Welcome to this year's Sound Out! Schools Concert, a celebration of creativity and new music.
This programme explores unusual sounds, storytelling and soundscapes. Listen out for brand-new compositions, interactive elements, and a high-energy finale with Sweet Tooth! Plus, world premieres of new music written especially for this concert and by young people who have taken part in our award-winning Composition Challenges Programme.
Explore the programme below and if you haven't already taken on a Composition Challenge, why not try one with your class now? Anyone can become a composer!
Dove Class at Heathbrook Primary School wrote this piece in 2023 during our Composition Challenge project. They started with a number line to create a melody (the tune) and Patrick used this number line to create rhythm and harmony (the accompaniment). The result is a quick, fun concert opener!
We loved the piece so much, we decided to repeat it last year, and again this year!
Ben's music reflects the world around him, connecting to his North-Eastern English Heritage, how disability impacts the world around him and his working-class upbringing. He has also become known for championing the work of others, creating unique collaborations with musicians from across the globe and developing unique concert experiences ad opportunities for others.
This piece was commissioned by N.A.M.E.S. (Austria) as part of their musical miniature series - composers were asked to write works of just 30 seconds to 2 minutes! With compositions so short, Ben was inspired by the short poetry form of a Haiku - he believes their ability to describe whole imaginative worlds is endlessly fascinating.
II. They fall and fall
Blossoms on a balcony
Bright melancholy
- Aldona Elena Puisyte-Grigaliune
III. Shadows, change of light,
sunlight fadings, clouds gather –
Stepping off the path
- Francesca Kay
A Haiku is a Japanese poem of 17 syllables, in three lines of five, seven and five syllables. It is traditionally themed on the natural world.
Can you write a Haiku about something in the world around you?
Working with a partner, find an instrument and try out some sounds that are inspired by your partner's Haiku. Can you create a composition that is as short as the Haiku yet captures the imagery in it?
Errollyn Wallen CBE is one of the most famous living classical composers - in 2024 she was appointed the Master of the King's Music which means that she writes new pieces for important royal events and advises the King on musical matters.
Errollyn writes all kinds of music for small groups, orchestras, singers, and operas. Her recordings have travelled 7.84 million kilometres in space, completing 186 orbits around the Earth on NASA's STS-115 mission.
Errollyn Wallen composed Skip for clarinet and piano in 2005, she dreamt up the piece while walking along a beach in Belize!
Robin Haigh is a British composer known for his innovative and imaginative works, particularly those featuring the recorder. In 2016, he composed In Feyre Foreste, a piece for five recorder players, which earned him a British Composer Award in 2017. His music has been played by lots of important orchestras such as the London Symphony Orchestra, Britten Sinfonia and Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra.
ECHO ECHO is a call and response with the audience and ensemble echoing each other – listen out for how the sounds around the melody (tune) change throughout the piece. Robin has written this piece specially for the concert today – you can listen to him talking about the composition below. In it, he talks about the piece being ‘post-minimalist’. Minimalist music takes small, simple patterns and repeats them. These patterns slowly change over time, taking the music on a journey.
Zoë Martlew takes on many roles in the world of music - cellist, composer, performer, cabaret artist, educator, creative mentor, podcaster and concert narrator. She has worked with some of the world’s most renowned contemporary music ensembles, chamber groups, improvisation, film, electronica, multi-media, pop, rock, dance and theatre companies and her own one woman show, Revue Z.
Listen to Zoë talking about her piece Slap On below.
Our Sound Out! Tour includes composition workshops with young people in your local area! Christian worked with the students at Ryde Academy to generate lots of new musical ideas which he's arranged into this piece for the London Sinfonietta.
Cevanne is a composer, artist and performer whose work has been described as “wide-ranging, dynamic and utterly unique” (BBC Music Magazine). She makes scores with windows cut through the text, a bit like The Very Hungry Caterpillar.
She also creates electronic folk songs from sound recordings of everyday objects found on her travels. She has performed these songs at the BBC Proms while playing a Sonic Bonnet — an electronic instrument that she wears on her head. Some of her pieces are made from text instructions only, with no music notation, such as Rites For Crossing Water. This multimedia installation featured animations by Jessica Glover projected onto billboards along the Coventry Canal. The instructions are also recorded as musical tracks, and printed in a book, so you can perform them when crossing a bridge over any river, or canal.
Listen to Cevanne explain the story of Cap O’Rushes, a folktale from the Suffolk coast in the East of England.
Daniel Kidane’s music has been performed all over the world, people describe his music as exciting, creative, and full of imagination. Daniel started his musical journey when he was just eight years old, learning to play the violin. As he got older, he became interested in composing his own music.
His music is performed by big orchestras, like the BBC Symphony Orchestra and the Royal Scottish National Orchestra. One of his most famous pieces, Woke, was played at a huge concert called the Last Night of the Proms in 2019. He loves to mix different genres of music in his compositions, like classical and Grime in his piece Breakbeat.
This piece, Dappled Light, was written for the London Symphony Orchestra’s Summer Shorts series. It was written during the coronavirus pandemic lockdown period and is about light coming through after a dark period of time. Daniel has kindly given us permission to rearrange this piece for our ensemble today.
James B Wilson is based in Bedfordshire, England. He studied at the Royal Academy of Music in London and enjoys writing music inspired by stories and ideas from other composers and art forms such as poetry and films.
We asked James to write this piece specially for this concert - it features the Sound Out Young Ensemble, London Sinfonietta musicians and most importantly - YOU, the audience! It's all about different sweets and being on a sugar high, get your voices ready to sing with us!
The London Sinfonietta is one of the world's leading contemporary music ensembles. We perform music by living composers, commission new works and engage people of all ages in creating new music.
The London Sinfonietta musicians performing in the Sound Out! Schools Concert are:
Joidy Blanco flute
Jordan Black clarinet
Philippa Mo violin
Tamaki Sugimoto cello
Clíodna Shanahan piano
Oliver Lowe percussion
Patrick Bailey conductor and presenter
Composition Challenges invites young people, teachers and schools to create new music for the London Sinfonietta inspired by the works and musical ideas of living composers. Aimed at KS2/3 and free to take part.
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