It’s with great pleasure we welcome the seventh Peninsula Summer Music Festival. If last year was anything to go by attendees are in for incredible performances that are seductive, joyous, profound, intriguing and transformative. If you haven’t been to a classical performance since your “old school days” this is your chance to rekindle your senses with something special – we’re very luck to have it on the Pen so let’s support it. We believe that the experience might be so profound that you might just “see the light”. What a great way to finish off 2013 and kick start the NY.
Last year we were fortunate to see the renown Acacia Quartet on NYE, Klezmania on NYD for the “Hair of the Dog” and to top it off Alwan as part of the sassy “After Hours” series at Port Phillip Estate. The Peninsula Summer Music Festival offers so much to spoil the senses, it’s held over 10 days and it’s in our back yard. The festival will bring timeless favourites and long-lost gems, performed by a superb assembly of Australian and international artists. Highlights this year include –
- Purcell’s masterpiece Dido and Aeneas, featuring beloved mezzo-soprano Fiona Campbell and internationally-renowned conductor Kenneth Weiss
- Australia’s “sorceress of percussion”, Claire Edwardes, at Hummingbird Eco-Retreat
- The perennially-popular Recital Series at St Johns Flinders, where audiences mingle with artists at the Festival Café between performances
- The outstanding Seraphim Trio performing Mozart and Schubert
- 17th century Spanish Fandango at Moorooduc Estate
- Abendmusik – celebrating the splendor of the German Baroque at St Peters Mornington
- Ollie the Elephant – a family-friendly concert for the young – and the young at heart
- Caprice Viennois – music inspired by Vienna at Main Ridge Estate
- After Hours – a relaxed yet sophisticated late-night series at Port Phillip Estate
- New Year’s Day with a difference – Hair of the Dog at Willow Creek Vineyard
- Twilight Jazz on the lawn at Montalto – a sold-out success for 6 years running
We all know that practise makes perfect.. This year we caught up with three of the young guns, “the next gem” of performers including Emma Williams (Baroque Violin), Hannah Lane (Italian Triple Harp) and Arun Patterson (Baroque Violin). The three are part of the Festival Academy – a model based on the great European Summer Schools that provides talented young singers and instrumentalists with the opportunity to work alongside leading Baroque practitioners in rehearsing and performing the greats.
This years Festival Academy is showcasing Dido and Aeneas; Aeneas, a Trojan prince who had escaped the devastation of his city at the hands of the Greeks, lands in Carthage where Dido is queen. She falls deeply in love with him, but evil forces are at work, bent on her destruction. Aeneas is tricked into abandoning her, and overwhelmed with grief, she dies. Purcell’s masterful setting of Virgil’s epic tale as an intimate human drama stood unchallenged as the finest English opera for more than three centuries.
For more information on the Peninsula Summer music festival or to organise your tickets please visit peninsulafestival.com.au
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