After the First 30 Years

 

 

The Hong Kong Chamber Orchestra was founded in 1976 by a small group of musicians who felt that there was a need in Hong Kong for a chamber-sized orchestra aiming at a high standard of music making. The Orchestra consists of around 30 professional and non-professional musicians and gives around ten concerts in Hong Kong each year.  Prof. Robert Lord, a professor of Linguistics at HKU, was the first music director and official founder of the orchestra.  The orchestra has been closely associated with HKU right from the start.

 

In the early years the HKCO did more work with choirs, particularly the Bach Choir.  HKCO conductors over the years have included Robert Lord, Peter Stephenson. Nicholas Routley, Malcolm Butler, KK Chiu and Ken Lam.

 

Hong Kong Chamber Orchestra has a wide coverage of repertoire from Bach Cantatas, to Mozart overtures and Beethoven symphonies, to Elgar, Brahms, Dvorak, Johann Strauss, to Tchaikovsky and Stravinsky.  It also gave the Hong Kong premiere of Richard Strauss' Metamorphosen in June 2005.

 

The 2006 Season marks the beginning of our 30th year of playing as well as performing as a chamber ensemble without a conductor - a move that will focus itself on better ensembleship among players.

 

A couple of highlights of HKCO throughout these 30 years include:

 

-          playing the farewell concert in the hall of the old HKSB building before it was demolished.  The program included the Wagner Siegfried Idyll.

-          doing the farewell concert for the VC Rayson Huang in the Loke Yew Hall, HKU. Program included the Farewell Symphony of Haydn and a piece composed by Dr Ann Boyd.

-          doing a City Hall concert with Richard Harvey conducting and HKCO played a new composition of his.

-          performing the HK premiere of Strauss' Metamorphosen.

 

 

 

 

Enquiries: info@hkchamber.org