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43-530: (Redirected from Hazlewood ) Hazelwood or Hazlewood may refer to: Places [ edit ] Australia [ edit ] Hazelwood, Victoria , an area in the Latrobe Valley, Victoria; now known as Churchill Hazelwood Power Station , in the Latrobe Valley, Victoria Hazelwood North , a town in the Latrobe Valley, Victoria Hazelwood, Victoria , also known as Hazelwood Pondage, an artificial lake in

86-408: A collaboration with Professor Green and Labrinth . Their “Thunderbirds are Go!” project was launched in 2014 at Glastonbury Festival, a celebration of work by composer Barry Gray . The show also featured at the 6 Music Festival in 2016 with guest vocalist Jarvis Cocker and members of Paraorchestra. Charles Hazlewood’s All Star Collective was integrated into Paraorchestra in 2019. Hazlewood

129-539: A dictator’ Independent in August 2018, and toured nationally in 2019. Charles Hazlewood's first TV appearance was as music director on Jonathan Miller 's Opera Works in 1996. Hazlewood created the 2009 BBC Two documentary series The Birth of British Music . He has authored and conducted the music in BBC films on Mozart , Beethoven and Tchaikovsky as well as a series exploring the birth of British music. He also appeared on

172-533: A film with Damon Gough (aka Badly Drawn Boy ) entitled Stripping Pop ( BBC Three , 2003); and a two part documentary Tones, Drones and Arpeggios: The Magic of Minimalism (BBC Four, 2018), on the history of minimalist music , in which he interviews the 'greats' of the genre: Terry Riley , Le Monte Young , Philip Glass and Steve Reich . Hazlewood’s documentary for Sky Arts , Beethoven and Me aired in January 2021. It featured members of Paraorchestra  and

215-657: A new opera company in Cape Town from the townships and villages of South Africa; the mostly black lyric-theatre company DDK ( Dimpho di Kopane , Sotho for "combined talents") was formed. Of the 40 members, only three had professional training. In January 2001, the company's debut of Bizet's Carmen opened to damning South African reviews, with one newspaper saying it was preposterous for black South Africans to perform Western opera. Their South African Carmen went on to tour internationally. Fiona Maddocks wrote in The Observer ‘this

258-602: A score for The Nature of Why, an immersive music experience which fused live music by an ensemble of Paraorchestra musicians with contemporary dance. The Nature of Why was inspired by a spontaneous lecture from the Nobel-prize winning theoretical physicist Richard Feynman on why magnets repel each other and was directed by Hazlewood and Caroline Bowditch, choreographed by Bowditch, and conducted by Hazlewood, and opened Bristol’s Mayfest in 2018. The Nature of Why opened Southbank Centre ’s Unlimited Festival in 2018 then toured to

301-644: A separate stage across the site. It was broadcast on BBC Radio 2 in September 2009. In 2010 Hazlewood conducted a live score for the 1926 silent film The Passion of Joan Arc , composed by Adrian Utley and Will Gregory , commissioned by Bristol Beacon and Watershed Media centre. It opened at Bristol Beacon in May 2010. His "Orchestra in a Field" festival took place at Glastonbury Abbey in 2012 with performances of Mussorgsky ’s Pictures at an Exhibition , Bizet ’s Carmen , Mike Oldfield ’s Tubular Bells and

344-624: A sports venue in Sunbury-on-Thames, England Hazelwood School , Limpsfield, Surrey, England Hazelwood School, Birmingham , England USS Hazelwood (DD-531) USS Hazelwood (DD-107) Hazel wood, from the hazel tree "The Hazelwood", a song by Patrick Wolf; see Tristan (song) Hazlewoods Limited , British bicycle manufacturer Hazelwood massacre , 1971 Detroit mass murder See also [ edit ] All pages with titles containing Hazelwood All pages with titles containing Hazlewood Topics referred to by

387-460: A stage version of Minimalism Changed My Life in 2019. A personal journey through ‘the last big idea in classical music’ was conducted and presented by Hazlewood, written by Jason Hazeley and performed by Paraorchestra at Queen Elizabeth Hall , Southbank Centre (September 2019) and Bridgewater Hall , (October 2019). The piece included performances of work by Terry Riley , Mike Oldfield , Philip Glass , Pauline Oliveros and Steve Reich and featured

430-513: A visual narrative by video artist John Minton. In 2021 Hazlewood and Paraorchestra created Death Songbook with Suede ’s Brett Anderson . The concert included an ensemble of musicians from Paraorchestra along with guest artists Nadine Shah , Adrian Utley and Seb Rochford and featured a collection of songs about loss and transcendence by artists such as Echo and the Bunnymen , Skeeter Davis , Japan , David Bowie / Jacques Brel , and Suede . It

473-545: Is Will Hazlewood , an Anglo-Catholic bishop. Hazlewood attended Christ's Hospital school in West Sussex where he was a chorister and organist. He later gained an organ scholarship to Keble College, Oxford in 1986, graduating in 1989. He made his London debut with his own chamber orchestra, Eos, in January 1991. Hazlewood has conducted many orchestras, including the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra ,

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516-749: Is Artistic Director of Paraorchestra , the world's first fully integrated ensemble of professional musicians with and without disabilities, which he founded together with television director Claire Whalley in November 2011. The orchestra was the subject of a documentary by Channel Four , screened in the hours between the end of the final sporting event at London 2012 Paralympics and the Closing Ceremony where they made their world debut alongside Coldplay . Paraorchestra exists to recognise and showcase disabled musicians with extraordinary abilities, and to demonstrate their full integration into orchestral music. Just as

559-498: Is a British conductor . After winning the European Broadcasting Union conducting competition in 1995 whilst still in his twenties, Hazlewood has had a career as an international conductor, music director of film and theatre, composer and a curator of music on British radio and television, Motivational Speaker and founder of Paraorchestra – the world's first integrated ensemble of disabled and non-disabled musicians. He

602-663: Is the Carmen by which all others should be measured’. Hazlewood was music director and conductor for the company's film version of Carmen , set in a township in South Africa, which won the Golden Bear award for Best Film at the 2005 Berlin International Film Festival . Their subsequent film, Son of Man , featured a score created by Hazlewood in collaboration with the company. The Mysteries , for which Hazlewood devised

645-545: The BBC Concert Orchestra . In 2003 Hazlewood formed Army of Generals, a period instrument orchestra, to record with him all the music for his BBC films on Mozart, Beethoven and the Birth of British Music. Army of Generals would regularly collaborate with Paraorchestra until the ensemble was fully integrated into Paraorchestra in 2019. In 2008 Hazlewood formed his All Star Collective ensemble to play Tubular Bells at

688-871: The Copenhagen Philharmonic , and the Philharmonia Orchestra , as well as the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra , Malmö Symphony Orchestra , Danish Radio Symphony Orchestra , Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra and Orchestra of St Luke’s, New York. He has conducted over 100 world premieres and is a founder of the British Paraorchestra , which performed together with the band Coldplay at the 2012 Summer Paralympics . He has also initiated several projects that explore common ground between different musical disciplines, such as "Urban Classic" (2006), which drew together five grime emcees and

731-645: The Paralympics have achieved in sport, Paraorchestra aims to shift perceptions of disability in creating a visible platform for gifted disabled musicians to perform and excel at the highest level, integrating talented players with disabilities into mainstream performances. The ensemble play an unconventional mix of acoustic, analogue, digital, and assistive technology instruments, drawing on the unique talents of their musicians and collaborating with high profile artists from across genres to create new and accessible orchestral music experiences. In 2016, Paraorchestra performed

774-607: The 2022 Broadcast Awards. Hazlewood became Sky Arts ’ Ambassador for Music in 2021 in a move from the channel to invest further in UK arts mentoring diverse and emerging talent across literature, music, dance, theatre and visual arts. Hazlewood's radio show, The Charles Hazlewood Show on BBC Radio 2 , won three Sony Radio Academy Awards in 2006. The musical selections are "linked together in surprising and productive new ways, with Mozart , for example, followed by Ivor Cutler , then The Streets , then Handel ". On 24 May 2020 Hazlewood

817-921: The All-Stars in a performance of Terry Riley 's A Rainbow in Curved Air at the Bristol Old Vic . In 2009 he staged his first festival “Play the Field” with Dragons' Den 's Deborah Meadon with the mutual goal of bringing music to a wider audience in the West Country. The festival included a complete performance of Holst 's The Planets which saw artists from his All-Star collective including Goldfrapp 's Will Gregory and Adrian Utley of Portishead , saxophonists Andy Sheppard and Jason Yarde, drummer Tony Orrell, keyboardist Graham Fitkin and harpist Ruth Wall improvise electronic responses to each orchestral planet from

860-600: The Glastonbury Festival, featuring artists from across genres including Adrian Utley of Portishead , Will Gregory of Goldfrapp and jazz saxophonist Andy Sheppard . It went on to play the Queen Elizabeth Hall in London, Sage Gateshead and St George’s Bristol in 2011,  a re-enactment of Mike Oldfield 's own group performance 38 years previously. In 2012, Jason Yarde and composer Graham Fitkin joined

903-667: The Heath Ledger Theatre, WA as part of Perth Festival 2019 where The Western Australian dubbed it ‘A modern ode to joy’. The Nature of Why toured the UK in 2019 playing Brighton Festival , Wales Millennium Centre in Cardiff, The Empress Ballroom at Winter Gardens, Blackpool, Kneehigh’s Asylum in St Austell, and The Lowry in Salford. Based on his 2018 BBC Programme, Tones, Drones, and Arpeggios: The Magic of Minimalism, Hazlewood created

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946-469: The Latrobe Valley, Victoria Hazelwood Park, South Australia , a suburb of Adelaide Hazelwood Park, Adelaide Canada [ edit ] Rural Municipality of Hazelwood No. 94 , Saskatchewan, a rural municipality England [ edit ] Hazelwood, Derbyshire (also spelt Hazlewood) Hazelwood, Devon , the location of the Blackdown Rings earthworks Hazelwood, London , in

989-599: The London Borough of Bromley Hazlewood, North Yorkshire Hazlewood Castle , North Yorkshire Hazlewood with Storiths , North Yorkshire Hazlewood, Suffolk Ireland [ edit ] Hazelwood, County Sligo Hazelwood House, Sligo , an 18th century mansion South Africa [ edit ] Hazelwood, Pretoria , a suburb of Pretoria, Gauteng Province United States [ edit ] Hazelwood, Indiana Hazelwood, Louisville , Kentucky Hazelwood Plantation , Laurel Hill, listed on

1032-629: The NRHP in Louisiana Hazelwood (Upper Marlboro, Maryland) , listed on the NRHP in Maryland Hazelwood, Missouri Hazelwood School District Hazelwood School District v. United States , 1977 Supreme Court case Hazelwood School District v. Kuhlmeier , 1988 Supreme Court case Hazelwood, North Carolina Hazelwood (Pittsburgh) , Pennsylvania Hazelwood, Portland, Oregon Hazelwood (Port Royal, Virginia) , listed on

1075-626: The NRHP in Virginia Hazelwood (Green Bay, Wisconsin) , listed on the NRHP in Wisconsin People with the surname [ edit ] Ali Hazelwood , Italian neuroscientist and writer Charles Hazlewood (born 1966), British conductor Elizabeth Haselwood (c. 1644–1715) English silversmith John Hasilwood (died 1544), English politician John Hazelwood (1726–1800), American naval officer John A. Hazelwood (1869–1923), American politician Joseph Hazelwood (1946–2022),

1118-549: The Stars , reset in apartheid South Africa, at the South Bank Centre . In 2014, Hazlewood scored a reworking of John Gay's  The Beggars Opera, Dead Dog in a Suitcase (and other love songs) written by Carl Grose and directed by Mike Shepherd for Kneehigh Theatre . The show toured the UK and internationally in 2015/16 and was listed in the top ten shows of 2014 by the  Guardian  newspaper. In 2016 Hazlewood wrote

1161-748: The captain of the Exxon Valdez during its 1989 oil spill Josh Hazlewood (born 1991), Australian cricketer Lee Hazlewood (1929–2007), American singer Mike Hazlewood (1941–2001), English singer, songwriter, composer Mike Hazelwood (born 1958), English water skier Patsy Hazlewood (born 1949), American politician Rex Hazlewood (1903—1985), British Scouting Official Rex Hazlewood , Australian architect Rex Hazlewood (photographer)  [ Wikidata ] , Australian photographer Roy Hazelwood (1938–2016), FBI profiler Will Hazlewood (born 1971), British Anglican bishop Other uses [ edit ] Hazelwood (rugby ground) ,

1204-433: The first orchestral headliner at Glastonbury Festival with Philip Glass ' "Heroes" Symphony . They returned to the festival the following year in 2017 with Play! – a symphonic repertoire of songs from the gaming world, conducted by Hazlewood, which was performed again in 2018 at The Barbican , London. In 2019 Paraorchestra took their Love Unlimited Synth Orchestra, conducted by Hazlewood, to The Park stage, celebrating

1247-531: The genius of Barry White alongside Gruff Rhys , Nadine Shah , Larry Heard , Eno Williams of Ibibio Sound Machine , YolanDa Brown , Adrian Utley , Clive Deamer and Lianne La Havas . In 2017 Hazlewood created kraftwerk re:werk, a re-imagining of Trans-Europe Express by German electronic music pioneers Kraftwerk , which was first performed at Bristol’s Simple Things Festival. The ensemble consisted of symphonic and electronic instruments performing an arrangement of fragments of melodies, rhythms, and sounds from

1290-542: The judging panel for the reality show Classical Star (BBC2 2007) and anchored the BBC Proms TV coverage in 2008. In 2011, Hazlewood commissioned leading instrument makers to create an orchestra of 44 instruments entirely from scrap. Documented by BBC Four, the film culminated in a performance of Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture on the scrap instruments with BBC Concert Orchestra at the 2011 BBC Proms . He authored and presented How Pop Songs Work ( BBC Four , 2008);

1333-595: The largely derelict Wilton's Music Hall in East London, restoring it back into a living performance venue. As Music Director for Wilton’s Music Hall Hazlewood conducted The Beggars Opera (director Jonathan Miller ) Britten's The Turn of the Screw (director Elijah Moshinsky ), Puccini's Il Trittico (director Simon Callow ) and Kurt Weill's The Silverlake with translation by Rory Bremner . In 1999, Hazlewood and theatre director Mark Dornford-May created

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1376-572: The original album, composed by Charlotte Harding and Lloyd Coleman. In 2018 kraftwerk re:werk played The Marble Factory, Bristol, Brighton Dome , Basingstoke Anvil, and WOMAD festival in 2019. The Anatomy of the Orchestra, created and conducted by Hazlewood in 2018, saw a 50-strong ensemble of Paraorchestra musicians spread across the Atrium of Bristol Beacon , performing Steve Reich ’s The Four Sections . The performance invited audiences to move about

1419-524: The same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Hazelwood . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hazelwood&oldid=1231880089 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Place name disambiguation pages Disambiguation pages with surname-holder lists Hidden categories: Pages using interlanguage link with

1462-499: The score for an operatic version of The Tin Drum by Günter Grass . The show featured a libretto by Carl Grose and was performed and produced by Kneehigh Theatre. It was highlighted as one of Susannah Clapp ’s top ten shows of 2017 in The Observer. Hazlewood integrated mass karaoke into a show with Kneehigh’s Ubu! in 2018 which had its debut to critical acclaim ‘Singing truth to power: How Kneehigh's new show uses mass karaoke to topple

1505-520: The score, sold out in London's West End in 2003, inciting the first editorial on music in The Times newspaper in 40 years. Hazlewood was music director of DDK from 2000 to 2007. With the company he also conceived the music for the shows Ibali Loo Tsotsi ( The Beggar's Opera ); and The Snow Queen , which premiered in New York in 2004. In 2009, Hazlewood conducted Kurt Weill 's musical drama Lost in

1548-815: The space and explore the orchestra, creating their own sonic experience of the piece . It played the Arnhem Foyer, Fairfield Halls, Croydon in November 2018. In 2020, Hazlewood and Paraorchestra were commissioned by the British Council to perform a version of Anatomy of the Orchestra at Garage Museum of Contemporary Arts in Moscow as part of the UK-Russia Year of Music. An ensemble of Paraorchestra musicians performed work by JS Bach , Louis Andriessen , Nico Muhly and Peter Maxwell Davies . In 2018 Hazlewood and Paraorchestra commissioned Goldfrapp ’s Will Gregory to write

1591-614: The town centre was renamed to Churchill , however many of the surrounding areas continue to carry the name Hazelwood. In the 2016 Census, there were 184 people in Hazelwood. 90.0% of people were born in Australia and 95.0% of people only spoke English at home. Lake Hazelwood Lake Hazelwood also known as Hazelwood Pondage is a man-made lake which was created as a cooling pond for the Hazelwood Power Station . This form of use keeps

1634-439: The water quite temperate all year round. Due to this the lake has become a popular destination for swimming and boating. On the shores of the lake there is park land, a pony club, caravan parks, boat launching areas and camp sites. Hazelwood Power Station The establishment of Hazelwood Power Station was vital in the beginning of Hazelwood. Charles Hazlewood Charles Matthew Egerton Hazlewood (born 14 November 1966)

1677-519: The wikidata parameter Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Hazelwood, Victoria Hazelwood is an area of Gippsland at the foot of the Strzelecki Ranges in Victoria, Australia . In the beginning the area acted as a service centre for the Hazelwood Power Station . Following the death of Sir Winston Churchill

1720-550: Was a guest on BBC Radio 4 's Desert Island Discs in May 2019 and became Sky Arts ' Ambassador for Music in January 2021. In 2023 Hazlewood was recognised for his 'outstanding contribution to the musical life of the UK' when awarded the Sir Charles Groves Prize by music charity Making Music . Hazlewood was born on 14 November 1966 to the Reverend Canon Ian Hazlewood and Helen Hazlewood. His brother

1763-426: Was highlighted by New Statesman as ‘Serious, high-minded and brilliant ... a stunning lesson in not patronising audiences.’ The film centres on Beethoven’s famous 5th Symphony for a detailed look at the life, genius, and mental health struggles of the great composer in the context of, and drawing parallels with, Hazlewood’s own childhood trauma. Charles Hazlewood: Beethoven and Me was awarded Best Music Programme at

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1806-551: Was pre-recorded on Wales Millennium Centre ’s Donald Gordon stage in January 2021 and streamed by BBC Cymru Wales as part of Gŵyl 2021 on 6 & 7 March. The orchestra has toured to Russia, the Middle East, Greece and Australia, as well as playing throughout the UK. In 1995 Hazlewood and British theatre director Mark Dornford-May began working on a venture called Broomhill Opera in Kent, England. In 1999 they moved their operation to

1849-504: Was the guest in the BBC Radio 4 series Desert Island Discs . During the programme he revealed that he had been a victim of sexual abuse throughout his childhood. As a speaker, Hazlewood draws from his professional and personal life to speak on themes of vulnerability, leadership, trust, disruption, and creativity. He has presented two TED talks; Trusting the Ensemble (2011), The Debut of

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