Andrey Lebedev

Andrey Lebedev

Born in Moscow and raised in Australia, Andrey is an exceptional guitarist.  His extensive solo repertoire includes important works from the late twentieth century, and he has given the world premieres of major compositions by Peter Sculthorpe and Brett Dean, and under the auspices of the Julian Bream Trust, both Leo Brouwer and Sir Harrison Birtwistle.

Andrey completed postgraduate studies at the Royal Academy of Music studying under Michael Lewin. During his studies he worked with guitarist Julian Bream to present an evening solo recital at St Johns Smith Square, and with guitarist John Williams on an evening concert of Australian chamber music with guitar in the Duke’s Hall. He was awarded an MA with distinction and Advanced Diploma, graduating with a Regency Award for notable achievement, the Academy’s David Russell Guitar Prize, and Recital Diploma. He gained his BMus degree with first class honours at the Australian National University in 2012 under Timothy Kain, in which year he became the only Australian to win first prize in the Adelaide International Guitar Competition, the first classical guitarist to receive the Australian National Fine Music ‘Young Performer of the Year’ Award, and the only classical guitarist to gain a Sydney Eisteddfod Instrumental Scholarship. After enrolling at the Academy in September 2013 he won first prize and the special Bach Prize in the 25th Gisborne International Music Competition open to all instrumentalists.

https://citymusicfoundation.org/our-artists/andrey-lebedev

  • Wim After Hours :
    • Far away : Classical guitar
    • Lullaby : Classical guitar
    • Campfire : Classical guitar
    • World untouched : Classical guitar

Andrey Lebedev

Wim After Hours

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Nathan Quirynen

Nathan Quirynen

Nathan Quirynen is an instrumentalist (violin) from Marche-En-Famenne (Belgium). He is mainly experienced in interdisciplinary projects, chamber music, choral music and symphonic music.  He holds degrees from the Leuven based Lemmensinstituut and from the Antwerp Conservatory.

  • Wim After Hours

    • Far away : Violins
    • Lullaby : Alto violin
    • Morning busyness : Violin
    • Intermezzo : Violin
    • World untouched : Violin
    • Lament : Violin
Wim Hautekiet

Wim Hautekiet

Wim Hautekiet

During business hours, Wim is busy with lawyering (or related business roles).

After hours, he creates all sorts of melodies and arrangements, and has done this for ages.

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  • Wim After Hours:
    • Morning busyness : Guitar
    • Intermezzo : Vocals, Guitars and piano
    • World untouched : Folk guitar
    • Knackered : Guitars and piano
    • Lament : Vocals
    • Interludium in C Minor : Guitars and piano
    • Postludium from Greece : Just Wim

17. Postludium from Greece

Tobias spent 4 years in Greece and when he picks up the guitar you can hear that he loved the Athens Rebetika scene. He tells me that harmonies and counterpoint are not part of the genre. I still had a go. Tobias actually wrote lyrics for this (in Greek); we may record the full version soon…

16. Winds of change

A song composed on a grand piano my wife Jackie gave me for my birthday. We wrote lyrics for it but here is just the instrumental version.

15. Interludium in C minor

My son Niklas plays a lot of these energetic melodies on the piano. I asked him to finalise one of them, so I could add some bass and guitar.

14. Lament

Not lamenting the death of a real person; Tim needed something for a film wherein the cast launched into a humming chorus after a character was shot; I sent him a rough draft, but Tim developed something better, so I could reclaim (and play with) my tune.

13. Preludium: Don’t you know?

My son Tim asked me to write a violin accompaniment to one of his songs. So I produced this accompaniment (saluting JS Bach) to the chorus of the video song “Don’t you know?” (for the full version: google TimH Don’t You Know). There are 3 references to Bach, which I combined in one canon:
1 The art of fugue: opening theme
2 Mattheus passion: Kommt, Ihr Töchter
3 Brandenburg 3: first movement

12. Knackered

A rather typical after work tune (the same chord sequence repeated 9 times!), but the instrumentation reflects the successive moods:
Knackered in the sofa (dragging string quartet)
A glimpse of recovery (add piano)
Regaining energy (flute)
Seeing the funny side of it (baritone)
Remembering the drag ….. (violin)
Calming down ….
Reaching relaxation (guitars)
Not forgetting the drag …. (Violin)
Ultimate piece and joy

11. Shifty Look

Alex and I were colleagues in Luxembourg, and later in London where we shared a flat for a while, so we played and wrote a fair number of songs and instrumental pieces before and after work. We should record them all, but that’s for another day. Here’s one that refuses to leave my head.

10. Midnight Variation

This is a variation of a song Dirk and I wrote for a musical which never saw the light of day. The song “On voudrait vivre sans problèmes”, was in French chanson style, sung in close harmony, and for our musical we had several variations. This one in five fourths stuck in my mind, though I tried a new arrangement …

9. Alex’ Waltz

An extremely old one! One of the first tunes I developed on a piano. In 2018, I developed it with the help of Paul Mann for string orchestra (recording by the Ukraine Festival Orchestra available at Toccata Classics “Music for My Love” volume 2). Here is a short piano version from which it all started.

8. World Untouched

Another tune derived from an earlier song I wrote. The army of flutes played by Nadia and the guitar played by Andrey give it an unusual texture. The string quartet only comes in at the end, and I wanted it to sound as if they picked up a variation from the cellar.

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