Two recent performances at the NCH gave me considerable satisfaction. The first, with the NSO conducted by Dubliner Killian Farrell, currently general music director of the state theatre in Meiningen, had Finghin Collins as the brilliant interpreter of Stanford’s 2nd Piano Concerto – a piece demanding verve and virtuosity supplied with breathtaking dash by Mr…
Centenary of a number of composers’ births and deaths
I recently mentioned 2024 as a year for remembering the centenary of a number of composers’ births or deaths. One such is Charles Villiers Stanford who was born in Dublin’s Herbert Street on September 30, 1852 and died in London on 29 March, 1924. Ideals of Brahms Stanford’s music is akin to the romantic ideals…
Impressive Irish composer celebrated
This year celebrates a number of composer centenaries, among them the anniversary of the death of Dublin-born Charles Villiers Stanford, who played an important role in music education in the UK where he was professor at Cambridge and a founder of London’s Royal College of Music. The NSO remembers him at the NCH tomorrow (February…
Musical centenary celebrations for 2024
The current year celebrates a number of musical centenaries not least those of the deaths of France’s Gabriel Fauré and Dublin-born Charles Villiers Stanford who became a particularly potent figure in the musical life of the UK where he was professor of music at Cambridge from 1887 until his death. Now maybe best remembered for…
A finger firmly on the pulse of the arts
With his death on November 17, the long life of the doyen of our composers – Seóirse Bodley – came to an end. May he rest in peace. Born in Dublin on April 4, 1933, Seóirse Bodley attended the CBS Coláiste Mhuire on Parnell Square where the curriculum was taught through Irish. Bodley also studied…
The young talent breathing life into the Irish music scene
Despite having already written about the Irish Freemasons Young Musician of the Year competition I am not making any excuses for continuing to spotlight young artists. This time I am drawing attention to the 2023 Top Security ‘Frank Maher Classical Music Awards’ held recently in the Royal College of Physicians in Dublin’s Kildare Street. The…
Reaping the rewards of stiff competition
The Irish Freemasons Young Musician of the Year competition took place last month at the Society’s head quarters in Dublin’s Molesworth Street, but the competition actually began life in RTÉ’s Music Department where it had been the brainchild of the late Jane Carty and was known as Musician of the Future.
A feast for Irish opera lovers
October means only one thing for Irish opera lovers – the Wexford Festival founded in 1951 by local GP and opera enthusiast, Dr Tom Walsh. His idea was the revival of operas that had disappeared from the repertoire and injecting them with new life. While this policy continues, Wexford also produces relatively recent compositions. This…
Sometimes pieces are noticeable by their absence
While the NSO’s season at the National Concert Hall began early last month, the Hall’s own International Series commenced on September 19 with the Concerto Budapest Symphony Orchestra conducted by fellow Hungarian András Keller. Renowned French pianist Pierre-Laurent Aimard was the soloist in Bartók’s soulful 3rd Piano Concerto written shortly before the composer’s death in…
The beginning of a new season brings new treats
As the saying goes, tempus fugit and with the arrival of September a new season has begun for a number of musical institutions not least the National Concert Hall, National Symphony Orchestra, Irish Chamber Orchestra and Music for Galway among a plethora of others. The NSO’s 2023/24 events got under way on September 9 with…