2018 2019 SEPTEMBER - JUNE - www.irishchamberorchestra.com - Irish Chamber Orchestra

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2018 2019 SEPTEMBER - JUNE - www.irishchamberorchestra.com - Irish Chamber Orchestra
2018
2019

 SEPTEMBER - JUNE
LIMERICK

           DUBLIN

                    THURLES

                              ENNIS

                                      TRALEE

                                               CORK

                                                      WATERFORD

www.irishchamberorchestra.com
2018 2019 SEPTEMBER - JUNE - www.irishchamberorchestra.com - Irish Chamber Orchestra
Culture Ireland promotes
Irish arts worldwide, creating
and supporting opportunities for
Irish artists and companies to
present and promote their work
at strategic international festivals
and venues.

Culture Ireland supports
the Irish Chamber Orchestra’s
international touring.

www.cultureireland.ie

Jörg Widmann conducting the Irish Chamber Orchestra in Essen, February 2018
2018 2019 SEPTEMBER - JUNE - www.irishchamberorchestra.com - Irish Chamber Orchestra
MES S AG E FR O M
T HE CE O

In 2018/2019 the Irish Chamber Orchestra takes us on another exciting journey, re-creating old
favourites, pushing out the boundaries, and exploring fresh, new music to present you with an
unforgettable experience. We will introduce you to some extraordinary soloists who mould and shape
our rich and varied scope of activity.

We have an incredible synergy with the multi-talented composer and clarinettist Jörg Widmann (our
Principal Conductor/Artistic Partner), his music and his mission. Our upcoming season celebrates
great repertoire – from the first to the last concert, we span no less than four centuries of music, and
we invite you to come and explore this with us.

Over the coming season, the ICO collaborates with some of the world’s finest international soloists.
We look forward to the return of flamboyant conductor, Jean-Christophe Spinosi who delves into the
heart of Beethoven’s C Symphonies – his First and Fifth. From the concert hall to the sports stadium,
come and see the ICO in a new guise, performing classic hits with some of Ireland’s finest rock bands
at one of the country’s iconic music festivals Feile -The Trip to Tipp. We joins forces once more with
Chamber Choir Ireland for the Irish premiere of Sir James MacMillan’s Stabat Mater, as part of NEW
MUSIC DUBLIN 2018 supported by NCH, RTÉ and The Arts Council.

The mesmeric Thomas Zehetmair returns to direct from the violin, performing Mozart’s Violin
Concerto No. 3. We also look forward to a mammoth collaboration with Chamber Choir Ireland for
Mendelssohn’s jewel in the crown: his iconic Lobgesang – bringing Widmann’s extraordinary journey
with Mendelssohn to a climactic conclusion. The cream of Irish and international soloists feature,
including sopranos Genia Kühmeier, Anna Devin and tenor Colin Balzer.
2018 2019 SEPTEMBER - JUNE - www.irishchamberorchestra.com - Irish Chamber Orchestra
As always, we champion young Irish composers and musicians. Sam Perkin presents another ICO
commission, while jazz flautist Michael Buckley tours with the ICO performing a recent concerto, Pipe
Dreams by Ronan Guillfoyle; followed by another commission by rising star Sebastian Adams. Our
December programme showcases the talents of Irish mezzo soprano Sharon Carty.

Our international profile continues to flourish. In June 2019, the orchestra will tour South America with
Jörg Widmann, with a further tour planned to the U.S. There have been glowing reviews of the ICO’s
latest CD, our third recording of Mendelssohn’s Symphonies on the Orfeo label.

Our Community Engagement programme really reflects who we are, as we venture beyond the
concert hall with a variety of work at the University of Limerick, in schools, hospitals and many other
community settings. Our Sing Out With Strings programme clearly demonstrates our innovation, our
pride and creativity, as we continue to change lives through music. The ICO creates extraordinary
musical experiences that empower individuals through collaboration with a deep-rooted passion for
artistic excellence.

The Irish Chamber Orchestra, resident at the Irish World Academy of Music and Dance, has its
own studio on campus at the University of Limerick and is funded by The Arts Council of Ireland/An
Chomhairle Ealaíon. Additional support from Culture Ireland contributes significantly towards the ICO’s
international touring initiatives. I would like to acknowledge the unfailing support of all our Patrons and
Friends for their continuing loyalty and support of the greater ICO family.

GERARD KEENAN
Chief Executive Officer
2018 2019 SEPTEMBER - JUNE - www.irishchamberorchestra.com - Irish Chamber Orchestra
IR I S H CH A M B ER ORCHEST RA
   The Irish Chamber Orchestra is Ireland’s most dynamic ensemble. Mixing traditional
   repertoire with new commissions and collaborating with everyone from DJs to
   dance companies, the ICO pushes the boundaries of what a chamber orchestra
   can do. These days, you’re as likely to find us at the Electric Picnic as Mozartfest, but
   wherever we perform, the ICO delivers world-class concerts feted for their energy
   and style.
/IRISHCHAMBERORCHESTRA

IRISHCHAMBERORCHESTRA
   Each year, Ireland’s busiest ensemble presents concert seasons in both
   Limerick and Dublin, embarks on two national tours, and makes a series of
@ICORCHESTRA
   prestigious international appearances supported by Culture Ireland. Our Artistic
   Committee works closely with our Artistic Partners to devise exciting, diverse and
WWW.IRISHCHAMBERORCHESTRA.COM
   innovative programmes, mixing standard repertoire with new work – often specially
   commissioned – from the best young Irish composers. This versatile approach
   enables us to appeal to music fans of every stripe while upholding the highest
   artistic standards.

   The driving force behind our recent success is our Principal Conductor/Artistic
   Partner Jörg Widmann, a composer, conductor and clarinettist whose irrepressible
   energy and pursuit of excellence has enabled the ICO to expand its horizons,
   attracting outstanding international performers such as Tabea Zimmermann, Igor
   Levit and James Galway. The last five years have seen ICO perform at leading
   concert halls and festivals across Europe and release a series of acclaimed
   recordings on the prestigious Orfeo label. The ICO recently completed a three-
   year residency at Heidelberger Frühling and is currently orchestra-in-residence at
   Kilkenny Arts Festival.
2018 2019 SEPTEMBER - JUNE - www.irishchamberorchestra.com - Irish Chamber Orchestra
Widmann’s enthusiasm and commitment is matched by the orchestra itself, led
by the ebullient Katherine Hunka and comprised of 22 outstanding musicians. The
ICO’s special rapport, forged over 20 years of playing – and sometimes singing!
– together, creates the unique sound that has captivated audiences all over the
world.

The orchestra enjoys outstanding support. The enthusiasm and forward thinking
of CEO Gerard Keenan has been instrumental in realising some of the ICO’s most
exhilarating collaborations, while the board, chaired by Aibhlín McCann, comprises
members whose diverse professional expertise is matched by their determination
to realise the orchestra’s vision.

At the heart of this vision is the belief that music is for everyone. That’s why the ICO
has implemented an ambitious and far-reaching strategy that aims to take music
out of the concert hall and into the local community, inspiring children to try music
for themselves, and supporting them on their journey from first lesson to public
performance.

Our groundbreaking initiative, Sing Out with Strings (SOWS), offers primary school
children in Limerick the chance to learn music for free. Now in its eleventh year, the
project has been hailed as a model of social inclusion, offering opportunities for
young people, developing key life skills and providing tangible long-term benefits
for participants, their families and the wider community.

The success of SOWS has inspired us to set up a youth orchestra, the ICOYO, which
provides aspiring musicians aged 12 to 18 with the support they need to grow. And it
doesn’t stop there: the orchestra has made its home at the University of Limerick for
over 20 years, and we’re deeply involved in the MA in Classical String Performance,
supporting young talent through workshops and masterclasses.

The ICO is orchestra-in-residence at the Irish World Academy of Music and Dance
at the University of Limerick, and is funded by The Arts Council of Ireland/An
Chomhairle Ealaíon.

For details of the ICO’s current season, click HERE.

                      w w w . ir is hc ha m b e r o r c he s tra . com
2018 2019 SEPTEMBER - JUNE - www.irishchamberorchestra.com - Irish Chamber Orchestra
Violin                                 Board of Directors/Executive
Katherine Hunka Concertmaster          Aibhlín McCrann (Chair)
Nicola Sweeney Principal 1st violin    Frank Casey (Hon. Life President)
André Swanepoel Principal 2nd violin   Rosemary Collier
Anna Cashell                           Eamonn Cregan
Diane Daly                             Joseph Dundon
Oonagh Keogh                           Joan Garahy
Emily Nenniger                         Karen Morton
Kenneth Rice                           Gearóid Stanley
Louis Roden
Cliodhna Ryan                          Chief Executive
                                       Gerard Keenan
Viola
Joachim Roewer Principal               Friends/Finance
Cian Ó Dúill                           Margaret Kelly
Mark Coates Smith
Robin Panter                           Marketing & Communications Manager
                                       Charlotte Eglington
Cello
Christian Elliott Principal            Operations Manager
Richard Angell                         Cathriona Murphy
Aoife Nic Athlaoich
                                       Education & Outreach Officer
Double Bass                            Kathrine Barnecutt
Malachy Robinson Principal
                                       Artistic Advisor
Oboe                                   Sonja Stein, Sonja Stein Company
Daniel Bates Principal
Matthew Draper

Horn
James Palmer Principal                 “There is a taut vivacity to the playing of this
Stephen Nicholls                       orchestra that’s easily traced to the geniality
                                       of the group”

                                       The Irish Independent
2018 2019 SEPTEMBER - JUNE - www.irishchamberorchestra.com - Irish Chamber Orchestra
KA TH ER I NE H U N K A
Director/Violin
Born in London, Katherine Hunka began playing the violin at the age of four. Whilst growing up
under the guidance of teacher Sheila Nelson, she performed chamber music at London’s South
Bank and the Royal Albert hall, was soloist with the City of London Sinfonia and led the National
Youth Orchestra of Great Britain.

Katherine was awarded a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Music where she spent five years
studying with Gyorgy Pauk, and then furthered her studies in the USA at Indiana University where
she also acted as teaching assistant to her professor, Mauricio Fuks. This instilled in her a great
love of teaching. She has since returned to Indiana as a guest Professor and been made a Fellow
of the Royal Academy of Music.

Katherine is Leader of the Irish Chamber Orchestra since 2002 and regularly directs from the
leader’s chair. As director and soloist, with the ICO, she has toured Germany, China and Singapore,
appeared at the West Cork Chamber Music Festival, and more recently, at the Kilkenny Arts
Festival. This summer in Kilkenny, she will be co-directing late Beethoven quartets, arranged for
string orchestra, with ICO principal cellist, Christian Elliott.

Katherine directs ICO national tours, which take the orchestra all over Ireland. Last year, Katherine
released her first solo CD recording with the ICO of Piazzolla’s The Four Seasons of Buenes Aires.
As part of her role with the ICO, Katherine collaborates with contemporary composers. She has
directed premieres with Irish composers including Sam Perkin, Ian Wilson, Raymond Dean,
Elaine Agnew, Linda Buckley, and John Kinsella. As leader, she has also enjoyed performing
solo concertos and chamber music with Jörg Widmann, Pekka Kuusisto, Anthony Marwood
and Nigel Kennedy amongst others.
2018 2019 SEPTEMBER - JUNE - www.irishchamberorchestra.com - Irish Chamber Orchestra
Katherine performs regularly, as a chamber musician and soloist, at festivals throughout Ireland
and the UK. At the Aldeburgh Festival she premiered Benjamin Britten’s rediscovered Double
Concerto. This year sees her at the Sligo International Chamber Music Festival, the Killaloe
Chamber Music Festival and performing much of Brahms’ chamber music in the Kilkenny Arts
Festival. She is a regular guest to concert venues across Ireland. Last Autumn, she toured Ireland
with pianist Finghin Collins playing duo recitals. Her trio, Far Flung with accordionist Dermot
Dunne and bassist Malachy Robinson delights audiences with its light-hearted approach, their
repertoire spans from Bach to Klezmer with anything in between. In 2017, Katherine toured with
other leaders of Irish Orchestras; Mia Cooper, Helena Wood and Ioana Petcu. The success of this
tour has resulted in another run of concerts later this year, this time in Northern Ireland.

Katherine has been a guest leader with the Manchester Camerata, the Scottish Chamber
Orchestra and the Royal Scottish National Orchestra as well as guest soloist with the RTE
National Symphony Orchestra and Concert Orchestra.

She is currently a Professor at the CIT Cork School of Music and the Irish World Academy of Music.
She plays a Jean Baptiste Vuillaume violin and her bows are by Irish maker Gary Leahy.
2018 2019 SEPTEMBER - JUNE - www.irishchamberorchestra.com - Irish Chamber Orchestra
JÖ RG WI D M A N N
Principal Conductor/Artistic Partner
Clarinetist, composer and conductor Jörg Widmann is one of the most versatile and intriguing
artists of his generation. The 2018/19 season sees him appear as soloist with orchestras such
as the National Symphony Orchestra Taiwan with Shao Chia Lu, the NDR Radiophilharmonie
Hannover with Andrew Manze, the Kammerorchester Basel with Heinz Holliger and the
Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunk with Susanna Mälkki.

Jörg Widmann is artist in Residence at the National Symphony Orchestra Taiwan, featuring as
clarinetist in a performance of Mozart’s Clarinet Concerto, as well as conductor in a play direct
program and composer and lecturer. Further residencies include the Orchestre de Paris, where
his works feature in various concerts.

Chamber music performances in the 2018/19 season include concerts with the Hagen Quartet
with performances in Hamburg’s Elbphilharmonie, New York’s Carnegie Hall, Freiburg and
Baltimore and trio recitals with Tabea Zimmermann and Dénes Várjon in Munich and Budapest.
In February, he will give the premiere of Peter Eötvös Joyce, commissioned by the CNDM and
written for Jörg Widmann.

Continuing his intense activities as a conductor, Jörg Widmann performs this season with the
Orchestra della Svizzera Italiana, Tokyo Metropolitan Orchestra, Boulez-Ensemble Berlin,
Kammerakademie Potsdam and he will be on tour through Germany with the Junge Deutsche
Philharmonie. As their principal conductor he will lead the Irish Chamber Orchestra in concerts
in Ireland, Europe and will embark on tour to South America with concerts in Buenos Aires, Sao
Paulo and Rio de Janeiro.

In August 2018 Jörg Widmann conducted the premiere of his second Violin Concerto, performed
by Carolin Widmann with the Tokyo Metropolitan Orchestra. This season sees performances of
this piece will take place with the Orchestre de Paris, The hr-Sinfonieorchester and the Royal
Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra.

Widmann studied clarinet with Gerd Starke in Munich and Charles Neidich at the Juilliard School
in New York. He performs regularly with renowned orchestras, such as Gewandhausorchester
Leipzig, Orchestra National de France, Tonhalle-Orchester Zürich, National Symphony
Orchestra, Washington, Orchestre symphonique de Montréal, Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra,
Netherlands Philharmonic Orchestra and Toronto Symphony Orchestra. He collaborates with
conductors such as Daniel Barenboim, Christoph Eschenbach and Christoph von Dohnányi.

Widmann gave the world premiere of Mark Andre’s Clarinet Concerto über at the
Donauerschinger Musiktage 2015. Other clarinet concerti dedicated to and written for him include
Wolfgang Rihm’s Musik für Klarinette und Orchester (1999) and Aribert Reimann’s Cantus (2006).

Widmann studied composition with Kay Westermann, Wilfried Hiller and Wolfgang Rihm.
His works continue to receive many awards such as the prestigious Chamber Music Society of
Lincoln Center’s Elise L. Stoeger Prize (2009), the Paul Hindemith Prize in 2001, the Arnold Schönberg
Prize by the Vienna Arnold Schönberg Centre and the Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin
(2004) and both the SWR Sinfonieorchester Baden-Baden und Freiburg’s composition award
and the Berliner Philharmoniker Academy’s Claudio Abbado Composition Award in 2006.

Widmann’s compositions are performed regularly by conductors such as Daniel Barenboim,
Daniel Harding, Valery Gergiev, Kent Nagano, Christian Thielemann, Mariss Jansons, Andris
Nelsons and Simon Rattle and have been premiered by orchestras such as the Wiener and
Berliner Philharmoniker, New York Philharmonic, Orchestre de Paris, BBC Symphony and
many others.

Widmann’s appointment as Daniel R. Lewis Young Composer Fellow at the Cleveland Orchestra
established an extraordinary artistic collaboration with the Orchestra and its Principal Conductor
Franz Welser-Möst including the world premiere of Widmann’s Flute Concerto, Flûte en
suite in May 2011 followed by its European premiere in 2012/13 by the Berliner Philharmoniker
and Emmanuel Pahud under Simon Rattle. Cleveland Orchestra featured Flûte en suite as
centrepiece in their 2014 European tour, and dedicated an entire evening to Widmann’s works
at the Berlin Philharmonie. His opera Babylon was premiered in 2012/13 at Bayerische Staatsoper
under the baton of Kent Nagano.

Am Anfang, by Anselm Kiefer and Jörg Widmann, was premiered in July 2009 as part of the 20th
anniversary of the Opéra Bastille, in which Widmann acted as composer, clarinetist and made
his debut as conductor.

Widmann was Artist in Residence at leading Festivals and Orchestras such as Lucerne Festival
and Salzburger Festspiele, Bamberger Symphoniker, Tonhalle-Orchester Zürich’s creative chair
2015/16, and both BOZAR and Elbphilarmonie’s artist in residence in its opening season. He was
featured in Artist Portraits at Vienna’s Konzerthaus, Frankfurt’s Alte Oper, Cologne’s Philharmonie
and New York’s Carnegie Hall, where his music was presented during an entire season under
the motto “Making Music: Jörg Widmann”. In the 2017/18 season he was featured as the first ever
Gewandhaus Composer in Leipzig’s history.

Widmann is a Fellow at the Wissenschaftskollegs in Berlin and a full member of the Bayerischen
Akademie of Schönen Künste, and since 2007, the Freien Akademie der Künste Hamburg, the
Deutschen Akademie der Darstellenden Künste and the Akademie der Wissenschaften und der
Literatur Mainz. He is professor for composition at the Barenboim-Said Academy, Berlin.
H OM E
SEPTEMB ER

                                                                                                       Spinosi 13 | 14 September
Irish Chamber Orchestra
Jean-Christophe Spinosi Conductor

ROLL OVER BEETHOVEN
Rossini		           Overture to Il Barbiere di Siviglia (The Barber of Seville)
Sam Perkin          New Work
Beethoven           Symphony No. 1 in C major, Op. 21
Beethoven           Symphony No. 5 in C minor, Op. 67

Join us in welcoming back flamboyant Corsican conductor Jean-Christophe Spinosi – renowned
for taking audiences on emotionally explosive journeys.

Rossini is synonymous with sparkling overtures and The Barber of Seville Overture charms from
the start, before erupting into pure fireworks! The ICO has commissioned a new encore by Sam
Perkin. This rousing work highlights the individual personality of each orchestra member, and his/
her unique playing style. No other body of work enjoys more universal respect and popularity than
Beethoven’s nine symphonies. We feature Beethoven’s two symphonies in the key of C. His meteoric
First, brims with originality, full of rich melodies that reflected popular Viennese musical life at the
time. His immensely popular Fifth is emotionally thrilling and uplifting, due to its raw power and the
overwhelming representation of human triumph over adversity.

Thursday 13 September                          Friday 14 September
Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin @ 8pm          University Concert Hall, Limerick @ 8pm
www.irishchamberorchestra.com                  in association with
€25, €22, €10 students, €5 children            061 331549 www.uch.ie
                                               €25, €22, €10 students, €5 children

“With an exceptional ability to communicate the joy he takes in making music, Spinosi seems to
dance and whirl in front of his players, rather than simply conduct them.”
The Guardian
SEPTEMB ER

                                                                                                          Féile Classical 21 | 22 September
Irish Chamber Orchestra
The Stunning, Hothouse Flowers, Emotional Fish, The Frank & Walters, The Four of Us
& Something Happens

FÉILE CLASSICAL – THE TRIP TO TIPP

28 years after the festival first launched, Féile has been re-branded as ‘Féile Classical’ with a real focus
on Irish musical talent. Come along and see the Irish Chamber Orchestra in a new guise, performing
classic hits with some of Ireland’s finest rock bands on a spectacular Oyster stage.

Legendary Irish bands and Trip to Tipp veterans including The Stunning, Hothouse Flowers, An
Emotional Fish and Something Happens will perform alongside the Irish Chamber Orchestra for this
iconic festival. Fully seated, complete with the luxury of gourmet vegan food stalls, pop-up gin and
prosecco bars – a far cry from tin-foiled ham sandwiches and flasks of tea.

Friday 21 September
Semple Stadium, Thurles
www.ticketmaster.ie
€60, €54, over 18’s only

Saturday 22 September

SOLD OUT

“Ranging from near-reckless energy to infinite calm, the music-making has that elusive mix of
freedom and precision many a conductor would die for. Yet this optimum is due to the ICO
leader, Katherine Hunka, who directs from her violin with seemingly telepathic discretion.”
Irish Times
SEPTEMB ER

                                                                                                         James MacMillan 23 September
Irish Chamber Orchestra
Chamber Choir Ireland
James MacMillan Conductor

STABAT MATER
James MacMillan Stabat Mater

Chamber Choir Ireland and the Irish Chamber Orchestra perform the Irish premiere of James
MacMillan’s Stabat Mater, an intense setting of a medieval hymn for choir and orchestra conducted
by the composer himself, as part of NEW MUSIC DUBLIN 2018. MacMillan paints two dramatic pictures,
the first in the ethereal writing for voice, the second in lacerating blows and feverish anxieties depicted
by the orchestra. Few living composers communicate with such emotional directness. For him ’beauty
is at the heart of our Christian faith’ and his grief-wracked Stabat Mater is profoundly shaped by his
beliefs.

Sunday 23 September
National Concert Hall, Dublin @ 7.30pm
01 417 0000 www.nch.ie
€20, €15 conc.
25% discount for Friends of the National Concert Hall
15% discount for Groups of 10 or more

“It’s not often that the composer of a new work gets a
standing ovation, but then every new work
isn’t like James MacMillan’s Stabat Mater.”
The Times

Presented by New Music Dublin with the support of NCH, RTÉ and The Arts Council
O CTOB ER

                                                                                                        Michael Buckley 18 | 19 | 20 October
Irish Chamber Orchestra
Katherine Hunka Director
Michael Buckley Flute

NIGHT MUSIC

Mozart               Eine Kleine Nachtmusik, KV 525
Ronan Guilfoyle      Pipe Dreams Concerto for Jazz Flute
Tchaikovsky          Souvenir de Florence, Op. 70

Mozart’s joyful serenade, Eine Kleine Nachtmusik is one of his most beautiful and best-loved works, full
of memorable melodies. Tchaikovsky’s jewel, his Souvenir de Florence was his final piece of chamber
music – this tribute to the city of Florence is a wonderful celebration, full of lyricism and ecstatic
vigour. Originally scored for sextet, the ICO performs the Souvenir as a string orchestra, which adds
to the richness inherent in the music, and amplifies Tchaikovsky’s gorgeous, full, lush sound world.
In between, renowned Jazz flute virtuoso Michael Buckley performs Pipe Dreams, an effervescent
concerto for Jazz flute and orchestra by Ronan Guilfoyle. A playful dialogue between Michael and
orchestra demonstrates the flute’s agility – join us and experience this new and vibrant collaboration!

                    Friday 19 October
Thursday 18 October		                                           Saturday 20 October
glór, Ennis @ 8pm   Siamsa Tíre, Tralee @ 8pm                   Monkstown Parish Church @ 8pm
065 684 3103        066 712 3055                                In Association with the Pavilion Theatre,
www.glor.ie         www.siamsatire.com                          Dún Laoghaire
€20, €18            €23, €21, €10                               01 231 2929 www.paviliontheatre.ie
                                                                Free Booking Online €24, €22

“The concert full of splendid music under leader Katherine Hunka, benefited from an eclectic
approach….overall a stimulating and thought-provoking concert”
The Sunday Business Post
N O VEM BER

                                                                                                      Jörg Widmann 15 | 16 | 17 November
Irish Chamber Orchestra
Jörg Widmann Principal Conductor/Artistic Partner
Katherine Spencer Clarinet

SPOTLIGHT
Puccini Chrysanthemums for String Orchestra
Sebastian Adams 2018.2
Stamitz Concerto for Clarinet B flat major
Tchaikovsky Serenade for Strings in C Major, Op. 48

Jörg Widmann spotlights a new work by Sebastian Adams, currently blazing a trail as a composer
and viola player of repute, with a passion for contemporary music. 2018.2 explores the possibilities of
the individuals in the orchestra as much as the instruments they play. Puccini‘s Chrysanthemums,
written as an elegy for the Duke of Savoy, is a beautifully poignant movement that also featured in
Puccini‘s opera Manon Lescaut. Johann Stamitz’s Clarinet Concerto was an early milestone in the
development of the genre, and Jörg Widmann invites Katherine Spencer into the spotlight, to show
off the vast capabilities of her artistry and instrument. Tchaikovsky’s gorgeous Serenade for Strings,
is one of his most enduringly popular works. This, combined with the irrepressible energy and insight
brought by Widmann and the ICO, has all the makings of an unforgettable performance!

Thursday 15 November          Friday 16 November                        Sat 17 November
University Concert Hall,      Curtis Auditorium,                        The Large Room, City Hall,
Limerick @ 8pm                CIT Cork School of Music,                 Waterford @ 7.30pm
061 331549                    Cork @ 8pm (Cork Orchestral Society)      (Symphony Club of Waterford
www.uch.ie                    www.corkorchestralsociety.ie              & Waterford Music)
€25, €22, €10 students,       €25, €20 (€5 student at door only)        051 855038
€5 children                   €15, €10 COS members                      ticket@garterlane.ie
                              (discount code/online purchase)           €20, €18

“Obviously the creative communication between Widmann and his ensemble (Irish Chamber
Orchestra) works extremely well, which makes for an exciting future.” Der Spiegel
D ECEMB ER

                                                                                                        Sharon Carty 13 | 14 December
Irish Chamber Orchestra                                          “The Irish Chamber Orchestra sounds
Jean-Christophe Spinosi Conductor                                         ring with vigor and freshness”
                                                                                  Crescendo Magazine,
Sharon Carty Mezzo Soprano
                                                                                                Belgium

NIGHT AT THE OPERA
Händel    Overture from Xerxes HWV 40
Händel    Frondi tenere... Ombra mai fu from Xerxes HWV 40
Vivaldi   Sol da te from Orlando Furioso RV 728
Mozart    Notturno Serenade KV 239
Vivaldi   Ah sleale, ah spergiura from Orlando Furioso RV 728
Biber     Battalia à 10 in D major, C. 61
Vivaldi   Agitata da due venti from Griselda
Barber    Adagio for Strings, Op. 11
Vivaldi   Sento in seno ch‘in pioggia di lagrime from Tieteberga RV 737
Vivaldi   Nel profondo from Orlando Furioso RV 728

Enjoy a feast of baroque operatic arias, and instrumental music oozing passion, colour and drama -
with the emphasis on colliding worlds. The exuberant Jean-Christophe Spinosi along with the brilliant
Sharon Carty, exploit every theatrical avenue this programme offers! The Overture from Handel’s
Xerxes rolls into the much-loved aria, Ombra mai fu, with its beautiful plaintive melody. Carty also
performs several Arias from Vivaldi’s magnificent opera Orlando furioso – comparable to the very best
of Handel’s Arias. Mozart’s Notturno Serenade demonstrates his ingenious ability to paint a picture –
creating allusions to nature, folk-songs, hunting and dance forms. Biber’s remarkable Battalia brings us
straight onto the battlefield, re-creating the sounds of muskets and cannons, and ending in a howling
lament for the casualties of battle. The drama continues with Vivaldi’s extraordinary aria Agitata da
due venti. Barber’s evocative Adagio permeates with solemnity and sadness. In Vivaldi’s Sento in
seno ch’in pioggia di lagrime, rain is depicted as a metaphor for tears: worlds collide as the dark skies
weep submerging us in a deluge of sorrow.

Thursday 13 December                     Friday 14 December
St Mary’s Cathedral, Limerick @ 8pm      Monkstown Parish Church, Dublin @ 8pm
www.irishchamberorchestra.com            www.irishchamberorchestra.com
€25, €22, €10 students, €5 children      €25, €22, €10 students, €5 children
J A NU ARY

                                                                                                              Sonamus 17 January
Irish Chamber Orchestra
Mary Coughlan Singer
Theo Dorgan Poet
Sonamus:
Cormac Breatnach Susato Whistles
Annette Cleary Cello
Rachel Factor Harpsichord
Eamon Sweeney Guitars

THE FIRST 100 YEARS

In 1919 the first Dáil convened in Dublin and the first Democratic Programme for Government was
devised. There have been changes in Irish society over the last century that would have been
inconceivable to those first TDs. This very special concert will reflect on 100 years of the Irish Republic
through poetry, music, and song - including a newly composed work by Fiachra Trench and
featuring some of Ireland’s finest artists.

This concert is curated by Eamon Sweeney, Music Network Artist in Residence 2018 an initiative of
Music Network in partnership with Wicklow County Council Arts Office and Mermaid County Wicklow
Arts Centre.

Thursday 17 January
Mermaid Theatre, Bray
www.mermaidartscentre.ie
€18, €16

“…the music was pleasing, exciting and individual... marvellously performed” The Examiner
FEB RU ARY

                                                                                                  Jörg Widmann 13 | 14 February
Irish Chamber Orchestra
Jörg Widmann Principal Conductor

VOICES FROM THE EDGE
Beethoven       Grosse Fuge, Op. 133
Korngold        Symphonic Serenade, Op. 39
Widmann         Aria for Strings
Mendelssohn     String Symphony No. 9 Swiss

Widmann explores music through many voices, spanning centuries. Beethoven’s towering Grosse
Fuge is admired for its almost cosmic proportions, its logic and total honesty. Beethoven takes
four voices, fully engaged and throbbing at high speeds, and in Widmann’s hands, drives them to
the edge of a cliff before stopping them to listen to the vastness of silence. Hollywood composer
Korngold’s seldom-heard Symphonic Serenade is extremely virtuosic, alternating between a
dissonant, dark world and a soft, melodic mood. In Widmann’s Aria for Strings, the multiple divided
strings give the impression of imaginary voices. Fascinated by yodelling and all things Swiss,
Mendelssohn sought to convey impressions of his Alpine journey in his Symphony No. 9 (whilst also
exhibiting his contrapuntal brilliance) – a masterful achievement for a fourteen-year old!

Wednesday 13 February                        Thursday 14 February
Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin @ 8pm        St Mary’s Cathedral, Limerick @ 8pm
www.irishchamberorchestra.com                www.irishchamberorchestra.com
€25, €22, €10 students, €5 children          €25, €22, €10 students, €5 children

“At one with Widmann’s direction, ICO’s support is elegant and trenchant,”
Irish Independent
MA RCH

                                                                                                      Thomas Zehetmair 14 | 15 March
Irish Chamber Orchestra
Thomas Zehetmair Director/Violin

MOSTLY MOZART
Salieri      Sinfonia in D Major Veneziana
Mozart       Violin Concerto No. 3 in G major, KV 216
Krenek       Symphonic Elegy, Op. 105 In Memoriam Anton von Webern
Mozart       Symphony No. 29 in A-Major, KV 201

Thomas Zehetmair’s ICO debut (April 2017) was unforgettable. The vigour and freshness of his
interpretation, his attention to detail was revelatory. For his long-awaited return, Zehetmair explores
two centuries of Austrian music – a highly charged journey, both in style and emotion.

Mozart’s alleged long-time rival (more legend than truth) Salieri, was a respected composer and
teacher in 18th century Vienna: both Beethoven and Schubert counted amongst his pupils. His well-
crafted Veneziana highlights his mastery of Italian light opera. Mozart’s dazzling Violin Concerto No.
3 is breezy and full of melody – arguably his most popular. His Symphony No. 29 in A major is stylish
but restrained, with a mighty finale which features dazzling scales in the violins, and repeated horn
calls. In between, Krenek’s highly emotive Symphonic Elegy stands at the zenith of his compositions.

Thursday 14 March                                  Friday 15 March
Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin @ 8pm              University Concert Hall, Limerick @ 8pm
www.irishchamberorchestra.com                      061 331549 www.uch.ie
€25, €22, €10 students, €5 children                €25, €22, €10 students, €5 children

“During the fast movements, he (Zehetmair) was full of flash and flair, furiously flying about
the fingerboard. But the slow movement was more like a love duet, double stops chiming
in like breathy assents.”
violinist.com
A PR IL

                                                                                                        Anna Devin 10 | 11 April
Irish Chamber Orchestra
Jörg Widmann Principal Conductor/Artistic Partner
Chamber Choir Ireland
Genia Kühmeier Soprano
Anna Devin Soprano
Colin Balzer Tenor

WEBER & MENDELSSOHN
Weber             Overture from Der Freischütz, Op. 77, J. 277
Mendelssohn       Symphony No. 2 in B flat major, Op. 52 Lobgesang (Hymn of Praise)

In 1821, a 12-year-old Mendelssohn was blown away at the premiere of Weber’s Der Freischütz. It
was an overnight sensation, taking the world by storm. Today a cornerstone of romantic opera, its
overture is one of Weber’s most popular – foreshadowing, in symphonic terms, the drama to come.

Mendelssohn’s Second Symphony stands as his most ambitious symphonic work. Immensely
popular during his lifetime and in the hands of Jörg Widmann, this “symphony-cantata on words
from the Holy Bible” (Mendelssohn’s description) can again be experienced in all its magnificent
glory! Written for the festival celebrating the 400th anniversary of Gutenberg’s printing press, it sought
to break down the barriers between concert and church music, and pays homage to another of
Leipzig’s great sons: J.S. Bach. Featuring three magnificent soloists and chorus, these performances
brings Widmann’s tribute to Mendelssohn to a rousing conclusion.

Wednesday 10 April                               Thursday 11 April
Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin @ 8pm            University Concert Hall, Limerick @ 8pm
www.irishchamberorchestra.com                    061 331549 www.uch.ie
€25, €22, €10 students, €5 children              €25, €22, €10 students, €5 children

“Obviously the creative communication between Widmann and his ensemble
(Irish Chamber Orchestra) works extremely well which makes for an exciting future”
Spiegel
MA Y

                                                                                               Peter Whelan 17 | 19 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 May
Irish Chamber Orchestra
Irish National Opera
Peter Whelan Conductor

THE MAGIC FLUTE
Mozart      The Magic Flute KV 620

In 1790, Mozart had fallen on hard times. Fortunately, his friend, singer and poet Emanuel
Schikaneder had recently written a new play about magic – which was all the rage in Vienna.
With Shikaneder’s libretto, Mozart composed The Magic Flute, which was to become one of the
most popular and most performed operas in history. Be prepared to be spirited away into a fairy-
tale realm of magic, love and humour – on the wings of some of Mozart’s most sublime music!

Friday 17 May                        Tuesday 21 May                     Friday 24 May
National Opera House,                Gaiety Theatre,                    Gaiety Theatre,
Wexford @ 8pm                        Dublin @ 7.30pm                    Dublin @ 7.30pm
053 9122144 / 1850 4 OPERA
                                     Wednesday 22 May                   Saturday 25 May
Sunday 19 May		                      Gaiety Theatre,                    Gaiety Theatre,
University Concert Hall,             Dublin @ 7.30pm                    Dublin @ 2.30pm
Limerick @ 8pm                                                          Gaiety Theatre,
(Concert Version)                    Thursday 23 May                    Dublin @ 7.30pm
061 331549 or www.uch.ie             Gaiety Theatre,                    www.ticketmaster.ie
                                     Dublin @ 2.30pm
                                     Gaiety Theatre,
                                     Dublin @ 7.30pm

“The Irish Chamber Orchestra delivered with its usual panache under conductor Peter Whelan.”
Sunday Business Post
A WA Y
JUNE

                                                                 Jörg Widmann 3 | 4 | 5 | 10 June
Irish Chamber Orchestra
Jörg Widmann Principal Conductor/Artistic Partner

THE HIGHLANDS

Mendelssohn           Hebrides Overture Op.26 Fingal’s Cave
Widmann               180 beats Per Minute for Sextet
Mozart                Concerto for Clarinet in A major, KV 622
Mendelssohn           Symphony No. 3 Scottish

And/Or

Widmann               Con Brio
Mozart                Concerto for Clarinet in A major, KV 622
Schumannn             Symphony No. 2

Monday 3 June         Concert in Buenos Aires (TBC)
Tuesday 4 June        Concert in Sao Paolo
Wednesday 5 June      Concert in Sao Paolo
Monday 10 June        Concert Buenos Aires (TBC)
N O VEM BER

                                                                                                  Jörg Widmann 19 November
Irish Chamber Orchestra
Jörg Widmann Principal Conductor/Artistic Partner
TBA Soprano

MENDELSSOHN, MOZART & WIDMANN
Mendelssohn                 String Symphony No. 8 in D major
Widmann                     Attempt at a Fugue
Mozart                      Adagio and Fugue in C minor, KV 546
Mendelssohn/Widmann         Andante from Sonata for Clarinet and
                            Piano in E flat major for Clarinet, String Orchestra,
                            Harp & Celesta
Weber                       Clarinet Quintet Op. 34 Baermann Quintet

Mendelssohn’s sparkling String Symphonies offer an amazing treasure chest of delights. Full
of colour and youthful energy, the trills from the winds create exciting and stirring effects in No
8. Mendelssohn’s obsession with Bach’s counterpoint was the inspiration for Jörg Widmann’s
Attempt at a Fugue. The Irish Chamber Orchestra with the Stuttgarter Kammerorchester
commissioned a re-write of this work for soprano and string orchestra.Thematic ideas are
concentrated, scattered, and abbreviated, and there is a playful engagement with the notion of
fugue as an ‘escape’. Mozart’s delightful Adagio and Fugue in C minor is followed by Weber’s
thrilling Quintet, a monument in the clarinet repertoire, that brims with colour and virtuosity.

Tuesday 19 November 		 Carnegie Hall, New York

“Time travellers visiting the past in science fiction always have to have an eye on how their
actions might change the future. Time travellers in music need have no such worries. Jörg
Widmann’s Attempt at the Fugue, an orchestral version of his Fifth String Quartet…is haunted
by the Mozart Adagio and Fugue which precedes it here. Classy musical time-travelling.”
The Irish Times.
C O MM U NIT Y E NG A G E ME N T

The Irish Chamber Orchestra has developed a comprehensive community engagement
programme. Every time you buy an ICO ticket, you support our programme, bringing live music
from the concert hall directly to the community.

SI N G OUT WIT H S TRI NG S
The ICO’s flagship programme provides weekly workshops in singing, song-writing and instrument
tuition for over 300 children across Limerick city. The project was established in 2008 by the
Irish Chamber Orchestra as a Community Engagement Programme working within Limerick’s
regeneration process. Participating schools include Le Cheile National School, St. Mary’s National
School, Thomond Community College and Coláiste Nano Nagle. Inspired by El Sistema, the
Venezuelan model of music education which provides free instrumental and vocal tuition
countrywide, Sing Out With Strings has gained a significant place within the musical fabric of
primary music provision and has attracted recognition as an excellent model of instrumental
music provision within primary schools. The project addresses issues of inclusion, equality of access
and provision and highlights the numerous benefits that a long-term project of this nature has
on the children, staff, parents and the wider community. Both at individual and collective levels
the project is uniting communities, building local pride, creating vehicles for expression, stimulating
emotional responses and developing tangible musical knowledge and skills. Sing Out With Strings
aims to continue to expand, contribute and strengthen the social, cultural and creative capital of
communities within Limerick’s regeneration process.

A C AD EMOS IRIS H CH A M B E R O RC H E ST RA A C A D EMY
The ICO is resident at the Irish World Academy of Music and Dance at the heart of an emerging
college of Performing Arts at the University of Limerick. The Academy boasts a respected M.A. in
Classical Strings Performance, a full-time two-year programme offering advanced tuition in
violin, viola, cello, double bass, piano and harpsichord. The M.A. in Classical String Performance is
operated jointly by the Irish Chamber Orchestra and the Irish World Academy, UL. Central to the
course is the Irish World Academy String Ensemble, Academos, which is tutored by members of
the Irish Chamber Orchestra and offers students extensive opportunities to perform publically in
orchestral and chamber ensembles. Master-classes and workshops by internationally acclaimed
visiting directors, soloists, and guests of the ICO are a unique feature of the programme.
C O N C ORDA
ConCorda is an exciting international chamber music course for young string musicians supported
by the Irish Association of Youth Orchestras, the Irish Chamber Orchestra and the Arts Council of
Ireland. ConCorda is now in its 23rd year and provides a rare platform for students from fourteen
years upwards to discover and explore all aspects of string chamber music in a non-competitive
and inspiring environment. The course takes place in the picturesque city of Kilkenny, a city
synonymous with arts that offers an inspiring and transforming musical experience in chamber
music, string orchestra and music improvisation. Participants study chamber music intensively at
a high level with a staff of Irish and international tutors.

IR I SH C HAMBER ORCH E ST RA CO M M U N I TY V I S I TS
Throughout the year, ICO musicians allow time to visit local voluntary organizations and charities
and perform for audiences who are unable to attend concerts. Performances at St Gabriel’s School
for Children with Special Needs, St Paul’s Nursing Home, the Children’s Ark in Limerick Regional
Hospital, Sisters of Charity, Milford Hospice and St. Camillus Hospital have garnered overwhelming
feedback.

C E O L NA MARA
Now in its 9th year, Ceol na Mara is a family friendly course catering for all ages and levels from
younger children to teenagers and adults. In addition to chamber music, orchestra and traditional
music classes, modules such as drama, singing, sean nós dancing, music appreciation and
song writing are also included. Ceol na Mara takes place in July in the very beautiful Kylemore
Abbey, Connemara and is designed to provide string players of all ages and standards with the
opportunity to meet and play music together under the guidance of ICO’s Oonagh Keogh, Director.

SAT U RDAY S T RING S A T T H E I C O
An innovative string programme run by ICO violinist Diane Daly on Saturday mornings at the ICO
Studio. The programme includes pre-instrumental classes for 4-7 year olds, beginner strings,
continuing strings and chamber groups.
HO W CAN Y O U HE LP ?
                                       Margaret & James Dodd
                                       John Doherty
                                       Rónán Dolan
                                       Mandy Donworth
                                       Andrea Doyle
The Irish Chamber Orchestra inspires   Joe Dundon
audiences of all ages with a passion   Maeve Earlie
and energy that is unique and          Evelyn Fennelly
strives to share its music in many     Michael & Irene Fenton
diverse ways. Through renowned         Adrianne Fields
performances, community                Marion Fitzpatrick
engagement projects, the orchestra     Robert Fitzpatrick
engages with communities and           Kieran & Helen Fleck
audiences from all walks of life,      Dick Fleming
throughout Ireland and beyond. If      John & Eibhlis Flynn
you share our passion or would         Bill & Maura Flood
consider ways of supporting the ICO,   Breffni Freyne
please visit our website on            Edward Gabriel
www.irishchamberorchestra.com          Michael & Mary Galvin
                                       Frederick Gilligan & Lydice Bunni
Funded by                              Tessa Greally & Kevin Kelleher
The Arts Council of Ireland            Dorene Groocock
                                       Deirdre Hanley
                                       Margaret Harper & Richard Stoops
                                       Dr. Sonja Heidrich
                                       Declan & Joan Hickey
                                       Dr. Gisela Holfter
                                       Ursula Hough Gormley
INDIVIDUAL FRIENDS                     Sylvia Jones
Brenda Andrews                         Valerie Keegan
Olga Barry                             Brian Kelly
Simon Boyle                            Nuala Kennedy
Maura Brann                            Sheila Keogh
Rita Brick                             Gary Leahy
Frances Britton                        Siún Leonowicz & Gearóid Carey
Michael & Sarah Brock                  Eileen Lydon
Pat Burke                              Conor & Louisa Maguire
Rita Butler                            Dr. Hugh Maguire
Judy Byrne & Frank Whelan              Agnes & Cormac MacCrann
Conor Cahill & Anne Reilly             Patrick McCann
Brian & Sheila Callanan                Marie McCormick
Joseph & Breda Clarkin                 Oonah McCrann/Noel MacMahon
Angela Coffey                          Noreen McDonagh
Mary Collins                           John & Mary McEntagart
Jane Coman                             Ciara McGoldrick & David
Avril Condell                          Montgomery
Kevin & Máirin Conroy                  Paul McNamara
Ann Corcoran                           Vivienne McKechnie
Kieran & Oonagh Corr                   Michael & Valerie Moloney
Jackie Costello                        Dr. Dermot & Dorothy Molony & Family
Eamonn Cregan                          Phil Molony
Mairéad De Barra & David Turner        Sara Moorhead
Colin & Angela Nicholls            Brian Patterson
Luán Ó Braonáin & Caoimhe Daly     Tommy & Ann-Elizabeth Riggs-Miller
Donough O’Brien                    Andrew & Jenny Robinson
Shelagh O’Connell                  Mary Ryan
Aodh O’Domhnaill                   Fionnuala Sherry & Bernard Doyle
Seán & Siobhán O’Dúill             Norma Smurfit
Dr. Geraldine O’Grady
Anne O’Keeffe                      HONORARY FRIENDS
Philip O Reilly & Sally Walker     Lindsay Armstrong
Eithne O’Sharkey                   Tom Briggs
Eugenie & Frank O Sullivan         Michael Buckley
Paul & Jan O’Sullivan              Brian Byrne
Joan Parker                        Frank Casey
Michael Petty                      Maureen Clune
Gerard Quinn                       Marion Creely
Peter & Marian Real                Maurice Foley
Miriam Reilly & Ronan O Loughlin   Ann Marie Gill
Charlie & Mary Roche               Lisa Grosman
Michael Ryan                       Maurice Healy
John & Dearval Sheanon             Daphne Henderson
Gerry & Ann Siney                  John Horgan
Anne Marie Stynes Pritzel          Mark Hely Hutchinson
Vanessa Sweeney                    John Kelly
Judith Taggart                     Oonagh Keogh
Mary Thornbury                     Eamonn Lawlor
Harry & Helen Van Den Akker        Ursula Leslie
Liz Walshe                         Liam McElligott
Darina Warner                      Pauline McLaughlin
Harvey Wasserman & Sarah Daniel    Kathy Moynes
David & Brenda Wilkes              Colm O Brien
David R Wilkins                    Fergal O’Ceallachain
Kostas Wootis                      John O’Connor
                                   Cian Ó Dúill
FOREVER FRIENDS                    Dr. Mícheál Ó Súilleabháin
P.Gerard Boland                    Vicki O’Toole
Michael & Anne Buckley             Margaret Quigley
Paul J Carey                       Kenneth Rice
Muriel Collins                     Malachy Robinson
Maurice & Maire Foley              Mary Robinson
Joan Garahy & Pat O’Connor         Louis Roden
Mary Geary                         Joachim Roewer
Máirín Hagerty                     Ben Rogerson
Maurice Healy                      Brian Scanlon
Dr. Miriam Hederman O’Brien        Gillian Smith
Alison Hunka                       Madeleine Staunton
Sean & Margaret Jackson            Dr. Thérèse Timoney
John Kelleher                      Dr Edward Walsh
Hilary & Mary Lawless              Mary Walsh
Beverley & Anthony Mackay          Gerard Watson
Aibhlín McCrann
Bernard & Moira McNamara           CORPORATE FRIENDS
Hazel Minion                       - Dundon Callanan
Eve Molony                         - Paddy Hoare Building
Máire-Treasa Nic Eochagáin           & Civil Engineering
PA T RONS & P A R TN ERS H I P S
The Irish Chamber Orchestra strives to share its music with audiences at home and across the globe.
It is funded by the Arts Council of Ireland/An Chomhairle Ealíon and kindly supported by individuals,
corporate friends, private patrons and the corporate sector. The Irish Chamber Orchestra nurtures
lifelong rewarding partnerships while offering a range of benefits and sponsorship opportunities. If
you are looking to develop relationships with key stakeholders or if you simply want to expand your
brand across the length and breadth of Ireland and further afield, the Irish Chamber Orchestra
offers creative and rewarding solutions that will bring music to your ear. For further information on
how you can help contact 061-202620

                       Robert Ballagh | Leslie Buckley | Michael Buckley
      Jim Flavin | John Shinnors | Dept of Arts Heritage and the Gaeltacht | Ireland Funds
                       JP McManus Charitable Foundation | RTÉ lyric fm

                                          Kerry Group mark
R E CENT RE C O R D ING S

                                                  “Here the wealth of melody in
                                                  Mendelssohn’s music becomes
                                                  a resounding feast of sound
                                                  which remains compact and
                                                  detailed throughout due to the
                                                  precise and refined playing by
                                                  the Irish Chamber Orchestra.”
                                                  Der Spiegel

          m O Z a rt | W I d m a n n

     s I n F O n I e 5 “ r e F O r m at I O n ”

                                                  “The Irish Chamber Orchestra
                                                  sounds ring with vigor and
                                                  freshness”
                                                  Crescendo Magazine, Belgium

       I r I s h C h a m b e r O rC h e s t ra
          mOjCa e rdmann
              j ö rg W I d m a n n

                                                  “A thrilling recording from the first
                                                  to the last bar”
                                                  CD-Journal Fono Forum
The Arts Council offers a wide range of financial supports across
artforms and arts practices, including music in Ireland and proudly
funds the Irish Chamber Orchestra.
ICO Studio, University of Limerick,
                         Castletroy, Limerick.

Irish Chamber Orchetra is a limited company registered in Ireland No. 82393
                  Charity No. 8789 VAT No. 461865OU

          www.irishchamberorchestra.com
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