Spring Cyber Symphonies Concert 1 - Mozart Bassoon ...

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Spring Cyber Symphonies Concert 1 - Mozart Bassoon ...
Spring Cyber Symphonies Concert 1

              Mozart Bassoon Concerto in B flat, K. 191
              Beethoven Symphony No. 1 in C, Op 21

Conductor         Bernhard Gueller
Soloist           Brandon Phillips
Concertmaster     Philip Martens

Recorded at the Cape Town City Hall on August 19, 2021
Streaming September 16 - 20, 2021

This concert is generously supported by
Spring Cyber Symphonies Concert 1 - Mozart Bassoon ...
BERNHARD GUELLER                                                               Conductor

                                            Principal guest conductor of the Cape Town
                                            Philharmonic Orchestra and Music Director
                                            Laureate of Symphony Nova Scotia in Canada,
                                            Bernhard Gueller continues to be acclaimed for
                                            his interpretations and phrasing, and the
                                            excitement he brings to the podium. “He is a
                                            favoured conductor, both of players and
                                            audiences, undoubtedly because of his carefully
                                            prepared but always musically rewarding
                                            performances”(WeekendSpecial.co.za). He is
                                            acclaimed by musicians, critics and audiences for
                                            his musical purity, and continually garners praise
                                            for the fresh approach he applies under his
                                            “amazingly suggestive baton”.

                                          Having stepped down in 2018 after 16 years as
                                          music director of Symphony Nova Scotia, Gueller
stepped into a new role as Music Director Laureate and in the last two years, prior to the
advent of Covid-19 returned to both SNS and British Columbia’s Victoria Symphony where he
was also principal guest conductor. He also made his debut with the Princeton Symphony
Orchestra in New Jersey in 2019 and returned to Halifax to conduct the Scotia Festival of
Music again. He has conducted many other orchestras in Canada including the Edmonton
and Calgary Philharmonic orchestras and is a frequent guest conductor with the KZN
Philharmonic and the Johannesburg Philharmonic.

Gueller has had many high-level collaborations with internationally acclaimed soloists,
including Canadian violinist James Ehnes and pianists Jan Lisiecki, Janina Fialkowska, Anton
Kuerti, Jon Kimura Parker and Marc Andre-Hamelin, along with pianist Lars Vogt, violinist
Joshua Bell, and Metropolitan Opera singers Pretty Yende, Elza van den Heever and the late
Johan Botha, as well as soprano Pumeza Matshikiza.

Beginning his career as a cellist, Gueller won the United German Radios Conducting
Competition in 1979 and for nearly 20 years ran tandem careers, deputing for the legendary
conductor Sergiu Celibidache, who regarded Gueller as his best “pupil”. Gueller also attracted
the attention of the renowned arts administrator Ernest Fleischman who "was deeply
impressed by his extraordinary musicianship, his marvellous ability to communicate with the
musicians, and his charismatic impact on the audience".

He has also been music director in Nuremberg and principal guest conductor of the
Johannesburg Philharmonic. His career has taken him to many top concert halls, from America
and Australia to Canada, Russia, Japan, China (Guangzhou, Shanghai, Hong Kong), Korea,
South Africa and Brazil, as well as countries in Europe such as Spain, Italy, France, Norway,
Bulgaria, Italy and Sweden, and his native Germany where he, for instance, conducted the
Stuttgart Radio Symphony and the Munich Philharmonic.
Spring Cyber Symphonies Concert 1 - Mozart Bassoon ...
He has conducted in festivals internationally, including the Cape Town Philharmonic
Orchestra in the International Festival of the Canary Islands, the Schwetzinger Festival in
Germany, the Scotia Festival in Halifax, and the Stellenbosch International Chamber Music
Festival and National Arts Festival in South Africa.

Gueller has made many recordings for national and international broadcast and several
acclaimed CDs including two with the CPO - with South African mezzo soprano Hanneli Rupert
and the Cape Town Philharmonic Orchestra and the concerti of Vieuxtemps and Saint-Saëns
with cellist Peter Martens. Others include two with contemporary Canadian composer,
Christos Hatzis, one of contemporary Canadian works by Tim Brady which won an East Coast
Music award, and a CD of orchestrated lieder by Schubert, all with Symphony Nova Scotia.
His latest CD with Symphony Nova Scotia with songstress Sarah Slean was nominated for a
Juno Award in 2021. He has also recorded CDs with the Radio Symphony Orchestra Stuttgart,
German Brass and the Stuttgart Chamber Orchestra. Gueller was awarded a doctorate by
Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia, for his service to music.
Spring Cyber Symphonies Concert 1 - Mozart Bassoon ...
BRANDON PHILLIPS                                                                 Soloist
Principal bassoon of the Cape Town Philharmonic Orchestra and, since 2015, its resident
conductor, Brandon Phillips runs a tandem career as bassoonist and conductor. The winner
of the Cape Town Philharmonic Orchestra’s Inaugural Len van Zyl Conductor’s Competition in
2010 (now the SA Conductors’ Competition), he is also the music director of the Cape Town
Philharmonic Youth Orchestra.

Phillips began his music career in the New Apostolic Church. He studied bassoon and viola at
the University of Cape Town, receiving his Diploma for Orchestral Studies and B Mus Hons in
solo bassoon in 2005.

He is regularly invited as an adjudicator and conductor for various competitions such as the
ATKV, Artscape National Youth, Unisa Winds and the Schock Singing competitions.

He is a guest conductor of the Johannesburg Philharmonic and the KZN Philharmonic, and
other orchestras in oratorio, opera and ballet, as well as cross-over concerts. Appearances
with the Miagi Youth Orchestra Festival which he conducted in 2014 in Berlin and Amsterdam
received critical acclaim. He has also conducted at the Stellenbosch International Chamber
Music Festival. In 2012, Phillips received a prestigious award from the Minister of Arts and
Culture Ivan Meyer for “outstanding achievements by the youth”. In 2017 he received
another prestigious award, "Skouerklop", at the Suidoosterfees. Phillips is supported by RMB
Starlight Classics.

Phillips conducts the CPO’s popular community concerts which give performance platforms
to talented local musicians, as well as the Rotary Concerto Festival with the CPYO. He was
invited to conduct the German National Youth Orchestra at the Beethoven Festival in Bonn in
2019 and recently conducted the world premiere of a work by American percussionist Marcus
Gilmore with the CPO in Rolex Arts Weekend in Cape Town.

In 2021, under Covid-19 restrictions, Phillips conducted the CPO in its Youtube presentation,
The Instruments of the Orchestra, for learners around the country.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
                              (1767-1791)
                     Bassoon Concerto in B flat, K 191

                 Allegro * Andante ma adagio * Rondo: Tempo di Menuetto

Mozart completed the Bassoon Concerto in June 1774, while the Mozart family was happily
ensconced in the Tanzmeisterhaus on Salzburg’s Makartplatz. The summer of 1774 was in
fact one of the most peaceful periods in the composer’s life – there were no hectic journeys
in the offing – and the relaxed life in that Salzburg summer is clearly mirrored in the music he
wrote at this time.

It is highly likely that the Bassoon Concerto was commissioned by the Freiherr Thaddäus von
Dürnitz, a talented amateur of the bassoon, who also ordered the Sonata for Bassoon and
Cello, K 292 and probably some 65 other works. There are, moreover, strong indications that
Mozart wrote three or even four other bassoon concertos for this rich Bavarian patron, but
sadly they have never been found. So this, the only existing Mozart Bassoon Concerto,
remains perhaps the most popular bassoon concerto played today, remembering that Vivaldi
had written 39 for this instrument alone and composers from the Baroque to the 21 st century
have written hundreds more.

In this work, the 18-year-old Mozart made no secret of the fact that he still accepted the
convention of his day where works of this nature were concerned; each of the three
movements contains minore sections in accordance with the taste of the period, while the
juxta-positioning of thematically stable tutti sections and solo passages consisting of lively
figurations may be seen as a survival of the baroque concerto principle. This particular one
displays the instrument’s agility and lyricism. Bassoon concertos reached the peak of their
popularity during the first half of the 18th century. After 1750, however, the bassoon lost
ground as a solo instrument in favour of the flute and clarinet.

NOTE: CTSO PROGRAMME BANK, AUGMENTED
Ludwig van Beethoven
                              (1770 – 1827)
                       Symphony No. 1 in C, Opus 21
 Adagio molto - Allegro con brio * Andante cantabile con moto * Menuetto: Allegro molto e
                          vivace * Adagio - Allegro molto e vivace

When Beethoven’s first foray into the imposing world of the symphony was premiered in
Vienna in April 1800, little did the musical establishment know that a musical revolution had
begun. The symphony, indeed orchestral music, was never to be the same again. Twenty-
seven years later, when Beethoven died, his nine symphonies became the backbone of
symphonic thought that was to dominate the 19 th century and even the 20th. For, with his
First Symphony, Beethoven had indicated quite clearly that he was turning away from the
orderly classical world of Haydn and Mozart and embarking on an altogether new journey.

Arnold Whittall captures the essence of what Beethoven set about doing when he writes:
“Beethoven, as the first great composer to approach the symphony with caution, ensured its
transformation from something which just happened to be the most substantial form yet
devised for orchestral concert music into a vehicle for the expression of personal dramas and
philosophies … With Beethoven, symphonies ceased to pour off the conveyor belt: each one
had to be individual, hand-made, a landmark in the composer’s development.”

And how individual this First Symphony is! In an audacious gesture, Beethoven begins with a
discord in the wrong key. A question-and-answer sequence proceeds until the main Allegro
leaps away with a typically Beethovian impishness.

The second movement is elegant and courtly, with drums tapping away here and there, while
the main theme wends its gentle way. The third movement could almost be called the first
symphonic Scherzo, although we have to wait for Eroica for that title to become official. But
this is no graceful 18th-century Minuet and Trio.

A Beethoven signature chord begins the finale. But surprises await, with a series of tentative
scale passages before the ebullient main subject races away. In this high-spirited atmosphere,
Beethoven’s audacious symphonic debut bustles to its close.

PROGRAMME NOTE: Rodney Trudgeon/ CTSO Programme Bank
CAPE TOWN PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA

Principal Guest Conductor:    Bernhard Gueller
Resident Conductor:           Brandon Phillips supported by RMB Starlight Classics
Guest Concertmasters:         Farida Bacharova; Suzanne Martens
Deputy Concertmaster:         Philip Martens
In alphabetical order

First Violins
Petrus de Beer ^
Bonolo Kgaile #
Elina Koytcheva ^
Emina Lukin *
Philip Martens
Refiloe Olifant
Annien Shaw ^
Maretha Uys
Valentina Vorster ^

Second Violins
Shannon Cook ^
Miroslawa Domagala
Samantha Durrant *
Claudia Gõttert
Tomasz Kita #
Joshua Louis ^
Matthew Stead
Milena Toma

Violas
Rory Africa ^
Petrus Coetzee *
Emil de Roubaix ^
Azra Isaacs #
Renette Swart
Maja van Dyk

Cellos
Dane Coetzee
Pearl Jung ^
Nwuko Sunday Kelechi ^
Peter Martens *
Edward McLean #

Double Basses
Zanelle Britz
Donat Pellei #
Roxane Steffen *

Flutes
Garreth Cederes ^
Gabriele von Dürckheim *
Garreth Cederes ^

Oboes
Carin Bam #
Lisa White *

Clarinet
David Cyster ^
Carla van der Merwe ^

Bassoons
Simon Ball **
Liesel Jobson ^
Brandon Phillips *

Horns
Shannon Thebus ^
Conrad van der Westhuizen

Trumpets
Paul Chandler
Pierre Schuster #
David Thompson *

Trombones
Slavomir Mrazik *
Ryan van der Rheede

Bass Trombone
David Langford #

Tuba
Shaun Williams *

Timpani
Christoph Müller *

Percussion
Eugene Trofimsczyk *

                       Principal * / Associate Principal ** / Sub Principal # / Ad hoc ^ / On leave ■

Orchestra Attendants
Rudi Makwana^
Lucien Faro ^
Rudi Makwana^

Drivers
Craig Wildeman ^
Derrick Wildeman ^
CPO MANAGEMENT

Chief executive officer Louis Heyneman

General manager Ivan Christian

Business development and fundraising executive Suzanne Aucamp

Marketing and communications executive Shirley de Kock Gueller

Fundraising / office administrator Mary MacGregor-Frew

Youth development and education co-ordinator Marvin Weavers

Education manager: Masidlale and CP Music Academy Odile Burden

Librarian Neil Robertson

Assistant orchestra manager and Covid officer Milena Toma

                                          CPO PATRONS
                                 Wendy Ackerman; Ton Vosloo

                                    BOARD OF DIRECTORS
       Wendy Ackerman; Derek Auret (chair); Dennis Davis; Elita de Klerk; Louis Heyneman;
     Edmund Jeneker; Felicia Lesch; Nisaar Pangarker; Christoff Pauw; Christo van der Rheede

                                         ADVISORY BOARD
                                     Ruth Allen; Ton Vosloo
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