McGlashan, Ward-Lealand Join Sistema Aotearoa for Government House Fundraiser
Image: Sistema Aotearoa end of year concert, TelstraClear Pacific Events Centre, Manukau, November 2011. Higher resolution
available.
Image credit: Adrian Malloch
Kiwi music legend Don McGlashan (The Mutton Birds, Blam Blam Blam, From Scratch, The Front Lawn) has added his name to
the list of those performing a fundraiser for Sistema Aotearoa, the children’s music education programme based in Otara
and run by Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra (APO) with funding for a pilot scheme from the Ministry for Culture & Heritage.
McGlashan will share the stage with the Jade String Quartet, and joins a bill that already includes award-winning
14-year-old singer Khona Va'aga-Gray, soprano Morag Atchison and pianist Rosemary Barnes.
The concert, which takes place from 3pm on Saturday 10 March, also marks the rare and welcome appearance as a pianist of
APO Music Director Eckehard Stier, who performs jazz standards with violinist Dr Joe Harrop, Programme Director of
Sistema Aotearoa.
Emcee for the afternoon is the accomplished actress Jennifer Ward-Lealand, who also worked with Don McGlashan in the
music/theatre group The Front Lawn.
Since Sistema Aotearoa launched in April 2011 the young pupils, aged between five and eight years, have played several
concerts, including one to 600 people at TelstraClear Pacific Events Centre in Manukau. And while they’ve performed to
family, friends and even government ministers, the fundraising concert will be in front of their most important guest
yet: Lt Gen The Rt Hon Sir Jerry Mateparae, the Governor-General of New Zealand. Indeed, the concert is held outside on
the lawn of Sir Jerry’s official Auckland residence, Government House.
“I’d like to thank Their Excellencies Sir Jerry Mateparae and his wife Lady Janine for making Government House available
to the children of Sistema Aotearoa,” says APO Chief Executive Barbara Glaser. “Through our season-opening Summer
Matinee concerts, the APO has had a strong relationship with Government House for 20 years, and there is nowhere we
would rather be for this event. I’d also like to thank all the artists, who have generously donated their time and
talent to this wonderful cause. We take immense pride in Sistema Aotearoa, and with the help of people like Don
McGlashan and Jennifer Ward-Lealand, we hope to secure additional instruments and ensure the
The concert is free to attend, but because it is held at the Governor-General’s residence, it is open only to ticket
holders. For more information and to secure your ticket, go to www.apo.co.nz/fundraising-concert or phone (09) 623 1052. The concert is held outdoors and in the open; the rain date is Sunday 11 March.
About Sistema Aotearoa
Launched in April 2011, Sistema Aotearoa is a music education and social intervention initiative led by Auckland
Philharmonia Orchestra, with funding for a two-year pilot programme coming from the Ministry for Culture and Heritage.
Sistema Aotearoa is based at Otara Music Arts Centre (OMAC) in Otara town centre.
The first Sistema programme was founded in Venezuela in the mid-1970s. More than 400,000 children learn an orchestral
instrument, and the programme has been credited with a drop in youth crime, a rise in school attendance rates, and a
reduction in the number of young people falling into lives of gangs and drugs.
In New Zealand, initial indications suggested that the first Sistema intake would comprise 50 students; however, 80
children turned up on the first day. Sistema Aotearoa now has more than children enrolled and attending regular classes
in music instrument instruction.
The students are drawn from 7 primary schools, all within walking distance of OMAC. This is part of the Sistema
philosophy, whereby there should be no cost – and therefore no economic barriers – to musical participation. Similarly,
instruments are provided free of charge, as is the tuition, which is supplied by professional musicians and music
teachers.
As well as the after-school classes and school holiday immersion courses attended by the core students, tutors from
Sistema Aotearoa travel to the 7 schools during class time to give lessons in general musicianship, meaning that the
programme has now exposed 450 children in the Otara area to the joys of music making.
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ENDS