JOY LISNEY violoncello
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Monday 22 May 2023Doors/Bar: 6.30pm
Concert: 7.30pm (approx. 1 hour, no interval) Tickets:
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This concert is the third in a series of four curated by Joy Lisney, featuring the cello in various different chamber combinations.
The name Seraphin Concerts refers jointly to the provenance of Joy's Giorgio Seraphin cello and to the Seraphin Project, an organisation founded to give opportunities to young musicians to perform alongside professionals of the highest level. For more information, please see www.seraphinproject.com.
The name Seraphin Concerts refers jointly to the provenance of Joy's Giorgio Seraphin cello and to the Seraphin Project, an organisation founded to give opportunities to young musicians to perform alongside professionals of the highest level. For more information, please see www.seraphinproject.com.
Programme (approx. 1 hour, no interval)
Ludwig van Beethoven
Sonata Op.5 No.2
Sonata Op.102 No.1
Sonata Op.102 No.2
Sonata Op.5 No.2
Sonata Op.102 No.1
Sonata Op.102 No.2
Joy Lisney
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Joy Lisney is a multi-faceted musician, combining the cello with composition and conducting.
Joy has performed in the major European concert halls including the Wigmore Hall, Amsterdam Concertgebouw and Leipzig Gewandhaus as well as multiple sold-out recitals at London’s Southbank Centre. During the pandemic she live-streamed solo concerts to an international audience, including from King’s College Chapel, Cambridge. Her programmes range from her own arrangement of the Bach Chaconne to world premieres by composers including Mark-Anthony Turnage, Cecilia McDowall, Jan Vriend and Judith Weir, as well as her own compositions. As a composer, Joy has written for musicians including the Arditti Quartet, Ensemble Recherche and Orchestra for the Earth. Joy plays on an eighteenth century Seraphin cello generously lent by Beare Violins. |
James Lisney
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James Lisney enjoys a rich musical life, moving seamlessly from concerto and recital soloist to chamber musician, song accompanist and pianist director. Initiatives, such as his Schubertreise series at London’s Southbank Centre, his extensive Beethoven Project or the recording company Woodhouse Editions, provide a platform for his wide-ranging musical sympathies.
In recent years he has given Schubert cycles at the Leipzig Gewandhaus and in Mumbai; held residencies at Carnegie Recital Hall, New York and the Amsterdam Concertgebouw; and he has recently completed a survey of the late music of Haydn, Beethoven, Schubert and Chopin at St George’s, Bristol. The 2022/23 season include performances in France, Belgium, the Netherlands and the Czech Republic. |
Monday
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Doors/Bar: 6.30pm
Concert: 7.30pm (approx. 1 hour, no interval) Tickets:
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