16 July 2025
On Sunday I was at Christchurch in Northampton for the annual Northampton Symphony Orchestra end-of-season Friends' Concert. This short Sunday afternoon concert and buffet for the Friends of the Orchestra is our way of saying thank you for their support over the past year. As usual we performed a selection of shorter pieces. Our programme included the 'Waltz from Masquerade' by Khachaturian, the 'Overture to The Barber of Seville' by Rossini and Dvorak's 'Slavonic Dance No 8'. We also played the last three movements of Beethoven's 'Symphony No 6 (Pastoral)'. This was the symphony we were rehearsing in March 2020 for a concert that was sadly cancelled because of the COVID lockdown. Having played the Pastoral Symphony recently with Milton Keynes Sinfonia (reviewed here in March 2025), it was great to have a chance to get a few more notes right in the famous horn solos. As we have done for the past few years, we used our Friends' Concert as the opportunity to showcase some of the best local young musicians by featuring Northamptonshire Music and Performing Arts Trust soloists competition winners. This year's concert included the first movement from Handel's 'Harp Concerto' ('Concerto No. 6 in B-flat major', originally for harpsichord or organ), beautifully played by Elizabeth. She also treated us to an amazing encore: 'Harpicide at Midnight' by Pearl Chertok. I really enjoyed getting to grips with the Vaughan Williams 'Tuba Concerto', which we last played in 2008 (reviewed here in June 2008). It's a lovely piece, worthy of being heard more often, excellently performed for us by Charlie. Overall it was a lovely miniature concert with some very controlled, precise playing throughout the orchestra, expertly directed by our conductor John Gibbons.