28.12.22

Past performers 2006-2022

After an eventful year when we returned to hosting concerts without restrictions, here is our regular look back at the growing list of fantastic performers we have been priviliged to host. We wish all our supporters a Happy New Year!

Adrian Bradbury | Adriano Graziani | Aiso Quartet | Alessandra Testai | Alex Metcalfe | Amanda Pitt | Ann Beilby | Anna Tilbrook | Anthony Zerpa-Falcon | Archaeus String Quartet | Archduke Trio | Barbirolli Quartet | Bérengère Mauduit | Bethany Horak-Hallett | Bojan Čičić | Callum Smart | Cambridge Taverner Choir | Cantabile: The London Quartet | Cellists of the RPO | Charles Wiffen | Chelys Viol Consort | Chris Hatt | Chris Parsons | Christopher Sayles | Clio Gould | Daniel Auchinloss | David Chatterton | David Campbell | Daniel Edgar | Daniel Grimwood | Daniel Tong | David Owen-Norris | David Maw | David Owen Norris | Decimus Consort | Diana Moore | Dominic Bowe | Dulcinea Quartet | Eboracum Baroque | Eleanor Alberga | Ellen Smith | Emma Halnan | English Cornett and Sackbut Ensemble | Felicity Lott | Felix Buser | Fiona Brown | Florian Stortz | Follia | Frances Yonge | Gary Branch | Gerald Finley | Giles Davies | Gilfillan family | Greg Tassell | Guy Johnstone | Hugh Webb | Ibrahim Aziz | James Gilchrist | Jamie McVinnie | Jane Gomm | Jennifer Snapes | Jenny Vizinet | Jonathan Ayling | Jong-Gyung Park | Joseph Wolfe | Julian Broughton | Julius Drake | Karen Jones | Karina Lucas | Kate Andrews | Kate Semmens | Katharine Johns | Katie Stillman | Kokoschka Trio | Konevets Quartet | Ken Aiso | King Charles Singers | Lianna Jeffrey | Liz Partridge | London Bridge Ensemble | London Concertante | Marcus Andrews | Mark Chambers | Margaret Faultless | Marie-France Ouellet | Marie-Noelle Kendall | Martin Bloor | Martin Fogel | Masahiro Yamaguchi | Matchbox Opera | Matt Glendening | Merry Opera | Michael Bacon | Michael Collins | Michael Grant | Michael McHale | Miriam Cox | Mirriam Teppich | Nigel Clayton | Oliver Davies | Owen Rees | Paul Clark | Paul Jeffrey | Paul Guinery | Pentagon Ensemble | Peter Arnold | Peter Barker | Rachel Godsill | Rachel Stroud | Rachel Threlfall | Raphael Wallfisch | Richard Egarr | Richard Uttley | Robert Gibbs | Robin Jeffrey | Rory Carver | Roselyne Martel-Bonnal | Rose Trio | Royal Tunbridge Wells Male Voice Choir | Ruairi Bowen | Ruth Beedham | St Andrews University Madrigal Group | Sam Haywood | Sara Lois Cunningham | Sarah Stuart-Pennink | Sasha Grynyuk | Schubert Ensemble | Simon Lane | Sophia Lisovskaya | Steve Pierce | Steven Devine | Temenos Chamber Choir | Teresa Caudle | Tim Gill | Tim Lines | Tom Bowes | Tom Foster | Tom Lilburn | Trajecti Voices | Trevor Eliot Bowes | Trio Lavolta | Tristan Gurney | Twilight Ensemble | Unexpected Opera | William Bass | William Summers | Yeo Yat Soon | Yukiko Shinohara

30.11.22

High horns live


Our annual Christmas baroque concert at King Charles on 
Saturday 3rd December, at 7:00pm is what Steven Devine, the concert's director, describes as "a rare chance to hear high horns live". 

Book here: https://www.ticketsource.co.uk/mkctw/bach-for-christmas/e-zajdjk

Note: this concert is likely to sell out of tickets at the advance price. However, a further 50 tickets will still be available on the door at full price (£22.50).

Bach's Mass in F Major and his first Brandenberg Concerto are two of the fairly unusual works to feature natural horns - that is, valveless and therefore restricted to the notes of the harmonic series in the key in which they are set up.

Steven writes:

Bach’s “Lutheran” Mass in F (BWV 233) consists of just the first two sections of the Mass ordinary (i.e. the Kyrie and the Gloria). This is one of four such compositions which date from the late 1730’s and was probably assembled from earlier composition – the Kyrie of the F major mass has its origins in a cantata movement dating from around 1708. These compositions share stylistic similarities with the earlier mass movements (Kyrie and Gloria) that were composed around 1733 and incorporated into the 1749 B Minor Mass (BWV 232). There is a contrast between old-style polyphony with instrumental doubling, for example the Kyrie, with thrillingly virtuosic style concitato writing for voices and instruments – for example the opening movement of the Gloria. 

The role of the natural horns also reflects a contrast – in the Kyrie they play a plainchant-like melody against the counterpoint of the voices and instruments, though this actual melody has not been identified. However, in the Gloria, they are released from this and play some of the most uplifting writing for the instruments ever written. 

The concerted nature of the horn writing is mirrored by the use of those instruments in the first of Bach’s six Brandenburg Concerti. As is well documented, Bach assembled the collection from earlier works as a portfolio of his instrumental compositions to impress the Margrave of Brandenburg. From the pristine nature of the surviving score (and the fact that Bach didn’t ever work for the Margrave) it seems that the collection didn’t have its intended effect. However it is now regared as one of the landmark compositional collections of Western music. 

The first concerto of the set, like the other five, showcases groups of instruments: in this case the horns, the oboe band (three oboes and bassoon) and the string team led from the Violin piccolo – a smaller instrument tuned a minor third higher (top string is G, then C, F and B flat). The technical demands placed on all the instruments show how accomplished Bach’s original musicians were (probably at the court in Dresden?) and push the demands of the instruments of the time to their limits. 

Vivaldi’s instrumental writing is equally enlightened in his concerto for violin RV 270 Il Riposo. He calls for all the strings to be muted (placing a small wooden clip or similar on the bridge in order to dampen the vibrations and hence the sound) and instructs the harpsichord continuo to remain tacet (silent) throughout. The soft-edge sound this creates is a perfect backdrop for Vivaldi’s writing of a high solo violin against frequent pedal notes. It seems to have been a favoured composition of Vivaldi’s as he returned to it a number of years later and appended the title “per il Santissimo Natale (for Holy Christmas)”.

10.11.22

Book now for our annual Baroque Christmas concert

In Dulci Jubilo
The annual Christmas baroque concert at King Charles
Saturday 3rd December, at 7:00pm. 

https://www.ticketsource.co.uk/mkctw/

One of the world's leading baroque violinists, Bojan Čičić, joins director and harpsichordist Steven Devine for a programme of music by Vivaldi, Praetorius and Bach, with the Decimus Ensemble and the Orchestra of Devine Music – principal players of the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, The Academy of Ancient Music and others. 

This concert has been an exciting feature of the Christmas celebrations at King Charles, Tunbridge Wells’ oldest building, for several years now and is always very popular.

Steven Devine, known to many in the area through his many years of work at the Finchcocks Musical Museum, said: “This is absolutely one of my favourite concerts of the year. I’m lucky enough to be able to involve some brilliant players from groups I work with, and we enjoy ourselves so much that every one of them asks to come back each time. 

“The setting is just perfect. An intimate baroque church with a wonderful acoustic, and the audiences are wonderful! The ovation at the end of our first concert, when we performed Handel’s Messiah in 2018, was the most spontaneously exciting response I’ve ever witnessed in this country. This year I’m thrilled to involve Bojan Čičić as soloist - for me, he’s got to be one of the finest violinists around.”

The programme includes Bach’s Brandenberg Concerto No.1, carols by Praetorius, Vivaldi’s violin concerto ‘Il Riposo’, and Bach’s Lutheran Mass in F major.

Rupert Preston Bell, director of music at King Charles the Martyr, has been promoting concerts of chamber music at the church since 2006. He said: “We’re very lucky to have these musicians coming to Tunbridge Wells, and their excitement is infectious. The church was built in the baroque period and is the perfect venue for this exciting and life-affirming music.”


25.10.22

Celebrated violinist Bojan Čičić to play at King Charles

We are very excited to announce that violinist Bojan Čičić will be playing in our annual Baroque concert at King Charles, directed by Steven Devine, on 3 December

Bojan is the leader of the Academy of Ancient Music and the ensemble Florilegium, and Professor of Baroque Violin at the Royal College of Music. He is frequently invited to lead orchestras such as the Orchestra of the 18th-century, Concerto Copenhagen, or the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment. 

His recording of J.S. Bach’s Concerto for Two Violins with Rachel Podger was named the best available recording of the work by BBC Music Magazine.

Find out more about him at his website, where you can also find video recordings to watch. http://www.bojancicic.com/

Tickets for the concert are available here https://www.ticketsource.co.uk/mkctw/t-xmdayga

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13.10.22

The two Michaels!

Friday 21 October, 7pm
Michael Collins (clarinet) and Michael McHale (piano)

It's a great privilege to welcome back these two wonderful Wigmore Hall artists, bringing their magical playing to a programme of Stanford (Sonata), Poulenc (Sonata), Finzi (Bagatelles) and a tribute to the late Joseph Horowitz (Two Majorcan Pieces/ Sonatina).

Chamber music of this prestigious quality is hard to come by outside top venues in London. We're very excited.

Tickets are just £18 in advance, and £20 on the door. 

https://www.ticketsource.co.uk/mkctw/michael-collins-michael-mchale/e-zayzpk

If you'd like to watch a clip of them in action, try here on YouTube

About the programme: Michael McHale in conversation with Michael Waggett

MW: It’s a joy to have the Collins/McHale duo at King Charles!

MM: And always a joy for us too. We very much like performing in such a beautiful church with its lovely ambience and good acoustics - and always helped by the great local audience!

MW: Your thoughts when putting together this programme?

MM: We wanted to present a mix of masterworks by great composers for clarinet and piano and combine those with works that aren’t performed quite so often but which are all really fantastic pieces of music

MW: Starting with eminent composer Charles Villiers Stanford

MM: Stanford was born in Dublin. He went on to become a titan of Anglican church music and a leading figure in British music and education with positions at Cambridge and the RCM in London. His students included Vaughan Williams, Howells, Bliss and Holst. Though his chamber music is influenced by Brahms he never forgot his Irish roots, as is evident in the sonata’s second movement which evokes an Irish lament and is subtitled “Caoine”.

MW: Next that great sonata for clarinet and piano by Poulenc 

MM: This sonata is one of the finest in the repertoire, full of Poulenc’s sparkling and witty melodic writing in the outer movements, and deeply lyrical and touching in the central Romanza. It is always a joy for us to perform this work! 

MW: After the interval you are playing the five bagatelles by Finzi in honour of a much loved mayor of Tunbridge Wells, the late Julian Stanyer, whose widow Annie will be with us.

MM: We both remember vividly our concert to celebrate the Twinning anniversary in 2019 and, having been unavailable last year, Michael Collins would like to remember Julian on this first anniversary of his passing by playing one of Julian‘s favourite pieces of music.

MW: The concert concludes with Joseph Horowitz and his Two Majorcan Pieces and Sonatina

MM: We wanted to pay a tribute to Joseph Horowitz, who died earlier this year aged 95. He had an incredible life, fleeing Vienna with his family as an Austrian Jew in 1938 and emigrating to England where he worked for decades at the RCM. It was there that Michael Collins met him as a teenage student in his theory class, and he would often come along to our recitals at Wigmore Hall – a truly lovely man and a supremely talented composer.


26.9.22

The two tenors!

James Gilchrist (l) and Mark Padmore (r)
Great to know that two of the country's most highly-acclaimed tenors can be heard on our doorstep in the next couple of weeks! 

You can hear Mark Padmore at All Saints Church, Tudeley on Thursday 29 September, and James Gilchrist at King Charles the Martyr on Friday 7 October.

Mark Padmore at Tudeley, 29 September
Tickets here
One of the world’s great singers Mark Padmore CBE, performs with guitar virtuoso Morgan Szymanski in the unique setting of All Saint’s Tudelely with its stunning Marc Chagall windows. Songs by Dowland and Schubert performed alongside new works by Stephen McNeff and Alec Roth.

James Gilchrist at King Charles, 7 October
Tickets here
An umissable opportunity to hear one of our generation's definitive interpretations of Schubert's enduringly profound song cycle, Winterreise, by James Gilchrist and Anna Tilbrook. Produced in association with the Tunbridge Wells International Music Festival.

Find out more about music in and around Tunbridge Wells by following the Tunbridge Wells INternational Music Festival @TW_MusicFest

4.9.22

Concerts in and around Tunbridge Wells this autumn

Here are some great concerts for your diary, plus links to other music festivals taking place. So much to see and hear. 


Paddock Wood Proms
Piano trio Tier 3 in concert at St Andrew's Paddock Wood
Daniel Grimwood, Joseph Wolfe & Jonathan Ayling
Concerts 7, 10, 12, 14, 17 September
www.tier-3.eu

Music at Malling, 21 Sept-2 Oct
See full schedule
A packed programme of international stars. Highly recommended. Classical and jazz of the highest quality.

Ightham Mote, 21-25 Sept
As part of Music at Malling,
21 September: Daniel Grimwood
22 September - BBC New Generations Artist Helen Charlston
25 September - The Marian Consort perform a fascinating programme of music written in the Tudor period including works by Sir William Haute - owner of Ightham Mote.

Tunbridge Wells International Music Festival

Saturday 24 September, 7pm, at King Charles Church
Tunbridge Wells International Music Competition finalist's concert
Adèle Théveneau, cello, & Charles Wiffen, piano
Book tickets here

Friday 7 October, 7pm, at King Charles Church
Schubert: Winterreise
James Gilchrist (tenor) and Anna Tilbrook (piano)
Book tickets here

Sunday 9 October, 3pm, at Rose Hill Theatre, TN4 9SY
Nigel Clayton and Imma Setiadi, piano duet
Music by Chabrier, Faure, Rachmaninoff etc
www.ticketsource.co.uk/codatw/t-noodxzm

Friday 21 October, 7pm, at King Charles Church
Michael Collins (clarinet) and Michael McHale (piano)
Book tickets here


20.7.22

Forthcoming concerts 2022

James Gilchrist. Photo: Patrick Allen

Live music has made a fantastic comeback after Covid lockdowns, and our autumn season will be something to savour!

Book tickets here

Saturday 24 September

Tunbridge Wells International Music Competition finalist's concert
Adèle Théveneau, cello
Charles Wiffen, piano
More information

Beethoven: Variations on "Bei Männern, welche Liebe fühlen", for cello and piano, WoO 46
Debussy: Sonata for Cello and Piano
Rachmaninov: Sonata for Cello and Piano, op. 19

And we look forward to this autumn's season of concerts in partnership with the Tunbridge Wells International Music Festival

Friday 7 October, 7pm

Schubert: Winterreise
James Gilchrist (tenor) and Anna Tilbrook (piano)

Attending a performance of this, Schubert's most famous song cycle, is an unforgettable experience. And we are very fortunate to welcome a duo whose interpretation is widely considered one of this generation's most definitive. Hear an extract on YouTube

"He is now unsurpassed amongst lyric tenors in sweetness and technical security, and for his musical intelligence" The Independent

"It is a profoundly considered reading, considered enough for some songs to be as penetrating as in almost any performance I have heard...I shall certainly treasure this disc as one of the indispensable readings, and also one of the best balanced between the two partners." BBC Music Magazine


Friday 21 October, 7pm
Michael Collins (clarinet) and Michael McHale (piano)

We're thrilled to welcome back these two Wigmore Hall regulars, for what will be an absolutely top class concert - programme to be announced.

Also principal conductor the City of London Sinfonia, Michael Collins is known as one of the world's greatest clarinettists. Michael McHale is one of Ireland's leading pianists, and the duo have been performing together for over a decade. See them at Wigmore Hall on YouTube.


To be first in the queue for future ticket information, email us to join our mailing list.


30.5.22

Our Red Cross donation from fundraising concert

Delighted that our "The heavans are telling" concert raised enough money to send £625 to the Red Cross Ukraine appeal. Thank you to everyone who took part and donated!




27.5.22

Vivaldi's Four Seasons

Friday 27 May, 7:30pm

Vivaldi, Bach and Mozart played by London Concertante.


Founded in 1991 by a group of graduates from London’s acclaimed music colleges, London Concertante has developed a reputation as one of the finest chamber ensembles in the UK. Its inspired programming, with repertoire from the Baroque to contemporary music, film scores to Viennese waltzes and Americana jazz to Argentine tango has led to both public and critical acclaim throughout its 30-year history, with past collaborators including celebrated jazz musicians such as Tim Garland, Byron Wallen and The David Gordon Trio, composers including John Tavener and John Woolrich and soloists including Giovanni Guzzo, Alexander Sitkovetsky, Mark Padmore, Michael Collins and many, many more.

18.4.22

'The heavens are telling' Fundraising concert


Saturday 7th May, 7pm

Come and sing choruses from Haydn's Creation and Handel's Messiah (bring your own scores if you can).

All welcome. Please come and help us support future concerts in the church, as our funds are completely exhausted after the difficulties of lockdown.

It will be wonderful to see friends and supporters for this informal occasion, followed by drinks in the hall. Please bring cash or card for your donations!

FUNDRAISING UPDATE: £1,200 raised thanks to everyone's generosity!

2.3.22

Daniel Grimwood at the National Liberal Club: Goldberg Variations

Monday 4 April, 7pm

We are pleased to promote an unmissable opportuity to hear Bach's Goldberg Variations played by the virtuoso pianist Daniel Grimwood, at the National Liberal Club in London.

Tickets: £20. 

Phone 0207 968 0912, or email bookings@nlc.org.uk

Cash bar from 6:30pm.

National Liberal Club, Whitehall Place, London SW1A 2HE.

Described by Felix Aprahamian as "the finest all-round musician I have ever known", Daniel Grimwood is obsessed by music and loves pianos old and new. His insatiable appetite for music has given rise to an eclectic and wide-ranging repertoire representing all eras from the rennaisance to the now.

"His touch was so light that he almost let the piano play itself." The Independent

"He has all the virtuoso velocity and firepower, and then some" BBC Music Magazine

The National Liberal Club, founded in 1882 by William Gladstone, is a private members' club with a diverse membership that also has a growing reputation as a concert venue. The Club recently purchased a magnificant Steinway D concert grand piano to further enhance the calibre of performances in its public events schedule, and as a venue it benefits from a superb location overlooking the Thames near Trafalgar Square, convnient for Charing Cross station.

8.1.22

King Charles Festival concert


Friday 28 January, 7pm

Please join us for a special concert to support the Tunbridge Wells International Music Competition.

Matt Glendening (clarinet) Competition Wind winner 2018, and Charles Wiffen (piano)

Brahms Sonata in F minor, Beethoven Sonata in E Flat major, and works by Schumann, Penderecki, Liszt, Rachmaninov and Francaix. 

Buy tickets here

Additionally, you may be interested in the King Charles Lecture, which this year is given by Professor Joe Moshenska of Oxford University, on the subject of John Milton and King Charles. This will be held at 2:30pm on Saturday 29 January.