The words you are searching are inside this book. To get more targeted content, please make full-text search by clicking here.
Discover the best professional documents and content resources in AnyFlip Document Base.
Search
Published by , 2018-04-16 18:37:19

CSMF-2018-brochure-lowres

CSMF-2018-brochure-lowres

5-21 July

WELCOME FESTIVAL DIARY

Welcome Festival Diary

I am delighted and honoured to be the Artistic Director of DATE TIME CONCERT VENUE PAGE
Cambridge Summer Music Festival. It is exciting to be working with 23 June 7.30pm
new colleagues in shaping the Festival and I am grateful to them all 2 July 6.00pm Schubert Ensemble Farewell Concert Fitzwilliam Auditorium 6
for their advice, wisdom and sheer hard work in delivering this 4 July 6.15pm
year's programme of events. 5 July 8.00pm Lord Smith: The State of the Arts Pembroke College 7
6 July 7.30pm
We are excited to be celebrating our 40th Festival in 2018, with a 7 July 1.10pm Sounds Green: Prime Brass CU Botanic Garden 7
suitably fitting anniversary programme ranging from solo and 7 July 7.30pm
chamber recitals, including pianist Joanna Macgregor, the Brodsky 8 July 1.10pm Festival Opening: Mozart & Fauré King’s College Chapel 8
Quartet and the Gould Piano Trio, to well-loved orchestral and 8 July 7.30pm
choral works, such as (appropriately) Mozart’s 40th Symphony, the 9 July 1.10pm Patrick Hemmerlé: Chopin and Debussy Robinson College Chapel 9
Fauré Requiem and Bach’s mighty B Minor Mass. 9 July 7.30pm
10 July 7.30pm Lunchtime: Cambridge Voices Reinvented All Saints’ Church 10
The Festival has always been about exploring less familiar and less 11 July 6.15pm
formal music too, as well as giving a platform to young upcoming 11 July 9.00pm Blazin’ Fiddles Cambridge Junction 10
talent. Among the huge range of sounds and styles to sample 12 July 6.30pm
there’ll be chamber music by Schoenberg, sophisticated jazz, a © John Wood 12 July 8.00pm Lunchtime: Ben Comeau – piano Robinson College Chapel 11
traditional fiddle band and some toe-tapping samba. 13 July 1.10pm
13 July 7.30pm Songs before Sleep: Ashley Riches The Old Divinity School 11
CSM’s long-established tradition of supporting new artists and 14 July 1.10pm
new music will also be celebrated. A highlight this year will be 14 July 7.30pm Lunchtime: The Karolos Ensemble EU Reformed Church 12
the world premiere of a new work by rising star Kate Whitley, 15 July 1.10pm
co-commissioned with BBC Radio 3 and the Royal Philharmonic 15 July 8.30pm Septura: Kleptomania – Song Swag West Road Concert Hall 12
Society, which will be broadcast across the UK. The Festival will 16 July 7.30pm
once again feature the ever popular Sounds Green series of open- 17 July 7.30pm Gould Piano Trio Jesus College Chapel 13
air concerts in the Cambridge Botanic Garden and lunchtime 18 July 1.10pm
recitals providing a platform for rising musical stars. 18 July 6.15pm Sounds Green: She’Koyokh CU Botanic Garden 14
19 July 7.30pm
I wish all our audiences and artists a wonderful summer of music! 20 July 1.10pm Silent Movie: with live organ improvisation St John’s College Chapel 14
20 July 7.30pm
David Hill, Festival Director 21 July 1.10pm Armonico Consort: Come and Sing St Paul’s Church 15
21 July 7.30pm
25 July 6.15pm Armonico Consort: Supersize Polyphony OLEM Catholic Church 15
4 Aug 7.30pm
Lunchtime: Harriet Mackenzie & Graham Walker Clare College Chapel 16

Brodsky Quartet: Wheel of 4Tunes Jesus College Chapel 17

Lunchtime: Lucy Taylor & Jeremy Thurlow Corpus Christi Chapel 18

Joanna MacGregor West Road Concert Hall 19

Lunchtime: Oliver Cope – harp Clare College Chapel 20

Brochure illustrations Joy Lisney – cello American Cemetery 20
by Ophelia Redpath
Catriona Morison & Joseph Middleton Old Divinity School 21

Daniel Cainer: Gefilte Fish & Chips Unitarian Church 22

Lunchtime: Flute and Piano Sidney Sussex College 23

Sounds Green: TG Collective CU Botanic Garden 23

The Trumpet Shall Sound Queens’ College Chapel 24

Lunchtime: Jonathan Ryan – organ Queens’ College Chapel 25

Joe Stilgoe: Singer, pianist, songwriter Downing College 25

Lunchtime: Simply Reeds St Columba’s Church 26

English Voices: Bach Mass in B minor West Road Concert Hall 26

Sounds Green: Afrosamba CU Botanic Garden 27

Aurora Orchestra: Shostakovich Saffron Hall 27

Festival Venue Information see page 5
Festival Booking Information see page 31

page 2 Festival Box Office: Cambridge Live | 01223 357851 Information: www.cambridgesummermusic.com page 3

SPONSORS, FRIENDS & SUPPORTERS THE VENUES

From the Friends’ Secretary Cambridge The Venues 8 Emmanuel United 16 Robinson College
Summer Music Reformed Church Grange Road, CB3 9AN
The Friends of Cambridge Summer Music are the closest 1 All Saints’ Church Trumpington Street, CB2 1RR
supporters of CSM’s work in the Cambridge community. Each Honorary Patrons Jesus Lane, CB5 8BW 17 St Columba’s Church
year our Friends give thousands of pounds towards the charity’s Lord Smith of Finsbury 9 Fitzwilliam College Downing Street, CB2 3EL
core operating costs, forming the backbone of our financial Dame Mary Archer 2 Cambridge American Storey’s Way, CB3 0DG
stability. We welcome old Friends and new, especially in this, our Tim Brown Cemetery 18 St John’s College
40th season, and as we plan for the next five-year cycle. Stephen Cleobury Madingley Road, CB23 7PH 10 Jesus College St John’s Street, CB2 1TP
Friends’ benefits include reserved seats, priority booking, invit- Germaine Greer Jesus Lane, CB5 8BL
ations to a special reception, opportunities to meet performers John Rutter 3 Cambridge Junction 19 St Paul’s Church
and a complimentary copy of the Festival Programme. Clifton Way, CB1 7GX 11 King’s College Hills Road, CB2 1JP
See page 29 for further details or visit our website – Vice-Presidents King’s Parade, CB2 1ST
cambridgesummermusic.co.uk – where you can download Katie Derham 4 Cambridge University 20 Sidney Sussex College
an application form. Friends also have an opportunity to Henry Goodman Botanic Garden 12 Old Divinity School Sidney Street, CB2 3HU
help fund a concert of their choice, either as individuals or Joanna Lumley 1 Brookside, CB2 1JE St John’s College
as Concert Supporter Groups. Please contact me St John’s Street, CB2 1TP 21 Unitarian Church
([email protected]) for further information. Trustees 5 Clare College Emmanuel Road, CB1 1JW
We look forward to seeing you at the Festival concerts – and Howard Mason (Chairman) Trinity Lane, CB2 1TL 13 Our Lady & the English
look out for an announcement of the Friends’ Reception to be Julia Seiber Boyd Martyrs Catholic Church 22 West Road Concert Hall
held during the Festival. Clare Gilmour 6 Corpus Christi College Hills Road, CB2 1JR 11 West Road, CB3 9DP
Meredith Lloyd-Evans, Friends’ Secretary Hatty Harris Trumpington Street, CB2 1RH
Roland Klein 14 Pembroke College BOX OFFICE
Thank you... Meredith Lloyd-Evans 7 Downing College Trumpington St, CB2 1RF
Patricia Ryan Regent Street, CB2 1DQ 23 Cambridge Live Tickets
Cambridge Summer Music is grateful to its many sponsors, 15 Queens’ College 2 Wheeler Street, CB2 3QB
donors and partners including Hannay Robertson, the TTP Executive Committee 9 Silver Street, CB3 9ET
Group, the Howard Foundation, the Williams Church Music Julie Anderson 2
Trust, Coutts & Co, the Countess of Munster Musical Trust, our Marguerite Howlett-Jones TO A14 BRIDGE STREET 10 TO A14 (E) &
media partner Cambridge Independent and the Patrons and Amy Klohr TO M11 & A10 NEWMARKET
Friends of CSM. Erica Lowry JCT 13 JESUS LANE
Jane O’Connell NORTH 18 12
Media Sponsor Robert Stripe 1
SIDNEY STREET20
Cambridge Summer Music Director TRINITY STREET KING STREET
David Hill CHRIST’S PIECES
[email protected]
www.cambridgesummermusic.com Administrator QUEEN’S ROAD GARRET HOSTEL TRINITY LANE EMMANUEL RD
Simon Patterson LANE
Cambridge Summer Music MARKET STREET
@cambridgemusic Press Officer GRANGE ROAD BURRELL’S WALK SENATE HOUSE MARKET DRUMMER ST
Margaret Levin PASSAGE PLACE BUS STATION

Registered Charity No 1068417. 5 21

VAT No 69426948 16 ST ANDREW’S STREET11 23 EAST ROAD
KING’S PARADE
Registered in England as a limited WEST ROAD THE PARK TERRACE PARKSIDE
company No 3475445 BACKS
22 6 DOWNING STREET 17 PARKER’S PIECE
15
A1134 SILVER STREET PEMBROKE STREET GONVILLE PLACE MILL RD

14 7
8

SIDGWICK AVENUE REGENT STREET A603

TENNIS COURT ROAD
TRUMPINGTON STREET

NEWNHAM ROAD COE FEN 13
FEN CAUSEWAY
A603 LENSFIELD ROAD ST PAUL’S RD

GRANGE ROAD A603 A1134 HILLS ROAD 19
LAMMAS LAND TRUMPINGTON ROAD
TO THE STATION
TO M11
JCT 12 3

A1134 TO BATEMAN STREET page 5
M11 JCT 11
4

page 4 Festival Box Office: Cambridge Live | 01223 357851 Information: www.cambridgesummermusic.com

PRE-FESTIVAL EVENTS PRE-FESTIVAL EVENTS

Schubert Ensemble Farewell Concert Lord Smith:
The State of
Saturday 23 June, 7.30pm After 35 years at the the Arts
forefront of British chamber
Fitzwilliam College Auditorium music, the Schubert Monday 2 July, 6.00pm Sounds Green
Ensemble will play for the
(by kind permission of the Master and Fellows of Fitzwilliam College) last time in Cambridge, as Old Library, Cambridge University Botanic Garden
part of its farewell season, Pembroke College
William Howard piano visiting favourite venues to On Wednesday evenings in July Cambridge University
Simon Blendis violin say thank you and goodbye. (by kind permission of the Master and Botanic Garden rings to the sound of live music when we
Jane Salmon cello Fellows of Pembroke College) present Sounds Green – the best in open-air music.
Douglas Paterson viola Tonight’s programme is one
Peter Buckoke double bass of passion and nostalgia. Lord Smith Master of Bring a rug and a picnic; open to all ages.
The rich romanticism of Pembroke College Food, ice creams and drinks on sale.
Vaughan Williams Piano Quintet Vaughan Williams’s Piano
Quintet (a recently Chris Smith, former Culture Music from 6.15pm; garden closes at 8.00pm.
Judith Weir Piano Quintet (2018) discovered early work) is Secretary, who was made a Life
tinged with poignant Peer in 2005, will reflect on the Admission to garden: £6 adults, £5.50 concessions
Dvorˇák Piano Quartet in E Flat longing, making it a perfect past twenty years of Arts free for accompanied children 16 and under.
foil to Dvorˇák’s exuberant, achievement and policy in
“… a marvellously unified ensemble, imparting their folk-inspired second Piano Britain – and on where we are Retiring collection towards the cost of concerts – please look
energy and lyricism to anything to which they turn their Quartet. In between, the now, still to a certain extent out for stewards bearing buckets as you leave!
expert hands.” Ensemble performs its living off the legacy of a golden
Classic FM Magazine fiftieth and final major age, but with major challenges Prime Brass
commission – a tender and and issues confronting us. He
Tickets £19.50 (students and unwaged £10) witty re-imagining of will argue for the overwhelming Wednesday 4 July
Schubert’s song Abschied importance of the Arts in 6.15pm
Prices include box office booking fee (Farewell) by long-term society, both for intrinsic and
collaborator Judith Weir. for practical reasons, and will Cambridge University
lament their neglect by Botanic Garden
CSM is grateful to The Schubert contemporary politics and
Ensemble Trust for its support of the policy. First up is Prime Brass, the
Piano Quintet by Judith Weir. talented, Cambridge-based
Tickets £15.00 ten-piece brass ensemble
with a strong local following.
Price includes box office booking fee Established nearly 30 years
ago, Prime Brass is well
known for its performances at
the lighter end of the musical
spectrum and for its highly
popular family concerts.

“Exceptional brass
ensemble Prime Brass.”
Classic FM
© Jack Liebeck
© Prime Brass

page 6 Festival Box Office: Cambridge Live | 01223 357851 Information: www.cambridgesummermusic.com page 7

THURSDAY 5 JULY 2018 FRIDAY 6 JULY 2018

FESTIVAL OPENING: What could be more fitting Patrick Hemmerlé: Chopin and Debussy
Mozart’s 40th & than to open the 40th
Fauré’s Requiem Cambridge Summer Music Friday 6 July, 7.30pm Last year, Festival audiences were treated to the experience
Festival with Mozart’s Robinson College of French pianist Patrick Hemmerlé playing all 48 of Bach’s
Thursday 5 July, 8pm celebrated 40th Symphony? Chapel Preludes and Fugues (otherwise known as Books 1 and 2 of
King’s College Chapel, Cambridge The best known of all his the Well-Tempered Clavier), in two unforgettable recitals.
symphonies, its restless (by kind permission of the Warden and Now Patrick returns to perform preludes by two giants of the
(by kind permission of the Provost and Fellows of King’s College) opening bars are instantly Fellows of Robinson College) piano repertoire, Chopin and Debussy.
recognisable. Mozart often
Bach Choir used the key of G minor to Patrick Hemmerlé piano Drawing inspiration from Bach’s Well-Tempered Clavier to
Orpheus Sinfonia express darker emotions in compose his own cycle of 24 Preludes, Chopin gave the
his music and this piece is no Chopin Prelude form an independent existence as a usually very short,
David Hill conductor exception, although there are 24 Preludes Op.28 undeveloped piece, almost a fragment, which nevertheless
moments of sunshine and Debussy contains an entire world. Following Chopin, many composers
Alison Ponsford-Hill soprano brilliance too. 12 Preludes, Book 2 adopted the form and the idea behind it. Among these,
Simon Ponsford countertenor Debussy is perhaps the most significant, and his own cycle of
Andrew Rupp baritone Fauré’s deeply contemplative Tickets £22.00 24 Preludes is equal in importance to Chopin’s. For this concert
Requiem and Leonard (students and unwaged £11) Patrick Hemmerlé will perform the 12 preludes from Book 2. In
Mozart Symphony No.40 Bernstein’s irrepressible, jazzy this anniversary year of Debussy’s death, it will be interesting to
Fauré Requiem setting of six Hebrew psalms Prices include box office booking fee put these two masterpieces in perspective.
Bernstein Chichester Psalms (commissioned by Chichester
Cathedral) complete the
Tickets £35, £30, £25, £20 concert, with the Bach Choir
and Orpheus Sinfonia under
(additional box office fee for credit cards) the baton of Festival Director
David Hill.
PLEASE NOTE: Tickets for this concert are available from
King’s College Box Office, Tel: 01223 769340

David Hill Andrew Rupp Simon Ponsford Alison Ponsford-Hill

Bach Choir © Patrick Hemmerlé

page 8 Festival Box Office: Cambridge Live | 01223 357851 Information: www.cambridgesummermusic.com page 9

SATURDAY 7 JULY 2018 SUNDAY 8 JULY 2018

Lunchtime Concert: Blazin’ Fiddles Lunchtime Concert: Songs before Sleep

Cambridge Saturday 7 July, 7.30pm Ben Comeau Sunday 8 July, 7.30pm
Voices
Reinvented Cambridge Junction Sunday 8 July, 1.10pm The Old Divinity School, St John’s College

Saturday 7 July, 1.10pm Bruce MacGregor, Jenna Reid, Robinson College (by kind permission of the Master and Fellows of St John’s College)
Rua Macmillan, Kristan Harvey fiddles Chapel
All Saints’ Church Ashley Riches bass-baritone
Anna Massie guitar (by kind permission of the Warden and
Cambridge Voices Fellows of Robinson College) Joseph Middleton piano
Ian de Massini director Angus Lyon piano
Ben Comeau piano Radio 3 New Generation Artist Ashley Riches is joined by
This concert commemorates one Blazin’ Fiddles are one of the world’s most prolific fiddle pianist Joseph Middleton for this recital of songs on a theme of
hundred years since the 1918 groups. Celebrating their 20th year in 2018 – and with the A recent graduate of music night and visions, to include works by Schubert, Gounod,
Armistice; the foundation of the release of their ninth album, The Key, in November 2017 – no from Cambridge University Duparc, Saint-Saëns, Debussy and Barber. The programme also
Republic of Estonia; and the other band has quite managed to capture the excitement, (gaining a starred first), Ben features the world premiere of two pieces by composer Kate
deaths of the composers passion and sensitivity of traditional Scottish music. Comeau divides his time Whitley – settings of poems by Julia Copus, Love, like water
Debussy and Parry. Performing between piano, organ, and In defence of adultery – and finishes with Richard Rodney
without a conductor, the choir’s With a ‘Blazers’ performance comes the rare opportunity to composition and jazz. At the Bennett’s Songs before Sleep, using texts taken from the
innovative programme will hear regional musical expressions from Scotland’s Highlands heart of today’s eclectic recital Oxford Dictionary of Nursery Rhymes.
include excerpts from Victoria’s and islands, and the individual style from each fiddler – Bruce are three Preludes and
Battle Mass for double-choir, MacGregor from Inverness, Shetlander Jenna Reid, Nairn’s Fugues from Bach’s Well- Kate Whitley’s pieces have been co-commissioned by
four of Parry’s Songs of Farewell, Rua Macmillan, and Orcadian Kristan Harvey – in a blend of Tempered Clavier Book 2, and Cambridge Summer Music, the BBC and the Royal Philharmonic
and first performances of a ensemble and solo sets. Fiddles and bows come alight with three Chopin Études. Ben’s Society. This concert will be recorded by BBC Radio 3 and
choral version of the slow guitar and piano from Anna Massie and Angus Lyon, enthusiasm for the new, broadcast on 10 July at 7.30pm.
movement of Debussy’s String delivering a musically intoxicating evening for all. experimental and fun then
Quartet. In addition there will be comes to the fore in new Tickets £22.00 (students and unwaged £11)
Leidvin Mons Takle’s Ave Maria Whatever the hall – be it a Highland village or London’s Royal transcriptions of music by
(specially commissioned for this Albert – this legendary, multi award-winning act never fails to Astor Piazzolla and the Prices include box office booking fee
concert), We will remember set the hearts of its audiences alight. Icelandic singer/songwriter
them in Flanders Fields by Ian Björk, together with Ashley Riches Joseph Middleton
de Massini and works by Arvo Tickets £26.50 (students and unwaged £12.50) improvisations on audience
Pärt and Veljo Tormis. requests.
Prices include box office booking fee
Please note, there are no toilets at this venue. Free admission,
PLEASE NOTE: Tickets for this concert are available from retiring collection
Free admission, Cambridge Junction Box Office, Tel: 01223 511511
retiring collection

© Cambridge Voices Reinvented
© Blazin’ Fiddles
© Ben Comeau
© Ashley Riches
© Joseph Middleton

page 10 Festival Box Office: Cambridge Live | 01223 357851 Information: www.cambridgesummermusic.com page 11

MONDAY 9 JULY 2018 TUESDAY 10 JULY 2018

Lunchtime Concert: Septura: Kleptomania – Gould Piano Trio
Song Swag
The Karolos Tuesday 10 July, 7.30pm
Ensemble Monday 9 July, 7.30pm
Jesus College Chapel
Monday 9 July, 1.10pm West Road Concert Hall
Emmanuel United (by kind permission of the Master and Fellows of Jesus College)
Reformed Church Huw Morgan, Alan Thomas, Simon Cox trumpets
Matthew Gee, Matthew Knight, Daniel West trombones Lucy Gould violin
Harriet Mackenzie violin Peter Smith tuba Alice Neary cello
Sarah Jane Bradley viola Benjamin Frith piano
Graham Walker cello Maurice Ravel Mother Goose
Haydn Trio in A flat, Hob XV: 14
Mozart Gabriel Fauré Six Mélodies Schoenberg Verklärte Nacht, arr. for piano trio by Eduard Steuermann
Divertimento in E flat Brahms Trio in B Major, Op.8
George Gershwin Three Preludes
All three members of The Songbook The award-winning Gould Piano Trio, which celebrated its 25th anniversary last year, is considered
Karolos Ensemble are An American in Paris one of the finest ensembles of its kind performing today.
internationally renowned
soloists and recording artists in This delightful and highly original programme explores a Tonight’s concert opens with one of Haydn’s many piano trios – he composed about 45 of them –
their own right. Today, they are great transatlantic relationship that charts a course from and displays the extraordinary inventiveness for which he is so rightly remembered. Schoenberg’s
performing Mozart’s Fauré’s Mélodies, through Ravel’s Mother Goose, to his Verklärte Nacht (‘Transfigured Night’) is more commonly heard in its string sextet or string
Divertimento in E flat, his friend Gershwin’s Songbook and the iconic An American in orchestra forms, but this piano trio arrangement by a pupil was sanctioned by the composer
masterpiece for string trio. Paris, specially arranged for brass and solo car-horns. himself. A lush and ultra-romantic early work, it tells the story of a woman confessing to her lover
String quartets often come on a moonlit walk that she is pregnant by another man. Brahms’ wonderful B major piano trio is
across this wonderful work The name of the programme – Kleptomania – reflects the also an early composition, written when he was only twenty years old and full of the exuberance
when one of their violinists fails fact that the brass septet is a brand new invention. There is of youth.
to turn up for a rehearsal – and no canon of repertoire and no grand history of great Tickets £27.50 (students and unwaged £11)
quickly discover that its six compositions, so Septura is inventing one. Like musical Robin
superbly crafted movements Hoods, they steal from the richest ensembles to create a Prices include box office booking fee
merit a prominent place in any musical parallel universe in which the brass septet rules.
chamber music programme.
Tickets £22.50 (Senior £16.88; students £5.63)
Tickets £16.50
Prices include box office booking fee
Price includes box office booking fee

Lunchtime Deal: 10% off, see p.31

Harriet Mackenzie Graham Walker

Sarah Jane Bradley © Septura
© Gould Piano Trio
page 12
Festival Box Office: Cambridge Live | 01223 357851 Information: www.cambridgesummermusic.com page 13

WEDNESDAY 11 JULY 2018 THURSDAY 12 JULY 2018

Sounds Green: Silent Movie: The General Armonico Armonico Consort:
Consort: Supersize Polyphony 360
She’Koyokh with live organ improvisation Come & Sing
Thursday 12 July, 8.00pm
Wednesday 11 July, Wednesday 11 July, 9.00pm Thursday 12 July
6.15pm 6.30pm Our Lady and the English Martyrs Catholic Church
St John’s College Chapel
Cambridge University St Paul’s Church Armonico Consort
Botanic Garden (by kind permission of the Master and Fellows of St John’s College) Christopher Monks director
Come and sing with Armonico
She’Koyokh’s members hail The General (1926) Consort at this open rehearsal Alessandro Striggio Mass for 60 voices
from the UK, Serbia, Sweden Featuring Buster Keaton, Marion Mack, Glen Cavender of music to be performed at
and Turkey. the Armonico’s concert later Thomas Tallis Spem in Alium
Richard Hills improvised organ accompaniment the same evening in the
They bring together the nearby Our Lady and the Audiences may be familiar with Tallis’s mighty 40-part motet
stunning polyphonic melodies Set in the American Civil War, Buster Keaton’s comedy classic English Martyrs Catholic Spem in Alium, one of the glories of English church music,
and intricate rhythms of is celebrated for its hair-raising action as a Southern railway Church. written around 1570. The chances are, however, that most of us
Bulgaria, treasured traditions engineer pursues his locomotive and his girl across the prairies. will not have heard an even more epic work for 60 voices,
from Serbian villages, Breathtaking stunts and Keaton’s characteristic dead-pan A not-to-be-missed penned a few years earlier by Tallis’s Italian contemporary
exhilarating Gypsy dances expression will have you hanging on to your hats and rolling in opportunity to sing Tallis’ Alessandro Striggio: the Mass for 60 voices. There’s some
from the Romanian mountains the aisles by turns – all brought to life by real-time organ music magnificent motet Spem in speculation that Tallis was inspired by Striggio’s work, which
and soulful Sephardic and improvised with brilliant virtuosity by acclaimed organist Alium for 40 separate voices was the largest of its kind composed during the Renaissance.
klezmer music from Turkey, Richard Hills. with this critically-acclaimed
Macedonia, Poland and choir! Critically acclaimed choir and instrumental ensemble Armonico
Ukraine. Screen and equipment provided by Keith Hearnshaw Big Screen Presentations Consort will encircle the audience to perform these epic works,
Advance booking essential – immersing them in 360 degrees of sound. The pieces by Tallis
Bring a rug and a picnic; open Tickets £20.00 (students and unwaged £11) music will be provided. and Striggio will be interspersed with ethereal chants by
to all ages. Food, ice creams Hildegard of Bingen and other works from the period.
and drinks on sale. Prices include box office booking fee Tickets £5
Tickets £24.00 (students and unwaged £11)
Admission to garden: £6 Richard Hills Price includes box office booking fee
adults, £5.50 concessions; Prices include box office booking fee
free for accompanied children Christopher Monks
16 and under. Retiring
collection towards the cost of
concerts.

© Alex Harvey-Brown
© Immortalized On Film
© Christopher Monks
© Armonico Consort

page 14 Festival Box Office: Cambridge Live | 01223 357851 Information: www.cambridgesummermusic.com page 15

FRIDAY 13 JULY 2018 FRIDAY 13 JULY 2018

Lunchtime Concert: Brodsky Quartet: “…the players gave unstintingly of their Tonight’s choices will be
Wheel of 4Tunes passion and energies, playing with a picked from the works below
Harriet Mackenzie spirit so transformational you felt they – one from each of the four
and Graham Walker Friday 13 July, 7.30pm were actually improving the world.” groups:

Friday 13 July, 1.10pm Jesus College Chapel The Strad Purcell Chaconne
Mozart Adagio & Fugue
Clare College Chapel (by kind permission of the Master and Fellows of Jesus College) Bach The Art of Fugue I & VI
Schubert Quartettsatz
(by kind permission of the Master and Fellows of Clare College) Daniel Rowland violin Turina Bullfighter’s Prayer
Ian Belton violin Wolf Italian Serenade
Harriet Mackenzie violin Paul Cassidy viola
Graham Walker cello Jacqueline Thomas cello Beethoven String Quartet in
F minor, Op.95
JS Bach Sonata in G minor for solo violin, First presented to
BWV 1001 celebrate their own Britten String Quartet No.3,
40th anniversary, the Op.94
Invention No.11 in G minor Brodsky Quartet’s
adventurous concert Janacek Quartet No.2
Invention No.7 in E minor format produces 'Intimate Letters'
a different
Suite No.2 in D minor for solo cello, programme of Shostakovich Quartet No.8
BWV 1008 four quartets in C minor, Op.110
every time.
Harriet Mackenzie and Graham Walker present Borodin String Quartet No.2
the final concert in their highly acclaimed Throughout the in D, ‘Kismet'
JS Bach Series for Cambridge Summer Music evening the
Festival. wheel is spun to Elgar String Quartet in
select works E minor, Op.83
This concert features the first of the solo violin from 24 of their
sonatas from Bach’s monumental set, as well as favourites. The Alvarez Metro Chabacano
the inspirational D minor Cello Suite and possibilities are
Graham and Harriet’s own arrangements of delicious, but Szyman´ ski Four Pieces for
Bach’s Inventions, which seem to have a new you won’t know String Quartet
dimension when played on stringed instruments. what you’re
going to hear until Tanaka At the Grave of
These concerts have been extremely popular – the wheel comes to Beethoven
early booking is advised. a halt.
Jegede Quartet No.2
Tickets £16.50
Kraggerud Preghiera
Price includes box office booking fee
Brodsky Surprise!
Lunchtime Deal: 10% off, see page 31

Tickets £27.50 Bartok String Quartet No.1
(students and
unwaged £11) Ravel String Quartet in F

Prices include box Mendelssohn String Quartet
office booking fee No.6, Op.80

© Graham Walker Shostakovich Quartet No.5
© Harriet Mackenzie in B flat major, Op.92
© Brodsky Quartet
Beethoven String Quartet,
Op.132

Dvorˇák String Quartet Op.96
‘American’

page 16 Festival Box Office: Cambridge Live | 01223 357851 Information: www.cambridgesummermusic.com page 17

SATURDAY 14 JULY 2018 “MacGregor’s SATURDAY 14 JULY 2018
verve, energy and
Lunchtime Concert: astounding Joanna MacGregor
technique are
Lucy Taylor & always at the Saturday 14 July, 7.30pm
Jeremy Thurlow service of the
music and never West Road Concert Hall
Saturday 14 July, 1.10pm vice versa. Her
Corpus Christi College Chapel ability to inhabit so Joanna MacGregor piano
many sound worlds
(by kind permission of the Master and Fellows of Corpus Christi College) with the same Beethoven 32 Variations in C minor WoO 80
intensity and
Lucy Taylor mezzo-soprano commitment is Chopin Four Mazurkas Op.30
Jeremy Thurlow piano profoundly
impressive ... ” Chopin Three Mazurkas Op.59
Schumann Liederkreis Op.39
BBC Classical Review Beethoven Sonata in F minor Op.57 ‘Appassionata’
Duparc L’invitation au voyage
Phydilé The programme will also include works by
Chanson triste Ginastera, Gubaidulina and Say.
La vie antérieure
One of the world’s leading pianists and recording
Lucy and Jeremy have chosen some of the most atmospheric artists, Joanna MacGregor makes a welcome return to
songs in the repertoire for their lunchtime concert today. the Festival with this colourful programme of
Schumann’s song cycle Liederkreis encapsulates in miniature a Beethoven and Chopin interspersed with music from
whole world of Romantic imagination and bittersweet emotion, South America.
from radiant moonlight and shadowy twilight to rustling woods
and mysterious strangers. These jewel-like settings of Beethoven’s 32 Variations were an immediate hit and
Eichendorff’s poetry are complemented by the languorous, remain so to this day. As well as the passion we expect
sensual and ecstatic songs of Duparc. from Beethoven, they deal with the basic stuff of piano
playing: repeated notes, arpeggios, thirds, octaves,
“… the richest voice around, uniform and deep-hued, and fast scales.
subtle and feminine … [a] really impressive artist”
Opera Soulful, witty and often dramatic, Chopin’s Mazurkas
can be enjoyed as a reflection on his life and Polish
Free admission, retiring collection culture, and a testimony to his elegant improvisation.
Sealed into each are childhood memories and
© Lucy Taylor bittersweet love, conflict and resignation.
© Jeremy Thurlow
© Pal Hansen Joanna Macgregor’s love of world music has been
nurtured by her concert tours, particularly to Latin
America. Tonight we hear folk-inspired dances of
Alberto Ginastera (Argentina); a dramatic Chaconne by
the Tatar-Russian Sofia Gubaidulina; and the short but
powerful Black Earth by Turkish composer Fazil Say.

Joanna completes her programme with Beethoven’s
monumental Appassionata sonata. Woven into an
orchestral-sized canvas, it features ferocious climaxes
and often shocking dynamics, suggesting an epic,
romantic journey with a constantly fretful undercurrent.

Tickets £24.00, £22.00, £20.00, £15.00
(students and unwaged £11 for balcony seats)

Prices include box office booking fee

page 18 Festival Box Office: Cambridge Live | 01223 357851 Information: www.cambridgesummermusic.com page 19

SUNDAY 15 JULY 2018 MONDAY 16 JULY 2018

Lunchtime Concert: Joy Lisney Catriona Morison & “… a singer of much character,
Joseph Middleton real musical intelligence.”
Oliver Cope Sunday 15 July, 8.30pm
Monday 16 July, 7.30pm The Guardian
Sunday 15 July, 1.10pm Cambridge American Cemetery
Old Divinity School, St John’s College “… the depth of her
Clare College Chapel Joy Lisney cello engagement with both words
(by kind permission of the Master and Fellows of St John’s College) and music held one in the
(by kind permission of the Master and Britten Suite No.3, Op.87 moment.”
Fellows of Clare College) Lisney ScordaturA Catriona Morison mezzo-soprano
Bach Chaconne in D minor Opera
Oliver Cope harp Joseph Middleton piano
Cellist and composer Joy Lisney, has been hailed as ‘the new “Joseph Middleton: rightful heir
Talented young harpist Oliver Jacqueline du Pré’. This recital of works for solo cello includes BBC Cardiff Singer of the World 2017, Scottish to legendary accompanist
Cope is gaining a reputation Benjamin Britten’s profound and haunting Suite No. 3, as well mezzo-soprano Catriona Morison has been Gerald Moore.”
for performances that are not as Bach’s Chaconne in D minor, originally for solo violin, and praised in the New York Times for her ‘silky,
just graceful and elegant, but described by Brahms as containing ‘a whole world of the lightly smoky tone, easygoing dramatic flair and Opera Magazine.nl
full of energy and vigour. A deepest thoughts and most powerful feelings’. unflappable poise’.
student of Ieuan Jones at the
Royal College of Music, Oliver Joy will also play her own Equally at home on the opera stage or in the
has chosen a varied and lively atmospheric and lyrical recital hall, tonight she will be presenting a
programme for today’s composition ScordaturA. glorious selection of songs by Mahler, Vellonnes,
concert, including a Handel Brahms, Grieg and Fauré, accompanied by
concerto for harp; La Source The recital, 100 years after celebrated Lieder pianist Joseph Middleton,
by the great nineteenth the end of WW1, will take described in Classical Music Magazine as ‘one of
century teacher and player place in the memorial the most talented, intuitive, collaborative pianists
Albert Zabel (who was harpist building at Cambridge’s of his generation’.
with St Petersburg’s Imperial American Cemetery on
Ballet in Tchaikovsky’s heyday); Madingley Hill – surely the Tickets £27.50 (students and unwaged £11)
and the virtuosic Rhapsodie by most poignant of settings.
French-American composer, Prices include box office booking fee
harpist and organist Marcel Tickets £19.00, £16.00
Grandjany. Composed in 1921,
this youthful work, based on Prices include box office
the theme of a Gregorian booking fee
© Oliver CopeEaster chant, has become a
© Joy Lisneyrecital showpiece.
© Joseph Middleton
Free admission,
© Catriona Morisonretiring collection

page 20 Festival Box Office: Cambridge Live | 01223 357851 Information: www.cambridgesummermusic.com page 21

TUESDAY 17 JULY 2018 WEDNESDAY 18 JULY 2018

Daniel Cainer: Lunchtime Concert: Sounds Green:
Gefilte Fish & Chips
Flute and piano TG Collective
Tuesday 17 July, 7.30pm
Wednesday 18 July, 1.10pm Wednesday 18 July, 6.15pm
Unitarian Church
Sidney Sussex College Chapel Cambridge University Botanic Garden
Written and performed by Daniel Cainer
(by kind permission of the Master and Fellows of The diverse instrumental group TG Collective
Every song tells a story Sidney Sussex College) brings together an intriguing mix of hotclub,
Every story touches the heart flamenco, jazz and contemporary classical
Rosie Bowker flute influences, based around the core of guitarists
Multi-award-winning Jewish songwriter, broadcaster and Aleksandra Myslek piano Jamie Fekete and Sam Slater. Creating ‘an
musical storyteller Daniel Cainer performs excerpts from his exciting, sensuous sound’, TGC perform original
highly acclaimed show. Smart, funny, timely and only slightly Flautist Rosie Bowker (who studied for her music and arrangements, touching on influences
irreverent, Cainer’s deeply moving tales about his family and first degree at Christ’s College, Cambridge) as varied as Paco de Lucia to Django Reinhardt
observational comedy are a joy. Feuding tailors, a naughty is joined by Polish pianist Aleksandra Myslek and JS Bach. They have built up a strong
rabbi, family fables (and foibles) – the human condition is all to present a programme of Romantic pieces following with their intense live performances.
here, lovingly and intelligently depicted in a remarkable for flute and piano. They open with a sonata
collection of stories-in-song. With brilliant rhyming and by Mel Bonis, a prolific French composer Bring a rug and a picnic; open to all ages. Food,
wordplay, great musicianship and haunting tunes, this is an with more than 300 works to her name, who ice creams and drinks on sale.
evening that you’ll never forget. studied at the Paris Conservatoire alongside
Debussy and Pierné. The concert finishes Admission to garden: £6 adults, £5.50
‘An extraordinary performer. His songs are at times with a Reinecke flute sonata, inspired by a concessions; free for accompanied children 16
heartbreakingly poignant and at others laugh-out-loud popular 19th century novella about a water and under. Retiring collection towards the cost
funny. Utterly charming, highly recommended.’ sprite by the German author Fouqué. In of concerts.
Edinburgh Festivals Guide between, Aleksandra performs a Barcarolle
by Fauré – a form he experimented with
Tickets £16.50 (students and unwaged £11) throughout his composing career. It is
derived from the folk songs traditionally
Prices include box office booking fee sung by Venetian gondoliers, and was also
much loved by Chopin and Mendelssohn.

Free admission, retiring collection

© Daniel Cainer
© Rosie Bowker
© Mark Whittaker

page 22 Festival Box Office: Cambridge Live | 01223 357851 Information: www.cambridgesummermusic.com page 23

THURSDAY 19 JULY 2018 FRIDAY 20 JULY 2018

The Trumpet © Crispian Steele-Perkins Lunchtime Concert: Joe Stilgoe
Shall Sound
Organ Friday 20 July, 7.30pm
Thursday 19 July, 7.30pm Recital
Howard Theatre, Downing College
Queens’ College Chapel Friday 20 July, 1.10pm
(by kind permission of the Master and Fellows of Downing College)
(by kind permission of the President and Fellows of Queens’ College Chapel
Queens’ College) Joe Stilgoe singer, pianist, songwriter
(by kind permission of the President and
Crispian Steele-Perkins trumpet Fellows of Queens’ College) Described by The Times as ‘Dapper, handsome and quick
witted, and gifted with dazzling digits’, singer, pianist and
David Hill organ Jonathan Ryan organ songwriter Joe Stilgoe combines virtuosic musicianship with
lightning fast improvisation.
Trumpeter Crispian Steele-Perkins is American organist Jonathan
world-renowned for the brilliance and Ryan has six major For tonight’s performance Joe has chosen a joyously
versatility of his playing, which he international prizes, a Grammy entertaining mix of his own songs as well as some well-loved
demonstrates in this wide-ranging award nomination and a jazz classics from the likes of Cole Porter and Louis Prima.
recital accompanied on the organ by critically acclaimed début CD
David Hill. under his belt. Today he puts Tickets £29.00
the exceptionally fine three-
Their varied programme will showcase manual Binns organ (built in Price includes box office booking fee
the evolution of the trumpet through 1892) at Queens through its
17th and 18th century classics by paces with a varied Generously supported by the Howard Foundation.
Clarke, Handel, Haydn and Mozart to programme of 19th and 20th
more contemporary works that push century works. The “He writes the songs, sings them, plays them and creates
the boundaries of the modern valved programme will include the arrangements – all with a panache that leaves the rest
instrument. David Hill will also Comes Autumn Time by Leo of us bug-eyed.”
contribute two works for solo organ: Sowerby, Dudley Buck’s The Observer
Haydn’s delightful miniatures Pieces Variations on the Last Rose of
for a Musical Clock and Georgi © John Wood Summer, selections from
Mushel's Toccata Calvin Hampton’s Five
Dances, three études by
Be prepared for some surprises! Robert Schumann and
Alexandre Guilmant’s mighty
Tickets £22.00 first sonata (later re-worked as
(students and unwaged £11) a symphony for organ and
orchestra).
Prices include box office booking fee
Free admission,
“Anyone who has seen Crispian retiring collection
Steele-Perkins in recital will know
how persuasively he communicates
his art, often fortified by instructive
and entertaining verbal interludes.”

Gramophone

“Long ones, short ones, fat ones, © Jonathan Ryan
thin ones... every conceivable © Joe Stilgoe
shape of trumpet (and some
inconceivable ones) come alike
to Crispian Steele-Perkins.”

Portsmouth News

page 24 Festival Box Office: Cambridge Live | 01223 357851 Information: www.cambridgesummermusic.com page 25

SATURDAY 21 JULY 2018 POST FESTIVAL EVENTS

Lunchtime Concert: English Voices: Sounds Green: Festival Coda:
Bach Mass in B minor
Simply Reeds Afrosamba Aurora Orchestra:
Saturday 21 July, 7.30pm
Saturday 21 July, 1.10pm Wednesday 25 July Shostakovich 9 from memory
West Road Concert Hall 6.15pm
St Columba’s Church Presented by Saffron Hall
English Voices Cambridge University
Viv Halton, Graham Dolby, Tim Brown director Botanic Garden Saturday 4 August, 7.30pm
Jon Halton, Claire Stevenson The Orchestra of English Voices Saffron Hall, Saffron Walden
Bojan Cicic leader Making a welcome return
The Cambridge-based to Sounds Green is the Denis Kozhukhin piano
saxophone and clarinet quartet Often thought of as Bach’s ‘monumental masterpiece’ here is four-piece band Aurora Orchestra
Simply Reeds has built a keen a chance to hear Bach’s B minor Mass in a revelatory version Afrosamba. Nicholas Collon conductor/presenter
following for its diverse with only ten singers and a pared down period orchestra. Tom Service presenter
repertoire encompassing a wide This approach allows the astonishing intricacy and visceral Fronted by Brazilian born
range of styles – made possible nature of Bach’s score to shine through, throwing a new light Pilo Adami, the group Mozart Ballet Music from Idomeneo (excerpts)
by the unique arrangements of onto a score that has traditionally often been performed with encompasses Afro-Brazilian
Jon Halton and Graham Dolby. an almost reverential dignity. Jazz, Samba and Bossa Shostakovich Piano Concerto No.2 in F major
This concert will showcase an Nova.
eclectic mix of big band style The ten soloists of English Voices, founded by Tim Brown Shostakovich Symphony No.9 in E-flat major
close harmony pieces, gentle whilst he was Director of Music at Clare College, are all young Joined by seasoned
classical, well-known show tunes professional singers, noted not only for the quality of their musicians from Four years ago at the BBC Proms, Aurora became the first
and traditional jazz. singing but for their energy and communicative presence. Mozambique, Brazil and orchestra to perform a symphony completely from memory. Since
the UK, influences range then the orchestra has electrified audiences around the world with
Tickets £16.50 This will be Tim Brown’s final concert as the Artistic Director from João Gilberto’s this direct and communicative performance style. For this concert,
of English Voices, offering an opportunity not only to enjoy harmonic complexities and Aurora applies its thrilling approach to Shostakovich’s ninth
Price includes box office booking fee Bach’s choral masterpiece, but to pay tribute to a choral Airto Moreira’s symphony. Join Aurora’s Principal Conductor Nicholas Collon and
director who has made such a distinguished contribution to experimental rhythms to BBC Radio 3’s Tom Service as they harness the unique versatility of
Lunchtime Deal: 10% off, see p.31 music in Cambridge over the past forty years, including many the laid back music of an orchestra playing by heart, to get under the skin of
years on the Board of Trustees of Cambridge Summer Music. Jorge Ben Jor. Shostakovich’s music, before hearing the orchestra perform the
whole work entirely from memory. Aurora is joined by Russian
Tickets £27.50, £22.00, £20.00, £15.00 Bring a rug and a picnic; pianist Denis Kozhukhin, making his debut at Saffron Hall as soloist
(students and unwaged £11 for balcony seats) open to all ages. Food, ice in Shostakovich’s much-loved second piano concerto.
creams and drinks on sale.
Prices include box office booking fee “Marvellous… Playing from memory, Aurora created an
Admission to garden: £6 organic sense of community, dynamism and inspiration.”
adults, £5.50 concessions; The New York Times
free for accompanied
children 16 and under. Tickets £35.00-£14.00 (concessions available)

Retiring collection towards PLEASE NOTE: Tickets for this concert are available from
the cost of concerts. Saffron Hall Box Office Tel: 0845 548 7650 | www.saffronhall.com

© Simply Reeds
© Afrosamba
© Nick Rutter

page 26 Festival Box Office: Cambridge Live | 01223 357851 Information: www.cambridgesummermusic.com page 27

FEATURE THE FRIENDS OF CSM

Forty summers of music! Friends of Cambridge
Summer Music
Academy of St This year Cambridge Summer Music Marian Consort Meredith Lloyd-Evans
Martin’s in the Fields is delighted to be celebrating its 40th The Friends of CSM are the closest supporters of the charity’s Friends’ Secretary
Tim Kliphuis work in the Cambridge community. Each year the Friends give
Kosmos anniversary – four decades of Sextet many thousands of pounds to support our core operating
promoting live musical performances costs, forming the backbone of our financial stability.
Voce New Zealand
of the highest calibre, to many Youth Choir Benefits of joining the Friends
Academy of thousands of visitors and residents,
Ancient Music Laura van der Heijden All Friends receive:
in and around Cambridge. • Priority booking
Red Priest Aurora Orchestra • Reserved seats (up to two) for advance bookings
The festival has its origins with • Invitation (plus one guest) to a Friends’ summer reception
Sounds Green John Wells, Church Organist at Little St Martinu Quartet • Complimentary Festival programme
Mary’s, who started Cambridge Summer • Acknowledgement in the Festival programme
Recitals as a way of bringing people into
There are five levels of Friends’ membership:
Cambridge’s historic churches and
college chapels, out of university term Friends £60+pa – individuals; £90+pa – couples
time. Performances focused initially on Benefits as listed above.
the instruments readily to hand – the
organs. John was Director of Cambridge Benefactors £150-249pa
Summer Recitals until 1986, when Anne Benefits as for Friend, plus up to four reserved seats for
Page took over. Under her stewardship advance bookings.
the Festival presented many world and
UK first performances and brought some Principal Benefactors £250-499pa
major recitalists from Europe to Britain Benefits as for Benefactor, plus private interval drinks for you
and up to three guests at a concert.
for the first time.
Patrons £500-999pa
In 1994 Juliet Abrahamson began a long Benefits as for Principal Benefactor, plus listing as a concert
and productive time as Director, sponsor (a choice of three concerts).
continuing to present world-class
soloists, chamber ensembles and Principal Patrons £1000pa and above
orchestras – as well as developing Benefits as for Patron level, plus private pre-concert or interval
drinks and tickets for you and three guests to the sponsored
Cambridge Summer Music, as it is now concert. Plus a quarter page advert for the charity of your
known, in exciting new directions. The choice in the Festival Programme.
Festival expanded to include less formal
Find out more...
music – from jazz to samba; Sounds
Green, the highly popular open-air For more information about the Friends scheme and ways of
performances in Cambridge Botanic supporting Cambridge Summer Music, please email:
[email protected] or download an
Garden were introduced; and a application form at: www.cambridgesummermusic.com where
particular focus was made of supporting you can also sign up to our mailing list.

talented young musicians on the
threshold of their performing careers.

This year we are delighted to welcome
David Hill as our Artistic Director. Under
his direction we are continuing to give

people of all ages the opportunity to
enjoy outstanding performances in
Cambridge’s most beautiful venues.

page 28 Festival Box Office: Cambridge Live | 01223 357851 Information: www.cambridgesummermusic.com page 29

HOW TO BOOK

2018 Download HOW TO BOOK
the App
Tickets for all concerts (except where otherwise indicated) are available online, over the telephone
RESIDENTIAL COURSES You’re invited to visit Cambridge Open and in person via Cambridge Live Tickets.
AND CONCERTS Studios – a free art event this July
ONLINE:
CLASSICAL • EARLY More than 300 artists are taking part in over 200 locations. www.cambridgesummermusic.com or www.cambridgelivetrust.co.uk/tickets/events-list
LIGHT • JAZZ • FOLK Explore their studios and meet the people behind the work.
TELEPHONE:
There’s a huge range of art to discover in Cambridge and 01223 357851
surrounding villages. Mon-Sat 10am-6pm

Download our easy to use app – with info about the artists and IN PERSON:
directions to their studios. You can start planning your visit today. Cambridge Live Box Office
2 Wheeler Street, Cambridge CB2 3QB
Or pick up our free yellow guidebook from libraries, Tourist Mon-Fri 12pm-6pm; Sat 10am-6pm
Information, galleries, park and ride sites and coffee shops.
ON THE DOOR:
Children are welcome – we want art to be accessible to all. Tickets will also be available on the door for all events unless sold out.

Cambridge Open Studios takes place over these DISCOUNTS
weekends: 7th/8th, 14th/15th, 21st/22nd
and 28th/29th July from 11am to 6pm GROUP BOOKINGS: 10% discount available for groups of 10+. Contact the Box Office for details.
BOOK 5 GET 10% OFF: Buy tickets to 5 evening concerts* and get 10% off.
www.camopenstudios.co.uk BOOK 8 GET 20% OFF: Buy tickets to 8 or more evening concerts* and get 20% off.
LUNCHTIME DEAL: Buy tickets for 3 lunchtime concerts (19th, 13th & 21st July) and get 10% off.
SUMMER SCHOOLS 5CVWTFC[ VJ ,WPG RO
*Excluding the concerts in King’s College Chapel, the Junction and Saffron Hall.
VIOLIN • VIOLA • CELLO 9GUV 4QCF %QPEGTV *CNN %CODTKFIG
VIOL • CONDUCTING • GUITAR CSM regrets that tickets cannot be exchanged, nor money refunded, except when an event is postponed or cancelled.
&ROOHJLXP /DXUHDWXP All information is correct at the time of printing. CSM reserves the right to make any changes to the published
PIANO • FLUTE • VOICE programme that prove necessary.
+CP %QDD EQPFWEVQT
www.benslowmusic.org ACCESSIBILITY INFORMATION
,QUGRJ *C[FP
01462 459446 All venues are accessible by wheelchair. There is limited space for wheelchair users and spaces
[email protected] 0DVV LQ ' PLQRU aren’t available in all price bands. Please advise the Box Office if you have any special
requirements. An induction loop is provided in some venues – please contact CSM for information
Benslow Music 1HOVRQ 0DVV on particular venues: [email protected].
Benslow Lane, Hitchin, Hertfordshire SG4 9RB /KEJCGN *C[FP
FRIENDS BOOKING
A company limited by guarantee. 0LVVD LQ KRQRUHP
Registered in England no 408404. Reg Charity no 313663 6DQFWDH 8UVXODH Friends of CSM enjoy reserved seating in unreserved venues when they
book in advance. Seats will be reserved until 15 minutes before the
6KEMGVU d start of each performance. For information on joining the Friends
of CSM visit: www.cambridgesummermusic.com/support-us
%CODTKFIG .KXG $QZ 1HHKEG
YYY YGIQVVKEMGVU EQO AVKEMGVU"EQNNGIKWO QTI WM Cambridge Summer Music

[email protected]
www.cambridgesummermusic.com

Cambridge Summer Music

@cambridgemusic

Information: www.cambridgesummermusic.com page 31

Capture the unique facets of your story with a one-off bespoke engagement ring

www.hkjewellery.co.uk

Hertfordshire Jewellery Centre London Shop Cambridge Shop Bridal Jeweller
+44 (0)1462 790 565 +44 (0)203 886 0757 +44 (0)1223 461 333 of the Year
[email protected] [email protected]
[email protected] 69 Regent’s Park Road, 6/7 Green Street, Cambridge,
North Barn, Fairclough Hall Farm, Primrose Hill, London, NW1 8UY Cambridgeshire, CB2 3JU

Halls Green, Herts, SG4 7DP


Click to View FlipBook Version