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Volume 21 Issue 3 - November 2015

"Come" seems to be the verb that knits this month's issue together. Sondra Radvanovsky comes to Koerner, William Norris comes to Tafel as their new GM, opera comes to Canadian Stage; and (a long time coming!) Jane Bunnett's musicianship and mentorship are honoured with the Premier's award for excellence; plus David Jaeger's ongoing series on the golden years of CBC Radio Two, Andrew Timar on hybridity, a bumper crop of record reviews and much much more. Come on in!

"Come" seems to be the verb that knits this month's issue together. Sondra Radvanovsky comes to Koerner, William Norris comes to Tafel as their new GM, opera comes to Canadian Stage; and (a long time coming!) Jane Bunnett's musicianship and mentorship are honoured with the Premier's award for excellence; plus David Jaeger's ongoing series on the golden years of CBC Radio Two, Andrew Timar on hybridity, a bumper crop of record reviews and much much more. Come on in!

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Letters, were both written late in his life, when he had found his<br />

decidedly individual voice and was experiencing a late surge in his<br />

career. In particular, he was deeply involved in an intensely passionate<br />

– though essentially unrequited – friendship with the young Kamila<br />

Stősslová, and the second quartet specifically represents events in<br />

Janáček’s relationship with her; despite his age, it’s full of the passion<br />

and yearning of a youthful man.<br />

The performances of both works here are all that you could want<br />

them to be.<br />

American Dreams is the title of a lovely new<br />

CD from the St. Helens String Quartet (Navona<br />

Records NV6004) as well as the subtitle of the<br />

opening work, Peter Schickele’s String Quartet<br />

No.1 from 1983.<br />

Schickele, who turned 80 this year, has<br />

enjoyed a long career as a composer and<br />

performer when not busy with his alter ego<br />

P.D.Q. Bach. This quartet, the major work on the CD, is beautifully<br />

written, moving in an arch from an Appalachian start through jazz,<br />

blues and fiddle styles and a Navajo song back to the dulcimer-like<br />

Appalachian tune from the opening.<br />

Ken Benshoof (born 1933), Bern Herbolsheimer (born 1948) and<br />

Janice Giteck (born1946) are the other composers, represented by<br />

a variety of short works. Benshoof’s Swing Low from 2004 is eight<br />

views of the famous spiritual, and his Remember is a nostalgic sketch<br />

from 1977. His Diversions from 2005 – six pieces in various moods,<br />

including Blue Grass and Raggedy Blues – are for violin and piano,<br />

with pianist Lisa Bergman providing the accompaniment.<br />

Botanas, Herbolsheimer’s five-movement work from 2008, is<br />

named for the appetizers served in Mexican bars and cafes. The two<br />

pieces by Giteck are Ricercare (Dream Upon Arrival) from 2012<br />

and Where can one live safely, then? In surrender, written for the<br />

St. Helens Quartet in 2005. There is nothing here that is hard to<br />

assimilate, and a great deal that is thought-provoking and highly<br />

enjoyable. The playing throughout is warm and idiomatic, the<br />

recording quality excellent.<br />

Also from Navona Records is Feral Icons,<br />

a suite of six movements for solo viola by<br />

Peter Vukmirovic Stevens performed by Mara<br />

Gearman (NV6008). The work was written<br />

for Gearman in 2013-14, and according to the<br />

very sparse booklet notes employs Stevens’<br />

signature sound of extended tonality and<br />

isometric rhythms.<br />

To be honest, I’m not quite sure what that means in this<br />

particular context. We’re told that Stevens, who studied with Bern<br />

Herbolsheimer among others, has a compositional approach that<br />

strips away the extraneous to reveal simplicity, and certainly the<br />

writing here seems to be mostly tonal and quite accessible, with<br />

a fairly standard use of the instrument. There’s not a great deal of<br />

dynamic, rhythmic or tonal range though, and Gearman’s vibrato<br />

never seems to vary much. Still, she’s more than up to any technical<br />

challenges the work presents.<br />

Judging by the number of cello ensembles around these days,<br />

cellists must love company. Vibrez is the<br />

first release on the UK’s Edition Classics<br />

label by the London-based cello octet<br />

Cellophony (EDN1047), featuring a program<br />

of nine arrangements by octet member<br />

Richard Birchall and one original composition.<br />

The eclectic list includes Wagner’s<br />

Prelude to Act 1 of Tristan und Isolde, three<br />

Schubert songs, Liszt’s La Lugubre Gondola,<br />

Wieniawski’s Scherzo-Tarantelle (in a particularly dazzling performance),<br />

Mendelssohn’s Ave Maria, a Bach Prelude and Barber’s Adagio<br />

Op.11, the famous “Adagio for Strings.” The original composition<br />

Violoncelles, Vibrez! by the contemporary Italian composer and cellist<br />

Giovanni Sollima completes a charming and entertaining disc.<br />

Music for a New Century is a new and intriguing CD of Violin<br />

Concertos by the American composers Sidney<br />

Corbett and Christopher Adler, performed by<br />

Sarah Plum (Blue Griffin Recording BGR371).<br />

The Chamber Music Midwest Festival<br />

Orchestra under Akira Mori joins Plum in a<br />

live recording of Corbett’s Yaël at its June 5,<br />

2011 North American premiere in Wisconsin,<br />

while Nicholas Deyoe conducts San Diego New<br />

Music in the world premiere of the Adler concerto, commissioned by<br />

Plum specifically to pair with the Corbett on this CD release.<br />

While both works are clearly very strong neither is an easy first<br />

listen, with a good deal of unrelenting toughness that tends to act<br />

like a suit of emotional armour, keeping you at bay. Plum, however,<br />

calls them “beautiful, original and quite striking,” and says that she<br />

is “confident that they will enter the repertoire and be played for<br />

many years to come.” I really hope she’s right, but I won’t be putting<br />

any money on it; these are works that are not immediately audience<br />

friendly in the traditional sense, even on repeated hearings, and might<br />

prove difficult to program.<br />

Mind you, it’s difficult to imagine a better flag bearer for them than<br />

Sarah Plum, who is quite brilliant here, or better performances or<br />

recordings. This is still an indispensable addition to the contemporary<br />

American violin concerto discography.<br />

Listen in!<br />

• Read the review<br />

• Click to listen<br />

• Click to buy<br />

New this month to<br />

the Listening Room<br />

TheWholeNote.com/Listening<br />

For more information<br />

Thom McKercher at<br />

thom@thewholenote.com<br />

MAHLER – SYMPHONY NO.10<br />

Yannick Nézet-Séguin<br />

with<br />

Orchestre Metropolitain<br />

Acclarion: Shattered Expectations<br />

Accordion and clarinet create<br />

breathtaking, richly romantic, vibrant<br />

original works and give a new voice to<br />

classical masterpieces.<br />

www.acclarion.ca<br />

Like a Ragged Flock<br />

~spin~ duo<br />

James Harley: electronics and<br />

sound diffusion<br />

Ellen Waterman: flutes and voice<br />

Available from the Canadian Music Centre<br />

thewholenote.com Nov 1 - Dec 7, <strong>2015</strong> | 67

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