13–15 May 2022 Abbotsford Convent

A celebration of Australian artistry, diversity and resilience.

67 composers
67 performers
67 collaborations
9 concerts
8 hours of brand-new music

A snap-shot of Australian composition in 2021, all 67 freshly-minted works comprising the ANAM Set will be performed in the beautiful venues of the Abbotsford Convent in May.

Over nine carefully curated concerts - between 7:00pm Friday 13 May and 5:00pm Sunday 15 May - you can hear all 67 works, performed by their original dedicatees or ANAM alumni, with 58 of the 67 composers present for the performances of their works.

The ANAM Set Festival is made possible by the Restart Investment to Sustain and Expand (RISE) Fund – an Australian Government initiative.

  • ANAM
  • Australian Government RISE fund
  • ABC RN

FESTIVAL SCHEDULE

Friday 13 May

  • 7:00pm to 8:30pm (Opening Concert)
 

Saturday 14 May

  • 9:30am to 12:00pm Lunch break
  • 1:00pm to 6:00pm Dinner break
  • 7:15pm to 9:30pm
 

Sunday 15 May

  • 9:30am to 12:00pm Lunch break
  • 1:00pm to 5:00pm
 

There will be time for meals and other breaks during the Festival. The schedule also allows ticket holders time to the live-to-air and pre-record broadcast of The Music Show, both of which are open to the general public.

Friday 13 May

  • 7:00pm to 8:30pm (Opening Concert)
 

Saturday 14 May

  • 10:00am to 12:00pm Lunch break
  • 1:00pm to 6:00pm Dinner break
  • 7:15pm to 8:45pm
 

Sunday 15 May

  • 9:30am to 12:45pm Lunch break
  • 1:45pm to 5:00pm
 

There will be time for meals and other breaks during the Festival. The schedule also allows ticket holders time to the live-to-air and pre-record broadcast of The Music Show, both of which are open to the general public.

67 works in
9 programs

Opening Concert

The ANAM Set Festival begins with a cross-section through the anthology: a warm welcome, whetting the appetite for the weekend ahead.

William Barton Journey Song Josiah Kop, French horn; William Barton, didgeridoo

 

Matthew Laing Destructive Interference Lily Bryant, flute

 

Liza Lim Cello Playing - as Meteorology James Morley, cello

 

Kate Tempany Honeyeater Nicholas Corkeron, trumpet

 

Elizabeth Younan Fantasia No. 7 Kenneth Harris, double bass

 

Chris Dench En petit mot-crabe-c’est-ma-faute Cian Malikides, trombone; Alexander Maegher, percussion

Out of Doors

It is vital for humankind to interact with our environment. However, we are also at the mercy of it, and the line between harmonious co-habitation and wanton destruction is often difficult to see, and even harder to judge. These works explore our relationship to the world outside – how we do good, how we can do better, and how our own lives are ephemeral compared to the deep time of the geological structures that surround us.

Ben Robinson Stepping Out Lynda Latu, violin; Peter de Jager, piano

 

Dominic Flynn Gorge Darcy O’Malley, trumpet

 

Felicity Wilcox To The Sea Adrian Biemmi, violin

 

Emma Greenhill Metamorphosis Grace Wu, violin; Louisa Breen, piano

 

Melody Eötvös Pilgrimado Ariel Postmus, viola

 

Ross Edwards Windsong for Sacred Earth Noah Rudd, oboe

 

Ben Hoadley Zig-zag Road Hanna King, violin; Peter de Jager, piano

 

James Ledger Fanfares for Libraries Alex Allan, oboe

Mind Games

The performer's mind is a complex one, at once highly active and disciplined. These performances invite us to be a part of the intimate relationship between the musician and their instrument. Through intense concentration and focus, these performers are ultimately a vessel – relaying a message from composer to audience via their highly trained bodies and the brass, wood and ivory through which they speak.

Huw Belling Shadow Partita 1004 Felix Pascoe, violin

 

Kitty Xiao In Flesh Hamish Jamieson, cello; Pia Lauritz, dancer

 

Cathy Milliken Braid Tim Allen-Ankins, French horn

 

Alex Pozniak Unlocked Jarrad Linke, clarinet

 

K Travers Eira [sound is] A Body in Space Alison Fane, percussion

 

David Chisolm Temporal Sweetness Profile Jack Chisholm, bassoon

 

Erkki Veltheim Heiligenschein Nicholas McManus, cello

 

Anthony Pateras Human Sensory Motor Schema Rachel Kelly, tuba

Nostalgia

No art exists without context, and these works know their lineage. Here, the old ways are made new again, as composers explore Romanticism, Impressionism, Variation form, and good old-fashioned chamber music – all through a 21st-century lens.

Mark Holdsworth Diabolus Nadia Barrow, cello

 

Paul Grabowsky Helix Variation Kate Worley, viola

 

Brenton Broadstock Memento Jarrod Callaghan, trombone; Aidan Boase, piano

 

Catherine Likhuta String Quartet No. 1 for solo cello Charlotte Miles, cello

 

Jack Symonds Eau Vivante Oliver Russell, cello; Leigh Harrold, piano

 

Andrew Anderson Theme and Variations Shuhei Lawson, cello

 

Richard Mills Che Scorre Harrison Swainston, viola; Nadia Barrow, cello

 

John Rotar Romanza Fiona Qiu, violin; Louisa Breen, piano

Weights and Measures

In the ancient Greek 'Quadrivium', music was grouped together with arithmetic and geometry; considered more of a science than an art. Here, some of the ANAM Set's intellectual powerhouses are on display – pieces that have their basis in physical laws, mathematical formulae, harmonic overtones and ...bakeries?!

Ian Whitney An Architecture of Butter and Sugar Lilly Yang, flute

 

Nicole Murphy Vector Will Kinmont, trombone

 

Elliot Gyger Elude Lyndon Watts, bassoon

 

Tim Dargaville Unfolding to an Infinite Number Jennifer Yu, piano

 

Adrian Pertout Mīmēsis Andrián Justo, viola

 

Damien Ricketson Touch Point Josephine Chung, violin

 

Noemi Liba Friedman The Eleventh Partial Nicola Robinson, French horn

 

Thomas Meadowcroft Rolando Continuo Nathan Gatenby, percussion

 

Harry Sdraulig Watch Caleb Salizzo, piano

Sounds of an Agenda

Music doesn’t always ‘just’ sooth. Often it has a job to do. In these performances composers address themes of inequality, political corruption, land rights, cultural intersections, and even the fraught notion of composition itself. Satire abounds here, and through some black humour this abstract music is likely to touch on some uncomfortable truths.

Natalie Williams Skripka Emily Su, violin

 

Paul Dean Roll Out the Pork Barrel Andrew Crothers, viola

 

Deborah Cheetham Fault Lines Ben Saffir, double bass

 

Alexander Turley Nowhere in Particular Murray Kearney, viola

 

Graeme Leak THIS is IT Alexander Meagher, percussion

 

Lilijana Matičevska You Can Call me CV01 Jye Todorov, bassoon

 

Bruce Crossman Fragility and Sonorousness Kane Chang, piano

 

Michael Kieran Harvey Death Cap Mushroom Theodore Pike, piano and toy piano; Alex Bull, drums

Loss and Hope

What to say about the last two years? Music has always had an ability to articulate nuanced, deep emotion, when words fail. In this concert, composers reflect heavily on the impacts of recent losses. When those we love are no longer there, our own thoughts and memories can both comfort and betray us. There is a way forward, but resilience can be a long time coming.

Mark Wolf This Teetering Bulb Alexandra King, oboe

 

Samantha Wolf adrift Hamish Gullick, double bass

 

Cat Hope The Long Now James Littlewood, bass trombone

 

Andrew Batterham A Black Dog Near Me Joel Walmsley, flugel horn; Peter de Jager, piano

 

Luke Altmann Prelude for viola and piano Eunise Cheng, viola; Aidan Boase, piano

 

Alexander Voltz Prayer for a Lost Friend Emily Beauchamp, violin and Leigh Harrold, piano

 

Kate Milligan Lux Levis Josef Hanna, violin and Aidan Boase, piano

 

Thomas Green So, I am Shouting Claire Weatherhead, violin

Intimate Exchange

An exhalation of air; a graze of the bow; the uncertain threshold between sound and silence. This brief concert presents those ANAM Set works that resonate best amongst a small group of listeners. Step into the hushed setting of the Abbotsford Oratory for what promises to be an intimate musical exchange.

Gordon Kerry Soliloquy Daniel Chiou, cello

 

Rosalind Page Respirare Rachel Lau, flute

 

Charlie Sdraulig Aside Mia Stanton, violin

 

Andrea Keller Other Selves Donica Tran, violin

 

Kirsten Milenko Lapse Rachael Kwa, violin; Hamish Jamieson, cello

Closing Concert

Andrew Ford Confused Alarms Eve McEwen, French horn; Louisa Breen, piano

 

Brett Dean Byrdsong Studies Amanda Pang, harpsichord

 

Anne Cawrse Ruby Clare Fox, clarinet

 

Yitzhak Yedid YE-DID-BACH Claudia Leggett and Carla Blackwood, French horns

 

Emile Frankel Cradlesong Alex Waite, piano

 

Jet Kye Chong 食JIAH8 James Knight, percussion

 

Elena Kats-Chernin Grand Rag Oliver Crofts, clarinet and Leigh Harrold, piano

Festival Pass

A Festival Pass is the only way to experience the complete anthology of works across the weekend – all 67 new Australian works that make up THE ANAM SET. They will be presented in nine carefully curated concerts in three of the Abbotsford Convent’s beautiful venues.

The Festival Pass also allows you to join Radio National’s The Music Show host (and ANAM Set composer) Andrew Ford in discussion with THE ANAM SET composers and musicians, to be broadcast live on Saturday morning and relayed the following Sunday morning.

Streams

Patrons may select whether they are in Stream A or Stream B. This is to assist us in managing capacities in each venue: there is no difference in which works you will get to hear, just the order in which you will get to hear them.

Both streams commence at 7pm on Friday 13 May and conclude at 5pm on Sunday 15 May. Please note: each stream has slightly different start, finish and break times.

Price

Full price: $210 Senior/Concession: $150 Under 30: $90

Single tickets go on sale 29 April, subject to availability.