Coming Up

Sat 28 Nov 2009 11am - 12pm

Old Museum Concert Hall

Early History of Music in Brisbane - Dr Martin Buzacott with QYO String Quartet & organist Christopher Wrench

Calendar

Important Dates

 

Mon 16 Nov 09

Mailout of audition results for 2010 orchestras

 

Fri 27 Nov 09

Final date for accepting offers

 

Tue 19 Jan 10

Final date for payment of membership fees

 

Sat 30 Jan 10

QYS & QYO2 rehearsals commence

 

Fri 5 Feb 10

WS & WE rehearsals commence

 

Sat 6 Feb 10

QYO3 & JSE rehearsals commence

 

Sun 7 Feb 10

BB rehearsals commence

Queensland Youth Symphony Concert Reviews

…A youth orchestra which plays Mahler 1 is nothing new. But a youth orchestra which totally astonishes the audience with their elan and compelling and richly contrasted performance in a work such as this, is literally unheard of. There were long stretches of time during which one completely forgot that this was a youth orchestra and not one of the French or German professional orchestras performing.

Music Critic, Composer & Pianist Peter Visser on 2008 QYS international tour concert in Strasbourg, 6 July 2008.

[QYS] impressed with great precision… The major work on the program was Dmitri Shostakovich’s Fifth Symphony. The work is difficult to play and its fame encourages comparison with other interpretations. The young Australians, however, had nothing to fear from comparisons. Their rendition was on a professional level. From the first to the last bar, the orchestra delivered a convincing, high voltage performance with beautiful solo contributions…

Music Critic Uwe Engel on 2008 QYS international tour concert in Speyer, 4 July 2008.

Conductor, John Curro, shaped an opening movement of turmoil and drama, with all sections of the QYS responding brilliantly to demands made of them … This demanding program concluded in a blaze of glory with the QYS giving its all in Respighi’s tone poem Pines of Rome, a work it loves to play and plays brilliantly… The Pines of Rome became very real and alive in Curro’s musical creation of such great spectacle. The QYS gets better and better…

Music Critic Barbara Hebden on Pines & Prokofiev, 2 June 2007.

They may be young in years but the musical maturing of the members of the Queensland Youth Symphony Orchestra is quite amazing.

Music Critic Barbara Hebden after Mozart & Mahler, 31 March 2007.

The expressive magnitude of the Holst collection gave opportunity to display the blazing musical colours for which the QYS is renowned.

Music Critic Patricia Kelly on the 40th Anniversary Spectacular Concert, 23 December 2006.

Collectively, they created the largest orchestral ensemble experienced in Brisbane in recent memory and the most memorable music-making since QYO mustered a similar orchestra to celebrate John Curro’s 70th birthday in December 2002 … In more ways than one, the Queensland Youth Orchestra movement has set the bar for orchestral playing in this state.

Music Critic Vincent Plush on the 40th Anniversary Spectacular Concert, 23 December 2006.

What moves me most of all … is the incredible care that you and all of the players have taken with the music. The accuracy that you have brought to every tempo, every ensemble balance, every melodic gesture and every tone colour is uniformly excellent.

Carl Vine on the September 9 QYS performance of his Symphony No.2, 7 November 2006.

Youthful triumph - The two major Russian works performed at the Queensland Youth Symphony concert were apt choices to mark the opening of the 2005 Lev Vlassenko Piano Competition honouring this Russian Piano virtuoso. QYS finished in triumph at the Great Gate of Kiev, Professor Vlassenko would have been thrilled.

The Courier Mail, 8 August 2005.

Tim Freedman of rock band The Whitlams says the Queensland Youth Orchestra is ‘the best youth orchestra in Australia’. ‘They’re brilliant and handle anything that the symphony orchestras can’ he said.

The Courier Mail, 5 September 2004.

QYS is in the top handful of youth orchestras in the world….they are world class.

Conductor Sean O’Boyle, The Courier Mail, 5 September 2004.

From the moment the Queensland Youth Symphony entered the Keilberth Hall, the public was sure to remember the event with pleasure. It was due to the impressive performance that would not easily be forgotten, both because of the beautiful repertoire and the arresting interpretation.

Under the experienced leadership of John Curro, who has directed the orchestra for the last 37 years, the talented young players inspired the audience members. The youth orchestra played these [works] professionally in so many respects: dynamic and precise, homogeneous and colourful.

For the musical performance, which could be described with complete justification as “first class”, there was even a standing ovation at the end.

Frankischer Tag, Forcheim, Germany, 8 July 2004.

Conductor John Curro set an ambitious program to open Queensland Youth Symphony’s 2004 season… Respighi has always been a strong suit for QYS and this performance of his Fountains of Rome was no exception. Powerful images drew an exciting response before the music ebbed to its pensive close.

The Courier Mail, 22 March 2004.

For the best orchestral playing in town, go hear your local youth orchestra. For consistently good playing, enthusiasm and exhilarating edge-of-the-seat music-making, these youngsters often outclass their jaded professional colleagues. This is certainly the case in Brisbane…

The Australian, 22 March 2004.

Radiating superb tonal quality, all players accentuated the jagged rhythms and the reiteration of the opening material. An electrifying performance.

The Courier Mail, 12 August 2003.

The QYO’s performance of The Firebird was dazzling. The interpretation scaled a diverse emotional range but the intensity and the momentum never wavered. Brimming with character and vitality the instrumental solos throughout the orchestra were impressive.

The Courier Mail, 9 June 2003.

John Curro’s Queensland Youth Symphony never ceases to amaze with its mature, polished playing of the big symphonic repertoire.

The Sunday Mail, 29 Dec 2002.

Close your eyes and you could be hearing some of the great orchestras of our time.

The Courier-Mail, review of QYS concert on, 24 Mar 2002.

The crowning glory of the afternoon was a performance of Ralph Vaughan Williams “Job, a Masque for Dancing” by the Queensland Youth Symphony conducted by John Curro.

Hobart Mercury, 15 Dec 2001, New World Festival of Australian State Youth Orchestras.

If there is a better youth orchestra in Australia than the Queensland Youth Symphony, I would like to hear it playing Carl Vine’s Celebrare Celeberrime, Symphony No. 6 by Prokofiev, Bassoon Concerto in F major (Weber) and Respighi’s Pines of Rome. In this program for its first subscription concert for 2001, the QYS was in vigorous form under conductor John Curro’s strong exacting direction.

The Courier-Mail, review of concert on, 9 April 2001.

It is as good a youth orchestra, if not better, than I have ever played with.

Lord Yehudi Menuhin, World Expo 1988, after a performance of the Beethoven Violin Concerto with QYS.

If the first concert in the Masterpiece Series for 2000 was any indication, this year is shaping up to be one of the best, if not the best, for QYS.

The Courier-Mail, review of concert on 25 March 2000.

An electric performance of Prokofiev’s delightful and graphic Romeo & Juliet Suite completed an exhilarating programme.

The Courier-Mail, review of concert on 20 March 1999.

…Queensland’s musical youth did a magnificent job.

The Australian, review of concert on 28 March 1998.

QYS’ playing of Symphony No. 11 by Shostakovich was one of the best if not THE best symphonic performance in Brisbane so far this year - and it is unlikely to be topped.

The Courier-Mail, review of concert on 16 August 1997.

The decision to hold back the Queensland Youth Orchestra until all the orchestras had been heard is likely to have been taken in the expectation or knowledge that this Australian orchestra would prove to be the best of those participating in Aberdeen’s Festival. The best it most certainly is.

International Festival of Youth Orchestras, Aberdeen, Friday August 15 1980.

…the best youth orchestra in Australia and one of the leading youth orchestras in the world. This is surely the reward of the permanent conductor, John Curro, who has taken charge of the orchestra since its foundation. His achievement cannot be valued highly enough.

Hamelin, Germany, August 26 1980.