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Portrait of Conductor Harish Shankar wearing a Black Suit
View all events for category: Classical music

Chineke! Orchestra: An American in Paris

Sample a sonic menu of exquisite music from around the world, with Indian, Hungarian and American influences.

In the centenary year of his death, the orchestra begins with Charlestonian Rhapsody by Edmund Thornton Jenkins, an American composer who emigrated to London and found success as both a performer and composer.

Next up is music by Royal Philharmonic Society Instrumentalist Award winner Jasdeep Singh Degun, whose concerto for sitar and orchestra, Arya, brings together Indian and European sounds.

‘It’s really not a matter of different worlds meeting,’ he reflects. ‘It’s just me: as much as I’m immersed in Indian classical music, I’m a product of this country; I’m a British composer.’

He wrote his sitar concerto during a residency at Benjamin Britten’s home in Aldeburgh, and his approach to music-making is always instinctive, organic and unprejudiced.

Then after the interval he rounds off his performance with another short piece combining the sitar with the western sounds of the orchestra in Lament.

Zoltan Kodály’s Dances of Galánta draws on folk songs of his motherland to paint the musical image of the small Hungarian market town of Galanta, famous for its gypsy band.

And we round out this concert with Gershwin’s An American in Paris, the composer’s love letter to his home of New York and the dissonance one feels being immersed in foreign culture.

Performers

Chineke! Orchestra

Harish Shankar conductor

Jasdeep Singh Degun sitar

Repertoire

Jenkins: Rhapsody No.1 (Charlestonia)

Jasdeep Singh Degun: Concerto for sitar & orchestra (Arya)

Interval

Jasdeep Singh Degun: Lament arr. Ashok Gupta for sitar, tabla & string ensemble (London premiere)

Kodály: Dances of Galánta

Gershwin: An American in Paris

Need to know

Age guidance
For ages 7+. Under-12s must be accompanied by an adult on our site.

For your visit

This event is held at the Queen Elizabeth Hall Southbank Centre

The Queen Elizabeth Hall is open from 90 minutes before events start until they finish. It’s closed at all other times.