Programme
Harold Arlen / Gordon Duncan Sleeping Rainbows (mash-up, arr. Doug Bott & Charlie Groves)
Liam Taylor-West Day One (arr. Doug Bott)
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor Variations on an African Air (new arrangement by Charlie Groves)
Oliver Cross Barriers (world premiere)
Alexander Campkin What Fear We Then? (NOYO & Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra co-commission, world premiere, arr. Doug Bott)
Antonio Vivaldi Spring (decomposed) (new arrangement by Charlie Groves)
Hans Zimmer Time (new arrangement by Charlie Groves)
NOYO Musicians
David Mac accordion
Jamie Moody alto saxophone
Luke Christian alto saxophone
Connor Bates cello
Alessandro Vazzana clarion
Leo Manh-Carstensen clarion
Elle Nanagara electric guitar
Jake Carswell electric guitar
Rhian Davies flute
Ellen O’Brien french horn
Georgina Spray french horn
Oliver Cross harmonica & bass synthesizer
Holli Pandit harp & percussion
Sally Kidson LinnStrument
Leo Long percussion
Miruna Spiridon piano
Ben Evans Seaboard RISE
Torin Van Breda tenor horn
Ben Bryan trombone
Rhys Stokes trumpet
Sam Carter trumpet
Francesca Shannon violin
Lizzie O’Brien violin
Sophia Breeze violin
Oscar Abbott xylophone & vibraphone
National Open Youth Orchestra
The National Open Youth Orchestra (NOYO) is the world’s first disabled-led national youth ensemble. It was launched in September 2018 to give some of the UK’s most talented young disabled musicians a progression route. It promotes musical excellence, supporting 11-25 year-old disabled and non-disabled musicians to rehearse and perform together as members of a pioneering inclusive ensemble.
NOYO collaborates with cutting-edge composers to create exciting new music for a diverse range of musicians and instruments. When in 2018 Liam Taylor-West won a British Composer Award for “The Umbrella”, our first commission, he talked of a creative process involving the young musicians. This is still central to NOYO’s approach to music-making.
NOYO is a collaborative partnership, a programme of charity Open Up Music delivered in partnership with some of the UK’s leading arts and cultural organisations, who together act as regional NOYO Centres: Barbican and Guildhall School of Music & Drama in London, Bristol Beacon in Bristol, Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra in Bournemouth, Midlands Arts Centre, B:Music and Services For Education in Birmingham.
It is generously supported by founding sponsor ABRSM, Arts Council England, Paul Hamlyn Foundation, Esmée Fairbairn Foundation, Boshier-Hinton Foundation, Steel Charitable Trust, The Radcliffe Trust, Borrows Charitable Trust and The D’Oyly Carte Charitable Trust.
We would like to thank every single person and organisation that has helped to make the National Open Youth Orchestra (NOYO) a reality.