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SA soprano Pumeza Matshikiza shines on global stage with show-stopping ‘Aida' in Italy
SA soprano Pumeza Matshikiza shines on global stage with show-stopping ‘Aida' in Italy

The Herald

time05-08-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Herald

SA soprano Pumeza Matshikiza shines on global stage with show-stopping ‘Aida' in Italy

South African soprano Pumeza Matshikiza continues to soar internationally after powerhouse performances that have further cemented her place as one of opera's most captivating voices. Pumeza recently took on the iconic title role in Verdi's Aida at the legendary Teatro Greco in Siracusa, Italy, as part of the Festival Lirico dei Teatri di Pietra. The open-air production, staged before more than 7,000 audience members in the ancient amphitheatre, marked the soprano's biggest Italian operatic appearance. 'To bring a powerful role to life in such a historic and resonant space was a true privilege,' Pumeza said. 'Aida's strength, her quiet dignity and inner conflict, they kept me going on stage. This was a dream come true. I come from a township and I stand on the world's greatest stages.' Days before her Aida triumph, Pumeza wowed crowds at the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles during the Classical Pride celebration with the LA Philharmonic, delivering an emotional programme that left audiences stunned. A graduate of the University of Cape Town and the Royal College of Music in London, Pumeza is known for her rich, magnetic voice and emotional depth. Her Italian debut in Aida earned glowing international reviews, with media hailing her as 'one of the most authoritative figures on the opera scene'. ' Aida is a story that strips you bare,' she said. 'It's about love that can't survive in the world as it is. It's about exile, identity and invisible borders. In times like these, it hits differently.' Her recent engagements have included a performance at Paris' Olympia Hall and the world premiere of Jake Heggie's Good Morning, Beauty at the Barbican in London. Looking ahead to her 2025/26 season, Pumeza will continue her European tour with Anna Netrebko and Yusif Eyvazov, perform Porgy and Bess at Paris' Théâtre des Champs-Élysées, and appear in Tippett's A Child of Our Time with the BBC Symphony Orchestra. She'll also headline a celebration of South African composers in Essen, Germany, alongside a reading of her own poetry for artist William Kentridge's exhibition.

Cherry Vann becomes first Church in Wales archbishop
Cherry Vann becomes first Church in Wales archbishop

BBC News

time30-07-2025

  • Politics
  • BBC News

Cherry Vann becomes first Church in Wales archbishop

Cherry Vann has been announced as the new Archbishop of becomes the first female leader of the church in Wales, replacing Andrew John who retired following a turbulent from Leicestershire, she has been Bishop of Monmouth since January 2020, and was the first woman ordained as a priest in the Church of England in John announced his decision to retire with immediate effect in June following the publication of two summaries highlighting safeguarding concerns and misbehaviour at Bangor Cathedral. Before serving in Monmouth, Ms Vann spent 11 years as Archdeacon or Rochdale, in the Diocese of has also held senior positions in the governance of the Church of England, including as a member of the Archbishops' Pastoral Advisory Group, which has provided resources for churches to help them offer a genuine welcome to LGBTQ+ her biography, she was described as having "a passion for justice and reconciliation".She is also a "talented pianist", and an associate of the Royal College of Music and a graduate of the Royal Schools of is described as living with her civil partner Wendy and their two was chosen after the Electoral College met at St Pierre Church and Hotel in Chepstow.

Trombone player on one of the most famous pop songs of all time leaves behind just £1,000 in his will after his death aged 79
Trombone player on one of the most famous pop songs of all time leaves behind just £1,000 in his will after his death aged 79

Daily Mail​

time09-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

Trombone player on one of the most famous pop songs of all time leaves behind just £1,000 in his will after his death aged 79

A respected orchestra musician who played trombone on one of the most famous songs in pop music history left £1,000 in his will after dying aged 79, it has emerged. Peter Bassano was among the performers on The Beatles ' 1968 hit single Hey Jude that topped the charts worldwide and sold an estimated 8million copies. Mr Bassano, who also worked as a conductor, lecturer and author, spoke in the past about how his involvement in the Fab Four track earned him more than anything else. Tributes were paid after his death on February 1 this year, and now details of the legacy he left have been revealed. Documents show the estate he bequeathed was worth £1,000, to be shared equally between his children, the Sun reported. Mr Bassano, who was a member and fellow of the Royal College of Music, previously wrote of being inspired to pursue music after watching the late Queen Elizabeth II 's coronation in 1953. And he was intrigued by the trombone when seeing Salvation Army bands marching by during his childhood in Southend, Essex. His posts during his career included being music director of the Oxford University Sinfonietta, performing in the London Symphony Orchestra for 27 years and serving as head of brass at the Royal College of Music between 1993 and 2004. He was married to renowned viola player Kathryn Bassano, a former member of the Academy of St Martins in the Fields and who played on soundtracks for Harry Potter and Lord Of The Rings films. The couple told in 2014 of being declared bankrupt and forced to leave their six-bedroom house in the Chilterns where they had lived for 16 years. Mr Bassano said his troubles began when he had to borrow heavily after becoming embroiled in a legal battle over the cost of an extension to the house in Great Missenden, Buckinghamshire. He told the Mail on Sunday at the time: 'The extension was intended to increase the value of the house but once we got involved in litigation, it was difficult to withdraw without incurring further costs. 'I don't blame anyone else for our financial predicament. But we were hit by a perfect storm of the banking crisis, my earnings dropping and a huge fall in the value of the house.' As well as his performing and conducting activities, Mr Bassano also published several books - including a memoir called Before The Music Stopped that covered his work with rock bands including The Beatles and the Bee Gees. Recording sessions for Hey Jude - which would be The Beatles' first release on their newly founded record label Apple - took place in London in July 1968. While the band initially rehearsed the song and taped demo tracks at their usual base of EMI Studios at Abbey Road in St John's Wood, north-west London, the main recordings including a orchestra were carried out at Trident Studios in Soho. Mr Bassano not only played trombone as part of the orchestral backing, he was also among those singing along to its 'Na, na, na, na-na-na-na' chorus outro. He spoke about the experience in a podcast interview in 2022, recalling: 'I turned up with my trombone and producer George Martin said, "All I want you to do is play four notes consecutively". 'We did that - that was straightforward. Then he said he wanted us to sing. 'We learnt it all and sang away. I thought, this sounds awful, it won't get anywhere. 'John Lennon brought out a crate of beer with him and it became a party. My critical appraisal was proven to be totally incorrect.' Hey Jude, with B-side Revolution, was released on August 30 1968 in Britain, along with three other launch releases by Apple Records - Mary Hopkin's Those Were The Days, Sour Milk Sea by Jackie Lomax and the Black Dyke Mills Band's Thingumybob. Copies of each were sent in gift-wrapped boxes to the Queen and other members of the royal family, as well as then-Prime Minister Harold Wilson. The Beatles also publicised the release of Hey Jude by performing it on ITV show Frost On Sunday in September that year - with the programme's presenter David Frost introduced them as 'the greatest tearoom orchestra in the world'. In his reminiscences about being involved in the song's recording, and its royalties, Mr Bassano said: 'Over the years, that single easy and enjoyable session has earned me more money than anything else I have ever done.' Hey Jude remains a staple of the live sets performed by Sir Paul McCartney, now 83, including at the Live 8 concert in Hyde Park in July 2005 and the London 2012 OIympics opening ceremony seven years later. Tributes shared following Mr Bassano's death in February this year included a quote from Finnish composer and conductor Esa-Pekka Salonen, who said: 'Few musicians possess this type of intellectual curiosity and knowledge.' Mr Bassano's career involved performing in the orchestras for West End musicals while he also founded a brass quintet called Equale Brass, conducted at the Royal Albert Hall during the Proms and adjudicated for the BBC Young Musician of the Year.

Musician who played on one of most famous songs of all time leaves just £1k in his will
Musician who played on one of most famous songs of all time leaves just £1k in his will

The Sun

time08-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Sun

Musician who played on one of most famous songs of all time leaves just £1k in his will

THE trombone player on Beatles track Hey Jude left just £1,000 in his will — despite admitting it made him more money than anything else. Peter Bassano, who was also part of the chorus that sang the 'Na, na, na, na, na, na, na' refrain at the end of the 1968 song, died aged 79 in February. 2 He also worked with the Bee Gees and later became a lecturer at the Royal College of Music. Documents show Mr Bassano left £1,000 in his estate, sharing it equally among his four children. He told a podcast in 2022: 'I turned up with my trombone and producer George Martin said, 'All I want you to do is play four notes consecutively'. 'We did that, that was straightforward. 'Then he said he wanted us to sing. "We learnt it all and sang away. "I thought, this sounds awful, it won't get anywhere. ' John Lennon brought out a crate of beer with him, and it became a party. 'My critical appraisal was proven to be totally incorrect.' He added: 'Over the years, that single, easy and enjoyable session has earned me more money than anything else I have ever done.' Chesney Hawkes starts a rendition of Hey Jude at Box Park 2

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