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Andrey Gugnin (piano) – Monday 4 May

Tchaikovsky   Nutcracker Suite for Solo Piano
Stravinsky   Three Movements from Petrushka
Tchaikovsky   Sleeping Beauty Suite for Solo Piano
Stravinsky   Infernal Dance, Berceuse, and Finale from The Firebird

 

Back in Leamington by popular demand, Andrey Gugnin was introduced to the Festival in 2019 by the violinist Tasmin Little and they launched it with a memorable concert. Three days later, Andrey gave a lunchtime concert which ended with a performance of Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition, which prompted an immediate standing ovation and invitations to return to the Festival – this is now his third solo concert for us.

Andrey studied at the Moscow State Tchaikovsky Conservatory and soon after leaving began to win an impressive number of prizes in Vienna, Sydney, Zagreb, and many others. Valery Gergiev invited him to appear with the London Philharmonic and Mariinsky Orchestras and he has performed in many of the most important concert halls across the world. We can certainly look forward to some fireworks in this Festival Finale!

This concert is generously supported by Peter Glanfield

 

The finer details…

Interval: 20 mins

Estimated finish: 9.30pm

Tickets:
Centre section: £28 full price | £3 child/student
Side sections: £18 full price | £9 under-35s | £3 child/student

Nicky Spence (tenor) and Dylan Perez (piano)

‘My Father’s Son’

Howells   The Little Boy Lost
Britten   ‘Midnight on the Great Western’ and
‘Proud Songsters’ from Winter Words Op. 52;
‘The Larky Lad’ from Who Are These Children?, Op. 84;
‘A Highland Balou’ from A Charm of Lullabies, Op. 41
Fauré   Les Berceaux, Op. 23 No. 1
Tippett   ‘Full fathom five’ from Songs for Ariel
Orr   ‘Shy Geordie’ and ‘The Boy in the Train’ from Songs of a Childhood
Rzewski   ‘No Good’ from Dear Diary
Tchaikovsky   At the ball, Op. 38 No. 3
Libby Larsen   Pregnant
Victoria Wood   Litter Bin
Wolf   Mörike-Lieder: 48. Storchenbotschaft
William Bolcom   Waitin
Dunhill   The Cloths of Heaven
Ireland   Baby’ from Mother and Child
Barber   A Slumber Song of the Madonna
Mahler   Rückert Lieder: 4. Um Mitternacht
Previn   ‘Will there really be a morning?’ from Three Dickinson Songs
Legrand   Little Boy Lost

 

“Although this recital uses the words of others, it might as well be autobiographical,” said Nicky Spence in an article about this very programme in Gramophone. An examination of parenthood through the eyes of two performers who have gone through this very process, this programme takes in a whole range of viewpoints on matters parental, each song carefully considered in relation to the others.

Winner of the BBC Music Magazine Personality of the Year 2022 and world-renowned opera singer Nicky is an artist and broadcaster of great integrity and one of Scotland’s proudest sons, who was made an OBE in the King’s inaugural Birthday Honours in 2023 for services to Music. Multi-award winning pianist Dylan Perez is much in demand as a recitalist, chamber musician, and coach specialising in vocal repertoire.

This concert is generously supported in memory of Martin and Barbara Rantzen

 

The finer details…

Interval: none

Estimated finish: 4pm

Tickets:
Centre section: £18 full price | £3 child/student
Side sections: £13 full price | £6.50 under-35s | £3 child/student

Nathan Amaral (violin) and Jonathan Ware (piano) – Monday 4 May

Miguez Violin Sonata in A Major, Op.14
Brahms Violin Sonata No. 2 in A Major, Op. 100

Young Artist Spotlight Concert

Recently awarded the Grand Prize of both the Concert Artist Guild and Young Classical Artist Trust (YCAT) competitions, Brazilian violinist Nathan Amaral has also been collecting First and Special Prizes from plenty of other international competitions as well as being named one of Classic FM’s Rising stars under 30. Texas-born pianist Jonathan Ware is a previous YCAT winner who has also been collecting prizes across the globe.

Brazilian composer Leopoldo Miguez’s Violin Sonata in A major, Op. 14, written in 1885, offers lyrical richness while balancing evocative, nocturnal beauty and a Kreisler-like sweetness, and is the very definition of a forgotten gem to be rediscovered (or newly discovered for many), while Brahms’s Sonata is most certainly a favourite treasure.

 

The finer details…

Interval: none

Estimated finish: 12 noon

Tickets:
Centre section: £18 full price | £3 child/student
Side sections: £13 full price | £6.50 under-35s | £3 child/student

Sinfonia of Birmingham – Sunday 3 May

Sinfonia of Birmingham

Michael Seal conductor
Zoë Beyers violin
Peter Dixon cello

Dvořák  Othello Overture, Op. 93
Brahms  Double Concerto for Violin & Cello in A minor, Op. 102
Arnold  Symphony No. 5, Op. 74

 

A welcome return to the Festival for this wonderful orchestra and CBSO Associate Conductor Michael Seal performing, as usual, with eminent soloists. South-African born Leader of the English Symphony Orchestra and Director of the Northern Chamber Orchestra Zoë Beyers has established a reputation as one of the finest violinists of her generation; Peter Dixon has been Principal Cellist with the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra for 35 years.

They bring another passionate programme to fill All Saints Church as only they can – Dvorák’s dramatic musical characterization of the relationship between Othello and Desdemona; Brahms’s final work for orchestra, composed as a gesture of reconciliation toward his old friend, the violinist Joseph Joachim, after a personal rift had separated them; and Malcolm Arnold’s emotional Fifth Symphony, filled with memories of friends who all died young, allowing us a chance for the Festival to mark the twentieth anniversary of the composer’s death.

 

The finer details…

Interval: 20 mins

Estimated finish: 9.30pm

Tickets:

Unreserved Seating

Front Nave: £24 (full price)
Rear Nave: £18 (full price) / £9 (under-35s)
Student/Child: £3 (all seats)

Warwickshire Music Advanced Musicians – Sunday 3 May

A platform which again showcases the cream of Warwickshire Music’s students from across the county, with a programme reflecting the theme of the Festival.

 

The finer details…

Interval: none

Estimated finish: 4pm

Tickets:

Unreserved Seating

£8 adults / £4 students & children

William Howard (piano) – Sunday 3 May

Schumann   Nine Pieces from Bunte Blätter Op. 99

Howard Skempton   Chorales and Inventions (2025)

Clara Schumann   Notturno Op. 6 No. 2

Fauré   Nocturne No. 6

Debussy   L’Isle Joyeuse

 

Described by The Sunday Times as “a thoughtful, poetic player”, William Howard is one of Britain’s leading pianists and enjoys a career that has taken him to over 40 different countries. His performing life consists of solo recitals, concerto performances, and guest appearances with chamber ensembles and instrumentalists. In 1983 he founded the Schubert Ensemble, with which he performed for the full 35 years of the Ensemble’s existence (it gave its final concert in June 2018).

William is passionate about 19th-century piano repertoire, particularly Schumann and Fauré, and throughout his professional life he has also been active in commissioning new works and has taken part in over 100 premières. Our ‘Favourite treasures, Forgotten gems’ theme shines out in this recital’s wonderful programme.

 

The finer details…

Interval: none

Estimated finish: 1pm

Tickets:
Centre section: £18 full price | £3 child/student
Side sections: £13 full price | £6.50 under-35s | £3 child/student

Guarneri Piano Trio – Saturday 2 May

Guarneri Piano Trio
Čeněk Pavlík violin | Marek Jerie cello | Ivan Klanský piano

 

Beethoven  Piano Trio No. 9 in B flat major, WoO 39
Beethoven  Piano Trio No. 7 in B flat Major, Op. 97 ‘Archduke’
Dvořák  Piano Trio No. 4 in E minor, Op. 90 ‘Dumky’

 

The Guarneri Piano Trio, is one of best in the world and has given several memorable concerts in Leamington over the years. The Trio celebrates its 40th anniversary in its original line-up in 2026, a milestone in the lives of three outstanding artists.

The ensemble bears the family name of the makers of both string instruments used by the Trio. Čeněk Pavlík plays the famous ‘Zimbalist’ violin by Guarneri del Gesù from the precious collection of Luigi Tarisio, while Marek Jerie plays a cello made by Andrea Guarneri in 1684.

This will certainly be a tour-de-force performance of the great Trios by Beethoven and Dvořák and is one absolutely not to be missed!

 

The finer details…

Interval: 20 mins

Estimated finish: 9.30pm

Tickets:
Centre section: £28 full price | £3 child/student
Side sections: £18 full price | £9 under-35s | £3 child/student

Kaleidoscope Chamber Collective – Saturday 2 May

Kaleidoscope Chamber Collective
Ben Goldscheider horn | Elena Urioste violin | Tom Poster piano

 

Ethel Smyth  Trio for Violin, Horn and Pianoforte
Brahms  Horn Trio in E flat major, Op. 40

 

Kaleidoscope Chamber Collective, hailed for its “exhilarating performances” (The Times), was dreamed up in 2017 by Tom Poster and Elena Urioste, who met through the BBC New Generation Artists Scheme. Kaleidoscope’s flexible roster features many of today’s most inspirational musicians, both instrumentalists and singers, and the Collective is particularly renowned for its creative programming, marked by an ardent commitment to celebrating diversity of all forms and a desire to unearth lesser-known gems of the repertoire.

Indeed, it was this wonderful programme that inspired the theme for this year’s Festival of ‘Favourite treasures, Forgotten gems’.

Brahms’s Horn Trio is all 19th-century Romanticism, and is said to have a strong emotional connection to the death of his mother three months earlier. Dame Ethel Smyth is one of the most important British composers that bridged the gap between the 19th and 20th centuries; encapsulating technique, melodies and arrangement, her Trio is a good challenge for musicians.

 

The finer details…

Interval: none

Estimated finish: 1pm

Tickets:
Centre section: £18 full price | £3 child/student
Side sections: £13 full price | £6.50 under-35s | £3 child/student

Fibonacci String Quartet – Friday 1 May

Fibonacci String Quartet
Luna De Mol and Kryštof Kohut violins
Elliot Kempton viola | Findlay Spence cello

 

arr. Fibonacci Quartet  Moravian Love Songs
Bartók  String Quartet No. 5, Sz 102
Schumann  String Quartet No. 3 in A major, Op. 41 No. 3

 

The Fibonacci Quartet is one of Europe’s leading young string quartets. They have recently taken prizes at the Royal Over-Seas League Competition and the Cavatina Chamber Music Competition at Wigmore Hall, and are quickly establishing a reputation as compelling performers of a wide variety of repertoire.

The Quartet blew us away on their first visit to Leamington with their magical performance of Bartók’s Fourth Quartet, and we simply had to invite them back to give us more at the earliest opportunity! This, partnered with Schumann’s brilliant Quartet No. 3 and a graceful nod to Leamington Music’s speciality in Czech music, they will get the Festival off to a very fine start indeed.

 

The finer details…

Interval: 20 mins

Estimated finish: 9.30pm

Tickets:
Centre section: £28 full price | £3 child/student
Side sections: £18 full price | £9 under-35s | £3 child/student