LMP: Beethoven’s Eroica

biographies

Stephen McNeff
composer

Stephen McNeff is originally from Ireland but brought up in Wales and educated at the Royal Academy of Music in London. After working as a musician and composerin theatre he became Composer in Residence at the Banff Centre in Canada. He is best known for his work in opera, starting with Clockwork (based on the Philip Pullman novel) which was seen at the Royal Opera House Linbury Theatre. The ROH then commissioned Gentle Giant, adapted from Michael Morpurgo’s book. He went on to be the first Royal Philharmonic Society/PRSF ‘Composer in the House’ with the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra and this led to an increasing recognition of his versatility and adaptability in a wide range of genres. Equally at home in the concert hall or theatre, works like the operas, Vivienne (2014), Banished (2016) and Beyond the Garden (2020) have enjoyed wide audiences both in the UK and abroad, while choral pieces for the BBC Singers and Chamber Choir Ireland sit alongside solo instrumental works and concertos for oboe, flute and, most recently, saxophone quartet. Hedd Wyn, his opera commissioned by Welsh National Opera for TV was released on CD in 2022, while his song cycle for tenor Gavan Ring and pianist Louise Thomas, Ballads of a Bogman, was premiered in California, brodcast on RTÉ Lyric FM and heard at the Wexford Festival. In 2023 the BBC broadcast The Horizons of Doubt (with a text by poet Aoife Mannix) performed by the BBC Singers in a concert featuring a his a capella works. Other recent commissionsinclude Dives and Lazarus for Chamber Choir Ireland premiered in Dublin and Belfast, and Spirits Unsurrendered, an opera oratorio at Kilmainham Gaol in Dublin His opera, A Star Next to the Moon, based on Juan Rulfo’s iconic novel Pedro Páramo, was premiered at Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London and his orchestral song cycle, The Celestial Stranger – a joint commission between the BBC National Orchestra of Wales and the National Symphony Orchestra in Dublin, was broadcast in the UK and Ireland. Forthcoming projects include the premiere of his Trumpet Concerto with soloist Jonathan Clarke and the Aalborg Symphony Orchestra and the UK premiere of Ballads of a Bogman next 17th March at the Wigmore Hall with tenor Gavan Ring and accompanist Fiachra Garvey.

Fenella Humphreys
violin

Fenella Humphreys, winner of the 2023 BBC Music Magazine Premiere Recording Award, is one of the UK’s most versatile violinists, with a career combining chamber music, concerto performances and solo work.

Over the past decade she has captured international attention in a wide range of repertoire, with an award-winning discography including her Bach 2 the Future series, which combines newly commissioned works with two of Bach’s Solo Sonatas and Partitas and other landmark repertoire, Caprices and, most recently, Prism, which combines her arrangement of J S Bach’s Toccata and Fugue, BWV565 with works by Caroline Shaw, Jessie Montgomery and George Walker. Other releases include Christopher Wright’s Violin Concerto, Four Seasons RecomposedSo Many Stars and a disc of Sibelius’s music for violin and piano.

She has given the first performances of music by a wide range of composers, including Peter Maxwell Davies, Sally Beamish, Gordon Crosse, Cheryl Frances-Hoad and Freya Waley-Cohen; earlier this year she premiered Adrian Sutton’s new Violin Concerto, dedicated to her, at the Queen Elizabeth Hall with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.

She is concertmaster of the Deutsche Kammerakademie, as well as guest leading and directing various ensembles in Europe.

As a chamber musician she performs with the Roscoe Piano Trio, Perpetuo and Counterpoise, as well as collaborating with artists including Nicholas Daniel, Martin Roscoe and Peter Donohoe. She is regularly invited by Steven Isserlis to the International Musicians’ Seminar, Prussia Cove.

A new collaboration with the writer and broadcaster Leah Broad and pianist Nicola Eimer has seen the creation of the Lost Voices project, which explores unknown and under-performed repertoire by female composers.

Fenella Humphreys plays a G B Guadagnini violin, kindly on loan from Jonathan Sparey.

Jonathan Bloxham
principal conductor and artistic advisor

This season will be Bloxham’s second year as Chief Conductor of the Nordwestdeutsche Philharmonie following in the footsteps of Andris Nelsons and Jonothan Heyward. Last season he led them on two national tours and in their subscription series in Herford, with two further tours planned for this season. In 2021 he recorded a CD of Strauss and Franck with the orchestra, described as “irresistible” by Musicweb International.

The 2025/26 season will also mark Bloxham’s first as Principal Conductor of the London Mozart Players, building on his long-standing relationship with the ensemble, which he has served as Resident Conductor and Artistic Advisor since 2022. Season highlights include Mozart, Master of Drama, the opening concert at St Martin-in-the-Fields with Danielle De Niese, and Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, a celebratory performance at Fairfield Halls marking the 150th anniversary of the Croydon-born composer. Bloxham also leads the orchestra in the world premieres of works by Anna Clyne, Stephen McNeff, Tunde Jegede and Ryan Morgan.

Guest highlights of the past couple of seasons have included London Philharmonic, NDR Elbphilharmonie, Tokyo Symphony, Salzburg Mozarteumorchester, Halle Orchestra, BBC Symphony, BBC Philharmonic, Belgian National, Residentie Orkest, Tonkuenstlerorchester Wien at the Grafenegg Festival, Bonn Beethovenorchester, Trondheim Symphony and Philharmonic Brass (musicians from Berlin and Vienna Philharmonic orchestras) – many of these on multiple occasions. This season he conducts the Antwerp Symphony Orchestra, Ulster Orchestra, Bremer Philharmoniker, and the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic with two programmes.

In 2024 Bloxham released a recording of Bach’s Keyboard Concertos with the Academy of St Martin in the Fields and Tianqi Du, which reached number one on the Apple Classical Top 100 global chart. He has also recorded works by Bruce Broughton with the London Symphony Orchestra (2024), as well as discs for future release with the BBC Scottish Symphony (2022) and London Mozart Players (2023).

Bloxham’s conducting career began in 2016 when he became Assistant Conductor of the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra under Mirga Gražinytė-Tyla. Prior to conducting, he enjoyed a successful career as a cellist, performing across Europe and making his concerto debut at the Berlin Philharmonie in 2012. He studied at the Yehudi Menuhin School, the Royal College of Music, and the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, and later trained in conducting with Sian Edwards, Michael Seal, Nicolas Pasquet, and Paavo Järvi. For the past 16 years Bloxham has been Artistic Director of the annual Northern Chords Festival in Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

Ruth Rogers
leader

Ruth Rogers
Ruth Rogers studied with Itzhak Rashkovsky and Herman Krebbers. Described as “the finest of the younger generation of violinists” (Musical Opinion) and hailed by the Guardian as “superb”, Ruth is in demand as soloist, leader, and chamber musician. She was awarded the Tagore Gold Medal – the Royal College of Music’s highest accolade. She appears regularly at such prestigious venues as The Wigmore Hall with Aquinas Piano Trio and has made many recordings as part of that ensemble, including recent releases by Naxos which have been very well received by the critics. Ruth was appointed as Leader of the London Mozart Players in 2015 and Leader of the Brighton Philharmonic Orchestra in 2022. She worked as Co-Leader of the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra from 2008 until 2012 and appears as a guest leader of many other major orchestras including the Hallé, BBC Philharmonic, the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra and the Scottish Chamber Orchestra. Ruth has played to orphans, landmine victims and malaria patients in refugee camps on the Thailand-Burma border.