Artist's albums
Holst: The Planets And Orchestral Music
2000 · album
Mozart: Late Symphonies
1999 · album
The Essential Vaughan Williams
1999 · album
Elgar: Orchestral Works
1999 · album
Boyce: The Eight Symphonies
1999 · album
Beethoven: Violin Concerto Etc
1997 · album
Bach, C.P.E.: Cello Concertos, Wq. 170-172
1996 · album
Stravinsky: Pulcinella & Danses concertantes
1995 · album
Raphael Wallfisch plays British Cello Concertos
2016 · album
Mozart: Operatic Arias
2014 · album
Britten: Music For Strings
2006 · album
Grainger: Famous Folk Settings
2005 · album
Seascapes
2005 · album
Moeran: Orchestral Works
2004 · album
Vivaldi: Le Quattro Stagioni (The Four Seasons)
2003 · album
Mendelssohn / Beethoven / Schubert
2002 · album
Similar artists
Biography
The Bournemouth Sinfonietta was founded in 1968 as a chamber orchestra of about 35 players to complement the work of the larger Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra. The first conductor was Kenneth Montgomery, followed by Maurice Gendron, Norman Del Mar, Roger Norrington, Tamás Vásáry, and Alexander Polianichko, as well as director/violinists Ronald Thomas and Richard Studt. The Sinfonietta has appeared at the BBC Proms, with Glyndebourne Touring Opera, for the National Opera Studio, at the major British music festivals, on tour in Europe and Brazil, and on over 70 recordings (many featuring the work of contemporary British composers). The home of the Bournemouth orchestras (the Sinfonietta, along with the Bournemouth Symphony) relocated to a new arts center in Poole in 1985, where an innovative educational program was established. They were pioneers in the concept of community music residencies where musicians from the orchestra work to bring music to communities not normally served by professional classical musicians. As individuals and as small ensembles (such as the Sinfonietta Winds, Sinfonietta Strings, and the Silvestri Ensemble), the orchestra members have performed in schools, hospitals, homes, village halls, community centers, prisons, hotels, and supermarkets. In 1995, the Sinfonietta was awarded a Sainsbury's Art for All Award for its work developing community interest in art. In 1995, the Sinfonietta ceased to be a salaried orchestra and it disbanded entirely in 2000 due to a restructuring enacted by the Arts Council of England.