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Volume 21 Issue 9 - Summer 2016

It's combined June/July/August summer issue time with, we hope, enough between the covers to keep you dipping into it all through the coming lazy, hazy days. From Jazz Vans racing round "The Island" delivering pop-up brass breakouts at the roadside, to Bach flute ambushes strolling "The Grove, " to dozens of reasons to stay in the city. May yours be a summer where you find undiscovered musical treasures, and, better still, when, unexpectedly, the music finds you.

It's combined June/July/August summer issue time with, we hope, enough between the covers to keep you dipping into it all through the coming lazy, hazy days. From Jazz Vans racing round "The Island" delivering pop-up brass breakouts at the roadside, to Bach flute ambushes strolling "The Grove, " to dozens of reasons to stay in the city. May yours be a summer where you find undiscovered musical treasures, and, better still, when, unexpectedly, the music finds you.

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program will be repeated at St. John the Evangelist in Hamilton<br />

on June 26.<br />

QUICK PICKS<br />

June 1: Bach’s cantata, Die Himmel erzählen die Ehre Gottes<br />

BWV76 will be performed by soloists from St. James Cathedral and the<br />

organist Ian Sadler.<br />

June 2: Christina Stelmacovich, mezzo, will sing a free concert at<br />

Metropolitan United Church.<br />

June 3: Show One Productions presents Tamara Gverdtsiteli<br />

singing Yiddish songs, with the Moscow Male Jewish Cappella at Roy<br />

Thomson Hall.<br />

June 4: Ermanno Mauro, tenor, will sing popular opera arias along<br />

with emerging singers coached by him at Columbus Centre.<br />

June 4: The Aradia Baroque Ensemble presents arias by Handel to be<br />

followed by Peter Maxwell Davies’ Eight Songs for a Mad King at The<br />

Music Gallery.<br />

June 4: The Etobicoke Centennial Choir presents opera arias and<br />

choruses by Mozart, Verdi and Offenbach. The soloists are Andrea<br />

Naccarato, soprano, Erin Ronniger, alto, Lance Kaizer, tenor, and<br />

Lawrence Shirkie, baritone, at Humber Valley United Church.<br />

June 5: Maeve Palmer, soprano, sings Five Poems by Tyler Versluis at<br />

Gallery 345.<br />

June 6: Melanie Conly, soprano, and Kathryn Tremills, piano,<br />

perform Mozart’s Exsultate Jubilate as well as songs by Case, Holby,<br />

Gershwin, Gounod, Porter and Purcell at the Church of the Redeemer.<br />

June 7: The Toronto Concert Orchestra presents highlights from<br />

Rigoletto, La traviata, La bohème and other operas. The singers are<br />

Sara Papini, soprano, Eugenia Dermentzis, mezzo, Romulo Delgado<br />

and Riccardo Iannello, tenor, and Bradley Christensen, baritone at<br />

Casa Loma.<br />

June 8 and 9: Michael Donovan, baritone, will sing his own new<br />

songs at Gallery 345.<br />

June 12: Schubert’s Mass in G will be sung in a free concert with<br />

soloists Jennifer Krabbe, soprano, and Dennis Zimmer, bass at<br />

Humbercrest United Church.<br />

June 16: Charlotte Knight, soprano, is the singer in “It Shoulda<br />

Been Me: A Cabaret,” a program of songs by Sondheim, Billy Joel, Joe<br />

Iconis and others at Gallery 345. The show is also being performed in<br />

St. Catharines, June 10 and Guelph, June 18.<br />

June 17: Rachel Fenlon sings and plays the piano in a Schubert<br />

concert at Gallery 345.<br />

June 24: Inga Filippova, soprano, Stanislav Vitort, tenor, and<br />

Andrey Andreychik, baritone, sing opera at Lawrence Park<br />

Community Church.<br />

And beyond the GTA, June 1: Maryem Tollar, Brenna MacCrimmon,<br />

Jayne Brown and Sophia Grigoriadis, who comprise the group<br />

Turkwaz, perform “Sounds of the Eastern Mediterranean” at the<br />

Kitchener-Waterloo Chamber Music Society Music Room.<br />

Hans de Groot is a concertgoer and active listener<br />

who also sings and plays the recorder. He can be<br />

contacted at artofsong@thewholenote.com.<br />

Beat by Beat | Choral Scene<br />

Reflections on the<br />

Sacred and the<br />

Secular<br />

BRIAN CHANG<br />

As we voyage into the beauty of summer and the winding down<br />

of the regular 2015/<strong>2016</strong> choral season, it has been my pleasure<br />

to write this column over the last year. One fascinating theme<br />

for me, as an active singer and performer, and as a regular attendee<br />

of concerts in the region, has been how often choral music finds itself<br />

at the crossroads of the secular and the sacred. From a Eurocentric<br />

perspective this comes as no surprise: much of what we revere<br />

as choral singers is deeply rooted in biblical and church liturgy -<br />

Handel’s Messiah, Mendelssohn’s Elijah, countless requiems, oratorios<br />

based on stories and teachings from scripture. Less evident, from that<br />

perspective, is the extent to which choral music is inseparable from<br />

global spirituality. We are lucky to be in Toronto, a truly global village<br />

where we can interact with, learn from, and be humbled by the<br />

myriad diversity of the human voice, human spirituality and music.<br />

One great case in point is the Aga Khan Museum which has hosted<br />

a variety of fabulous musicians from across the world. Qawwali is<br />

a devotional, passionate music inspired by Sufi tradition and the<br />

California-based Fanna-Fi-Allah Sufi Qawwali Party will perform it at<br />

the museum, August 4. This youthful group will bring us sounds and<br />

words that have been part of South Asian culture for over 700 years,<br />

showing us the harmony of the sacred and secular at play. I hope their<br />

programming goes from strength to strength, and that more institutions<br />

like this emerge as our city’s cultural landscape continues<br />

to change.<br />

Reflecting on the past season, the year has been an extraordinary<br />

choral soundscape: 1000 performers in Luminato’s staging of Murray<br />

Schafer’s Apocalypsis; several opportunities to experience contemporary<br />

throat singing with Tanya Tagaq; fans coming together to sing<br />

choral tributes to David Bowie and Prince; a diverse series of Ismaili<br />

and other South Asian works by the Aga Khan Museum; an unusual<br />

Messiah under Sir Andrew Davis with the Toronto Mendelssohn Choir<br />

and the TSO; and the voices of so many children, in the region’s children’s<br />

choirs and guests from around the world. Choral City isn’t just<br />

humming, it is belting a message of hope across the region!<br />

Gospel Music – Community in Action: Karen Burke, a York<br />

University professor specializing in music education and gospel<br />

music, is also the director of the Toronto Mass Choir. She’s incredibly<br />

in demand as a clinician and teacher. She talks about the music, but<br />

it is clear that people are the key to her approach and to her appeal as<br />

an educator and expert. The community that is built, the stories, the<br />

30 | June 1, <strong>2016</strong> - September 7, <strong>2016</strong> thewholenote.com

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