Aylesbury Lunchtime Music presents

Lizzie Estrada & Thomas Scott

15 May 2025

Starts: 12:45pm, Doors: 12:15pm

Duration: 1 hour (approx.)

£7 adults on the door (<18s & carers free)

  • Lizzie Estrada Soprano
  • Thomas Scott piano

Programme

Lizzie and Thomas are standing in for the previously advertised performance by pianist Bridget Yee who had to cancel at short notice.

  • 1810-1856

    Lieder (Schumann)

    Aufträge (Op. 77, Lieder und Gesänge) Heiß mich nicht reden, heiß mich schweigen (D 726) In der fremde (Liederkreis, Op. 39) Wehmut (Liederkreis, Op. 39)
  • 1845-1924

    La rose ‘Ode anacréontique’, Op 51 No 4 (Fauré)

    This song is as significant a piece in the third recueil as is Lydia, by the same poet, in the first. Leconte de Lisle’s ode (Poèmes et poésies) was already thirty-five years old, but the composer makes it sound almost as fresh as the day it was written. He clearly admired the gardener in this Parnasse whose roses from Isfahan and Lahore he also set. This prize-winning specimen however is from Delos, and it inspires Fauré to a very personal response; he relaxes the poet’s majestic and statuesque pose (très 1855) with music that remains fresh and natural, despite the mythological references. There are no separate strophes in this poem, and the composer only allows himself a brief piano interlude before the fourteenth line. Apart from this respite, voice and piano flower together in a texture that, if not exactly overgrown, signifies profusion and effulgence: this is no single rose but an overgrown hillside where the passer-by is overwhelmed by the flowers’ scent. Constantly changing harmonies (on a row of descending basses with mixolydian colourings) are meant to delight but, as in La bonne chanson, the ear is in danger of being unsettled by too much diversity; nevertheless, the listener’s attention is held by the freshness and impetus of the music. The apotheosis-like final page incorporates the grandeur of Zeus without obliterating the slender grace of the flower. The postlude, like that for Schubert’s Ganymed, restores classical poise in the wake of heavenly upheaval.

  • Gypsy songs, Op. 55 (Dvořák)

    i Má píseň zas mi láskou zní / My song rings out with love again ii Aj! Kterak trojhranec můj / Hey, how my triangle iii A les je tichý kolem kol / The woods are silent all around iv Když mne stará matka / Songs my mother taught me v Struna naladěna / Now the string is tuned, lad vi Široké rukávy / Flowing sleeves and trousers vii Dejte klec jestřábu / Give the hawk a cage

    “Songs My Mother Taught Me” is a song for voice and piano written in 1880 by Antonín Dvořák. It is the fourth of seven songs from his cycle Gypsy Songs (Czech: Cigánské melodie), B. 104, Op. 55. The Gypsy Songs are set to poems by Adolf Heyduk in both Czech and German. This song in particular has achieved widespread fame.

  • 1797-1828

    Lieder (Schubert)

    Geheimes (D 719) Heiß mich nicht reden, heiß mich schweigen (D 726) Suleika I (D 720)

    It was in the genre of the lied that Schubert made his most indelible mark. Leon Plantinga remarks that “in his more than six hundred Lieder he explored and expanded the potentialities of the genre, as no composer before him.” Prior to Schubert’s influence, Lieder tended toward a strophic, syllabic treatment of text, evoking the folksong qualities engendered by the stirrings of Romantic nationalism.

  • 1864-1949

    Vier Lieder, Op. 27 (Strauss)

    i Ruhe, meine Seele, ii Cäcilie, iii Heimliche Aufforderung, iv Morgen

    Op 27 is a set of four songs composed by Richard Strauss in 1894. They were originally for voice and piano, and not orchestrated by Strauss until 1948, after he had completed one of his Four Last Songs, “Im Abendrot”.

Performers

  • Lizzie Estrada

    Soprano

    Lizzie Estrada is a young Filipino soprano studying at the Royal Academy of Music

    Read More
  • Thomas Scott

    Piano

    Award winning young pianist Thomas Scott is studying a post-graduate degree at the Royal Academy of Music

    Read More

Key information for concert goers

When

Every Thursday at 12:45pm (except August & over Christmas). Performances last around 60 minutes. Please enter quietly as there is a noon service in the Lady Chapel.

How much?

Entry is £7 per adult (card or cash), under 18s and carers are free. The price includes a programme. Donations are welcomed to subsidise the larger ensembles.

Where?

Performances are at St Mary’s Church in the heart of Aylesbury Old Town. See directions for further details.

Do I need to book?

No, just turn up. Doors open at 12:15 pm. Make sure you arrive in good time to get a seat.

Other Concerts you may be interested in