Winter 2012 Concert Review

by rob
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Published on: January 17, 2013

Press Release: 9th November 2012

by rob
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Published on: November 21, 2012

The Royal Forest of Dean Orchestra is delighted to announce details of its forthcoming winter concert on Saturday 1st December 2012 at Coleford Baptist Church. The orchestra will once again be under the musical direction of its energetic young conductor, Thomas Payne, who studied violin and conducting at the Birmingham Conservatoire and will perform the spirited overture to Mozart’s Cosi Fan Tutte and Haydn’s Trumpet Concerto in the first half. The soloist is trumpeter Edward Carpenter. Brought up in Somerset, Edward came to Birmingham to study at the Conservatoire in 2007. During his studies he had many opportunities with the major ensembles, playing a wide range of repertoire. In 2009 he was awarded a place to study in Italy with Giancarlo Parodi. During the term spent there Edward played both the Vivaldi double trumpet concerto with Sergio Luchetta and also the Torelli Trumpet concerto, accompanied by the Baroque Orchestra of Ferrara. He was a finalist in several competitions at the college, including the Corfield Trumpet Prize and the Brass Prize, he was also awarded the postgraduate certificate course prize for 2011/12. During his postgraduate studies Edward was awarded a place on the CBSO orchestral training scheme in which he took part in a number of orchestral rehearsals.Away from his studies, Edward was a founder member of the Thumb contemporary music ensemble, with whom he plays regularly. Edward has also played with several other ensembles in the Birmingham area, including the Birmingham Philharmonic Orchestra, the CBSO Youth Orchestra and the Sinfonia of Birmingham.

Following the interval the second half will entirely devoted to a performance of one of classical music most powerful and best loved works, Beethoven’s Symphony No 3, ‘The Eroica’. The orchestra is led as usual by distinguished local performer and teacher, Ros Taunton. The concert will start at 7.30pm and tickets are available at the door, £8/£5 concessions with children under 14 getting in for free, so long as they are accompanied by an adult. There will be retiring collection in aid of SARA and refreshments will be available. The orchestra now has a fully updated website www.rfdo.org.uk and a facebook page where further details about the orchestra can be found.

Concert Review: Summer 2012

by rob
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Published on: July 6, 2012
ROYAL FOREST OF DEAN ORCHESTRA: CONCERT AT NEWLAND CHURCH
Saturday 30th June 2012
The Royal Forest of Dean Orchestra were in unfamiliar territory, musically speaking, last Saturday, exploring the complexities of late romantic European music. Two new composers entered their repertoire, Sibelius and Max Bruch, and this was a brave step into the unknown by the Orchestra under their dynamic and enterprising Musical Director Thomas Payne.
The concert was held in the great medieval Forest Cathedral at Newland, with its fine acoustics and grand setting. Sibelius started and finished the programme, with his symphonic poem ‘Finlandia’ and his Third Symphony, with Bruch’s Violin Concerto in the middle.
Finlandia was a powerful start for the evening.  It is a dramatic patriotic piece celebrating the Finnish people’s struggle to assert their identity against their great neighbours the Russians, and the orchestra captured the turbulence of the age and then the calm confidence of the new country.
Bruch’s Violin Concerto was, coincidentally, played on Classic FM earlier that day. Philippe Quint, the Russian-American virtuoso was the soloist on the radio recording, and I have to say that the performance of Elin White, the RFODO soloist who reprised the concerto in the evening was as good. Her command of the richly lyrical, powerful, sweeping, and fiendishly difficult concerto was complete, and she is yet another gifted young Gloucestershire musician to partner the orchestra.
Sibelius’ Third is not particularly known, and presents technical difficulties that may well have deterred a less confident and ambitious conductor than Thomas Payne. But it was a well chosen and well performed piece, celebrating in the romantic way the triumph of lightness over darkness, all to the accompaniment of insistent cello pizzicato. I hope that the cellists’ fingers were not completely torn to shreds.
The Orchestra’s mastery of this unfamiliar territory clearly brought them great shock and delight at the end of the performance. ‘Yes we can!’. They are approaching their 20thanniversary, and their journey from their uncertain start all those years ago to becoming an established regional orchestra has been a pleasure to observe. It’s all down to the partnership between the musical director and the orchestra. Their inspiring conductor coaxes, urges, encourages, and above all trusts the orchestra. The orchestra, led into dangerous territory, overcomes its doubts and difficulties.
It’s back to Beethoven for the next concert on 1st December, and I hope a programme of inspiring music for their anniversary year in 2013.
Dave Kent

Concert Review: Spring 2012

by rob
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Published on: April 2, 2012

The Royal Forest of Dean Orchestra paid a visit to St Peters Church, Newnham, last Saturday, presenting a well chosen and demanding programme of music to a packed house. Newnham is the home of the orchestra, as they rehearse in the village school, and the church has the grandeur and the acoustics to inspire the performers to another fine performance from this ambitious group. The Forest’s church buildings seem to be the best local venues for classical music, and the orchestra have previously performed at Coleford Baptist Church and Newland, Parkend and St Briavels Churches.

I can’t recall the orchestra playing Mozart before, but the opening piece this time was the Overture to his Magic Flute opera, a lively, if short, opening to the evening.

Next was a Concertino (which I discovered was a short concerto) for trombone and orchestra by Ferdinand David, performed by the phenomenally gifted local musician, 14 year old Rhiannon Symonds.

You don’t usually consider the trombone to be an instrument for soloists, but this piece from the German romantic period was beautifully and expressively played by Rhiannon. It was a precociously assured performance, and the audience called her back twice for curtain calls at the end of her performance. The last time I heard Rhiannon she was playing in the Forest Woodwind Ensemble and singing cabaret songs in a quite different environment (musically and in all other senses) at Newnham Club, highlighting the breadth of her musical interests.

The last piece was Brahms’ 2nd Symphony, a powerful and reflective work that took the orchestra into new areas that they confidently found their way through.

Thomas Payne, the ridiculously youthful and empathetic conductor, has a great rapport with the orchestra and is a great ambassador for classical music in the community, especially in the Forest of Dean. He challenges and encourages the musicians, and the success of this difficult programme and the large and appreciative audiences that they attract, testify to the growing strength of RFODO.


Review by Forest View

I was at St Peter’s Church, Newnham, for the Royal Forest of Dean Orchestra’s spring concert last Saturday. The setting and acoustics were superb, and the Orchestra added to their growing reputation with spirited and accomplished performances of some well known and less well known pieces. They started off with the mercurial Overture to Mozart’s opera ‘The Magic Flute, followed by perhaps the highlight of the evening, the concertina for trombone and orchestra by Ferdinand David, with the astonishingly gifted Rhiannon Symonds as soloist. The Orchestra always feature a guest star as soloist, and the performance of 14 year old Rhiannon of Yorkley was at least as accomplished as any of the national and international musicians who have preceded her.

The show concluded with a fine performance of Brahms’ 2nd Symphony. The RFODO musical director, Thomas Payne, is passionate about developing the orchestra and taking them to new challenges. They have certainly come a long way since their perhaps uncertain start 20 years ago. The next concert will be at Newland Church on 30th June, with another young musical star Elin White of Gloucester, who will be playing Bruch’s Violin Concerto.

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