'The musical experience of a lifetime'

'The world's finest musicians in a magnificent setting'

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To find out more about the Leicester Museum and Art Gallery and their programme of events, please use the following links:

Leicester Museum Home – Leicester Museums

Leicester Museum & Art Gallery – Leicester Museums

PLEASE NOTE: The Museum café is unfortunately now closed. We look forward to the superb new café area opening in 2025 after the Museum’s redevelopment.

Refreshments and snacks are available from vending machines in the café area (cash and card). Visitors may also consume their own food and drinks if they wish. You may also wish to try the excellent Soft Touch Arts café - just across New Walk.

 

NEXT LUNCHTIME CONCERT: THURSDAY 11TH APRIL 1PM

THEO PLATT (BARITONE) & KEVAL SHAH (PIANO)

Mortal Wounds: Macmillan; Schumann; Poulenc; Shawn E. Okpebholo; Richard Farina (arr Will Liverman); Margaret Bonds; William Grant Still; Florence Price

We end our season with a varied and thought-provoking programme of song from two of Britain’s most exciting young performers.

Rising British-Russian baritone Theodore Platt is considered one of the most promising young voices of the opera world today celebrated for his "warm and powerful English baritone" (Music OMH). He was a member of the Bayerische Staatsoper’s Opera Studio and in 2022 was named recipient of the prestigious Borletti-Buitoni Trust (BBT) Fellowship.In the 2023/24 season, Theodore Platt  sees his first performances of Belcore in L’elisir d’amore in a return to the Glyndebourne Opera Festival, and makes his role and house debut as the titular character in Guillaume Tell at St. Gallen Opera House.

British-Indian pianist Keval Shah is at the forefront of a new generation of collaborative artists. Recognised for the artistic and intellectual originality of his playing and approach to programming, Keval has performed at many of Europe’s leading concert halls and festivals, including Wigmore Hall, Heidelberger Frühling, Schubertiade Schwarzenberg, Aldeburgh Festival and the Oxford International Song Festival. Keval is Lecturer of Lied at the Sibelius Academy, Helsinki, an appointment which made him the institution’s youngest professor, and which is testament to the strength of his artistic vision and his gifts as a communicator. 

last lunchtime concert

thursday 14th march 1pm: Hélène clément (viola) & alasdair beatson (piano)

We were delighted to welcome back to Leicester the viola player, Hélène Clément, this time not with the Doric Quartet, but with pianist, Alasdair Beatson, brilliant with many instrumentalists and singers on his previous visits. We enjoyed a wonderfully intense hour of music by Frank Bridge, Benjamin Britten and Imogen Holst. What a beautiful range of colours they conjured from their instruments!

 

We had another great audience for Bone-afide’s Lunchtime Concert at the Museum. Their concert ranged from very witty arrangements of popular classics, through Tchaikovsky ballet to recent commissions and toe-tapping jazz and folk. Thank you to this superb group for coming and entertaining us so well.

 

Festival 2023

Our Artistic Director, Nicholas Daniel assembled a brilliant team of musicians for this year’s Festival, with three contrasting concert experiences to enjoy in the magnificent Victorian Gallery at Leicester Museum.

After a day spent in a local school, Catherine St Infants; Agnes House residential care home, and a much-anticipated return to Leicester's Freedom Youth Club for young asylum seekers, our musicians presented 'Music for Everyone' on Saturday lunchtime, a promenade concert aimed at families and young people. This was the first time since the Covid pandemic that we were able to tour all of the museum's spaces and fill them with musical delights!

There were some familiar faces in Saturday evening's 'Festival Finale' concert, including the horn player, Ben Goldscheider; cellist Ashok Klouda, who was with us last year, and Anna Tilbrook (piano), who certainly needs no introduction to audiences at the Museum.

They were joined by some outstanding new faces for a very exciting programme, combining three of Mozart's great masterpieces with music by Great British Women: Thea Musgrave; Eleanor Alberga, and Nicola LeFanu, whose new for violin, horn and cello, ‘After Farrera’, received its second performance at the festival.

All three of these distinguished and successful women composers have a long-standing association with Nicholas Daniel, of course.

Thank you to everyone who joined us - we hope you enjoyed it!

 

Our concert venue: the Victorian Gallery at Leicester Museum and Art Gallery

become a friend of LIMF

We would like to say a big ‘thank you’ to everyone who has joined our Friends Scheme, helping to keep chamber music alive in Leicester. Your support is vital.

LIMF is dedicated to bringing the world's best musicians to Leicester; supporting young artists; delivering valuable education projects locally; commissioning new works and ensuring diversity in all of our concert programmes.

Please consider joining us, whether you live near or far. If you fall into the latter category, we would love to see you at one of our concerts - transport links to Leicester are very good!