The Linwood College students orchestra is scheduled to tour Europe and the United Kingdom in April 2011. Major fundraising has been undertaken and up until 22 February 2011, the students had a shortfall of $50,000.
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The following is a recent press release that updates the College orchestra's fund raising situation.
Linwood Orchestra Dreams Rise from the Ashes
Linwood College Orchestra will be playing in Westminster Abbey on
Anzac Day after all, thanks to two major sponsors -- Fletcher
Building and the Freemasons -- and the generous spirit of people
around the world who have risen to the challenge to get the students
and support staff on the plane on April 9. Before they leave, the
orchestra is hoping to be able to offer a final free concert to thank
Christchurch and to acknowledge all those who have helped them
achieve their dream.
The day the earthquake struck Christchurch was the same day the
students learned of the Westminster Abbey invitation. With the
Christchurch Cathedral in ruins, dreams of performing at the Abbey
seemed impossibly distant, particularly as plans for final fund-
raising were dropped immediately, as more urgent and tragic matters
took precedence; the school had lost a student in the quake, some
families were homeless, all were shocked at the destruction in their
home city.
The orchestra's conductor, Tony Ryan, whose house and family were
among the worst affected by the earthquake, had thought that the trip
could not continue. But he began to sense the strong determination
among the orchestra families and realised that he and the students
needed to look to the future.
"We spent the first days in a state of shock and then a sense of
coping day-by-day; we need to look beyond merely coping with this
disaster, so the orchestra trip now seems vital in helping us to get
our lives back on track - we have to believe that a future can emerge
from this, whatever the challenges."
Instruments and music were rescued from the school, which has had to
move from site due to building damage. A makeshift rehearsal venue
was found through the generosity of a community clubroom, and
rehearsals began in earnest.
"The rehearsals quickly proved to be ideal therapy for our feelings
of vulnerability and grief" says Ryan. "Music and the arts are the
soul of a community, and our music-making in preparation for the trip
is proving to be just what everyone needed."
Yet there was still the matter of a substantial shortfall in funds to
deal with. No Theatre Royal Gala Concert was possible now, and no
amount of sausage sizzles was going to raise the required amount in
the four weeks remaining.
Social networking sprang into action, with pleas being sent out to
wider family contacts, ex-pats living in the UK, business
acquaintances, sporting and cultural groups. Media coverage on
National Radio's Kim Hill programme, TV One News and Radio NZ
Concert's "Upbeat" programme saw the story spread.
"We started to get people asking if they could make a donation to get
our kids on the way, a cruise ship that had been in Lyttelton at the
time of the quake had a whip round, and then we had calls from the
Freemasons and Fletchers offering substantial support. The generosity
and goodwill of everyone has been overwhelming and very humbling,"
says Linwood College Principal Margaret Paiti.
Mark Binns, Chief Executive Infrastructure of Fletcher Building, said
that his company was keen to support the effort. "Rebuilding the city
is about more than bricks and mortar, it's also about rebuilding the
dreams of those who live there."
David Mace, Chairman of the Freemasons Roskill Foundation, says that
the Freemasons are delighted to support this worthy cause. Mace
points out that Mozart,Verdi and Sir Arthur Sullivan were all
Freemasons, and supporting musical excellence comes naturally to the
group.
"We believe it is vitally important to help these young people.
They�re such a thoroughly professional group who can represent the
spirit of Christchurch and its hopes for the future," he says.
The orchestra's outstanding vitality and musicianship under the
dynamic baton of conductor Tony Ryan is what originally attracted
invitations for it to play in the likes of Paris, Salzburg and
Venice, with the Abbey invitation the final endorsement of the years
of hard practice and commitment.
As a school that serves Christchurch's lowest socio-economic area,
Linwood College has found fund-raising challenging. Raffles, concerts
and stocking shelves saw them slowly accumulate nearly $130,000 -
transporting and housing a 70-strong orchestra for a month is not a
cheap undertaking. After the September earthquake, the students
donated some proceeds from their fund-raising calendar sales to the
initial earthquake fund. Some students had had to drop out when
$50,000 more money was required from the families for airfares, and
another $35,000 more needed to be gathered for accommodation and
additional expenses.
"The big donations from the Freemasons and Fletchers mean we can
cover those basic costs now. And the individual donations that are
coming in are being put towards some of the other costs of the trip
which we'd normally get the school community to cover - supporting
the accompanying music teachers, copying the music, hiring
replacement travel cases," says Board of Trustees chair, Tim
Anderson. "It's going to make a huge difference and take a lot of the
pressure off so the students, their families and staff can
concentrate on getting lives back to normal."
It's not quite normal yet. The orchestra has been hunting rehearsal
venues, as the school remains closed. The Woolston Club has come to
the rescue there, and the strains of the Radetzky March rings out
where horse-racing commentators are normally heard.
One student has proposed that the trip be dubbed the Linwood College
Orchestra Phoenix Tour - their repertoire includes a piece from
Stravinsky's Firebird Suite after all - as the phoenix is the
symbol of hope arising from the ashes of despair.