Musica Viva, also known as Musica Viva Australia, is a national organisation in Australia dedicated to chamber music.
The first concert of Sydney Musica Viva was presented at Verbrugghen Hall, Sydney Conservatorium of Music on 8 December 1945. Let down by Sydney's unreliable post-war power supply, the concert took place in darkness save the headlights of several cars parked in the doorway of the auditorium, and lighting provided by a generator in the foyers.
Richard Goldner's Sydney Musica Viva performed 10 concerts in 1946, and 20 in 1947. In 1948, the ensemble toured Melbourne, Adelaide, and New Zealand, and eventually reduced to just five players, including Goldner as violist. They were popular with recent European refugees as well as locals. However, the schedule was exhausting, Goldner's financial resources were drying up, and he was forced to give up playing after injuring his hand in 1952. Musica Viva paused their activities, but re-formed in 1953 or 1954 as a concert agency with the help of Fred Turnovsky and Paul Morawetz, named Musica Viva Society of Australia. Goldner took the role of music director, with the group being guided by Charles Berg and Ken Tribe.
Goldner continued as honorary music director until 1969, and Musica Viva eventually became the largest not-for-profit chamber music organisation in the world.
In 2011, the Academy Award-winning film producer Suzanne Baker published a book titled Beethoven and the Zipper: The Astonishing Story of Musica Viva, which detailed how Richard Goldner had invented and patented a zip fastener for the Australian Army, and used the proceeds to establish Musica Viva Australia.
Hywel Sims was appointed Victorian general manager in June 2016.
In 2016, Musica Viva took over co-management of the Melbourne International Chamber Music Competition, together with MRC and the Australian National Academy of Music (ANAM). Wilma Smith, previously concertmaster of the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, was appointed artistic director of the competitions, and works alongside the Victorian general manager.
In 2018, the Grand Prize of the MICMC was won by the Berlin-based piano trio, Trio Marvin,
In 2009, the MICMC was complemented by the Asia-Pacific Chamber Music Competition, with each held at the newly opened Melbourne Recital Centre (MRC) alternately on a four-year cycle. Young chamber music ensembles from around the world compete in both competitions. The expansion was initiated under Chamber Music Australia's artistic director Marco van Pagee. APCMC is open to "the best young aged and from the region". Prizes are in cash as well as including concert engagements. In its inaugural year, Anna Goldworthy, Tokyo String Quartet member Koichiro Harada, and Scottish cellist Alasdair Tait were on the panel of six jurors.
In 2013, APCMC was presented by Chamber Music Australia in association with the MRC. Murdoch University, Arts Victoria, Musica Viva, and ABC Classic FM were all partners, and Dame Elisabeth Murdoch was patron.
In 2014, The Guardian named Musica Viva in Schools' Interactive Whiteboard as one of the ten global R&D projects that were changing arts and culture.
In 2016 Musica Viva announced the inaugural artistic director of education, Michael Sollis.
Governance and people
the CEO is Anne Frankenberg. She occupied the newly created role of deputy CEO in 2019.
Chamber music competitions
MICMC
and for piano trio:
APCMC
Strike A Chord
Programs and events
Past
Rising Stars (2012)
Ongoing
Musica Viva in Schools
FutureMakers
External links
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