists, professional choirs and opera companies.

These performances of the Christmas Oratorio, in the week before Christmas are an event not to be missed.

Sydney Opera House Mon 16 Dec 6.30pm

Melbourne – Arts Centre Thu 19 Dec 6.30pm

Each performance is approximately 4 hours long, including interval

Choir of London: “English choral singing at its very best.”

Edinburgh Guide

sT nicholas church, leipZig

richarD TogneTTi

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F E S T I V A L S

NISEKO WINTER MUSIC FESTIVAL 12–14 January The Niseko ski fields in Hokkaido, Japan, are famous for powder snow, stunning views, amazing food and the number of Australians who visit each winter. This January, join us for the Niseko Winter Music Festival, three days of concerts, skiing and more. Concert details and bookings at aco.com.au/niseko2013.

Renaissance Tours has tailored a ski holiday package especially for Festival attendees, including flights, accommodation, meals, lift passes, Festival tickets and special events. For more information, visit renaissancetours.com.au/niseko or call 1300 727 095.

Three intimate weekend-long festivals in three extraordinary locations.

TARRAWARRA FESTIVAL 18–19 May TarraWarra Museum of Art in the Yarra Valley makes a stunning location for this weekend festival for just 200 guests. The Festival includes three concerts, a master class, gala dinner and guided tours of the Museum’s exhibition of abstract art. Festival packages and concert tickets may now be booked at aco.com.au/tarrawarra2013.

VASSE FELIX FESTIVAL6–8 December Our annual pilgrimage to Vasse Felix Winery in Margaret River is a highlight of the year and the concerts always sell out quickly. This year, ACO2 performs three concerts at the Vasse Felix Art Gallery, each with beautiful dining packages. If you’d like to join us, please email [email protected].

FLY VIRGIN AUSTRALIAVisit aco.com.au/virgin for Virgin Australia flight offers to the TarraWarra and Vasse Felix Festivals.

PRINCIPAL PARTNER

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I N T E R N A T I O N A L T O u R S

After 481 concerts in 260 cities across 36 countries on 53 international tours, we weren’t at all offended by this review we received after our Carnegie Hall concert in New York last year:

“Confined to a sparsely populated, predominantly scrubland atoll near the bottom of the planet, hounded by fierce koala bears and the sinister wallaby, it comes as no surprise that, even after 37 years, the Australian Chamber Orchestra has no idea about the protocol of Manhattan music-making.

How dare they begin a concert by layering an American Crumb cake with a filling of Austrian Webern? What gives their Music Director the right to orchestrate perfectly decent Schubert and Schumann lieder, or turning a Grieg string quartet into a string symphony?...

The esteemed Richard Tognetti – virtuoso violinist, composer, arranger, the man who taught Russell Crowe to handle a fiddle in a movie – stands with his 17-person orchestra, gives the downbeat and plays his Guarneri del Gesù with aplomb, élan and other words not usually associated with Australia.” Concertonet

2013 INTERNATIONAL TOURSJapan 12–14 January Three concerts at the Niseko Winter Music Festival. See aco.com.au/niseko2013.

Hong Kong 14–16 March Four concerts at Hong Kong Arts Festival. See hk.artsfestival.org.

united States 22–23 March Two concerts at the University of California, Berkeley. See calperfs.berkeley.edu.

reBecca chan

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A C O 2

ACO2 has developed into an outstanding ensemble with a busy national touring program, performing concerts and working with students in nearly one hundred regional centres in every state in Australia. For concert details and bookings visit aco.com.au.

VICTORIA TOUR 19–30 April Benalla, Bendigo, Horsham, Melbourne, Mildura, Sale, Warburton. With classical accordion player James Crabb.

NATIONAL TOUR13–26 June Led by Richard Tognetti. See page 6 for details.

NEW SOUTH WALES & QUEENSLAND TOUR9–20 September Armidale, Bangalow, Bellingen, Cairns, Cleveland, Mackay, Rockhampton. Led by Helena Rathbone.

WESTERN AUSTRALIA TOUR 7–9 December Vasse Felix Festival. See page 16 for details.

ACO ACADEMYSecondary students come together for a week of rehearsals and performances in July. Program details will be published at aco.com.au.

helena raThBone

aco2

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H O W T O S u B S C R I B E

Website aco.com.au Phone1800444444(Mon-Fri9am-5pm) Mail ACO Box Office, PO Box R21, Royal Exchange NSW 1225 In Person Opera Quays, 2 East Circular Quay, Sydney

To see which performances are included in your subscription series, see the next page.

RENEWING SUBSCRIBERSTo keep your seats, please return the personalised renewal form you received with your brochure or renew online by logging into aco.com.au by 21 September 2012, after which non-renewed seats will be released.

NEW SUBSCRIBERSPlease complete the booking form in this brochure, subscribe at aco.com.au or phone 1800 444 444.

CONCESSIONSFull-time students, Centrelink-issued Pension card holders, Veterans’ Affairs pensioners and Health Care card holders are eligible for concession prices. Seniors Card holders are not eligible. To claim a concession, please enclose photocopied proof with your booking form.

UNDER 30 DISCOUNTIf you are aged under 30 you can save up to 50%. Please enclose photocopied proof of age with your booking form.

PROCESSING OF SUBSCRIPTION APPLICATIONS Tickets will be allocated primarily in date order of receipt within each subscription category. The categories are prioritised as follows: renewing subscriptions without changes; renewing subscriptions with changes; new subscriptions. Tickets are subject to availability. Tickets will be mailed by December 2012.

Requests for a seating change must be made when renewing. Changes, where possible, will be made primarily in date order of receipt. Where it is not possible to satisfy a change request, the original seats will be re-allocated.

Your credit card will be debited or your cheque banked on receipt of your application. If you choose to pay in two instalments, you will be charged 50% on receipt of your application and 50% in December 2012.

TICKET EXCHANGE AND REPLACEMENT After 5 December 2012, subscription tickets can be exchanged to another concert, subject to availability. Tickets are transferable and able to be replaced if you lose them. Tickets are not refundable.

For terms and conditions of sale, see aco.com.au/terms-and-conditions. The ACO reserves the right to change programs, artists and venues without notice.

DONATIONS

On the booking form, we ask for a tax-deductible donation to be included with your subscription payment. We request this contribution to help offset the ever-increasing cost of maintaining the ACO as Australia’s finest orchestra and to provide essential support for the ACO’s education work. Unlike the symphony orchestras, which are generously funded with up to 70% of their costs from the government, the ACO receives less than 20% of its revenue from government sources and relies on the generosity of our subscribers and supporters. We thank you for your contribution.

ACO+ ACO+ packages feature concerts which combine artforms and musical genres in Brisbane, Melbourne and Sydney. The following concerts are included. For prices, see the booking form.

Brisbane The Reef 22 Feb Barry Humphries 1 May Sydney Dance Company 11, 12 or 13 July

Melbourne The Reef 24 or 25 Feb Barry Humphries 5 or 6 May The Crowd 11 Oct

Sydney The Reef 4 Mar Barry Humphries 3 May The Crowd 13 Oct

GIFTSExperiences make the best gifts. Consider giving an ACO subscription, or visit aco.com.au for gift certificates and CDs.

SINGLE TICKET SALESSingle tickets and Choose 3 packages go on sale on Wednesday 5 December 2012. Visit aco.com.au or phone 1800 444 444 on 5 December for prices, availability and bookings.

20 aco.com.au music, videos & moreMUSIC, VIDEOS & MORE

S E A S O N D A T E S

20

This shows which concerts are included in each subscription series. For prices, see the booking form. For ACO+ packages, see page 19.

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ADELAIDE Town Hall, Tue 8pm

5 Feb 7 May 18 Jun 23 Jul 13 Aug 22 Oct

BRISBANE QPAC Concert Hall, 8pm

Fri 22 Feb

Wed 1 May

Mon 17 Jun

Mon 29 Jul

Mon 28 Oct

Tue 3 Dec

Additional performances11, 12, 13 Jul

CANBERRA Llewellyn Hall, Sat 8pm

2 Feb 2 Mar 15 Jun 27 Jul 19 Oct 16 Nov

Additional performances12, 13, 14 Sep

MELBOuRNE Arts Centre, Sun 2.30pm

3 Feb 24 Feb 5 May 23 Jun 21 Jul 20 Oct 17 Nov

MELBOuRNE Arts Centre, Mon 8pm

4 Feb 25 Feb 6 May 24 Jun 22 Jul 21 Oct 18 Nov

MELBOuRNE Recital Centre, 8pm

Mon 26 Aug

Mon 7 Oct

Wed 4 Dec

Additional ConcertsFri

11 Oct19 & 20

Dec

NEWCASTLE City Hall, 7.30pm

Thu 28 Feb

Thu 13 Jun

Mon 12 Aug

Thu 14 Nov

PERTH Concert Hall, Wed 7.30pm

6 Feb 8 May 24 Jul 14 Aug 23 Oct

SYDNEY City Recital Hall, Tue 8pm

12 Feb 23 Apr 25 Jun 30 Jul 20 Aug 8 Oct 19 Nov

SYDNEY City Recital Hall, Wed 7pm

13 Feb 24 Apr 26 Jun 31 Jul 21 Aug 9 Oct 20 Nov

SYDNEY City Recital Hall, Fri 1.30pm

15 Feb 26 Apr 21 Jun 2 Aug 23 Aug 4 Oct 22 Nov

SYDNEY City Recital Hall, Sat 7pm

16 Feb 27 Apr 22 Jun 3 Aug 17 Aug 5 Oct 23 Nov

SYDNEY Opera House, Sun 2pm

10 Feb 16 Jun 28 Jul 13 Oct 27 Oct 24 Nov 8 Dec

Additional ConcertsMon

4 MarFri

3 MayTue

29 Oct16 & 17

Dec

WOLLONGONG Town Hall, 7.30pm

Fri 1 Mar

Sat 20 Jul

Sat 24 Aug

Thu 3 Oct

21aco.com.aumusic, videos & moreMUSIC, VIDEOS & MORE

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NEW SUBSCRIBER BOOKING FORMSubscribe at aco.com.au or complete both sides of this form. If you subscribed to the 2012 Season and have not received a renewal notice, please call 1800 444 444. If you would like to add performances that are not included in your subscription series, please book at aco.com.au or by phone on 1800 444 444.

A RES Full

A RES Conc.

A RES Under 30

B RES Full

B RES Conc.

B RES Under 30

C RES Full

C RES Conc.

C RES Under 30

TOTALS

ADELAIDE $462 $372 $228 $366 $294 $198 - - - $

BRISBANE $462 $372 $228 $366 $294 $198 $276 $210 $180 $

CANBERRA $462 $372 $228 $366 $294 $198 $276 $210 $180 $

MELBOuRNESun 2.30pm $595 $511 $266 $476 $392 $245 $350 $287 $210 $

MELBOuRNEMon 8pm $595 $511 $266 $476 $392 $245 $350 $287 $210

$

MELBOuRNE Recital Centre $255 $219 $114 $204 $168 $105 $150 $123 $90

$

NEWCASTLE $284 $212 $152 - - - - - - $

PERTH $385 $310 $190 $305 $245 $165 $230 $175 $150 $

SYDNEYTue 8pm City Recital Hall $595 $511 $266 $476 $392 $245 $350 $287 $210 $

SYDNEYWed 7pm City Recital Hall $595 $511 $266 $476 $392 $245 $350 $287 $210 $

SYDNEYFri 1.30pm City Recital Hall $595 $511 $266 $476 $392 $245 $350 $287 $210 $

SYDNEYSat 7pm City Recital Hall $595 $511 $266 $476 $392 $245 $350 $287 $210 $

SYDNEYSun 2pm Opera House $595 $511 $266 $476 $392 $245 $350 $287 $210 $

WOLLONGONG $284 $212 $152 $224 $184 $128 - - - $

ACO+ Select city: Brisbane Melbourne Sydney

$255 $288 $288

- - -

$132 $132 $132

$198 $225 $225

- - -

$102 $102 $102

$141 $159 $159

- - -

$90 $90 $90

$ $ $

SuB-TOTAL $

FILL IN YOuR DETAILS

Dr/Mr/Mrs/Ms/Miss First Name Surname

Address

Suburb State Postcode Phone

Email Please do NOT send me the ACO e-newsletter and customer service emails.

If you are subscribing for more than one person, please attach each subscriber’s details on a separate sheet so they can receive a subscriber card and be emailed news and invitations.

CHOOSE YOuR SuBSCRIPTION PACKAGES Indicate the number of packages you require in each reserve.

SEATING PREFERENCE

If you have a preference for where you would like to sit, please tick that section of the hall. Seating maps are available at aco.com.au/venues.

City Recital Hall Angel Place Level 1 Level 2 Level 3

All other venues Stalls Circle Box Balcony Gallery Choir

Special requirements – if you use a wheelchair or have any other seating needs, please tell us here:

PAYMENT

Subscription package/s total $

I would like to make a tax-deductible donation to support the ACO $

TOTAL PAYMENT $

I have included photocopied proof to qualify for a discounted price

Under 30 proof of age

Full-time student card, Centrelink Pension concession card, Veteran’s Affairs pensioner card or Health Care card

PAYMENT METHOD

Cheque or money order made payable to ‘Australian Chamber Orchestra Pty Ltd’

Credit card

Full amount OR Charge50%tomycreditcardnowand50%inDecember2012(cardmustbevaliduntilDec2012).

Visa Mastercard Diners American Express

Credit Card Number Expiry Date / Amex ID / CVV

Cardholder’s Name

Signature Date

SUBMIT YOUR SUBSCRIPTION Website aco.com.au Post ACO Subscriptions, PO Box R21, Royal Exchange NSW 1225 Fax (02)82743887 Phone 1800444444(Mon–Fri9am–5pm) In person AustralianChamberOrchestra,OperaQuays,2EastCircularQuay,Sydney(Mon–Fri9am–5pm)

NEW SUBSCRIBER BOOKING FORM CONTINUED

PRINCIPAL PARTNER

FOuNDING PARTNER GOVERNMENT PARTNERS

ACO3D FOuNDING PARTNER NATIONAL TOuR PARTNERS

OFFICIAL PARTNERS

PERTH SERIES PARTNER

CONCERT AND SERIES PARTNERS

Peter Weiss AM

EVENT PARTNERS

Holmes à Court Family Foundation The Neilson Foundation

The Ross Trust

captive moments in city life

Janet Holmes à Court AC Marc Besen AO & Eva Besen AO

NATIONAL EDuCATION PARTNERS

MUSIC, VIDEOS & MOREaco.com.au

A C O P A R T N E R SWe would like to thank our 2013 Partners for their generous support.

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ACO INSTRuMENT FuNDPeter Weiss AM, Patron

The ACO has established its Instrument Fund, to offer patrons and wholesale investors the opportunity to participate in the ownership of a bank of historic stringed instruments. The Fund’s first asset is Australia’s only Stradivarius violin, now on loan to Satu Vänskä, Principal Violin.

The ACO pays tribute to the Founding Patrons of the Fund, who have made donations to the Orchestra to assist the Fund to acquire the Stradivarius violin.

VISIONARY - $1m+ Peter Weiss AM

CONCERTO - $200,000 – $499,999 Naomi Milgrom AO

OCTET - $100,000 – $199,999 Amina Belgiorno-Nettis

quARTET - $50,000 – $99,999 John Leece OAM & Anne Leece

CHAIRMAN’S COuNCILThe Chairman’s Council is a limited membership association of high level executives and enlightened individuals who support the ACO’s international touring program and enjoy exclusive private events.

Mr Guido Belgiorno-Nettis AM Chairman Australian Chamber Orchestra & Executive Director Transfield Holdings

Mr Philip Bacon AM Director Philip Bacon Galleries

Mr David Baffsky AO

Mr Brad Banducci Director Woolworths Liquor Group

Mr Jeff Bond General Manager Peter Lehmann Wines

Mr John Borghetti Chief Executive Officer Virgin Australia

Mr Michael & Mrs Helen Carapiet

Mr Stephen & Mrs Jenny Charles

Mr & Mrs Robin Crawford

Rowena Danziger AM & Kenneth G. Coles AM

Dr Bob Every Chairman Wesfarmers Mr Robert Scott Managing Director Wesfarmers Insurance

Mr Angelos Frangopoulos Chief Executive Officer Australian News Channel

Mr Richard Freudenstein Chief Executive Officer FOXTEL

Mr Colin Golvan SC & Dr Deborah Golvan

Mr John Grill Chief Executive Officer WorleyParsons

Mrs Janet Holmes à Court AC

Mr & Mrs Simon & Katrina Holmes à Court Observant Pty Limited

Ms Catherine Livingstone AO Chairman Telstra

Mr Andrew Low Chief Executive Officer RedBridge Grant Samuel

Mr Steven Lowy AM Chief Executive Officer Westfield Group

Mr Didier Mahout CEO Australia & NZ BNP Paribas

Mr David Mathlin Senior Principal Sinclair Knight Merz

Ms Julianne Maxwell

Mr Michael Maxwell

Mr Geoff McClellan Partner Freehills

Mr Donald McGauchie AO Chairman Nufarm Limited

Mr John Meacock Managing Partner NSW Deloitte

Ms Naomi Milgrom AO

Ms Jan Minchin Director Tolarno Galleries

Mr Jim Minto Managing Director TAL

Mr Clark Morgan Vice Chairman UBS Wealth Management Australia

Mr Alf Moufarrige OAM Chief Executive Officer Servcorp

Mr Scott Perkins Head of Global Banking Deutsche Bank Australia/New Zealand

Mr Oliver Roydhouse Managing Director Inlink

Mr Glen Sealey General Manager Maserati Australia & New Zealand

Mr Ray Shorrocks Head of Corporate Finance, Sydney Patersons Securities

Mr Andrew Stevens Managing Director IBM Australia & New Zealand

Mr Paul Sumner Director Mossgreen Pty Ltd

Mr Mitsuyuki (Mike) Takada Managing Director & CEO Mitsubishi Australia Ltd

Mr Alden Toevs Group Chief Risk Officer Commonwealth Bank of Australia

Mr Michael Triguboff Managing Director MIR Investment Management Ltd

The Hon Malcolm Turnbull MP & Ms Lucy Turnbull AO

Ms Vanessa Wallace Director Booz & Company

Mr Kim Williams AM Chief Executive Officer News Limited

Mr Geoff Wilson Chief Executive Officer KPMG Australia

Mr Peter Yates AM Chairman, Royal Institution of Australia Director, AIAA Ltd

MEDICI PROGRAMIn the time-honoured tradition of the great Medici family, the ACO’s Medici Patrons support individual players’ Chairs and assist the Orchestra to attract and retain musicians of the highest calibre.

Mrs Amina Belgiorno-Nettis, Patron

PRINCIPAL CHAIRS

Richard Tognetti AO – Artisitic Director Michael Ball AM & Daria Ball Joan Clemenger Wendy Edwards Prudence MacLeod

Helena Rathbone – Principal Violin

Satu Vänskä – Principal Violin Robert Bryan AM & Kay Bryan

Christopher Moore – Principal Viola Tony Shepherd AO

Timo-Veikko Valve – Principal Cello Peter Weiss AM

Maxime Bibeau – Principal Double Bass John Taberner & Grant Lang

CORE CHAIRS

Aiko Goto – Violin Andrew & Hiroko Gwinnett

Mark Ingwersen – Violin

Ilya Isakovich – Violin Australian Communities Foundation – Connie & Craig Kimberley Fund

Madeleine Boud – Violin Terry Campbell AO & Christine Campbell

Rebecca Chan – Violin Ian Wallace & Kay Freedman

Nicole Divall – Viola Ian Lansdown

Viola Chair Philip Bacon AM

Melissa Barnard – Cello The Bruce & Joy Reid Foundation

Julian Thompson – Cello The Clayton Family

GuEST CHAIRS

Brian Nixon – Principal Timpani Mr Robert Albert AO & Mrs Libby Albert

FRIENDS OF MEDICI

Mr R Bruce Corlett AM & Mrs Ann Corlett

LIFE PATRONS

IBM

Mr Robert Albert AO & Mrs Libby Albert

Mr Guido Belgiorno-Nettis AM

Mrs Barbara Blackman

Mrs Roxane Clayton

Mr David Constable AM

Mr Martin Dickson AM & Mrs Susie Dickson

Mr John Harvey AM

Mrs Alexandra Martin

Mrs Fay Parker

Mr John Taberner & Mr Grant Lang

Mr Peter Weiss AM

aco.com.aumusic, videos & more

P A T R O N SWe offer our heartfelft thanks to our Patrons for their visionary support.

23

26

aiko goTo

melissa BarnarD

“The ACO’s playing is consistently ‘alive’, perhaps because its musicians are always bouncing off

each other in a spirit of fun.”The Telegraph, UK

picTure creDiTs: Outside and inside covers, and pages 1, 2, 14, 17, 18, 21 Jamie Williams; Page 3 Helen White; Page 4 Jon Frank; Page 5 Greg Gorman; Page 6 Christine Schneider; Page 7 Justin Ridler; Page 8 Marco Borggreve; Page 9 Michael Wilson; Page 10 James McMillan/Decca; Page 12 Satoshi Aoyagi; Page 13 Mats Bäcker; Page 15 Sheila Rock/Decca.

ilya isakovich

chrisTopher moore

“For vitality, elegance, playfulness and technical prowess –

all the qualities you want in a chamber ensemble, really – it would be hard

to top the ACO.”San Francisco Chronicle

ACO.COM.Au

Australian Chamber Orchestra Pty Ltd A not for profit company registered in NSW. ABN 45 001 335 182

Artistic Director Richard Tognetti AO General Manager Timothy Calnin

PO Box R21, Royal Exchange NSW 1225, Australia Opera Quays, 2 East Circular Quay, Sydney NSW 2000

Phone1800444444(Mon–Fri9am–5pm) Fax(02)82743887 Email [email protected]

saTu vänskä

If you would like to be sent a copy of the text in this brochure printed in a larger font, please phone 02 8274 3800.

Brochure Design www.leadinghand.com.au

“Intensity and virtuosity are hallmarks of this orchestra.”

New York Times, 2012