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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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Decca has chosen to list the repertoire in the index by DD numbers,<br />

1 through 128 and identifies the disc where the work is to be found. As<br />

identified above, the 32 CDs are in five easily seen groups; Orchestral<br />

and Stage Works, Chamber Works, Choral and Vocal Works, Piano<br />

Works and a fifth group of Celebrated Performances.<br />

Bartók was one of the very greatest composers of the 20th century,<br />

a unique figure. Listening to his Complete Works has been and<br />

continues to be a constant pleasure. Except as noted, the sound<br />

throughout is exemplary. I haven’t seen it memorialized but in the<br />

1950s and 60s the hippest members of the Beat Generation “dug the<br />

Bartók scene” and their enthusiasm may have got the ball rolling. Link<br />

to contents: deccaclassics.com/en/cat/4789311.<br />

There is no doubt that Leonard Bernstein’s<br />

later years were his very best, confirmed by<br />

all his recordings for Deutsche Grammophon,<br />

including those with the Vienna Philharmonic<br />

which had not played any Mahler for a<br />

long, long time until Bernstein stood before<br />

them. <strong>Volume</strong> One of The Leonard Bernstein<br />

Collection on DG (4791047, 59 CDs)<br />

covered composers from Beethoven to Liszt;<br />

completing his legacy on DG CDs, <strong>Volume</strong> Two (4795553, 64 CDs)<br />

takes us from Mahler to Wagner plus the earlier American Decca<br />

recordings.<br />

Orchestras in this second volume are the Vienna Philharmonic, the<br />

Royal Concertgebouw, the Berlin Philharmonic (arguably the very best<br />

Mahler Ninth on record), the New York Philharmonic, the Chicago<br />

Symphony, Orchestre National de France, the Israel Philharmonic,<br />

Bavarian Radio Symphony and the Accademia Nazionale del Santa<br />

Cecilia. Collectors will be very happy to have the following assured<br />

performances, each followed by a spoken informative analysis, as<br />

recorded by American Decca in 1953 by Bernstein and the New York<br />

Philharmonic in Carnegie Hall: Beethoven’s Eroica, Dvořák’s New<br />

World, Schumann’s Second, Brahms Fourth and the Tchaikovsky<br />

Sixth. If you have a chance, compare this confident 1953 Pathétique to<br />

the searching 1986 version – two very different worlds.<br />

The care and attention lavished on the two editions, including the<br />

illustrated enclosures, honours the late maestro. Link to contents:<br />

deutschegrammophon.com/en/cat/4795553.<br />

The art of the late conductor Hans<br />

Knappertsbusch is to be heard on countless<br />

performances of Wagner’s Ring Cycle from<br />

Bayreuth as well as other Wagner music dramas<br />

and in performances of the orchestral works of<br />

the Romantic composers – all audio discs, with<br />

only four works on video. They are Beethoven’s<br />

Leonora Overture No.3 and the Fourth Piano<br />

Concerto with Wilhelm Backhaus together with<br />

the Vorspiel und Isoldes Liebestod from Tristan sung by Birgit Nilsson,<br />

all from the Wiener Festwochen in 1962. From 1963, only one item:<br />

Act One of Die Walküre in a concert performance sung by Claire<br />

Watson (Sieglinde), Fritz Uhl (Siegmund) and Josef Greindl (Hunding).<br />

The orchestra throughout is the Vienna Philharmonic.<br />

Arthaus Musik has issued them on a single Blu-ray disc, A Tribute<br />

to Hans Knappertsbusch (109<strong>21</strong>3) in a video quality typical of the<br />

time or maybe a little better, supplied by the ORF. Filmed in black<br />

and white in 4:3 format. Watching Knappertsbusch in action it is easy<br />

to see how he achieves those long lines with such ease. He seems to<br />

draw the orchestra out rather than imposing on them. Hard to explain<br />

but I believe it is there to see. The veteran Backhaus, still well in<br />

command of his instrument, and Knappertsbusch are of one mind in<br />

this elegant, patrician performance. Nilsson is Nilsson. The Walküre<br />

first act is sung flawlessly but today we have been spoiled by so many<br />

videos of the actual opera that it is very hard to visualize what they<br />

are singing about or to empathize with any confrontation when they<br />

are simply standing there awaiting their turn. I think that the disc<br />

is still desirable if only to see and hear Knappertsbusch, Backhaus<br />

and Nilsson.<br />

<strong>Summer</strong> Vocations<br />

continued from page 11<br />

How you might know him:<br />

Organist and music director at Our<br />

Lady of Sorrows Catholic Church;<br />

executive producer of ORGANIX<br />

CONCERTS<br />

<strong>Summer</strong> Vocation: “I recharge by<br />

pushing my musical limits, by going<br />

to Europe to perform organ concerts<br />

in massive medieval cathedrals.<br />

The tour this coming August will<br />

be the result of my third invitation<br />

to perform in Poland (2012, 2015,<br />

<strong>2016</strong>)...I am often the only Canadian<br />

in a festival of European organists<br />

and of course, it is an honour that I<br />

do not take for granted.<br />

I am energized by learning and<br />

preparing new music for my concerts.<br />

Gordon Mansell<br />

For me, it is not a rest at all but a<br />

change and an opportunity to experience baroque instruments and<br />

the occasional example of the continuing vibrancy of the North<br />

German organ-building craft first-hand. By the end of this coming<br />

tour, I will have performed concerts on 11 different organs, including<br />

one museum organ dating back to 1653 in its original state. Overall,<br />

these concert tours are exhilarating opportunities for musical and<br />

personal growth.<br />

My itinerary for this summer includes the first concert in Słupsk<br />

(August 11) followed by a very special performance as part of the<br />

Fiftieth International Organ Music Festival at St. Mary’s Cathedral<br />

(August 12 – Koszalin) and the Cathedral Basilica of St. James the<br />

Apostle (August 13 – Szczecin). After these concerts, my wife and I<br />

will then vacation in Germany and plan to visit Bach’s hometown and<br />

church, and play the famous Bach organ.”<br />

Hear him this summer: Before Mansell departs for his tour, he plays<br />

a noontime organ recital on July 20, at All Saints Kingsway. Details in<br />

our GTA listings and at allsaintskingsway.ca.<br />

Name: Aimée Butcher<br />

Instrument: Jazz vocalist<br />

How you might know her:<br />

Performer at The Rex and Jazz<br />

Bistro; Singer-songwriter on<br />

debut 2015 CD The World Is<br />

Alright<br />

<strong>Summer</strong> Vocation: “What<br />

I am looking forward to most<br />

about my summer vacation<br />

is a chance to create new<br />

musical memories. I have<br />

my first festival gig ever on<br />

July 31 at the TD Newmarket<br />

Jazz+ Festival, which I am very<br />

excited about, and plan to<br />

schedule a few house concerts<br />

up in northern Ontario around that date. I also plan to do a little bit of<br />

recording with a couple of bands that I am a part of, which is something<br />

that we had to wait to do until summer because all of us have<br />

been very busy throughout <strong>2016</strong>. In addition to singing for some<br />

enjoyable gigs, I am looking forward to a reduced teaching schedule so<br />

that I may enjoy some time with family and friends over the summer,<br />

as well as taking some time to myself so that I may do some songwriting<br />

and planning for 2017.”<br />

Hear her this summer: Butcher’s performs at the TD Newmarket<br />

Jazz+ Festival as part of the Sunday, July 31 lineup, at 3:30pm, in a set<br />

featuring songs from her debut album. Flip to our Green Pages (pages<br />

G1 to G10) in this issue to read up on what this festival, as well as 40<br />

others, have planned for the summer ahead.<br />

continues to page 90<br />

thewholenote.com June 1, <strong>2016</strong> - September 7, <strong>2016</strong> | 89

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