Showing posts with label Aaron Azunda Akugbo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aaron Azunda Akugbo. Show all posts

Monday, 26 January 2026

Aaron Azunda Akugbo impresses in Marsalis' Concerto for Trumpet, and the BPO give confident readings of classic Nyman film scores

Aaron Azunda Akugbo, Joanna MacGregor
& the Brighton Philharmonic Orchestra
© Frances Marshall

Aaron Azunda Akugbo (trumpet)
Joanna MacGregor (conductor)
Ruth Rogers (leader) 

7.30pm, Saturday 24 January 2026


Marsalis, Wynton (b.1961): Concerto for Trumpet
Nyman, Michael (b.1944): Prospero's Books Suite
                                          The Draughtsman's Contract for Orchestra


Once again Joanna MacGregor delivered an interesting programme for the Brighton Philharmonic Orchestra’s latest outing, as they move into the second half of their season. A very contemporary trumpet concerto by the fabulous jazz trumpeter and composer Wynton Marsalis was coupled with two of Michael Nyman’s iconic film scores from the late twentieth century, repertoire that clearly sparked interest, with Brighton Dome very nearly full.

Aaron Azunda Akugbo & Joanna MacGregor
 © Frances Marshall
Marsalis’ Concerto for Trumpet was written for trumpeter Michaeal Sachs, who premiered the work with the Cleveland Orchestra in 2023. Across its six short movements, it covers a wide variety of styles, almost serving as a brief history of the instrument, across classical and jazz genres alike. Inevitably, this means it is a bit of an eclectic mix, and nothing stays still for very long, even within each movement. This creates a huge challenge for soloist and orchestra alike, not least because many of the short episodes within have many complex rhythms and balance issues to be grappled with along the way. Edinburgh-born trumpeter Aaron Azunda Akugbo traversed the many styles and demands with style, warming into the appreciative atmosphere in the Brighton Dome as his confidence grew. The orchestra on the whole successfully navigated the rhythms and the individual episodes thrown at them by Marsalis, but one felt that there wasn’t quite enough breathing space for them to see how this all fitted together. To be fair, Marsalis does take things at breakneck speed, so there is seldom chance for any element to establish itself before the next idea comes along. Balance was also occasionally an issue – a focus on ‘getting it right’ perhaps didn’t allow for time to listen, and in the opening March, the heavy use of percussion and lower brass was in danger of drowning out the soloist. However, there was some great cartoon scurrying from the strings, along with comic muted trombones here. The second movement, Ballad, allowed Azunda Akugbo to show off a more lyrical style, with a gently bouncing swing in the orchestra, and a delicate duet exchange between the soloist and the oboe. In contrast, Mexican Son had more virtuosic show from Azunda Akugbo, with mostly tight ensemble from the orchestra in the dancing rhythms. At the end, the strange whooping sounds from held horn and woodwind notes that accompanied the soloist weren’t entirely convincingly confident, but the woodwind solos in the following Blues movement were more assured. Here Azunda Akugbo showed off the differing effects of not one but four different mutes, including the most bluesy of all, a felt hat. The French Pastoral was full of twisting, winding lines, before Harlequin Two-Step brought the work to a spirited conclusion. The energetic opening section did get a little wild at one point, on the brink of coming adrift, but then settled into a quieter, smoother section, allowing for more expressive playing. And just when we thought it had ended, wild whistling and crazy noises in the coda led back to a final elephant call from the soloist, as the work had begun. All in all, a great showcase for the talented Azunda Akugbo, and the orchestra largely pulled off their contribution, but I’m not sure they managed to convey an overall coherency in this highly challenging, episodic work.

Joanna MacGregor & the Brighton Philharmonic Orchestra
© Nick Boston
Two of Michael Nyman’s scores for Peter Greenaway films filled the second half of the evening’s programme, starting with the Prospero’s Books Suite. MacGregor and the BPO seemed on safter ground here, although as MacGregor said in her introduction, this music is still challenging to perform, just in a different way. The first movement, Prospero’s Magiclaunches in straight away with Nyman’s signature pulsing repetitive figuration in the strings, and the BPO bassoons throbbed away beneath the slower moving woodwind and brass chords. MacGregor shaped the slow build, and the violins soared above the texture when they shifted away from their perpetual motion role. The quirkier Prospero’s Curse had mostly tight rhythms here, triplets against fours mostly locked in, although it felt like MacGregor allowed the overall momentum to lapse a little here. Glassy, shimmering strings dominated in Cornfield, the soft trumpet emerging slowly. Miranda, the final movement, had good drive, with pecking woodwind, although the clarinet raced ahead rather at one point, risking a loss of ensemble, and the various changes in tempo felt a little insecure initially. However, the final drive to the finish had the necessary energy to pull it all back together.

The Draughtsman’s Contract for Orchestra, Nyman’s suite from his score for the Greenaway film, contains some of his most familiar music, the final movement in particular, and Nyman draws much of the musical content from Purcell, in particular in his use of the ground bass. Its opening movement, A Watery Death, starts with emphatic low chords, before the violins scream in, and the BPO gave this their all, with some deft work from the brass section. The ground that forms the bases of The Garden is Becoming a Robe Room set off with some rushing and disagreement between the bassoons and double basses, but settled, with more fluid lines from the violins calming the texture. An Eye for Optical Theory moves into jazzier, swinging rhythms, and MacGregor gave these a nice swing. And then the finale, Chasing Sheep is Best Left to Shepherds. The processional opening, with hammering piano had real drive, and the violins’ triplets against the prevailing fours were tight. The Black Beauty-esque section galloped along, followed by sparky exchanges between the woodwinds and brass, and MacGregor led them to a strong finish, with some of the most confident and assured playing of the evening from the orchestra.

And so again, MacGregor and the Brighton Philharmonic Orchestra showed us their enthusiasm for tackling challenging repertoire. On the night, the Nyman proved more assured than the Marsalis, but hats off to them for bringing us this striking work, especially along with the highly talented Aaron Azunda Akugbo.

Thursday, 17 July 2025

Brighton Philharmonic Orchestra launch their 101st season

Elena Urioste, BPO season brochure
After an extremely successful 100th season, the Brighton Philharmonic Orchestra have revealed their plans for their 
101st, and Music Director Joanna MacGregor is not taking her foot off the pedal, with another exciting and varied programme revealed.  

Big names this season include tenor Mark Padmore, cellist Guy Johnston and violinist Elena Urioste. Pianist Junyan Chen (runner up at last year’s Leeds International Piano Competition, also coming away with two other prizes, including the chamber music prize) and Nigerian-Scottish trumpeter Aaron Azunda Akugbo also feature, as well as Lativan accordionist Alise Siliņa. And percussion, so much a feature now of BPO’s programmes, forms the centrepiece of the season’s final concert, with a new work for Brazilian percussion and piano, to be written by MacGregor, and performed by Brazilian percussionist Adriano Adewale and MacGregor on piano. Leader Ruth Rogers also gets a chance to shine as a soloist, along with Romanian violist Sacha Bota, and actor Alistair McGowan returns for the BPO’s popular version of A Christmas Carol.
 
Junyan Chen
And so to the music. The season kicks off with Junyan Chen playing Rachmaninov’s mighty Piano Concerto No. 3, and this sits alongside two great ballet scores, Ravel’s wild La Valse and Bartók’s equally outrageous The Miraculous Mandarin Suite - the ballet was banned in Germany after its 1926 Cologne premiere (2.45pm, Sunday 28 September, Brighton Dome).
 


Ben Gernon
Joanna MacGregor has repeatedly demonstrated her commitment to bringing rarer and more unusual repertoire to the BPO’s programmes, whilst also managing to show that they don’t neglect core repertoire. Last year, Tchaikovsky, Rimsky-Korsakov and Stravinsky sat alongside MacMillan, Schnittke and Gwylim Simcock, and of course, who could forget their barnstorming performance of Messaien’s Turangalîla Symphony? But I’m not sure when I last heard the BPO perform Mahler, so it’s great to see his Symphony No. 5 on the schedule, with Ben Gernon conducting, alongside a luscious gem, Samuel Coleridge-Taylor’s Violin Concerto, played by one of the work’s great advocates, Elena Urioste (2.45pm, Sunday 19 October, Brighton Dome).
 
Mark Padmore
© Marco Borggreve
The strings of the BPO are at the heart of their next concert, with tenor Mark Padmore and the BPO’s Principal horn, Alexei Watkins joining them for Britten’s wonderful Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings. There’s more Britten, with his Young Apollo, a radiant work for piano, string quartet and strings, and also Britten’s arrangement for string quartet and string orchestra of Purcell’s Chacony in G minor. MacGregor is then the arranger, this time of Dowland for Mr Dowland’s Midnight, and the concert ends with James MacMillan’s Piano Concerto No. 2, a work full of Scottish folk music influences, with a wild, anarchic ceilidh to finish (7.30pm, Saturday 8 November, Brighton Corn Exchange).
 
Alise Siliņa
December brings two Christmas themed events. The first unusually puts a solo accordionist, Alise Siliņa centre stage, in Václav Torjan’s Fairy Tales: A Concerto for Accordion, which draws on Czech fairy tale characters for its three movements. Ukranian composer Thomas de Hartmann fled from the Nazis to Paris, and it was there that he composed his orchestral work, Koliadky (Noëls ukrainiensor Ukrainian Christmas Carols). The concert opens with Delius’ rarely performed Eventyr (Once upon a Time), evoking Norway’s folk tales, mythical beasts and landscapes, and they end with the Christmas classic, Tchaikovsky’s The Nutcracker Suite (2.45pm, Sunday 7 December, Brighton Dome). Then, as mentioned above, Alistair McGowan returns, joined by MacGregor and the BPO Brass Quintet for Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol, directed by Richard Williams. And this year, they are taking the show to Petworth and Lewes, as well as giving two performances in Brighton (18, 19 & 20 December, St George’s Church Kemptown, St Mary’s Church Petworth & St Anne’s Church Lewes).
 
Aaron Azunda Akugbo
They usher in 2026 with classic, infectiously minimalist Michael Nyman film scores, The Draughtman’s Contract and Prospero’s Books, set alongside Wynton Marsalis’ Trumpet Concerto, which combines jazz with blues and classical trumpet styles in a virtuosic whirlwind, a great showcase for the young trumpeter Aaron Azunda Akugbo (7.30pm, Saturday 24 January, Brighton Dome).
 
Once again combining core repertoire with the lesser known, Mozart’s glorious Sinfonia Concertante, with Ruth Rogers (violin) and Sascha Bota (viola), and the Piano Concerto No. 20, with Joanna MacGregor at the piano, are separated by Lonely Angel: Meditation for violin and strings, by Latvian composer Pēteris Vasks. They open with Bartók’s distinctive Romanian Folk Dances, a short suite of piano pieces that Bartók then orchestrated for strings (2.45pm, Sunday 22 February, Brighton Dome).
 
Guy Johnston
© Frances Marshall
John Tavener’s masterpiece, The Protecting Veil is the highlight of their next concert, with cellist Guy Johnston the soloist. The work combines moments of joyful ecstasy with soulful contemplation, and is a real tour de force for the soloist. Before that, Ruth Rogers (violin) is the soloist in Spring and Winter from Vivaldi’s Four Seasons, coupled with Max Richter’s mesmerising take on the movements, from his hit work. Vivaldi Recomposed. And another homage from one composer to another, Vaughan Williams’ richly evocative Fantasia on a Theme of Thomas Tallis, opens this concert (2.45pm, Sunday 29 March, Brighton Dome).
 
Adriano Adewale
Sounds of Brazil will bring the season to a close, with an eclectic programme, including that new Concerto for Brazilian Percussion and Piano by MacGregor, with soloist Adriano Adewale. This will follow on from Britten’s The Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra, a firm favourite to show off all sections of the orchestra. I’m not sure how the Russian witches of Mussorgsky’s Night on Bald Mountain, or the puppets of Stravinsky’s Scenes from Petrushka (or the Britten for that matter) fit in with a Brazilian theme, but this will nevertheless no doubt be a lively, joyful programme to end the 101st season.
 
Also worth a mention is an exciting new collaboration with Brighton College to take chamber music to younger audiences, with three recitals, each preceded by short masterclasses for students in the afternoons. Concerts include music by Glass, Rameau, Liszt, Haydn, Dvořák and Piazzolla, with Joanna MacGregor being joined by principal string players, and soloists Adriano Adewale and cellist Adrian Brendel (7pm, 10 September, 25 February & 15 April, Brighton College).
 
With low income concessions and tickets from £10 for all under 30s, as well as last-minute offers for first-time bookers. Details of all concerts and tickets at brightonphil.org.uk and brightondome.org.