KURINGAI YOUTH ORCHESTRA WHIMSY AND WONDER : AN INSPIRED PERFORMANCE

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Its rare for a consummate concert goer to be totally  bowled over by a  sublime performance  that exceeds  expectation.

So it was at a 90 minute afternoon  performance by the effervescent  Kuringai Youth Orchestra, who totally nailed it, to the delight of the audience.

Led by the ebullient  conductor  and artistic director,  Brad Lucas, who didn’t hide  his enthusiasm and pride in presenting  three Australian  pieces,  two of which are premiers.  The Dvorak  and Borodin  are incredibly  exciting  works which challenge the orchestra  and bring an energy  and frisson  to the performance that was thrilling in execution.

Showcasing a veteran  of the orchestra, Harry Wagstaff  in Martinu’s  Oboe Concerto  was exceedingly special. Harry has been a member of the orchestra since High School,  from where he proceeded studying  at the Sydney Conservatoire and regularly  performs and tours with the NSW Police Band.  A truly  remarkable success story  of what this orchestra  offers young students.  Harry’s Oboe dexterity is amazing, his cheeks hardly look like they are filled with air.

Bohuslav Martinu was a Czech composer of modern classical  music.  Residing in Paris 1923, he experimented with modern French  stylistic developments,  embracing neoclassicism, modelling  his works on Stravinsky. Set in three movements,  the concerto  features long syncopated  melodies with the prominent  use of the piano.

The classical  delights continued with Antonin Dvorak’s Carnival Overture(1891). Part of a trilogy titled Nature, Life and Love, they were composed  as stand-alone pieces.  Dvorak  described  this work as a “lonely, contemplative wanderer” who reaches the city at nightfall where a carnival  is in full swing. On every side he hears the clangour  of instruments,  mingled with shouts of joy and unrestrained  hilarity  of people giving vent to their  feelings  in their songs snd dance tunes. It was electric.

The orchestra  then premiered Mopoke by young composer  Elliot Leahy,  a French horn  player in the orchestra who was inspired by  Philip Bunting’s eponymous  picture book Mopoke, a fun and playful  composition  for orchestra.  The work  is episodic  in nature depicting many of the different  “pokes”, including: Mopoke ( high pitched instruments), Poorpoke (a yearning  violin solo), Fee-Fi-Fo- poke( Timpani and piccolo duet) and Crowpoke(oboe’s crowning).  Mopoke was commissioned  by the Kuringai Youth Orchestra.

The audience were primed  for the second premiered performance  of Equilibrium  by Chris Moran, a trumpet  player and emerging composer who brings the same energy and precision  to writing as he does to performance.  Equilibrium is certainly  a vibrant  orchestral work that balances pop-inspired chord structures with  the expansive  colour  palette  of a full symphony orchestra. It certainly  had the groove and grandeur.  The audience were in a swoon.

We were treated to one of Australia’s  most prolific composers Elena Kats-Chernin’s Dance of the Paper Umbrellas (2013). Her colourful  style makes her compositions some of the most approachable  and enduring pleasure-bombs. This piece  was commissioned  for the Hush Foundation which provides  support  to children  undergoing  painful  medical procedures  at the Royal Children’s Hospital  Melbourne.  Katz-Chernin says it illustrates,  “a world of magic and dreams”, a cake adorned with multi-coloured umbrellas”.

Last on our card was the  robust Polovtsian Dances by Alexander  Borodin who described  himself as a “Sunday composer”, a scientist  by day and a composer  in his spare time. This work comes from his ballet,  Prince Igor, which he spent 18 years composing  but remained unfinished at the time of his death in 1887. The Polovtsian Dances take place in in the victorious  Polovtsians who celebrate their  king, Khan Konchak.

All in all, a thrilling performance by dedicated young musicians  which the KYO welcomes from high schools and universities  across  Sydney offering  a dynamic musical environment  that allows gifted musicians  to thrive.

I was wowed by the sheer dynamic  of this orchestra taking notes of names I am sure will grace prestigious venues in the next generation.

This concert took place on Sunday 21 September at 3pm at Abbotsleigh’s Peter Duly Hall.

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