Orchestra Victoria

Just announced! Explore Season 2026

Session 1

Meet @ the Market

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Meet @ the Market opens its 2026 season with a trip through myth, magic and the cosmos. From the rediscovered voice of Imogen Holst to the monumental sweep of her father Gustav’s The Planets, this concert invites audiences into a universe of sound that is simultaneously intimate, exhilarating and infinite.

Program

John Psathas ‘Pandora’ and ‘Labyrinth’ from Djinn: Marimba Concerto

Soloist: Mathew Levy, Section Principal Percussion

Gustav Holst 'Venus, the bringer of Peace' from The Planets (arr. George Morton)

Imogen Holst ‘Prelude’ and ‘Fugue’ from Suite for String Orchestra

Gustav Holst 'Jupiter, the Bringer of Jollity' from The Planets (arr. George Morton)


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  • Melbourne / Naarm

    Friday 10 April 2026 , 7:00pm

    Blackwood Box
    Meat Market
    Corner of Blackwood Street and Tyrone Street, North Melbourne
    Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung Country

  • Ticket Price Range

    Adult: $45
    Concession: $35
    Under 35: $35

    3-Concert Season Pass: $120

Meet @ the Market opens its 2026 season with a trip through myth, magic and the cosmos. At its heart is Gustav Holst’s The Planets, one of the most exhilarating orchestral experiences ever written. From peaceful glow of ‘Venus’, to the uplifting joy and nostalgia of ‘Jupiter’: hearing it live is a full-body experience with surround-sound intensity, colours that seem to glow, and a chorus that drifts into infinity. It’s brought to the intimate setting of the Meat Market via an arrangement for chamber orchestra by British composer and conductor George Morton, who manages to preserve the vast scope of Holst’s work in this distilled form.

Balancing this is a gem by Holst’s daughter, Imogen. Written in the middle of World War II, her Suite for Strings brims with folk-like melodies, lively rhythms and surprising tenderness. Once overshadowed by her father’s fame, her music is now finally being heard on its own terms, thanks to conductors like Alice Farnham, who is joining us from the UK to conduct this program and has been central to bringing Imogen’s voice back into vogue.

To shake things up, New Zealand’s John Psathas gives us a hit of adrenaline with Djinn, a concerto for marimba that fuses jazz-like grooves and global rhythms with his own fantasy-inspired sound world. At its centre is Orchestra Victoria’s own Section Principal percussionist Mathew Levy, making the marimba shimmer, pulse and explode with sound.

It’s a night where past and present collide: myth meets groove, father and daughter share a stage, and the orchestra opens up galaxies of sound.

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About the Works

Gustav Holst – The Planets, red. George Morton

Few works in orchestral history have captured the public imagination like Gustav Holst’s The Planets. Written during the First World War, its seven movements conjure the astrological characters of the solar system with extraordinary invention, from the relentless hammering of ‘Mars, the Bringer of War’ to the regal triumph of ‘Jupiter, the Bringer of Jollity’ and the supernatural eeriness of ‘Neptune, the Mystic’, with its distant, wordless chorus. A century on, Holst’s orchestral colours, propulsive rhythms and visionary scope remain both revolutionary and deeply beloved. His writing reshaped what an orchestra could express; by turns visceral, mystical and transcendent, its influence still radiates through concert halls and film scores.

In this performance, Orchestra Victoria presents The Planets in George Morton’s sensitively crafted chamber-orchestra arrangement. Morton preserves the work’s breadth and vivid colour while allowing its contrapuntal brilliance and harmonic daring to shine with striking intimacy. The result is an experience that feels both grand and personal: Holst’s vast celestial journey distilled into a sound world of luminous clarity, still as awe-inspiring as when it first premiered more than a century ago.

Imogen Holst – Suite for String Orchestra

This program shines a spotlight on Holst’s daughter Imogen, who was a significant figure in British music as a composer and conductor throughout the 20th century. Gustav wrote The Planets when Imogen was only 10 years old; her Suite for String Orchestra was written in 1943, more than a decade after Gustav’s death in 1935. The familial tie is not the only thread connecting these two works: both were composed in wartime London, albeit almost 30 years apart.

Suite for String Orchestra is both a tribute to tradition and a bold statement of individuality. The four-movement work blends folk-like vitality with a modern clarity of line and rhythm. Its lilting 5/8 prelude, vigorous fugue and tender intermezzo for solo violin reveal a composer of distinctive voice and keen craftsmanship.

Imogen’s work has long lain in the shadow of her father’s towering reputation, but thanks to the advocacy of conductors like Alice Farnham, her voice is being heard afresh. In 2024, Farnham directed the landmark recording Discovering Imogen with the BBC Concert Orchestra and BBC Singers, bringing a host of her forgotten works to light. The album was hailed as a revelation, presenting Imogen as a composer of imagination and poise “hiding in plain sight”. To experience her Suite in the same program as her father’s Planets, under the baton of one of her foremost modern interpreters, is to hear father and daughter in conversation, revealing not only the legacy they share but also the independence of Imogen Holst’s creative voice.

John Psathas – Djinn

Adding a thrilling contemporary energy is Djinn, a concerto for marimba and orchestra by acclaimed New Zealand composer John Psathas. Inspired by genies as mythical beings of fire and air, Djinn unfolds across three movements: ‘Pandora’, ‘Labyrinth’ and ‘Out-Dreaming the Genie’. Each movement is pulsing with driving rhythms, hypnotic grooves, and Psathas’s trademark fusion of classical form with jazz and global traditions. The marimba’s rich sonority and timbral agility make it the perfect protagonist for this modern myth, by turns virtuosic, meditative and explosive.

About the Artists

Alice Farnham, Conductor

Guiding this journey is the internationally renowned British conductor, Alice Farnham. A compelling interpreter of the great orchestral repertoire and a champion of under-represented voices, Farnham has appeared with the Royal Opera, the BBC Concert Orchestra and the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, and co-founded the Royal Philharmonic Society’s Women Conductors program. Her acclaimed book In Good Hands: The Making of a Modern Conductor reflects her dedication to craft, clarity and inspiration. As one of today’s leading advocates for Imogen Holst, Farnham brings a uniquely personal insight to a program connecting tradition and innovation.

Stéphanie Kabanyana Kanyandekwe

Stéphanie Kabanyana Kanyandekwe is a Rwandan-British composer, arts and culture strategist and broadcaster working between Narrm/Melbourne and Rwanda. Her research-based practice explores how culture is constructed and archived through experiential narratives, shaped by her tertiary training in composition and performance practice. Multiple forms of synaesthesia—sound/colour/texture, auditory-tactile, and spatial sequence—add a neurodiverse dimension to her polycultured identity. Stéphanie’s ongoing research on the global history of art music, which began in 1999, underpins her work in graphic scores, artworks, and a musical conversation series where audiences become active participants in a multisensory live space. This scholarly curiosity also drives Passenger, her weekly show on ABC Classic and the Listen app, inviting national and international listeners on an audio voyage matching storytelling with art music from around the world—particularly highlighting non-Western expressions of people and place.

Mathew Levy, Section Principal Percussion

At the centre of Djinn is Orchestra Victoria’s own Section Principal Percussion, Mathew Levy. Mat joined Orchestra Victoria in 2018, and throughout his career has also appeared with orchestras on both sides of the world, from the Melbourne, Sydney and West Australian Symphony Orchestras to the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra and the illustrious Australian World Orchestra. He brings both technical brilliance and a deep understanding of Psathas’s sound world to Djinn.

Hear the Repertoire

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Concert Partners

Supporters

Thank you to our Southbank Circle members Lady Southey AC, John & Gaye Gaylard, Peter Griffin AM & Terry Swann, and Dr Karen Wayne OAM & Dr Victor Wayne, whose generosity and leadership has enabled Southbank Series to take place.

These programs were developed in a studio managed by the City of Melbourne’s Meat Market tenancy program.

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