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Wensleydale Concert Series

Herschel Trio

Concerts
herschel-trio
  Saturday, 27th July 2024 19:30

  St. Andrew's Church, Aysgarth

Programme: "Baroque Britannia!"

Turlough O’Carolan (1670-1738) - A Set of Irish Airs

  • “O’Carolan’s Farewell to Music”
  • “O’Carolan’s Concerto”
  • “O’Carolan’s Dream” (based on “Molly MacAlpin” by William Connellan (c.1630-? ))
  • “O’Carolan’s Maggot”

Godfrey Finger (c.1655-1730) - Suite in D minor (from ‘50 Airs Anglois’)

  • Ouverture
  • A Farewell
  • Air
  • Adagio
  • Jigg
  • A Ground

John Parry (“Parri Ddall”) (1710-1782) - Three Airs from ‘Antient British Music’

Henry Purcell (1659-1695)

  • A New Ground in E minor “Here the Deities Approve” from Welcome to All Pleasures
  • Lilliburlero. A New Irish Tune
  • Two Parts upon a Ground from ‘Dioclesian’

James Oswald (1710-1769) - Airs from ‘The Seasons’

  • “The Snowdrop” (from Winter)
  • “The Primrose” (from Spring)
  • “The Poppy” (from Summer)
  • “The Marvel of Peru” (from Autumn)

Thomas Augustine Arne (1710-1778) - Harpsichord Sonata no.3 in G major

  • Prelude
  • Allegro
  • Minuet

George Frederic Handel (1685-1759) - Trio Sonata in B minor, Op.2 no.1

  • Andante
  • Allegro
  • Largo
  • Vivace

Nicola Matteis (c.1650- after 1713) - Ground after the Scotch Humour

Graham O'Sullivan flute and recorder

Susanna Pell viols

Mie Hayashi harpsichord

herschel trio door

Graham O'Sullivan

Graham read English Literature at Caius College, Cambridge, and then moved on to postgraduate studies at the Royal Academy of Music in London, where he was taught by Lisa Beznosiuk and Rachel Brown. Scholarships from the Countess of Munster Musical Trust and the Leverhulme Trust supported further studies with Barthold Kuijken at the Royal Conservatory of the Hague in Holland. Graham has given recitals on flute and recorder across the UK, as well as in continental Europe and the Far East. As an orchestral musician, he has performed and recorded as a member of the Dunedin Consort, and also with many of the country's leading period instrument ensembles, including the English Baroque Soloists, the Academy of Ancient Music, the English Concert, the Gabrieli Consort and Players, the Hanover Band, Solomon's Knot, and Ensemble Marsyas.

Susanna Pell

Susanna studied music at the University of York and then went on to study the viol with Jordi Savall at the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis in Basel. In 1987 Susanna joined the innovative medieval ensemble The Dufay Collective and a year later gave her first performance with the world-renowned viol consort Fretwork, becoming a full-time member soon afterwards. With these groups she toured extensively and made many recordings for radio and disc. With Fretwork she explored a large body of newly commissioned music by such composers as George Benjamin, Orlando Gough, Alexander Goehr, Elvis Costello, Gavin Bryars and Tan Dun, and appeared on Ryuichi Sakamoto’s disc Out of Noise. Susanna can also be heard on the soundtrack of several films, including Zeferelli’s Hamlet, Harry Potter and Prisoner of Azkaban, and The Da Vinci Code. She also appears on Kate Bush’s 2005 release Aerial.

Now based in North Yorkshire Susanna teaches viol at the Universities of York and Durham. Having abandoned air travel in 2011 for environmental reasons she is now focusing her performing on her duo with Jacob Heringman, Pellingmans' Saraband; with the Herschel Players.

Mie Hayashi

Mie was born in Kyoto, Japan. She studied at the Royal Academy of Music with Laurence Cummings and the late John Toll, and then at the Royal College of Music with Robert Woolley. With the ensemble La Sfera Musicale, Mie won top prize at the Japan Early Music Competition (Yamanishi) 2005 and honourable mention at the Bruges International Early Music Competition 2006. With La Sfera Musicale she has performed recitals across Europe and in Japan and released the CD Baroques Dialogues (WAON Records). As an orchestral musician, Mie has performed with the Royal Northern Sinfonia and the London Handel Orchestra, and was for several years principal harpsichordist with the Kyoto Philharmonic Chamber Orchestra with whom she appeared frequently as a concerto soloist. As a duo recitalist and orchestral musician, Mie has shared the concert platform with many renowned musicians, including the harpsichordists Laurence Cummings and Masaaki Suzuki, the cellist Anner Bylsma and the autists Rachel Brown and Masahiro Arita, giving acclaimed performances and radio broadcasts both in the UK, in continental Europe and the Far East. In 2016 Mie released her debut solo CD Ascents of the Soul (Omnibus Classics), and in 2019 released a disc of the works for solo harpsichord by Joseph-Nicolas-Pancrace Royer (Resonus).

 

 

List of Dates (Page event details)


  • Saturday, 27th July 2024 19:30