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Spring 2014 Concerts Brochure

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Musical events taking place at the University of Sheffield Spring 2014
14
11/12 SPRING 2014 EVENTS Saturday 01 February – Sunday 30 May
Transcript

11/12

SPRING 2014 EVENTSSaturday 01 February –Sunday 30 May

It’s a great pleasure to welcomeyou to the Spring 2014 ConcertSeason at the University. Spring boasts a collective ofcreativity, an array of internationallyacclaimed artists and an opportunityto discover and understand newmusic in a showcase of concertperformances and learning events.

French music and poetry take overFebruary culminating in a rare

performance of Poulenc’s monumental choral masterpiece ‘FigureHumaine’ by exciting new vocal ensemble Pro North Voices; a powerfulmoving tribute to the human spirit which sets poems by Paul Éluard thatwere secretly circulated during the German occupation of France inWorld War II.

Ensemble DeNote bring together performers and scholars ofhistorically informed performance and revitilise masterpieces of thepast, while one of the finest chamber ensembles, the brilliant Endymionpay homage to Brahms.

We’re delighted to welcome back sensational soprano Elizabeth Wattswho joins forces with Simon Lepper to navigate us through anintoxicating selection of songs by Duparc, Strauss, Wolf and Granados.

Spectacular jazz pianist Bruno Heinen dazzles with scintillatingarrangements of Stockhausen’s ‘Tierkreis’ based on the signs of theZodiac. Leading exponents of contemporary music the Ligeti StringQuartet engineer an electrifying performance of Bartok’s ingenious4th string quartet and Alban Berg’s autobiographical cryptic puzzlethe ‘Lyric Suite.’

Our free lunchtime and rush-hour concerts continue to provide a greatopportunity to take time out of the busy day; sit back, relax and take inmusic performed by our talented students. New to the series too areresearch talks. Find out about the latest cutting edge musical researchfrom our own academics and visiting speakers.

I look forward to seeing you at one of our events soon!

Stewart Campbell

PS. Are you ready for the Chaplin boom? Keep your eyes peeledin May for a celluloid cinematic celebration of Charlie Chaplinin a two-week music and film festival.

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Classical World Jazz

Lunchtime Rush-HourEvening

AffordableEclecticEnlightening

The Concert Series is a Sheffield home formusical discovery andunderstanding. We combine innovativeprogramming,internationallyacclaimed performersand cutting-edgeresearch in a dynamicseries of events at a low cost.

Enquiries: 0114 222 0468☎

☎Box O

ffice: 0114 223 3777 (SIV Tickets)

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Public Masterclass with Sophie Bevan (soprano)

Dr Helen Abbott leads a Frenchlanguage coaching session withinternational award-winningsoprano Sophie Bevan. Studentsfrom the department of Music alsoperform, receiving vocal coachingand language advice and there willbe a question and answer sessionto end.

No prior knowledge of French isrequired – texts & translations willbe made available.

SaTurday 01 FeBruary, 10:00, deParTMeNT OF MuSIC, JeSSOP BuILdINGadMISSION: Free. eMaIL [email protected] TeLePHONe 0114 222 0468 TO BOOk.duraTION: FIve HOurS+ Break FOr LuNCH

Pro North voicesPoulenc: Figure Humaine Ravel: Trois chansons Debussy: Trois chansons de Charles d’Orléans

+ music by Milhaud, Saint-Saëns and masters ofthe renaissance

Richard Longman (director)

Pro North voices is an exciting new vocalensemble based in the North of england. They embrace a refreshingly broad interpretationof the concept of “voice” combining the voices ofpoet, composer, and singer in the performance ofmusic exclusively in foreign languages.

at the core of this concert is Poulenc’smonumental choral masterpiece ‘FigureHumaine’. Suffused with humanity andcompassion Poulenc’s powerful moving tributeto the human spirit sets poems by Paul Éluard,secretly circulated during the Germanoccupation of France in World War II.

Helen Abbott (soprano), Richard Longman (piano)

Berlioz: Les Nuits d’été vierne: Cinq Mélodies deBaudelaire

Berlioz transforms Gautier’spoems of passionate, unrequitedand lost love into extraordinarilyatmospheric and luminousnocturnal songs. These arecombined with vierne’s dark andbrooding Cinq Mélodies andinterspersed with poetry readings.

MONday 24 FeBruary, 17:45FIrTH HaLL(FIrTH COurT)adMISSION: Free – aNd yOu dON'T NeedTO BOOk a TICkeTduraTION: 1 HOur

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Evening Concerts

Poetry in the Pub

Informal readings andperformances of Paul Éluard’spoems in French with englishtranslations by students from thedepartment of French.

TueSday 11 FeBruary, 17:00red deer PuBadMISSION: Free – aNd yOu dON'T NeedTO BOOk a TICkeT

SuNday 16 FeBruary,19:30FIrTH HaLL(FIrTH COurT)

TICkeTS: £8.50, £6(CONCeSSIONS, STaFF), £3 (STudeNTS, uNWaGed,uNder 26)

duraTION: 90 MINuTeS +20 MINuTe INTervaL

FrenchPoetry and MusicMonth

Evening Concerts

54

Ensemble DeNote revitalise masterpieces ofthe past. Bringing together performers andscholars of historically-informed performancethey recreate the dazzling soundworld ofcolours, textures and instruments familiar to thecomposers themselves.

Listen to fresh perspectives on thegroundbreaking Mozart ‘Piano Quartet’ whichunleashes the piano from its formeraccompanying role. Haydn demonstratesintimacy and innocence in the ‘Piano Sonata inG’ and Hummel’s ‘Clarinet Quartet’ features anexquisite slow movement. a young Beethovenoffers a glimpse of what’s to come as heexuberantly explores the relationship betweenthe strings and piano capturing his virtuosity asboth composer and performer.

Peter Hanson (violin)Peter Collyer (viola) Jennifer Morsches (cello)Jane Booth (clarinet)John Irving (fortepiano)

Mozart: Piano Quartet in G minor, k.478 Hummel: Clarinet Quartet in e flat Haydn: Piano Sonata in G, Hob. XvI:40 Beethoven: Piano Quartet in e flat, Op.16

TueSday 18 FeBruary,19:30, FIrTH HaLL(FIrTH COurT)

TICkeTS: £8.50, £6(CONCeSSIONS, STaFF), £3 (uNder 26S, STudeNTS,uNWaGed)

duraTION: 90 MINuTeS +20 MINuTe INTervaL

ensemble deNote

Evening Concerts

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Krysia Osostowicz (violin) Stephen Stirling (horn)Michael Dussek (piano)

Beethoven: violin Sonata No.10 inG major, Op. 96�Ligeti: Trio for horn, violin andpiano, ‘Hommage à Brahms’�Brahms: Trio for horn, violin andpiano in e flat major, Op. 40

One of the uk’s premier chamber ensemblesthe “brilliant endymion” (Sunday Times)execute world-class music. Join us on anilluminating journey from the joyous chirrupsof the violin in one of Beethoven’s mostfamous works to the moving stillness at the endof Ligeti’s masterful horn trio. Ligeti’sinspiration was not the hunting calls and folktunes in the outer movements of Brahms‘horn trio, but the work’s second movement, adeeply compelling elegy to the memory of hismother.

endymion

TueSday 04 MarCH,19:30, FIrTH HaLL(FIrTH COurT)

TICkeTS: £8.50, £6(CONCeSSIONS, STaFF), £3 (STudeNTS, uNWaGed,uNder 26)

duraTION: 80 MINuTeS +20 MINuTe INTervaL

“Profoundperformances ofthe impossible”THE GUARDIAN

Evening Concerts

98

TueSday 11 MarCH,19:30, FIrTH HaLL(FIrTH COurT)

TICkeTS: £8.50, £6(CONCeSSIONS, STaFF),£3 (uNder 26S,STudeNTS, uNWaGed)

duraTION: 90 MINuTeS +20 MINuTe INTervaL

With a voice described as "one of themost beautiful Britain has produced in ageneration" (International recordreview), Elizabeth Watts joins forceswith Simon Lepper, one of the mostgifted accompanists of his generation.Together they navigate us as we journeythrough a thrilling combination ofsongs.

We venture through German Lieder withthe melodic genius of Strauss and thepsychological power and dramaticscope of Wolf. We experience theexceptional intensity and beautifulmelodies of duparc and conclude withintoxicating Spanish songs from the Oldand New Worlds by Granados.

Strauss: Ständchen, rote rosen, Werhat’s gethan?, Malven, BefreitDuparc: Chanson triste, Phidylé, aupays où se fait la guerre, extase, La vieantérieureWolf: auch kleine dinge, Mein Liebsterist so klein, Ich esse nun mein Brot,Mein Liebster hat zu Tische michgeladen, du sagst mir, dass ich keineFürstin sei, Wer rief dich denn?, dudenkst mit einem Fädchen mich zufangen, Wie lange schon, Schweig'einmal still, Ich hab' in Penna,Granados: La maja y el ruisenor, elmajo timido, Guastavino La rosa y elsauce, rodrigo de donde venis amore,adela, Obradors del cabello mas sutil ,el vito

elizabeth Watts (soprano) Simon Lepper (piano)

“[Elizabeth Watts]packs vocalpunches withimpeccably pureclass”THE TELEGRAPH

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Evening Concerts

10

Bruno HeinenSextet

TueSday 18 MarCH,19:30, FIrTH HaLL(FIrTH COurT)

TICkeTS: £8.50, £6(CONCeSSIONS, STaFF), £3 (STudeNTS, uNWaGed,uNder 26)

duraTION: 90 MINuTeS +20 MINuTe INTervaL

Bruno Heinen (piano)James Allsopp (bass clarinet)Fulvio Sigurta (trumpet)�Tom Challenger (tenor sax)�Andrea Di Biase (bass)Jon Scott (drums)

Spectacular jazz pianist Bruno Heinen is onethe most original voices on the contemporaryjazz scene. Performing alongside some of thetop jazz musicians in the country he brings usinnovative reworkings of Stockhausen’s mostpopular composition, ‘Tierkreis.’

‘Tierkreis’ was originally written for twelvemusic boxes each representing a sign of thezodiac. Bruno’s imaginative arrangements arefull of tinkling melodies, intricately engineeredrhythms and glow with jazzy ensemble sounds.Featuring the original music boxes this concertfuses an unusual alliance between disparatemusical genres of Stockhausen's works andthe outside realm of progressive jazz.

Pre-Concert Talk 18:30: discover the origins of ‘Tierkreis.’ Join Bruno Heinen as he demonstrates theoriginal Stockhausen music boxes and providesinsight into his mesmerising arrangements.

“Erudition,eclectic studiesand a jazzsensibility makeHeinen the kind ofnewcomer whorepositions thegoalposts.” THE GUARDIAN

Evening Concerts

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Bartok: String Quartet No.4George Nicholson: String Quartet No.4(second performance)Berg: Lyric Suite

Mandhira de Saram (violin)Patrick Dawkins (violin)Richard Jones (viola)Valerie Welbanks (cello)

One of the leading exponents of contemporarymusic in the uk, the award winning LigetiQuartet engineer an electrifying performanceof modern string quartet music.

Bartók’s fourth string quartet is a tour deforce of sound. Featuring technical innovation,ingenious construction and tight symmetry thework is armed with an array of fresh effects:strumming, slapping, sliding, striking. The lively,rhythmic and energetic linked outer movementsencase a moonlight scene in the middle.dissonances provide a backdrop to thenocturnal twittering of birds, eerie sounds ofnature and lonely melodies.

Alban Berg was obsessed by cryptic messages,numerology and ritual patterns. The Lyric Suiteis an autobiographical story full of hiddenmessages and quotations. Passionate and tragicthe work documents forbidden love and theoverwhelming power of desire: its secret musethe woman with whom he had a 10-year affair.

TueSday 25 MarCH,19:30, FIrTH HaLL(FIrTH COurT)

£8.50, £6 (CONCeSSIONS,STaFF), £3 (STudeNTS,uNWaGed, uNder 26)

duraTION: 90 MINuTeS +20 MINuTe INTervaL

LigetiQuartet

“An impressiveforce.”THE YORK PRESS

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Evening Concerts

15

Sound Junction is cinema for the ear. aneclectic showcase of the best in electroacousticmusic demonstrating the unique sounddiffusion system from our Sound Studios.

What’s sound diffusion?Multiple loudspeakers come to life, immersingyou in the music. Sound spaces are sculpted inthree dimensions as effects dart around theroom. Let Sound Junction take you to newspaces with the sound diffuser as director, tourguide and driver.

The Festival features headline artists from homeand abroad and premieres of new compositionsin a series of concerts and workshops.

Visit www.sheffield.ac.uk/concerts forfull programme details.

Sound Junction

WedNeSday 02 – FrIday04 aPrIL, draMa STudIO

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Evening Concerts

16

Following a string of Broadway musicals inconcert the department of Music revivesanother classic musical comedy ‘Subways arefor Sleeping.’ Written by Betty Comden andadolph Green this concert performance is a ukpremiere and features a sensational score byJule Styne, complete with the originalorchestrations.

angie Mckay is a journalist assigned to get thescoop on a story about an unusual group ofwell-dressed homeless people sleeping in theNew york subway. angie goes undercover andpretends to be a stranded girl from out-of-town. She quickly befriends Tom Bailey theleader of the group. When she learns how theother half lives, she begins to see there mightbe another way to experience the world.Trouble ensues when angie’s cover is blown.

Pre-concert talk: Tuesday 29 april, 18:30: dominic McHugh andMatthew Malone of the department of Musicdiscuss the background to the musical and thisrevival, with live music examples.

TueSday 29 aPrIL 19:30,WedNeSday 30 aPrIL,19:45, FIrTH HaLL (FIrTHCOurT)

TICkeTS: £8.50, £6(CONCeSSIONS, STaFF), £3 (STudeNTS, uNWaGed,uNder 26)

duraTION: 90 MINuTeS +20 MINuTe INTervaL

Subwaysare forSleeping

Beethoven: Sonata for Horn and Piano, Op.17Beethoven: Piano Sonata, Op.2 No.1 Schubert, Czerny: Brillante Fantasien Op. 339 Czerny: Nocturne in d flat major, Op. 368 No.4Chopin: Nocturne in d flat major, Op. 27 No.2Czerny: andante e Pollaca

Pianists amongst you may remember labouringaway on Carl Czerny’s unforgiving pianoexercises. Finger torture aside this concertdocuments one of the most famous pianoteachers of all time, the continuation of pianostyle and brilliantly illustrates the history of thehorn and playing techniques. virtuosic hornfanfares and flourishes are matched byCzerny’s glittering piano writing in cascades ofnotes. dutch natural horn and baroque hornspecialist Erwin Wieringa teams up withCroatian pianist Inja Davidovic and togetherleave no avenue of these instrumentsunexplored.

TueSday 06 May, 19:30,FIrTH HaLL (FIrTH COurT)

TICkeTS: £8.50, £6(CONCeSSIONS, STaFF), £3 (STudeNTS, uNWaGed,uNder 26)

duraTION: 90 MINuTeS +20 MINuTe INTervaL

erwin Wieringa (horn) + Inja davidovic (fortepiano)

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Free Lunchtime Concerts

18

Free Lunchtime ConcertsOur free lunchtime concerts are a greatalternative way to spend part of a lunchhour. Sit back, relax and take in the musicperformed by our talented students. Stayfor the whole concert, stay for one piece,it’s up to you – audience members canarrive and leave between pieces.

all concerts start at 13:10 (doors open at12:45) at Firth Hall (Firth Court).

Admission: Free - and you don't needto book a ticketDuration: 45 minutes

THurSday 13 FeBruaryPostgraduate Students MONday 17 FeBruaryJulian Payne Prize RecitalAntonia Self (oboe)

MONday 03 MarCHStefanie McMinn (soprano)Hannah Donkin (piano)

THurSday 13 MarCHNatasha Wood (piano)Robin Gloor (horn)

MONday 17 MarCHAlex Bazalgette (guitar)Beth Nichol (clarinet)

MONday 24 MarCHVictor Hsu (piano)

THurSday 03 aPrILOllie King (melodeon)

MONday 28 aPrILMark McCombs (organ)(This concert takes place at St Mark’sChurch, Broomhill)

THurSday 01 MayAnthony Jakob (piano)

THurSday 08 May1st and 2nd year Undergraduates THurSday 15 May3rd year Undergraduates

Charlie Chaplin FestivalSuNday 18 – FrIday 30 May

“Are You Ready for the Chaplin Boom?” keystone Studios used this headline to advertise their legendary starcomedian to international audiences. are you ready? as a follow up tolast year’s sensational performance of ‘The Gold rush’ we bring the‘Chaplin Boom’ to Sheffield. a jam-packed festival fortnight full of filmscreenings, live music and talks exploring the icon’s life, work as an actor,director, musician and all round innovator.

Highlights include screenings of Chaplin’s masterpiece ‘City Lights’ withlive orchestra; pop-up screenings around the city including ‘The Circus’,‘Modern Times’, ‘a dog's Life’, ‘Shoulder arms’, and ‘The Pilgrim’;performances by inspirational improviser and film composer Neil Brand;and talks by internationally renowned film experts.

For the full programme visit www.sheffield.ac.uk/concerts

2120

Rush-Hour Concerts

Research Talks

discover the latest cutting-edgemusical research. These eventsfocus on a diverse range of topicsand feature our own academicsand nationally and internationallyrenowned guest speakers.

all talks start at 16:00 at theuniversity of Sheffield departmentof Music, Jessop Building

Admission: Free – and you don'tneed to book a ticketDuration: 1.5 hours

Monday 17 FebruaryJane Ginsborg (royal Northern College of Music)

Monday 24 FebruaryAdam Ockelford (university ofroehampton) – ‘Music, Languageand Autism’

Monday 03 March Martin Barker (aberystwythuniversity)

Monday 10 MarchAndrew Killick (university ofSheffield) – 'NorthumbrianPiping and the Music of Place'

Monday 17 March Renee Timmers (university ofSheffield) – ‘Perspectives onexpressiveness in musicperformance’

Monday 24 MarchJustin Williams (university of Bristol)

Research TalksRush-Hour Concerts

Beat the traffic, avoid the publictransport rush and unwind beforegoing home after a hard day’s workwith some great free music. Stayfor the whole concert, stay for onepiece, it’s up to you – audiencemembers can arrive and leavebetween pieces.

all concerts start at 17:45 (doorsopen at 17:15) at Firth Hall (FirthCourt).

Admission: Free – and you don'tneed to book a ticketDuration: 45 minutes

Monday 17 FebruaryPostgraduate Students

Monday 24 FebruaryHelen Abbott (soprano)Richard Longman (piano)

Berlioz: Les Nuits d’été

Monday 10 MarchSound of the Engine House

Monday 24 MarchSheffield University JazzOrchestra

Monday 12 MaySheffield University Big Band

2322

Buy ticketsBuy tickets

In person: From the Students’ union BoxOffice and Sheffield City Hall.

university of Sheffield Students'unionWestern BankSheffieldS10 2TGMonday – Friday: 11:00 – 18:00

Sheffield City HallBarkers Pool Sheffield S1 2JaMonday – Friday: 09:30 – 17:30

Online: From www.sheffield.ac.uk/concerts

Telephone: 0114 223 3777 - From SheffieldInternational venues TicketsMonday – Saturday 09:00 – 21:00

On the door: Left it to the last minute? Wealways hold back a limited numberto sell on the door on a first comefirst served basis. doors open 30minutes before each concert.

Are you a member of staff or astudent and want to get adiscount? Make sure you getyour tickets from the Students’Union and show your UCard.

Parking:durham road Car ParkFree after 17:00.

arts Tower Car ParkLimited spaces are available for50p per evening.

Wheelchair Access: at Firth Hall there is a lift and rampfor wheelchair users. Please speakto the Concerts Team when youarrive who will be able to assist you.

University of Sheffield O

rchestras and Choirs

University of Sheffield Orchestras and Choirs

all concerts start at 19:30 at Firth Hall.

Tickets: £8.50, £6 (concessions, staff),£3 (students, unwaged, under 26) Duration: 90 minutes + 20 minuteinterval

Thursday 20 MarchNew Music Ensemble Premieres of new studentcompositions.

George Nicholson (director)

Sunday 23 MarchSheffield University ChamberOrchestra

Mozart: Piano Concerto in F Maj kv413Béla Erdős: New WorkElgar: Serenade for Strings in e minor,Op. 20

+ a selection of operatic duets by Mozart

Sachiko Kitao (piano)Manxuan Xiong, Tiantian Ma(sopranos)Tim Shephard (conductor)

Sunday 30 MarchSheffield University WindOrchestra

Kenneth Hesketh: MasqueNigel Hess: east Coast Pictures Darius Milhaud: Suite Bernstein: PreludeFugue & riffs

Beth Nichol (clarinet)Rebecca Williamson (contrabassoon)Anthony Houghton, TimothyWatson (conductors)

Tuesday 01 april Sheffield UniversityChamber Choir

Folk song arrangements byHolst and vaughan Williams arepaired with the very best ofenglish part songs, includingFinzi’s Seven Part Songs basedon poems by robert Bridges.

Mark McCombs (conductor)

Saturday 05 april Sheffield Rep Orchestra

Elgar: Sospiri Op. 70Pete Russell: New WorkFauré: elegieShostakovich arr. Barshai:String Quartet No. 8

Lucy Revis (cello)George Morton (conductor)

Sunday 11 MaySheffield UniversitySymphony Orchestra

Finzi: dies NatalisVaughan Williams:Symphony No. 7, ‘Sinfoniaantarctica’Elgar: Cockaigne Overture, Op. 40

Ella Taylor (soprano)Adrian Moore (conductor)

aLL deTaILS OF PrOGraMMeS are aCCuraTe aT THe TIMe OF GOING TO PreSS,BuT are SuBJeCT TO CHaNGe

Concert diary

Date of Concert Title Venue StartTime

Thursday, 13 February 14 Postgraduate Students Firth Hall 13:10

Sunday, 16 February 14 Pro North voices Firth Hall 19:30

Monday, 17 February 14 antonia Self (oboe) Firth Hall 13:10

Monday, 17 February 14 Postgraduate Students Firth Hall 13:10

Monday, 17 February 14 Jane Ginsborg (royal NorthernCollege of Music)

Jessop Building 16:00

Tuesday, 18 February 14 ensemble deNote Firth Hall 19:30

Monday, 24 February 14 Helen abbott (soprano), richardLongman (piano)

Firth Hall 17:45

Monday, 24 February 14 adam Ockelford (university ofroehampton) – 'Music, Language andautism'

Jessop Building 16:00

Monday, 3 March 14 Stefanie McMinn (soprano), Hannahdonkin (piano)

Firth Hall 13:10

Monday, 3 March 14 Martin Barker (aberystwythuniversity, Pennsylvania)

Jessop Building 16:00

Tuesday, 4 March 14 endymion Firth Hall 19:30

Monday, 10 March 14 Sound of the engine House Firth Hall 17:45

Monday, 10 March 14 andrew killick (university ofSheffield) – 'Northumbrian Piping andthe Music of Place'

Jessop Building 16:00

Tuesday, 11 March 14 elizabeth Watts (soprano) SimonLepper (piano)

Firth Hall 19:30

Thursday, 13 March 14 Natasha Wood (piano), robin Gloor(horn)

Firth Hall 13:10

Monday, 17 March 14 alex Bazalgette (guitar), Beth Nichol(clarinet)

Firth Hall 13:10

Monday, 17 March 14 renee Timmers (university ofSheffield) – 'Perspectives onexpressiveness in music performance'

Jessop Building 16:00

Tuesday, 18 March 14 Bruno Heinen Sextet Firth Hall 19:30

Thursday, 20 March 14 New Music ensemble Firth Hall 19:30

Sunday, 23 March 14 Sheffield unviersity ChamberOrchestra

Firth Hall 19:30

■ evening Concerts

■ Free Lunchtime Concerts

■ research talks

■ rush-Hour concerts

■ Orchestras and Choirs

shefuniconcertsw

ww

.sheffield.ac.uk/concerts

concerts@sheffi

eld.ac.uk

Date of Concert Title Venue StartTime

Monday, 24 March 14 victor Hsu (piano) Firth Hall 13:10

Monday, 24 March 14 Sheffield university Jazz Orchestra Firth Hall 17:45

Monday, 24 March 14 Justin Williams (university of Bristol) Jessop Building 16:00

Tuesday, 25 March 14 Ligeti Quartet Firth Hall 19:30

Friday, 28 March 14 Mark McCombs (organ) St Mark's ChurchBroomhill

13:10

Sunday, 30 March 14 Sheffield university Wind Orchestra Firth Hall 19:30

Tuesday, 1 april 14 Sheffield university Chamber Choir Firth Hall 19:30

Wednesday, 2 april 14 Sound Junction 1 drama Studio 19:30

Thursday, 3 april 14 Sound Junction 2 drama Studio 19:30

Thursday, 3 april 14 Ollie king (melodeon) Firth Hall 13:10

Friday, 4 april 14 Sound Junction 3 drama Studio 19:30

Saturday, 5 april 14 Sheffield rep Orchestra Firth Hall 19:30

Tuesday, 29 april 14 Subways are for Sleeping Firth Hall 19:30

Wednesday, 30 april 14 Subways are for Sleeping Firth Hall 19:45

Thursday, 1 May 14 anthony Jakob (piano) Firth Hall 13:10

Tuesday, 6 May 14 erwin Wieringa (horn) + Injadavidovic (fortepiano)

Firth Hall 19:30

Thursday, 8 May 14 2nd year undergraduates Firth Hall 13:10

Sunday, 11 May 14 Sheffield university SymphonyOrchestra

Firth Hall 19:30

Monday, 12 May 14 Sheffield university Big Band Firth Hall 17:45

Thursday, 15 May 14 3rd year undergraduates Firth Hall 13:10


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