Yorkshire Music: News and Updates
Music in Bradford, Leeds and the West Yorkshire Region
Wednesday, April 11, 2007
Oops!
The piano was being brought to the home of John and Penny Adie, the organisers of the Two Moors Festival, an annual music event on Dartmoor and Exmoor.
But disaster struck when it toppled over and fell 2.5m (8.2ft) before landing on a bank, causing extensive damage to the instrument.
Removals firm G&R declined to comment on the incident.
The moments before and after the fall were captured on camera by Mrs Adie, 54, who was hoping to record a highpoint for the festival.
But joy turned to horror as she recorded how the piano toppled onto a bank.
Her husband John, 61, said: "It is unlikely ever to come back to us.
"The piano weighs half a tonne, has 10,000 moving parts and has fallen 2.5m onto the ground.
"How the hell do you guarantee that it will work again?"
The festival had been raising funds for two years to buy the piano at auction in London earlier this year.
It was to go into a concert hall at the Adies' home at Barkham, near South Molton, as a centrepiece for the upcoming spring festival.
The piano is now back in London where it is waiting for an independent assessment of the damage.
The piano was insured, but only for the £26,000 they paid for it at auction in London rather than its likely replacement value of £45,000.
Mr Adie said: "Bosendorfers are like the Stradivarius of the piano world.
"It's more than money that is the issue here. They are simply irreplaceable."
Bosendorfers are made in Austria and are the piano of choice for many of the world's leading pianists.
Mr and Mrs Adie set up the Two Moors Festival in 2001 to help the area recover from the foot-and-mouth crisis.
The two-year long campaign to raise the cash for the piano was spearheaded by Sophie, Countess of Wessex, who is the event's patron.
A spokesman for removals firm G&R said: "The matter is in the hands of the insurers. We have no further comment to make."
Original source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/devon/6541457.stm
Friday, April 06, 2007
Glennie's ISM Medal
Receiving the DMA, Dame Evelyn said: ‘This is indeed a great honour, which I am delighted to accept’. She spoke with feeling about her early musical education in village schools in Aberdeenshire, where enlightened local authority policies had enabled her to receive free tuition on both piano and percussion – if cost considerations had forced her parents to choose only one, it might not have been percussion. She urged the ISM to maintain its pressure on the government to ensure that top-quality music teaching was available to all schoolchildren, and vowed to continue her personal campaign to the same end.
Dr David Smith, the ISM’s East Scotland Regional Councillor, who had nominated Dame Evelyn for the DMA, said:
‘Dame Evelyn was born and brought up in rural Aberdeenshire, where she attended Ellon Academy before studying at the RAM. She is the first musician to have managed to sustain a full-time performing career as a solo percussionist: this has taken her around the world, typically performing in 100 concerts per year. She displays a dynamic flair in performance, and has acted as an inspiration for a generation of young percussionists. She is also in demand as a teacher, giving frequent masterclasses wherever she travels. As a champion of new music, she has commissioned 145 new percussion works from the world’s most eminent composers, including concertos and solo percussion pieces, greatly enriching the repertory. She has successfully crossed the boundaries of ‘art’ and ‘popular’ music, working with a wide and disparate array of artists: for example, she has collaborated in projects involving music for film, TV and radio, has explored improvised sound worlds, and composed songs with the vocalist Björk. She has received many accolades for her playing, including a Grammy Award in 1989 for a recording of Bartok’s Sonata for Two Pianos & Percussion. A woman of strongly held views and convictions, she often challenges established orthodoxy. She has received honorary doctorates from 15 UK universities, and was appointed OBE in 1993 and DBE in 2007.’
The ISM established its Distinguished Musician Award in 1976, as a means by which the profession could acknowledge the outstanding contribution of a colleague to British musical life. Previous recipients have been Sir Alexander Gibson, Sir William Walton, Sir Peter Pears, Sir Adrian Boult, James Galway, Jacqueline du Pre, Janet Craxton, Sir Michael Tippett, Sir Reginald Goodall, Sir Charles Groves, Sir Simon Rattle, Norman Del Mar, Witold Lutoslawski, Julian Bream, Sir Colin Davis, George Malcolm, Christopher Hogwood, Sir David Willcocks, Dame Fanny Waterman, Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, Sir Charles Mackerras, John McCabe, Sir Malcolm Arnold and Pierre Boulez.
Monday, April 02, 2007
Bradford's Urban Colours
A 30-VOICE youth choir from Bradford, Urban Colours, featuring black, white and Asian children, are set to release their debut album. The self-title project features songs made famous by Mary Mary, Cyndi Lauper, Tim Hughes, Joan Osbourne and Hillsong. It was produced by Steve and Velveta Thompson in conjunction with Alove, The Salvation Army For A New Generation. The album was recorded at the Kaiser Chiefs studios in Leeds. 'Urban Colours' will be released by ICC in June.
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