Next Concert
Hot Young Strings directed by Donald Armstrong
Featuring Hot Young Strings directed by Donald Armstrong with a programme including:
- Antonio Correlli - Concerto Grosso, Opus 6, No 4
- William Walton - From the film music for Henry V
- Richard Rodney Bennett - Reflections on a theme of William Walton
- J S Bach - Violin Concerto in E major, BWV 1042
- J S Bach - Air from Suite No 3 in D, BWV 1068
- Elgar - Serenade for Strings in E minor, Opus 20
About Chamber Music Hutt Valley
The Society was founded in 1979. The purpose was to foster interest in chamber music in the Hutt Valley and to arrange professional performances for the public. We have presented a season of concerts, usually five, between April and October every year. The artists are drawn from this country and overseas. From time to time we present special concerts involving dance, light and sound, and voice.
You can become a subscriber to the Society, but anyone is welcome to attend individual concerts via the box office. Subscribers enjoy substantial benefits outlined in the season brochure on this Web site. If you have school-age children learning music, they can accompany you at no charge.
The venue for most of our concerts is the Little Theatre in central Lower Hutt. This 300-seat theatre is an ideal size for chamber music. Some concerts are held in the nearby church of St James and TheNewDowse whose acoustics are preferred by some musicians. All venues have the benefit of nearby parking, in well-lit streets and car parks.
What Is Chamber Music?
Originally, in the 16th century, it was music written for small groups of players, to be played in an intimate setting, literally one's chamber at home, in front of an audience of family and friends. Gradually it moved from a private, amateur, diversion to public, professional, performances. Nowadays the setting is more likely to be a small theatre or concert hall but the ensemble usually remains between two and eight players. In contrast, a symphony orchestra has over 100 people plus a conductor. Many composers have found it easier to express emotions through these small, personal groups than through an orchestra. Hence, in chamber music we find some of the greatest and most beautiful music ever written.
For the audience there is always a sense of contact with the players. Each instrument can be seen and its individual voice heard. Sometimes, one of the musicians will introduce a piece with a few words, so increasing the sense of participation for the audience as well as their understanding of what they are about to hear. For those learning music this is especially valuable.
Almost any instrument can be found in chamber music groups, but the commonest ones are piano, violin, 'cello, viola, clarinet and flute. However, one might also see a harp, saxophone, oboe or some percussion. In groups specialising in "early music" there will be lutes and viols, or even crumhorns, sackbuts and rackets!
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Chamber Music Hutt Valley is an Incorporated Society and is registered with the NZ Charities Commission as a non-profit organisation. People who subscribe to the full season of concerts in any year become members with voting rights at the AGM. Non-subscribers can register to be on the mailing list and receive our newsletters free of charge. The AGM is held early in the calendar year and anyone interested in furthering the objects of the Society is welcome to attend.
The Society is run by a small Committee assisted by co-opted members with particular skills. The Committee for 2009/2010 is:
| President | Mike Rudge |
| Vice-President | Beverley Tyler |
| Treasurer | Helen Lukes |
| Committee | Margaret Cull, Judy Hanley, Maria Newman, Malcolm Nicholls, Murray Presland |
| Co-opted | Malcolm Crawley, Jan Heine, Lionel Sharman, Martin Rothbaum |
Anyone wishing to help make fine music happen in the Hutt Valley, whether as a Committee member or co-opted assistant, should use the contact page on this web site to express interest.