Lunchtime Recitals

Lunchtime Recitals

Lunchtime Recitals

We are thrilled to invite five award-winning, renowned professional pianists to offer midday recitals at St Barnabas Dulwich. Recitals start at midday and last no more than 40 minutes.

26 April Daniel Lebhardt

  • Beethoven: Sonata no.17 in d minor “Tempest” op.31 no.2
  • Brahms: 4 Klavierstucke op.119

17 May Victor Braojos

  • Claude Debussy: Estampes
    • Pagodes
    • La soirée dans Grenade
    • Jardins sous la pluie
  •  Isaac Albéniz: Two works from the Suite Iberia
    • Evocación
    • El Puerto (Cádiz)
  • Enrique Granados: El amor y la muerte (Love & Death) from the Goyescas 

31 May Monica Zhenyu Shi. A programme including pieces by

  • Mozart
  • Liszt
  • Chopin

20 Sep  Luis A. Parés

  • Enrique Granados — Quejas, o la maja y el ruiseñor (Lament, or The Maiden and the Nightingale) from Goyescas
  • Teresa Carreño — Mi Teresita (Waltz)
  • Johannes Brahms — Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Handel, Op. 24

 

Daniel Lebhardt

Hungarian pianist Daniel Lebhardt has been described by the New York Times as playing with ‘…power, poetry and formidable technique’. Since winning the 2015 Young Classical Artists Trust auditions, Daniel has given concerts in the UK, Europe, USA, South America, Asia and New Zealand.
He performed with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Hallé Orchestra, Konzerthausorchester Berlin, National Philharmonic of Ukraine, and had his debuts at Royal Festival Hall, Barbican Hall and Symphony Hall in Birmingham. In September he will make his Royal Albert Hall debut in Rachmaninoff’s 2nd Piano Concerto.
His discography includes two duo albums with violinist Benjamin Baker (Delphian Records), and he has recorded Schubert (Naxos) and Bartók (Decca) as well.
Daniel studied at the Franz Liszt Academy in Budapest with Gyöngyi Keveházi and István Gulyás, the Royal
Academy of Music in London and the Royal Birmingham  Conservatoire with Pascal Nemirovski and is currently
based in London.

Website: daniel-lebhardt.com

Víctor Braojos

Praised for his poetical, intense and original performances, Víctor Braojos obtained his Bachelor of Music at Escola Superior de Música de Catalunya and his Master in Piano Performance and Artist Diploma at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, working with Martin Roscoe and receiving guidance from Dame  Imogen Cooper, Sir Stephen Hough, Paul Lewis and Robert Levin.

He is a laureate of several national and international competitions, among which we could highlight awards in the Maria Canals International Piano Competition, the Catalunya Piano Competition and the “Primer Palau” International Music Competition.

Along his career, he has performed in prestigious venues in Spain, Germany, France, Italy, Russia, Poland and the UK, including the Palau de la Musica Catalana, Barbican Centre,  Munchener Künstlerhaus and the Frederic Chopin Museum. His future engagements include recitals at internationally acclaimed halls such as the Imperial College, Auditorio de León, Dulwich College Old Library and the Melodomia Music Society in Provence.

In September 2022, Víctor was appointed Junior Felow at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama.

Monica Zhenyu Shi

Monica Zhenyu Shi is a Chinese-born pianist and educator now based in England, with a distinguished career as a performer and a dedicated teacher.

A graduate of the prestigious Guildhall School of Music and Drama, she earned both her Bachelor with Honours and Master’s degrees under the tutelage of renowned artists including Professor Philip Jenkins, Noriko Ogawa and Laura Roberts. Her studies were supported by the Mayflower Theatre Bursary.

Monica’s performing career was launched after her move to England in 2010, where she studied with Bulgarian pianist Valentina Seferinova. She quickly gained recognition, winning the Recital Prize at the Portsmouth Festival and the Solent Symphony Orchestra Concerto Award, leading to a critically acclaimed performance of Beethoven’s Third Piano Concerto. She has since developed a strong international presence, performing as a soloist with orchestras such as the Torun Symphony Orchestra (Poland) and in major concert halls across China, Malta, Germany, France, and the UK. Recent engagements include performances at London’s St. James’s Church Piccadilly and the Barbican Centre Milton Court.

As an educator, Monica currently teaches at Junior Guildhall. Her teaching is  informed by her extensive performance experience and academic training, providing students with a comprehensive and inspiring musical education.

As a practice-researcher, Monica is a doctoral candidate at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama.

Maria Canyigueral

Maria Canyigueral has been described by La Vanguardia as “a pianist of great personality”.

One of the leading lights among the new generation of Spanish pianists, Maria Canyigueral has inspired collaborations with outstanding contemporary composers such as Antón García Abril, Benet Casablancas, Nicolas Bacri, Konstantia Gourzi and Moritz Eggert.

Recent highlights include recitals at Palau de la Música Catalana and Auditori in Barcelona, at Fundación Juan March in Madrid, at the Wigmore Hall in London and at Ljubljana Festival. She recently made her debut at Gran Teatre del Liceu performing Beethoven Choral Fantasy Op.80 with Fundació Liceu orquestra and Manel Valdivieso.

Maria Canyigueral has performed in Spain, the UK, Japan, Belgium, Slovenia and France.

In addition to her live performances, Maria has made an impact with her recordings. Her solo album Avantguarding Mompou for Audite (2020) has been critically acclaimed from magazines such as International Piano, Pizzicato, Revista Musical Catalana and Melómano. It features the complete Cançons i danses by Frederic Mompou and commissions from Nicolas Bacri, Antón García Abril, Joseph Phibbs, Konstantia Gourzi, Moritz Eggert, Jiri Gemrot, Josep Maria Guix, Joan Magrané and Victor Estapé. The project was world premiered at the Conway Hall in 2018, receiving an award from Arts Council in England and the support of Instituto Cervantes, Fundació Mompou and Institut Ramon Llull. 

She won the Gold Medal at the Global Music Awards in California for her album of works by C. Franck, Granados, Skerjanc and Finzi, recorded with violinist Lana Trotovsek (Hedone Records, 2016).Two more albums for Hedone Records (2017, 2021), one featuring works for flute and piano by Martinu, Böhm, Fauré and Poulenc alongsite flutist Boris Bizjak and a recent live recording from a solo recital at Palau de la Música Catalana performing Bach, Beethoven, Haydn and Montsalvatge. 

Her live performances with Lana Trotovsek at Festival Ljubljana 2020 of the complete set of Sonatas for violin and piano by Beethoven have been recently published on four CDs, thanks to ZKP RTV Slovenia and Festival Ljubljana. It has been ‘Melómano de Oro’ in Melómano Magazine.

Canyigueral has recently released with cellist Ramon Bassal the Beethoven complete works for cello and piano with Da Vinci Classics (2023), recorded and produced at Teldex Berlin Studio.

Having spent her formative years between Spain and the UK, Maria completed her undergraduate studies at the Conservatori del Liceu in Barcelona with Michel Wagemans, she later attained a Master of Arts in Performance from the Royal Academy of Music in London, studying with Sulamita Aronovsky. She has also received musical advice from Nino Kereselidze and André de Groote.

An avid chamber musician, Maria has been appointed artistic director at a new chamber music series in Barcelona, in Sarrià theatre. First edition took place from March to November 2021.

Luis A. Parés

Luis Parés has enjoyed an international career as a soloist and chamber musician, performing across Europe, Asia, North and South America. His concert appearances include prestigious venues such as Wigmore Hall, Queen Elizabeth Hall, Cadogan Hall, and Bridgewater Hall, and he has performed as soloist with orchestras in Europe and South America, with live broadcasts on BBC Radio 3, RAI Italy, Kol HaMusika Israel, and Spanish radio.

 

He studied at the Royal College of Music in London as a Scholar and Mills Williams Junior Fellow with Gordon Fergus-Thompson and Andrew Ball. Competition prizes include First Prize at the XI Ricard Viñes International Piano Competition (Lleida, Spain) and Third Prize at the Maria Canals International Competition.

 

Luis is Director of Music at Alleyn’s School, an examiner and presenter for ABRSM, and regularly gives masterclasses and adjudicates at festivals and competitions in the UK and internationally.

The Gift of Music: A New Piano for Our Church

in 2024 we took delivery of a new Yamaha C7X grand piano. This beautiful instrument will serve our church for decades to come and enable a greater flexibility of music making, both in worship and services, but also through recitals and lunchtime concerts. 

Week by week, we are aware that our fine 3-manual Tickell organ is a superb and versatile instrument: it is as brilliant in leading large congregations and handling French organ symphonies as it is when accompanying 16th century verse anthems (Orlando Gibbons’s, This is the record of John, for example). This should be no surprise: it was designed by Kenneth Tickell and Dr William McVicker (Director of Music here between 1988-2019). Their work so evidently seized the opportunity to create something positive from the devastation of the fire in 1992. They were both acutely aware of the legacy that remains in installing a new instrument. Almost thirty years on we still benefit, week by week, from the vision and determination of McVicker and Tickell in designing and building our organ. 

William’s 31 years’ service is inspiring and testament to his commitment. He told me how he was inspired by his predecessor, Raymond Gray, who was Organist and Director of Music between 1951-1988 and continued to deputise for William in to the early ‘90s. You may have noticed the bench dedicated to Raymond that sits outside St Barnabas underneath the welcome area’s canopy. Raymond sadly never heard the new organ because he died in 1995. There is no doubt he would have been enthused by the improvement on the Speechly instrument in the Victorian church that had (by all accounts) seen better days. 

Three decades on, our new piano is a significant moment for us, not only because it gives us a first-class instrument that now matches our pipe organ, but more so because it is given in memory of both Raymond Gray and Audrey Skillman. 

Audrey was a stalwart of St Barnabas and a committed member of our congregation for over five decades. Members of the choir recall how Audrey would stand in the welcome area to greet the choir as they began their procession into church, such was her love of the choir and choral music. Audrey died in May 2023 and her gift has enabled us to invest in music and purchase a much needed new piano.  

Audrey lived with her sister, Lynn Gray (1932-2016), who was married to Raymond. They all lived in Woodwarde Road until moving to flats in Dulwich Mead in the early 2000s. 

There is something hugely humbling about this generous gift. Both Raymond and Lynn’s, and Audrey’s, service, commitment and faithfulness to St Barnabas continues to this day through their gift to us. 

There will be opportunity over the coming months to give thanks for the legacy of Audrey and the Grays through music and the playing of the piano. This instrument gives us new possibilities that were not feasible with our current instruments that are heavily worn and in desperate need of replacement.  We begin with  these two lunchtime concerts ; we will host music examinations; we will enable community music groups to offer concerts that previously needed to be held elsewhere.  

Above all, however, this instrument will be used to lead and inspire worship with our choirs. Given that the combined service of Audrey, Lynn and Raymond tops a century, enabling music in worship is an entirely fitting tribute to them. 

Christopher Woodward 
Director of Music