As August approaches its last few weeks, we come to the fiftieth Anniversary of the foundation of the Ulster Orchestra ... and it is still providing an essential contribution to music making in the province of Ulster.
Founded as a replacement for the largely amateur City of Belfast Orchestra, with the support of The Arts Council of Northern Ireland , the Northern Ireland Musicians Association (NIMA) and locall authorities throughout the six provinces of Ulster, the object was to provide both orchestral concerts and concerts for schoolchildren.
The beginnings were small - a chamber orchestra composed of a few local ex-Belfast players, some imported professionals from Eire and some ex students embarking on their first professional careers.
There were many problems to be solved and much organisation regarding recruitment of an Administrative Staff, the scheduling of concert performances, publicity, travel arrangements and provision of box office facilities, programme notes and - well, I could go on, but follow the link above starting with the music situation before the inception of a permanent orchestra to fulfill the musical needs of one of the United Kingdom's most music loving population.
So I am proud to have been given the responsibility of organising the administrative functions as the orchestra's General Manager during those formative years and I offer my congratulations to all those who have nourished and enhanced the status of the Ulster Orchestra, which is now a full sized symphony orchestra, giving performances (and broadcasting on Radio 3) throughout The British Isles and beyond..
In the midst of the present run of Promenade Concerts, it is appropriate that the Golden Anniversary of The Ulster Orchestra should fall in this month.
Cheers!
Hornspieler (AKA - ?):ok
My thanks to FHG for his correction to the title of this thread. (It's very easy for my clumsey digits to hit two adjacent keys without reading that wot I wrote.)
I'm so glad that my original ambition - to play the clarinet like Benny Goodman was thwarted by the lack of an available school instrument.
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