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Northern Sinfonia of England

The Northern Sinfonia is a British chamber orchestra, based initially in Newcastle upon Tyne, and currently in Gateshead. For the first 46 years of its history, the orchestra gave the bulk of its concerts at the City Hall, Newcastle upon Tyne. Since 2004, the orchestra has been resident at The Sage Gateshead. The Northern Sinfonia Chorus is affiliated with the orchestra. Michael Hall (born Whitley Bay, 1932, died Exeter, 2012) founded the ensemble in 1958 as the first permanent chamber orchestra in Britain. The ensemble gave its first concert on 24 September 1958 as the 'Sinfonia Orchestra', at the City Hall, Newcastle upon Tyne, and gave 6 concerts in its first season, 1958-1959. Hall acted as the organisation's single leader, in effect as "general manager, secretary, artistic director, conductor, and fund-raiser", though without a formal title. The word "Northern" was added to the orchestra's name in 1959. The orchestra became an established institution in 1959, with Humphrey Noble chosen as the first chairman of the ensemble's management committee. Hall resigned from the orchestra in 1964, but returned as a guest conductor in subsequent years. After Hall's departure, Rudolf Schwarz and Boris Brott took over musical leadership of the ensemble in parallel, with Schwarz being the first titled artistic director of the ensemble. Keith Statham served as the orchestra's general manager from 1966 to 1974.

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Associated labels:

EMI ClassicsVirgin ClassicsAngel Records

Genres

Classical

Tracks

 

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