80
17 th July–2 nd August 2015

Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

  • Upload
    drmcv

  • View
    236

  • Download
    2

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Events in the 2015 Ryedale Festival

Citation preview

Page 1: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

17th July–2nd August 2015

Page 2: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015
Page 3: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

3

Friday 17th July1 11am

Coffee ConcertPickering Parish Church

2 8pmBrahms and the Gypsy: The Red Hedgehog TavernMilton Rooms, Malton

Saturday 18th

3 11amCoffee ConcertSt John and All Saints’ Church, Easingwold

4 2pm Strings WorkshopSt John and All Saints’ Church, Easingwold

5 6pm Lehár – The Merry WidowRyedale Festival Opera (with picnic interval) First of two performancesAmpleforth College Theatre

Sunday 19th

6 7–7.30pmPre-concert talk IThe Saloon, Duncombe Park

7 8pm Haydn, Bartók and the String Quartet IThe Saloon, Duncombe Park

Monday 20th

8 10–10.30amPre-concert talk IISt Mary’s Church, Birdsall

9 11amCoffee ConcertHaydn, Bartók and the String Quartet IISt Mary’s Church, Birdsall

10 3pmMartin Bell: The End of EmpireGaltres Centre, Easingwold

11 7pmLehár – The Merry WidowRyedale Festival OperaSecond of two performancesAmpleforth College Theatre

Tuesday 21st

12 10–10.30am Pre-concert talk IIIAll Saints’ Church, Hovingham

13 11am Coffee ConcertHaydn, Bartók and the String Quartet IIIAll Saints’ Church, Hovingham

14 3.30pm NYJO Jazz WorkshopMilton Rooms, Malton

15 7pmNational Youth Jazz OrchestraMilton Rooms, Malton

16 9.30pm Nocturnes by Candlelight I St Michael’s Church, Malton

Wednesday 22nd

17 11am Talk: The Rise and Fall of the Habsburg EmpireMalton Methodist Chapel

18 12.45pmFestival LunchThe Talbot Hotel, Malton

19 7–7.30pmPre-concert talk IVSt Mary’s Priory Church, Old Malton

20 8pmHaydn, Bartók and the String Quartet IVSt Mary’s Priory Church, Old Malton

Thursday 23rd

21 11amCoffee ConcertHelmsley Arts Centre

22 7pm Triple ConcertCastle Howard

Friday 24th

23 11amCoffee ConcertJoan of Arc Hall, Botton Village

24 3pmHenry Marsh: Do No HarmHelmsley Arts Centre

25 8pmOrchestra of Opera NorthSt Peter’s Church, Norton

Saturday 25th

26 11am Coffee ConcertSt Hilda’s Church, Sherburn

27 3pm Piano WorkshopHelmsley Arts Centre

28 7.30pmRachmaninov – Vespers Ampleforth Abbey

29 9.30pm Nocturnes by Candlelight IIChurch of the Holy Cross, Gilling

Sunday 26th

30 6.45pmDame Fanny Watermanin conversationThe Saloon, Duncombe Park

31 8pm Benjamin Grosvenor in recitalThe Saloon, Duncombe Park

Monday 27th

32 11amCoffee ConcertThe Saloon, Duncombe Park

33 3pmAfternoon ConcertSt Mary’s Church, Ebberston

34 6.30pmJohn Butt in conversationChurch of St Martin-on-the-Hill, Scarborough

35 8pmDunedin ConsortChurch of St Martin-on-the-Hill, Scarborough

Tuesday 28th

36 11amCoffee ConcertSt Mary’s Church, Lastingham

37 2pmWind WorkshopSt Mary’s Church, Lastingham

38 3.30pmCharlotte Green: The News is ReadHelmsley Arts Centre

39 7pmDouble Concert ISledmere House and Church

Wednesday 29th

40 11amCoffee ConcertSt Michael’s Church, Coxwold

Thursday 30th

41 11amCoffee ConcertSt John the Evangelist’s Church, Welburn

42 7pmDouble Concert IISledmere House and Church

Friday 31st

43 11amCoffee ConcertChurch of St Michael le Belfrey, York

44 6pmAny Other Business – Martin Vander Weyer and friendsHelmsley Arts Centre

45 8pm An Evening with Michael BerkeleyThe Saloon, Duncombe Park

Saturday 1st August46 11am

Coffee ConcertSt Mary’s Church, Thirsk

47 8pmThe Beautiful Maid of the Mill All Saints’ Church, Helmsley

48 9.30pmNocturnes by Candlelight IIIAll Saints’ Church, Helmsley

Sunday 2nd

49 3pmGarden PartyGarden of the Worsley Arms Hotel, Hovingham

50 6pm Festival Service All Saints’ Church, Hovingham

51 7pmFinal Gala ConcertHovingham Hall

Summary of events

N.B. Doors will be opened 30 minutes before performances.

Page 4: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

4

Introductionfrom the Artistic Director

Welcome to the 2015 Ryedale Festival – two weeksof inspiring performances in the many beautiful andhistoric venues in and around Ryedale, NorthYorkshire. Right from the opening night (when werecreate the sights and sounds of Brahms’s favouritetavern!), there’s a Hungarian flavour to theprogramme, with a complete cycle of Bartók’s stringquartets alongside an equally great set by Haydn, anew production of Lehár’s The Merry Widow, and acelebration of Brahms’s Hungarian-inspired works.

A 100th anniversary performance of Rachmaninov’sAll Night Vigil in Ampleforth Abbey introduces aparallel theme of ‘night music’, including a completecycle of Chopin’s Nocturnes over three candlelitconcerts and night-inspired works by Bartók,Schoenberg, Mozart, Tallis, Byrd, Britten and others.

Chamber music is at the heart of the programme,with festival residences from the Heath and DoricQuartets, and the Lendvai Trio. A new piececelebrating coffee (and an old one satirising it) opensthe festival’s famous series of Coffee Concerts, manyof them featuring outstanding young musicians.Orchestral highlights include the Orchestra ofOpera North playing Mahler and the RoyalNorthern Sinfonia performing at Hovingham Hall,while the Dunedin Consort bring an all-Bachprogramme to Scarborough and the National YouthJazz Orchestra promises an unmissable evening inMalton. Vocal highlights include performances bytop choirs Ex Cathedra and Stile Antico, while anew English version of one of Schubert’s greatestsong cycles is heard for the first time in Helmsley.

The ink will still be drying on eleven new works(nine world premieres, two English premieres),including two by festival composer MichaelBerkeley. To complete the picture, there is theunique Triple Concert at Castle Howard and DoubleConcerts at Sledmere, a series of literary events Wayswith Words, a festival exhibition, a series of freefestival workshops for young and amateurmusicians, and a new initiative Ryedale500 to helpmore young people explore the festival.

It promises to be an exciting summer in Ryedaleand the festival looks forward to welcoming friendsold and new to enjoy it. I hope you can join us andlook forward to seeing you there.

Christopher GlynnArtistic Director

Ryedale Festival 2015

Ryedale Festival Trust LimitedRegistered Charity No. 1117355Company Registration No. 5976080 VAT No. 500 6984 56

Cover design after Klimt’s TheTree of Life Design:www.basementpress.com Printing: www.inprint-colour.co.uk

Page 5: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

11amPickering Parish Church

Coffee ConcertSir Thomas Allen (baritone)Rowan Pierce (soprano)Nick Pritchard (tenor)Charlotte Barbour-Condini (recorder)Fitzwilliam QuartetAdam Summerhayes (violin)David Gordon (harpsichord)Malcolm Creese (double bass)Asaf Sirkis (percussion)

Purcell – Fantasia no. 7Marcus Bartram-Stevens – Double on Purcell’s Fantasia

no. 7 (World Premiere)David Gordon – Romanesque (World Premiere) Bach – Coffee Cantata

Friday 17th July

After opening with one of the extraordinary worksfor viol consort that so excited Purcell’s musicalimagination, and a contemporary piece inspired byit, the Ryedale Festival, famous for its CoffeeConcerts, presents the world premiere of a newcoffee-inspired work by David Gordon. It featuresrecorder soloist (and BBC Young Musician of theYear finalist) Charlotte Barbour-Condini and anarray of percussion instruments from the maincoffee-growing countries. Finally, Sir Thomas Allenheads the cast for one of the most comic andquirky pieces ever to come from the pen of J.S.Bach: a mini-opera about a coffee-addicted girl andher father who longs to find her a respectablehusband, heard here in the first performance of anew translation by John Warrack, with the moral‘drinking coffee is natural!’Coffee/tea/soft drinks and biscuits served from 10am–10.45am

1

Sir Thomas Allen Charlotte Barbour-Condini

Page 6: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

8pmMilton Rooms, Malton

Brahms and theGypsy: The RedHedgehog TavernZRI Ensemble

Ben Harlan (clarinet)Max Baillie (violin)Matthew Sharp (cello)Jon Banks (accordion)Iris Pissardie (santouri)

Brahms – Clarinet Quintet AllegroHungarian traditional melody – Tigeneascau Carpathian traditional melody – Kolomeyke Traditional Klezmer melody – Hora mit tsibiles

(Hora with Onions) Ukrainian trad. – Sarba Maracini

Brahms – Clarinet Quintet AdagioKlezmer melody – Der Gasn Nign (The Street Tune)

Brahms – Clarinet Quintet AndantinoRomanian trad. – Dance from KorondKlezmer melody – Der Goldene Khasene

(The Golden Wedding)Carpathian wedding improvisation – Doina

Brahms – Hungarian Dance no. 1Moldavian trad.– Nikolaev Bulgar

Brahms – Clarinet Quintet Finale

Malton’s Milton Rooms are transformed into theViennese tavern Zum Roten Igel ! This was the famousRed Hedgehog Tavern where Brahms loved to drinkand let his hair down while gypsy bands playedHungarian and Jewish folk music. The world-classmusicians of ZRI combine classical refinement withtavern grit and gypsy flair in their own version ofBrahms’s Clarinet Quintet – one of his lastcompositions, full of his melancholic, unfulfilled lovefor Clara Schumann. Its folk influences aremagnified with a new instrumentation, includingsantouri (hammered cimbalom-type instrument)

and accordion, and the movements are interleavedwith improvisations on the folk music of MiddleEurope. There is sure to be a party atmosphere andtickets include Hungarian delicacies at the interval.

‘ZRI played with consummate virtuosity, magic andpassion. The emotional charge of Brahmsilluminated by the gypsy spirit was a greatcombination’ – Royal Albert Hall

Pre-concert and interval drinks

Friday 17th July continued

2

ZRI Ensemble

6

Page 7: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

11amSt John and All Saints’ Church, Easingwold

Coffee ConcertPhoenix TrioJonathan Stone (violin)Marie Macleod (cello)Sholto Kynoch (piano)

Haydn – Piano Trio in G major ‘The Gypsy Rondo’Brahms – Piano Trio no. 1 in B major

Three outstanding musicians present one of thebest-loved of all Haydn’s chamber works,nicknamed Gypsy Rondo after its high-spiritedfinale in the Hungarian style. It is followed by oneof the most dramatic and expansive of all pianotrios, full of passionate, folk-influenced melodiesthat mark it out as one of the finest works by theyoung Brahms.

‘three consummate musicians’ – Oxford Times

‘powerfully eloquent’ – The Guardian

Coffee/tea/soft drinks and biscuits served from 10am–10.45am

2pmSt John and All Saints’ Church, Easingwold

Strings WorkshopMatthew Sharp

Young and amateur players of all stringedinstruments are invited to an informal publicworkshop with top cellist Matthew Sharp. Comeand find out how to get more from yourinstrument and find more freedom andenjoyment in playing. All ages and levels are welcome at this free event. Open-door to thepublic with unreserved seating. To take part, orfind out more, please email Robert Heath:[email protected].

‘a stunning cellist, unique communicator and, Ibelieve, one of the most exciting musicians of hisgeneration’ – Mark Antony Turnage

‘an extraordinary cellist – virtuosic, charismatic,brimming with verve and poetry’ – The Times

Saturday 18th July3 4

Matthew Sharp

7

Page 8: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

Saturday 18th July continued

5 6pmAmpleforth College Theatre

Ryedale Festival OperaLehár – The MerryWidow(with picnic interval)

Kerem Hasan (conductor)Nina Brazier (director)

Franz Lehár’s Merry Widow has held audiencesspellbound ever since its premiere in 1905. Sunghere by a cast of outstanding young singers, in thefirst performance of a new English translation byJohn Warrack, it tells the story of Hanna Glawari,a rich and sophisticated widow who captivates allof Paris, and whose wealth could save her near-bankrupt little country of Pontevedro – if onlyshe does not marry a foreigner! The diplomatsthat surround her are desperate to keep hermoney in the country by persuading her to marryCount Danilo. He’s an old flame, just waiting tobe re-lit, but also a proud man who still enjoyshis bachelor lifestyle and the easygoing ladies he finds at Maxim’s nightclub. In a sub-plot, the

charming Frenchman Camille de Rosillon doeshis best to seduce the ambassador’s wifeValencienne, who is bored enough to be temptedbut too ‘respectable’ to succumb. Meanwhile, theirrepressible Hanna flirts, charms and dances herway through the farcical events surrounding herand the conflict between political duty andromantic intrigue brings out the best in Lehár: awinning streak of intimate waltzes, flirtatiouspolkas, exuberant can-cans and catchy melodies.

‘Ryedale Festival Opera is an object lesson to ourlarge opera companies as to how much can beachieved from so little…on the proverbial shoestringbudget, Ryedale Festival each year offers an operaticproduction of the highest quality’ – Yorkshire Post

‘Evenings like this are too good to miss’ – OperaMagazine

No interval bar

8

Ampleforth Abbey

The Merry Widow

Page 9: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

7–7.30pmThe Saloon, Duncombe Park

Pre-concert talk IKaty Hamilton

Musician and writer Katy Hamilton shares herknowledge and enthusiasm for two of the greatestsets of string quartets ever composed. Haydn wasboth inventor and ‘father’ of the string quartetand his op. 76 set, composed for a Hungarianpatron, show him at the height of his powers.More than 200 years later, another Hungarian,Béla Bartók, began his own set of six quartets - amusical adventure that would span his creativelife and result in some of the greatest music of the20th century. Join us to find out what makesthese works so special. This is a free event.

‘I never before received such pleasure frominstrumental music: they are full of invention, fire,good taste and new effects and seem the product, notof a sublime genius who has written so much and sowell already, but one of highly cultivated talents,who had expended none of his fire before’ – CharlesBurney on Haydn’s op. 76

8pmThe Saloon, Duncombe Park

Haydn, Bartók andthe String Quartet IDoric QuartetHeath Quartet

Haydn – String Quartet in G major (op. 76, no. 1)Bartók – String Quartet no. 1Haydn – String Quartet in D minor The Fifths (op. 76, no. 2)Bartók – String Quartet no. 2

The brilliant Heath and Doric Quartets are inresidence for a festival series featuring two of thegreatest sets of string quartets ever composed. Forboth Haydn and Bartók, the string quartet was alifelong exploration, a medium where their creativespirits found fullest expression. The first two worksof Haydn’s last great set of quartets, full of ingeniouseffects and expressive power, are heard herealongside Bartók’s 1st quartet – a sad, passionatework lamenting the loss of his first love – and themore peaceful, folk-inspired 2nd quartet hecompleted a few years later. Hungarian inspireddelicacies will be served at the interval.

‘Haydn and the Doric are a perfect match …Unequivocally, these were performances of terrificpanache and perception, seeming to get right under theskin of Haydn’s creative genius’ – Sunday TelegraphPre-concert and interval drinks

Sunday 19th July6 7

Doric Quartet

9

Page 10: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

10–10.30amSt Mary’s Church, Birdsall

Pre-concert talk IIKaty Hamilton

Katy Hamilton continues her exploration of thestring quartets of Bartók and Haydn. This is a freeevent.

Monday 20th July

8

9

10

St Mary’s Church, Birdsall

All Saints’ Church, Hovingham

11amSt Mary’s Church, Birdsall

Coffee ConcertHaydn, Bartók andthe String Quartet IIDoric QuartetHeath Quartet

Haydn – String Quartet in C major (op. 76, no. 3) TheEmperor

Bartók – String Quartet no. 3

National feeling runs strong in both these stringquartets. One of Haydn’s boldest and brightestworks, the Emperor quartet was nicknamed after itsuse of the Austrian National Anthem, while Bartók’skaleidoscopic 3rd quartet is full of the influence ofHungarian folk music and special instrumentaleffects.

Coffee/tea/soft drinks and biscuits served from 9.30am–10.45am

Page 11: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

11

3pmGaltres Centre, Easingwold

Martin Bell: TheEnd of EmpireFormer BBC war reporter and independent MP,Martin Bell talks about his time as a soldier in theBritish army in Cyprus in the late 1950s. The Endof Empire is a powerfully personal account of theviolent process of decolonization, drawing onrecently discovered letters he had written homeduring the conflict. Known to many as ‘the manin the white suit’, he also talks about his days asBBC foreign correspondent in some of thebloodiest conflicts of recent years and his four-yearterm as an anti-sleaze independent MP – years hedescribes as ‘the most shocking of my life’.

7pmAmpleforth College Theatre

Ryedale Festival OperaLehár – The MerryWidowKerem Hasan (conductor)Nina Brazier (director)

See event 5 for detailsPre-opera and interval drinks – there will not be a picnicinterval at this performance

10–10.30amAll Saints’ Church, Hovingham

Pre-concert talk IIIKaty Hamilton

In the third of her talks, Katy Hamilton uncoversthe stories behind two more masterpieces of thestring quartet repertoire. This is a free event.

11amAll Saints’ Church, Hovingham

Coffee ConcertHaydn, Bartók andthe String Quartet IIIDoric QuartetHeath Quartet

Haydn – String Quartet in B flat major (op. 76, no. 4)The Sunrise

Bartók – String Quartet no. 4

What better way to start the day than with Haydn’sSunrise quartet – so-called after the theme that arcsacross its opening bars? The five movements ofBartók’s powerful and colourful 4th quartet alsoform an arch-shape, with exuberant dance-likemovements and quicksilver scherzi framing theatmospheric nocturne that lies at its centre. Coffee/tea/soft drinks and biscuits served from 9.30am-10.45am

3.30pmMilton Rooms, Malton

NYJO Jazz WorkshopYoung jazz players from Ryedale School andacross the region join the acclaimed leaders of theNational Youth Jazz Orchestra to develop theirskills in an afternoon of musical exploration. Allages and abilities are welcome at this free event.Open-door to the public with unreserved seating.To take part, or find out more, please email RobertHeath: [email protected].

Tuesday 21st July

10

11

12

13

14

Martin Bell

Page 12: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

7pmMilton Rooms, Malton

National Youth JazzOrchestraNYJO is famous as a showcase for the country’sbest young jazz musicians and for its unique,swinging big-band sound. Malton will surely beswinging too, as they play big band classicsalongside new compositions and arrangements.

‘Their combination of youthful intensity andpinpoint accuracy can be quite overwhelming … theplaying, both solo and ensemble, makes itoutstanding by any standards’ – The Observer

‘As conductor, Armstrong capered ecstatically in frontof a youth band professional enough to nail the mostcomplex section-playing, with a string of giftedsoloists (some of them still at secondary school)delivering almost languidly trenchant improvisations’– The GuardianPre-concert and interval drinks

Tuesday 21st July continued

1615

12

National Youth Jazz Orchestra

9.30pmSt Michael’s Church, Malton

Nocturnesby Candlelight ICharles Owen (piano)

Chopin – Three Nocturnes (op. 9)Chopin – Three Nocturnes (op. 15)Chopin – Two Nocturnes (op. posth.)Ravel – Gaspard de la nuit

OndineLe gibetScarbo

The first in a festival series of three candlelit concertsfeaturing the complete Nocturnes of Chopin,alongside other piano works inspired by the night.The first eight of Chopin’s ‘night songs’ weave anintoxicating and nostalgic sound world, wheresoaring dream-like melodies are set against darkershadows. Charles Owen follows them with adevilishly virtuosic masterpiece for piano by Ravel,one of the most difficult piano pieces ever composed,but also one of the most evocative: a night-inspiredtriptych, depicting a seductive water-nymph, anightmarish vision of a hanged man in the desert,and a goblin darting about at dead of night.

‘Charles Owen is out of the best school of Britishpianism – bright, sensitive, unaffected, and withplaying informed by brainwork’ – The Irish Times

Page 13: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

11amMalton Methodist Chapel

The Rise and Fall ofthe Habsburg EmpireA talk by Lucy BeckettHistorian and novelist Lucy Beckett sets the scenefor the festival’s Austro-Hungarian theme with a talkabout the history of the great Habsburg dynasty.Coffee/tea/soft drinks and biscuits served from 10am–10.45am

12.45pmThe Talbot Hotel, Malton

Festival LunchAll are welcome for an informal lunch at theTalbot Hotel, Malton.

7-7.30pmSt Mary’s Priory Church, Old Malton

Pre-concert talk IVKaty HamiltonThe last in a series of talks by Katy Hamilton,where she shares her fascination with the stringquartets of Haydn and Bartók and talks about what makes these works so special. This isa free event.

8pmSt Mary’s Priory Church, Old Malton

Haydn, Bartók andthe String Quartet IVDoric QuartetHeath Quartet

Haydn – String Quartet in D major (op. 76, no. 5) LargoBartók – String Quartet no. 5Haydn – String Quartet in E flat major (op. 76, no. 6) Bartók – String Quartet no. 6

The final concert in this series features starkcontrasts. Two late quartets by Haydn are full ofplayful humour but also have profound slowmovements. Bartók’s 5th quartet, once memorablydescribed as ‘like no other quartet’, features twoprofound slow movements evoking the sights andsounds of the night – as well as episodes ofgrotesque humour and demonic energy. The seriesends with the deep sadness and nostalgia of Bartók’s6th and final quartet, composed just before theoutbreak of World War II. Hungarian inspireddelicacies will be served at the interval.

‘The Heath gave us all the wit and mercurialinventiveness you’d expect … with a really engaging senseof interplay … And it’s nice to see four musicians whoutterly dispel the idea that classical music is somehowbackward-looking or fogey-ish’ – GramophonePre-concert and interval drinks

Wednesday 22nd July

17

18

19

20

Heath Quartet

13

Page 14: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

Charles Owen, Katya Apekisheva

11amHelmsley Arts Centre

Coffee ConcertYorkshire Young MusiciansPenny Stirling (director)Benjamin Powell (piano)

Come and hear some of the most talented youngmusicians in the Yorkshire and Humber area(aged 8-18), participants in the Yorkshire YoungMusicians scheme which enables youngmusicians to benefit from the highest qualitytuition in their locality.Coffee/tea/soft drinks and biscuits served from 10am–10.45am

7pmCastle Howard

Triple ConcertA special event, unique to the Ryedale Festival:the Triple Concert features three contrastingconcerts in different areas of the house, eachperformed three times, with the audiencesrotating between performances.

Long Gallery

PetrushkaKatya ApekishevaCharles Owen

Stravinsky – Petrushka

Petrushka is a puppet, the Slavic version of MrPunch: a naughty trickster who beats his wife, argueswith authority, challenges the devil, and delights hisaudience. The comedy and tragedy of the characterStravinsky described as ‘the immortal and unhappyhero of every fair in all countries’ shine through inone of his greatest ballet scores, heard here in thecomposer’s own version for piano duet and playedby two of the country’s leading pianists.

Thursday 23rd July

21

22

14

Castle Howard

Page 15: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

Chapel

In Pace: Music for ComplineStile Antico

Byrd – I Laid Me Downe to RestSheppard – Libera Nos I and II Mundy – O Lord, the Maker of all ThingPlainsong – Miserere mihi Tallis – Miserere nostriByrd – Miserere mihiSheppard – The Lord’s PrayerTallis – Te Lucis ante Terminum (festal tone)Taverner – Ave Dei patris filia

As the darkness folded around the pillars of theirchurches, mediaeval worshippers gathered for theservice of Compline, commending themselves toGod’s protection through the long watches of thenight. It was an occasion that inspired the greatEnglish composers to some of their most intimateand uplifting music. This magical programmeranges from exquisitely simple hymns tobreathtakingly complex webs of polyphony,

culminating in John Taverner’s thrilling votiveantiphon, Ave Dei patris filia, and is performedby one of the world’s finest vocal ensembles.

‘An ensemble of breathtaking freshness, vitality andbalance’ – New York Times

‘Perhaps the most ravishing sound I heard this year’– The New Yorker

Great Hall

Transfigured NightPsappha

Schoenberg – Verklärte Nacht

A man and woman are walking through a moonlitforest. She confesses a dark secret: she is pregnantwith the child of another man. The acceptance andforgiveness of her new lover, who is prepared toaccept the child as his own, find expression in apassionate masterpiece for string sextet that hasremained Schoenberg’s most popular work.Interval drinks

Stile Antico

15

Page 16: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

3pmHelmsley Arts Centre

Do No Harm:Stories of Life, Deathand Brain SurgeryHenry Marsh

Henry Marsh, Consultant Neurosurgeon atAtkinson Morley’s / St George’s Hospital inLondon, gives an astonishingly candid insight intothe life and work of a modern neurosurgeon – itstriumphs and disasters. How does it feel to holdsomeone’s life in your hands, to cut into the stuffthat creates thought, feeling and reason? How doyou live with the consequences of performing apotentially life-saving operation when it all goeswrong? If you believe that brain surgery is a preciseand exquisite craft, practised by calm and detachedsurgeons, think again. Henry Marsh reveals thefierce joy of operating, the profoundly movingtriumphs, the harrowing disasters, the hauntingregrets and the moments of black humour thatcharacterise a brain surgeon’s life.

Friday 24th July23 24

Orchestra of Opera North

16

11amJoan of Arc Hall, Botton Village

Coffee ConcertAeðelfrìthMichael Berkeley – Champagne Fanfare (UK Premiere)Nick Walkley – Jórvíkekkoer (World Premiere)Byrd – Earl of Oxford’s MarchTimothy Jackson – Fantasia on a theme of Thomas TallisMichael Berkeley – Music from ChaucerSimon Dobson – Joan’s Vision of St Michael (World Premiere)Torstein Aagaard-Nielsen – Eirik the VikingHolst (arr. Wick) – A Moorside Suite

Aeðelfrìth is a brass ensemble-based arts project,named after an ancient King of Northumbria andexploring connections between Anglian, Celtic andNordic cultures. Their programme has a mediaevalflavour, with a couple of Viking invasions thrownin! After a sparkling fanfare by Michael Berkeley,they play a new piece reminiscing Yorkshire underViking rule – a ‘call to arms’ featuring a pair ofDanish Lurs! There are also pieces inspired byTallis and Chaucer, a new piece by Simon Dobsonto celebrate the special atmosphere of Botton’s Joanof Arc Hall and Holst’s famous evocation of thenorthern moorland landscapes of England.Coffee/tea/soft drinks and biscuits served from 10am–10.45am

Page 17: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

8pmSt Peter’s Church, Norton

Orchestra ofOpera NorthRichard Farnes (conductor)

Bartók – Music for Strings, Percussion and CelestaMahler – Symphony no. 4 in G major

Richard Farnes conducts the musicians of OperaNorth in one of Bartók’s most popular and originalworks, where the driving rhythms and diabolicalenergy of Hungarian and Bulgarian folk music giveway to passages of great calm and beauty, especiallythe famous ‘night music’ section. It is followed byperhaps the most magical of all Mahler’ssymphonies: a musical depiction of the worldthrough the innocent eyes of a child, beginningwith sleigh bells and ending in heaven.

‘…Opera North back on top form, with theconductor undoubtedly the star of the show: howlong before Richard Farnes is recognised as anational treasure?’ – Daily Telegraph

‘Richard Farnes’s conducting is sensational in itssweep, detail and understanding’ – The GuardianPre-concert and interval drinks

11amSt Hilda’s Church, Sherburn

Coffee ConcertPolyhymnia

Schumann – ZigeunerlebenDvořák – Gypsy SongsSchubert – Mignon songsSchubert – Mignon und der HarfnerLiszt – Die Drei ZiegeunerWolf – Die ZigeunerinBrahms – Ziegeunerlieder

A stay in Budapest inspired one of the best ofBrahms’s many Hungarian-inspired works – theZiegeunerlieder (‘Gypsy Songs’) for vocalensemble. A group of outstanding young singersjoins festival director Christopher Glynn for theseand other musical depictions of gypsy life – fiery,passionate, playful and always colourful.

Coffee/tea/soft drinks and biscuits served from 10am–10.45am

3pmHelmsley Arts Centre

Piano WorkshopCharles Owen

Young and amateur pianists are invited to comeand work with top pianist Charles Owen in aninformal public workshop. Come and find outhow to get more from your instrument and findmore freedom and enjoyment in playing. All agesand levels are welcome at this free event. Open-door to the public with unreserved seating. Totake part, or find out more, please email RobertHeath: [email protected].

‘Owen is an intelligent and insightful player witha technique to allow him to essay even the mostdifficult of music and present it clearly to us; thereare insufficient superlatives to praise him’ – TheGlasgow Herald

Saturday 25th July

25

26

27

Richard Farnes

17

Page 18: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

7.30pmAmpleforth Abbey

Rachmaninov –Vespers Ex CathedraJeffrey Skidmore (conductor)

A centenary performance by an acclaimed choirof the work Rachmaninov loved above all hisothers – the Vespers (also known as the All NightVigil, and first performed in 1915). The solemn,serene beauty of this music which is rooted in hisdeep Orthodox faith gave him ‘an hour of themost complete satisfaction’. This work alwayscreates an unmistakable atmosphere and thisperformance by candlelight in Ampleforth Abbeywill surely be no exception.

‘Birmingham’s jewel in the crown – as theiracclaimed Proms appearance demonstrated – isJeffrey Skidmore’s Ex Cathedra…top-notch quality’– The Independent

‘a phenomenal feat of musicianship’ – The NewYorker

‘beyond praise…an unforgettable concert of memorablemusic superbly performed’ – Seen and HeardNo interval. Pre-concert and post-concert drinks

9.30pmChurch of the Holy Cross, Gilling

Nocturnesby Candlelight IIFinghin Collins (piano)

John Field – Two NocturnesChopin – Two Nocturnes (op. 27)Schumann – Des AbendsChopin – Two Nocturnes (op. 32)Schumann – In der NachtChopin – Two Nocturnes (op. 37)Schumann – Traumes Wirren

Acclaimed Irish pianist Finghin Collins beginswith two pieces by his compatriot John Field –the composer credited with inventing theNocturne. He follows them with three sets ofnocturnes by Chopin, interspersed with threevivid night-time evocations by Schumann.

‘He didn’t play as though trying to prove something, butrather as though recounting some little story he haduncovered in each one. This was transcendent playing… spellbinding stuff that reached deep’ – Irish Times

‘Of Finghin Collins as soloist, little needs to be saidthat has not been said before: he is exceptionallyfluent, exceptionally intelligent, exceptionallysensitive, responding to every possible nuance’ –International Record Review

Saturday 25th July continued

28 29

18

Ex Cathedra

Page 19: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

6.45pmThe Saloon, Duncombe Park

Dame Fanny Watermanin conversation withRichard Shephard

A celebration of one of Yorkshire’s great musicalfigures. At the age of 96, Dame Fanny Watermanis perhaps the world’s best known piano teacher.Her books have introduced over 2 millionchildren to the piano and the international pianocompetition she founded in Leeds over 50 yearsago is famous for bringing ‘global talent to God’sown county’ by discovering and launching thecareers of many great pianists. She joins thedistinguished composer Richard Shephard to talkabout her life and work.

8pmThe Saloon, Duncombe Park

Benjamin Grosvenorin recitalBenjamin Grosvenor (piano)

Mendelssohn – Two Preludes and Fugues Chopin – Sonata no. 2 in B flat minor (Funeral March)Ravel – Le Tombeau de Couperin Liszt – Venezia e Napoli

Since being named BBC Young Musician of theYear 2004 at the age of 11, Benjamin Grosvenorhas widely been seen as one of the mostremarkably talented pianists to have emerged onthe international stage. His programmeencompasses works by Mendelssohn and Ravel,as well as Chopin’s 2nd Sonata, with its famous‘funeral march’ and a final movement describedby Rubinstein as ‘wind howling aroundgravestones’, before he ends with a dazzling piecethat Liszt composed to celebrate his favouriteItalian cities.

‘Benjamin Grosvenor may well be the mostremarkable young pianist of our time …performance after performance of surpassingbrilliance and character’ – Gramophone

‘There is something of the conjuror and the magicianabout Grosvenor. His stage demeanour is quiet andhumble, his technique is effortless and flawless, hisrhythmic energy and flexibility are a constant sourceof delight, the range of colours he produces and hisdynamic range are possibly without parallel, and thisis done with an unassuming modesty that reveals somuch about his talent: he does not seek to amaze,and he does not need to’ – International RecordReview

Pre-concert and interval drinks

Sunday 26th July

30

31

Benjamin Grosvenor

19

Page 20: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

11amThe Saloon, Duncombe Park

Coffee ConcertCharles Owen (piano)

Bach – Goldberg Variations

‘Composed for connoisseurs, for the refreshmentof their spirits’ said Bach of his thirty variationson a simple tune, a musical Everest, full ofvirtuosity and incredible invention, and playedhere by one of the outstanding British pianists ofhis generation.

‘Charles Owen’s pellucid articulation, a bright andshining sound, absolutely no pedal, and anexuberant delight in these colourful works. Houdini-like technical challenges … as Bach pianism goes,this was as exciting as it gets’ – The IndependentCoffee/tea/soft drinks and biscuits served from 10am–10.45am

3pmSt Mary’s Church, Ebberston

Afternoon ConcertFenella Humphreys (violin)

Sally Beamish – New Work (English Premiere)Bach – Chaconne (from Partita no. 2 in D minor)Sir Peter Maxwell Davies – New Work (English Premiere)Bach – Partita no. 3 in E major

The beautiful church of St Mary’s Ebberston isthe setting for two of Bach’s greatest solo violinworks alongside two new Bach-inspired works bytwo of the country’s foremost composers. Theyare played by a violinist variously described in thepress as ‘alluring’, ‘unforgettable’ and ‘a wonder’.

‘Fenella Humphreys’ performance is a wonder’ –International Record Review

‘Fenella Humphreys captures the music’s wistfulcantabile to perfection, producing a golden tone inall registers with the utmost sensitivity to where everyphrase is moving’ – The Strad

Monday 27th July

32

33

Fenella Humphreys

20

Page 21: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

6.30pmChurch of St Martin-on-the-Hill, Scarborough

Discovering Bach:John Butt in conversationThe award-winning conductor, keyboard playerand renowned Bach expert John Butt introducesthe concertos of J.S. Bach and answers questionsfrom the audience about Bach and his music.This is a free event.

‘Butt is an unlikely podium hero. Holed up at theUniversity of Glasgow, he spends his days unravellingthe notational mysteries of baroque scores ... But, puthim on a podium, and Butt forgets his boffin dayjob and conducts his musicians with head-bangingferal might’ – The Guardian

8pmChurch of St Martin-on-the-Hill, Scarborough

Dunedin ConsortJohn Butt (director)Cecilia Bernardini (violin)Huw Daniel (violin)Alexandra Bellamy (oboe)

J.S. Bach – Sinfonia to Cantata 21 Ich hatte vielBekümmernis

J.S. Bach – Concerto for oboe and violin in C minorJ.S. Bach – Violin Concerto in E majorJ.S. Bach – Violin Concerto in A minorJ.S. Bach – Concerto for two violins in D minor (Double

Concerto)

Bach was most famous as an organist and keyboardplayer, but was also a fine violinist. After a livelyoverture, the Dunedin Consort presents two of hissolo violin concertos, with their wealth of inventivedetail, alongside a colourful and joyful concerto forviolin and oboe. The programme culminates inone of Bach’s greatest masterpieces - the DoubleConcerto for two violins, with its famous andsublime slow movement.

‘One of the finest available Bach performances’ –The Independent

‘Sheer magic’ – BBC Music Magazine

‘a sparkling and scintillating performance…wheresome violinists sound as though they’re engaged in aphysical and intellectual tussle with the music,Bernardini made light and weightless music thatflowed in every movement …It was an absolutethrill to listen to and a delight to hear’ – The Herald

Interval drinks

34 35

Dunedin Consort

21

Page 22: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

11amSt Mary’s Church, Lastingham

Coffee ConcertJoseph Shiner (clarinet)Frederick Brown (piano)

John Ireland – Fantasy-Sonata for clarinet and pianoDebussy – Beau SoirFreya Waley-Cohen – Nocturne (World Premiere)Fauré – Clair de luneBrahms – Sonata for clarinet and piano in E flat major Weiner – Peregi Verbunk

Two outstanding young musicians perform aprogramme including one of John Ireland’s mostpersonal works, a late sonata by Brahms and adazzling Hungarian showpiece. At the centre ofthe programme are three pieces inspired by night,including the world premiere of a new nocturneby Freya Waley-Cohen.

Coffee/tea/soft drinks and biscuits served from 10am–10.45amin Lastingham Village Hall

2pmSt Mary’s Church, Lastingham

Wind WorkshopJoseph Shiner

Young and amateur wind players are invited tocome and work with top clarinettist JosephShiner in an informal public workshop. Comeand find out how to get more from yourinstrument and find more freedom andenjoyment in playing. All ages and levels arewelcome at this free event. Open-door to thepublic with unreserved seating. To take part, orfind out more, please email Robert Heath:[email protected].

3.30pmHelmsley Arts Centre

Charlotte Green: The News is ReadFor 27 years, newsreader Charlotte Green’s rich,velvety voice was a staple on the radio and a treatfor millions of listeners. Charlotte joined theBBC in 1978 and became one of the regularreaders on the Today programme, where herbulletins covered everything from the fall of theBerlin Wall to 9/11. After leaving Radio 4 in2013, Charlotte joined Classic FM, where shenow presents an arts and culture programme. Shetalks about her life, giving us the story behind thevoice, extracts from her entertaining andtouching autobiography, some hilariousanecdotes of her career, and a peek at the invisibleworld of radio.

Tuesday 28th July36

38

22

37

Joseph Shiner

Page 23: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

7pmSledmere House and Church

Double Concert IHouse

A Matter of Patter

Richard Suart (baritone)Bryan Evans (piano)

A light-hearted celebration of operetta and the artof the patter song, of which Richard Suart is onethe world’s greatest exponents. Featuring songs byGilbert and Sullivan, Tom Lehrer, Flanders andSwann and Noel Coward, all spiced withanecdotes, dialogue and general patter – as youmight expect!

‘Richard Suart… patters astoundingly and isgleefully funny as Major-General Stanley’ – TheGuardian

Church

Beethoven – Septet

GirasoliAlison Bury (violin)Katie Heller (viola) Andrew Skidmore (cello)Elizabeth Bradley (double bass)Lesley Schatzberger (clarinet)Susan Dent (horn)Alastair Mitchell (bassoon)

Beethoven’s sparkling Septet has always been oneof his most celebrated works. Full of melodiccharm, witty interplay between instruments andingenious effects, this is Beethoven at his mostconvivial, played by a group of celebratedmusicians who have come together to mark the20th anniversary of festival charity Jessie’s Fund.The grounds of Sledmere will be open from 5.30pm forconcert-goers and there will be a further picnic opportunityduring the 45 minute interval between performances whendrinks will also be available.

39

Sledmere House

23

Page 24: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

Lendvai TrioSt Michael’s Church, Coxwold

11amSt Michael’s Church, Coxwold

Coffee ConcertLendvai Trio

Beethoven – Serenade in D major (op. 8)Michael Berkeley – String Trio

Ryedale welcomes the superb Lendvai Trio for athree-day residency. They begin with an earlywork by Beethoven, where lively dances to delightthe composer’s patron sit alongside slowermovements that are full of poetry. It is followedby another early work (for which the composerstill has a ‘soft spot’) by festival composer inresidence Michael Berkeley.

‘The Lendvai Trio has a deep well of energy… thiswas persuasive playing, technically of the highestorder’ – The Strad

‘The string trio repertoire tends to be an unopenedbox of surprises, even to string players themselves …played with great wit and finesse by the LendvaiString Trio. This is their first disc. What a fine debut’– The Observer

Coffee/tea/soft drinks and biscuits served from 10am-10.45am.

Wednesday 29th July

40

24

Page 25: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

11amSt John the Evangelist’s Church, Welburn

Coffee ConcertAlec Frank-Gemmill (horn)Simon Smith (piano)

Beethoven – Sonata in F major for horn and pianoKirchner – Tre Poemi Schumann – Adagio and AllegroR. Strauss – Mondscheinmusik aus Capriccio

At 28 years old, BBC New Generation Artist AlecFrank-Gemmill is already considered one of the

foremost exponents of the horn as a soloinstrument. He joins pianist Simon Smith for atypically wide-ranging programme.

‘A phenomenon with a tone of golden purity,wraparound warmth and ecstatic afterglow’ –Financial Times

‘what a great player is Frank-Gemmill.Extraordinary: the haunting horn strands of themusic have never been more tellingly in safe hands’– The HeraldCoffee/tea/soft drinks and biscuits served from 10am-10.45am.

Thursday 30th July41

Alec Frank-Gemmill

25

Page 26: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

7pmSledmere House and Church

Double Concert IIChurch

Lendvai TrioMozart – Divertimento in E flat major

Aged 31, at the height of his powers but alsovirtually penniless, Mozart turned to the unusualcombination of three string instruments andproduced one of his greatest masterpieces. AlfredEinstein called it ‘one of his noblest works...something special in the way of art, invention,

and good spirits... Each instrument is first amongequals, every note is significant, every note acontribution to spiritual and sensuous fulfilmentin sound’.

‘their well-considered performances show affection forthe music, revelling in its warmth and flashes ofhumour, a resounding success’ – BBC Music Magazine

House

4 Girls 4 HarpsEleanor Turner, Harriet Adie, Keziah Thomas,

Elizabeth Scorah (harps)

Handel – La Réjouissance (Music for the Royal Fireworks) Harriet Adie – Sun, Moon and Stars – A Middle-Eastern Sky Ravel – Three pieces from ‘Ma mère l’Oye’ (Mother Goose)

Pavane de la Belle au bois dormant Laideronnette, Impératrice des pagodes Les entretiens de la Belle et de la Bête

Paul Patterson – Mosquitoes (World Premiere)Monica Stadler – African Reflections Saint-Saëns – Danse Macabre

4 Girls 4 Harps have delighted audiences throughoutEurope with their dynamic performances andinnovative repertoire. Inspired by the sights andsounds of the night, their programme includes theworld premiere of a piece by Paul Patterson depictingone of night’s less welcome visitors!

‘Sparkingly energetic…ensemble is watertight andthere is a real rhythmic élan to the playing whichkeeps you listening’ – BBC Music Magazine

The grounds of Sledmere will be open from 5.30pm forconcert-goers and there will be a further picnic opportunityduring the 45 minute interval between performances whendrinks will also be available.

Thursday 30th July continued

42

4 Girls 4 Harps

26

Page 27: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

11amChurch of St Michael le Belfrey, York

Coffee ConcertLendvai TrioAlec Frank-Gemmill (horn)Christopher Glynn (piano)

Mozart – Horn Quintet in E flat major Mozart – Piano Quartet in G minor

Two very different works by Mozart. The LendvaiTrio join forces with Alec Frank-Gemmill for hisHorn Quintet, a good-natured piece, full ofvirtuosity and with a magical central movement.In contrast his Piano Quartet in G minor isalmost operatic in its scope and richness, a truemasterpiece from the same year as The Marriageof Figaro.Coffee/tea/soft drinks and biscuits served from 10am-10.45am.

6pmHelmsley Arts Centre

Any Other Business –Martin Vander Weyerand friendsMartin Vander Weyer reads excerpts from his newbook Any Other Business and talks about his life,alongside musical and poetic contributions fromfriends and colleagues. A Spectator columnistdescribed by Boris Johnson as ‘the most oracularand entertaining business commentator inLondon’, Martin is also a poet, playwright,amateur actor, former banker, intrepid traveller,ardent Francophile, music lover and proudYorkshireman – aspects of his life that are allreflected in this anthology which he describes as‘a kind of autobiographical jigsaw puzzle’.

Friday 31st July

43 44

Lendvai Trio

27

Page 28: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

8pmThe Saloon, Duncombe Park

An Evening withMichael BerkeleyFenella Humphreys (violin)Adrian Brendel (cello)Ruby Hughes (soprano)Christopher Glynn (piano)Ryedale Festival Ensemble

Mozart – Adagio and Fugue Lennox Berkeley – Andantino Bridge – Go not, happy dayBritten – The Salley GardensMichael Berkeley – Three songs for children Michael Berkeley – VeilleuseMichael Berkeley – At a Solemn Wake (World Premiere)Poulenc – La GrenouillèreMichael Berkeley – Echo: Homage à PoulencMichael Berkeley – Rilke Sonnet no. 2 Fauré – Piano Quartet in C minor

An evening of music and conversation with thecomposer and broadcaster Michael Berkeley –one of the country’s best known musical figures.The son of the composer Lennox Berkeley,godson of Benjamin Britten, and a chorister atWestminster Cathedral, he has also been artisticdirector of several festivals, presenter of BBCRadio 3’s Private Passions and, since 2012, anindependent peer in the House of Lords. He talksabout his life in music and introducesperformances of some of his own ‘privatepassions’, including one of Fauré’s mostmagnificent works. The concert also includes theworld premiere of a new piece for cello and pianocommissioned for the Ryedale Festival.

Pre-concert and interval drinks

Friday 31st July continued

45

Michael Berkeley

28

Page 29: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

11amSt Mary’s Church, Thirsk

Coffee ConcertX24 and EXtraCHORdWilliam Brooks and Jessica Burggraf

(conductors)

Barber – Agnus Dei (Adagio for Strings)Buchenberg – Veni, Dilecta MiBritten – Hymn to St CeciliaByrd – O quam suavis estFrank Martin – Mass for Double Choir

This concert begins and ends with two greatsettings of the Agnus Dei: Samuel Barber’s is anarrangement for voices of his own famous Adagiofor strings, while Swiss composer Frank Martin’ssetting concludes his inspired mass for doublechoir – one of the 20th century’s greatestliturgical works and also a piece that thecomposer regarded as his own personal offeringto God. It also features one of Britten and Auden’shappiest collaborations – a motet in praise of thepatron saint of music. Coffee/tea/soft drinks and biscuits served from 10am-10.45am.

8pmAll Saints’ Church, Helmsley

The Beautiful Maidof the Mill Toby Spence (tenor)Christopher Glynn (piano)

Schubert - The Beautiful Maid of the Mill (Die schöne Mullerin – in a new English version by Jeremy

Sams)

Schubert’s great song cycle Die schöne Mullerin isheard here in the world premiere of a new Englishversion by Jeremy Sams, sung by the internationallyrenowned tenor Toby Spence. Its twenty songs tellthe story of a young wanderer who follows a streamto a mill. He finds work there, and falls in love withthe miller’s daughter. But when she rejects him hefinds himself alone, wandering again, with thestream his only companion.

‘Toby Spence’s appreciation of poetic form andexpression was evident from the first phrase…everyword was clear, even those lines which werearticulated almost as a whisper. He vibrantly liftedwords from the page, and sang with affectingemotional commitment’ – Opera Today

‘one of the great British tenors of his generation’ –Opera Now

Pre-concert drinks

Saturday 1st August

46

47

Toby Spence

29

All Saints’ Church, Helmsley

Page 30: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

9.30pmAll Saints’ Church, Helmsley

Nocturnesby Candlelight IIIKatya Apekisheva (piano)

Chopin – Two Nocturnes (op. 48)Chopin – Two Nocturnes (op. 55)Chopin – Two Nocturnes (op. 62)Beethoven – Sonata no. 14 in C# minor (Moonlight Sonata)

For the last in our series celebrating night musicfor piano, Russian pianist Katya Apekisheva playsthe late Chopin Nocturnes alongside a sonata byBeethoven, nicknamed Moonlight after itsatmospheric opening movement.

‘A profoundly gifted artist who has already achievedartistic greatness’ – Gramophone

‘Astute colours and brilliant technique’ – The Times

‘Her power and temperament remind me of MarthaArgerich’ – Nezavisimaya Gazeta, Moscow

Pre-concert drinks

3pmGarden of the Worsley Arms Hotel,Hovingham

Garden PartyKirkbymoorside Brass Band

No Yorkshire festival would be complete withouta brass band performance – and Kirkbymoorsideis well known as one of the county’s finest. Wewelcome them in this their 200th anniversaryyear. Tickets include a cream tea.

6pmAll Saints’ Church, Hovingham

Festival Service The Revd. Tim RobinsonThe Rt. Revd. James Jones (Preacher)

A short, ecumenical service of thanksgiving forthe festival, with words and music reflecting on atheme of ‘The Imagination of our Hearts’.

Sunday 2nd August48

Saturday 1st August continued

49

50

Hovingham Hall

30

Page 31: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

7pmHovingham Hall

Final Gala ConcertRoyal Northern SinfoniaToby Spence (tenor)Steven Hudson (oboe)Peter Francomb (horn)Bradley Creswick (director)

Mozart – Eine kleine NachtmusikMichael Berkeley – Oboe Concerto Britten – Serenade for tenor, horn and stringsMozart – Paris Symphony no. 31 in D major

Three works with very different night-timeassociations: Mozart’s evening divertissement Einekleine Nachtmusik ended up as one of his mostcelebrated works. Michael Berkeley’s OboeConcerto remembers the composer’s godfather,Benjamin Britten, in a movement recalling thelines ‘Let us sleep now’ from his War Requiem.Britten’s own fascination with the night is heardin his Serenade – haunting settings of six greatnocturnal poems with an eloquent part for solohorn. The concert ends with the musicalfireworks of one of Mozart’s most extrovertsymphonies.

‘the Serenade…got the performance of a lifetimefrom tenor Toby…Crystalline, witty and full oftender, mysterious emotion, this was a reading thatbrought out every nuance and every bit of majestyin the score’ – San Francisco Chronicle

‘There’s no better chamber orchestra in Britain’ –The Guardian

Pre-concert and interval drinks

51

5th July – 31st July 2015 / Helmsley Arts Centre

Ryedale FestivalExhibition

Gerard CollettGerard Collett is fast developing an internationalreputation for his street and social documentaryphotography. He has been recently exhibited in thePall Mall Gallery in London, the Soho ArthouseGallery in New York, and in Los Angeles at the LosAngeles Center for Digital Art (LACDA). He isthe 2014 winner of the international iPhonePhotography Awards in its highly competitiveNews/Events category, securing furthernominations in other categories. He is a passionateadvocate of the analogue process and in additionto mobile photography and digital, he uses Leicarangefinder cameras in the tradition of HenriCartier-Bresson and Garry Winogrand, two of hismajor influences. In this year’s MobilePhotography Awards, he has received threecommendations, two in its Photojournalismcategory. His innovative work with the iPhone hasattracted the attention of numerous publications,including an in-depth interview with MacUserMagazine which ran a four-page spread of hisphotographs, establishing him as an exciting newvoice within iPhoneography and photojournalism.

31

Page 32: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

Austro-Hungarianmusic• Bartók – String Quartets (19th – 22nd July)• Haydn – String Quartets op. 76 (19th –

22nd July)• Lehár – The Merry Widow (18th and 20th July)• Brahms and the Gypsy – The Red Hedgehog

Tavern (17th July)• Brahms – Ziegeunerlieder (25th July)• Bartók – Music for Strings, Percussion and

Celesta (24th July)• Lucy Beckett – The Rise and Fall of the

Habsburg Empire (22nd July)

Night music• Chopin – Complete Nocturnes (21st and

25th July, 1st August)• Schoenberg – Verklärte Nacht (23rd July)• Stile Antico – Music for Compline (23rd July)• Holst – Nocturne from Moorside Suite

(24th July)• Bartók – Music for Strings, Percussion and

Celesta (24th July)• Rachmaninov – 100th anniversary

performance of Vespers (25th July)• Freya Waley-Cohen – Nocturne (28th July)

• Harriet Adie – Sun, Moon and Stars (30thJuly)

• Paul Patterson – Mosquitoes (30th July)• Mozart – Eine kleine Nachtmusik (2nd August)• Britten – Serenade for tenor, horn and strings

(2nd August)

Michael Berkeley –composer in residence• Champagne Fanfare (24th July)• Music from Chaucer (24th July)• String Trio (29th July)• At a Solemn Wake (World Premiere – 31st July)• Veilleuse (31st July)• Three songs for children (31st July) • Echo: Homage à Poulenc (31st July)• Rilke Sonnet no. 2 (31st July)• Oboe Concerto (2nd August)

Free Workshops• Strings Workshop with Matthew Sharp

(18th July)• Jazz Workshop with NYJO (21st July)• Piano Workshop with Charles Owen

(25th July)• Wind Workshop with Joseph Shiner (28th July)

Festival Focus

Future datesRyedale Festival London Launch ConcertTuesday 9th June 2015, 6.30-8.30pm

22 Mansfield Street, London W1G 9NRTickets on application from the festival box office.

Ryedale Festival Christmas ConcertDecember 2015

Details to be announced later.

Ryedale Easter Festival 20161st April – 3rd April 2016

Join us for three exciting days of concerts andother festival events at Easter 2016. Moredetails available on the festival website soon.

Ryedale Festival 201615th July – 31st July 2016

Two weeks of great music and arts in the manybeautiful and historic venues of Ryedale andNorth Yorkshire.

32

Page 33: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

Festival Premieres• David Gordon – Romanesque for recorder

and string quartet (17th July)• Marcus Bartram-Stevens – Double on

Purcell’s Fantasia No 7 (17th July)• Michael Berkeley – Champagne Fanfare

(24th July)• Nick Walkley – Jórvíkekkoer (24th July)• Simon Dobson – Joan’s Vision of St Michael

(24th July) • Sir Peter Maxwell Davies – new work

(27th July)• Sally Beamish – new work (27th July)• Freya Waley-Cohen – Nocturne for clarinet

and piano (28th July)• Paul Patterson – Mosquitoes (30th July)• Michael Berkeley – At a Solemn Wake

(31st July)• Jeremy Sams – The Beautiful Maid of the

Mill (1st August)

Ways with Words –festival talks and literary events • Katy Hamilton – Haydn, Bartók and the

String Quartet (19th – 22nd July)• Martin Bell – The End of Empire (20th July)

• Lucy Beckett – The Rise and Fall of theHabsburg Empire (22nd July)

• Henry Marsh – Do No Harm (24th July)• Dame Fanny Waterman in conversation

(26th July)• John Butt – Discovering Bach (27th July)• Charlotte Green – The News is Read (28th July)• Martin Vander Weyer – Any Other Business

(31st July)

Festival Partners

Ryedale500Under 25? Come and explore the festival for a great price… Ryedale500 is a festival initiative to offer 500 tickets for £5 or less to concert-goers under 25. Thesetickets are available for all festival events, offering you a chance to explore the festival. Please phone oremail the box office for more details. Details will also be announced daily on Facebook and Twitter.

• Offer applies to those aged under 25 at the time of booking• Offer is limited to two tickets per person, per event• ID will be required on collection (Driving Licence, Student ID, passport etc)• Limited availability

33

Page 34: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

34

Where to stay, where to eatin Ryedale and surrounding area

Phone Postcode LocaleAmpleforth areaThe White Swan* 01439 788239 YO62 4DT AmpleforthThe White Horse* 01439 788378 YO62 4DX AmpleforthThe Wombwell Arms* 01347 868280 YO61 4BE WassThe Fairfax Arms 01439 788212 YO62 4JH Gilling EastEasingwold areaThe George Hotel 01347 821698 YO61 3AD EasingwoldThe Bay Tree* 01347 811394 YO61 1JU StillingtonThe Rose and Crown* 01347 811333 YO61 1DP Sutton on the ForestCastle Howard areaCrown and Cushion* 01653 618304 YO60 7DZ WelburnHelmsley areaBlack Swan Hotel 01439 770466 YO62 5BJ HelmsleyFeversham Arms 01439 770766 YO62 5AG HelmsleyThe Feathers Hotel 01439 770275 YO62 5BH HelmsleyThe Pheasant Hotel 01439 771241 YO62 5JG HaromeThe Star Inn* 01439 770397 YO62 5JE HaromeThe Hare Inn* 01845 597769 YO7 2HG ScawtonThe Black Swan* 01347 868387 YO61 4BL OldsteadRoyal Oak Inn* 01751 431414 YO62 7HX GillamoorHovingham Worsley Arms 01653 628234 YO62 4LA HovinghamMalton areaThe Talbot Hotel 01653 639096 YO17 7AJ MaltonThe Old Lodge 01653 690570 YO17 7EG MaltonThe New Malton* 01653 693998 YO17 7LX MaltonThe Mansion House 0871 911 8000 YO17 6UX Flamingo LandPickering areaThe White Swan Inn 01752 472288 YO18 7AA PickeringForest and Vale Hotel 01751 472722 YO18 7DL PickeringThe Fox and Hounds* 01751 431577 YO62 6SQ SinningtonThe Moors Inn* 01751 417435 YO62 6TF Appleton le MoorsLastingham Grange 01751 417345 YO62 6TH LastinghamScarborough areaThe Blue Bell* 01944 738204 YO17 8EX WeaverthorpeCrown Spa Hotel 01723 357400 YO11 2AG ScarboroughThirskThe Golden Fleece 01845 523108 YO7 1LL ThirskYorkGrand Hotel & Spa, York 01904 380038 YO1 6GD YorkThe Royal York Hotel 01904 653681 YO24 1AA York

Map: http://bit.ly/18L0Hpt

* denotes restaurant or pub with rooms

Some recommendations from the festival team...

Page 35: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

35

Page 36: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015
Page 37: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

37

Page 38: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

Ryedale Festival Members and VolunteersMembers: Our Members and Friends are at the heart of the Festival, providing the support which is essential to its continuedsuccess. Demand for tickets is high and grows each year and becoming a Friend or Gold/Silver Member ensures prioritybooking among other benefits:► Free festival programme for Gold/Silver/Friend Members (£10 otherwise) ► Soh-Fah magazine► Discounts for Gold and Silver Members ► Priority Booking Periods for each type of ► Acknowledgement in the Souvenir Programme MembershipFriends and Members subscribe various amounts – from £50 to £250 p.a (£10 for under 25s). To find out more pleasecontact Lorna Vasey on 07828 783536 or [email protected] or visit the website www.ryedalefestival.com.Volunteers: Our willing team of volunteers provide much-needed help in a variety of areas – transport, accommodation,stewarding, hospitality, brochure distribution, programme selling, fund-raising and administration work. The festival thriveson the goodwill of our supporters and volunteers. If you’d like to get involved in volunteering, please email Robert Heath:[email protected].

Ampleforth Abbey and Theatre YO62 4ENBirdsall St Mary’s Church YO17 9NWBotton Village Joan of Arc Hall YO21 2NJCastle Howard YO60 7DACoxwold St Michael’s Church YO61 4ADEasingwold Galtres Centre YO61 3AD

St John and All Saints’ YO61 3HHEbberston St Mary’s Church YO13 9PAGilling Church of the Holy Cross YO62 4JQHelmsley Duncombe Park YO62 5EB

Helmsley Arts Centre YO62 5DWAll Saints’ Church YO62 5AQ

Hovingham All Saints’ Church YO62 4LGHovingham Hall YO62 4LUWorsley Arms Hotel YO62 4LA

Ryedale FestivalBox OfficeThe Memorial Hall, Potter Hill, Pickering, N. Yorks YO18 [email protected] office 01751 475777

Finding our Venues

Lastingham St Mary’s Church YO62 6TNMalton Methodist Chapel YO17 7LL

Milton Rooms YO17 7LXSt Michael’s Church YO17 7LXThe Talbot Hotel YO17 7AJ

Norton St Peter’s Church YO17 9AEOld Malton St Mary’s Priory Church YO17 7HBPickering Parish Church YO18 7AWScarborough St Martin-on-the-Hill YO11 2BTSherburn St Hilda’s Church YO17 8PPSledmere Sledmere House YO25 3XGThirsk St Mary’s Church YO7 1PRWelburn St John the Evangelist YO60 7EQYork St Michael le Belfrey YO1 7EN

38

Page 39: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

Email: [email protected] Phone: 01751 475777 Post: Ryedale Festival Box Office, Memorial Hall, Potter Hill,

Pickering, YO18 8AABox Office Opening TimesMonday 9.30am to 4.00pm; Tuesday – Friday 9.30am to 2.00pm; Saturday 9.30am to 12.00pm.• Please note there will be a £2.00 handling charge for all bookings. • Credit card bookings cannot be accepted by email. • Please make cheques payable to ‘Ryedale Festival’.• For acknowledgement of your postal booking please include a stamped addressed envelope.• Please be sure to mark name, address and postcode clearly on all correspondence.Online Tickets for many Ryedale Festival events will now be available online. Please visitwww.ryedalefestival.com for more details. Please note that membership discounts cannot be usedonline, and online booking is not available during the priority booking period.

PRIORITY BOOKING DATES (Priority Bookings are Postal Only): Gold: 17th – 23rd AprilSilver: 24th – 30th April

Friends: 1st May – 14th MayGeneral Booking and Box Office Open from 18th May

Memberships To become a Festival Gold Member (£250 p.a.), Silver Member (£150 p.a.), Friend (£50 p.a.) or Under25 Member (£10 p.a.) please add the appropriate amount to your ticket order. Subscriptions run from1st January - 31st December. Please contact Membership Secretary, Lorna Vasey, on 07828 [email protected], or see the website for more details.Priority Booking TermsDuring the priority booking periods, Gold, Silver and Friend Members may purchase up to two ticketsper event; Gold members receive a 20% discount, and Silver members a 10% discount, on one ticketper event. There are no discounts for Friends. If ordering for more than one member please includeall names on the form.General Booking TermsTickets can be applied for by post before the Box Office opens on the 18th May, and will be dealt within order of receipt when general booking begins.Accessibility Some of our venues have limited access for wheelchair users and those with restricted mobility. If you have anyspecial requirements, please inform the Box Office when ordering tickets, or use the Accessibility Requirementssection on the Booking Form.Returns The Festival cannot accept returns at less than one week’s notice prior to the event. Before this date, arefund will be paid (less a 10% handling charge) for any ticket returned and subsequently resold.

• In the event of unforeseen circumstances, the Festival reserves the right to change artists,programmes and venues without prior notice.

• Please note that many Festival venues are not designed as concert halls and some seats may havea restricted view.

• Doors open 30 minutes before advertised performance times.

Booking Form

39

Page 40: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

TIM

ENo

EVEN

TVE

NUE

FULL

GOLD

SILV

ER

UNDE

R 25

TOTA

Lqt

yM

EMBE

R q

tyM

EMBE

R q

tyqt

p

FRI 1

711

am1

Coffe

e Ca

ntat

a / R

oman

esqu

e / S

ir Th

omas

Alle

nPi

cker

ing

Paris

h Ch

urch

£16.

00£1

2.80

£14.

40£8

.00

JULY

8pm

2Th

e Re

d He

dgeh

og Ta

vern

Milt

on R

oom

s, M

alto

n£1

8.00

£14.

40£1

6.20

£9.0

0

SAT

1811

am3

Coffe

e Co

ncer

t – P

hoen

ix Tr

io /

Hayd

n an

d Br

ahm

s St

Joh

n an

d Al

l Sai

nts'

, Eas

ingw

old

£12.

00£9

.60

£10.

80£6

.00

2pm

4St

rings

Wor

ksho

p –

Mat

thew

Sha

rp

St J

ohn

and

All S

aint

s', E

asin

gwol

dFr

eeS

EE

PA

GE

7Fr

ee

6pm

5Th

e M

erry

Wid

ow (w

ith p

icni

c in

terv

al)

Ampl

efor

th C

olle

ge T

heat

re£3

5.00

£28.

00£3

1.50

£17.

50

SUN

197p

m6

Pre-

conc

ert t

alk

ITh

e Sa

loon

, Dun

com

be P

ark

Free

BO

OK

ING

NE

CE

SS

AR

YFr

ee

8pm

7Ha

ydn,

Bar

tók

and

the

Strin

g Qu

arte

t ITh

e Sa

loon

, Dun

com

be P

ark

£16.

00£1

2.80

£14.

40£8

.00

MON

20

10am

8Pr

e-co

ncer

t tal

k II

St M

ary'

s Ch

urch

, Bird

sall

Free

BO

OK

ING

NE

CE

SS

AR

YFr

ee

11am

9Ha

ydn,

Bar

tók,

and

the

Strin

g Qu

arte

t II

St M

ary'

s Ch

urch

, Bird

sall

£12.

00£9

.60

£10.

80£6

.00

3pm

10M

artin

Bel

l – T

he E

nd o

f Em

pire

Galtr

es C

entre

, Eas

ingw

old

£12.

00£9

.60

£10.

80£6

.00

7pm

11Th

e M

erry

Wid

ow (w

ithou

t pic

nic

inte

rval

)Am

plef

orth

Col

lege

The

atre

£35.

00£2

8.00

£31.

50£1

7.50

TUES

21

10am

12Pr

e-co

ncer

t tal

k III

All S

aint

s' C

hurc

h, H

ovin

gham

Free

BO

OK

ING

NE

CE

SS

AR

YFr

ee

11am

13Ha

ydn,

Bar

tók,

and

the

Strin

g Qu

arte

t III

All S

aint

s' C

hurc

h, H

ovin

gham

£12.

00£9

.60

£10.

80£6

.00

3.30

pm14

Jazz

Wor

ksho

p –

NYJO

Milt

on R

oom

s, M

alto

nFr

eeS

EE

PA

GE

11

Free

7pm

15Na

tiona

l You

th J

azz

Orch

estra

Milt

on R

oom

s, M

alto

n£2

0.00

£16.

00£1

8.00

£10.

00

9.30

pm16

Noct

urne

s by

Can

dlel

ight

I –

Char

les

Owen

St

Mic

hael

's C

hurc

h, M

alto

n£1

2.00

£9.6

0£1

0.80

£6.0

0

WED

22

11am

17Lu

cy B

ecke

tt –

The

Rise

and

Fal

l of t

he H

absb

urg

Empi

reM

etho

dist

Cha

pel,

Mal

ton

£12.

00£9

.60

£10.

80£6

.00

12.4

5pm

18

Fest

ival

Lun

ch

Talb

ot H

otel

, Mal

ton

£25.

00N

O

DI

SC

OU

NT

S

7pm

19Pr

e-co

ncer

t tal

k IV

St M

ary'

s Pr

iory

Chu

rch,

Old

Mal

ton

Free

BO

OK

ING

NE

CE

SS

AR

YFr

ee

8pm

20Ha

ydn,

Bar

tók,

and

the

Strin

g Qu

arte

t IV

St M

ary'

s Pr

iory

Chu

rch,

Old

Mal

ton

£16.

00£1

2.80

£14.

40£8

.00

THU

2311

am21

Coffe

e Co

ncer

t – Yo

rksh

ire Yo

ung

Mus

icia

nsHe

lmsl

ey A

rts C

entre

£10.

00£8

.00

£9.0

0£5

.00

7pm

22Tr

iple

Con

cert

– Pe

trush

ka /

Com

plin

e / T

rans

figur

ed N

ight

Cast

le H

owar

d£3

6.00

£28.

80£3

2.40

£18.

00

FRI 2

411

am23

Bras

s en

sem

ble

– Ae

ðelfr

ithJo

an o

f Arc

Hal

l, Bo

tton

£15.

00£1

2.00

£13.

50£7

.50

3pm

24He

nry

Mar

sh –

Do

No H

arm

Helm

sley

Arts

Cen

tre£1

0.00

£8.0

0£9

.00

£5.0

0

8pm

25Or

ches

tra o

f Ope

ra N

orth

– B

artó

k an

d M

ahle

rSt

Pet

er's

Chu

rch,

Nor

ton

C

entre

Nav

e£3

0.00

£24.

00£2

7.00

£15.

00

Side

Aisl

es U

nallo

cate

d£2

8.00

£22.

40£2

5.20

£14.

00

SAT

2511

am26

Coffe

e Co

ncer

t – Z

iege

uner

liede

r / P

olyh

ymni

aSt

Hild

a's

Chur

ch, S

herb

urn

£15.

00£1

2.00

£13.

50£7

.50

3pm

27Pi

ano

Wor

ksho

p –

Char

les

Owen

Helm

sley

Arts

Cen

treFr

eeS

EE

PA

GE

17

Free

7.30

pm28

Rach

man

inov

– V

espe

rs /

Ex C

athe

dra

Ampl

efor

th A

bbey

£20.

00£1

6.00

£18.

00£1

0.00

Page 41: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

(See

nex

t pag

e fo

r met

hod

of p

aym

ent)

9.30

pm29

Noct

urne

s by

Can

dlel

ight

II –

Fin

ghin

Col

lins

Holy

Cro

ss C

hurc

h, G

illin

g£1

2.00

£9.6

0£1

0.80

£6.0

0

SUN

266.

45pm

30Da

me

Fann

y W

ater

man

and

Ric

hard

She

phar

dTh

e Sa

loon

, Dun

com

be P

ark

£7.0

0£5

.60

£6.3

0£3

.50

8pm

31Be

njam

in G

rosv

enor

in re

cita

lTh

e Sa

loon

, Dun

com

be P

ark

£28.

00£2

2.40

£25.

20£1

4.00

MON

27

11am

32Co

ffee

Conc

ert –

Gol

dber

g Va

riatio

ns /

Char

les

Owen

The

Salo

on, D

unco

mbe

Par

k£1

4.00

£11.

20£1

2.60

£7.0

0

3pm

33Af

tern

oon

Conc

ert –

Fen

ella

Hum

phre

ysSt

Mar

y's

Chur

ch, E

bber

ston

£10.

00£8

.00

£9.0

0£5

.00

6.30

pm34

Disc

over

ing

Bach

– J

ohn

Butt

in c

onve

rsat

ion

St M

artin

-on-

the-

Hill,

Sca

rbor

ough

Free

BO

OK

ING

NE

CE

SS

AR

YFr

ee

8pm

35Du

nedi

n Co

nsor

t – B

ach

Conc

erto

sSt

Mar

tin-o

n-th

e-Hi

ll, S

carb

orou

gh£2

0.00

£16.

00£1

8.00

£10.

00

TUES

28

11am

36Co

ffee

Conc

ert –

Jos

eph

Shin

er a

nd F

rede

rick

Brow

n St

Mar

y's

Chur

ch, L

astin

gham

£12.

00£9

.60

£10.

80£6

.00

2pm

37W

ind

Wor

ksho

p –

Jose

ph S

hine

rSt

Mar

y’s C

hurc

h, L

astin

gham

Free

SE

E P

AG

E 2

2Fr

ee

3.30

pm38

Char

lotte

Gre

en –

The

New

s is

Rea

dHe

lmsl

ey A

rts C

entre

£15.

00£1

2.00

£13.

50£7

.50

7pm

39Do

uble

Con

cert

I – A

Mat

ter o

f Pat

ter /

Bee

thov

en –

Sep

tet

Sled

mer

e Ho

use

and

Chur

ch£3

0.00

£24.

00£2

7.00

£15.

00

WED

29

11am

40Co

ffee

Conc

ert –

Len

dvai

Trio

St

Mic

hael

's C

hurc

h, C

oxw

old

£12.

00£9

.60

£10.

80£6

.00

THU

3011

am41

Cofff

ee C

once

rt –

Alec

Fra

nk-G

emm

ill a

nd S

imon

Sm

ith

St J

ohn

the

Evan

gelis

t, W

elbu

rn£1

2.00

£9.6

0£1

0.80

£6.0

0

7pm

42Do

uble

Con

cert

II –

Lend

vai T

rio /

4 Gi

rls 4

Har

psSl

edm

ere

Hous

e an

d Ch

urch

£25.

00£2

0.00

£22.

50£1

2.50

FRI 3

111

am43

Coffe

e Co

ncer

t – L

endv

ai Tr

io, A

. Fra

nk-G

emm

ill, C

. Gly

nnSt

Mic

hael

le B

elfre

y Ch

urch

, Yor

k£1

5.00

£12.

00£1

3.50

£7.5

0

6pm

44M

artin

Van

der W

eyer

and

Frie

nds

Helm

sley

Arts

Cen

tre£1

0.00

£8.0

0£9

.00

£5.0

0

8pm

45An

Eve

ning

with

Mic

hael

Ber

kele

yTh

e Sa

loon

, Dun

com

be P

ark

£25.

00£2

0.00

£22.

50£1

2.50

SAT

111

am46

Coffe

e Co

ncer

t – X

24 a

nd E

Xtra

CHOR

dSt

Mar

y's

Chur

ch, T

hirs

k£1

2.00

£9.6

0£1

0.80

£6.0

0

AUGU

ST8p

m47

The

Beau

tiful

Mai

d of

the

Mill

– T.

Spe

nce

and

C. G

lynn

Al

l Sai

nts'

Chu

rch,

Hel

msl

ey£1

8.00

£14.

40£1

6.20

£9.0

0

9.30

pm48

Noct

urne

s by

Can

dlel

ight

III –

Kat

ya A

peki

shev

aAl

l Sai

nts'

Chu

rch,

Hel

msl

ey£1

2.00

£9.6

0£1

0.80

£6.0

0

SUN

23p

m49

Gard

en P

arty

– K

irkby

moo

rsid

e Br

ass

Band

W

orsl

ey A

rms

Hote

l Gar

den,

Hov

ingh

am£1

2.00

£9.6

0£1

0.80

£6.0

0

6pm

50Fe

stiv

al S

ervi

ceAl

l Sai

nts'

Chu

rch,

Hov

ingh

amFr

eeB

OO

KIN

G U

NN

EC

ES

SA

RY

Free

7pm

51Fi

nal G

ala

Conc

ert –

Roy

al N

orth

ern

Sinf

onia

/ T.

Spen

ceHo

ving

ham

Hal

l

Mai

n Se

ctio

n£3

0.00

£24.

00£2

7.00

£15.

00

Rear

Sec

tion

£26.

00£2

0.80

£23.

40£1

3.00

Tota

l tic

ket p

aym

ent a

ll co

lum

ns

I enc

lose

a s

ubsc

riptio

n of

£25

0, £

150,

£50

, £10

(as

appl

icab

le)

Hand

ling

char

ge o

n al

l ord

ers

£2.0

0

Dona

tion

TOTA

L PA

YMEN

T

Page 42: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

42

Amount should be same as TOTAL PAYMENTon previous page

Payment detailsPlease enter details of your ticket order on the inside of this form, then complete the details below, rememberingto include the £2.00 handling charge. Please note that even in the case of events where entry is free, bookingis still required to be sure of having a seat (with the exception of the Festival Service and Workshops).

Priority bookings are only accepted by post. For parties wishing to be seated together please sendyour booking forms in the same envelope.

To aid the Box Office in identifying Friends and Members, if there are people in your party with a festivalmembership please list their names and postcodes in the spaces below.

1 2 3

Accessibility RequirementsThe Ryedale Festival makes every effort to accommodate all our audience members. Please help us tomake appropriate arrangements by informing us of any special requirements.

Is there a Wheelchair User in your party? YES / NO Any other disability? YES / NO

Please mention any other special requirements in the space below, or if you prefer contact the Box Office directly.

Title: Name:

Address:

Postcode:

Daytime tel:

E-mail address:

The Ryedale Festival likes to send our customers occasional newsletters and messages by email regarding festivalconcerts and social events. We will not share your contact information with third parties.

I agree that the Ryedale Festival can send me communications regarding events.

I enclose a cheque made payable to ‘Ryedale Festival’ £

Please debit my Visa / Mastercard / Maestro £

Card No.

Issue No. Card expiry date / Card start date /

Signature: Date:

For subscriptions and donations onlyI am a UK taxpayer, and I wish this, and subsequent donations I make to the Ryedale Festival,to be tax effective under the Gift Aid Scheme, until I notify you otherwise.

Signature: Date:

Remember to notify us if you no longer pay an amount of income tax or capital gains tax equal to the amount we reclaim on your donation.

Send to: RYEDALE FESTIVAL BOX OFFICE, The Memorial Hall, Potter Hill, Pickering, N. Yorks YO18 8AA Tel: 01751 475777 / Email: [email protected] / www.ryedalefestival.com

Page 43: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

43

Page 44: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

THEPHEASANTHOTEL

Conservatory, dining room and terraceopen to non-residents for morning coffee,light lunches, afternoon teas and dinner

THE PHEASANT HOTEL, HAROME,NEAR HELMSLEY, NORTH YORKS, YO62 5JG

T: 01439 771241E: [email protected]

www.thepheasanthotel.com44

Page 45: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

45

Page 46: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

46

Page 47: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

47

Page 48: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

48

Page 49: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

49

Page 50: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

50

Page 51: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

51

Page 52: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

52

Page 53: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

53

Page 54: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

54

Page 55: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

55

Page 56: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

56

Page 57: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015
Page 58: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

58

Page 59: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

59

Page 60: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

60

Your local AGA specialist

Country Warmth, Scarborough Road, Norton,Malton, North Yorkshire, YO17 9HE

Telephone 01653 694699www.countrywarmth.co.uk

AGA, Rayburn, Everhot, Falcon

��%&�%�&�! $#"A relaxed pub serving fresh,

seasonal food, wine and cask alesall day, every day.

You can find us in CAMRA’S Good Beer Guide 2015 andThe Michelin guide 2015.

Open Monday – Saturday 11.30am – 11pm, food served 12pm – 9.30pm,

Sunday 12pm – 10.30pm, food served 12pm – 9pm

��� �&���&���

��%&�%�&�! $#"�&���&�!��%$&� !�%�&�! $#"&����&��

�"�#$�%"%��! $#"��#���

Wishing the Ryedale Festival a very good season

County ClassicsClothes of Quality

7 Saville Street, Malton, North Yorkshire, YO17 7LL – 01653 6924813 Bondagte, Helmsley, York, North Yorkshire, YO62 SHW – 01439 730277

Open Mon–Sat 9.30–5 Size 10–22

Page 61: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

61

Page 62: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

62

Page 63: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

63

Page 64: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

64

Page 65: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

65

Page 66: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

66

Page 67: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

67

Page 68: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

68

Page 69: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

69

Page 70: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

70

Page 71: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

71

Page 72: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

72

Page 73: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

73

Page 74: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

74

Page 75: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

75

Page 76: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

76

Page 77: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

77

Page 78: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

78

Page 79: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015

79

Page 80: Ryedale Festival Brochure 2015