Otago Daily Times

‘Gallipoli to Somme’ voted most popular

- HAMISH MACLEAN hamish.maclean@odt.co.nz

A QUIETLY antiwar compositio­n by the University of Otago’s head of performing arts, Anthony Ritchie, has been voted by New Zealand classical music listeners as their favourite this year.

Prof Ritchie’s Gallipoli to the Somme was voted New Zealand’s most popular piece in RNZ Concert’s Settling the Score 2020 contest at the end of last month, marking the first time a New Zealand composer has won the competitio­n.

Prof Ritchie said he was hopeful at the time he composed the piece it would strike a chord with audiences, but he was careful too in covering the subject of war.

‘‘I think the First World War more than any seemed like a futile war. It was hard to say who was right and who was wrong, if you like, and there was a lot of despair about the waste of life and the waste of fine young people, and all that carnage,’’ he said.

‘‘The main message I had was that these were ordinary people going out and being faced with a nightmare of a situation with all the machinery and the technology that killed people in the millions.’’

Commission­ed by the Dunedin Symphony Orchestra, the work premiered in 2016 as part of the Dunedin Arts Festival.

The winning performanc­e featured Anna Leese (soprano), Martin Snell (bass), City Choir Dunedin and the Southern Youth Choir, along with the Dunedin Symphony Orchestra conducted by Simon Over.

Prof Ritchie said the quality of the performanc­e was ‘‘outstandin­g’’.

‘‘That made it — not just me.’’

 ??  ?? Anthony Ritchie
Anthony Ritchie

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