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Beat by Beat | Classical & BeyondFour PlaySHARNA SEARLESeptember is kind of an oddball month around here: the summerfestivals have wound down, for the most part, and the season ofregular concert series doesn’t really get under wayuntil October. So, what’s a classical music columnist towrite about this month? Plenty, actually: there are thoseexception-to-the-rule summer series and festivals totake us into the end of September (look for Colours ofMusic and SweetWater in our Beyond the GTA listings),and the gutsy presenters who are first out of the startinggate each year with season launches in September. See,nothing to worry about!September’s septet of quartets: You can’t talkabout quartets in Toronto without talking about MusicToronto. For 40 years, this venerable organization hasconsistently presented some of the most sublime, memorableand musically satisfying evenings of chambermusic, many of which have involved one major, or upand-coming,string quartet or another (in addition tooutstanding trios, duos and soloists). Here’s a nonexhaustivelist: Juilliard, Guarneri, Orford, St. Lawrence,Jerusalem, Kronos, Tokyo, Lafayette, Cecilia, Molinari,Bozzini, Brentano and Amadeus.The person who, with little fanfare, has beenshepherding Music Toronto since 1990 — first as general managerand since 2006 as both GM and artistic producer — is Jennifer Taylor.Roman Borys, artistic director of Ottawa Chamberfest, and cellist withthe Gryphon Trio (Music Toronto’s ensemble-in-residence from 1988to 2008), sings her praises during a June 12, 2012, video interviewhe did for The WholeNote’s Conversations@TheWholeNote YouTubevideo series: “Jennifer Taylor, Music Toronto, there’s an organizationand a particular individual ... one of the great foundations in chambermusic in this country ... who understands the genre, who understandsthe business of presenting music, presenting concerts, and who,luckily, also has great stamina!” Borys adds that Taylor gave theGryphon “wonderful opportunties to continue to develop our ownskills as chamber musicians and learn from one another.”For Music Toronto’s 41st season, Taylorhas assembled yet another superb lineup ofquartets, trios, pianists and other soloists,with concerts at the Jane Mallett Theatre — itsregular venue since its inception. Firstup of the quartets, on September 13, isthe Brentano, with a fascinating 20thanniversary program called “Fragments:Connecting Past and Present.” They havetaken six fragments by great composers fromthe past, and invited six living composersto respond to them. In their Music Torontoconcert you’ll hear “fragments” of Schubert,Bach, Haydn, Shostakovich and Mozartjuxtaposed with “completions” by BruceAdolphe, Sofia Gubaidulina, John Harbison,Stephen Hartke and Vijay Iyer, respectively.Also on the program is a work by CharlesWuorinen, based on the music of Josquinand Dufay, the earliest music in the“Fragments” project.(You can also hear — but only hear, not see — the Brentano Quartetin a film titled A Late Quartet. It’s one of several featured films onoffer at this year’s TIFF to “use music in interesting ways,” accordingMusic Toronto presents the BrentanoString Quartet at Jane Mallett.CHRISTIAN STEINERSeptember 1 – October 7, 2012 thewholenote.com 17

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