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Volume 23 Issue 4 - December 2017 / January 2018

In this issue: composer Nicole Lizée talks about her love for analogue equipment, and the music that “glitching” evokes; Richard Rose, artistic director at the Tarragon Theatre, gives us insights into their a rock-and-roll Hamlet, now entering production; Toronto prepares for a mini-revival of Schoenberg’s music, with three upcoming shows at New Music Concerts; and the local music theatre community remembers and celebrates the life and work of Mi’kmaq playwright and performer Cathy Elliott . These and other stories, in our double-issue December/January edition of the magazine.

In this issue: composer Nicole Lizée talks about her love for analogue equipment, and the music that “glitching” evokes; Richard Rose, artistic director at the Tarragon Theatre, gives us insights into their a rock-and-roll Hamlet, now entering production; Toronto prepares for a mini-revival of Schoenberg’s music, with three upcoming shows at New Music Concerts; and the local music theatre community remembers and celebrates the life and work of Mi’kmaq playwright and performer Cathy Elliott . These and other stories, in our double-issue December/January edition of the magazine.

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PRICELESS<br />

Vol <strong>23</strong> No 4<br />

DOUBLE ISSUE<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2017</strong> / JANUARY <strong>2018</strong><br />

CONCERT LISTINGS<br />

FEATURES | REVIEWS<br />

COVER STORY<br />

Artful Glitcher<br />

Nicole Lizée<br />

Q & A<br />

Richard Rose on<br />

Hamlet (the musical)<br />

DISCoveries<br />

Old Wine:<br />

On Bernstein<br />

Remastered<br />

Nicole Lizée


17.18 Music<br />

James Rolfe + Morris Panych<br />

the overcoat:<br />

a musical tailoring<br />

MAR 27- APR 14<br />

voices 3<br />

3 unique concert events<br />

musica nuda<br />

FEB 22-24<br />

fides krucker:<br />

in this body<br />

MAR 14-18<br />

tanya tagaq<br />

+ laakkuluk<br />

williamson<br />

bathory<br />

MAR 22-24<br />

Geoffrey Sirett (The Overcoat: A Musical Tailoring), photo: Dahlia Katz<br />

Njo Kong Kie +<br />

Folgaa Gang Project<br />

picnic in the<br />

cemetery<br />

APR 26-MAY 6<br />

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<strong>2017</strong>/18<br />

SEASON<br />

HANDEL<br />

MESSIAH<br />

Directed by Ivars Taurins<br />

Joanne Lunn soprano<br />

James Laing countertenor<br />

Rufus Müller tenor<br />

Brett Polegato baritone<br />

DEC 13–16, <strong>2017</strong> AT 7:30PM<br />

Tickets start at $39 for Toronto’s favourite<br />

holiday tradition! Seats selling quickly!<br />

SING-ALONG MESSIAH AT MASSEY HALL DIRECTED BY “HERR HANDEL” | DEC 17, <strong>2017</strong> AT 2PM<br />

WORLD<br />

PREMIERE!<br />

SAFE HAVEN<br />

A NEW PROGRAM FROM ALISON MACKAY<br />

DIRECTED BY ELISA CITTERIO<br />

JAN 18–21, <strong>2018</strong><br />

JEANNE LAMON HALL,<br />

TRINITY-ST. PAUL’S CENTRE<br />

JAN <strong>23</strong>, <strong>2018</strong><br />

GEORGE WESTON RECITAL HALL,<br />

TORONTO CENTRE FOR THE ARTS<br />

Featuring music from Vivaldi’s L’estro armonico, Telemann,<br />

Bach, and Vivaldi’s “Winter” from The Four Seasons.<br />

Production Sponsor<br />

Safe Haven is generously supported by The Pluralism Fund<br />

GWRH Series sponsored by<br />

tafelmusik.org


<strong>December</strong> 31 • 7:00 pm<br />

OPERA CANADA SYMPHONY • OPERA CANADA CHORUS<br />

Marco Guidarini, conductor<br />

Barbara Bargnesi<br />

soprano<br />

David Pomeroy<br />

tenor<br />

Carolyn Sproule<br />

mezzo-soprano<br />

Francesca Sassu<br />

soprano<br />

Carmen • Aida • La bohème • Turandot<br />

Massimo Cavalletti<br />

baritone<br />

Celebrate New Year’s at<br />

<strong>January</strong> 1 • 2:30 pm<br />

Strauss Symphony of Canada<br />

Niels Muus, conductor (Vienna)<br />

Lilla Galambos, soprano (Vienna)<br />

Thomas Weinhappel, baritone (Vienna)<br />

Featuring dancers from Kiev-Aniko Ballet of Ukraine &<br />

International Champion Ballroom Dancers<br />

European Singers,<br />

Ballroom Dancers, Ballet<br />

Enjoy Waltzes, Polkas & Operetta Excerpts<br />

Co-presented by Attila Glatz Concert Productions and Roy Thomson Hall.<br />

Artists subject to change without notice.<br />

Media Partner:<br />

Tickets: 416.872.4255 • roythomsonhall.com


PRICELESS<br />

Vol <strong>23</strong> No 4<br />

ON OUR COVER<br />

DOUBLE ISSUE<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2017</strong> / JANUARY <strong>2018</strong><br />

CONCERT LISTINGS<br />

FEATURES | REVIEWS<br />

COVER STORY<br />

Artful Glitcher<br />

Nicole Lizée<br />

Q & A<br />

Richard Rose on<br />

Hamlet (the musical)<br />

DISCoveries<br />

Old Wine:<br />

On Bernstein<br />

Remastered<br />

Nicole Lizée<br />

PHOTO: MURRAY LIGHTBURN<br />

<strong>Volume</strong> <strong>23</strong> No 4 | <strong>December</strong> & <strong>January</strong> <strong>2017</strong>/18<br />

The 2013 Lachine Canal Sessions - Reel-to-Real Photography<br />

The photo session took place in mid November 2013. Murray<br />

Lightburn – whose day job is fronting indie rock band The<br />

Dears – is also a great photographer and we share a love of<br />

analogue. He brought three or four of his vintage film cameras,<br />

including a Rolleiflex. I brought a few of my vintage machines<br />

in a large suitcase, including an AKAI reel-to-reel and an<br />

oscillator robot. Over the course of four hours we shot near<br />

the iconic lighthouse on the pier in the heart of Old Lachine. It<br />

was brutally cold and the wind was like a knife. I was standing<br />

directly on the rocks on the water’s edge wearing heels. The<br />

tape from the reels began blowing off the reel into the camera<br />

(making for some great shots), and then eventually all over<br />

Lachine. We got a few looks from passersby. And there are some<br />

outtakes of the session that capture my emotional state as I<br />

casually froze to death. — Nicky Lizée<br />

The Choir of<br />

the Church of St. Andrew<br />

and St. Paul presents<br />

LUX<br />

a collection<br />

of sacred songs<br />

FEATURES<br />

7 OPENER | Back to the<br />

Future | DAVID PERLMAN<br />

8 FEATURE | Artful Glitching:<br />

Nicole Lizée |<br />

WENDALYN BARTLEY<br />

12 QUESTIONS & ANSWERS |<br />

Rock and Rage: director<br />

Richard Rose |<br />

JENNIFER PARR<br />

14 FEATURE| Seminal<br />

Schoenberg: the Second<br />

Viennese School |<br />

DAVID JAEGER<br />

16 QUESTIONS & ANSWERS |<br />

Finding the Balance:<br />

pianist George Li |<br />

PAUL ENNIS<br />

70 REMEMBERING |<br />

Celebrating Cathy Elliott |<br />

JENNIFER PARR<br />

71 WE ARE ALL MUSIC’S<br />

CHILDEN | MJ BUELL<br />

91 DISCOVERIES | Old Wine:<br />

Bernstein Remastered |<br />

BRUCE SURTEES<br />

ACD2 2771<br />

O Come<br />

All Ye Faithful<br />

Once in Royal David’s City<br />

A Spotless Rose<br />

Lux Aurumqueand<br />

Just released!<br />

November 17, <strong>2017</strong><br />

92<br />

G R I G O R I A N . C O M


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Matthew Whitfield<br />

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BEAT BY BEAT<br />

18 Classical & Beyond |<br />

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21 Music Theatre | JENNIFER PARR<br />

22 In with the New |<br />

WENDALYN BARTLEY<br />

<strong>23</strong> Early Music |<br />

MATTHEW WHITFIELD<br />

25 On Opera | CHRISTOPHER HOILE<br />

27 Art of Song | LYDIA PEROVIĆ<br />

30 Choral Scene | BRIAN CHANG<br />

33 World View | ANDREW TIMAR<br />

35 Jazz Notes | STEVE WALLACE<br />

36 Bandstand | JACK MACQUARRIE<br />

LISTINGS<br />

39 A | Concerts in the GTA<br />

58 B | Concerts Beyond the GTA<br />

63 C | Music Theatre<br />

56 D | In the Clubs (Mostly Jazz)<br />

67 E | The ETCeteras<br />

33<br />

DISCOVERIES:<br />

RECORDINGS REVIEWED<br />

72 Editor’s Corner: DAVID OLDS<br />

74 Strings Attached:<br />

TERRY ROBBINS<br />

76 Keyed In: ALEX BARAN<br />

78 Vocal<br />

80 Classical and Beyond<br />

82 Modern and Contemporary<br />

83 Jazz and Improvised Music<br />

88 Pot Pourri<br />

89 Something in the Air |<br />

KEN WAXMAN<br />

91 Old Wine, New Bottles |<br />

BRUCE SURTEES<br />

MORE<br />

6 Contact Information<br />

7 Upcoming dates and<br />

deadlines<br />

69 Classified Ads<br />

6 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


FOR OPENERS | DAVID PERLMAN<br />

Back to<br />

the Future<br />

Sometimes the way I can tell that things are going well around<br />

here is by noticing how small, in the overall scheme of<br />

things, the things I am fretting about actually are. Like two<br />

days ago when I found myself agonizing about whether it would be<br />

more accurate, on the cover, to describe this two-month issue as<br />

“combined” or “double.” “Double,” I told myself, is how I think we<br />

have usually done it. But with the concert scene being significantly<br />

put on hold in the latter part of <strong>December</strong>, for Festivus or whatever<br />

you choose to call it, and the first couple of weeks of <strong>January</strong><br />

significantly dedicated to recovery, there isn’t double the amount of<br />

activity. “Combined” would be more accurate. I went searching for<br />

answers in our “rear view mirror” – the complete <strong>23</strong>-year flip-through<br />

archive of this publication on our website – to see what we’ve done<br />

in the past, all the way back to Vol 1 No 4 in <strong>December</strong> 1995. (Click on<br />

Previous <strong>Issue</strong>s under the “About” tab.)<br />

The results: “double” takes the prize by a long way, with “nothing<br />

in particular” a respectable second (as in the cover of Vol 1 No 4 illustrated<br />

here). “Combined” is almost nowhere to be found, except this<br />

time last year. (Things must have been going well for even longer than<br />

I thought!)<br />

There were three other things that I particularly noticed, as I flipped<br />

my way through the archive.<br />

First was how often the subjects of the covers of past Dec/Jan<br />

issues, especially the early ones, still crop up in our current coverage:<br />

Tafelmusik’s Ivars Taurins in his “Herr Handel” Massey Hall “Sing-<br />

Along Messiah” outfit (Vol 2); Val Kuinka, who will be stage-directing<br />

Highlands Opera Studio’s production of Andrew Balfour’s new opera<br />

Mishaabooz’s Realm this <strong>December</strong> (Vol 3); the Toronto Children’s<br />

Chorus (Vol 5) and mezzo Krisztina Szabó (Vol 7) who will appear<br />

together in the TCC’s concert “The Fire Within” <strong>December</strong> 16 at Roy<br />

Thomson Hall; Barbara Hannigan (Vol 6), just here in November<br />

for a Koerner art song recital, who dropped into her hometown in<br />

<strong>December</strong> 1999, fresh off her Lincoln Center debut, to see in Y2K as<br />

the Merry Widow for Toronto Operetta Theatre, whose New Year’s<br />

Day-straddling productions of light opera and operettas are a timehonoured<br />

fixture of the holiday season … The list goes on.<br />

Second, amusingly, was noticing the different ways the cover copy<br />

on these various issues riffs on the contrast, performance-wise,<br />

between <strong>December</strong> and <strong>January</strong>: “The Holiday Season and Its (Not-<br />

So) Flip Side”; “<strong>December</strong> Glitter, <strong>January</strong> Gold”; “To the Holidays and<br />

Beyond!”; and (my favourite), “Mid-Season Blip.”<br />

Third, and this is for you, whomever you may be: in analyzing the<br />

pattern of when we did and didn’t make an effort on the cover to call<br />

attention to the fact that it was a double issue, it seems that the years<br />

we made an extra effort (like the words DOUBLE ISSUE in 30-point<br />

type around a medallion of two-headed Janus) were right after years<br />

when we had made no effort at all. And that is because those were<br />

the years when you phoned me up to complain that it was already<br />

<strong>January</strong> 8 and your <strong>January</strong> WholeNote had still not arrived.<br />

It won’t this year either!<br />

The Rear View Mirror: The context for the headline on Vol 1 No 4,<br />

pictured here (still one of my favourites), is that it coincided with<br />

a time when funders of the arts (in particular the Ontario Arts<br />

Council) were reeling under the impact of the politics of the time.<br />

The “Common Sense Revolution” it was called. This year, for the first<br />

time in many years, we are seeing significant increases in funding to<br />

the OAC (increases that are being passed along). If it’s a sign that the<br />

value of the contribution that artists make to the wellbeing of Ontario,<br />

economically and in every other way, has been recognized, it’s a<br />

welcome sign indeed.<br />

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thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 7


COVER STORY: IN WITH THE NEW<br />

ARTFUL GLITCHING:<br />

Nicole Lizée WENDALYN BARTLEY<br />

STEVE RAEGALE<br />

MURRAY LIGHTBURN<br />

Each year at the<br />

University of Toronto’s<br />

New Music Festival,<br />

a composer is invited to<br />

be the Roger D. Moore<br />

Distinguished Visitor in<br />

Composition. This year the<br />

festival, which runs from<br />

<strong>January</strong> 21 to 28, will host<br />

Canadian composer, sound artist and keyboardist Nicole<br />

Lizée. I’ve been fascinated by Lizée’s unique approach to<br />

working with technology and instruments, so this felt<br />

like a perfect opportunity to learn more.<br />

One of the key features of her work is the use of what she calls<br />

“glitch.” In our recent interview she offered an inspiring description<br />

of her unique relationship to working with media-based technologies<br />

and what it is that fascinates her about malfunctioning machines.<br />

“I was born into that world. My father is an electronics repairman,<br />

salesman and collector who was always repairing or beta testing new<br />

technologies and devices. During the 1960s, 70s and 80s there was<br />

a lot of experimentation, and many of the machines didn’t always<br />

work at first. I grew to love these machines – the way they looked and<br />

smelled, as well as the sounds and visuals they would produce.”<br />

Lizée’s parents were huge fans of music, including classical,<br />

soundtracks and easy listening, and had an extensive LP collection. Old<br />

films were also a favourite, and she grew up watching films on video by<br />

Hitchcock, Kubrick and Bergman. “We would watch on repeat, repeat,<br />

repeat, and inevitably the tapes would melt or malfunction. This is<br />

when those movies became the most interesting to me. The version of<br />

The Sound of Music that I know is not the version most people know.”<br />

Lizée’s passion for both music and film led to a desire to merge<br />

these worlds. This, in combination with her strong emotional<br />

connection to the malfunctioning analogue technologies of her<br />

childhood, inspired her vision to bring this world into the concert hall<br />

and to mix it with live instrumental performers.<br />

The main source of fascination was the glitch – machines<br />

malfunctioning and not behaving as planned. “Analogue devices<br />

have a life beyond what they’re intended to do. They continue to live.<br />

The tapes would become chewed or worn down, but would still play<br />

back. Their material would then become altered and new rhythms<br />

would emerge.” She gives the example of a video game machine<br />

that would play, “but if you pushed a certain button in a particular<br />

way, something else that wasn’t supposed to happen would start<br />

happening. It was crazy – and like going into a portal. I wanted to<br />

capture those sounds and those visuals, and compose with that<br />

in mind. Capturing glitch means capturing the malfunction, the<br />

stuttering, the rhythms and sounds that would be produced.”<br />

8 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


Many of her works also use video, but not as accompaniment to<br />

the music – rather, the video becomes an instrument itself that the<br />

performer engages with in a synced-up dialogue. Even the glitches<br />

themselves become instruments.<br />

On the stage, Lizée uses both malfunctioning technologies such<br />

as reel to reel tape recorders and old synths, as well as “behaving<br />

ones” – usually performed on by others. The glitching devices are<br />

unpredictable, so she needs to perform with that in mind and often<br />

she has no idea what will happen with them. It requires keeping an<br />

open mind and working with whatever happens. Using such devices<br />

gives new colours such as hums and hisses, and even when they don't<br />

work properly, other things will be present. Despite the glitches, the<br />

analogue machines will always offer her something to work with.<br />

They won’t shut off or fail to function – unlike digital devices. “I have<br />

never come across an analogue device that completely shuts down. It<br />

may go crazy and be unpredictable in a concert, and sometimes there<br />

will be a malfunctioning cable, but it will never shut down. It just<br />

keeps going.”<br />

“I have never come across an analogue<br />

device that completely shuts down. It may<br />

go crazy … but it just keeps going.”<br />

CHRIS HUTCHESON<br />

What enables Lizée to use these glitch features in the composing<br />

process is the notation system she has devised. And she doesn’t<br />

just approximate the sound, but rather employs great precision<br />

to accurately translate what is occurring within the glitch. Using<br />

changing time signatures for example, rather than adjusting<br />

everything to regular 4/4 time, is one outcome of her approach.<br />

Spending years developing her transcription process was essential to<br />

developing her perspective on composing music.<br />

And yes, she admits, it is labour intensive, but “ultimately it has<br />

pushed me in many ways, and performers tell me repeatedly how<br />

it has made them play differently. They all have their stories and it’s<br />

extremely interesting to hear how their relationship to this element<br />

has pushed them. It taps into different emotions and requires a<br />

spot-on precision. The stops and starts, changing tempos, metres,<br />

volume extremes, this all requires a player to completely commit to<br />

delving into this world.”<br />

Working with glitch brings up emotions in players that are of a<br />

different order than usual. The glitch often creates a “forlorn and<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 9


WHAT’s NEW?<br />

In the New Year<br />

(and Previously Mentioned)<br />

STEVE RAEGALE<br />

plaintive sound which gets into the ears and head of the player. People<br />

tell me how they’ve gone through shock, fear and sadness, and that’s<br />

because of the source material and the way it is dealt with. It is being<br />

torn apart, hacked and taken into a different direction than originally<br />

intended.”<br />

At the U of T New Music Festival, Montreal’s Architek Percussion<br />

will be joining forces with Lizée’s ensemble SaskPwr on the evening<br />

of <strong>January</strong> 25 to perform selections from Lizée’s The Criterion<br />

Collection. These short works are an homage to both glitch and to her<br />

favourite film directors, Alfred Hitchcock and Stanley Kubrick. While<br />

watching these films growing up, “I was getting into the language<br />

and techniques of the director, but also while watching it, the tape<br />

was deteriorating and this whole other world was being created by<br />

the glitch and malfunction. The sound and image are completely<br />

synonymous and intertwined. When the glitch happens, it happens<br />

to both. The performance will be one hour long, nonstop. Everything<br />

will be live and synced, with heavily glitched scenes.”<br />

Another of her works, Malfunctionlieder, will be performed<br />

during the festival's noon concert on <strong>January</strong> 25. This piece was<br />

commissioned as a test piece for voice and piano for the <strong>2017</strong><br />

Eckhardt-Gramatté Competition, which is designed to encourage<br />

the performance of Canadian and contemporary music. Lizée’s piece<br />

includes an accompanying soundtrack and video and represents the<br />

first time in the history of the competition (which began in 1976)<br />

that the repertoire has included the worlds of both acoustic music<br />

and technology. This work also represents a more recent direction<br />

for Lizée – to write works for voice. Writing for the voice “opens up<br />

the possibility of a whole other world where the live human voice<br />

engages with the glitched characters on the screen as well as with the<br />

audience.”<br />

And finally, her work Isabella Blow at Somerset House will be<br />

performed on <strong>January</strong> 24 by the Cecilia String Quartet, who played the<br />

work earlier this year at the 21C Festival in May. Lizée wrote the piece<br />

as an acoustic representation of fashion designer Isabella Blow and<br />

what her impact on the fashion industry might sound like. If you are<br />

intrigued to experience more of Lizée’s fascinating work, I encourage<br />

you to attend not only the concerts, but also her composition<br />

masterclasses on <strong>January</strong> 24 and 26, and the composers’ forum on<br />

<strong>January</strong> <strong>23</strong>.<br />

The festival will also feature concerts from the Faculty of<br />

Music’s opera, chamber music and orchestra series, a night of<br />

improvising music from the jazz department and a concert devoted<br />

to electroacoustic music. In addition to Lizée’s Isabella Blow, the<br />

Karen Kieser Prize Concert on <strong>January</strong> 24 features Tyler Versluis’<br />

<strong>2017</strong> prizewinning work 3 Unuttered Miracles for accordion and<br />

percussion, along with past prize winner Riho Maimets’ Three<br />

Movements for Marimba.<br />

On <strong>January</strong> 26 in the Array Space on Walnut Ave., The<br />

Array Ensemble performs four new works by four Canadian<br />

composers: Rebecca Bruton (Calgary), Marielle Groven<br />

(Montréal), Stephen Parkinson (Toronto) and Holger Schoorl<br />

(Toronto). Bruton’s work happens in the intervening spaces<br />

between avant-pop, experimental chamber music and noise,<br />

and one of her current projects is co-creative producer of<br />

Tidal ~ Signal, a Vancouver-based festival dedicated to<br />

increasing representation of women and transgender artists<br />

within the fields of sound art and experimental music.<br />

Groven’s work draws on raw and emotionally charged<br />

sounds, with attention to connections between evocative<br />

human and instrumental sounds. Parkinson is a composer<br />

and performer with the Drystone Orchestra. His work,<br />

Desires Are Already Memories, is part of Arraymusic’s New<br />

World CD. Schoorl is a guitarist who is an active participant<br />

in Toronto’s improvisation community. The day following the<br />

concert, all four composers will re-gather and spontaneously<br />

compose together in various combinations.<br />

Many of early <strong>December</strong>’s events of new music were mentioned<br />

in my November column, including the “Urgent Voices” concert<br />

presented by Continuum Contemporary Music on <strong>December</strong> 8<br />

and 9 at the Daniels Spectrum Aki Studio, ...as well as New<br />

Music Concerts’ “Concertos” on <strong>December</strong> 3 at the National<br />

Ballet School’s Betty Oliphant Theatre.<br />

Upcoming New Music Concerts productions in the new<br />

year include “Kammerkonzert” on <strong>January</strong> 14 at the same<br />

venue, with a focus on music by the primary composers of<br />

the Second Viennese School, Arnold Schoenberg and Alban<br />

Berg. Michael Oesterle’s Chamber Concerto will also receive<br />

its world premiere there. Then on February 4, NMC presents<br />

Calgary’s Land’s End Ensemble at Gallery 345 on Sorauren<br />

Ave., performing compositions by Canadians Hope Lee, Sean<br />

Clarke and Matthew Ricketts. Anton Webern’s 1922 chamber<br />

arrangement of Schoenberg’s Kammersymphonie Op.9 will<br />

round out the program.<br />

And finally, the Music Gallery presents their first Emergents<br />

Concert of the season on <strong>December</strong> 7 at the the 918 Bathurst<br />

Centre for Culture, Arts, Media and Education, with four<br />

contemporary song cycles created as part of the Sounds Of<br />

Silence Initiative. After just one year, this initiative has brought<br />

together over 50 composers, poets and musicians to create new<br />

Canadian art song that tells the story of a diverse Canadian<br />

cultural identity, and supports, in particular, artists from<br />

Indigenous, immigrant, black, refugee and LGBT communities.<br />

For details on all these and other performances of interest,<br />

consult our comprehensive concert listings in this <strong>December</strong>-<br />

<strong>January</strong> double issue of the magazine, or online at<br />

thewholenote.com/just_ask, where you can filter the listings by<br />

genre to simplify your search.<br />

Wendalyn Bartley is a Toronto-based composer and electrovocal<br />

sound artist. sounddreaming@gmail.com.<br />

10 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


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ST. LAWRENCE QUARTET<br />

Thursday, February 1, <strong>2018</strong> at 8pm<br />

The Gryphon Trio add<br />

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GRYPHON TRIO<br />

Thursday, <strong>December</strong> 7, <strong>2017</strong> at 8pm<br />

A true polymath, both as a uniquely insightful<br />

concert pianist, and as a writer and composer<br />

STEPHEN HOUGH<br />

Tuesday, <strong>January</strong> <strong>23</strong>, <strong>2018</strong> at 8pm<br />

TICKETS: 416.366.77<strong>23</strong> | www.stlc.com<br />

27 Front Street East, Toronto


Q & A<br />

ROCK<br />

AND RAGE<br />

Richard Rose<br />

on Tarragon’s<br />

Hamlet<br />

COURTESY TARRAGON THEATRE<br />

JENNIFER PARR<br />

“<br />

Music Theatre” as we use the term in The WholeNote<br />

is a large tent, covering a wide range of<br />

productions and performances in which music<br />

pervades the drama rather than simply decorating it. It’s<br />

this interweaving that I will be hoping for in a new<br />

version of a Shakespearean classic opening at the<br />

Tarragon Theatre in Toronto on <strong>January</strong> 2. Artistic director<br />

Richard Rose is making a foray into new and uncharted<br />

(pun intended) territory with a rock and roll Hamlet,<br />

with music and music direction by his longtime<br />

collaborator Thomas Ryder Payne.<br />

As a longtime devotee of both Shakespeare and musicals, with<br />

a particular fascination for when the two become blended into<br />

one, I contacted Rose to find out more about the inspiration<br />

behind this idea and what we might expect.<br />

The show isn’t even in rehearsal yet, so it is early for the<br />

director to speak about what we will see in <strong>January</strong> – but in some<br />

ways it was even more interesting to have that conversation now,<br />

as the concept and its development are currently still in flux.<br />

Here is some of what we spoke about (edited for length):<br />

WN: What was the initial inspiration to turn Hamlet into a rock<br />

and roll musical?<br />

RR: I’ve always wanted to do Hamlet, and you want to find a great<br />

time to do it. It’s not really a rock and roll musical. It’s part concert,<br />

part radio play, part performance. I’m not sure where it will eventually<br />

land. I had an idea that it would be interesting to do Hamlet<br />

accompanied by a rock and roll concert. I didn’t really know what that<br />

would lead to except that the play always seemed to be about a young<br />

person’s despair and rage against the system, about trying to find out<br />

who they are. Hamlet is struggling between being a hero who can<br />

take action and his conscience: how do you act in the world when the<br />

world is actually politically corrupt?<br />

But why rock and roll particularly?<br />

Because of the rage. Marshall McLuhan talks about how young<br />

people have turned to rock and roll to push out all this information<br />

of the electronic age that is coming at them, and they’re shrieking,<br />

trying to express their identity – and that’s why it is so loud – to<br />

somehow express their anger – and that’s Hamlet, isn’t it? He is<br />

asking “Am I man of action or conscience? Can I kill someone, can<br />

I commit an act of revenge knowing that the society and the world<br />

around me is filled with lies? I have to do absolutely the right thing,<br />

but I don’t know what the right thing is.”<br />

If we have a world full of lies it is very hard to know who we are; here<br />

the music, the rock and roll, will be a fundamental way of showing the<br />

anger at the hypocrisy of the world and it goes further than that.<br />

You and Thomas Ryder Payne are longtime collaborators. But every<br />

show is different. How did it work this time?<br />

He was part of the project from the beginning and we both felt that<br />

Hamlet was the right fit for a rock and roll take, and rock and roll was<br />

the way to connect to young audiences today. In a preliminary workshop<br />

a rough concept emerged, of speaking the text against a musical<br />

background. Hamlet’s soliloquies, for example, got bashed against<br />

the progression of a rock and roll guitar accompaniment [capturing] a<br />

feeling of what Hamlet is going through as he speaks. Then we started<br />

to find and develop a sonic experience.<br />

12 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


Sonic experience?<br />

An environmental mood creating the overall time and space of the<br />

play, as well as for specific scenes and effects such as the appearance<br />

of the ghost – or the chaos of the Danish Court through a mashup<br />

of Tchaikovsky’s 1812 Overture with jazz and martial music. So,<br />

while this is not at all a traditional rock musical, music is essential<br />

and dictated the working method. We would jam like a rock band:<br />

someone comes up with a riff, someone starts to work with that riff,<br />

someone starts to sing a song to that riff or we speak to that riff.<br />

Where do the actors fit into the process?<br />

Call it ongoing experimentation – the company is not yet officially<br />

in rehearsal at this point. It’s things like the actors taking a different<br />

approach to the text, looking at the words as song lyrics from different<br />

genres such as punk, or from the points of view of singers as different<br />

as Mick Jagger, Frank Sinatra or Peggy Lee, to see what effect this has<br />

on the speaking or thinking of the lines.<br />

“If we have a world full of lies it is<br />

very hard to know who we are.”<br />

And actual songs?<br />

There will be at least some songs as well as the underscoring and<br />

background music. Hamlet will have a song of his own, though<br />

most of the soliloquies are spoken. The Gravedigger has a song as he<br />

actually does in the play. Hamlet and Ophelia’s relationship will be<br />

explored through music with Ophelia possibly singing snatches of<br />

her later “mad songs” as happy innocent pop songs early in the play,<br />

then distorted versions of those songs after the death of her father…<br />

And we’re seeing the play within the play, when Hamlet tries to prove<br />

Claudius' guilt, as a kind of mini-operetta, a heightened moment of<br />

performance for the other characters to watch…. Most of it though<br />

will be spoken against music rather than sung – [and while] there<br />

will be some elements of staging the performers will mostly be<br />

acting the play at microphones like a radio play, but supported by<br />

the sound behind that evokes the world, the inner life, and works<br />

with them.<br />

And the musicians?<br />

The actors themselves. Only two will not be singing or playing<br />

instruments: Nigel Shawn Williams as Claudius, and Tantoo Cardinal<br />

as Gertrude. All the others will be singing and playing instruments,<br />

with no additional musicians to back them up other than<br />

[composer and music director] Thomas Ryder Payne as live mixer<br />

and sound man.<br />

As Rose went on to explain, the company is comprised of actors<br />

who are almost all musicians as well. Noah Reid, whose album Songs<br />

from a Broken Chair is available on iTunes, stars as Hamlet. Brandon<br />

McGibbon of the ElastoCitizens, and many musical theatre credits<br />

including Once and The Producers, will play Laertes as a teenager so<br />

obsessed with his guitar that he never puts it down until his world<br />

falls apart with the death of his father and madness of his sister. Jack<br />

Nicholsen, Greg Gale, Jesse LaVercombe, Beau Dixon, Cliff Saunders,<br />

Rachel Cairns (the one piece of cross-gender casting as Rosencrantz)<br />

all have strong musical backgrounds, and Tiffany Ayalik, who plays<br />

Ophelia, has special vocal techniques from the discipline of throat<br />

singing “to go to places other people don’t go.”<br />

“To go to places other people don’t go” sounds like a fitting<br />

mission statement for this latest outing by an always adventurous<br />

theatrical team.<br />

Hamlet runs <strong>January</strong> 2 to February 11 in the Tarragon Main Space<br />

at 30 Bridgman Ave., Toronto.<br />

Jennifer Parr’s regular Music Theatre column appears elsewhere<br />

in this issue of The WholeNote.<br />

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thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 13


FEATURE<br />

SEMINAL<br />

SCHOENBERG<br />

A Mini-Revival of the<br />

Second Viennese School<br />

DAVID JAEGER<br />

Glenn Gould recording Schoenberg’s songs with Helen Vanni, 1964.<br />

DON HUNSTEIN<br />

Late in 1974, CBC Radio, in collaboration with writer/<br />

host Glenn Gould (1932-1982) and with me as<br />

producer, presented Arnold Schoenberg: The Man<br />

Who Changed Music, ten one-hour-long broadcasts<br />

honouring the centennial of the birth of composer<br />

Arnold Schoenberg (1874–1951).<br />

It was a comprehensive series of programs, and in the course of<br />

those ten episodes a great deal of Schoenberg’s music was heard,<br />

including the early Romantic works, the middle period, freely atonal<br />

pieces and the serial, 12-tone works of his late period. The inclusion of<br />

much of the Austrian/American composer’s piano music, as recorded<br />

by Gould himself, was a unique feature of the series. Gould’s script<br />

was written carefully and in a conversational style, for shared delivery<br />

between the CBC Radio staff announcer (or “sidekick,” as Gould at<br />

times called him), Ken Haslam (1930-2016) and Gould, the series host.<br />

The writing was clear, precise, with typical Gouldian exactitude. Every<br />

word was meant to count, even those words that appeared to express<br />

the personal opinions of Haslam, but which had clearly been placed<br />

in the script by Gould. And the point of all these words and music was<br />

to share as much of the Schoenberg legacy with CBC listeners as was<br />

possible within the allotted air time, and along the way, to demonstrate<br />

Gould’s devotion to it.<br />

In the tenth and final chapter of that series of broadcasts, and at<br />

precisely the right moment for summative comments about the ten<br />

programs, Gould says, “Even now, <strong>23</strong> years after his death, it’s extraordinarily<br />

difficult to effect any really balanced judgment about<br />

Schoenberg’s contribution. Though it’s not particularly difficult to<br />

find an axe to grind and with which one can whack away with.” And<br />

despite Gould’s own personal admiration for Schoenberg’s music, he<br />

doubted that the composer would ever become, as he termed it, “a<br />

household word.”<br />

Notwithstanding this assessment of the prospects for a wider<br />

acceptance of the music of Schoenberg and his students and disciples –<br />

the so-called Second Viennese School – people like flutist/composer<br />

Robert Aitken, the founder and artistic director of Toronto’s New<br />

Music Concerts (NMC), value it as an essential foundation of today’s<br />

music. And in fact, within the first eight weeks of <strong>2018</strong>, New Music<br />

Concerts’ programming will include Schoenberg’s Phantasy Op.47;<br />

his String Trio Op.45; the Chamber Symphony Op.9, in a quintet<br />

setting by Anton Webern (1883-1945); and Alban Berg’s (1885-1935)<br />

Chamber Concerto. A newly commissioned Chamber Concerto by<br />

Montreal composer Michael Oesterle (b. 1968), which uses the identical<br />

chamber orchestra as Berg’s concerto, will reflect the entire<br />

collection in the light of the present.<br />

I asked Aitken what prompted him to create, in effect, a mini-revival<br />

of the Second Viennese School in New Music Concerts’ programming<br />

for <strong>2018</strong>. He told me that the desire to include this repertoire is always<br />

a factor in his thinking, and that it has been so ever since he studied<br />

composition with John Weinzweig in the early 1960s. Weinzweig<br />

taught the 12-tone, or serial, technique of composing that Schoenberg<br />

had devised and introduced in 1921. Aitken told me that one of the<br />

aspects of Schoenberg’s music he admires is that, even given the<br />

Robert Aitken<br />

© DANIEL FOLEY<br />

14 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


frequent complexity of the counterpoint, the clarity of the music is<br />

never an issue. Aitken says that clarity and attention to every minute<br />

detail are also important values in his own compositions, musing that<br />

such attention to detail is a Virgo trait. (He and Schoenberg are both<br />

Virgos, as was Schoenberg’s student, John Cage (1912-1992).)<br />

New Music Concerts’ three-concert Schoenbergian revival kicks<br />

off at the Betty Oliphant Theatre at 8pm on Sunday, <strong>January</strong> 14,<br />

with a program featuring the Chicago-based Duo Diorama, violinist<br />

MingHuan Xu and Winston Choi, piano, performing the Schoenberg<br />

Phantasy Op. 47, and as the soloists in the chamber concertos of<br />

Alban Berg and Michael<br />

Oesterle. In that tenth<br />

and final centennial<br />

broadcast in the CBC’s<br />

1974 Gould/Schoenberg<br />

series, Gould said of the<br />

Phantasy, composed<br />

in 1949, and one of<br />

Schoenberg’s last<br />

completed works: “I<br />

Michael<br />

Oesterle<br />

still think it’s full of<br />

uneasy mixtures of<br />

Brahms and Wagner:<br />

you know, expressionistic violin lines, soaring, diving, equally expressionistic<br />

harmonics within a relatively four-squarish sentence structure.”<br />

Gould himself recorded the Phantasy with violinist Israel Baker<br />

in 1964 for Columbia Records.<br />

The idea to commission the Chamber Concerto by Oesterle sprang<br />

from the shared enthusiasm by Aitken, Oesterle and Daniel Cooper,<br />

an enthusiastic NMC supporter, for the Berg Chamber Concerto for<br />

piano, violin and 13 winds (19<strong>23</strong>-1925). Oesterle’s concerto has the<br />

same instrumental forces as the Berg, and it will receive its world<br />

premiere on the <strong>January</strong> 14 concert. The Berg Chamber Concerto will<br />

complete the program. Aitken will conduct the NMC ensemble, with<br />

Duo Diorama as soloists.<br />

Three weeks later, on February 4, at Gallery 345, NMC will present<br />

a 19<strong>23</strong> Anton Webern arrangement of Schoenberg’s Chamber<br />

Symphony No. 1 Op. 9 (1906). The Calgary-based Land’s End<br />

Ensemble will be joined by Aitken on flute and clarinetist James<br />

Campbell for this quintet version of one of Schoenberg’s more<br />

frequently arranged works. Schoenberg himself arranged the piece<br />

twice, for both smaller and larger forces. Berg made an arrangement<br />

for two pianos, and Webern’s arrangement itself exists in two versions.<br />

Land’s End Ensemble will also perform trios by Canadians Sean Clarke<br />

(b. 1983), Hope Lee (b. 1953) and Matthew Ricketts (b. 1986).<br />

It’s extraordinarily difficult to effect any<br />

really balanced judgment about Schoenberg’s<br />

contribution ... It’s not particularly difficult to<br />

find an axe to grind. — Glenn Gould<br />

Finally, three weeks later on February 25, at 8pm at Gallery 345,<br />

NMC will present another late work by Schoenberg: his String Trio<br />

Op. 45 (1946), in a performance by Trio Arkel, along with a program<br />

of trios by Krzysztof Penderecki (b. 1933), Kaija Saariaho (b. 1952)<br />

and James Rolfe (b. 1961). The concert will be preceded at 6:30pm<br />

by a screening of the Larry Weinstein film, My War Years: Arnold<br />

Schoenberg.<br />

Perhaps by the end of this sequence of three concerts, it will be<br />

revealed that any doubts about the value of Schoenberg’s contribution<br />

have, by now, diminished or even vanished altogether – and that,<br />

if not yet in Gould’s phrase “a household word,” Schoenberg is at very<br />

least a welcome and engaging house guest.<br />

David Jaeger is a composer, producer<br />

and broadcaster based in Toronto.<br />

<strong>2017</strong>.<strong>2018</strong><br />

SEASON HIGHLIGHTS<br />

New Music Festival<br />

With Canadian composer, sound artist and keyboardist Nicole Lizée.<br />

Chamber Music<br />

Musicians from Marlboro, Cecilia String Quartet with Patricia Parr, and<br />

Krisztina Szabó, Christopher Enns and Steven Philcox in The Artist’s Life<br />

Through Song.<br />

Choirs in Concert and Early Music<br />

Sing and Rejoice!, In High Voice, Music for a Sunday Afternoon,<br />

Cherubini’s Requiem with the UofT Symphony Orchestra,<br />

The Tallis Scholars, and Mozart’s Requiem.<br />

Thursdays at Noon<br />

Beverley Johnston, Timothy Ying, Lydia Wong and Teng Li, Music and<br />

Poetry, Rob MacDonald, Rudin Lengo, Simona Genga, and Asher Ian<br />

Armstrong and Emily Kruspe.<br />

Visitors<br />

George E. Lewis, Johannes Debus, Howard Shore, John Hess, Ineke<br />

Vandoorn and Marc van Vugt, and Renee Rosnes.<br />

For complete <strong>2017</strong>-<strong>2018</strong> listings visit music.utoronto.ca. Tickets: 416.408.0208<br />

The Faculty of Music gratefully acknowledges the generous support of our presenting sponsors:<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 15


Q & A<br />

FINDING<br />

THE BALANCE<br />

PIANIST<br />

GEORGE LI<br />

PAUL ENNIS<br />

The 2015 International Tchaikovsky Competition<br />

produced a motherlode of talent, sparking concert<br />

careers by each of its top four prizewinners. This past<br />

March, Show One Productions brought gold medallist<br />

Dmitry Masleev to Koerner Hall; on February 4 they will<br />

complete the Koerner circle with George Li’s recital there.<br />

Boston-born Li – the son of Chinese immigrants – shared<br />

second place with Lithuanian-Russian pianist Lukas<br />

Geniušas, whom Show One presented in a memorable<br />

2016 Koerner Hall concert with fourth-place winner<br />

Lucas Debargue of France.<br />

A student of English Literature at Harvard now in his fourth year,<br />

Li explained in an email exchange with me in mid-November that<br />

his non-musical studies have affected his approach and led to a<br />

deeper understanding of the music he plays, echoing what he told the<br />

Harvard Gazette in September 2016: “With music, there’s a balancing<br />

of different qualities and you have to have control and finesse and<br />

technique. There’s always a fine line between too much control and<br />

technique with being overly emotional, overindulgent. With literature,<br />

it’s not always an outpouring of emotion. It never goes overboard. It’s<br />

on the cusp of going overboard, but it never does.”<br />

Elsewhere in this issue in his Editor’s Corner, DISCoveries editor<br />

David Olds calls Li a “fabulous young performer” in his review of Li’s<br />

debut CD, Live at the Mariinsky.<br />

WN: How important a role did music play in your home<br />

growing up?<br />

GL: It was definitely a big part of my life ever since I was little. I was<br />

always surrounded by music, whether it be listening to the classical<br />

CANZONA<br />

THE MUSIC SPEAKS<br />

SUN DEC 3 - ISLAND |<br />

MON DEC 4 - CITY<br />

A collaboration of musicians<br />

from the Toronto Symphony<br />

Orchestra and the National<br />

Arts Centre Orchestra.<br />

Mendelssohn’s miraculous<br />

String Octet in E Flat Major<br />

Opus 20 and Brahms’s first<br />

string sextet, Opus 18.<br />

SAT JAN 27 - CITY |<br />

SUN JAN 28 - ISLAND<br />

TRIO INK<br />

Yosuke Kawasaki, violin;<br />

Wolfram Koessel, cello; and<br />

Vadim Serebryany, piano;<br />

play works by Schumann,<br />

Brahms, and Shostakovich.<br />

<strong>2017</strong>-18<br />

CHAMBER MUSIC<br />

SERIES<br />

ON TORONTO<br />

ISLAND at St Andrew<br />

by the Lake Church:<br />

2pm, brunch at 12:30,<br />

by reservation.<br />

IN THE CITY<br />

at St. George the Martyr<br />

Anglican Church,<br />

197 John St., Toronto.<br />

7:30pm<br />

UPCOMING CONCERTS:<br />

FEB 25/26, MAR 18/19, APR 15/16, MAY 27/28<br />

SINGLE CONCERT TICKETS $25<br />

SEASON TICKETS $150<br />

With brunch (Island concerts only):<br />

$45 (single concert) $270 (season)<br />

reservations@canzona.org 416-822-0613<br />

SIMON FOWLER<br />

16 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> 18 thewholenote.com


adio station, going to concerts to hear the BSO, or recitals in Boston,<br />

or listening to my sister practise.<br />

How did you come to start playing the piano? How old were you?<br />

I started when I was about four years old, and much of how and<br />

why I started was due to the things that I mentioned above. Because<br />

music played such a big part in my life from a young age, it almost<br />

became inevitable that I would try it out, and I haven’t stopped since!<br />

Who was the first composer you fell in love with as a child?<br />

I remember becoming obsessed with the Moonlight Sonata for a<br />

period of time, as well as Prokofiev’s Concerto No. 3, so I suppose<br />

Beethoven and Prokofiev.<br />

Who were your musical heroes in your formative years?<br />

When I was in my teens, I listened quite a bit to pianists in the<br />

Golden Age of playing, so I really idolized Cortot, Horowitz, Gilels<br />

and Richter. I also started listening to a lot of orchestral music, so<br />

conductors like Abbado and Kleiber gave me great inspiration as well.<br />

“I connect especially with Horowitz,<br />

because of his magical abilities with<br />

the piano; the amount of colour and<br />

character in his playing is astounding,<br />

and he’s also unafraid of taking risks.”<br />

Do you feel a particular kinship to any pianist (or musician)<br />

living or dead?<br />

I connect especially with Horowitz, because of his magical abilities<br />

with the piano; the amount of colour and character in his playing is<br />

astounding, and he’s also unafraid of taking risks.<br />

When did you feel that you would devote your life to music?<br />

I think I started realizing that I would fully immerse myself in music<br />

when I was 12 or 13. It was actually at a concert I was playing then<br />

when I realized how powerful music is, and what a transformative<br />

experience it was to be able to perform onstage. Since that concert, I<br />

decided I would fully dedicate myself to music.<br />

Your upcoming Toronto recital mirrors your first CD, Live at the<br />

Mariinsky. What went into choosing the repertoire for it?<br />

There were several reasons, but the most important for me was that<br />

I felt that there was a strong arc throughout the program. Although<br />

each piece is of a totally different style and from a different period,<br />

there is also a fluidity throughout; each piece flows naturally into the<br />

next in terms of tone and character. For example, in the first half of<br />

the CD, the Haydn sonata – which contains a nuanced tinge of darkness<br />

and tragedy – flows quite naturally into the turbulent, dramatic<br />

tragedy that is the Chopin Sonata No.2.<br />

You concluded the program of your Toronto debut with Music<br />

Toronto in <strong>December</strong> 2012 with the Liszt Consolation No.3 and<br />

Hungarian Rhapsody No.2, both of which also conclude your first<br />

CD and Koerner Hall concert. What is the attraction these pieces<br />

have for you and how has your approach to them evolved over<br />

the years?<br />

Liszt has been a favourite composer of mine throughout the years,<br />

and these two pieces especially have been a part of me for a long time.<br />

I especially appreciate that Wagnerian drama and the operatic references<br />

that he often implements, and while we don’t exactly hear<br />

Wagner in the Rhapsody, I nonetheless try to highlight the drama and<br />

the variety of colours that I do hear throughout the piece.<br />

Are there any particular pieces, orchestral or chamber, that never<br />

grow stale for you?<br />

Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony, Mahler’s Second Symphony and<br />

quite recently Debussy’s Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune have been<br />

a few of the orchestral pieces that I’ve been listening to incessantly.<br />

Paul Ennis is the managing editor of The WholeNote.<br />

the <strong>2018</strong> SeaSon<br />

The Splendour of<br />

noTre dame<br />

organist DaviD Briggs<br />

in concert with the choir of st James catheDral<br />

Friday, <strong>January</strong> 19, <strong>2018</strong><br />

8:00pm | An illustrated pre-concert talk with David Briggs begins at 7:00pm<br />

a celebration oF French repertoire including “Messe Salve<br />

Regina” by castagnet, “Messe Solennelle” by Vierne, and motets by Duruflé.<br />

For tickets and further information, visit stjamescathedral.ca<br />

65 ChurCh STreeT, ToronTo 416.364.7865 STjameSCaThedral.Ca<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 17


Beat by Beat | Classical & Beyond<br />

A Winter Festival<br />

PAUL ENNIS<br />

The extra coverage in this double issue of The WholeNote has<br />

prompted me to consider its entire nine-plus weeks of listings as<br />

fodder for constructing my personal musical winter wonderland.<br />

You are welcome to come along for the ride!<br />

On thewholenote.com I find the LISTINGS tab and click on the<br />

indispensable JustASK feature. It’s early in planning my journey so I<br />

opt to see the entire listings for the first week in <strong>December</strong>. (Later in<br />

my wanderings, to refine my search I may<br />

choose to JustASK specifically for chamber<br />

music or piano.) In this case, I decide on a<br />

free RCM event, pianist Francine Kay in a<br />

Sunday Interludes recital at Mazzoleni Hall<br />

on <strong>December</strong> 3. Chopin’s Barcarolle has<br />

always been a personal favourite and its<br />

rolling rhythms will get my festive juices<br />

running. Besides, the eminent Princeton<br />

University faculty member (and Analekta<br />

recording artist) will be giving two masterclasses<br />

the following Friday in the same<br />

space. Depending on what the students will<br />

be playing, I may sit in.<br />

My next stop brings me to Koerner<br />

Hall on <strong>December</strong> 5 for a concert I wrote<br />

about in the November WholeNote:<br />

Messiaen’s Quartet for the End of Time, a<br />

20th-century touchstone, played by some<br />

of the newest stars in Europe’s musical<br />

firmament. I have high hopes for pianist<br />

Lucas Debargue, violinist Janine Jansen,<br />

cellist Torleif Thedéen and clarinetist<br />

Martin Fröst. Next stop, <strong>December</strong> 10 (and<br />

I still haven’t budged from Bloor Street)<br />

I’m looking forward to the return of Khatia<br />

Buniatishvili. This time she’s opening with<br />

Mussorgsky’s majestic and intricate Pictures at an Exhibition before<br />

moving on to Liszt showpieces. (And while I’m waiting, there’s the<br />

Rebanks Family Fellowship concert <strong>December</strong> 6 in Mazzoleni Hall,<br />

where young musicians on the cusp of professional careers display<br />

their craft.)<br />

Sorry to say, you’ll have to JustASK for yourself for the balance of<br />

<strong>December</strong>. That’s because my annual visit to longtime friends in the<br />

cabin they built themselves in the middle of a hundred-acre wood<br />

will take me through the month. A festive Christmas feast of turkey<br />

and trimmings baked in a wood stove will serve all of us well while a<br />

curious, sociable parrot provides live entertainment.<br />

<strong>January</strong> 4 and 6, Ryan Wang: When Ryan Wang was five years old<br />

he performed at Carnegie Hall in the American Protégé International<br />

Piano and Strings Competition. A charming child with no pretentious<br />

airs, his celebrity shone soon after, in his first appearance on The Ellen<br />

Show. When not playing a concerto with the Shanghai Symphony,<br />

for example, he enjoys biking, road hockey and Harry Potter in West<br />

Vancouver. In a YouTube video made last year, he talks about being a<br />

piano prodigy who began playing when he was four. “Kids in school<br />

think I’m just a famous pianist,” he says unabashedly. “But I’m just an<br />

ordinary kid.” He calls Harry Potter his hero “because he’s brave. And<br />

if you’re brave, you can overcome anything … Sometimes life is really<br />

challenging, but I never give up and never lose hope.”<br />

Martha Argerich debuted at four, Claudio Arrau at five. Ryan Wang<br />

at ten has been on the stage for half his life. The Li Delun Music<br />

Foundation presents him on <strong>January</strong> 4 at the Fairview Library Theatre<br />

in recital playing Bach’s French Suite No.6 – his Bach on YouTube<br />

is refreshingly without any affect – a Haydn sonata, a Poulenc<br />

Villageoise, Debussy’s Arabesque No.1, the two Chopin Waltzes Op.64<br />

and a Bartók Romanian Dance. An excursion to North York may be<br />

a New Year’s resolution worth keeping. Two days later, <strong>January</strong> 6,<br />

Wang is the soloist in Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No.2 with the<br />

Toronto Festival Orchestra conducted by Dongxiao Xu in the Li Delun<br />

Music Foundation’s “New Year’s Concert <strong>2018</strong>” at the George Weston<br />

Recital Hall.<br />

<strong>January</strong> 7, Rachel Barton Pine: She began learning the violin at<br />

three; at five she “self-identified as a violinist.” At ten, she performed<br />

with her hometown band, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra; at 17,<br />

she won the Bach International Competition in Leipzig, Germany.<br />

At 20, her violin case straps caught in the closing doors of a Chicago<br />

commuter train; the accident cost her part of a leg and mangled a<br />

foot. Her determination and discipline from her years of violin study<br />

brought her all the way back musically.<br />

On <strong>January</strong> 7, she performs the first<br />

Adrian Anantawan<br />

Sunday Interludes concert of the year in<br />

Mazzoleni Hall.<br />

<strong>January</strong> 10 to 21, Mozart @ 262: I’m back<br />

on Bloor again for some of this next part<br />

of my private winter festival. I am about to<br />

come face to face with the TSO’s Mozart<br />

@ 262 Festival that begins <strong>January</strong> 10; it<br />

will be the TSO’s 14th annual celebration<br />

of that prodigy’s genius, and the final one<br />

with Peter Oundjian (the festival’s creator)<br />

as TSO music director. Roy Thomson Hall<br />

(three performances), Koerner Hall (two)<br />

and the George Weston Recital Hall (one)<br />

will all be involved. On <strong>January</strong> 17 and 18<br />

concertmaster Jonathan Crow and principal<br />

violist Teng Li will be the soloists in<br />

Mozart’s Sinfonia Concertante for violin<br />

and viola K364/320d in what might very<br />

well be the single highlight of the festival.<br />

Oundjian’s sole conducting gig, however<br />

(<strong>January</strong> 19 to 21), is the one program I’m<br />

most focused on, though (and the only<br />

one that’s in all three venues). Anchored<br />

by Mozart’s exhilarating final symphony,<br />

No.41 in C Major “Jupiter,” the concert showcases two talented young<br />

Canadian artists. Charles Richard-Hamelin will weave his colouristic<br />

alchemy in the Piano Concerto No.<strong>23</strong> in A Major K488 – the understated<br />

grandeur of its Adagio served as the main theme of Terrence<br />

Malick’s film The New World, underscoring the pristine beauty of<br />

its first act. And Adrian Anantawan will be the soloist in the Rondo<br />

for violin and orchestra K250/248b “Haffner,” and the Adagio for<br />

violin and orchestra K261. Anantawan, who grew up in Toronto, was<br />

born with no right hand, only a stunted appendage with tiny stubs<br />

instead of fingers. At nine he took up the violin, which proved to be a<br />

great equalizer for him. Needless to say, it changed his life. Now in his<br />

early 30s, he works with cutting-edge technology to help others; he’s<br />

also given a TED Talk. He told CNN in 2013 that “it’s never about the<br />

technique or technology that is important, but the desire to live life<br />

authentically and creatively. We often forget even ‘traditional’ musical<br />

instruments are technological adaptations in their own right – they<br />

are tools to manipulate sound in a way that we couldn’t do with our<br />

bodies alone.”<br />

<strong>January</strong> 11, Brentano and Dawn Upshaw: I plan on abandoning<br />

Mozart to take advantage of a rare opportunity to hear Schoenberg’s<br />

pivotal String Quartet No.2 when Music Toronto presents the Brentano<br />

String Quartet and soprano Dawn Upshaw in the Jane Mallett Theatre.<br />

Completed in 1908, the quartet’s extreme late-Romanticism loses<br />

its harmonic bearings by its final movement, a change that can be<br />

considered the beginning of atonal music. The third and fourth movements<br />

are settings of poems by the symbolist poet Stefan George.<br />

Alex Ross in The Rest Is Noise talks about the extraordinary moment<br />

18 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


in the fourth movement when the soprano sings the line I feel the<br />

wind of another planet and then the “transformation,” I dissolve in<br />

tones, circling, weaving … The Schoenberg is preceded by Respighi’s<br />

intimate, lyrical setting of Shelley’s Il Tramonto. Before intermission,<br />

the Brentano (without Upshaw) will interweave Webern Bagatelles<br />

with Schubert Minuets before performing Argentine-American Mario<br />

Davidovsky’s String Quartet No.4 (1980), a piece I look forward to<br />

hearing for the first time.<br />

The next morning, <strong>January</strong> 12 at 10am, Upshaw will give a masterclass<br />

in Mazzoleni Hall. I’ve marked my calendar. Maybe I should just<br />

move to Bloor Street!<br />

Sunday, <strong>January</strong> 14, David Jalbert and Wonny Song: these two toprank<br />

Canadian pianists return to U of T’s Walter Hall and Mooredale<br />

Concerts following their acclaimed 2014 appearance there, for “Piano<br />

Dialogue,” a program inspired by dance, theatre and visual art.<br />

Rachmaninoff’s Suite No.1 for two pianos and his four-hand arrangement<br />

of Tchaikovsky’s Sleeping Beauty Waltz share the stage with<br />

Milhaud’s Scaramouche Suite for Two Pianos and Stravinsky’s kinetic<br />

Petrouchka, also for two pianos. Elsewhere in this issue Alex Baran<br />

writes in his DISCoveries Keyed In column about Jalbert’s latest CD<br />

of music connected to what Jalbert and Song are playing in their<br />

recital: “[The CD] shows why he’s considered one of the younger<br />

generation’s finest pianists. His performance of Dance russe from<br />

Petrouchka explodes into being with astonishing speed and alacrity.<br />

Jalbert possesses a sweeping technique that exudes ease and persuasive<br />

conviction.”<br />

Glionna Mansell Presents<br />

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Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Jurgis Juozapaitis,<br />

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February 26, <strong>2018</strong>, 7:30 p.m.<br />

La Malinconia – Reflections on<br />

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Ludwig van Beethoven, Dmitri Shostakovich,<br />

Johannes Brahms<br />

March 26, <strong>2018</strong>, 7:30 p.m.<br />

The Companion’s Guide to Rome<br />

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, François Devienne,<br />

Andrew Norman<br />

April <strong>23</strong>, <strong>2018</strong>, 7:30 p.m.<br />

Taste of Dark Chocolate<br />

Franz Schubert, Johannes Brahms<br />

May 28, <strong>2018</strong>, 7:30 p.m.<br />

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thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 19


<strong>January</strong> <strong>23</strong>, Stephen Hough: In October 2016 the brilliant British<br />

pianist Stephen Hough revealed on BBC Radio 4’s Desert Island DIscs that<br />

he discovered he liked playing the piano when he went to visit his aunt’s<br />

house and could pick out more than one hundred nursery rhymes on her<br />

piano. After much pestering, his parents bought him a cheap second-hand<br />

piano from an antique shop. So began the storied career of this polymath,<br />

whose first novel, The Final Retreat, is to be published in March <strong>2018</strong>. On<br />

<strong>January</strong> <strong>23</strong>, he makes his fourth appearance for Music Toronto since 1996<br />

with a program mixing four Debussy works (two of which, Images Bk 1<br />

and II, appear on his latest Hyperion CD, anticipating the centenary of the<br />

composer’s death in 1918) with Schumann’s rapturous Fantasie Op.17 and<br />

Beethoven’s colossal Sonata in F Minor, Op.67, “Appassionata.” The next<br />

morning, Hough will make the trek north to Mazzoleni Hall for a public<br />

masterclass. Having been to two of these, I have no doubt it will be an<br />

insightful and inspirational experience.<br />

<strong>January</strong> 27, the Dover Quartet: The Dovers came to wide attention in<br />

2013 when they won the Banff International String Quartet Competition. I<br />

wrote about their memorable Beethoven concert at Toronto Summer Music<br />

in 2016: “Musically mature, vibrant and uncannily unified in purpose and<br />

execution, the youthful players brought passion and grace to the first two<br />

movements [of Op.132], took a decisive approach to the fourth and emphasized<br />

the rhapsodic character of the finale.” Chamber Music Hamilton, a<br />

top-flight regional series, is presenting the young Americans in a recital<br />

of Schumann’s Second, Ullmann’s Third and Zemlinsky’s Second String<br />

Quartets, Sunday <strong>January</strong> 27 at 2pm at the Art Gallery of Hamilton.<br />

<strong>January</strong> 30, RCM and Hot Docs Ted Rogers Cinema (although<br />

the name has changed, the address remains Bloor Street) present<br />

Stefan Avalos’ compulsively watchable Strad Style, a film I saw at<br />

Hot Docs <strong>2017</strong>. The documentary chronicles the improbable but<br />

triumphant story of a reclusive Ohio violin maker, Daniel Houck,<br />

whose confidence that he can produce a copy of “Il Canone,” the<br />

Guarneri violin built in 1742 that Paganini played, carries him through<br />

an eight-month journey that threatens to be derailed more than once.<br />

A violin aficionado who loves listening to old masters like Oistrakh<br />

and Heifetz and idolizes violin makers Amati, Guarneri and Stradivari<br />

– all from Cremona, Italy – Houck suffers from bipolar disorder but<br />

functions with medication. He befriends Razvan Stoica on Facebook<br />

when he discovers the Romanian-born violinist has won the Strad<br />

Prize at a Salzburg festival and offers to make him the Canone replica.<br />

There is magic stuff here.<br />

After the screening Jonathan Crow will bring out his own Guarneri<br />

for what promises to be a fascinating show-and-tell Q&A. And that’s<br />

why I’ll be there.<br />

And on into February: The astounding young pianist Daniil Trifonov<br />

continues his homage-to-Chopin tour February 1, with a sold-out<br />

concert at Koerner Hall. I’m lucky to have a ticket but unlucky to miss<br />

the St. Lawrence String Quartet’s annual Music Toronto visit the same<br />

evening. Fortunately I can attend the SLSQ’s masterclass in Mazzoleni<br />

Hall the next day at 10am.<br />

In 2008, clarinetist Dionysis Grammenos became the first wind<br />

player ever to be named European Young Musician of the Year. Two<br />

years later at 21, having been guided by Bernard Haitink, Christoph<br />

Eschenbach and Robert Spano, he made his conducting debut with<br />

the Vienna Chamber Orchestra. Johannes Debus hired him as assistant<br />

conductor for the COC’s <strong>2018</strong> production of Mozart’s Abduction from<br />

the Seraglio February 7 to 24. “You find in him a musician who exudes<br />

an enthusiasm for music from every single pore and who equally has<br />

the talent to communicate and share his enthusiasm and euphoria<br />

with others – no matter if it’s about an audience or fellow musicians,”<br />

Debus says. Grammenos’ appearance at noon on February 7 in<br />

the Richard Bradshaw Amphitheatre with Ensemble Made in Canada<br />

(they will perform Brahms’ late masterpiece, the sublime Clarinet<br />

Quintet in B Minor Op.115) is the last stop in my winter festival.<br />

Given the abundance of live music available to all of us in the<br />

Toronto area, there’s an ad hoc personal winter festival out there for<br />

the making for every musical taste. How? JustASK.<br />

Paul Ennis is the managing editor of The WholeNote.<br />

DENIS MASTROMONACO<br />

MUSIC DIRECTOR &<br />

C O N D U C T O R<br />

20 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


Beat by Beat | Music Theatre<br />

Multi-Layered<br />

Homecoming<br />

for Tale of a Town<br />

JENNIFER PARR<br />

November is almost over and two shows<br />

stood out for me recently: The Musical<br />

Stage Company’s Uncovered: Dylan &<br />

Springsteen with its brilliant storytelling through<br />

song, and the wild and wacky low-budget<br />

silliness of Christopher Bond’s Evil Dead,<br />

the Musical – an incredibly clever tribute to<br />

and parody of musicals, low-budget horror<br />

movies and Sam Raimi’s Evil Dead franchise in<br />

particular. (Good news is that the latter show’s<br />

run has just been extended to <strong>January</strong> 7.)<br />

Looking ahead to <strong>December</strong> there is a wealth<br />

of music theatre on offer. With the holiday<br />

season approaching, there are many familyoriented<br />

shows, including at least three versions<br />

of A Christmas Carol in which music is integral<br />

to the story and production. Ross Petty<br />

Productions gives us its usual anarchic take on<br />

a classic through the prism of the traditional<br />

English panto. At the Grand Theatre in London,<br />

new artistic director Dennis Garnhum is introducing<br />

himself to audiences through his own<br />

acclaimed version of Dickens’ classic, described<br />

as “brimming with music, dance, and ... all of<br />

your favourite carols.” And the Shaw Festival is<br />

joining the fray, with what I believe is their first Christmas season, in<br />

a production adapted and directed by new artistic director Tim Carroll<br />

with music direction by Paul Sportelli, movement and puppetry<br />

by Alexis Milligan, and as Scrooge, Michael Therriault, star of last<br />

season’s Me and My Girl.<br />

The Tale of a Town<br />

In and among Toronto’s rich smorgasbord of music theatre offerings<br />

to choose from, many of them not tied specifically to the season,<br />

two in particular (one in <strong>December</strong>, one in <strong>January</strong>) caught my eye<br />

because of their unusual – in different ways – weaving of music with<br />

text-based elements.<br />

The second of the two, chronologically, is the Tarragon Theatre’s<br />

rock-and-roll Hamlet commencing <strong>January</strong> 2. (You can read my interview<br />

with director Richard Rose elsewhere in the issue.)<br />

The other is Fixt Point’s production of The Tale of a Town, the<br />

creation of husband-and-wife duo Charles Ketchabaw and Lisa<br />

Marie DiLiberto which returns to its starting place at Theatre Passe<br />

Muraille, <strong>December</strong> 14 to 17. Since the show’s beginnings, Ketchabaw<br />

and DiLiberto have spent three years touring the country in their<br />

Storymobile (recording studio on wheels) gathering the stories and<br />

songs of communities from the Arctic to the East Coast and creating<br />

Lisa Marie DiLiberto and Charles Ketchabaw, with their Storymobile on PEI, July 2013<br />

local performance installations. They also built a national story map<br />

that not only forms part of each local show but remains in place in<br />

each community, as well as online and as a ten-part series on TVO – a<br />

kind of national story archive.<br />

I spoke with DiLiberto as well as with the show’s current music<br />

COURTESY OF VICTORY PLAYHOUSE<br />

THE PEASANT CANTATA<br />

by Johann Sebastian Bach<br />

ALL THE DIAMONDS<br />

Songs and Poems Inspired by the Night Sky<br />

Bach’s raucous cantata followed by a<br />

mid-winter cabaret to warm the soul.<br />

Staring Patricia O’Callaghan and Giles Tomkins<br />

and a stellar band of singers and players.<br />

an Ontario government agency<br />

un organisme du gouvernement de l’Ontario<br />

8, 9 & 10 February <strong>2018</strong><br />

Enoch Turner Schoolhouse, 106 Trinity Street<br />

Tickets from torontomasquetheatre.com<br />

or call 416-410-4561<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 21


director, Sophia Perlman, to find out some more details of the musical<br />

side of this project. What makes it “a musical”? was our starting point,<br />

and here is the essence of the conversation that followed:<br />

DiLiberto: I wouldn’t call it a musical per se, but music is an essential<br />

part of the process and the show, which features songs and audio<br />

and performance moments which are underscored live.<br />

Perlman: You’re right. It’s not a musical, entirely. I am coming at<br />

this production from an early background in opera and music theatre,<br />

but with the last decade or so of my career being rooted mostly in jazz,<br />

blues and improvised music. Part of what I love about this piece is the<br />

process that has gone into preparing each show, and the insight that<br />

each member of the team brings to the table in terms of how music<br />

can help shape the story.<br />

DiLiberto: For me, this is a real homecoming. We began this project<br />

at Theatre Passe Muraille, and have since toured to every province<br />

and territory in Canada gathering stories. To return back home to<br />

this theatre feels like the project is coming full circle. The music is<br />

such a huge part of the show. It reveals the essence of where we are,<br />

how we feel throughout the journey of the show. It lifts everything<br />

up into a heightened space – like in a musical – but in the case of this<br />

show it lifts up the audio, the verbatim performances, and helps us<br />

get from place to place. I’m so excited to share this epic story here in<br />

Toronto where it all began, partly because of how far it has travelled<br />

in the meantime. This production is a culmination of several years of<br />

touring, story gathering and local installation performances. During<br />

the process, we worked with these archives and adapted a lot of the<br />

score from the ideas and music created by the musicians who collaborated<br />

on these performances locally.<br />

Perlman: And for me, personally, Queen West was one of the first<br />

communities that The Tale of a Town gathered stories from, and<br />

several places (like the coffee shop I used to go to in Parkdale and the<br />

Cameron House) are featured in the story. I lived in Toronto’s downtown<br />

most of my life – and only left a few years ago. … After the<br />

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amazing adventure I’ve had on the first part of this season’s tour, it<br />

feels especially wonderful to have the chance to bring this story so<br />

close to home.<br />

The WholeNote: So the version of the show we will see at Passe<br />

Muraille is still in development?<br />

Perlman: We created a score that was an overall shape for the piece<br />

back in August and September. Lisa Marie [DiLiberto] is an actor,<br />

performer and musician, and there are songs that are sung by her and<br />

guest artists. She also plays cello and guitar! Charles Ketchabaw has<br />

a background in radio and audio tech and sometimes in terms of live<br />

music my role feels a bit more like leading a silent movie orchestra!<br />

But part of what drew me to this piece, creatively, was the fact that<br />

while the score has been “set” since August, the time we took in the<br />

rehearsal room to understand those choices has meant that everywhere<br />

we go the score can be adapted to fit different instrumentation,<br />

special guests or new local content.<br />

DiLiberto: Each place we go there will be a new band, featured<br />

local guests and some kind of a choir ... Perlman: An amazing ad-hoc<br />

of musical collaborators and volunteers, you might say … And that<br />

becomes part of the story.<br />

After the Toronto run, The Tale of a Town will hit the road again<br />

in <strong>January</strong> for dates in St. Catharines, Burlington, Milton and<br />

Kingston. See their website (thetaleofatown.com) for details or call<br />

416-504-7529.<br />

QUICK PICKS<br />

To Dec 31: YPT’s streamlined production of Disney’s Beauty and<br />

the Beast, which started November 6, is aimed particularly at families<br />

and younger children and features a young, diverse cast including<br />

Celine Tsai, one of The Musical Stage Company’s <strong>2017</strong> Banks Prize<br />

winners, as Belle.<br />

Nov <strong>23</strong> to Dec 2: Two productions of the operetta Candide have<br />

popped up at the same time. Talk is Free Theatre present theirs at<br />

the Mady Centre for the Performing Arts in Barrie. Dec 28, 30, 31<br />

and Jan 5, 6, 7, Toronto Operetta Theatre presents their take on the<br />

Bernstein/Sondheim classic at the Jane Mallett Theatre. Will the Barrie<br />

version have a more “musical theatre” approach?<br />

Nov 28 to Dec 2: Randolph Academy presents the rarely seen<br />

musical Moll, with music and lyrics by Canadian composer Leslie<br />

Arden and book by Arden and Cathy Elliott, at the Annex Theatre. This<br />

is must-see for fans of Arden and Elliott.<br />

Nov 30 to Dec <strong>23</strong>: For fans of the comedy side of musical comedy,<br />

Theatre Orangeville presents a new Christmas musical, The Last<br />

Christmas Turkey, with book by Dan Needles, creator of the Wingfield<br />

plays, and music and lyrics by Clive VanderBurgh.<br />

Dec 9 to Jan 21: For fans of the large-scale musical and for families<br />

over the holidays, Mirvish Productions offers a musical version of<br />

Dr. Seuss’s The Lorax – music and lyrics by Charlie Fink, adapted for<br />

the stage by David Greig – at the Royal Alex; while Dec 12 to Jan 7,<br />

also from Mirvish, Million Dollar Quartet (which always seems to be<br />

playing somewhere) moves into the Panasonic Theatre.<br />

Jan 12 and 13: There are only two days to catch triple-threat and<br />

Stratford star Juan Chioran, starring in Podium Concert Productions’<br />

concert version of Nine, the Maury Yeston and Arthur Kopit musical<br />

based on Fellini’s film 8 ½, at Trinity-St. Paul’s Centre.<br />

Feb 4 to 25: Coal Mine Theatre, known for its riveting and darkedged<br />

theatre productions, moves into musical territory with<br />

Rumours By Fleetwood Mac: A Coal Mine Concert. It will be interesting<br />

to see where this falls on the music theatre spectrum, particularly<br />

because artistic director Ted Dykstra is also well known for his<br />

accomplished work on musicals as both performer and director.<br />

And more: for a more comprehensive overview of musical theatre<br />

listings over <strong>December</strong> and <strong>January</strong>, visit our music theatre listings on<br />

page 63 in this issue.<br />

Toronto-based “lifelong theatre person” Jennifer (Jenny) Parr<br />

works as a director, fight director, stage manager and coach, and is<br />

equally crazy about movies and musicals.<br />

22 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


an Ontario government agency<br />

un organisme du gouvernement de l’Ontario<br />

Beat by Beat | Early Music<br />

On Bothering and<br />

the Baroque<br />

MATTHEW WHITFIELD<br />

This sentence notwithstanding, I try not to use too many personal<br />

pronouns when writing. Call it a parasympathetic reflex from my<br />

student days writing prosaic, academically sourced theses, but<br />

words like “I” and “my” seem too personal and isolating to use even<br />

in a communal column and publication such as The WholeNote; and<br />

I don’t write editorials (although I do express the occasional opinion<br />

or two!). This month is an exception, however, for we begin our<br />

two-month survey of the Toronto early music scene with two personal<br />

anecdotes – disparate occurrences that, although entirely independent<br />

in time and place, share a common, relevant and important theme.<br />

A few weeks ago, I gave a recital at Trinity-St. Paul’s Centre. The<br />

program for this little concert contained a blend of jazz, minimalist<br />

and avant-garde music, including György Ligeti’s Harmonies for<br />

organ. After the performance one audience member approached and<br />

asked, “Why bother with such music? You could have played that<br />

piece (Harmonies) forwards or backwards and we wouldn’t have<br />

known the difference!” It was ultimately a worthwhile question and<br />

one that many performers face, particularly in the realm of music<br />

written in the 20th century and onwards: why bother playing music<br />

that people won’t understand, music that is not necessarily tuneful,<br />

pretty, or accessible to the masses?<br />

Days after my recital experience, I saw the new film Loving Vincent,<br />

an artistically oriented speculative recreation of the last days of Dutch<br />

painter Vincent van Gogh, incorporating elements of documentary<br />

and murder mystery. This film was screened at TIFF Bell Lightbox<br />

and is notable because of the way it was made. Each frame – 65,000<br />

of them altogether – was hand-painted in the style of Van Gogh by<br />

an international team of artists, then photographed and digitized<br />

using animation software, thereby creating a literal motion picture.<br />

Before viewing Loving Vincent, I read a synopsis in The Guardian in<br />

which the reviewer questioned the painstaking process of producing<br />

the film, arguing that an equally visually satisfying production could<br />

have been generated using purely digital means without the trouble of<br />

hand-painting anything at all. In our digital age, the review queried,<br />

Robert Gulaczyk as Vincent van Gogh in Loving Vincent<br />

why bother with all the unnecessarily painstaking manual labour?<br />

In early music circles, the question “Why bother?” is a relevant one,<br />

too. When we look at the frequency with which certain individual<br />

works are performed, there are inevitably moments where we question<br />

the rationale behind established conventions that have become<br />

normalized. For example, now that <strong>December</strong> is here, why bother<br />

playing Handel’s Messiah again across the city – haven’t we been<br />

up to our eyeballs in it every year for the past decade? Why bother<br />

with another performance of Bach’s Christmas Oratorio or Corelli’s<br />

Christmas Concerto? Reprising these works year after year seems to<br />

be the bad end of a Faustian pact, the lure of a full auditorium paid<br />

off with the ceaseless repetition of the same stuff, taxing our ears<br />

with all-too familiar strains of “Hallelujah!,” “Jauchzet, frohlocket!”<br />

or some other predictable and overdone work – a festive and wintry<br />

Groundhog Day, if you will.<br />

These are thought-provoking queries, many of which are difficult<br />

to answer. The questions of “Why?” and “Why bother?” will always<br />

be applicable to the arts, particularly when something new and<br />

unfamiliar (in the case of Ligeti’s Harmonies) or unusual and idiosyncratic<br />

(as we see in Loving Vincent) is put on display, but another<br />

little anecdote recounted to me by a former teacher may help answer<br />

why we always seem to return to the time-tested Baroque classics<br />

in <strong>December</strong>:<br />

Once a conductor was in a dress rehearsal of Messiah – everyone<br />

involved had performed the work many times. One singer was<br />

rather lackadaisical about his part and seemed lazy and lacklustre<br />

throughout, irking the conductor enough that he confronted him<br />

about it afterwards.<br />

“Listen,” the conductor said, “I know you have sung this many<br />

times, as I’ve conducted it many times, but you have a great responsibility<br />

as a performer. Tonight’s concert may be the first time that<br />

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someone in that audience hears Messiah. And this performance may<br />

also be the last Messiah someone in that audience hears.”<br />

My Grown-Up Christmas List<br />

For many, Messiah is as much a quintessential seasonal favourite as<br />

mulled wine and a ten-pound fruitcake. With dozens of performers<br />

presenting various Messianic adaptations and interpretations across<br />

Toronto and its surrounding areas, it can be a tricky task to pick only<br />

one! Fortunately, The WholeNote is here to help: read my recent blog<br />

post on notable performances, or search for the word “Messiah” in our<br />

online listings to get a list of most of this year’s shows. Whether fulllength<br />

or condensed, HIP or modern, symphonic or sing-along, we<br />

have the Messiah for you.<br />

Johann Sebastian Bach’s Christmas Oratorio is another classic<br />

Christmas composition from the Baroque era, compiled and<br />

composed between 1733 and 1734 to celebrate the Christmas season<br />

in Leipzig. Although catalogued as BWV248<br />

and now considered a single, freestanding<br />

work, this “oratorio” is in actuality a series of<br />

six individual cantatas that were performed<br />

during the time between Christmas and<br />

Epiphany (what we now call the Twelve<br />

Days of Christmas) and divided between the<br />

Thomaskirche and Nikolaikirche, Leipzig’s two<br />

main churches.<br />

Monumental in scope and brilliant in its<br />

musical expression of Bach’s beliefs and<br />

theology, the Christmas Oratorio is, along with<br />

the Passions, the closest Bach came to writing<br />

a narrative opera. Geoffrey Butler and the<br />

Toronto Choral Society perform the Christmas<br />

Oratorio at Koerner Hall on <strong>December</strong> 6, in<br />

what promises to be a welcome respite from<br />

the hurly-burly of the commercially overloaded<br />

Christmas season.<br />

Continuing their trend of melding old and<br />

new, the Toronto Masque Theatre presents<br />

their seasonal salon “Peace on Earth” on<br />

<strong>December</strong> 17 and 18. Featuring the performance<br />

of baroque Noëls and the Messe de Minuit<br />

by Marc-Antoine Charpentier, these Francoflavoured<br />

evenings will explore the simplicity, beauty and joy of the<br />

French Baroque Christmas, different in many ways from the immense<br />

and intricate forms we find in English and German oratorio.<br />

To complement these French Baroque favourites, TMT also leaps<br />

forward into the 20th century with excerpts from The Birth of Christ,<br />

ILLUMINATIONS<br />

March 2 & 3, <strong>2018</strong> at 8pm<br />

Joëlle Morton<br />

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a cantata written in 1901 by Canadian composer Clarence Lucas (1866-<br />

1947) as well as seasonal readings by from T.S. Eliot’s The Journey of<br />

the Magi. With this medley of music and word on display only one<br />

week before Christmas, these performances will surely banish the last<br />

“Bah humbug!” from even the Scroogiest of curmudgeonly misers.<br />

But Wait, There’s More! A Taste of <strong>2018</strong><br />

Fast forward to <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong>: Belts are loosened an extra notch<br />

(or two); turkey leftovers, eggnog and rum hangovers, and the last<br />

few sweet treats all linger longer than expected. New Year’s resolutions<br />

are resolutely made and broken, and we start looking ahead to<br />

the inevitable wintry weather that is to come. If we somehow ignore<br />

the temptation to snuggle up with a cup of cocoa and hibernate until<br />

March, there are many exciting events taking place across Toronto in<br />

<strong>January</strong>, including two promising projects by Tafelmusik (who might<br />

quite reasonably go into hibernation themselves after their busy<br />

<strong>December</strong>!).<br />

The first is the Tafelmusik Winter<br />

Institute, a terrific opportunity for those<br />

with a passion for Historically Informed<br />

Performance. A one-week intensive for<br />

advanced students and young professionals,<br />

this year’s TWI culminates in a<br />

free public performance at Jeanne Lamon<br />

Hall on <strong>January</strong> 10. Featuring music<br />

by French composers Lully, Campra,<br />

Marais and Rameau, and this performance<br />

presents a rare opportunity to hear<br />

top-notch music from the height of the<br />

French tradition for an unbeatable price.<br />

Over the last few years, Tafelmusik<br />

has pushed the boundaries of the early<br />

music concert experience with Alison<br />

Mackay’s creative multimedia conceptions<br />

and collaborations. This positive<br />

trend towards HIP-infused modernism<br />

continues with Safe Haven, a program<br />

exploring the musical ideas of Baroque<br />

Europe’s refugee artists, drawing parallels<br />

between 18th-century Europe and<br />

present-day Canada. At that time of year<br />

when the Christmas chestnuts have come and gone, this concert looks<br />

to provide a palate-cleansing leap forward in a genre that occasionally<br />

seems to specialize in blasé repetition.<br />

Scaramella: While Tafelmusik peers into the future with Safe<br />

Haven, period performance group Scaramella looks back in time<br />

with their “Ode to Music” on <strong>January</strong> 27. Featuring Scaramella’s<br />

Joëlle Morton and guest virtuoso viol players Elizabeth Rumsey and<br />

Caroline Ritchie from Basel, Switzerland, this program uses a variety<br />

of 16th-century music for viol consort to explore the impact of the<br />

muses on Renaissance composers. This concert provides a wonderful<br />

opportunity for viol enthusiasts and novices alike to acquaint themselves<br />

with the spectrum of sound these antiquated instruments can<br />

produce, living musical relics linking our ears to past centuries.<br />

As winter-themed advertising flashes across our smartphone screens<br />

and store windows are redecorated with miniaturized villages and<br />

resplendent hues of red, green and gold, it can be overwhelming and<br />

daunting to find time to attend a concert; despite the seasonal hustle<br />

and bustle, I encourage you to explore the vibrant musical offerings<br />

that are on display this <strong>December</strong> and <strong>January</strong>. Whether you prefer<br />

Handel’s Messiah, Tafelmusik’s Safe Haven, a traditional Festival of<br />

Lessons and Carols, or any of the other listings in this double issue of<br />

The WholeNote, the richness and depth of Toronto’s classical music<br />

scene ensures that no concertgoer ever has to ask, “Why bother?”<br />

Happy Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, Festivus and New Year,<br />

everyone. See you in February! Until then, keep in touch at<br />

earlymusic@thewholenote.com.<br />

Matthew Whitfield is a Toronto-based harpsichordist and organist.<br />

24 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


Beat by Beat | On Opera<br />

Reviving the Unrevivable<br />

and Ringing in the New<br />

CHRISTOPHER HOILE<br />

It used to be that the only operatic productions that took place in<br />

<strong>December</strong> and <strong>January</strong> were from the Canadian Opera Company<br />

and Toronto Operetta Theatre. Now there are so many new small<br />

companies that there is quite a wide range of offerings available to see<br />

out the old year and see in the new.<br />

COC: That being said, the production<br />

on the largest scale in these<br />

two months is the Canadian Opera<br />

Company’s remount of Verdi’s Rigoletto<br />

for ten performances from <strong>January</strong> 20 to<br />

February <strong>23</strong>. The production, directed by<br />

Christopher Alden, was last seen in 2011.<br />

There is some controversy attached to the<br />

production, since Alden had previously<br />

created it for Lyric Opera of Chicago in<br />

2000. The action is set entirely inside<br />

a gentlemen’s gaming club in the<br />

early 1850s with the chorus onstage<br />

throughout the action. The various locations<br />

in the libretto are acted out using<br />

furniture from the club, the danger being<br />

that if people do not already know the<br />

story the staging provides no clues to help them. After its unpopular<br />

run at LOC, the production was deemed “unrevivable” and LOC now<br />

has a popular new production directed by E. Loren Meeker. When the<br />

COC and English National Opera approached Alden for a Rigoletto, he<br />

simply re-created the one he had done for Chicago.<br />

In any case, the COC has revived the unrevivable and it features<br />

Roland Wood in the title role, Anna Christy as Rigoletto’s daughter<br />

Gilda, Stephen Costello and Joshua Guerrero (February 11, 17, <strong>23</strong>) as<br />

the depraved Duke of Mantua, and Goderdzi Janelidze as the assassin<br />

Sparafucile. Stephen Lord conducts.<br />

On a much lighter note, the COC has invited the public to see a new<br />

opera for children, The Magic Victrola, on <strong>December</strong> 1, 2 and 3. The<br />

opera also has a Chicago connection in that it was premiered by the<br />

LOC in 2015. In the opera, written by David Kersnar and Jacqueline<br />

Russell, two children stay at their grandfather’s place for the summer<br />

vacation. The grandfather has a Victrola and a set of opera recordings;<br />

the children find when they play the records that the characters come<br />

alive. The hour-long show includes well-known excerpts from The<br />

Marriage of Figaro, The Magic Flute, The Tales of Hoffmann, The Elixir<br />

of Love, Lakmé, Gianni Schicchi and Carmen. The opera, suitable for<br />

ages five and over, is performed by members of the COC Ensemble<br />

Studio and is directed by Ashlie Corcoran, with music direction by<br />

Rachael Kerr and Stéphane Mayer.<br />

Toronto Operetta Theatre has been helping Torontonians bridge<br />

the old and the new years with operetta for more than 30 years. This<br />

year it revives its production of Leonard Bernstein’s Candide (1956),<br />

last staged here in 2007, which the composer himself designated as<br />

an “operetta.” The work follows the adventures of the eternal optimist<br />

Candide, whose tutor has taught him to believe that this is the best of<br />

all possible worlds. This belief is sorely tested when Candide barely<br />

survives one disaster after another. Tonatiuh Abrego takes on the<br />

title role, while Vania Chan stars as his beloved Cunegonde and sings<br />

the show-stopping coloratura aria Glitter and Be Gay. TOT favourite<br />

Elizabeth Beeler sings the Old Lady, Nicholas Borg is Dr. Pangloss,<br />

Cian Horrobin is the Governor and Mikhail Shemet is Cacambo.<br />

Candide runs for six performances from <strong>December</strong> 28 to <strong>January</strong> 7.<br />

Derek Bate conducts and Guillermo Silva-Marin directs.<br />

Talk Is Free Theatre: This is likely the first time ever that a person<br />

can see two different productions of Candide in Ontario in the same<br />

month. The second takes place at a non-traditional operatic showcase,<br />

Talk Is Free Theatre in Barrie, which is in the process of presenting<br />

the Bernstein work in a run from November <strong>23</strong> to <strong>December</strong> 2.<br />

The cast includes Thom Allison, Holly Chaplin, Gabi Epstein, Mike<br />

Nadajewski and Michael Torontow; Richard Ouzounian directs and<br />

Lily Ling conducts.<br />

Tarragon Theatre, another non-traditional showcase for opera, is<br />

presenting Mr. Shi and His Lover, a one-act work by Njo Kong Kie<br />

that runs in Toronto until <strong>December</strong> 17. In the new year it plays at<br />

the NAC in Ottawa from <strong>January</strong> 3 to 13. Mr. Shi is made up of seven<br />

scenes in which two characters, Mr. Shi and Bernard Boursicot, reflect<br />

Shi Pei Pu, the<br />

original Mr. Shi<br />

on the the strange but true story of their relationship.<br />

Boursicot, a young French diplomat stationed<br />

in China in 1964, fell in love with Shi Pei Pu, a<br />

male performer of the Peking Opera specializing<br />

in female roles, believing that Shi was actually a<br />

woman. Amazingly, Boursicot and Shi’s relationship<br />

continued for 20 years without Boursicot ever realizing<br />

Shi was a man, much less a spy recruited to<br />

entrap him. This story is the basis for David Henry<br />

Hwang’s 1988 play M. Butterfly. Jordan Cheng sings<br />

the role of Mr. Shi and Derek Kwan sings Boursicot.<br />

Njo Kong Kie conducts the singers and percussionist<br />

Yukie Lai from the piano in an eclectic score that<br />

ranges from Peking opera to traditional folk song,<br />

music hall, pop music, Western opera and the art<br />

song. Tam Chi Chun, the artistic director of Macau<br />

Experimental Theatre, directs.<br />

Tryptych: Continuing its exploration of standard repertory with<br />

Upstaged by West Side Story but never<br />

obscured, CANDIDE has become the darling<br />

of opera companies and Broadway through<br />

the sheer power of its drama, music and<br />

imaginative splendour. Voltaire’s irresistible<br />

– and censored! – masterwork becomes great<br />

music theatre.<br />

Tonatiuh Abrego<br />

Guillermo Silva-Marin<br />

General Director<br />

by Leonard Bernstein<br />

Derek Bate, Conductor<br />

Guillermo Silva-Marin, Stage Director<br />

Vania Chan<br />

Elizabeth Beeler<br />

Nicholas Borg<br />

<strong>December</strong> 28, 30 & <strong>January</strong> 5, 6 at 8 pm<br />

<strong>December</strong> 31, <strong>January</strong> 7 at 3 pm<br />

416-366-77<strong>23</strong> | 1-800-708-6754 | www.stlc.com<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 25


what drew him to Handel instead of, say, Verdi, who also wrote<br />

about so many dispossessed people, he responded, “There is<br />

something in the form in which Handel wrote most of his music<br />

which is interesting. His draw to a formula, a repetition of text<br />

and simplicity in how he set it, is profound. Yes, Verdi is a master<br />

composer, but his music takes on a much more propelling aspect<br />

to the storytelling. Handel allows you to reflect, assess and<br />

move forward.”<br />

Some of the pieces that Bound draws upon are Acis and<br />

Galetea, Alcina, Alexander’s Feast, Ariodante, Orlando,<br />

Floridante, Giulio Cesare in Egitto, Jephtha, Rinaldo, Rodelinda,<br />

Semele, Serse and Tolomeo. For the assembled score Ivany has<br />

written a new English libretto. The cast includes soprano Danika<br />

Lorèn, tenor Asitha Tennekoon, countertenor David Trudgen,<br />

baritone Justin Welsh and bass Michael Uloth. Ivany will direct<br />

and Mokrzewski will conduct.<br />

Richard Margison and Lauren Margison<br />

large orchestra, Tryptych Concert & Opera presents its final opera in<br />

Toronto before its co-artistic directors, Edward Franko and Lenard<br />

Whiting, move to Kenora to restart the company there. On <strong>December</strong> 9<br />

and 10, Tryptych presents a fully-staged production of Engelbert<br />

Humperdinck’s Hansel and Gretel in English at the P.C. Ho Theatre in<br />

Scarborough, with the Cathedral Bluffs Symphony Orchestra and the<br />

Toronto Beaches Children’s Chorus. The cast features Meghan Symon<br />

as Hansel, Marion Samuel-Stevens as Gretel, Douglas Tranquada as<br />

the Father, Mila Ionkova as the Mother, Kira Braun as the Dew Fairy<br />

and Sandman and Whiting himself as the Witch. Franko directs and<br />

Norman Reintamm conducts. Despite Franko and Whiting’s move, the<br />

two plan to stage at least one opera with the CBSO in Toronto every<br />

year. Donizetti’s The Elixir of Love is already planned for next year.<br />

Tapestry: In the realm of new music is the welcome return of<br />

Tapestry Opera’s popular Opera Briefs. This year’s “Winter Shorts”<br />

consists of ten opera scenes developed during Tapestry’s 2016<br />

Composer-Librettist Laboratory. Creators of the shorts have drawn<br />

inspiration from current events and contemporary concerns including<br />

the Syrian refugee crisis, robot warfare, the 1984 Quebec National<br />

Assembly shooting, voyeurism, fairy tales and dysfunctional millennial<br />

relationships. This year’s operas include three composed by<br />

Afarin Mansouri, three from Iman Habibi, three from Norbert Palej<br />

and one from Kit Soden. The librettists are Bobby Theodore, Marcia<br />

Johnson, Phoebe Tsang and Jessica Murphy Moo. The performers are<br />

Alexander Dobson, Erica Iris, Keith Klassen and Jacqueline Woodley.<br />

“Winter Shorts” runs from November 30 to <strong>December</strong> 3.<br />

Against the Grain: In contrast to Tapestry’s “bite-size” offerings,<br />

from <strong>December</strong> 14 to 16 Toronto’s indomitable Against the Grain<br />

Theatre presents a “new” full-length Handel opera in the form of<br />

Bound – A Handel Mash-up. AtG’s artistic director Joel Ivany and<br />

music director Topher Mokrzewski have collaborated with awardwinning<br />

composer Kevin Lau to create a pastiche of music from<br />

Handel’s operas and oratorios that will focus on current world events.<br />

According to the AtG website, “In the wake of the world’s refugee<br />

crisis, this workshop will explore the current state of those displaced,<br />

dehumanized and mistreated, with texts and stories drawn from reallife<br />

news articles and world events.” When I asked Ivany in November<br />

Così fan tutte<br />

presented by Toronto Lyric<br />

Trinity St. Paul’s<br />

PERA<br />

Opera Centre<br />

Jeanne Lamon Hall<br />

427 Bloor Street W<br />

Sun Feb 18, <strong>2018</strong><br />

7:30 PM<br />

Highlands Opera premiere: Meanwhile, there is an important<br />

premiere outside Toronto. Opera lovers may know that the Highlands<br />

Opera Studio, based in Haliburton with Richard Margison as artistic<br />

director, presents opera in the summer. This year HOS will present a<br />

new work <strong>December</strong> 21 and 22, Mishaabooz’s Realm (Le Royaume<br />

de Michabous), with music and libretto by Cree composer Andrew<br />

Balfour. The opera, a co-production with L’Atelier Lyrique of L’Opéra<br />

de Montréal, will have its world premiere performances in Montreal<br />

on <strong>December</strong> 15 and 16 before moving to Haliburton.<br />

The opera’s central figure is Mishaabooz, an important character in<br />

Anishinaabe storytelling. Mishaabooz is another name for Nanabozho,<br />

the great trickster spirit and shape-shifter, one of whose favourite forms<br />

is as a giant rabbit, who is often sent to earth by Gitche Manitou (the<br />

Creator) to teach the Ojibwe peoples. (Mishaabooz, in fact, means “Great<br />

Hare.”) In his composer’s statement, Balfour describes the opera as “a<br />

multi-media and multi-directional work, incorporating classical styles,<br />

unique choral and vocal perspectives, Indigenous musical and oral<br />

traditions, with a libretto in First Nations dialect, French and English,<br />

exploring contemporary issues concerning Canada’s relationship with<br />

our First People and the land of Turtle Island, past, present and future.”<br />

Singers include soprano Lauren Margison and baritone Nathan<br />

Keoughan. Balfour and Cory Campbell will contribute vocals and play<br />

percussion while music director Louise-Andrée Baril will conduct<br />

from the piano. The chorus will be drawn from both Montreal and<br />

Haliburton. Valerie Kuinka is the stage director.<br />

We clearly no longer have to wait until spring for variety in operatic<br />

activity in Ontario.<br />

Christopher Hoile is a Toronto-based writer on opera and<br />

theatre. He can be contacted at opera@thewholenote.com.<br />

RUDDIGORE<br />

Artistic Director - Laura Schatz<br />

Musical Director - Brian Farrow<br />

Choreographer - Jennie Garde<br />

Jan 26 & 27, Feb 1 & 2, 7:30pm<br />

Jan 27 & 28, Feb 3 & 4, 2pm<br />

Visit tlocentre.com<br />

for tickets and<br />

more info!<br />

26 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


Beat by Beat | Art of Song<br />

Some Southern<br />

Comfort<br />

LYDIA PEROVIĆ<br />

If anything’s desperately needed in Toronto in <strong>December</strong>, it’s<br />

a dash of the south. The Vesuvius Ensemble to the rescue: the<br />

trio that specializes in Southern Italian music (mostly from<br />

Naples and Campania but also Calabria and Puglia) is preparing<br />

a pastoral Christmas program for mid-<strong>December</strong>, just as the<br />

Toronto winter is about to take over.<br />

Vesuvius is a three-lad enterprise: Francesco Pellegrino is<br />

the voice of the group, while Marco Cera and Lucas Harris play<br />

a variety of plucked string instruments, and are most likely to<br />

be found manning Baroque guitar and theorbo respectively.<br />

Various other period instruments are added depending on the<br />

songs chosen, like tammorra, a large tambourine with bells, or<br />

ciaramella, an early oboe with an ear-trumpet-like shape. This<br />

instrumentarium is there to accompany the songs both folk and<br />

composed, roughly from the same period, the 1500s and 1600s.<br />

The most interesting part of the Vesuvius mission is this mix of<br />

the popular and the authored material. There have always been<br />

song composers open to the influence of the folk, and among<br />

those who have used either folk music or folk lyrics you are<br />

likely to hear in Vesuvius concerts are Andrea Falconieri (d.<br />

1656), Giovanni Girolamo Kapsberger (1580-1651), Athanasius<br />

Kircher (1602-1680), Leonardo Vinci (1690-1730), and Francesco<br />

Provenzale (1624-1704).<br />

The study of Italian folk song got a significant boost in the 20th<br />

century thanks to recording technology. In the mid-1950s, Alan<br />

Lomax and Diego Carpitella travelled to villages up and down Italy<br />

to record traditional peasant songs sung in dialect. Some of the<br />

songs were work songs, some were dances like the tarantella (which,<br />

myth has it, cures poisonous spider bites and bilious moods of other<br />

kinds), and others were laments, or love songs, or wedding songs.<br />

Commercially released recordings of some of the Carpitella-Lomax<br />

treasures still exist – the Italian Treasury series of CDs divided into<br />

regions is not exactly easy to buy (an Amazon search will yield<br />

second-hand, vinyl or MP3 offers) and is best sought out in large and<br />

university libraries. Puglia: the Salento (2002), Calabria and Folk<br />

Music and Song of Italy: A Sampler (1999), for example, are available<br />

at the Toronto Reference Library and each includes booklets with<br />

lyrics and translations.<br />

Another important figure of the Italian folk revival of the 20th<br />

century is the musicologist, theatre artist and composer Roberto de<br />

Simone (b. 1933). In addition to the research and archiving of the<br />

popular chant, de Simone incorporated folk practices into his own<br />

writing and stage directing and is probably best known internationally<br />

for the opera La gatta Cenerentola. (Look for Secondo coro delle<br />

lavandaie – The Second Chorus of the Washerwomen – on YouTube.)<br />

Vesuvius Ensemble<br />

Which of the Italian traditional and composed treasures will<br />

Vesuvius perform in their Christmas concert? We’ll find out on<br />

<strong>December</strong> 17 or 19 in Heliconian Hall, though a few days earlier is<br />

also a possibility since the group will perform a similar program<br />

at the Four Seasons Centre’s Richard Bradshaw Amphitheatre on<br />

<strong>December</strong> 12 at noon. When I spoke with Francesco Pellegrino for<br />

this article in mid-October, the program had not yet been finalized.<br />

What is certain is that Tommaso Sollazzo, a connoisseur of the Italian<br />

bagpipes called zampogne, will be joining in. The trio performed<br />

with him in Italy a few years back and now he’s making the trip to<br />

wintry Toronto.<br />

And since the tarantellas and the tammurriatas are so danceable,<br />

SCARLET O'NEILL<br />

Concertos!<br />

Sunday Dec. 03 <strong>2017</strong><br />

Elliott Carter<br />

String Trio<br />

Robin de Raff<br />

Percussion Concerto<br />

Linda C. Smith<br />

Path of Uneven Stones<br />

Paul Frehner<br />

Clarinet Concerto v<br />

Ryan Scott, Eve Egoyan, Max Christie<br />

NMC Ensemble | Robert Aitken<br />

Oliphant Theatre | 404 Jarvis St.<br />

Kammerkonzert<br />

Sunday Jan. 14 <strong>2018</strong><br />

Alban Berg<br />

Kammerkonzert<br />

Arnold Schoenberg<br />

Phantasy Op.47<br />

Michael Oesterle<br />

Chamber Concerto v<br />

v World Premieres<br />

MingHuan Xu, Winston Choi<br />

NMC Ensemble | Robert Aitken<br />

Oliphant Theatre | 404 Jarvis St.<br />

Land’s End Ensemble<br />

Sunday Feb. 04 <strong>2018</strong><br />

Hope Lee<br />

Imaginary Garden VII v<br />

Sean Clarke<br />

New Work v<br />

Matthew Ricketts<br />

Graffiti Songs<br />

Arnold Schoenberg<br />

(arr. Anton Webern)<br />

Kammersymphonie Op.9<br />

Land’s End Ensemble, guest artists<br />

Robert Aitken, James Campbell<br />

Gallery 345 | 345 Sorauren Ave.<br />

www.NewMusicConcerts.com<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 27


will Vesuvius let the audience dance<br />

during their concerts, maybe preceded<br />

by some dance instruction? “Not yet,”<br />

says Pellegrino, “but we are expanding<br />

this program and in the next couple<br />

of years our concerts may also have<br />

dancers from Italy who are well versed<br />

in tarantella or tammurriata. We’re<br />

working on it.”<br />

Outside Toronto, you can hear<br />

(though not yet dance to) Vesuvius’<br />

Christmas concert on <strong>December</strong> 18 in<br />

Hamilton and <strong>December</strong> 20 in Montreal.<br />

<strong>January</strong><br />

Twenty-five years after its world<br />

premiere, the song cycle Honey and Rue<br />

is still regularly performed by symphony<br />

orchestras and coloratura sopranos in<br />

the US. Carnegie Hall commissioned<br />

it and André Previn composed it for<br />

Claire de Sévigné<br />

Kathleen Battle, who was a keen reader<br />

of Toni Morrison and wanted her as a<br />

lyricist. We don’t hear the cycle that<br />

often in Canada, and it’s St. Catharines, not Toronto, that got lucky<br />

this season, with two Honey and Rue performances with the Niagara<br />

Symphony Orchestra in <strong>January</strong>. Morrison’s poems are a rich and<br />

intense read and should be relished without the music first (keep<br />

those programs, concertgoers: the poems are not easy to find).<br />

Young soprano Claire de Sévigné will sing. Last time I heard de<br />

Sévigné was in the COC’s Arabella, where she effortlessly produced<br />

the coloratura for the Viennese ball ingenue, Fiakermilli. There probably<br />

isn’t another Canadian soprano whose timbre more resembles<br />

Battle’s. I caught up with the travelling soprano via email to learn<br />

more about her take on the piece.<br />

When I ask her what it is that<br />

she likes about Honey and Rue,<br />

she starts with the orchestration.<br />

“Singing with an orchestra<br />

is always thrilling but singing a<br />

piece that’s in the style of ‘classical-jazz-blues<br />

fusion’ feels like<br />

a real jam. The fourth song is a<br />

huge contrast to the rest of the<br />

cycle in that it is a cappella, and<br />

this moment can be magic. I also<br />

adore the lyrics. Very strong text<br />

with stunning imagery.”<br />

I tell her that my first impression<br />

of it was that it was<br />

extremely high. Her answer<br />

doesn’t surprise me: “I don’t<br />

notice it being all that high<br />

actually – but that’s coming<br />

from a coloratura soprano and<br />

my voice lives in the clouds,<br />

haha. I think that Previn knew<br />

how to write for the voice, since<br />

the performer doesn’t notice it being all that high! I actually find the<br />

set quite lyric – the highest note is only a B flat, a whole fourth lower<br />

than my high notes, and the set sits in quite a nice place for a light<br />

soprano’s voice to spin and shimmer while still being able to sing the<br />

text… It’s quite a pleasure to sing.”<br />

The cycle was written by an African-American writer for an<br />

African-American singer originally, and although it’s still frequently<br />

sung by African-American singers, it’s become a cycle for any talented<br />

soprano who can meet its challenge. I ask de Sévigné what she thinks<br />

of the recent rise in discussions about what cultural material can<br />

be performed by who, and in what context. “It’s true, the cycle was<br />

28 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


I<br />

I<br />

T<br />

C H O R A L E<br />

C<br />

H O<br />

R<br />

L<br />

A<br />

E<br />

originally commissioned after Battle read The Bluest Eyes by Toni<br />

Morrison. The poems of Honey and Rue are different however – they<br />

don’t explicitly or exclusively portray the same themes from the book,<br />

with the exception of the sixth song, which I would say is outwardly<br />

about slavery and abuse.” The final poem is based on the African-<br />

American spiritual Take My Mother Home, though with added lyrics<br />

and musical material. “The cycle as a whole,” writes de Sévigné,<br />

“explores questions around equality, suffering, freedom and acceptance,<br />

which are themes that humanity as a whole has experienced<br />

and can appreciate.”<br />

This will not be the young singer’s first encounter with the piece.<br />

“It’s the second time I’ve been asked to sing it. I first performed it<br />

with piano in the Aspen Music Festival concert series in 2012 and have<br />

performed excerpts over the past years in several recitals. I find something<br />

new every time I perform it. I have found that my best way to<br />

interpret the songs is by switching between the first person and the<br />

narrator.”<br />

And what is next on her schedule? “I’m currently doing a concert<br />

tour in China with the Hantang International Music Festival in collaboration<br />

with the Salzburg Festival (writing to you from Beijing right<br />

now!). I’m back to Canada in <strong>December</strong> for the Messiah with the<br />

Edmonton Symphony and in February, I’ll be at the Canadian Opera<br />

Company singing the role of Blonde in Mozart’s Die Entführung aus<br />

dem Serail. There’s also a Mozart C Minor Mass this season, and a<br />

Carmina Burana with the Grant Park Festival in Chicago.”<br />

But as the first thing in the new year, Honey and Rue: <strong>January</strong> 20<br />

and 21, 7:30pm, with the Niagara Symphony Orchestra. Also on the<br />

program: Wagner’s Siegfried Idyll and Ravel’s Mother Goose (complete<br />

ballet). Bradley Thachuck, conductor. FirstOntario Performing Arts<br />

Centre, St. Catharines.<br />

Lydia Perović is an arts journalist in Toronto. Send her your artof-song<br />

news to artofsong@thewholenote.com.<br />

P A X<br />

•<br />

C H R<br />

I S T<br />

•<br />

C H O R A L E<br />

I<br />

David Bowser<br />

Artistic Director<br />

VOICE<br />

B OX<br />

OPERA IN CONCERT<br />

Guillermo Silva-Marin<br />

General Director<br />

operainconcert.com<br />

Beste Kalender<br />

Ilana Zarankin<br />

Holly Chaplin<br />

I DUE FIGARO<br />

by Saverio Mercadante<br />

Rediscovered in 2009, this 1826 opera turns out to be<br />

a jewel of the Bel Canto style … brilliant and graceful.<br />

Narmina Afandiyeva,<br />

Music Director<br />

featuring Beste Kalender<br />

Stuart Hamilton Memorial Award Winner,<br />

Ilana Zarankin, Holly Chaplin,<br />

Nicholas Borg,<br />

The Opera in Concert Chorus<br />

Robert Cooper, Chorus Director<br />

Sun. February 4 at 2:30 pm<br />

Gloria<br />

The joie de vivre of the season<br />

Poulenc Gloria<br />

Duruflé Four Motets<br />

Fauré Cantique de Jean Racine<br />

Gounod Noël<br />

Pax Christi Chorale with<br />

Andrea Núñez and Daniel Norman<br />

Saturday, <strong>December</strong> 16 <strong>2017</strong>, 7:30 p.m.<br />

Sunday, <strong>December</strong> 17 <strong>2017</strong>, 3:00 p.m.<br />

Grace Church on-the-Hill,<br />

300 Lonsdale Rd. Toronto<br />

FOR TICKETS, VISIT<br />

PAXCHRISTICHORALE.ORG<br />

416-366-77<strong>23</strong> | 1-800-708-6754 | www.stlc.com<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 29


Beat by Beat | Choral Scene<br />

The Dreaded<br />

Cough<br />

BRIAN CHANG<br />

Welcome to this double edition of Choral Scene! By the time<br />

you get your hands on this magazine the holiday season will<br />

be well under way. Carols will get in your ear, festive sounds<br />

will echo out and bells will be a-ringing throughout the region. I hope<br />

you’ve got your concert tickets in hand. If not, hurry up and reserve<br />

your place in these amazing concerts before you’re disappointed.<br />

Balancing out the holiday season, I’m also going to highlight some<br />

interesting performances you should check out in the choral world<br />

into the new year. We’ll be back in February, just in time for Chinese<br />

New Year on February 16, <strong>2018</strong> – the Year of the Dog! But I’m going<br />

to highlight a few performances well beyond the date that you might<br />

want to circle in one of the seasonal calendars you will doubtless be<br />

acquiring in the coming weeks.<br />

Stage Coughs<br />

But first, from a chorister’s perspective, some thoughts on the<br />

dreaded cough and wintry illness for singers!<br />

In November’s WholeNote, Vivien Fellegi wrote about major injuries<br />

and musicians and noted that 84 percent of musicians will have to<br />

deal with a significant injury affecting their ability to make music.<br />

If you ask any vocalist to name their performance terror, it usually<br />

involves being sick around performance time. Four years ago, during<br />

an especially illness-fraught Messiah run at the Toronto Symphony<br />

Orchestra, the flu and cold hit our soprano and bass soloists.<br />

Eventually, a sub for the bass needed to be called in to finish the run.<br />

Members of the choir were hit as well. Good performers put on a good<br />

show even when adverse conditions exist, but even then, there’s only<br />

so much one can do when your body is under bacterial or viral attack.<br />

This past October, I got a pretty bad viral throat infection. It cleared,<br />

but the residual cough and throat irritation continued for a few weeks.<br />

The result was a lot of rehearsals spent sitting in the back, humming<br />

along as we began going through Suzanne Steele and Jeffrey Ryan’s<br />

Afghanistan: Requiem for a Generation. My voice returned in time<br />

for the Remembrance Day performances but there was coughing<br />

during the performance I just couldn’t control. A persistently irritated<br />

throat, diminished lung capacity, wonky musculature around the<br />

vibrating air and sudden bursts of coughing made it hard to rehearse<br />

and perform. It’s quite upsetting to find your instrument unreliable.<br />

Something is physically making your voice not work and it is quite<br />

distressing, because when it is your body, nothing can really make the<br />

healing process go faster than it takes.<br />

And Audience Echoes<br />

Let’s be clear though, illness sucks even if you aren’t a performer. If<br />

you’re in the audience, sometimes the tension of trying not to make a<br />

sound makes you uncomfortable to the point where you’re no longer<br />

enjoying the music and instead just trying to be silent. I know many<br />

of my colleagues feel very strongly about audience noises. Some barely<br />

notice, but some take great issue with coughs and shuffles and the<br />

noises that crowds of hundreds of people make just by existing.<br />

For me, any good performer can do their job, even when there is<br />

noise; the aural presence of the audience adds an ambience to the<br />

overall process of performing. Performing without an audience is just<br />

glorified rehearsal. Real audiences are made of real people and they<br />

make noises. They react to the music and they respond in kind. Think<br />

about how the energy in the room changes when everyone stands<br />

for the “Hallelujah Chorus” in Messiah – there is a visceral, physical<br />

and emotional change in the room. You don’t have to be a music<br />

aficionado to notice it, or more importantly, to feel changed by it. I<br />

like when there’s an audience, especially a big one, and I think most<br />

performing arts organizations would prefer you’re there, even if a<br />

bit noisy.<br />

So, into this season of coughs, hacks, sneezes and other wintry<br />

ailments we go. Be healthy and get your flu shot! And be kind to the<br />

singers in your life, especially if we Purell ourselves religiously and<br />

take precautions to stay away from potential illness. We’re worried<br />

sick about losing our voices!<br />

The Governor General’s Messiah<br />

The newly installed Governor General, Julie Payette, once sang in<br />

the Tafelmusik Chamber Choir. She famously carried a recording of<br />

Tafelmusik’s Messiah with her into space. Her Excellency’s love of<br />

music will surely serve her well in her position as a grand patron of<br />

the arts in Canada.<br />

Tafelmusik’s annual Messiah continues to provide a period interpretation<br />

in the inimitable Koerner Hall, <strong>December</strong> 12 to 16. Ivars<br />

Taurins leads the ensembles. Presenting one of the smaller Messiah<br />

performances annually, Tafelmusik also presents the largest Messiah<br />

in town with its annual “Sing-Along Messiah” at Massey Hall, where<br />

2,700 fans join the orchestra and choir in a grand tradition under the<br />

baton of the great maestro himself, Herr Handel (aka. Ivars Taurins),<br />

<strong>December</strong> 17 at 2pm.<br />

Welcome Christmas!<br />

<strong>December</strong> 15, <strong>2017</strong> 7:30pm<br />

Metropolitan United Church, 56 Queen St E, Toronto<br />

Swing into the Merry Season<br />

Expect high-energy chart-toppers from the Bob DeAngelis Big<br />

Band and acclaimed jazz pianist John Sherwood, alongside Nils<br />

Lindberg’s sparkling Christmas Cantata and festive favourites!<br />

Robert Cooper, C.M. Artistic Director, Edward Moroney, Accompanist<br />

Guest Artists<br />

Bob DeAngelis Big Band<br />

John Sherwood<br />

www.orpheuschoirtoronto.com<br />

416-530-4428<br />

The Jackman Foundation<br />

30 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


SIAN RICHARDS<br />

Tafelmusik Chamber Choir<br />

A Solid Choral Holiday at the TSO<br />

The Toronto Symphony Orchestra (TSO) has an exceptionally choirfilled<br />

holiday season.<br />

Home Alone in concert is being performed live with the Etobicoke<br />

School of the Arts Concert Choir, conducted by Constantine<br />

Kitsopoulos, November 30 to <strong>December</strong> 2. This beloved movie is very<br />

much a holiday favourite and one of John Williams’ most magical<br />

scores. “Somewhere in my Memory,” nominated for an Academy Award<br />

for Best Original Song, has become a choral classic for the season.<br />

Then, joining the TSO for the first time, Resonance Youth<br />

Choir from Mississauga makes its debut in Roy Thomson Hall on<br />

<strong>December</strong> 10 at 3pm. Only in its second season, Bob Anderson’s choir<br />

will join Tha Spot Holiday Dancers and TSYO Concerto Competition<br />

winner, cellist Dale Yoon Ho Jeong. Singalong<br />

classics Jingle Bells, Joy to the World,<br />

Hark! The Herald Angels Sing and more are<br />

part of the program, as well as an excerpt<br />

from Saint-Saëns Cello Concerto No.1. David<br />

Amado, music director of the Delaware<br />

Symphony and the Atlantic Music Festival,<br />

leads the groups. The main presentation<br />

will be live accompaniment of Howard<br />

Blake’s score to the holiday favourite film<br />

The Snowman.<br />

No holiday season is complete without the<br />

TSO Pops Concert, featuring the Canadian<br />

Brass and the Etobicoke School of the Arts<br />

Holiday Chorus. Lucas Waldin conducts. The<br />

program <strong>December</strong> 12 and 13 looks magical,<br />

including bits from The Polar Express film,<br />

unique Canadian Brass arrangements like<br />

White Christmas, Go Tell it On the Mountain,<br />

The First Noël and carols arranged by TSO<br />

Pops conductor Stephen Reineke. (Waldin,<br />

who works with the Edmonton Symphony<br />

Orchestra, was most recently in Toronto conducting the hugely<br />

popular and totally-sold-out TSO Carly Rae Jepsen performance.)<br />

Last but not least, the TSO and Toronto Mendelssohn Choir presentation<br />

of Messiah promises to be as grand as ever. Matthew Halls,<br />

British early music specialist, takes the helm. This performance has an<br />

impeccable set of soloists: Karina Gauvin, soprano; Krisztina Szabó,<br />

mezzo-soprano; Frédéric Antoun, tenor; and Joshua Hopkins, baritone.<br />

<strong>December</strong> 18 to <strong>23</strong> in Roy Thomson Hall. (Barring an uncontrollable<br />

relapse into viral coughing, I’ll be there in my usual place in the<br />

Mendelssohn tenor section.)<br />

The New Year<br />

With most musical programming seasons running to the end of<br />

conducted by Craig Pike<br />

THAT CHOIR CAROLS<br />

featuring RESONANCE and our family carol sing-a-long<br />

St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church<br />

Works by WHITACRE | EMERY | DALEY | ALLAN<br />

(73 Simcoe Street, Toronto ON) GJEILO | TWARDOWSKI | HANNEY | MEALOR<br />

VISIT US<br />

thatchoir.com<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 31


CAROLS BY<br />

CANDLELIGHT<br />

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 10, 4:30PM<br />

A traditional candlelight choral<br />

presentation featuring choirs and<br />

musicians of Yorkminster Park.<br />

NINE LESSONS<br />

& CAROLS<br />

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 17, 4:30PM<br />

Following the historic tradition<br />

of King’s College in Cambridge.<br />

June, I’ve decided to highlight one performance from each of the next<br />

few months. They might make great gifts if you’re thinking ahead,<br />

and there are some you’ll surely want to secure seats to before they<br />

sell out.<br />

<strong>January</strong>: Annually, at the end of <strong>January</strong>, the Toronto Mendelssohn<br />

Choir hosts one of the most important training intensives for emerging<br />

conductors anywhere in North America. Under the supervision<br />

of Noel Edison, five symposium participants are exposed to a rigorous<br />

schedule of about 20 diverse songs from global choral repertoire and<br />

tested by the chamber-sized Elora Festival Singers and the symphonic,<br />

full Toronto Mendelssohn Choir. The week culminates with a free<br />

concert and a chance to see these conductors in action on <strong>January</strong> 27<br />

at 3pm, Yorkminster Park Baptist Church, Toronto.<br />

February: The Orpheus Choir presents “Nordic Light.” The Northern<br />

Lights, also known as the Aurora Borealis, have long captured<br />

the imagination and spirit of peoples in the far North. Indigenous<br />

peoples in Canada have an especially strong connection to their presence.<br />

Ēriks Ešenvalds, Latvian composer, has written Nordic Light<br />

Symphony. He will be in Toronto to introduce the work prior to the<br />

performance. This is the Canadian premiere of the work and a chance<br />

to experience Ešenvalds’ ethereal, atmospheric and deeply satisfying<br />

work, February 24 at 7:30pm, Metropolitan United Church, Toronto.<br />

March: Soundstreams presents Tan Dun’s Water Passion. Choir 21,<br />

soloists and instruments are conducted by David Fallis. I’m deeply<br />

intrigued by the program. Billed as a reimagination of the Bach<br />

St. Matthew Passion. Dun’s East Asian musicality will weave a<br />

blending of the words of Christ through the theme of water, guided<br />

by Eastern musical traditions. From Mongolian overtone singing to<br />

Peking Opera to the sound of water, this promises to be an experience,<br />

March 9 at 8pm, Trinity-St. Pauls Centre, Toronto.<br />

Follow Brian on Twitter @bfchang. Send info/media/<br />

tips to choralscene@thewholenote.com.<br />

Admission is FREE<br />

for both events.<br />

Doors open<br />

at 3:30pm.<br />

SONGS FROM A CELTIC HEART<br />

Annual Fundraising Event<br />

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3, <strong>2018</strong> • 2:00 PM & 7:00 PM<br />

FEATURING<br />

Amadeus Choir of Greater Toronto | Lydia Adams, conductor | Joan Andrews, conductor<br />

Shawn Grenke, conductor and piano | Tom Leighton, guitar and vocals<br />

Yorkminster Park Baptist Church<br />

1585 Yonge Street | (416) 922-1167<br />

YorkminsterPark.com<br />

Single tickets: $50 | $40 | $25<br />

$5 off tickets purchased before Jan. 15, <strong>2018</strong>!<br />

For tickets, call (416) 446-0188<br />

www.amadeuschoir.com<br />

Jubilee United Church<br />

40 Underhill Dr, Toronto<br />

(just NE of the DVP and Lawrence Ave E)<br />

32 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


Beat by Beat | World View<br />

In Ways That Words<br />

Alone Can Not<br />

ANDREW TIMAR<br />

Christmas, and the liminal juncture between old and new years<br />

that follows, is for many of us a prime occasion for gifting<br />

and for helping those<br />

less fortunate. It’s also a time<br />

when daylight hours are at<br />

their shortest and even our<br />

waking hours are dominated<br />

by darkness. As such it’s a<br />

time which amply rewards<br />

introspection of the personal<br />

kind, when we can profitably<br />

reflect back on the past year and<br />

also look forward, hopefully, to a<br />

brighter new one.<br />

At the heart of all this is<br />

observance of the winter solstice.<br />

The period around the year’s<br />

shortest day has been marked<br />

in the Northern Hemisphere<br />

with rituals of rebirth, celebrated<br />

in holidays, festivals and<br />

community gatherings, reaching<br />

back perhaps to the Neolithic<br />

Ahmed Moneka<br />

period. Ancient Romans, Persians, Chinese, Theravada Buddhists,<br />

Northern European peoples – pagan and neo-pagan – as well as the<br />

Zuni of the American Southwest all celebrated the winter solstice.<br />

Some still do. Sensitivity to natural cycles seems to be hardwired in<br />

our human DNA.<br />

It’s no coincidence that Christians of the Western tradition chose<br />

the winter solstice to celebrate the Longest Night (aka Blue Christmas).<br />

Falling at the end of the Advent season, these long and cold nights<br />

underscore believers’ own struggle with darkness and grief as<br />

they face the end of the growing season, and loss of many kinds.<br />

Christmas, the joyous celebration of Christ’s birth, was strategically<br />

placed within the Roman annual calendar by the early Church to<br />

coincide with this period.<br />

Timar family Christmas<br />

My own family has celebrated Christmas for many generations<br />

but in recent decades the focus has increasingly shifted from longtime<br />

religious to secular rituals performed by our immediate Toronto<br />

family. In our ever-morphing clan new partners are added, names<br />

change, babies are born, people move away and some return; they<br />

grow up, grow old and yes, our elders ultimately enter the realm of the<br />

ancestors.<br />

All dressed up, each year the extended Timar clan gathers at one of<br />

our homes to celebrate our seasonal traditions, ancient and new. We<br />

feast extravagantly into the night with special rich food and drink that<br />

speaks to our multiple ethnic and religious roots, identities and values.<br />

Helping refresh family bonds is the spirit of generosity, mutual care<br />

and the hospitality that permeates that late <strong>December</strong> evening.<br />

65 Million Refugee Realities<br />

Things aren’t so rosy however for everyone at this time of year. It’s<br />

a particularly sad time for families torn apart geographically, when<br />

some are compelled to flee their homelands. So it was too with my<br />

family when I was six. We were refugees from post-revolution occupied<br />

Hungary. Our first generation is forever grateful to Canada for<br />

giving five of us sanctuary, a fertile place to put down roots, make a<br />

home, to flourish.<br />

Today, the plight of refugees of many kinds continues to confront<br />

every global citizen. Many millions of our fellow humans need aid or<br />

asylum at any given time. Celebrated Chinese multimedia artist and<br />

activist Ai Weiwei estimates the number at “about 65 million people.”<br />

In October <strong>2017</strong> he opened a vast new installation Good Fences<br />

Make Good Neighbours at some 300 sites around New York City,<br />

aiming ultimately to draw attention to the world’s refugee crisis. Good<br />

Fences criticizes “the global trend of trying to separate us by colour,<br />

race, religion, nationality ... against freedom, against humanity,” as Ai<br />

said at his October Manhattan press conference.<br />

Reunite the Moneka Family<br />

The mind-boggling numbers of displaced humanity around the<br />

world can be overwhelming in<br />

the absence of being able to put<br />

a human face on suffering. The<br />

dilemma of refugees, so passionately<br />

articulated by Ai in his art,<br />

is reflected in many ways here<br />

in Toronto. Not surprisingly,<br />

within our musical communities,<br />

it shows up particularly<br />

keenly among world musicians<br />

who have recently made Canada<br />

their home.<br />

Early in November I received<br />

an email from Jaclyn Tam,<br />

manager of concerts and<br />

special projects – including<br />

New Canadian Global Music<br />

Orchestra (NCGMO) – at<br />

the Royal Conservatory and<br />

TELUS Centre. “I wanted to<br />

tell you about a fundraiser I’m<br />

Proudly presents our 5 th<br />

HIGH NOTES GALA<br />

for Mental Health with<br />

LUBA GOY, LLOYD ROBERTSON, MICHAEL LANDSBERG<br />

GILES TOMKINS, MICHAEL BRIDGE,<br />

FRANK HORVAT & FRIENDS<br />

Thursday February 1 @ 7:30 pm<br />

Richmond Hill Centre for Performing Arts<br />

905.787.8811 rhcentre.ca<br />

ONE in FIVE are a ected<br />

WE ALL HAVE A STORY<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 33


organizing on Monday, <strong>December</strong> 11 at Lula Lounge,” Tam’s email<br />

began. JUNO winners and nominee musicians Quique Escamilla,<br />

David Buchbinder, Maryem and Ernie Tollar, and many special guests<br />

will perform. They’re coming together to support Ahmed Moneka, an<br />

incredibly special musician and actor who now calls Toronto home, in<br />

his bid to bring his family here. I first met him last year when he auditioned<br />

for NCGMO.”<br />

I was immediately gripped. Here was a story with parallels to that of<br />

my own family of origin, as well as to ancient semi-mythic narratives<br />

of asylum, hopes of peace, reconciliation and gift-giving generosity. I<br />

called Tam at her Royal Conservatory office.<br />

“Musician and actor Ahmed Moneka was forced to apply for asylum<br />

in Canada in 2015 after his family received death threats for his lead<br />

role as a gay Iraqi man in the [short] film The<br />

Society,” she told me. (The film premiered at<br />

the Cannes Film Festival and showed at TIFF.)<br />

Moneka’s family, of African Sufi descent,<br />

was well established in Baghdad’s artist<br />

community. His father was a well-known<br />

Iraqi actor and comedian, and his sister<br />

Isra was one of the founders of the Cinema<br />

Department at the University of Basra. His<br />

younger sister Tara has an international<br />

career as a singer. She has performed on Iraqi<br />

TV and at festivals at a young age.<br />

Having faced months of violent threats<br />

from the increasingly powerful militias in<br />

Iraq, however, the family was forced to flee<br />

to Turkey in 2016. Ahmed’s family has been<br />

torn apart and they are now “in a critical<br />

situation.” Moneka speaks powerfully of their<br />

present danger in his fundraising YouTube<br />

video. Moneka hopes to reunite his family<br />

in Canada “so that they may live together in<br />

peace.” All proceeds from the <strong>December</strong> 11<br />

Lula concert will support his goal.<br />

“With Ahmed, it’s all personal,” Tam<br />

says. “I met him a few times, heard his music, and since there was a<br />

personal connection I felt compelled to act. It was simple really: here’s<br />

one person I could help reconnect with his family.”<br />

At his NCGMO audition, “Ahmed<br />

radiated pure musical joy.” But as Tam<br />

explains, by the time the final roster<br />

was decided, he had already made<br />

a commitment to tour with another<br />

band. The NCGMO moved on without<br />

him, but he made abiding connections<br />

with artistic director David<br />

Buchbinder, who has hired Ahmed for<br />

other projects.<br />

After hearing Ahmed’s story, Tam felt<br />

personally compelled to help. “I don’t<br />

have a lot of money to donate,” she<br />

says, “but I do have a large network built up over the years and also the<br />

producing skills to put together such an event.” So she reached out to<br />

Tracey Jenkins at Lula Lounge and to musicians who have worked with<br />

Ahmed. “I was touched by the response of Lula and of the musicians<br />

and artists. They didn’t hesitate to donate their talents.”<br />

This is our community at work big time (and it promises to be a fine<br />

musical evening as well)! Ahmed plays cajón and sings maqam in a<br />

wonderful trio called Moskitto Bar, which will play at the fundraiser.<br />

(One of his bandmates, Tangi Ropars, is formerly of Lemon Bucket<br />

Orkestra.) Additionally, a group dubbed Orchestra of Love has been<br />

organized for the fundraiser, bringing together Toronto world music<br />

A-listers such as trumpeter David Buchbinder, singers Maryem Tollar<br />

and Roula Said, percussionist Naghmeh Farahmand, multi-instrumentalist<br />

and vocalist Waleed Abdulhamid and wind player extraordinaire<br />

Ernie Tollar.<br />

In addition to pure music, NAMAS will recite poetry to guitar<br />

accompaniment and Zeena Sileem, an Iraqi painter, will paint a canvas<br />

ZOHAR RON<br />

Ravid Kahalani of Yemen Blues<br />

live during the evening. The completed canvas will be auctioned with<br />

proceeds benefitting the Moneka family reunification fund.<br />

All in all, this promises to be a terrific community event guaranteed<br />

to put all who come out to support the Moneka family’s desire for<br />

reunification in a proper holiday spirit.<br />

New Canadian Global Music Orchestra (NCGMO): update<br />

I promised in my summer <strong>2017</strong> column story about NCGMO that<br />

I would follow up on the ensemble’s progress. Since I was speaking<br />

with Jaclyn Tam about the Moneka story I asked her for an update<br />

on the orchestra as well. As it turns out, the Orchestra had a Banff<br />

Centre studio residency in September and October, recording its first<br />

album (which is being edited and mixed for concert release on April 7,<br />

<strong>2018</strong>). Shortly after the Banff residency, in November, the NCGMO<br />

performed a showcase at “North America’s<br />

World Music Summit,” Mundial Montréal. And<br />

on February 24, deeper and no doubt whiter<br />

into winter, NCGMO will appear on the Isabel<br />

Bader Centre stage in Kingston, in what the<br />

Isabel’s listings describe as a concert of “transcultural<br />

music which connects and communicates<br />

in ways that words, politicians, and<br />

spiritual leaders cannot. Together, we all find a<br />

common language.”<br />

Lula Music and Arts Centre<br />

In its own words, Lula “nourishes a thriving<br />

Canadian world music scene … with a focus on<br />

local artists performing music of the Americas.” It<br />

fosters the Canadian world music scene “through<br />

concerts, festivals, cultural exchanges, education,<br />

outreach, audience and professional development.”<br />

Lula’s Dundas West space appears to be in<br />

particularly heavy rotation this <strong>December</strong>. I<br />

counted 31 concerts and salsa classes on the site.<br />

That averages out to an astounding one scheduled<br />

event for each day of the month! In <strong>January</strong><br />

the action announced so far settles down to<br />

eight music events, plus another six booked to date in February. It’s<br />

entirely possible more gigs will be booked in the interim, but in any<br />

case that is much too many to talk about here. I encourage readers to<br />

Paolo Angeli<br />

visit The WholeNote’s listings or Lula’s<br />

site calendar for updates.<br />

Aga Khan Museum: concert picks<br />

for <strong>January</strong> and February <strong>2018</strong><br />

Another premier Toronto venue for<br />

culturally diverse music performance<br />

is the Aga Khan Museum. It continues<br />

its programs of concerts and more<br />

casual pop-ups.<br />

<strong>January</strong> 18 the AKM presents<br />

“Yemen Blues,” a truly transcultural<br />

band delivering “an explosive combination<br />

of Yemeni song and poetry,<br />

Jewish music, West African groove and funk.” With musicians from<br />

New York City, Uruguay and Tel Aviv, leader Ravid Kahalani’s charts set<br />

a high musical standard and have roused international audiences.<br />

February 1 “Musical Inventions” by Paolo Angeli featuring Dr. Draw<br />

takes the AKM’s auditorium stage.<br />

Angeli, playing a unique 18-string hybrid of guitar, violoncello and<br />

drums, performs music rooted in the Sardinian tradition blended with<br />

avant-garde aesthetics. He’s joined by electric violinist Dr. Draw.<br />

February 16 the AKM presents “Under the Indian Musical<br />

Sky,” with Montréal group Constantinople and Grammy Awardnominated<br />

Carnatic venu (flute) virtuoso Shashank Subramanyam.<br />

Constantinople’s collaboration with Subramanyam “bridges not only<br />

East and West but [also musical] traditions … from across the globe,”<br />

much like the group’s namesake city.<br />

Andrew Timar is a Toronto musician and music writer. He<br />

can be contacted at worldmusic@thewholenote.com.<br />

34 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


Beat by Beat | Jazz Notes<br />

The Pitfalls of<br />

Seasonal Gigging<br />

STEVE WALLACE<br />

Jazz musicians earn part of what is laughingly referred to as their<br />

“living” by doing what they call “jobbing gigs,” on which they<br />

provide all-purpose music for various functions. Guido Basso<br />

calls what is generally required on these gigs “jolly jazz”: a variety of<br />

familiar songs – standards, bossa novas, maybe even the odd jazz tune<br />

– well-played at tempos which are danceable, or at least listenable.<br />

Not that anyone at these dos actually listens – the music is generally<br />

intended as background to deafening chatter – but just in case.<br />

The time-honoured m.o. of these gigs is “faking” – that is, playing<br />

umpteen songs without using any written music. Even when all of<br />

the musicians involved know a lot of tunes, there is a certain amount<br />

of repertorial Russian roulette involved. Nobody knows every song –<br />

well, Reg Schwager maybe – but even if you know the given song, it<br />

may not come to you until after it’s over and it’s too late. Generally<br />

though, faking works and it cuts down on schlepping music and<br />

music stands.<br />

But a couple of bullets are added to the faking Russian roulette<br />

pistol every <strong>December</strong>, when seasonal music is thrown into the<br />

jobbing mix. Both the risks and stakes suddenly go up as musicians<br />

are naturally expected to play Christmas standards – familiar<br />

and dear to all – but which they haven’t played for a whole year. (By<br />

“Christmas standards” I mean more modern seasonal songs with some<br />

kind of jazz element such as Walking in a Winter Wonderland or<br />

White Christmas, as opposed to traditional carols which are generally<br />

performed by roving choirs or brass ensembles.)<br />

On the face of it, faking seasonal standards doesn’t seem like<br />

such a challenge, because we all know how these chestnuts (no pun<br />

intended) go, right? But you’d be surprised. Not all Christmas standards<br />

are as simple as they seem, some are quite complicated and after<br />

a year in mothballs they can prove a little elusive. Even the easier ones<br />

– such as Santa Claus Is Coming to Town or Let It Snow – present<br />

challenges because they don’t behave like other songs. Often their<br />

middle sections – or bridges – go into the key of the dominant, which<br />

very few other songs do. And because the bridges often occur only a<br />

quarter of the time, they’re harder to remember. I’ve been on many a<br />

seasonal gig where a faked Christmas tune is going along swimmingly<br />

until the middle is approaching and everyone gets a panicky look on<br />

their face which says, “Where the hell does the bridge go?” It’s ironic,<br />

but the seeming simplicity of the easier seasonal songs confound jazz<br />

musicians who spend the rest of the year negotiating the fiendish<br />

complexities of songs such as Lush Life or Round Midnight without<br />

a hitch, and maybe that’s part of the problem. Being accustomed to<br />

complex harmony, jazz musicians playing simple Christmas tunes are<br />

a bit like cryptic crossword experts who have difficulty solving regular<br />

crosswords.<br />

There are two harmonically complex seasonal standards though:<br />

The Christmas Song, and Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas,<br />

each of them a must-play. Both are ballads and their slow tempos<br />

exacerbate the chord change clashes which lurk around every corner.<br />

Taken in the key of E-flat, The Christmas Song has two quick and<br />

tricky modulations in its first eight bars alone: to the key of G-Major<br />

then immediately to G-flat Major. These key changes come as something<br />

of a surprise if you haven’t played it in 12 months, but even if<br />

you do remember them there are all sorts of chord-change options to<br />

trip over before the modulations. Altogether this makes faking Mel<br />

Torme’s classic for the first time in a year a sweaty experience.<br />

Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas may be the best of the lot<br />

and is somewhat easier, but still has its scary moments. It’s smooth<br />

sailing up until the beginning of the bridge, which can start on one<br />

of two chords fraught with conflict for a bassist and a pianist. Again<br />

in E-flat, the first chord of the bridge could be A-flat Major 7, or the<br />

“hipper” option – an A Minor 7 flat-five chord which has all the same<br />

notes save for the all-important root. Notice the roots are a semitone<br />

apart, and there’s the rub. As the bridge arrives, a bassist has to make<br />

a split-second decision about which root to play, with a 50/50 chance<br />

of being dead wrong and sounding like an idiot. If he or she chooses<br />

the A and the pianist plays the A-flat chord it sounds awful and vice<br />

versa; it’s a game of chord-change chicken. If I had a dollar for every<br />

time I zigged when I should have zagged in this situation, I’d be a rich<br />

man. The smart solution would be for the pianist to omit the root altogether<br />

and leave the choice up to the bassist. But no, that would be too<br />

easy, and not many pianists think this way. This may seem like a small<br />

detail and it is, but the trouble with these clashes is that they leave<br />

you frazzled and jar your concentration, which can lead to further<br />

clunkers along the way.<br />

The big problem is that these seasonal faking mishaps occur in a<br />

context riddled with expectation, memory and the potential to spoil<br />

the seasonal mood. It’s an important time of year and the people at<br />

a seasonal gig know all these tunes intimately from years of hearing<br />

them on records and in movies, usually in more deluxe versions with<br />

strings, choirs, Bing Crosby, etc. Messing up a Christmas tune leaves<br />

the band with eggnog on its face and is like messing up a national<br />

anthem – everybody hears it right away and sometimes offence is<br />

taken. As in, “Who hired these bums and how much are they being<br />

paid? They can’t even play White Christmas, for crying out loud!”<br />

But not all the disasters of seasonal gigs come from faking tunes;<br />

some of them have to do with the merrymaking of the audience. Here<br />

are a couple of Christmas party stories to illustrate this. About 15 years<br />

ago guitarist Ted Quinlan hired saxophonist Mike Murley, drummer<br />

Ted Warren and me to play a Christmas party, held on the third floor<br />

of The Senator, for a small company. Ted is prized for his musical<br />

versatility and his whacky sense of humour, both of which came in<br />

WWW.OPJAZZFEST.ORG<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 35


SANJA ANTIC<br />

handy on this gig. After no time at all it became clear that the people<br />

weren’t going to pay any attention to the music, all was din. We were<br />

playing God Rest Ye, Merry Gentleman when, thinking of the lyrics,<br />

I glanced over at<br />

Ted, who had a<br />

typically maniacal<br />

grin on his face.<br />

Somehow I knew<br />

this meant that he<br />

was going to yell<br />

out “Satan!” from<br />

the carol’s fifth<br />

line and when the<br />

time came we both<br />

bellowed “Satan!”<br />

at the top of our<br />

lungs. Nobody<br />

noticed except the<br />

other two guys<br />

in the band, who<br />

proceeded to join<br />

us with “Satan!” in<br />

the next choruses.<br />

I still don’t know<br />

how we managed<br />

to get through the<br />

tune with all the<br />

Ted Quinlan<br />

laughing, but we<br />

had to take a break<br />

afterwards from<br />

sheer exhaustion.<br />

A few years later, singer John Alcorn hired guitarist Reg Schwager<br />

and me – his regular band – to play a Christmas party for a small<br />

law firm, held in a private banquet facility in a downtown restaurant.<br />

It was a fairly intimate party with the people close at hand,<br />

some of them even listening to the music. All was going well until we<br />

came back from our second break and noticed that suddenly everybody<br />

was drunk. Particularly a large East Indian gentleman who really<br />

had the lamp shade on, like Peter Sellers in The Party, only louder.<br />

Alcorn called Route 66 – not a seasonal song, but a good party tune.<br />

As he began singing it, the Indian guy bellowed out “Oh goody, it’s<br />

Route 67!” and began dancing a ridiculous teetering boogie only he<br />

understood. Reg and I both doubled over laughing, but still somehow<br />

managed to keep playing. Alcorn didn’t bat an eye though; his face<br />

was a mask of composure and he kept singing as if nothing had<br />

happened. That, ladies and gentleman, is professionalism.<br />

So these are a couple of examples of musicians getting their own<br />

back amid the minefield of Christmas gigs. A few years ago some of us<br />

found a new way of having fun with seasonal music: a mashup game<br />

in which we combined the names of Christmas carols/songs with<br />

jazz tunes and standards to form wacky new titles. “Hark the Herald<br />

Angels Sing Sing Sing,” “Joy Spring to the World,” “Sippin’ at Jingle<br />

Bells,” “Silent Night in Tunisia,” “What Child Is This Thing Called<br />

Love?” and “O Little Rootie Tootie Town of Bethlehem” were among<br />

the first of these; later I expanded the game to include readers and<br />

wrote a piece about it. If you’re interested, google wallacebass.com<br />

and look for the title “Birth of the Yule” (or use the direct link:<br />

wallacebass.com/?p–4462).<br />

I’d like to take this opportunity to wish everyone a joyous and<br />

safe holiday season and a Happy New Year. The latter usually comes<br />

with resolutions, some of which are easier to stick to than others. A<br />

few years back I resolved to stop taking New Year’s Eve gigs, only to<br />

discover they’d disappeared. All New Year’s resolutions should be so<br />

easy to keep.<br />

Toronto bassist Steve Wallace writes a blog called “Steve Wallace<br />

jazz, baseball, life and other ephemera” which can be accessed at<br />

wallacebass.com. Aside from the topics mentioned, he sometimes<br />

writes about movies and food.<br />

Beat by Beat | Bandstand<br />

Pride of Performance and<br />

Canadian Connections<br />

JACK MACQUARRIE<br />

Here we are, it’s <strong>December</strong> already, but with many community<br />

ensembles still more focused on sesquicentennial projects as<br />

the year draws to a close than on events that could be described<br />

as special for the Christmas season. Let’s start with two band projects<br />

we have recently learned of that warrant mention, both of which have<br />

significant historical aspects.<br />

Cobourg: The first of these is the announcement of a CD by the<br />

Cobourg Concert Band. Although this CD, Pride of Performance, was<br />

officially released on Canada Day at the band’s concert in the Cobourg<br />

Victoria Park Bandshell, it did not come to our attention until a few<br />

days ago. There are a number of ways in which this CD is special. Not<br />

only is it a sesquicentennial project, but it marks the 175th year that<br />

there has been a town band in Cobourg. That’s 25 years longer than<br />

Canada has been a country. Whether that sets a record for the establishment<br />

of a town band in Canada will be left for this Cobourg band<br />

to dispute with the Newmarket Citizens’ Band and any others that<br />

might claim such a title. Every track on this recording is either a new<br />

arrangement of an established work or a completely new composition.<br />

All are by local musicians, including some band members.<br />

Even the cover artwork was created by contest winners from the local<br />

St. Mary’s High School. I hope to see a review of this CD in a future<br />

issue of The WholeNote.<br />

(A side note: this band also bears the title The Band of Her Majesty’s<br />

Royal Marines Association – Ontario, and is allowed, by royal assent,<br />

to wear the uniform of the Royal Marines. How could this be, you<br />

might ask. Some years ago a man named Roland White moved from<br />

England and took up residence in Cobourg. He just happened to<br />

have been an assistant bandmaster in the Royal Marines working<br />

under the renowned conductor Sir Vivian Dunn, and had studied<br />

conducting under Sir John Barbirolli. When the town band needed a<br />

new conductor, there was White to take over, get that royal assent and<br />

change the image of the town band to its present pride of Cobourg.)<br />

London: Where else might we look for a sesquicentennial band<br />

project? The first place that comes to mind, of course, is Henry<br />

Meredith’s Plumbing Factory Brass Band in London. On Wednesday,<br />

<strong>December</strong> 13, 7:30pm at Byron United Church – 420 Boler Rd.,<br />

London, Ontario – the PFBB will celebrate Canada’s 150th birthday<br />

with “The Golden Age of Brass,” featuring music from the 1800s on<br />

period instruments. Since Confederation-era music will be highlighted,<br />

von Suppé’s exuberant Jolly Robbers Overture, written<br />

exactly 150 years ago in 1867, will open the program. Then, band<br />

music by big name composers will include Beethoven’s Marsch des<br />

Yorck’schen Korps and Mendelssohn’s War March of the Priests. The<br />

centrepiece of the program will be the challenging Raymond Overture<br />

by Ambroise Thomas.<br />

Last month I mentioned the importance of musicianship for ensembles<br />

to really tell their story. Well, in this program, Dr. Hank has<br />

selected a set of four up-tempo compositions to test the skill of his<br />

band’s musicians. One highly regarded composer of the 1800s, famed<br />

for his toe-tapping pieces based on popular dance forms of the mid-<br />

19th century, was Claudio Grafulla. To demonstrate their skills, the<br />

band will play a set of four of his works: Cape May Polka, Freischutz<br />

Quick Step, Skyrocket March, and Hurrah Storm Galop. Another<br />

seasonal favourite, Johann Strauss Sr.’s famous Radetzky March from<br />

1848, will bring the concert to a rousing close. I’m sure that many<br />

instruments from Dr. Hank’s vast collection will be front and centre at<br />

this concert.<br />

(Another sidenote: While brass bands have many loyal followers,<br />

36 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


particularly in England and much of North America, that has not<br />

always been the case. With the origin of the brass band movement<br />

coming largely from company “works bands” in England, there<br />

were often considerable derisive comments about them. Sir Thomas<br />

Beecham was famous (or infamous) for two of these comments. “The<br />

British Brass Band has its place – outdoors, and several miles away” is<br />

perhaps his most often quoted. But the one that drew the most ire was<br />

when he referred to the brass band as “that superannuated, obsolete,<br />

beastly, disgusting, horrid method of making music.” However, attitudes<br />

gradually changed, and in 1947 Beecham even guest-conducted<br />

a mass band concert at Belle Vue.)<br />

Ukraine: Speaking of brass bands, recent Salvation Army news<br />

caught my attention. The Salvation Army is represented and active in<br />

127 countries around the world. In many of these countries, Salvation<br />

Army groups have brass bands. Ukraine, in particular, is a country<br />

where there is a will but not the required leadership to develop the<br />

brass band movement. Several attempts have been made over the<br />

last 25 years to stimulate interest. While some attempts have been<br />

successful, with the political unrest of recent years, these have been<br />

difficult to sustain.<br />

Enter Bob Gray, a Toronto high school music teacher, trumpet player<br />

and conductor with whom I play regularly, who has been active in the<br />

Salvation Army for many years. About six years ago, at the Salvation<br />

Army’s music camp at Jackson’s Point, he met two young men from<br />

Kiev, a cornet player and a euphonium player. After they had returned<br />

to Kiev, Bob decided to look into the SA band situation in Ukraine.<br />

After the revolution of 2014, Salvation Army churches throughout<br />

Ukraine closed, and now there are only two remaining in Kiev. Having<br />

learned of the demise of that Salvation Army movement, Gray decided<br />

to try to do something to rectify the situation. Item one on his agenda<br />

was language study. For over a year he actively studied in preparation<br />

for visits to Ukraine for Salvation Army activities. He went to<br />

Kiev for the first time in June 2016, then in May <strong>2017</strong>, and again in<br />

October <strong>2017</strong>. Gray, along with the people he met at Jackson’s Point<br />

years ago, are trying to resurrect the brass band movement in the<br />

Ukraine and, in particular, Kiev. A survey showed that there were 25<br />

instruments in working order and a few players who were willing<br />

to commit time and effort to form what would be a divisional band<br />

base in Kiev.<br />

The Salvation Army will be celebrating their 25th anniversary of<br />

operations in Ukraine this coming June. It is hoped that the divisional<br />

band in Kiev will have its debut during that weekend of activities.<br />

The Winton Citadel Band from Bournemouth in the United<br />

Kingdom will be the featured band for the festivities. The city of Kiev<br />

hosted the Eastern block countries Eurovision Song Festival this<br />

past June. During the event many groups entertained in local parks<br />

and squares. The Salvation Army provided a musical presentation in<br />

Victory Park. Bob Gray was a featured cornet soloist as part of these<br />

outreach concerts.<br />

A trip to Belgium: A couple of months ago I heard from longtime<br />

friend Colin Rowe that he would be travelling to Belgium. I first met<br />

Colin some time around 1984 when we were both playing in a swing<br />

band at the Newmarket Jazz Appreciation Society. After that, he played<br />

trombone in the Governor General’s Horse Guards Band and subsequently<br />

became their drum major. Having moved East some years ago,<br />

Colin now has the same duties with the Cobourg Concert Band.<br />

To commemorate the 100th anniversary of the battle of<br />

Passchendaele, Veterans Affairs Canada decided to mount a very<br />

different form of memorial. Specifically they identified nine recipients<br />

of the Victoria Cross from that era and the nine regiments in<br />

which they served. Then they selected a living representative of each<br />

regiment to go to Belgium, but that person could not be a currently<br />

serving member of the regiment. One of those VC recipients was<br />

Private Tommy Holmes VC from the 48th Canadian Mounted Rifles. At<br />

some time after WWI that unit’s name was changed to the Governor<br />

General’s Horse Guards. As the representative from the GGHG,<br />

Veterans Affairs selected Colin Rowe. All of regimental representatives,<br />

along with the band of the Royal 22nd Regiment, embarked on an<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 37


JACK MACQUARRIE<br />

Drum major Colin Rowe with the Cobourg<br />

Concert Band in Plattsburgh NY, 2013<br />

RCAF transport for their trip to Belgium on November 5.<br />

Another formerly local musician was Kevin Fleming, who was<br />

originally introduced to the GGHG by Colin as a trombone player.<br />

Later, like Colin, he continued to play trombone, but became Drum<br />

Major of the GGHG. Some time later Fleming transferred to the<br />

Regular Force, and a while ago to the Royal 22nd Regiment, nicknamed<br />

the Van Doos. Their band was selected as the lead band<br />

because Passchendaele was one of that regiment’s battle honours.<br />

While there were many ceremonies, the highlight for Fleming was at<br />

Passchendaele, with a torchlight parade from the WW1 monument to<br />

the town square followed by a concert.<br />

Those who went on that trip commented that it had been meticulously<br />

organized by Veterans Affairs, and that on the flight over, they<br />

were presented with a six-page detailed itinerary for their ten-day<br />

visit to memorials and cemeteries, informing them of the time and<br />

place of their every move.<br />

(Aside, again: speaking of Belgium, one significant recent event<br />

I attended was a concert by Toronto’s Wychwood Clarinet Choir on<br />

November 19. While most of the works performed at their concerts<br />

are special arrangements, the opening work, Claribel, was written<br />

by Belgian composer Guido Six specifically for his Claribel Clarinet<br />

Choir in Ostend. This was a wonderful rousing opening. The arranging<br />

talent of choir member Roy Greaves was certainly on display as<br />

the choir’s moods traversed from the Irish folk song The Lark in the<br />

Clear Air and a Mozart Serenade to three tangos by Astor Piazzolla.<br />

Harmonically the choir sounded better than I had ever heard it. Their<br />

harmonies were so well blended that one might think that their<br />

sounds were coming from a single source.)<br />

Greenbank, Ontario: From the tiny Ontario hamlet of Greenbank,<br />

conductor and composer Stuart Beaudoin brought his Orpheus<br />

Symphonietta to the small town of Uxbridge for another memorable<br />

recent event – a concert featuring his new composition Elegy<br />

II: Lament and Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No.5. This was the first<br />

performance of his composition which conveys, in musical terms,<br />

some of the spectrum of the composer’s emotions arising from<br />

world events during his lifetime. It’s an interesting work which bears<br />

more listening. This same man will be back two weeks later with his<br />

Greenbank Cantorei sine Nomine choir and the same orchestra for a<br />

three-hour performance of Bach’s Christmas Oratorio in English.<br />

Flute Street: That other local same-instrument-family group, Flute<br />

Street, unfortunately had their most recent concert on the same date<br />

as the aforementioned Wychwood Clarinet Choir. Their featured<br />

soloist was Christine Beard playing alto flute and piccolo. Those<br />

types of same-instrument ensembles would seem to be competing for<br />

the same audiences, and it is unfortunate that there is not a central<br />

registry to avoid such overlaps. Flute Street’s Nancy Nourse had hoped<br />

to have her new contra alto flute, but it wasn’t available on time. She<br />

says that it will be the first of its kind in Canada. She intends to unveil<br />

it in time for their next concert, possibly in March. It’s an unusual<br />

instrument made in Holland. She may even travel there to get it and<br />

bring it home.<br />

Jack MacQuarrie plays several brass instruments and has<br />

performed in many community ensembles. He can be contacted at<br />

bandstand@thewholenote.com.<br />

Friday, <strong>January</strong> 26 <strong>2018</strong><br />

5:45 pm<br />

Cocktail hour concert with arias<br />

and duets to open Mozart’s<br />

birthday weekend celebrations.<br />

The bar opens at 5:00 pm.<br />

Natalya Gennadi, soprano<br />

Lyndsay Promane, mezzo soprano<br />

Helen Becqué,piano<br />

$25<br />

Saturday, <strong>January</strong> 27 <strong>2018</strong><br />

8:00 pm<br />

Happy birthday Wolfgang!<br />

Celebrate with the Toronto<br />

Mozart Players and guest artist<br />

Adam Sherkin. Sacher Torte to<br />

follow.<br />

Adam Sherkin,composer & pianist<br />

Toronto Mozart Players<br />

$35 adults | $15 students<br />

Sunday, <strong>January</strong> 28 <strong>2018</strong><br />

2:00 pm<br />

Celebrating the master. Symphony<br />

No. 40 in g minor, Regina Coeli<br />

K.276, “Coronation” Mass in C<br />

Toronto Mozart Players<br />

Pax Christi Chamber Choir<br />

Singers from the Toronto Mozart Vocal<br />

Competition & Masterclass Series<br />

$35 adults | $15 students<br />

38 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


The WholeNote listings are arranged in five sections:<br />

A.<br />

GTA (GREATER TORONTO AREA) covers all of Toronto<br />

plus Halton, Peel, York and Durham regions.<br />

B.<br />

BEYOND THE GTA covers many areas of Southern<br />

Ontario outside Toronto and the GTA. Starts on page 58.<br />

C.<br />

MUSIC THEATRE covers a wide range of music types:<br />

from opera, operetta and musicals, to non-traditional<br />

performance types where words and music are in some<br />

fashion equal partners in the drama. Starts on page 63.<br />

D.<br />

IN THE CLUBS (MOSTLY JAZZ)<br />

is organized alphabetically by club.<br />

Starts on page 65.<br />

E.<br />

THE ETCETERAS is for galas, fundraisers, competitions,<br />

screenings, lectures, symposia, masterclasses, workshops,<br />

singalongs and other music-related events (except<br />

performances) which may be of interest to our readers.<br />

Starts on page 67.<br />

A GENERAL WORD OF CAUTION. A phone number is provided<br />

with every listing in The WholeNote — in fact, we won’t publish<br />

a listing without one. Concerts are sometimes cancelled or postponed;<br />

artists or venues may change after listings are published.<br />

Please check before you go out to a concert.<br />

HOW TO LIST. Listings in The WholeNote in the four sections above<br />

are a free service available, at our discretion, to eligible presenters.<br />

If you have an event, send us your information no later than the<br />

8th of the month prior to the issue or issues in which your listing is<br />

eligible to appear.<br />

LISTINGS DEADLINE. The next issue covers the period from<br />

February 1 to March 7, <strong>2017</strong>. All listings must be received by<br />

Midnight Monday <strong>January</strong> 8.<br />

LISTINGS can be sent by email to listings@thewholenote.com<br />

or by using the online form on our website. We do not receive<br />

listings by phone, but you can call 416-3<strong>23</strong>-2<strong>23</strong>2 x27 for further<br />

information.<br />

LISTINGS ZONE MAP. Visit our website to search for concerts<br />

by the zones on this map: thewholenote.com.<br />

Lake<br />

Huron<br />

6<br />

Georgian<br />

Bay<br />

7<br />

2 1<br />

5<br />

Lake Erie<br />

3 4<br />

8<br />

City of Toronto<br />

LISTINGS<br />

Lake Ontario<br />

Friday <strong>December</strong> 1<br />

●●10:30am and 1:00: Canadian Opera Company.<br />

The Magic Victrola. Libretto by David<br />

Kersnar and Jacqueline Russell. Works by<br />

Bizet, Mozart, Puccini and others. Members<br />

of the COC’s Ensemble Studio; Ashlie<br />

Corcoran, director. Richard Bradshaw<br />

Amphitheatre, Four Seasons Centre for the<br />

Performing Arts, 145 Queen St. W. 416-363-<br />

8<strong>23</strong>1. $30; free(children under 12), Maximum<br />

of 2 free children’s tickets for each adult<br />

ticket sold. Additional children’s tickets $10.<br />

Also Dec 1(1pm), Dec 2(11am and 1:30pm),<br />

Dec 3(10:30am and 1:30pm).<br />

●●12:30: York University Department of<br />

Music. Music @ Midday: Brass Ensemble.<br />

Tribute Communities Recital Hall, Accolade<br />

East Building, YU, 4700 Keele St. 647-459-<br />

0701. Free.<br />

FOUR WEDDINGS,<br />

A FUNERAL, AND<br />

A CORONATION<br />

DIRECTED BY ELISA CITTERIO<br />

& IVARS TAURINS<br />

NOV 29 – DEC 3<br />

TRINITY-ST. PAUL’S CENTRE<br />

tafelmusik.org<br />

●●3:30: Tafelmusik. Four Weddings, a Funeral,<br />

and a Coronation. Handel: Ouverture from Il<br />

parnasso in festa; Purcell: Symphonies from<br />

the ode “From Hardy Climes” Z325; Blow: Coronation<br />

Anthem “God Spake Sometimes in<br />

Visions”; Lully: Ballet from Xerxes; Pachelbel<br />

Canon & Gigue; and other works. Tafelmusik<br />

Baroque Orchestra and Chamber Choir<br />

directed by Elisa Citterio and Ivars Taurins.<br />

Trinity-St. Paul’s Centre, 427 Bloor St. W. 416-<br />

964-6337. $19-$97. Also Nov 29, 30, Dec 2, 3.<br />

●●7:00: Brampton Folk Club. Friday Folk<br />

Night. Frost and Fire: A Celtic Christmas with<br />

Rant Maggie Rant. St. Paul’s United Church<br />

(Brampton), 30 Main St. S., Brampton. 647-<br />

<strong>23</strong>3-3655 or 905-874-2800. $18; $15(sr/st).<br />

●●7:30: Living Arts Centre. Alysha Brilla.<br />

4141 Living Arts Dr., Mississauga. 905-306-<br />

6000. $20-$35.<br />

●●7:30: Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Home<br />

Alone in Concert. John Williams: Home Alone<br />

(film with live orchestra). Etobicoke School<br />

of the Arts Concert Choir; Constantine Kitsopoulos,<br />

conductor. Roy Thomson Hall,<br />

60 Simcoe St. 416-593-1285. $25-$88. Also<br />

Nov 30(7:30pm), Dec 2(2pm and 7:30pm).<br />

●●8:00: Amadeus Choir of Greater Toronto/<br />

Elmer Iseler Singers. J.S. Bach’s Christmas<br />

Oratorio. Bach: Christmas Oratorio; Cantatas<br />

I-III. Monica Whicher, soprano; Marjorie Maltais,<br />

mezzo; Christopher Mayell, tenor; Dion<br />

Mazerolle, baritone; Lydia Adams, conductor.<br />

A. Concerts in the GTA<br />

Metropolitan United Church (Toronto),<br />

56 Queen St. E. 416-446-0188 or 416-217-<br />

0537. $55; $50(sr); $20(under 30).<br />

●●8:00: Flato Markham Theatre. Eddie Palmieri:<br />

Eddie at 80. 171 Town Centre Blvd., Markham.<br />

905-305-7469. $15-$80.<br />

●●8:00: Let There Be Music Community<br />

Choir. Songs of the Season Christmas Concert.<br />

Susan Chopp, director; Dave Parsons,<br />

director; Eric Medhurst, accompanist. Salvation<br />

Army Temple (Rexdale), 2152 Kipling Ave.<br />

416-745-0352. $15; free(under 12).<br />

●●8:00: Living Arts Centre. A Swingin’<br />

Christmas with the Toronto All Star Big Band.<br />

4141 Living Arts Dr., Mississauga. 905-306-<br />

6000. $20-$35.<br />

●●8:00: Royal Conservatory. Quiet Please,<br />

There’s a Lady on Stage: Lisa Fischer and<br />

Grand Baton. Koerner Hall, Telus Centre,<br />

273 Bloor St. W. 416-408-0208. $45-$100.<br />

●●8:00: Summerhill Orchestra. In Concert.<br />

Saint-Saëns: Carnival of the Animals;<br />

Beethoven: Symphony No.8. Sarah John, conductor.<br />

Church of the Messiah, 240 Avenue<br />

Rd. summerhillorchestra@gmail.com. $10.<br />

●●8:00: Tapestry Opera. Tapestry Briefs:<br />

Winter Shorts. Jacqueline Woodley, soprano;<br />

Erica Iris, mezzo; Keith Klassen,<br />

tenor; Alex Dobson, baritone; Artists of the<br />

2016 Composer-Librettist Laboratory. Dancemakers<br />

Studio, Distillery Historic District,<br />

9 Trinity St. 416-537-6066. From $25. Also<br />

Dec 2(4pm and 8pm), 3(4pm).<br />

●●8:00: Upper Canada Choristers/Cantemos<br />

Latin Ensemble. Christmas Joy. Charpentier:<br />

Messe de Minuit pour Noel; Kodály: Christmas<br />

Dance of the Shepherds; Forrest: Carol<br />

of Joy; carol medley (arr. Forrest), aguinaldos<br />

and other works; audience sing-along. Laurel<br />

Trainor, flute; Hye Won Cecilia Lee, piano; Laurie<br />

Evan Fraser, conductor. Grace Church onthe-Hill,<br />

300 Lonsdale Rd. 416-256-0510. $25;<br />

free(children and teens with adult). Please<br />

bring an item for the food bank.<br />

Saturday <strong>December</strong> 2<br />

●●11:00am and 1:30: Canadian Opera Company.<br />

The Magic Victrola. See Dec 1 for<br />

details. Also Dec 3(10:30am and 1:30pm).<br />

●●2:00: Gallery 345. The Art of the Piano:<br />

Shoshana Telner. Hummel: Sonata No.2 in<br />

E-flat Op.13; Hummel: 24 Etudes Op.125; Liszt:<br />

Sonata in b S17. 345 Sorauren Ave. 416-822-<br />

9781. $20; $10(st). Cash only.<br />

●●2:00: Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Home<br />

Alone in Concert. John Williams: Home Alone<br />

(film with live orchestra). Etobicoke School<br />

of the Arts Concert Choir; Constantine Kitsopoulos,<br />

conductor. Roy Thomson Hall,<br />

60 Simcoe St. 416-593-1285. $25-$88. Also<br />

Nov 30, Dec 1, 2(all at 7:30pm).<br />

●●2:00: Yorkminster Park Baptist Church.<br />

Carol Sing. Guests: Jim Codrington, Fiona<br />

Reid, Kevin Frankish. True North Brass; Canadian<br />

Children’s Opera Company; That Choir;<br />

The Hedgerow Singers; Yorkminster Park<br />

Baptist Church Choir. 1585 Yonge St. 416-241-<br />

1298. Free. A collection will be taken. In support<br />

of the Churches-on-the-Hill Food Bank.<br />

●●2:30: Bel Canto Singers. Songs for a Winter’s<br />

Night. Linda Meyer, conductor; Jacqueline<br />

Mokrzewski, piano. Scarborough Bluffs<br />

United Church, 3739 Kingston Rd., Scarborough.<br />

416-286-8260. $20. Also 7:30pm.<br />

●●3:00: Singing Out. A Sky Full of Stars!<br />

Jane Mallett Theatre, 250 Front St. W.<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> | 39


416-585-4498. $30(door, cash only);<br />

$25/$20(adv/adv before Nov 17); $20(st/<br />

child)/$15(st/child before Nov 17). Also<br />

7:30pm. Proceeds benefit Singing Out, a<br />

registered charity.<br />

●●3:00: St. Michael’s Choir School. Christmas<br />

at Massey Hall. Handel: Messiah (Part<br />

I); Vaughan Williams: Fantasia on Christmas<br />

Carols; secular and sacred carols with audience<br />

participation. Elementary, Junior, Senior,<br />

Massed, and Alumni Choirs; Meredith<br />

Hall, soprano; Christina Stelmacovich, alto;<br />

Lawrence Wiliford, tenor; Stephen Hegedus,<br />

bass; chamber orchestra; Maria Conkey, Teri<br />

Dunn, Peter Mahon, and Vincent Cheng, conductors.<br />

Massey Hall, 178 Victoria St. 416-872-<br />

4255. $20-$60. Also Dec 3.<br />

Saturday, <strong>December</strong> 2<br />

Pax Christi Chorale<br />

presents<br />

The<br />

Children’s<br />

Messiah<br />

Church of the Redeemer<br />

Pay what you can<br />

●●4:00: Pax Christi Chorale. Children’s Messiah.<br />

Handel: Messiah (excerpts). Church of<br />

the Redeemer, 162 Bloor St. W. boxoffice@<br />

paxchristichorale.org. PWYC.<br />

●●4:00: Tapestry Opera. Tapestry Briefs:<br />

Winter Shorts. See Dec 1 for details. Also<br />

Dec 2(8pm), 3(4pm).<br />

●●7:00: Liona Boyd. In Concert: A Winter Fantasy.<br />

Andrew Dolson, guitar; Ron Korb, flute.<br />

Guests: Richmond Hill United Church Chancel<br />

Choir. Richmond Hill United Church,<br />

10201 Yonge St., Richmond Hill. 905-884-<br />

1301 x5. $35.<br />

●●7:00: University of Toronto Scarborough.<br />

Fall Flourish Concert. UTSC Concert Band,<br />

Concert Choir and String Orchestra. University<br />

of Toronto Scarborough Campus,<br />

Room AC2<strong>23</strong>, 1265 Military Trail. 416-208-<br />

4769. Free.<br />

●●7:30: Bach Children’s Chorus and Bach<br />

Chamber Youth Choir. Good Cheer! Charissa<br />

Bagan, artistic director; James Pinhorn,<br />

Bach Chamber Youth Choir conductor; Eleanor<br />

Daley, piano. Toronto Centre for the Arts,<br />

5040 Yonge St., North York. 1-855-985-2787.<br />

$35-$40.<br />

●●7:30: Bel Canto Singers. Songs for a Winter’s<br />

Night. Linda Meyer, conductor; Jacqueline<br />

Mokrzewski, piano. Scarborough Bluffs<br />

United Church, 3739 Kingston Rd., Scarborough.<br />

416-286-8260. $20. Also 2:30pm.<br />

●●7:30: Cantores Celestes Women’s Choir.<br />

Mystery and Wonder. Arnesen: Magnificat;<br />

other works by Class, Halley, Gjeilo and<br />

A. Concerts in the GTA<br />

Vivaldi. Adanya Dunn, soprano; Stephen Tam,<br />

flute; Kate Carver, piano; Matthew Coons,<br />

organ; Emperor String Quartet; Kelly Galbraith,<br />

conductor. Runnymede United Church,<br />

432 Runnymede Rd. 416-655-7335. $25. A<br />

$1,000 donation will be made to Stella’s Place.<br />

●●7:30: Etobicoke Centennial Choir. Sacred<br />

Traditions <strong>2017</strong>. Pergolesi: Magnificat; Holst:<br />

Christmas Day; and other seasonal works.<br />

Caroline Corkum, soprano; Maria Stevens,<br />

soprano; Emma Cava, alto; Devin Herbert,<br />

tenor; Lawrence Shirkie, baritone; Henry<br />

Renglich, conductor; Carl Steinhauser, piano<br />

and organ. Humber Valley United Church,<br />

76 Anglesey Blvd., Etobicoke. 416-779-2258.<br />

$25. 6pm Christmas Marketplace.<br />

●●7:30: MCS Chorus Mississauga. Rutter’s<br />

Gloria and Favourite Carols. Rutter: Gloria;<br />

What Sweeter Music; and other seasonal<br />

works by the composer. With brass, timpani,<br />

organ, and percussion. First United Church<br />

(Mississauga), 151 Lakeshore Rd. W., Mississauga.<br />

905-278-7059. $20; $10(under 19).<br />

●●7:30: Mississauga Festival Choir. When<br />

Angels Sing. Britten: A Ceremony of Carols;<br />

Mark Hayes: Gloria; traditional holiday music.<br />

Guests: Mississauga Symphony Orchestra.<br />

Hammerson Hall, Living Arts Centre,<br />

4141 Living Arts Dr., Mississauga. 905-306-<br />

6000. $37.<br />

●●7:30: Music at St. Andrew’s. Charles Dickens’<br />

A Christmas Carol. Dramatic readings<br />

with musical interludes. Rick Phillips<br />

and Mary Weins, readers; Marion Newman,<br />

mezzo; Joseph Angelo, tenor; St. Andrew’s<br />

Gallery Choir; and others. St. Andrew’s<br />

Church (Toronto), 73 Simcoe St. 416-593-<br />

5600 x<strong>23</strong>1. Freewill offering. Donations support<br />

St. Andrew’s Out of the Cold program.<br />

Gingerbread and hot apple cider reception<br />

to follow.<br />

●●7:30: Oakham House Choir. The Star of<br />

Bethlehem. Rheinberger: The Star of Bethlehem;<br />

Christmas carol sing-along; orchestral<br />

and vocal seasonal favourites. Oakham<br />

House Choir; Toronto Sinfonietta; Allison<br />

Cecilia Arends, soprano; Jeremy Ludwig,<br />

baritone; Matthew Jaskiewicz, conductor.<br />

Calvin Presbyterian Church, 26 Delisle Ave.<br />

416-960-5551. $30/$25(adv); $15(st); free(12<br />

and under).<br />

●●7:30: Singing Out. A Sky Full of Stars! Jane<br />

Mallett Theatre, 250 Front St. W. 416-585-<br />

4498. $30(door, cash only); $25/$20(adv/<br />

adv before Nov 17); $20(st/child)/$15(st/child<br />

before Nov 17). Also 3pm. Proceeds benefit<br />

Singing Out, a registered charity.<br />

●●7:30: T Dots Records. Sounds of the City<br />

Holiday Food Drive Concert. CoCo Coelho;<br />

Ai’ma Khojé; Across the Board; Signs of a<br />

Slumbering Beast; Alabasterds; and others;<br />

Joey Harlem, MC. Mây Cafe, 876 Dundas St.<br />

W. 647-675-1279. $10. Donations in support of<br />

Daily Bread Food Bank.<br />

●●7:30: Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Home<br />

Alone in Concert. John Williams: Home Alone<br />

(film with live orchestra). Etobicoke School<br />

of the Arts Concert Choir; Constantine Kitsopoulos,<br />

conductor. Roy Thomson Hall,<br />

60 Simcoe St. 416-593-1285. $25-$88. Also<br />

Nov 30(7:30pm), Dec 1(7:30pm), 2(2pm).<br />

●●7:30: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. Wind Ensemble: Music Responding<br />

to Crisis. Balmages: Fanfare Canzonique;<br />

Benson: The Leaves Are Falling; Meechan:<br />

Korn Symphony; Gillingham: Waking Angels;<br />

Sweelinck: Mein junges Leben hat ein End;<br />

and other works. Gillian Mackay, conductor.<br />

MacMillan Theatre, Edward Johnson Building,<br />

80 Queen’s Park. 416-408-0208. $30;<br />

$20(sr); $10(st).<br />

●●8:00: Aga Khan Museum. Nazar by Turkwaz.<br />

Melodies inspired by Arabic, Balkan, and<br />

Turkish folk songs. Maryem Toller, vocals; and<br />

others. 77 Wynford Dr. 416-646-4677. $40.<br />

Ticket incl. same day museum admission.<br />

●●8:00: Alliance Française de Toronto. Klezmology:<br />

Klezmer Reinvented. Jonno Lightstone,<br />

David Mott and Nick Fraser. 24 Spadina<br />

Rd. 416-922-2014 x37. $15; $10(sr/st/<br />

member).<br />

●●8:00: Arraymusic. Sarah Hennies and Kurt<br />

Newman. Hennies: Gather & Release (for<br />

vibraphone, sine waves, field recordings and<br />

bilateral stimulation). Sarah Hennies, percussion;<br />

Kurt Newman, pedal steel guitar.<br />

Gallery 345, 345 Sorauren Ave. 416-532-7513.<br />

PWYC, $15 suggested.<br />

●●8:00: Healey Willan Singers. Christmas in<br />

the Village. Fauré and Messager: Messe des<br />

pecheurs de Villerville; Chilcott: The Midnight<br />

of Your Birth. John Stephenson, piano; Ron Ka<br />

Ming Cheung, conductor. St. Martin-in-the-<br />

Fields Anglican Church, 151 Glenlake Ave. 416-<br />

519-0528. $20; $15(sr/st).<br />

●●8:00: Isabel Bader Theatre. Sultans of<br />

String: A Christmas Caravan. Guests: Rebecca<br />

Campbell and Amanda Martinez, vocals.<br />

93 Charles St. W. 416-408-0208. $25-$30.<br />

●●8:00: Royal Conservatory. Music Mix:<br />

SongBird North. Temerty Theatre, 273 Bloor<br />

St. W. 416-408-0208. $35.<br />

●●8:00: Tafelmusik. Four Weddings, a<br />

Funeral, and a Coronation. Handel: Ouverture<br />

from Il parnasso in festa; Purcell: Symphonies<br />

from the ode “From Hardy Climes” Z325;<br />

Blow: Coronation Anthem “God Spake Sometimes<br />

in Visions”; Lully: Ballet from Xerxes;<br />

Pachelbel Canon & Gigue; and other works.<br />

Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra and Chamber<br />

Choir directed by Elisa Citterio and Ivars<br />

Taurins. Trinity-St. Paul’s Centre, 427 Bloor<br />

St. W. 416-964-6337. $19-$97. Also Nov 29,<br />

30, Dec 1, 3.<br />

●●8:00: Tapestry Opera. Tapestry Briefs:<br />

Winter Shorts. See Dec 1 for details. Also<br />

Dec 3(4pm).<br />

Sunday <strong>December</strong> 3<br />

●●10:30am and 1:00: Canadian Opera Company.<br />

The Magic Victrola. See Dec 1 for<br />

details.<br />

●●2:00: Canzona Chamber Players. In Concert.<br />

Mendelssohn: String Octet in E-flat<br />

Op.20; Brahms: Sextet for Strings No.1 in<br />

B-flat Op.18. Yosuke Kawasaki, violin; Jessica<br />

Linnebach, violin; Shane Kim, violin; Ashley<br />

Vandiver, violin; Theresa Rudolph, viola;<br />

Ivan Ivanovich, viola; Joseph Johnson, cello;<br />

Alastair Eng, cello. St. Andrew by-the-Lake<br />

Anglican Church, Cibola Ave., Toronto Island.<br />

647-248-4048. $25. Also Dec 4(7:30pm, St.<br />

George the Martyr Anglican Church).<br />

●●2:00: Peter Margolian and Friends. Chamber<br />

Music Concert. Bridge: Blow, blow Thou<br />

Winter Wind (Shakespeare) for tenor and<br />

piano; Ireland: Sea Fever (Masefield) for<br />

tenor and piano; Sonata for violin and piano;<br />

Fricker: Serenade for flute, oboe and piano.<br />

Ryan Downie, tenor; Peter Margolian, piano;<br />

Samantha Chang, flute; Hazel Boyle, oboe;<br />

Steve Prime, violin. Canadian Music Centre,<br />

20 St. Joseph St. 647-980-5475 (information).<br />

Free.<br />

●●2:00: Royal Conservatory. Sunday Interludes:<br />

Francine Kay. Janáček: Piano Sonata;<br />

Schumann: Fantasiestücke Op.12; Chopin:<br />

Barcarolle Op.60; Debussy: Ondine, L’Isle joyeuse.<br />

Mazzoleni Concert Hall, Royal Conservatory,<br />

273 Bloor St. W. 416-408-0208. Free.<br />

●●2:00: Toronto Mozart Players. Brass<br />

by Eric Wilder. Steven Woomert, trumpet;<br />

James Gardiner; trumpet; Audrey Good,<br />

horn; Vanessa Fralick, trombone; Mark<br />

Tetreault, tuba; Rachael Kerr, piano. Church<br />

of the Redeemer, 162 Bloor St. W. 647-478-<br />

7532. $35; $15(st).<br />

●●2:30: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. Choirs in Concert: Sing and Rejoice!<br />

Jocelyn Hagen: How to Survive Winter for<br />

women’s voices and string quartet; and other<br />

works. UofT Men’s Chorus; Women’s Chorus;<br />

Women’s Chamber Choir; MacMillan Singers;<br />

Hilary Apfelstadt, Elaine Choi, Mark Ramsay,<br />

Tracy Wong, conductors. MacMillan Theatre,<br />

Edward Johnson Building, 80 Queen’s Park.<br />

416-408-0208. $30; $20(sr); $10(st).<br />

●●3:00: Burlington Performing Arts Centre.<br />

The Ennis Sisters: Christmas Originals<br />

Music at<br />

St. Thomas’s Church<br />

383 Huron Street, Toronto<br />

Matthew Larkin<br />

Organist & Director of Music<br />

Sunday, Dec. 3 | Advent I<br />

Evensong &<br />

Advent Carols at 7 pm<br />

Sunday, Dec. 17 | Advent III<br />

Festival of Nine Lessons<br />

& Carols at 7 pm<br />

Christmas Eve<br />

Midnight Mass at 11 pm<br />

Christmas Day<br />

Sung Eucharist at 9:30 am<br />

Solemn Eucharist at 11 am<br />

Sunday, Jan. 7 | Epiphany<br />

Evensong & Epiphany<br />

Carols at 7 pm<br />

Sunday, Jan. 28<br />

Evensong Prelude 6:30 pm<br />

Julia Morson, soprano<br />

Evensong at 7 pm (weekly)<br />

Friday, Feb. 2 | Candlemas<br />

Procession & Solemn<br />

Eucharist at 6:15 pm<br />

www.stthomas.on.ca<br />

40 | <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


and Holiday Classics. Burlington Performing<br />

Arts Centre, Community Studio Theatre,<br />

440 Locust St., Burlington. 905-681-6000.<br />

$45. Series discount available.<br />

●●3:00: Gallery 345. From Russia with Love.<br />

Works by Arensky, Rachmaninoff and Shchedrin.<br />

Decus Duo: Lucia Barcari, violin; Katya<br />

Lhatsko, piano; Guest: Olga Laktionova, cello.<br />

345 Sorauren Ave. 416-822-9781. $25; $10(st).<br />

Cash only.<br />

●●3:00: Harmony Singers. That’s Christmas!<br />

Bob Rae: We’re in the Same Boat Now;<br />

and seasonal readings and music. Guests:<br />

The Hon. Bob Rae, reader; Martina Myskohlid,<br />

vocalist; Bruce Harvey, accompanist; Harvey<br />

Patterson, conductor. Humber Valley United<br />

Church, 76 Anglesey Blvd., Etobicoke. 416-<br />

<strong>23</strong>9-5821. $20.<br />

●●3:00: St. Michael’s Choir School. Christmas<br />

at Massey Hall. Handel: Messiah (Part<br />

I); Vaughan Williams: Fantasia on Christmas<br />

Carols; secular and sacred carols with audience<br />

participation. Elementary, Junior, Senior,<br />

Massed, and Alumni Choirs; Meredith<br />

Hall, soprano; Christina Stelmacovich, alto;<br />

Lawrence Wiliford, tenor; Stephen Hegedus,<br />

bass; chamber orchestra; Maria Conkey, Teri<br />

Dunn, Peter Mahon, and Vincent Cheng, conductors.<br />

Massey Hall, 178 Victoria St. 416-872-<br />

4255. $20-$60. Also Dec 2.<br />

●●3:00: York University Department of<br />

Music. York University Wind Symphony.<br />

Bill Thomas, conductor. Tribute Communities<br />

Recital Hall, Accolade East Building, YU,<br />

4700 Keele St. 416-736-5888. $15; $10(sr/st).<br />

●●4:00: Cathedral Church of St. James.<br />

Organ Recital: Ian Sadler. 65 Church St. 416-<br />

364-7865 x<strong>23</strong>4. Donations welcomed.<br />

●●4:00: Church of St. Mary Magdalene<br />

(Toronto). Nico Muhly’s ‘O Antiphons’.<br />

Andrew Adair, organ. 477 Manning Ave. 416-<br />

531-7955. Free.<br />

●●4:00: Humbercrest United Church. Advent<br />

Vespers. Bach: Cantata No.140 “Sleepers,<br />

Wake!”. Jennifer Krabbe, soprano; Matthew<br />

Dalen, tenor, Daniel Thielmann, baritone; Alex<br />

Halliday, bass; Melvin J. Hurst, director of<br />

music; Rev. Jessica McCrae, presider. 16 Baby<br />

Point Rd. 416-767-6122. Freewill offering. Religious<br />

service.<br />

●●4:00: St. Olave’s Anglican Church. Christmas<br />

Lights. Choral Evensong for Advent Sunday.<br />

Christmas songs, poems, stories and<br />

instrumental solos. St. Olave’s Arts Guild and<br />

guests. 360 Windermere Ave. 416-769-5686.<br />

Contributions appreciated. Christmas tea<br />

following.<br />

●●4:00: Tapestry Opera. Tapestry Briefs:<br />

Winter Shorts. See Dec 1 for details. Also<br />

Dec 2(4pm and 8pm).<br />

●●4:30: Cathedral Church of St. James.<br />

Advent Procession. Works by Grier, Monteverdi,<br />

Sowerby, Cabena, McKie and others.<br />

Choir of St. James Cathedral. 65 Church St.<br />

416-364-7865 x<strong>23</strong>4. Free.<br />

●●7:00: Choral Bonanza Team. Messiah Singalong.<br />

Handel: Messiah (Christmas Portion).<br />

Dr. Richard Heinzle, conductor; Sapphire<br />

Navaratnarajah, accompanist. Richmond Hill<br />

Presbyterian Church, 10066 Yonge St., Richmond<br />

Hill. 416-568-9838. $25(participation<br />

fee); $10(suggested donation for concert).<br />

Rehearsal 2:30-5pm.<br />

●●7:00: Music at St. Thomas’s. Advent I:<br />

Evensong and Advent Carols. Matthew Larkin,<br />

organ and director of music. St. Thomas’s<br />

Anglican Church (Toronto), 383 Huron St.<br />

416-979-<strong>23</strong><strong>23</strong>. By donation. Religious service.<br />

●●7:00: Small World Music. Minha Lua:<br />

A Fado Project Born in Alhambra. Small<br />

World Music Centre, Artscape Youngplace,<br />

180 Shaw St. 416-536-5439. $20.<br />

●●7:30: Hart House Symphonic Band.<br />

150 Years of Music. Grainger: Shepherd’s<br />

Hey; Lincolnshire Posy; William Schuman:<br />

Chester; Hazo:Arabesque; Whitacre: The<br />

Seal Lullaby. Mark Saresky, conductor. Hart<br />

House, Great Hall, 7 Hart House Circle. 613-<br />

806-4944. Free.<br />

●●7:30: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. Percussion Ensembles. Walter Hall,<br />

Edward Johnson Building, University of<br />

Toronto, 80 Queen’s Park. 416-408-0208.<br />

Free.<br />

CONCERTOS!<br />

SUN. DEC. 03 @ 404 JARVIS ST.<br />

www.NewMusicConcerts.com<br />

●●8:00: New Music Concerts. Concertos.<br />

Carter: String Trio; De Raaff: Percussion Concerto;<br />

Linda C. Smith: Path of Uneven Stones;<br />

Frehner: Clarinet Concerto “Cloak”. Ryan<br />

Scott, percussion; Max Christie, clarinet; Eve<br />

Egoyan, piano; New Music Concerts Ensemble;<br />

Robert Aitken, conductor. Betty Oliphant<br />

Theatre, 404 Jarvis St. 416-961-9594. $35;<br />

$25(sr/arts workers); $10(st). Pre-concert<br />

talk 7:15pm.<br />

●●8:00: Tafelmusik. Four Weddings, a<br />

Funeral, and a Coronation. Handel: Ouverture<br />

from Il parnasso in festa; Purcell: Symphonies<br />

from the ode “From Hardy Climes” Z325;<br />

Blow: Coronation Anthem “God Spake Sometimes<br />

in Visions”; Lully: Ballet from Xerxes;<br />

Pachelbel Canon & Gigue; and other works.<br />

Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra and Chamber<br />

Choir directed by Elisa Citterio and Ivars<br />

Taurins. Trinity-St. Paul’s Centre, 427 Bloor<br />

St. W. 416-964-6337. $19-$97. Also Nov 29,<br />

30, Dec 1, 2.<br />

●●8:00: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. Tallis Scholars: Gaude Virgo. Rachmaninoff:<br />

The Lord’s Prayer; Tavener: Song<br />

for Athene; Josquin: Gaude Virgo;Pärt: The<br />

Deer’s Cry. University of Toronto Schola<br />

Cantorum; Choir of the Theatre of Early<br />

Music; Peter Phillips, conductor; Daniel<br />

Taylor, conductor. Grace Church on-the-<br />

Hill, 300 Lonsdale Rd. 416-408-0208. $40;<br />

$25(sr); $10(st).<br />

Monday <strong>December</strong> 4<br />

●●12:30: York University Department<br />

of Music. Music @ Midday: Instrumental<br />

Masterclass in Concert. Martin Family<br />

Lounge, Accolade East Building, YU,<br />

4700 Keele St. 647-459-0701. Free.<br />

●●7:30: Canzona Chamber Players. In Concert.<br />

Mendelssohn: String Octet in E-flat<br />

Op.20; Brahms: Sextet for Strings No.1 in<br />

B-flat Op.18. Yosuke Kawasaki, violin; Jessica<br />

Linnebach, violin; Shane Kim, violin; Ashley<br />

Vandiver, violin; Theresa Rudolph, viola;<br />

Ivan Ivanovich, viola; Joseph Johnson, cello;<br />

Alastair Eng, cello. St. George the Martyr<br />

Church, 197 John St. 647-248-4048. $25. Also<br />

Dec 3(2pm, St. Andrew by-the-Lake Church,<br />

Toronto Island).<br />

●●7:30: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. Vocalis (Graduate Singers Series):<br />

An Evening with the Parnassians. Jason<br />

Nedecky, curator. Heliconian Hall, 35 Hazelton<br />

Ave. 416-408-0208. Free.<br />

●●7:30: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. Guitar Orchestra. Jeffrey McFadden,<br />

director. Walter Hall, Edward Johnson Building,<br />

University of Toronto, 80 Queen’s Park.<br />

416-408-0208. Free.<br />

●●8:00: Soundstreams. Electric Messiah.<br />

Music by Handel. Adanya Dunn, vocals; Elizabeth<br />

Shepherd, vocals; Jonathan MacArthur,<br />

vocals; Justin Welsh, vocals; Adam Scime,<br />

music director; and others. The Drake Underground,<br />

1150 Queen’s St. W. 416-531-5042.<br />

$20. Also Dec 5, 6.<br />

Tuesday <strong>December</strong> 5<br />

●●12:00 noon: Canadian Opera Company.<br />

Vocal Series: Wirth Vocal Prize Showcase.<br />

Simone McIntosh, mezzo. Richard Bradshaw<br />

Amphitheatre, Four Seasons Centre for the<br />

Performing Arts, 145 Queen St. W. 416-363-<br />

8<strong>23</strong>1. Free. First-come, first-served. Late seating<br />

not available.<br />

●●12:10: Nine Sparrows Arts Foundation/<br />

Yorkminster Park Baptist Church. Lunchtime<br />

Chamber Music: Tristan Savella, Piano.<br />

Yorkminster Park Baptist Church, 1585 Yonge<br />

St. 416-241-1298. Free; donations welcomed.<br />

●●1:00: Cathedral Church of St. James.<br />

Organ Recital: Thomas Gonder. 65 Church St.<br />

416-364-7865 x<strong>23</strong>4. Donations welcomed.<br />

FESTIVAL<br />

OF CAROLS<br />

WITH THE CANADIAN<br />

STAFF BAND &<br />

CANADIAN CHILDREN’S<br />

OPERA COMPANY<br />

Dec 5 & 6<br />

at 7:30 pm<br />

www.tmchoir.org<br />

●●7:30: Toronto Mendelssohn Choir. Festival<br />

of Carols. Guests: The Canadian Staff<br />

Band; Canadian Children’s Opera Company<br />

(Teri Dunn, conductor); David Briggs, organ.<br />

Yorkminster Park Baptist Church, 1585 Yonge<br />

St. 416-408-0208. $35-$76; $35-$70(sr);<br />

$20(VoxTix for 30 years and under). Also<br />

Dec 6.<br />

●●7:30: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. gamUT: Contemporary Music Ensemble.<br />

Wallace Halladay, director. Walter Hall,<br />

Edward Johnson Building, University of<br />

Toronto, 80 Queen’s Park. 416-408-0208.<br />

Free.<br />

●●8:00: Gallery 345. Jazz At The Gallery.<br />

Davis: Birth Of The Cool; Ellington/Strayhorn:<br />

Nutcracker Suite. Young musicians from<br />

across the GTA. 345 Sorauren Ave. 416-822-<br />

9781. $20; $10(st). Cash only.<br />

Janine Jansen,<br />

Martin Fröst,<br />

Torleif Thedéen,<br />

and Lucas Debargue<br />

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 8PM<br />

PRE-CONCERT TALK 7PM<br />

KOERNER HALL<br />

TICKETS ON SALE NOW! 416.408.0208<br />

WWW.PERFORMANCE.RCMUSIC.CA<br />

●●8:00: Royal Conservatory. Chamber Music.<br />

Bartók: Contrasts; Szymanowski: Myths<br />

Op.30; Messiaen: Quartet for the End of Time.<br />

Janine Jansen, violin; Martin Fröst, clarinet;<br />

Torleif Thedéen, cello, and Lucas Debargue,<br />

piano. Koerner Hall, Telus Centre, 273 Bloor<br />

St. W. 416-408-0208. $30-$75.<br />

●●8:00: Soundstreams. Electric Messiah.<br />

Music by Handel. Adanya Dunn, vocals; Elizabeth<br />

Shepherd, vocals; Jonathan MacArthur,<br />

vocals; Justin Welsh, vocals; Adam Scime,<br />

music director; and others. The Drake Underground,<br />

1150 Queen’s St. W. 416-531-5042.<br />

$20. Also Dec 4, 6.<br />

●●8:00: Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Best<br />

of Tchaikovsky. Laura Pettigrew: Dòchas<br />

(Sesquie for Canada’s 150th); Tchaikovsky:<br />

BEST OF<br />

TCHAIKOVSKY<br />

DEC 5–7<br />

Reserve today!<br />

TSO.CA/holiday<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> | 41


Romeo and Juliet Fantasy-Overture; Variations<br />

on a Rococo Theme Op.33 (original version),<br />

Symphony No.5 in e Op.64. Joseph<br />

Johnson, cello; Keri-Lynn Wilson, conductor.<br />

Roy Thomson Hall, 60 Simcoe St. 416-593-<br />

1285. $34.75-$148. Also Dec 6, 7.<br />

Wednesday <strong>December</strong> 6<br />

●●12:00 noon: Canadian Opera Company.<br />

Jazz Series: Jazz@McGill. McGill Jazz Quintet;<br />

Kevin Dean, trumpet. Richard Bradshaw<br />

Amphitheatre, Four Seasons Centre for the<br />

Performing Arts, 145 Queen St. W. 416-363-<br />

8<strong>23</strong>1. Free. First-come, first-served. Late seating<br />

not available.<br />

●●12:00 noon: Yorkminster Park Baptist<br />

Church. Noonday Organ Recitals: Imre Olah.<br />

1585 Yonge St. 416-922-1167. Free.<br />

●●12:30: Organix Concerts/All Saints Kingsway.<br />

Kingsway Organ Concert Series.<br />

Hanné Becker, organ. All Saints Kingsway<br />

Anglican Church, 2850 Bloor St. W. 416-571-<br />

3680. Freewill offering. 45-minute concert.<br />

●●7:00: Royal Conservatory. Taylor Academy<br />

Orchestra. Mazzoleni Concert Hall, Royal<br />

Conservatory, 273 Bloor St. W. 416-408-<br />

0208. Free.<br />

●●7:30: Living Arts Centre. Tartan Terrors<br />

Christmas. 4141 Living Arts Dr., Mississauga.<br />

905-306-6000. $30-$50. Also Dec 7.<br />

●●7:30: Royal Conservatory. Rebanks Family<br />

Fellowship Concert. Mazzoleni Concert Hall,<br />

Telus Centre, 273 Bloor St. W. 416-408-0208.<br />

Free.<br />

●●7:30: Toronto Choral Society. Bach’s Christmas<br />

Oratorio. Talisker Players; Geoffery Butler,<br />

conductor. Koerner Hall, Telus Centre,<br />

273 Bloor St. W. torontochoralsociety.org.<br />

From $45.<br />

●●7:30: Toronto Mendelssohn Choir. Festival<br />

of Carols. Guests: The Canadian Staff<br />

Band; Canadian Children’s Opera Company<br />

(Teri Dunn, conductor); David Briggs, organ.<br />

Yorkminster Park Baptist Church, 1585 Yonge<br />

St. 416-408-0208. $35-$76; $35-$70(sr);<br />

$20(VoxTix for 30 years and under). Also<br />

Dec 5.<br />

●●7:30: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. PianoFest. Walter Hall, Edward<br />

Johnson Building, University of Toronto,<br />

A. Concerts in the GTA<br />

80 Queen’s Park. 416-408-0208. Free. Also<br />

Dec 7, 9(2:30pm).<br />

●●8:00: Soundstreams. Electric Messiah.<br />

Music by Handel. Adanya Dunn, vocals; Elizabeth<br />

Shepherd, vocals; Jonathan MacArthur,<br />

vocals; Justin Welsh, vocals; Adam Scime,<br />

music director; and others. The Drake Underground,<br />

1150 Queen’s St. W. 416-531-5042.<br />

$20. Also Dec 4, 5.<br />

●●8:00: Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Best<br />

of Tchaikovsky. Andrew Ager: The Talk of the<br />

Town (Sesquie for Canada’s 150th); Tchaikovsky:<br />

Romeo and Juliet Fantasy-Overture; Variations<br />

on a Rococo Theme Op.33 (original<br />

version), Symphony No.5 in e Op.64. Joseph<br />

Johnson, cello; Keri-Lynn Wilson, conductor.<br />

Roy Thomson Hall, 60 Simcoe St. 416-593-<br />

1285. $34.75-$148. Also Dec 5, 7.<br />

Thursday <strong>December</strong> 7<br />

●●12:00 noon: Canadian Opera Company.<br />

Chamber Music Series: The Golden Hour.<br />

Joshua Morris, cello. Richard Bradshaw<br />

Amphitheatre, Four Seasons Centre for the<br />

Performing Arts, 145 Queen St. W. 416-363-<br />

8<strong>23</strong>1. Free. First-come, first-served. Late seating<br />

not available.<br />

●●12:00 noon: Encore Symphonic Concert<br />

Band. Monthly Concert. Big band, swing,<br />

jazz and film scores. Wilmar Heights Centre,<br />

963 Pharmacy Ave., Scarborough. 416-346-<br />

3910 or 647-287-5390. $10. First Thursday of<br />

each month. Refreshments available or bring<br />

your lunch.<br />

●●1:00: Miles Nadal JCC. Jump & Jive @ the<br />

J. Classic songs from the 1950s and early<br />

1960s. Rev-Tones rock & roll band. Al Green<br />

Theatre, 750 Spadina Ave. 416-924-6211 x0.<br />

$18.<br />

●●7:00: Living Arts Centre. Tartan Terrors<br />

Christmas. 4141 Living Arts Dr., Mississauga.<br />

905-306-6000. $30-$50. Also Dec 6.<br />

●●7:30: Nuné Melik. Hidden Treasures: Rediscovered<br />

Music from Armenia. Works by Khachaturian,<br />

Vardapet and other Armenian<br />

composers. Nuné Melik, violin; Michel-Alexandre<br />

Broekaert, piano. Atelier Rosemarie<br />

Umetsu, 310 Davenport Rd. 416-420-6853.<br />

$10. CONCERT MOVED FROM NOV 16.<br />

●●7:30: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. PianoFest. Walter Hall, Edward<br />

Johnson Building, University of Toronto,<br />

80 Queen’s Park. 416-408-0208. Free. Also<br />

Dec 6, 9(2:30pm).<br />

Sultans<br />

of String<br />

presents<br />

A Christmas<br />

Caravan<br />

Thurs. <strong>December</strong> 7,<br />

8pm<br />

auroraculturalcentre.ca<br />

905 713-1818<br />

●●8:00: Aurora Cultural Centre. Sultans of<br />

String: A Christmas Caravan. Guest: Rebecca<br />

Campbell, vocals. 22 Church St., Aurora. 905-<br />

713-1818. $30-$35.<br />

●●8:00: Burlington Performing Arts Centre.<br />

Canadian Brass: Christmas Concert. Burlington<br />

Performing Arts Centre, Main Theatre,<br />

440 Locust St., Burlington. 905-681-6000.<br />

$69.50. Series discount available.<br />

●●8:00: Music Gallery. Emergents I: Sounds<br />

of Silence Initiative. Four contemporary song<br />

cycles. 918 Bathurst Centre for Culture, Arts,<br />

Media and Education, 918 Bathurst St. 416-<br />

204-1080. $12; $8(members).<br />

Rococo Theme Op.33 (original version), Symphony<br />

No.5 in e Op.64. Joseph Johnson, cello;<br />

Keri-Lynn Wilson, conductor. Roy Thomson<br />

Hall, 60 Simcoe St. 416-593-1285. $34.75-<br />

$148. Also Dec 5, 6.<br />

Friday <strong>December</strong> 8<br />

●●1:00: Spadina Road Library. Odin String<br />

Quartet. Alex Toskov and others. 10 Spadina<br />

Rd. 416-393-7666. Free.<br />

80 th<br />

YEAR AT THE CHURCH<br />

OF THE HOLY TRINITY<br />

●●7:30: Church of the Holy Trinity. The<br />

Christmas Story. Nativity pageant. Professional<br />

musicians and volunteer cast. 19 Trinity<br />

Sq. 416-598-4521 x301. $20; $(17 and under).<br />

A collection will be taken. Also Dec 15, 16, 21,<br />

22, <strong>23</strong>(all at 7:30pm); Dec 9, 10, 16, 17, <strong>23</strong>, 24(all<br />

at 4:30pm).<br />

●●7:30: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. UofT Symphony Orchestra. Zemlinsky:<br />

Sinfonietta Op.<strong>23</strong>; Mendelssohn: Piano<br />

Concerto No.1 in g Op.25; Dvořák: Symphony<br />

No.9 in e Op.95 “From the New World”. Aisa<br />

Sayama, piano; Uri Mayer and Chad Heltzel,<br />

T H E T O R O N T O C H O R A L S O C I E T Y P R E S E N T S<br />

Bach’s Christmas Oratorio<br />

at Koerner Hall<br />

Conductor:<br />

Geoffrey Butler<br />

TELUS Centre<br />

Featuring:<br />

The Talisker Players<br />

<strong>December</strong> 6, <strong>2017</strong>, 7:30 PM<br />

Tickets from $45 TorontoChoralSociety.org<br />

<strong>December</strong> 7 at 8pm<br />

GRYPHON<br />

TRIO<br />

●●8:00: Music Toronto. Gryphon Trio.<br />

Haydn: Piano Trio in E-flat HobXV:29; Marjan<br />

Mozetich: Scales of Joy and Sorrow; Brahms:<br />

Piano Quartet in A Op.26. Guest: Jethro<br />

Marks, viola. St. Lawrence Centre for the<br />

Arts, 27 Front St. E. 416-366-77<strong>23</strong>. $50-$55;<br />

$10(st, full time).<br />

●●8:00: Toronto Symphony Orchestra.<br />

Best of Tchaikovsky. Tchaikovsky: Romeo<br />

and Juliet Fantasy-Overture; Variations on a<br />

We Sing<br />

and<br />

Rejoice!<br />

Friday, <strong>December</strong><br />

8th, <strong>2017</strong>, 8pm<br />

Songs and Stories<br />

of the Season<br />

Featuring Canadian<br />

Composers from<br />

Coast-to-Coast<br />

383 Huron Street, Toronto<br />

416-971-9229 www.exultate.net<br />

an Ontario government agency<br />

un organisme du gouvernement de l’Ontario<br />

42 | <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


conductors. MacMillan Theatre, Edward<br />

Johnson Building, 80 Queen’s Park. 416-408-<br />

0208. $30; $20(sr); $10(st). Pre-performance<br />

chat.<br />

●●8:00: Continuum Contemporary Music.<br />

Urgent Voices. Hostman: The Invisible Forest;<br />

Rolfe: Clinical Notes of the Bipolar Therapist;<br />

Southam: Glass Houses; Wilson: From<br />

the Diaries of William Lyon Mackenzie King.<br />

Guests: Alex Dobson, baritone; Pascal Charbonneau,<br />

tenor; Laurent Philippe, piano. Aki<br />

Studio, Daniels Spectrum, 585 Dundas St.<br />

E. 416-531-1402. $35; $25(sr/arts workers);<br />

$15(st). Also Dec 9.<br />

●●8:00: Coro San Marco. Jesus Born On<br />

This Day: Christmas and Marian Celebration.<br />

Guest soloists. St. Dominic Catholic Church,<br />

625 Atwater Ave., Mississauga. 905-278-<br />

7762. $25.<br />

●●8:00: Exultate Chamber Singers. We Sing<br />

and Rejoice! Songs and stories of the season<br />

featuring Canadian composers from coast to<br />

coast. Hilary Apfelstadt, conductor. St. Thomas’s<br />

Anglican Church (Toronto), 383 Huron St.<br />

416-971-9229. $25; $20(sr); $10(st).<br />

●●8:00: Flato Markham Theatre. Men of the<br />

Deeps: Christmas in the Mine. 171 Town Centre<br />

Blvd., Markham. 905-305-7469. $15-$80.<br />

●●8:00: Small World Music. Ivan Mazuze<br />

Quartet Presents Ubuntu. Small World Music<br />

Centre, Artscape Youngplace, 180 Shaw St.<br />

416-536-5439. $20.<br />

●●8:00: Toronto Consort. Navidad: A Spanish<br />

Christmas. Trinity-St. Paul’s Centre, Jeanne<br />

Lamon Hall, 427 Bloor St. W. 416-964-6337.<br />

From $29. Also Dec 9, 10(3:30pm).<br />

Saturday <strong>December</strong> 9<br />

●●1:30: Oakville Children’s Choir. Community<br />

Carol Concerts. Guest: Lianne Tan, organ. St.<br />

John’s United Church (Oakville), 262 Randall<br />

St., Oakville. 905-337-7104. $25; $20(sr);<br />

$15(under 13). Also 4pm.<br />

●●2:00: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Music by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky,<br />

with libretto by James Kudelka. James<br />

Kudelka, choreographer/librettist. Four<br />

Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts,<br />

145 Queen St. W. 416-345-9595. $39-$190.<br />

Opens Dec 9, 2pm. Runs to Dec 30. Days and<br />

times vary. See national.ballet.ca for details.<br />

●●2:30: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. PianoFest. Walter Hall, Edward<br />

Johnson Building, University of Toronto,<br />

80 Queen’s Park. 416-408-0208. Free. Also<br />

Dec 6, 7(both at 7:30pm).<br />

●●2:30: Village Voices. Christmas Joy. Hayes:<br />

Christmas Suite; Hoelscher: Still, Still, Still;<br />

Hagenberg: Sweetest Music, Softly Stealing;<br />

Forrest: He is Born; and other works. Oksana<br />

Vignan, conductor; Robert Graham, accompaniment;<br />

Prometheus Male Choir (Pablo<br />

Fondera, conductor); Zajvir Childrens’ Choir<br />

(Olesia Konyk, conductor). Markham Missionary<br />

Church, 5438 Major Mackenzie Dr.<br />

E., Markham. 905-763-4172. $25; $20(sr);<br />

$10(st); free(under 12). Also 7:30pm.<br />

●●3:00: Mississauga Children’s Choir. Peace<br />

On Earth. RBC Theatre, Living Arts Centre,<br />

4141 Living Arts Dr., Mississauga. 905-306-<br />

6000. $25; $15(under 13).<br />

●●4:00: Oakville Children’s Choir. Community<br />

Carol Concerts. Guest: Lianne Tan, organ. St.<br />

John’s United Church (Oakville), 262 Randall<br />

St., Oakville. 905-337-7104. $25; $20(sr);<br />

$15(under 13). Also 1:30pm.<br />

●●4:00: Timothy Eaton Memorial Church.<br />

Yule Sing! Festive Christmas music and carol<br />

sing. Timothy Eaton Memorial Church Choir<br />

School and Sanctuary Choir, Weston Silver<br />

Band. <strong>23</strong>0 St. Clair Ave. W. 416-925-5977. $15;<br />

$45(family); free(under 5).<br />

●●4:30: Church of the Holy Trinity. The<br />

Christmas Story. See Dec 8 for details.<br />

●●7:00: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Opens Dec 9. Runs to Dec 30. Days<br />

and times vary. See national.ballet.ca for<br />

details.<br />

●●7:00: Toronto Gilbert and Sullivan Society.<br />

Joy to the World! Gilbert and Sullivan<br />

selections and Christmas carols. St. Andrew’s<br />

United Church (Bloor St.), 117 Bloor St E. 416-<br />

763-0832. Free(members); $5(non-members).<br />

Refreshments included.<br />

●●7:30: Annex Singers. <strong>December</strong> Diaries:<br />

A Choral Drama. Roger Honeywell, tenor;<br />

Cheryl MacInnis, actor; Anne Lindsay, violin;<br />

Alejandro Céspedes, percussion. Jane Mallett<br />

Theatre, St. Lawrence Centre for the Arts,<br />

27 Front St. E. 416-968-7747. $35; $25(sr/st).<br />

Also Dec 10(3pm).<br />

●●7:30: Chris Tsujiuchi. A Very Chris-terical<br />

Christmas Cabaret <strong>2017</strong>. Colin Asuncion,<br />

Kevin Wong, Leah Canali, Steve John Dale<br />

and others. Buddies in Bad Times Theatre,<br />

12 Alexander St. 416-975-8555. $30. Also<br />

Dec 10. Limited tickets at the door.<br />

●●7:30: Espressivo Singers. Benjamin Britten’s<br />

A Ceremony of Carols and More. Daley:<br />

What Sweeter Music; J.O. Edwards: Wassail;<br />

What Child Is This? (arr. James Helme<br />

Sutcliffe); Rutter (arr.): Tomorrow Shall<br />

Be My Dancing Day. Guest: Liane James,<br />

harp. Westminster United Church (Whitby),<br />

1850 Rossland Rd. E., Whitby. 905-686-6299.<br />

$25; $15(12 and under).<br />

●●7:30: Living Arts Centre. Oscar Peterson<br />

and Oliver Jones: A Celebration. 4141 Living<br />

Arts Dr., Mississauga. 905-306-6000.<br />

$75-$150.<br />

●●7:30: Scarborough Philharmonic Orchestra.<br />

Around the World at Holiday Time. Tchaikovsky:<br />

Act 2 from The Nutcracker; The<br />

Huron Carol; An Impression of Beautiful<br />

Southern China; Holiday Music for Choir and<br />

Orchestra; Carol Sing-along. Sistema Toronto<br />

Youth Choir; St. Paul’s Youth and Adult Choirs;<br />

Woburn Collegiate Choir; Scarborough<br />

presents<br />

DECEMBER DIARIES<br />

A Choral Drama<br />

Shackleton at the South Pole, Champlain in New France, the<br />

Christmas Truce of 1914... A journey in words and music to<br />

three remarkable Christmases past.<br />

featuring:<br />

Roger Honeywell, tenor<br />

Cheryl MacInnis, actor<br />

Anne Lindsay, violin<br />

Alejandro Céspedes, percussion<br />

Maria Case, Artistic Director<br />

<strong>December</strong> 9 at 7:30 PM & <strong>December</strong> 10 at 3 PM<br />

Jane Mallett Theatre, St. Lawrence Centre for the Arts<br />

www.annexsingers.com<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> | 43


Philharmonic Women’s Choir. Salvation Army<br />

Scarborough Citadel, 2021 Lawrence Ave.<br />

E., Scarborough. www.spo.ca. $30; $25(sr);<br />

$15(st); $10(child).<br />

●●7:30: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. Wind Symphony. Irvine: Hannaford<br />

Overture; Forsyth: Songs from the Qu’Appelle<br />

Valley; Arnold: Prelude, Siciliano and Rondo;<br />

Meechan: Letters for Home; Milhaud: Suite<br />

française. Jeffrey Reynolds, conductor. Mac-<br />

Millan Theatre, Edward Johnson Building,<br />

80 Queen’s Park. 416-408-0208. $30;<br />

$20(sr); $10(st).<br />

●●7:30: Village Voices. Christmas Joy. Hayes:<br />

Christmas Suite; Hoelscher: Still, Still, Still;<br />

Hagenberg: Sweetest Music, Softly Stealing;<br />

Forrest: He is Born; and other works. Oksana<br />

Vignan, conductor; Robert Graham, accompaniment;<br />

Prometheus Male Choir (Pablo<br />

Fondera, conductor); Zajvir Childrens’ Choir<br />

(Olesia Konyk, conductor). Markham Missionary<br />

Church, 5438 Major Mackenzie Dr.<br />

E., Markham. 905-763-4172. $25; $20(sr);<br />

$10(st); free(under 12). Also 2:30pm.<br />

●●7:30: VOCA Chorus of Toronto. The Great<br />

Canadian Choirbook. All-Canadian choral<br />

music (including two world premieres and<br />

songs of the season) by celebrated composers<br />

and singer-songwriters. Cheri Maracle,<br />

vocalist; Michael Occhipinti, guitar; James<br />

Gordon, guitar and vocalist; Rob Clutton, bass;<br />

Jamie Drake, percussion; Jenny Crober, conductor;<br />

Elizabeth Acker, accompanist. Eastminster<br />

United Church, 310 Danforth Ave.<br />

416-947-8487. $25; $20(sr); $10(st).<br />

●●7:30: York Chamber Ensemble. Christmas<br />

Masterpieces: Sing-Along! Boyce: Symphony<br />

No.1 in B-flat – Ode for the New Year;<br />

Handel: Messiah (selections); Bach: Christmas<br />

Oratorio Part 3; carol sing-along. Trevor<br />

Dearham, guest conductor. Trinity Anglican<br />

Church (Aurora), 79 Victoria St., Aurora.<br />

905-727-6101. $20; $15(sr/st).<br />

●●8:00: Cathedral Bluffs Symphony Orchestra.<br />

Subscription Concert #2. Humperdinck:<br />

Hansel and Gretel. Tryptych Concert & Opera;<br />

Norman Reintamm, conductor. P.C. Ho Theatre,<br />

Chinese Cultural Centre of Greater<br />

Toronto, 5183 Sheppard Ave. E., Scarborough.<br />

416-879-5566. $35 and up; $30(sr/st);<br />

A. Concerts in the GTA folk music; improvisation. Rebekah Wolkstein,<br />

Cathedral Bluffs<br />

SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA<br />

Norman Reintamm<br />

Artistic Director/Principal Conductor<br />

free(under 12). 7:15pm: Pre-concert talk. Also<br />

Dec 10(2pm).<br />

●●8:00: Continuum Contemporary Music.<br />

Urgent Voices. Hostman: The Invisible Forest;<br />

Rolfe: Clinical Notes of the Bipolar Therapist;<br />

Southam: Glass Houses; Wilson: From<br />

the Diaries of William Lyon Mackenzie King.<br />

Guests: Alex Dobson, baritone; Pascal Charbonneau,<br />

tenor; Laurent Philippe, piano. Aki<br />

Studio, Daniels Spectrum, 585 Dundas St.<br />

E. 416-531-1402. $35; $25(sr/arts workers);<br />

$15(st). Also Dec 8.<br />

●●8:00: Flato Markham Theatre. Lynn<br />

Harrell: J.S. Bach - Six Suites for Solo Cello.<br />

171 Town Centre Blvd., Markham. 905-305-<br />

7469. $15-$85.<br />

●●8:00: North York Concert Orchestra. In<br />

Concert. Seasonal holiday favourites; Royer:<br />

Fantasia on Canadian Christmas Carols; Goldstein:<br />

Hannukah Medley. Youth Concerto<br />

Competition Winners; Rafael Luz, conductor.<br />

Yorkminster Citadel, 1 Lord Seaton Rd., North<br />

York. 416-628-9195. $25; $20(sr); $10(st).<br />

●●8:00: Payadora Tango Ensemble. Album<br />

Release Concert. Original tangos; arrangements<br />

of traditional tangos and Argentinian<br />

Album Release<br />

Concert<br />

Saturday Dec 9, 8pm<br />

Gallery 345, Toronto<br />

payadora.com<br />

Saturday <strong>December</strong> 9, <strong>2017</strong> 8 pm<br />

HANSEL & GRETEL<br />

by Humperdinck<br />

with TrypTych Concert & Opera<br />

Special Encore Matinée: 2 pm Sunday<br />

SUBSCRIPTION CONCERT 2 | TICKETS: from $35 adult $30 senior/student<br />

children under age 12 are free ORDER ONLINE OR BY PHONE<br />

P.C. HoTheatre 5183 Sheppard Ave E (1 block east of Markham Rd), Scarborough<br />

cathedralbluffs.com | 416.879.5566<br />

violin; Branko Džinović, accordion and bandoneon;<br />

Robert Horvath, piano; Joe Phillips,<br />

double bass. Guest: Elbio Fernandez, vocals.<br />

Gallery 345, 345 Sorauren Ave. 416-822-9781.<br />

$25; $15(st). Reserve on the phone and tickets<br />

available at the door.<br />

●●8:00: Royal Conservatory. TD Jazz: Dianne<br />

Reeves Quintet. Great American Songbook.<br />

Koerner Hall, Telus Centre, 273 Bloor St. W.<br />

416-408-0208. $50-$100.<br />

●●8:00: Toronto Consort. Navidad: A Spanish<br />

Christmas. Trinity-St. Paul’s Centre, Jeanne<br />

Lamon Hall, 427 Bloor St. W. 416-964-6337.<br />

From $29. Also Dec 8, 10(3:30pm).<br />

●●9:00: Ava Productions. Rastak Music<br />

Group. Persian folk music from every corner<br />

of Iran with different dialects. Performers on<br />

tar, dulcimer, ney, tombak, daf, fiddle, quishak.<br />

John Basset Theatre, 255 Front St. W. 647-<br />

960-0282. $55-$120.<br />

Sunday <strong>December</strong> 10<br />

●●1:00: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Opens Dec 9. Runs to Dec 30. Days<br />

and times vary. See national.ballet.ca for<br />

details.<br />

●●1:30: Music at Metropolitan. Deck the<br />

Halls: Downtown Carol Sing. Sing carols with<br />

the Metropolitan Silver Band and organ.<br />

Metropolitan Silver Band. Metropolitan<br />

United Church (Toronto), 56 Queen St. E. 416-<br />

363-0331 x26. Donations welcome.<br />

●●1:30: Oakville Symphony Orchestra. Family<br />

Christmas. Guests: Oakville Children’s Choir.<br />

Oakville Centre for the Performing Arts,<br />

130 Navy St., Oakville. 905-815-2021. $13-$25.<br />

Also 4pm.<br />

●●2:00: Cathedral Bluffs Symphony Orchestra.<br />

Subscription Concert #2. Humperdinck:<br />

Hansel and Gretel. Tryptych Concert & Opera;<br />

Norman Reintamm, conductor. P.C. Ho Theatre,<br />

Chinese Cultural Centre of Greater<br />

Toronto, 5183 Sheppard Ave. E., Scarborough.<br />

416-879-5566. $35 and up; $30(sr/st);<br />

free(under 12). Also Dec 9(8pm).<br />

●●2:00: Festival Wind Orchestra. Holiday<br />

Soliloquy. Hannaford Overture; Rikudim;<br />

Bond…James Bond; Copacabana; Autumn<br />

Soliloquy; Christmas carol sing-along. Justin<br />

Bartlett, oboe; Keith Reid, conductor. Isabel<br />

Bader Theatre, 93 Charles St. W. 416-302-<br />

1875. $20; $15(sr/st); free(under 13). Gift Basket<br />

Raffle.<br />

●●2:00: Living Arts Centre. The Nutcracker.<br />

4141 Living Arts Dr., Mississauga. 905-306-<br />

6000. $50-$85. Also 7:30pm.<br />

●●3:00: Annex Singers. <strong>December</strong> Diaries:<br />

A Choral Drama. Roger Honeywell, tenor;<br />

Cheryl MacInnis, actor; Anne Lindsay, violin;<br />

Alejandro Cespedes, percussion. Jane Mallett<br />

Theatre, St. Lawrence Centre for the Arts,<br />

27 Front St. E. 416-968-7747. $35; $25(sr/st).<br />

Also Dec 9(7:30pm).<br />

●●3:00: Durham Chamber Orchestra. It’s<br />

Christmas. Symphonic works by Schubert<br />

and Rossini; Ave Verum Corpus; O Holy Night;<br />

Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas; The<br />

Nutcracker. Guests: Martina Ortiz-Luis and<br />

The Durham Girls’ Choir. Forest Brook Community<br />

Church, 60 Kearney Dr., Ajax. 905-<br />

852-1141. $20; free(under 12).<br />

●●3:00: Hart House. True North: 100 Years<br />

of Canadian Classical Music. New Canadian<br />

classical works. Stephanie Chua, piano; Veronique<br />

Mathieu, violin. Hart House, Great Hall,<br />

7 Hart House Circle. 416-978-2452. Free.<br />

●●3:00: Orchestra Toronto. Holiday Music<br />

Magic. How the Grinch Stole Christmas;<br />

music from Frozen; seasonal sing-along.<br />

Trevor Rines, narration. George Weston<br />

Recital Hall, 5040 Yonge St. 1-855-985-2787.<br />

$45; $39(sr); $19(under 29). 2:45pm: preconcert<br />

chat. During intermission: Long &<br />

McQuade instrument petting zoo.<br />

●●3:00: Royal Conservatory. Invesco Piano<br />

Concerts: Khatia Buniatishvili. Mussorgsky:<br />

Pictures at an Exhibition; works by Liszt.<br />

Koerner Hall, Telus Centre, 273 Bloor St. W.<br />

416-408-0208. $35-$80. Pre-concert talk<br />

2pm.<br />

●●3:00: St. Paul’s Bloor Street. Michael Bloss,<br />

Organ. 227 Bloor St. E. 416-961-8116. Free.<br />

●●3:00: Stouffville United Church. Sing Along<br />

Messiah. Handel: Messiah. Anna Bateman,<br />

soprano; Susan Black-McAuliffe, alto; Bruce<br />

Nasmith, conductor, and others. 34 Church<br />

St. S., Stouffville. 905-640-7107. $20; $10 (sr/<br />

st). Scores provided or bring your own.<br />

●●3:00: Symphony on the Bay. A Double-<br />

Reed Christmas. Vivaldi: Christmas Concerto;<br />

Vaughan Williams: Fantasia on Christmas<br />

Carols; and other works. Fraser Jackson,<br />

bassoon; Claudio Vena, conductor. Burlington<br />

Performing Arts Centre, 440 Locust St.,<br />

Burlington. 905-681-6000. $43; $36.50(sr);<br />

$24.50(16-24); $12(under 16).<br />

●●3:00: Syrinx Concerts Toronto. Sofya Gulyak,<br />

Piano. Coulthard: Sonata No.2; Clementi:<br />

Sonata in C Op.33; Brahms: Handel Variations<br />

Op.24; Tchaikovsky: Nutcracker Suite<br />

(arr. Pletnev); Shostakovich: Prelude and<br />

Fugue in D-flat. Heliconian Hall, 35 Hazelton<br />

Ave. 416-654-0877. $30; $20(st). Post-concert<br />

reception.<br />

●●3:00: Toronto Symphony Orchestra. The<br />

Snowman. Traditional: Jingle Bells Fantasie<br />

(arr. C. Dragon); Smith-Bernard: Winter Wonderland;<br />

Blake: The Snowman; Korngold:<br />

The Snowman Overture; J. Strauss II: Pizzicato<br />

Polka; and other works; traditional carol<br />

sing-along. David Amado, conductor. Guests:<br />

Tha Spot Holiday Dancers; Resonance Youth<br />

Choir. Roy Thomson Hall, 60 Simcoe St. 416-<br />

593-1285. $25-$69. 20-minute intermission.<br />

●●3:30: St. Anne’s Anglican Church. St.<br />

Anne’s Community Cantate. St. Anne’s Choir;<br />

Young Voices Toronto; Junction Trio; St.<br />

Anne’s Festival Brass Quintet. 270 Gladstone<br />

Ave. 416-536-3160. $15; $10(sr/st);<br />

44 | <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


free(under 12). Proceeds to Oasis Food Bank<br />

and CPDL Youth Scholarship Program.<br />

●●3:30: Toronto Consort. Navidad: A Spanish<br />

Christmas. Trinity-St. Paul’s Centre, Jeanne<br />

Lamon Hall, 427 Bloor St. W. 416-964-6337.<br />

From $29. Also Dec 8, 9(both at 8pm).<br />

●●4:00: Cathedral Church of St. James.<br />

Organ Recital: Ian Sadler. 65 Church St. 416-<br />

364-7865 x<strong>23</strong>4. Donations welcomed.<br />

●●4:00: Eglinton St George’s United Church.<br />

All Bells in Paradise. An ESG Christmas with<br />

brass, carols, choir and organ. ESG Choir;<br />

Trillium Brass; Andrew Adair, organ; Shawn<br />

Grenke, conductor. Eglinton St. George’s<br />

United Church, 35 Lytton Blvd. 416-481-1141.<br />

$35; $25(st).<br />

●●4:00: Oakville Symphony Orchestra.<br />

Family Christmas. Guests: Oakville Children’s<br />

Choir. Oakville Centre for the Performing<br />

Arts, 130 Navy St., Oakville. 905-815-2021.<br />

$13-$25. Also 1:30pm.<br />

●●4:00: Toronto Classical Singers. Noël Noël:<br />

A French Christmas. Contrasting the elegance<br />

of the court at Versailles with the passion<br />

of 19th-century Paris. Charpentier:<br />

Messe de minuit pour noël; Saint-Saëns: Oratorio<br />

de Noël. Whitney Mather, soprano; Kendra<br />

Dyck, soprano; Lillian Brooks, mezzo;<br />

Stephen McClare, tenor; Bruce Kelly, baritone;<br />

Talisker Players Orchestra; Jurgen<br />

Petrenko, conductor. Christ Church Deer<br />

Park, 1570 Yonge St. 416-444-7863. $30.<br />

●●4:30: Church of the Holy Trinity. The<br />

Christmas Story. See Dec 8 for details.<br />

CAROLS BY<br />

CANDLELIGHT<br />

SUN., DEC. 10, 4:30pm<br />

NINE LESSONS<br />

& CAROLS<br />

SUN., DEC. 17, 4:30pm<br />

Yorkminster Park<br />

Baptist Church<br />

yorkminsterpark.com<br />

●●4:30: Yorkminster Park Baptist Church.<br />

Carols by Candlelight. Choirs and musicians<br />

of Yorkminster Park. 1585 Yonge St. 416-922-<br />

1167. Free.<br />

●●5:30: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Opens Dec 9. Runs to Dec 30. Days<br />

and times vary. See national.ballet.ca for<br />

details.<br />

●●7:30: Chris Tsujiuchi. A Very Chris-terical<br />

Christmas Cabaret <strong>2017</strong>. Colin Asuncion,<br />

Kevin Wong, Leah Canali, Steve John Dale<br />

and others. Buddies in Bad Times Theatre,<br />

12 Alexander St. 416-975-8555. $30. Also<br />

Dec 9. Limited tickets at the door.<br />

●●7:30: Echo Women’s Choir. We Must Be the<br />

Light: Celebrating Canada at 150. Craig: We<br />

Must Be the Light; Valverde: Suave Brisa (Soft<br />

Breeze); Alcorn: That Old Feeling; and other<br />

songs reflecting many aspects of Canadian<br />

life. Becca Whitla, conductor and piano; Alan<br />

Gasser, conductor. Guest: Coco Love Alcorn.<br />

Church of the Holy Trinity, 19 Trinity Sq. 416-<br />

779-5554. $20/$15(adv); $10(sr/child/underwaged).<br />

Wheelchair accessible.<br />

●●7:30: Leaside United Church. Lessons and<br />

Carols. Willan: Let All Mortal Silence; Sirett:<br />

If Ye would Hear the Angels Sing; Britten: A<br />

Boy was Born; Eisele: Joyful Message; Rutter:<br />

Jesus Child; Albright: An African Celebration;<br />

What Child is This? (arr. Cynda Fleming).<br />

Chancel Choir of Leaside United (dir. Sharon<br />

L. Beckstead); Junior Choir (dir. Nancy Stewart);<br />

C Flats Jazz Band (dir. Cynda Fleming).<br />

822 Millwood Rd. 416-425-1253. Freewill<br />

offering. In support of the Out of the Cold<br />

Program.<br />

●●7:30: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. Percussion Ensembles. Walter Hall,<br />

Edward Johnson Building, University of<br />

Toronto, 80 Queen’s Park. 416-408-0208.<br />

Free.<br />

<strong>2017</strong>–<strong>2018</strong><br />

ConCErt SEriES<br />

All Bells<br />

in Paradise<br />

SUNDAY, Dec 10 th<br />

At 4 p.m.<br />

eSG chOIR AND<br />

tRILLIUm BRASS<br />

An ESG Christmas with<br />

Brass, Carols, Choir<br />

and organ<br />

ShAwn GrEnkE,<br />

ConduCtor<br />

AndrEw AdAir, orGAn<br />

35 Lytton BLvd.<br />

toronto<br />

416.481.1141<br />

www.esgunited.org<br />

Monday <strong>December</strong> 11<br />

●●7:00: Lula Music and Arts Centre. Reunite<br />

the Moneka Family. In support of Ahmed<br />

Moneka’s dream of reuniting his family. Lula<br />

Lounge, 1585 Dundas St. W. 416-588-0307. $15.<br />

Tuesday <strong>December</strong> 12<br />

●●12:00 noon: Canadian Opera Company.<br />

World Music Series: Christmas in Southern<br />

Italy. Traditional Christmas folk music. Vesuvius<br />

Ensemble. Richard Bradshaw Amphitheatre,<br />

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 10 - 1:30pm<br />

Deck the Halls: Downtown Carol<br />

Sing with the Metropolitan Silver<br />

Band and Organ<br />

Sing favourite carols<br />

~ Freewill donation helps Metropolitan’s<br />

community work in the downtown core<br />

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 17 - 7:00pm<br />

Annual Candlelight Service of<br />

Lessons and Carols with the<br />

Metropolitan Choirs<br />

~ Freewill offering<br />

www.metunited.org • 416-363-0331, ext. 26<br />

56 Queen Street East, Toronto<br />

TORONTO<br />

CLASSICAL<br />

SINGERS<br />

FRENCH<br />

CHRISTMAS<br />

CONCERT<br />

CHARPENTIER<br />

MESSE DE MINUIT<br />

SAINT-SAËNS<br />

ORATORIO DE NOËL<br />

Jurgen Petrenko,<br />

Artistic Director and Conductor<br />

The Talisker Players Orchestra<br />

Whitney Mather , soprano<br />

Kendra Dyck , soprano<br />

Lillian Brooks , mezzo-soprano<br />

Stephen McClare, tenor<br />

Bruce Kelly , baritone<br />

4pm<br />

Sunday , <strong>December</strong> 10, <strong>2017</strong><br />

Christ Church Deer Park<br />

1570 Yonge Street at Heath<br />

Four Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts,<br />

145 Queen St. W. 416-363-8<strong>23</strong>1. Free. Firstcome,<br />

first-served. Late seating not available.<br />

●●12:10: Nine Sparrows Arts Foundation/<br />

Yorkminster Park Baptist Church. Lunchtime<br />

Chamber Music: Rising Stars Recital.<br />

Students from the Glenn Gould School. Yorkminster<br />

Park Baptist Church, 1585 Yonge St.<br />

416-241-1298. Free; donations welcomed.<br />

●●1:00: Cathedral Church of St. James.<br />

Organ Recital: Matthew Whitfield. 65 Church<br />

St. 416-364-7865 x<strong>23</strong>4. Donations welcomed.<br />

MetUnited Music<br />

MetUnitedMusic<br />

NOËL NOËL<br />

TORONTO CLASSICAL SINGERS<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> | 45


●●7:30: Hannaford Street Silver Band.<br />

Christmas Cheer. Ben Heppner, tenor and<br />

host; Elmer Iseler Singers. Metropolitan<br />

United Church (Toronto), 56 Queen St. E. 416-<br />

366-77<strong>23</strong> or 1-800-708-6754. $45; $35(sr);<br />

$15(st).<br />

Toronto Youth Choir &<br />

Incontra Vocal Ensemble<br />

present<br />

O Nata Lux<br />

A. Concerts in the GTA<br />

Arts Senior Chorus; Lucas Waldin, conductor.<br />

Roy Thomson Hall, 60 Simcoe St. 416-593-<br />

1285. $34.75-$107. Also Dec 13(2pm and 8pm).<br />

Wednesday <strong>December</strong> 13<br />

●●12:00 noon: Canadian Opera Company.<br />

Vocal Series: Bound. Works by Handel.<br />

Against the Grain Theatre. Richard Bradshaw<br />

Amphitheatre, Four Seasons Centre for the<br />

Performing Arts, 145 Queen St. W. 416-363-<br />

8<strong>23</strong>1. Free. First-come, first-served. Late seating<br />

not available.<br />

●●12:00 noon: Yorkminster Park Baptist<br />

Church. Noonday Organ Recitals: Rashaan<br />

Allwood. 1585 Yonge St. 416-922-1167. Free.<br />

●●2:00: Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Canadian<br />

Brass Christmas. Tyzik: Christmas<br />

Overture; Silvestri (arr. Pope): The Spirit of<br />

Christmas from The Polar Express; Traditional:<br />

Ar Hyd y Nos (All through the Night)<br />

(arr. C. Dragon); Williams: Merry Christmas<br />

from Home Alone 2; and other works. Canadian<br />

Brass, brass quintet; Etobicoke School<br />

of the Arts Senior Chorus; Lucas Waldin, conductor.<br />

Roy Thomson Hall, 60 Simcoe St.<br />

416-593-1285. $34.75-$107. Also Dec 12 and<br />

13(both 8pm).<br />

●●7:00: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Opens Dec 9. Runs to Dec 30. Days<br />

and times vary. See national.ballet.ca for<br />

details.<br />

●●7:30: Incontra Vocal Ensemble. Hodie<br />

Christus Natus Est. Works by Palestrina,<br />

Lauridsen, Sixten, Gjeilo, Rutter and others.<br />

Matthew Otto, artistic director and conductor;<br />

Sarah Leung, assistant conductor.<br />

St. Joseph’s Chapel, Regis College, University<br />

of Toronto, 100 Wellesley St. W. 416-922-<br />

5474 x266. $35.<br />

●●8:00: Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Canadian<br />

Brass Christmas. Tyzik: Christmas<br />

Overture; Silvestri (arr. Pope): The Spirit of<br />

Christmas from The Polar Express; Traditional:<br />

Ar Hyd y Nos (All through the Night)<br />

(arr. C. Dragon); Williams: Merry Christmas<br />

from Home Alone 2; and other works. Canadian<br />

Brass, brass quintet; Etobicoke School<br />

of the Arts Senior Chorus; Lucas Waldin, conductor.<br />

Roy Thomson Hall, 60 Simcoe St. 416-<br />

593-1285. $34.75-$107. Also Dec 12(8pm) and<br />

13(2pm).<br />

Thursday <strong>December</strong> 14<br />

●●12:00 noon: Canadian Opera Company.<br />

Vocal Series: A Cappella Christmas. Original<br />

music and classic Christmas songs.<br />

Cadence. Richard Bradshaw Amphitheatre,<br />

Four Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts,<br />

145 Queen St. W. 416-363-8<strong>23</strong>1. Free. Firstcome,<br />

first-served. Late seating not available.<br />

●●5:30: Canadian Music Centre. CMC Presents:<br />

KUYUM. Francisco Barradas, violin;<br />

Cesar Aguilar, countertenor; Yolanda<br />

Tapia, piano. 20 St. Joseph St. 416-961-6601<br />

x202. $20; $15(CMC members/arts workers);<br />

$10(st).<br />

●●7:00: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Opens Dec 9. Runs to Dec 30. Days<br />

and times vary. See national.ballet.ca for<br />

details.<br />

●●7:30: Gallery 345. Mid Winter’s Eve. Works<br />

by Schubert, Debussy, Brahms and Sarasate.<br />

Carmen Lasceski Custers, violin; Emily Rho,<br />

piano. 345 Sorauren Ave. 416-822-9781. $25;<br />

$10(st). Cash only.<br />

●●8:00: Art of Time Ensemble. To All A Good<br />

Night 3: The Different Holiday Concert.<br />

Harbourfront Centre Theatre, <strong>23</strong>5 Queens<br />

Quay W. 416-973-4000. $25-$64; $15(rush<br />

tickets, 30 and under). Also Dec 15, 16.<br />

●●8:00: Blythwood Winds. Blythwood Strikes<br />

Back: A Darth Vader Holiday. Star Wars Episode<br />

V: The Empire Strikes Back (arr. Vander<br />

Hyden); holiday favourites. Tim Crouch, flute;<br />

Elizabeth Eccleston, oboe; Anthony Thompson,<br />

clarinet; Curtis Vander Hyden, french<br />

horn; Kevin Harris, bassoon. Free Times Cafe,<br />

320 College St. 416-999-6097. PWYC. Come<br />

early for dinner! Shows sell out.<br />

●●8:00: Flato Markham Theatre. Wonderful<br />

World of Christmas: Graceland Edition.<br />

171 Town Centre Blvd., Markham. 905-305-<br />

7469. $15-$65.<br />

●●8:00: Polyphonic Ground. Slim Flex and<br />

Success K/Evolution/Los Poetas. Revival Bar,<br />

783 College St. 416-536-5439. $35.<br />

Friday <strong>December</strong> 15<br />

●●7:00: Bell Tower Coffee and Community.<br />

Jason Wilson. Reggae. Church of the Messiah,<br />

240 Avenue Rd. 647-828-1176. Free.<br />

●●7:00: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Opens Dec 9. Runs to Dec 30. Days<br />

and times vary. See national.ballet.ca for<br />

details.<br />

●●7:00: Raffi Altounian. Imagine: Christmas.<br />

Ellington: The Nutcracker Suite; Guaraldi: A<br />

Charlie Brown Christmas. Rebekah Wolkstein,<br />

violin; Tom Skublics, clarinet; Burke<br />

Carroll, pedal steel; Raffi Altounian, guitar;<br />

Ben Heard, double bass; Andrew Rasmus,<br />

percussion. St. Barnabas Anglican Church,<br />

361 Danforth Ave. 416-528-5349. $30.<br />

●●7:30: Church of the Holy Trinity. The<br />

Christmas Story. See Dec 8 for details.<br />

●●7:30: Orpheus Choir of Toronto. Welcome<br />

Christmas! Lindberg: Christmas Cantata;<br />

and festive sing-along carols. The Bob<br />

DeAngelis Big Band; John Sherwood, jazz<br />

pianist; Orpheus Choir of Toronto; Edward<br />

Maroney, accompanist; Robert Cooper, artistic<br />

director. Metropolitan United Church<br />

Tickets: $10 - $25<br />

Christ Church Deer Park<br />

Tues. Dec. 12 | 7:30PM<br />

torontochildrenschorus.com<br />

●●7:30: Toronto Youth Choir/Incontra Vocal<br />

Ensemble. O Nata Lux: 5th Anniversary Concert.<br />

Seasonal music. Christ Church Deer<br />

Park, 1570 Yonge St. 416-920-5211. $25;<br />

$20(st/sr); $10(child). Proceeds will help<br />

support Toronto Youth Choir’s tour to New<br />

York City.<br />

●●8:00: Sony Centre for the Performing<br />

Arts. The Tenors: Christmas Together.<br />

1 Front St. E. 1-855-872-7669 or 416-916-7878.<br />

$50-$125.<br />

●●8:00: Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Canadian<br />

Brass Christmas. McPherson: In Excelsis<br />

Gloria (After the Huron Carol) - Sesquie<br />

for Canada’s 150th; Tyzik: Christmas Overture;<br />

Silvestri (arr. Pope): The Spirit of Christmas<br />

from The Polar Express; Traditional:<br />

Ar Hyd y Nos (All through the Night) (arr. C.<br />

Dragon); Williams: Merry Christmas from<br />

Home Alone 2; and other works. Canadian<br />

Brass, brass quintet; Etobicoke School of the<br />

HANDEL<br />

MESSIAH<br />

DEC 13–16, KOERNER HALL,<br />

TELUS CENTRE<br />

tafelmusik.org<br />

●●7:30: Tafelmusik. Messiah. Music by Handel.<br />

Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra and<br />

Chamber Choir; Joanne Lunn, soprano;<br />

James Laing, countertenor; Rufus Müller,<br />

tenor; Brett Polegato, baritone; Ivars Taurins,<br />

conductor. Koerner Hall, Telus Centre,<br />

273 Bloor St. W. 416-408-0208. From $30.<br />

Also Dec 14, 15, 16.<br />

●●8:00: Nathaniel Dett Chorale. An Indigo<br />

Christmas...Parranda. Guest: Maestre &<br />

Friends. All Saints Kingsway Anglican Church,<br />

2850 Bloor St. W. 416-736-2100 x33068. $30.<br />

The Glenn Gould School<br />

New Music Ensemble<br />

THURS., DEC. 14, 7:30PM<br />

TEMERTY THEATRE<br />

FREE (TICKET REQUIRED)! 416.408.0208<br />

WWW.PERFORMANCE.RCMUSIC.CA<br />

●●7:30: Royal Conservatory. Discovery Series:<br />

Glenn Gould School New Music Ensemble.<br />

Curated by Brian Current. Temerty Theatre,<br />

273 Bloor St. W. 416-408-0208. Free.<br />

●●7:30: Tafelmusik. Messiah. Music by Handel.<br />

Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra and<br />

Chamber Choir; Joanne Lunn, soprano;<br />

James Laing, countertenor; Rufus Müller,<br />

tenor; Brett Polegato, baritone; Ivars Taurins,<br />

conductor. Koerner Hall, Telus Centre,<br />

273 Bloor St. W. 416-408-0208. From $30.<br />

Also Dec 13, 15, 16.<br />

●●8:00: Against the Grain Theatre. Bound.<br />

Music by George Frideric Handel, libretto by<br />

Joel Ivany. COC Jackman Studio, 227 Front<br />

Street East. 647-367-8943. $35. Also<br />

Dec 15(8pm), 16(6pm and 9pm).<br />

sine nomine<br />

Ensemble for Medieval Music<br />

A Medieval Nunnery<br />

Christmas<br />

Friday, <strong>December</strong> 15, 8 pm<br />

Trinity College Chapel<br />

6 Hoskin Avenue<br />

Tickets $20 / $15<br />

416-978-8849<br />

tickets.harthouse.ca<br />

Information 416-638-9445<br />

sinenominetoronto@gmail.com<br />

46 | <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


(Toronto), 56 Queen St. E. 416-530-4428. $45;<br />

$40(sr); $20(st).<br />

●●7:30: Tafelmusik. Messiah. Music by Handel.<br />

Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra and<br />

Chamber Choir; Joanne Lunn, soprano;<br />

James Laing, countertenor; Rufus Müller,<br />

tenor; Brett Polegato, baritone; Ivars Taurins,<br />

conductor. Koerner Hall, Telus Centre,<br />

273 Bloor St. W. 416-408-0208. From $30.<br />

Also Dec 13, 14, 16.<br />

●●8:00: Against the Grain Theatre. Bound.<br />

See Dec 14 for details. Also Dec 16(6pm and<br />

9pm).<br />

●●8:00: Art of Time Ensemble. To All A Good<br />

Night 3: The Different Holiday Concert.<br />

Harbourfront Centre Theatre, <strong>23</strong>5 Queens<br />

Quay W. 416-973-4000. $25-$64; $15(rush<br />

tickets, 30 and under). Also Dec 14, 16.<br />

●●8:00: Etobicoke Community Concert Band.<br />

Christmas Memories. Favourite seasonal carols;<br />

reading of “Twas the Night Before Christmas,”<br />

backed by the band. Guest: Councillor<br />

Stephen Holyday. Etobicoke Collegiate Auditorium,<br />

86 Montgomery Rd., Etobicoke. 416-<br />

410-1570. $15; free(under 12).<br />

●●8:00: Etobicoke Philharmonic Orchestra.<br />

Holiday Magic. Tchaikovsky: Waltz of<br />

the Flowers (Nutcracker Suite); L. Anderson:<br />

Sleigh Ride; seasonal favourites; Christmas<br />

sing-along. Jessica Lane, soprano.<br />

Humber Valley United Church, 76 Anglesey<br />

Blvd., Etobicoke. 416-<strong>23</strong>9-5665. $30;<br />

$25(sr)/$22(adv); $15(st). Silent Auction.<br />

●●8:00: Sine Nomine Ensemble for Medieval<br />

Music. A Medieval Nunnery Christmas.<br />

Trinity College Chapel, University of Toronto,<br />

6 Hoskin Ave. 416-978-8849 (reservations),<br />

416-638-9445 (information). $20; $15(sr/st/<br />

unwaged).<br />

●●8:00: Sony Centre for the Performing<br />

Arts. Dance Me: Music of Leonard Cohen. Les<br />

Ballet Jazz de Montréal. 1 Front St. E. 1-855-<br />

872-7669 or 416-916-7878. $55-$145.<br />

Saturday <strong>December</strong> 16<br />

●●2:00: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Opens Dec 9. Runs to Dec 30. Days<br />

and times vary. See national.ballet.ca for<br />

details.<br />

●●2:00: Roy Thomson Hall. Toronto Children’s<br />

Chorus: The Fire Within. Vivaldi: Gloria. Lesia<br />

Mackowycz, soprano; Krisztina Szabó, mezzo;<br />

TORONTO<br />

CHILDREN’S<br />

CHORUS<br />

The Fire Within<br />

SAT DEC 16 ◆ 2 PM<br />

ROYTHOMSONHALL.COM<br />

416-872-4255<br />

TCC Alumni Choir, Toronto Youth Choir,<br />

friends from the Toronto Symphony Orchestra;<br />

Michael Bloss, organ. 60 Simcoe St. 416-<br />

872-4255. $35.50-$45.50.<br />

●●3:00: Neapolitan Connection. Musical<br />

Matinées at Montgomery’s Inn: Rome<br />

& Romance. Alicja Wysocka soprano;<br />

Ronée Boyce, piano. Montgomery’s Inn,<br />

4709 Dundas St. W. 416-<strong>23</strong>1-0006. $30;<br />

$15(child). 2:15pm: historical tour; tea and<br />

cookies included.<br />

●●3:30: York Symphony Orchestra. YSO<br />

Holiday Spectacular. Seasonal favourites<br />

and audience sing-along. Trinity Anglican<br />

Church (Aurora), 79 Victoria St., Aurora. 416-<br />

410-0860. $28; $<strong>23</strong>(sr); $15(st). Also 8pm,<br />

Dec 17(7:30pm, Richmond Hill).<br />

●●3:30: Young Voices Toronto. This Christmastide.<br />

Fraser: This Christmastide; Engelhardt:<br />

Gaudete!; Gjeilo: Tundra; Brymer:<br />

Happy Xmas (War Is Over); Fjelheim: Winter’s<br />

Night. Maria Conkey, conductor; Brenda<br />

O”Connor, conductor; Sheldon Rose, pianist.<br />

Trinity-St. Paul’s United Church, 427 Bloor St.<br />

W. 416-762-0657. $25; $15(sr/st); free(under<br />

5).<br />

●●4:30: Church of the Holy Trinity. The<br />

Christmas Story. See Dec 8 for details.<br />

●●6:00: Against the Grain Theatre. Bound.<br />

See Dec 15. Also Dec 16(9pm).<br />

●●7:00: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Opens Dec 9. Runs to Dec 30. Days and<br />

times vary. See national.ballet.ca for details.<br />

●●7:00: St. Elizabeth of Hungary Roman<br />

Catholic Church. Christmas Concert.<br />

Saturday <strong>December</strong> 16 at 8 p.m.<br />

(Pre-concert chat at 7:15 p.m.)<br />

Christmas in<br />

San Marco:<br />

Monteverdi at 450<br />

With the Toronto Continuo<br />

Collective<br />

Calvin Presbyterian Church<br />

26 Delisle Avenue<br />

(416) 763-1695<br />

torontochamberchoir.ca<br />

DENIS MASTROMONACO<br />

MUSIC DIRECTOR &<br />

C O N D U C T O R<br />

Poulenc: Gloria; Christmas songs. Brigitte<br />

Emery, soprano; Ian Sadler, organ, St. Elizabeth<br />

Scola Cantorum Adult and Children’s<br />

Choirs; Imre Olah and Christa Lazar, conductors.<br />

432 Sheppard Ave. E. 416-225-3300. $20;<br />

$10(st). Post-concert reception.<br />

●●7:30: Church of the Holy Trinity. The<br />

Christmas Story. See Dec 8 for details.<br />

●●7:30: Cirque Musica Holiday. Believe. Incredible<br />

feats of strength, skill and grace to great<br />

holiday music favourites performed by a live symphony.<br />

Tribute Communities Centre, 99 Athol St.<br />

E., Oshawa. ev12.evenue.net. $49.99-$75.<br />

●●7:30: Pax Christi Chorale. Gloria. Poulenc:<br />

Gloria; Duruflé: Four Motets; Fauré: Cantique<br />

de Jean Racine; Gounod: Noël; classic french<br />

Pax Christi Chorale<br />

<strong>December</strong> 16 & 17<br />

Gloria<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> | 47


carols. Andrea Núñez, soprano; Daniel Norman,<br />

organ; David Bowser, conductor. Grace<br />

Church on-the-Hill, 300 Lonsdale Rd. n/a.<br />

$45; $40(sr); $25(st). Also Dec 17(3pm).<br />

●●7:30: Royal Conservatory. Taylor Academy<br />

Showcase Concert. Taylor Academy<br />

Chamber Orchestra. Mazzoleni Concert Hall,<br />

Royal Conservatory, 273 Bloor St. W. 416-408-<br />

0208. Free.<br />

●●7:30: Tafelmusik. Messiah. Music by Handel.<br />

Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra and<br />

Chamber Choir; Joanne Lunn, soprano;<br />

James Laing, countertenor; Rufus Müller,<br />

tenor; Brett Polegato, baritone; Ivars Taurins,<br />

conductor. Koerner Hall, Telus Centre,<br />

273 Bloor St. W. 416-408-0208. From $30.<br />

Also Dec 13, 14, 15.<br />

●●7:30: The Salvation Army. Christmas Spectacular.<br />

God Bless us Everyone, Of Great<br />

Wonder, Joy to the World, Hark the Herald<br />

and other songs. Amadeus Choir; North York<br />

Temple Band; Organ; Brass Band; Choir. Tyndale<br />

Chapel, 3377 Bayview Ave. 416-225-7968.<br />

$20. Call for tickets. Limited general admission<br />

space.<br />

●●7:30: Voices Chamber Choir. Handel: Messiah.<br />

Antonina Ermolenko, soprano; Monica<br />

Zerbe, alto; Michael Taylor, tenor; Steven<br />

Henriksen, bass; John Stephenson, organ;<br />

chamber orchestra; Ron Ka Ming Cheung,<br />

conductor. Church of St. Martin-in-the-<br />

Fields, 151 Glenlake Ave. 416-519-0528. $35;<br />

$25(sr/st).<br />

●●8:00: Art of Time Ensemble. To All A Good<br />

Night 3: The Different Holiday Concert.<br />

Harbourfront Centre Theatre, <strong>23</strong>5 Queens<br />

Quay W. 416-973-4000. $25-$64; $15(rush<br />

tickets, 30 and under). Also Dec 14, 15.<br />

●●8:00: Kindred Spirits Orchestra. Russian<br />

Romance. Shostakovich: Festive Overture;<br />

Violin Concerto No.1; Rachmaninoff: Symphony<br />

No.2 Op.27. Kristian Alexander, conductor;<br />

Marc Djokic, violin. Flato Markham<br />

Theatre, 171 Town Centre Blvd., Markham.<br />

905-604-8339. $30-$40; $25(sr); $15(youth).<br />

7:15pm pre-concert recital; 7:30pm pre-concert<br />

talk; intermission discussion with Marc<br />

Djokic.<br />

●●8:00: Mississauga Symphony Orchestra.<br />

Highlights from Messiah. Handel: Messiah<br />

(excerpts). Sara Schabas, soprano; Beste Kalender,<br />

mezzo; Zachary Rioux, tenor; Christopher<br />

Dunham, baritone; Mississauga Festival<br />

Chamber Choir; David Ambrose, guest conductor.<br />

Hammerson Hall, Living Arts Centre,<br />

4141 Living Arts Dr., Mississauga. 905-306-<br />

6000. $40-$65; $36-$58(sr); $30(youth);<br />

A. Concerts in the GTA<br />

$25(15 and under); $100(family).<br />

●●8:00: Toronto Chamber Choir. Christmas<br />

in San Marco. Celebrating the 450th<br />

anniversary of Claudio Monterverdi. Monteverdi:<br />

Magnificat, Psalm settings and hymns.<br />

Guests: Toronto Continuo Collective. Calvin<br />

Presbyterian Church, 26 Delisle Ave. 416-763-<br />

1695. $30; $25(sr); $12.50(under 30). Preconcert<br />

chat at 7:15pm.<br />

●●8:00: York Symphony Orchestra. YSO Holiday<br />

Spectacular. Seasonal favourites and<br />

audience sing-along. Trinity Anglican Church<br />

(Aurora), 79 Victoria St., Aurora. 416-410-<br />

0860. $28; $<strong>23</strong>(sr); $15(st). Also 3:30pm,<br />

Dec 17(7:30pm, Richmond Hill).<br />

●●9:00: Against the Grain Theatre. Bound.<br />

See Dec 14 for details.<br />

Sunday <strong>December</strong> 17<br />

●●1:00: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Opens Dec 9. Runs to Dec 30. Days<br />

and times vary. See national.ballet.ca for<br />

details.<br />

●●2:00: Gallery 345. Christmas Concert Beau<br />

Noel. Bosco/Humphrey: Noëls de Lourmarin;<br />

D’où viens-tu bergère (arr. Murphy); Entre le<br />

boeuf et l’âne gris (arr. Murphy); Büsser: Le<br />

sommeil de L’Enfant Jésus; Widor: Ave Maria;<br />

traditional carols; and other works. Julie Nesrallah,<br />

mezzo; Caroline Léonardelli, harp;<br />

Matthew Larkin, piano. 345 Sorauren Ave.<br />

416-822-9781. $25; $10(st). Cash only.<br />

SING-ALONG<br />

MESSIAH<br />

DEC 17, MASSEY HALL<br />

tafelmusik.org<br />

●●2:00: Tafelmusik. Sing-Along Messiah.<br />

Music by Handel. Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra<br />

and Chamber Choir; Joanne Lunn, soprano;<br />

James Laing, countertenor; Rufus<br />

Müller, tenor; Brett Polegato, baritone; Ivars<br />

Taurins, conductor. Massey Hall, 178 Victoria<br />

St. 416-872-4255. From $30.<br />

●●3:00: Greater Toronto Philharmonic<br />

Orchestra. Christmas at Columbus Centre.<br />

Tchaikovsky: The Nutcracker Suite;<br />

MacMillan: Christmas Carols; Verdi: Va pensiero<br />

from Nabucco; Donizetti: Overture and<br />

arias from L’Elisir d’amore; Handel: Messiah<br />

(excerpts). Elisabeth Polese, soprano; Columbus<br />

Belle Voci Choir; Paolo Busato, conductor.<br />

Columbus Centre, 901 Lawrence Ave. W. 647-<br />

<strong>23</strong>8-0015. $25; $20(sr); $15(st).<br />

●●3:00: Mississauga Symphony Orchestra. A<br />

Merry Little Christmas. Bob Anderson, music<br />

director; Resonance Youth Choir. Hammerson<br />

Hall, Living Arts Centre, 4141 Living Arts<br />

Dr., Mississauga. 905-306-6000. $40-$65;<br />

$36-$58(sr); $30(youth); $25(15 and under);<br />

$100(family).<br />

●●3:00: Pax Christi Chorale. Gloria. Poulenc:<br />

Gloria; Duruflé: Four Motets; Fauré: Cantique<br />

de Jean Racine; Gounod: Noël; classic french<br />

carols. Andrea Núñez, soprano; Daniel Norman,<br />

organ; David Bowser, conductor. Grace<br />

Church on-the-Hill, 300 Lonsdale Rd. n/a.<br />

$45; $40(sr); $25(st). Also Dec 16(7:30pm).<br />

●●4:00: Cathedral Church of St. James.<br />

Organ Recital: Manuel Piazza. 65 Church St.<br />

416-364-7865 x<strong>23</strong>4. Donations welcomed.<br />

●●4:30: Christ Church Deer Park. Jazz Vespers.<br />

Ellington’s Nutcracker. The Brian Barlow<br />

Big Band. 1570 Yonge St. 416-920-5211.<br />

Freewill offering. Religious service.<br />

●●4:30: Church of the Holy Trinity. The<br />

Christmas Story. See Dec 8 for details.<br />

●●4:30: Yorkminster Park Baptist Church.<br />

Nine Lessons and Carols. 1585 Yonge St. 416-<br />

922-1167. Free. Religious service.<br />

●●5:30: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Opens Dec 9. Runs to Dec 30. Days<br />

and times vary. See national.ballet.ca for<br />

details.<br />

●●7:00: Music at Metropolitan. Candlelight<br />

Service of Lessons and Carols. The Metropolitan<br />

Choirs. Metropolitan United Church<br />

(Toronto), 56 Queen St. E. 416-363-0331 x26.<br />

Freewill offering.<br />

●●7:00: Royal Conservatory. Emilie-Claire<br />

Barlow: Lumières d’hiver Album Release Concert.<br />

Koerner Hall, Telus Centre, 273 Bloor St.<br />

W. 416-408-0208. From $40.<br />

●●7:00: St. Thomas’s Anglican Church. Festival<br />

of Nine Lessons and Carols. St. Thomas’s<br />

Church Choir; Elizabeth Anderson,<br />

assistant organist; Matthew Larkin, organ<br />

and conductor. St. Thomas’s Anglican Church<br />

(Toronto), 383 Huron St. 416-979-<strong>23</strong><strong>23</strong>. Freewill<br />

offering. Religious service.<br />

●●7:00: The Choir of Trinity-St. Paul’s United<br />

Church & VIVA! Youth Singers of Toronto.<br />

Carols by Candlelight. A seasonal service of<br />

music and candlelight. Trinity-St. Paul’s Centre,<br />

427 Bloor St. W. 416-922-8435. Free.<br />

Peace on Earth<br />

Carols, stories and seasonal<br />

music, served up with<br />

holiday food and TMT’s<br />

famous Renaissance Punch.<br />

17 & 18 <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong><br />

●●7:30: Toronto Masque Theatre Salon Series.<br />

Peace on Earth: A Christmas Salon. Carols,<br />

songs and instrumental works; Lucas:<br />

The Birth of Christ (excerpts). Atrium,<br />

21 Shaftesbury Ave. 416-410-4561. $25. Food,<br />

drink and silent auction. Also Dec 18.<br />

●●7:30: Victoria Scholars. Yuletide on the<br />

Canadian Side. Our Lady of Sorrows Church,<br />

3055 Bloor St. W., Etobicoke. 416-761-7776.<br />

$30; $25(sr/st). Also Dec 18(Blessed Sacrament<br />

Church).<br />

●●7:30: York Symphony Orchestra. YSO<br />

Holiday Spectacular. Seasonal favourites<br />

and audience sing-along. St. Mary’s Anglican<br />

Church, 10030 Yonge St., Richmond Hill.<br />

416-410-0860. $28; $<strong>23</strong>(sr); $15(st). Also<br />

Dec 16(3:30pm and 8pm, Aurora).<br />

●●8:00: Istituto Italiano di Cultura di<br />

Toronto. Vesuvius Ensemble: Christmas Concert.<br />

Traditional Christmas folk songs from<br />

the Italian countryside. Heliconian Hall,<br />

35 Hazelton Ave. 416-356-5016. $25; $10(sr/<br />

st); free(children under 12). Also Dec 19.<br />

●●8:00: Music Gallery/Kith & Kin. Kith &<br />

Kin Holiday Wassail. 918 Bathurst Centre<br />

48 | <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


for Culture, Arts, Media and Education,<br />

918 Bathurst St. 416-204-1080. $18; $16(adv);<br />

$12(st/member/arts worker); free(ages 12<br />

and under).<br />

THAT CHOIR<br />

CAROLS<br />

featuring Resonance & our<br />

family carol sing-a-long<br />

Dec 17, <strong>2017</strong> | 8PM<br />

thatc ho ir. c o m<br />

●●8:00: That Choir. That Choir Carols.<br />

Whitacre: Lux Nova; Gjeilo: Serenity; Twardowski:<br />

Alleluia; K. Allan: Angels’ Daley: Huron<br />

Carol; M. Emery: new work. Guests: Resonance<br />

Youth Choir. St. Andrew’s Church<br />

(Toronto), 73 Simcoe St. 416-419-1756. $30;<br />

$20(sr/arts worker); $10(st); free(under 18).<br />

Monday <strong>December</strong> 18<br />

●●7:00: St. Cuthbert’s Anglican Church<br />

(Toronto). Carols with Friends. Carol singalong.<br />

1399 Bayview Ave. 416-485-0329. Free<br />

with donation to Flemingdon Park Community<br />

Food Bank. Mulled cider and cookies to follow.<br />

●●7:30: Toronto Masque Theatre Salon Series.<br />

Peace on Earth: A Christmas Salon. Carols,<br />

songs and instrumental works; Lucas:<br />

The Birth of Christ (excerpts). Atrium,<br />

21 Shaftesbury Ave. 416-410-4561. $25. Food,<br />

drink and silent auction. Also Dec 17.<br />

●●7:30: Victoria Scholars. Yuletide on the<br />

Canadian Side. Blessed Sacrament Church,<br />

24 Cheritan Ave. 416-761-7776. $30; $25(sr/<br />

st). Also Dec 17(Our Lady of Sorrows Church).<br />

●●8:00: Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Messiah.<br />

Karina Gauvin, soprano; Kriztina Szabó,<br />

mezzo; Frédéric Antoun, tenor; Joshua Hopkins,<br />

baritone; Toronto Mendelssohn Choir;<br />

Matthew Halls, conductor. Roy Thomson Hall,<br />

60 Simcoe St. 416-593-1285. $38.75-$111.25.<br />

Also Dec 19, 20, 22(all at 8pm), <strong>23</strong>(3pm).<br />

Tuesday <strong>December</strong> 19<br />

21 ST ANNUAL NOON HOUR<br />

CHOIR & ORGAN CONCERTS<br />

ELMER ISELER<br />

SINGERS<br />

Season of Joy<br />

Lydia Adams, conductor<br />

Shawn Grenke, organ<br />

TUE DEC 19 ◆ 12 PM<br />

FREE<br />

ROYTHOMSONHALL.COM<br />

416-872-4255<br />

●●12:00 noon: Roy Thomson Hall. Elmer Iseler<br />

Singers. Season of Joy. Shawn Grenke, organ;<br />

Lydia Adams, conductor. 60 Simcoe St. 416-<br />

872-1255. Free.<br />

●●1:00: Cathedral Church of St. James.<br />

Organ Recital: Manuel Piazza. 65 Church St.<br />

416-364-7865 x<strong>23</strong>4. Donations welcomed.<br />

●●7:00: Mississauga Festival Youth Choir.<br />

Joy and Wishes. Folk songs and carols<br />

from around the world. Youth Choristers;<br />

piano; percussion. Eden United Church,<br />

3051 Battleford Rd., Mississauga. 905-267-<br />

1101. $15; $10(sr/child under 10).<br />

●●7:00: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Opens Dec 9. Runs to Dec 30. Days<br />

and times vary. See national.ballet.ca for<br />

details.<br />

●●8:00: Istituto Italiano di Cultura di<br />

Toronto. Vesuvius Ensemble: Christmas Concert.<br />

Traditional Christmas folk songs from<br />

the Italian countryside. Heliconian Hall,<br />

35 Hazelton Ave. 416-356-5016. $25; $10(sr/<br />

st); free(children under 12). Also Dec 17.<br />

●●8:00: Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Messiah.<br />

See Dec 18 for details. Also Dec 20, 22(all<br />

at 8pm), <strong>23</strong>(3pm).<br />

FAITH<br />

AMOUR<br />

& Friends<br />

JAZZ FOR CHRISTMAS<br />

Wednesday<br />

Dec 20, 7pm<br />

faithamourjazz.com<br />

●●7:30: Cardinal Carter Academy for the<br />

Arts Vocal Program. A Festival of Nine Lessons<br />

and Carols. 165 singers from school<br />

vocal ensembles. St. Justin Martyr Church,<br />

3898 Hwy. 7, Unionville. 416-393-5556. $20.<br />

●●8:00: Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Messiah.<br />

See Dec 18 for details. Also Dec 19,<br />

22(both at 8pm), <strong>23</strong>(3pm).<br />

Thursday <strong>December</strong> 21<br />

●●7:00: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Opens Dec 9. Runs to Dec 30. Days<br />

and times vary. See national.ballet.ca for<br />

details.<br />

●●7:00: Yorkminster Park Baptist Church.<br />

John McDermott: Family Christmas. Guests:<br />

Dala. 1585 Yonge St. 416-241-1298 or eventbrite.com.<br />

$30/$25(adv).<br />

●●7:30: Church of the Holy Trinity. The<br />

Christmas Story. See Dec 8 for details.<br />

●●8:00: Quartetto Gelato. The Magic of<br />

Christmas. Christmas carols, gypsy tunes,<br />

original compositions and other works. Trinity-St.<br />

Paul’s Centre, 427 Bloor St. W. 416-738-<br />

6390. $25-$60.<br />

●●8:00: Roy Thomson Hall. The Barra Mac-<br />

Neils: An East Coast Christmas. 60 Simcoe St.<br />

416-872-4255. $29.50-$199.50.<br />

THE BARRA<br />

MACNEILS<br />

An East Coast Christmas<br />

THU DEC 21 ◆ 8 PM<br />

ROYTHOMSONHALL.COM<br />

416-872-4255<br />

Wednesday <strong>December</strong> 20<br />

MESSIAH<br />

DEC 18–<strong>23</strong><br />

Tickets are limited—book now!<br />

TSO.CA/holiday<br />

●●12:30: Organix Concerts/All Saints Kingsway.<br />

Kingsway Organ Concert Series Listings.<br />

Stefani Bedin, organ. All Saints Kingsway<br />

Anglican Church, 2850 Bloor St. W. 416-571-<br />

3680. Freewill offering. 45-minute concert.<br />

●●7:00: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Opens Dec 9. Runs to Dec 30. Days<br />

and times vary. See national.ballet.ca for<br />

details.<br />

●●7:00: In Tribute Jazz Productions. Jazz<br />

for Christmas. The Christmas Song; Baby, It’s<br />

Cold Outside; Coventry Caroll; Let It Snow; Little<br />

Drummer Boy; and other seasonal works.<br />

Faith Amour, alto; Taylor Evans, tenor; Jeremy<br />

Ledbetter, piano; Mark Godfrey, bass; Morgan<br />

Childs, drums. Jazz Bistro, 251 Victoria St.<br />

416-363-5299. $20.<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> | 49


QUARTETTO<br />

GELATO<br />

presents<br />

THE MAGIC OF CHRISTMAS<br />

<strong>December</strong> 21, 8pm<br />

An exciting holiday show of well-known<br />

Christmas songs and carols, virtuosic showpieces,<br />

gypsy tunes and original compositions<br />

Trinity-St. Paul United Church, Jeanne Lamon Hall,<br />

427 Bloor St West, Toronto<br />

Tickets start at $25 • eventbrite.ca<br />

quartettogelato.ca • 416-738-6390<br />

WITH SPECIAL GUESTS DALA<br />

Friday <strong>December</strong> 22<br />

●●7:00: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Opens Dec 9. Runs to Dec 30. Days<br />

and times vary. See national.ballet.ca for<br />

details.<br />

●●7:30: Burlington Performing Arts Centre/Orillia<br />

Opera House. Charles Dickens’<br />

A Christmas Carol. Burlington Performing<br />

Arts Centre, Main Theatre, 440 Locust St.,<br />

Burlington. 905-681-6000. $47; $25(child);<br />

$124(family 4-pack). Also Dec <strong>23</strong>(2pm and<br />

7:30pm).<br />

●●7:30: Church of the Holy Trinity. The<br />

Christmas Story. See Dec 8 for details.<br />

●●7:30: Euterpe Corporation/Reaching Out<br />

Through Music. Holiday Concert. Ensemble<br />

Vivant; St. James Town Children’s Choir; Anne<br />

Massicotte, director. Rose Avenue Jr. Public<br />

A. Concerts in the GTA<br />

School, 675 Ontario St. 416-465-8856. Free.<br />

●●8:00: Dr. Draw and the Strange<br />

Parade. Holiday Extravaganza. Royal Cinema,<br />

608 College St. www.drdraw.ca.<br />

$35/$25(adv).<br />

●●8:00: Living Arts Centre. My Home Land.<br />

Sarzamin Man; Dawood Sarkhosh Ensemble.<br />

4141 Living Arts Dr., Mississauga. 905-306-<br />

6000. $60-$75.<br />

●●8:00: Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Messiah.<br />

See Dec 18 for details. Also Dec 19,<br />

20(both at 8pm), <strong>23</strong>(3pm).<br />

Saturday <strong>December</strong> <strong>23</strong><br />

●●2:00: Burlington Performing Arts Centre/Orillia<br />

Opera House. Charles Dickens’<br />

A Christmas Carol. Burlington Performing<br />

Arts Centre, Main Theatre, 440 Locust St.,<br />

Burlington. 905-681-6000. $47; $25(child);<br />

$124(family 4-pack). Also Dec 22, <strong>23</strong>(7:30pm).<br />

●●2:00: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Opens Dec 9. Runs to Dec 30. Days<br />

and times vary. See national.ballet.ca for<br />

details.<br />

●●3:00: Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Messiah.<br />

See Dec 18 for details. Also Dec 19, 20,<br />

22(all at 8pm).<br />

●●4:30: Church of the Holy Trinity. The<br />

Christmas Story. See Dec 8 for details.<br />

●●7:00: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Opens Dec 9. Runs to Dec 30. Days and<br />

times vary. See national.ballet.ca for details.<br />

●●7:30: Burlington Performing Arts Centre/Orillia<br />

Opera House. Charles Dickens’<br />

A Christmas Carol. Burlington Performing<br />

Arts Centre, Main Theatre, 440 Locust St.,<br />

Burlington. 905-681-6000. $47; $25(child);<br />

$124(family 4-pack). Also Dec 22(7:30pm),<br />

<strong>23</strong>(2pm).<br />

●●7:30: Church of the Holy Trinity. The<br />

Christmas Story. See Dec 8 for details.<br />

Sunday <strong>December</strong> 24<br />

●●10:30am: Music at St. Andrew’s. 4th Sunday<br />

of Advent: Candle of Love. St. Andrew’s<br />

Gallery Choir; Dan Bickle, organ. St. Andrew’s<br />

Church (Toronto), 73 Simcoe St. 416-593-<br />

5600 x220. Freewill offering. Religious<br />

service.<br />

●●1:00: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Opens Dec 9. Runs to Dec 30. Days<br />

<strong>December</strong> 21st<br />

7:00 pm<br />

YORKMINSTER PARK<br />

BAPTIST CHURCH<br />

1585 Yonge Street<br />

www.yorkminsterpark.com<br />

TICKETS:<br />

General Admission: $25<br />

Online: $26.74<br />

at www.eventbrite.com<br />

At the door: $30.00<br />

Euterpe & Reaching Out Through Music present a<br />

free community outreach concert celebrating the<br />

spirit of the holiday season.<br />

Ensemble Vivant<br />

joined by the St. James Town Children’s Choir,<br />

directed by Anne Massicotte<br />

<strong>December</strong> 22, <strong>2017</strong> • 7:30<br />

Rose Avenue Jr. Public School<br />

Come One and All!<br />

Concert is free of charge.<br />

50 | <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


and times vary. See national.ballet.ca for<br />

details.<br />

●●4:00: Church of St. Mary Magdalene<br />

(Toronto). Sung Mass with Pageant and Carols.<br />

477 Manning Ave. 416-531-7955. Free.<br />

Religious service.<br />

●●4:30: Cathedral Church of St. James. Nine<br />

Lessons and Carols. TBA. Choir of St. James<br />

Cathedral. 65 Church St. 416-364-7865 x<strong>23</strong>4.<br />

Free.<br />

●●4:30: Church of the Holy Trinity. The<br />

Christmas Story. See Dec 8 for details.<br />

●●5:30: St. Anne’s Anglican Church. Christmas<br />

Eve Service. Christmas carol sing-along;<br />

Choral eucharist. Organ and brass quartet.<br />

270 Gladstone Ave. 416-536-3160. Freewill<br />

offering. Religious service. Also 10:30pm.<br />

●●7:00: Music at St. Andrew’s. Candlelight<br />

Service of Lessons and Carols. St. Andrew’s<br />

Gallery Choir; Aldbury Garden Brass Quintet;<br />

Dan Bickle, organ. St. Andrew’s Church<br />

(Toronto), 73 Simcoe St. 416-593-5600 x220.<br />

Freewill offering. Religious service.<br />

●●10:30: St. Anne’s Anglican Church. Christmas<br />

Eve Service. Christmas carol sing-along;<br />

Choral eucharist. Organ and brass quartet.<br />

270 Gladstone Ave. 416-536-3160. Freewill<br />

offering. Religious service. Also 5:30pm.<br />

●●11:00: Church of St. Mary Magdalene<br />

(Toronto). Solumn Midnight Mass and Procession.<br />

477 Manning Ave. 416-531-7955. Free.<br />

Religious service.<br />

●●11:00: Music at St. Andrew’s. Christmas<br />

Eve Candlelight Service of Worship and<br />

Carols. St. Andrew’s Gallery Choir; Daniel<br />

Bickle, organ. St. Andrew’s Church (Toronto),<br />

73 Simcoe St. 416-593-5600 x220. Freewill<br />

offering. Religious service.<br />

●●11:00: St. Thomas’s Anglican Church.<br />

Christmas Eve Midnight Mass. St. Thomas’s<br />

Church Choir; Elizabeth Anderson, assistant<br />

organist; Matthew Larkin, organ and<br />

conductor. St. Thomas’s Anglican Church<br />

(Toronto), 383 Huron St. 416-979-<strong>23</strong><strong>23</strong>. Freewill<br />

offering. Religious service.<br />

Monday <strong>December</strong> 25<br />

●●9:30am: Music at St. Thomas’s. Christmas<br />

Day: Sung Eucharist. Matthew Larkin, organ<br />

and director of music. St. Thomas’s Anglican<br />

Church (Toronto), 383 Huron St. 613-962-<br />

3636. By donation. Religious service.<br />

●●10:00am: Church of St. Mary Magdalene<br />

(Toronto). Sung Mass with Carols.<br />

477 Manning Ave. 416-531-7955. Free. Religious<br />

service.<br />

●●11:00am: Music at St. Thomas’s. Christmas<br />

Day: Solemn Eucharist. Matthew Larkin,<br />

organ and director of music. St. Thomas’s<br />

Anglican Church (Toronto), 383 Huron St.<br />

613-962-3636. By donation. Religious service.<br />

Wednesday <strong>December</strong> 27<br />

●●1:00: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Opens Dec 9. Runs to Dec 30. Days and<br />

times vary. See national.ballet.ca for details.<br />

●●5:30: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Opens Dec 9. Runs to Dec 30. Days and<br />

times vary. See national.ballet.ca for details.<br />

Thursday <strong>December</strong> 28<br />

●●7:00: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Opens Dec 9. Runs to Dec 30. Days and<br />

times vary. See national.ballet.ca for details.<br />

In Concert<br />

Watch on the big screen while a full<br />

symphony orchestra plays the entire<br />

score in sync with the film!<br />

<strong>December</strong><br />

28 & 29<br />

●●7:30: Sony Centre for the Performing<br />

Arts. Jurassic Park in Concert. Motion Picture<br />

Symphony Orchestra. 1 Front St. E.<br />

1-855-872-7669 or 416-916-7878. $49-$99.<br />

Also Dec 29.<br />

●●8:00: Toronto Operetta Theatre. Candide.<br />

Music by Leonard Bernstein. Tonatiuh<br />

Abrego, tenor (Candide); Elizabeth Beeler,<br />

soprano (Old Lady); Vania Lizbeth Chan, soprano<br />

(Cunégonde); Nicholas Borg, baritone<br />

(Voltaire/Pangloss/Martin); Cian Horrobin,<br />

tenor (Governor); and others; Derek<br />

Bate, conductor. St. Lawrence Centre for<br />

the Arts, 27 Front St. E. 416-366-77<strong>23</strong>. $49-<br />

$95. Also Dec 30, Jan 5, 6(all at 8pm), Dec 31,<br />

Jan 7(both at 3pm).<br />

St_Andrews_Church_Dec2016.pdf 1 2016-11-15 8:05 AM<br />

cANDLELIGHT<br />

Friday <strong>December</strong> 29<br />

●●1:00: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Opens Dec 9. Runs to Dec 30. Days and<br />

times vary. See national.ballet.ca for details.<br />

●●5:30: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Opens Dec 9. Runs to Dec 30. Days and<br />

times vary. See national.ballet.ca for details.<br />

●●7:30: Sony Centre for the Performing<br />

Arts. Jurassic Park in Concert. Motion Picture<br />

Symphony Orchestra. 1 Front St. E.<br />

1-855-872-7669 or 416-916-7878. $49-$99.<br />

Also Dec 28.<br />

Saturday <strong>December</strong> 30<br />

●●2:00: Flato Markham Theatre. Canada’s<br />

Ballet Jorgen: The Nutcracker, A Canadian<br />

Tradition. 171 Town Centre Blvd., Markham.<br />

905-305-7469. $15-$55. Also 7pm.<br />

●●2:00: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Opens Dec 9. Runs to Dec 30. Days and<br />

times vary. See national.ballet.ca for details.<br />

●●7:00: National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Opens Dec 9. Runs to Dec 30. Days and<br />

times vary. See national.ballet.ca for details.<br />

●●8:00: Toronto Operetta Theatre. Candide.<br />

See Dec 28 for details.<br />

Sunday <strong>December</strong> 31<br />

●●3:00: Toronto Operetta Theatre. Candide.<br />

See Dec 28 for details.<br />

●●7:00: Attila Glatz Concert Productions/<br />

Roy Thomson Hall. Bravissimo! Opera’s<br />

Greatest Hits. Selections from Carmen, La<br />

bohème, Turandot. Barbara Bargnesi and<br />

Francesca Sassu, sopranos; Carolyn Sproule,<br />

Christmas Eve<br />

Services<br />

7 PM<br />

Lessons & Carols<br />

Organ, brass band &<br />

our renowned choir<br />

TM & © Universal Studios<br />

Tonatiuh Abrego<br />

11 PM<br />

Worship & Carols<br />

Organ & our choir<br />

Vania Chan<br />

by Leonard Bernstein<br />

Derek Bate<br />

Conductor<br />

Guillermo Silva-Marin<br />

Stage Director<br />

Dec. 28<br />

to Jan.7<br />

torontooperetta.com<br />

New Year’s Eve • 7:00 pm<br />

Tickets: 416.872.4255<br />

roythomsonhall.com<br />

Opera Stars,<br />

Chorus & Orchestra<br />

Roy Thomson Hall<br />

mezzo; David Pomeroy, tenor; Massimo Cavalletti,<br />

baritone. Roy Thomson Hall, 60 Simcoe<br />

St. 416-872-4255. From $55.<br />

Monday <strong>January</strong> 1<br />

416.872.4255<br />

roythomsonhall.com<br />

<strong>January</strong> 1 • 2:30 pm<br />

Roy Thomson Hall<br />

● ● 2:30: Attila Glatz Concert Productions/Roy<br />

Thomson Hall. Salute to Vienna New Year’s<br />

Concert. Lilla Galambos, soprano; Thomas<br />

Weinhappel, baritone; Strauss Symphony<br />

of Canada; Kiev-Aniko Ballet of Ukraine and<br />

International Champion Ballroom Dancers;<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> | 51


Niels Muus, conductor. Roy Thomson Hall,<br />

60 Simcoe St. 416-872-4255. From $65.<br />

Thursday <strong>January</strong> 4<br />

●●12:00 noon: Encore Symphonic Concert<br />

Band. In Concert. Big Band swing, jazz, film<br />

scores and marches. Wilmar Heights Centre,<br />

963 Pharmacy Ave., Scarborough. 416-<br />

346-3910. $10.<br />

●●5:30: Adam Sherkin. Rachmaninoff: Let<br />

Hands Speak. Rachmaninoff: Morceaux<br />

de fantaisie, op. 3 (transcribed for saxophone<br />

and piano), Lullaby (After Tchaikovsky),<br />

Scherzo (from a Midsummer Night’s<br />

Dream); Sherkin: Elegiac Variants (<strong>2017</strong>),<br />

Northern Frames (2013), Sunderance (2008).<br />

Adam Sherkin, piano; David Zucchi, saxophones.<br />

Glenn Gould Studio, lobby, 250 Front<br />

St. W. 416-205-5000. $30; $26 (sr); $22 (35<br />

and under). The Write Off the Keyboard Series<br />

is presented in partnership with Steinway<br />

Piano Gallery.<br />

A. Concerts in the GTA<br />

Friday <strong>January</strong> 5<br />

●●8:00: Toronto Operetta Theatre. Candide.<br />

See Dec 28 for details.<br />

Saturday <strong>January</strong> 6<br />

●●7:30: Li Delun Music Foundation. New<br />

Year’s Concert <strong>2018</strong>. Bernstein: Magnificent<br />

Seven Theme; Beethoven: Piano Concerto<br />

No.2; Verdi: Ah, forse e lui from La traviata<br />

and a Chinese song; Anlun Huang: Chinese<br />

Rhapsody No.9; and other works. Ryan Wang,<br />

piano; Yuanyuan Huo, soprano; Toronto Festival<br />

Orchestra; Dongxiao Xu, conductor. Host:<br />

Kemin Zhang. George Weston Recital Hall,<br />

5040 Yonge St. 416-490-7962. $30-$88.<br />

●●8:00: Toronto Operetta Theatre. Candide.<br />

See Dec 28. Also Jan 7(3pm).<br />

Sunday <strong>January</strong> 7<br />

●●2:00: Royal Conservatory. Sunday Interludes:<br />

Rachel Barton Pine. Mazzoleni Concert<br />

Hall, Royal Conservatory, 273 Bloor St. W. 416-<br />

408-0208. Free.<br />

●●2:00: St. Barnabas Anglican Church. Charlotte<br />

Abbott, Soprano and Michael Pare,<br />

Guitar. Scarlatti; Argento: Letters from Composers;<br />

Celtic and Canadian Folksongs.<br />

361 Danforth Ave. 416-463-1344. $20; $10(sr/<br />

st).<br />

●●3:00: Toronto Operetta Theatre. Candide.<br />

See Dec 28 for details.<br />

●●4:00: Church of St. Mary Magdalene<br />

(Toronto). Organ music for Epiphany.<br />

Andrew Adair, organ. 477 Manning Ave. 416-<br />

531-7955. Free.<br />

●●4:00: St. Olave’s Anglican Church. Epiphany<br />

Choral Evensong. 360 Windermere Ave.<br />

416-769-5686. Contributions appreciated.<br />

Religious service with Epiphany tea following.<br />

5pm: Lecture by Dr. Giles Bryant on Cathedral<br />

and Parish Music.<br />

●●4:30: Christ Church Deer Park. Jazz Vespers.<br />

TBA. 1570 Yonge St. 416-920-5211. Freewill<br />

offering. Religious service.<br />

●●7:00: St. Thomas’s Anglican Church. Evensong<br />

with Epiphany Carols. St. Thomas’s<br />

Church Choir; Elizabeth Anderson, assistant<br />

organist; Matthew Larkin, organ and<br />

conductor. St. Thomas’s Anglican Church<br />

(Toronto), 383 Huron St. 416-979-<strong>23</strong><strong>23</strong>. Freewill<br />

offering. Religious service.<br />

Tuesday <strong>January</strong> 9<br />

●●12:00 noon: Canadian Opera Company.<br />

Chamber Music Series: Martinů and Korngold.<br />

Martinů: Three Madrigals for violin and<br />

viola; Korngold: String Sextet in D Op.10. Artists<br />

of the COC Orchestra. Richard Bradshaw<br />

Amphitheatre, Four Seasons Centre for the<br />

Performing Arts, 145 Queen St. W. 416-363-<br />

8<strong>23</strong>1. Free. First-come, first-served. Late seating<br />

not available.<br />

●●12:10: Nine Sparrows Arts Foundation/<br />

Yorkminster Park Baptist Church. Lunchtime<br />

Chamber Music: Rising Stars Recital.<br />

Sophia Szokolay, violin. Yorkminster Park<br />

Baptist Church, 1585 Yonge St. 416-241-1298.<br />

Free; donations welcomed.<br />

Wednesday <strong>January</strong> 10<br />

●●12:00 noon: Yorkminster Park Baptist<br />

Church. Noonday Organ Recitals: Alex<br />

Straus-Fausto. 1585 Yonge St. 416-922-1167.<br />

Free.<br />

●●12:10: TO.U Collective/Music at St.<br />

Andrew’s. Noontime Recital. Aperghis: À<br />

Tombeau ouvert. Jana Luksts, piano. St.<br />

Andrew’s Church (Toronto), 73 Simcoe St.<br />

416-593-5600 x<strong>23</strong>1. Free.<br />

●●5:30: Canadian Opera Company. World<br />

Music and Jazz Series: Golpes y Flores. Eliana<br />

Cuevas, singer and songwriter. Richard Bradshaw<br />

Amphitheatre, Four Seasons Centre for<br />

the Performing Arts, 145 Queen St. W. 416-<br />

363-8<strong>23</strong>1. Free. First-come, first-served. Late<br />

seating not available.<br />

●●7:30: Tafelmusik. Tafelmusik Winter Institute<br />

Concert. Works by Lully, Campra, Marais<br />

and Rameau. Participants of the annual<br />

Tafelmusik Winter Institute. Trinity-St. Paul’s<br />

Centre, 427 Bloor St. W. 416-964-6337. Free.<br />

Arrive early to get the best seats.<br />

●●8:00: Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Mozart@262<br />

Festival: Majestic Mozart. Mozart:<br />

Serenade No.10 in B-flat K3701A/361 “Gran<br />

Partita”; Symphony No.39 in E-flat K543. Bernard<br />

Labadie, conductor. Roy Thomson Hall,<br />

60 Simcoe St. 416-593-1285. $34.75-$148.<br />

Also Jan 13.<br />

Thursday <strong>January</strong> 11<br />

●●12:00 noon: Canadian Opera Company.<br />

Dance Series: Dance Ontario’s Dance Weekend<br />

Preview. Kaha:wi Dance Theatre. Richard<br />

Bradshaw Amphitheatre, Four Seasons Centre<br />

for the Performing Arts, 145 Queen St. W.<br />

416-363-8<strong>23</strong>1. Free. First-come, first-served.<br />

Late seating not available.<br />

●●12:10: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. Thursdays at Noon: Bev @ 60! Works<br />

by Kontogiorgos, Hatzis, Wijeratne and Ho.<br />

Beverley Johnston, percussion. Walter Hall,<br />

Edward Johnson Building, University of<br />

Toronto, 80 Queen’s Park. 416-408-0208.<br />

Free.<br />

●●12:30: York University Department of<br />

Music. Jazz at Noon: Turboprop. Martin<br />

Family Lounge, Accolade East Building, YU,<br />

4700 Keele St. 647-459-0701. Free.<br />

●●8:00: Music Toronto. Brentano Quartet<br />

with Soprano Dawn Upshaw. Webern: Bagatelles<br />

interwoven with Schubert Minuets<br />

(D89); Mario Davidovsky: Quartet No.4; Respighi:<br />

Il tramonto; Schoenberg: Quartet No.2.<br />

St. Lawrence Centre for the Arts, 27 Front St.<br />

E. 416-366-77<strong>23</strong>. $50-$55; $10(st, full time).<br />

RYAN WANG<br />

JAN 4 THU, 7:30 PM<br />

Piano Recital<br />

Tickets:<br />

canadaticketbox.com<br />

●●7:30: Li Delun Music Foundation. Ryan<br />

Wang Piano Recital. Works by Bach,<br />

Beethoven, Chopin, Debussy, Poulenc and<br />

Bartók. Fairview Library Theatre, 35 Fairview<br />

Mall Dr. 416-490-7962. $25/$33(VIP).<br />

Sunday 7 Jan. at 4 p.m.<br />

Choral Evensong<br />

for Epiphany Sunday<br />

plus Epiphany Tea and at 5:<br />

GILES BRYANT:<br />

CATHEDRAL AND<br />

PARISH MUSIC<br />

Giles traces Anglican church<br />

music from just before the<br />

Prayer Book up to now.<br />

His illustrated talk at the piano<br />

will focus on Tallis, Purcell,<br />

Maurice Greene, Stanford,<br />

S.S. Wesley, Howells and<br />

their parish contemporaries.<br />

St. Olave’s Church<br />

Bloor and Windermere<br />

416-769-5686 stolaves.ca<br />

52 | <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


<strong>January</strong> 11 at 8pm<br />

BRENTANO<br />

QUARTET<br />

with soprano<br />

DAWN UPSHAW<br />

Friday <strong>January</strong> 12<br />

●●7:30: Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Mozart@262<br />

Festival: What Makes It Great?®<br />

Mozart Clarinet Concerto. Q&A with audience.<br />

Mozart: Clarinet Concerto in A K622<br />

(Various musical examples and commentary)<br />

followed by the complete Clarinet Concerto.<br />

Joaquin Valdepeñas, clarinet; Rob Kapilow,<br />

conductor. Roy Thomson Hall, 60 Simcoe St.<br />

416-593-1285. $35.75-$83.75.<br />

Saturday <strong>January</strong> 13<br />

●●7:00: Toronto Gilbert and Sullivan Society.<br />

Songfest. A glorious evening of G&S with four<br />

companies performing excerptsfrom their<br />

upcoming productions. St. Andrew’s United<br />

Church (Bloor St.), 117 Bloor St E. 416-763-<br />

0832. Free(members); $5(non-members).<br />

Refreshments included.<br />

●●7:30: Southern Ontario Lyric Opera.<br />

Encore: Favourite Opera Arias. Jean Stilwell,<br />

mezzo; Joni Henson, soprano; David Pomeroy,<br />

tenor. Burlington Performing Arts Centre,<br />

440 Locust St., Burlington. 905-681-6000.<br />

$20-$65.<br />

●●8:00: Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Mozart@262<br />

Festival: Majestic Mozart. Mozart:<br />

Serenade No.10 in B-flat K3701A/361 “Gran<br />

Partita”; Symphony No.39 in E-flat K543. Bernard<br />

Labadie, conductor. Roy Thomson Hall,<br />

60 Simcoe St. 416-593-1285. $34.75-$148.<br />

Also Jan 10.<br />

Sunday <strong>January</strong> 14<br />

●●1:15: Mooredale Concerts. Music and Truffles:<br />

Piano Dialogue: David Jalbert and Wonny<br />

Song. Host Joanna leads an interactive concert<br />

for young people with a Lindt truffle<br />

at the end. Walter Hall, Edward Johnson<br />

Building, University of Toronto, 80 Queen’s<br />

Park. 416-922-3714 x103. $20. 3:15pm: main<br />

performance.<br />

●●3:00: St. Paul’s Bloor Street. Stephen<br />

Frketic, Organ. 227 Bloor St. E. 416-961-8116.<br />

Free.<br />

●●3:00: Vesnivka. Vesnivka’s Christmas Concert.<br />

Guests: Natalya Matyusheva, soprano;<br />

Pavlo Fondera, baritone; Dudaryk Men’s<br />

Chamber Choir from Lviv. Islington United<br />

Church, 25 Burnhamthorpe Rd. 416-763-2197<br />

or 416-246-9880. $30; $25(sr/st). Reception<br />

with coffee and home-baked treats after<br />

the concert.<br />

●●3:15: Mooredale Concerts. Piano Dialogue:<br />

David Jalbert and Wonny Song. Rachmaninoff:<br />

Suite No.1 “Fantasie-tableaux” in g<br />

Op.5; Sleeping Beauty Waltz; Milhaud: Scaramouche<br />

Op.165b; Stravinsky: Petrushka Suite<br />

for two pianos. Walter Hall, Edward Johnson<br />

Building, University of Toronto, 80 Queen’s<br />

Park. 416-922-3714 x103. $40; $20(under 30).<br />

1:15pm: Music and Truffles.<br />

KammerKonzert<br />

SUN. JAN. 14 @ 404 JARVIS ST.<br />

www.NewMusicConcerts.com<br />

●●8:00: New Music Concerts. Kammerkonzert.<br />

Berg: Kammerkonzert; Schoenberg:<br />

Phantasy Op.47; Oesterle: Chamber<br />

Concerto. Duo Diorama (MingHuan Xu, violin;<br />

Winston Choi, piano); New Music Concerts<br />

Ensemble; Robert Aitken, conductor.<br />

Betty Oliphant Theatre, 404 Jarvis St. 416-<br />

961-9594. $35; $25(sr/arts workers); $10(st).<br />

7:15pm: pre-concert talk.<br />

Monday <strong>January</strong> 15<br />

●●7:00: Royal Conservatory. Music Mix:<br />

Maple Blues Awards. Koerner Hall, Telus Centre,<br />

273 Bloor St. W. 416-408-0208. $35-$80.<br />

Tuesday <strong>January</strong> 16<br />

● ● 12:00 noon: Canadian Opera Company.<br />

Chamber Music Series: The English Violin.<br />

Elgar: Violin Sonata in e Op. 82; Britten: Suite<br />

for violin and piano Op.6. Benjamin Baker,<br />

violin; Daniel Lebhardt, piano. Richard Bradshaw<br />

Amphitheatre, Four Seasons Centre for<br />

the Performing Arts, 145 Queen St. W. 416-<br />

363-8<strong>23</strong>1. Free. First-come, first-served. Late<br />

seating not available.<br />

●●12:00 noon: York University Department<br />

of Music Student Association. Music Media<br />

Showcase. Martin Family Lounge, Accolade<br />

East Building, YU, 4700 Keele St. 647-459-<br />

0701. Free.<br />

●●12:10: Nine Sparrows Arts Foundation/<br />

Yorkminster Park Baptist Church. Lunchtime<br />

Chamber Music: Rising Stars Recital.<br />

Students from the Glenn Gould School. Yorkminster<br />

Park Baptist Church, 1585 Yonge St.<br />

416-241-1298. Free; donations welcomed.<br />

●●7:00: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. Student Composers Concert. Walter<br />

Hall, Edward Johnson Building, University<br />

of Toronto, 80 Queen’s Park. 416-408-0208.<br />

Free.<br />

Wednesday <strong>January</strong> 17<br />

●●12:00 noon: Organix Concerts/All Saints<br />

Kingsway. Kingsway Organ Concert Series<br />

Listings. Andrew Adair, organ. All Saints<br />

Kingsway Anglican Church, 2850 Bloor St. W.<br />

416-571-3680. Freewill offering. 45-minute<br />

concert.<br />

●●12:00 noon: York University Department<br />

of Music. Music @ Midday: New Music<br />

Ensemble. Matt Brubeck, conductor. Martin<br />

Family Lounge, Accolade East Building, YU,<br />

4700 Keele St. 647-459-0701. Free.<br />

●●12:00 noon: Yorkminster Park Baptist<br />

Church. Noonday Organ Recitals. Performer<br />

TBA. 1585 Yonge St. 416-922-1167. Free.<br />

●●8:00: Toronto Symphony Orchestra.<br />

JAN<br />

18<br />

8 PM<br />

Mozart@262 Festival: Essential Mozart. Mozart:<br />

Overture to The Magic Flute K620; Sinfonia<br />

concertante in E-flat for Violin, Viola,<br />

and Orchestra K364/320d; Overture to<br />

Der Schauspieldirektor (The Impresario)<br />

K486; Symphony No.36 in C K425 “Linz”.<br />

Jonathan Crow, violin; Teng Li, viola; Bernard<br />

Labadie, conductor. Roy Thomson Hall,<br />

60 Simcoe St. 416-593-1285. $34.75-$148.<br />

Also Jan 18(Koerner Hall).<br />

Thursday <strong>January</strong> 18<br />

●●12:10: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. Thursdays at Noon: Timothy Ying,<br />

Violin and Lydia Wong, Piano. Walter Hall,<br />

Edward Johnson Building, University of<br />

Toronto, 80 Queen’s Park. 416-408-0208.<br />

Free.<br />

●●7:30: York University Department of<br />

Music Students Association. Music Media<br />

Music Concert. Tribute Communities Recital<br />

Hall, Accolade East Building, YU, 4700 Keele<br />

St. 416-736-5888. $15; $10(sr/st).<br />

●●8:00: Aga Khan Museum. Yemen Blues.<br />

Yemeni song and poetry, Jewish music, West<br />

African groove and funk. 77 Wynford Dr. 416-<br />

646-677. $50. Tickets include same day entry<br />

to the Aga Khan Museum.<br />

●●8:00: Living Arts Centre. Nikki Yanofsky.<br />

4141 Living Arts Dr., Mississauga. 905-306-<br />

6000. $40-$60.<br />

●●8:00: Tafelmusik. Safe Haven. Program<br />

created by Alison Mackay. Works by Corelli,<br />

Lully, Bach and Vivaldi. Elisa Citterio, director.<br />

Trinity-St. Paul’s Centre, 427 Bloor St. W.<br />

416-964-6337. From $19. Also Jan 19, 20(both<br />

at 8pm), 21(3:30pm), <strong>23</strong>(8pm, George Weston<br />

Recital Hall).<br />

NIKKI<br />

YANOFSKY<br />

“arguably one of the most talented acts in the<br />

tradition of Amy Winehouse since Amy herself.”<br />

– DuJour.com<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> | 53


SAFE HAVEN<br />

JAN 18–21,<br />

JEANNE LAMON HALL,<br />

TRINITY-ST. PAUL’S CENTRE<br />

tafelmusik.org<br />

●●8:00: Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Mozart@262<br />

Festival: Essential Mozart. Mozart:<br />

Overture to The Magic Flute K620; Sinfonia<br />

concertante in E-flat for Violin, Viola,<br />

and Orchestra K364/320d; Overture to Der<br />

Schauspieldirektor (The Impresario) K486;<br />

Symphony No.36 in C K425 “Linz”. Jonathan<br />

Crow, violin; Teng Li, viola; Bernard Labadie,<br />

conductor. Koerner Hall, Telus Centre,<br />

273 Bloor St. W. 416-593-1285. $34.75-$148.<br />

Also Jan 17(Roy Thomson Hall).<br />

Friday <strong>January</strong> 19<br />

●●7:30: Living Arts Centre. Shen Yun.<br />

4141 Living Arts Dr., Mississauga. 905-306-<br />

6000. $100-$150. Also Jan 20(2pm and<br />

7:30pm), 21(2pm), <strong>23</strong>(7:30pm).<br />

●●7:30: Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Mozart@262<br />

Festival: Mozart Jupiter Symphony.<br />

Mozart: Rondo for Violin and Orchestra from<br />

Serenade No.7 “Haffner” K248b; Adagio in E<br />

for Violin and Orchestra K261; Piano Concerto<br />

No. <strong>23</strong> in A K488; Symphony No.41 in C K551<br />

“Jupiter”. Charles Richard-Hamelin, piano;<br />

Adrian Anantawan, violin; Peter Oundjian,<br />

conductor. Roy Thomson Hall, 60 Simcoe St.<br />

A. Concerts in the GTA<br />

416-593-1285. $30.75-$148. Also Jan 20(2pm<br />

and 8pm, Koerner Hall), 21(3pm, Toronto Centre<br />

for the Arts).<br />

The Splendour of<br />

noTre<br />

dame<br />

The Choir of<br />

ST JameS CaThedral<br />

& organiST david BriggS<br />

in ConCerT<br />

friday, <strong>January</strong> 19, <strong>2018</strong><br />

8:00pm<br />

STJameScaThedral.ca<br />

●●8:00: Cathedral Church of St. James.<br />

The Splendour of Notre Dame. Castagnet:<br />

Messe salve regina; Vierne: Messe solennelle;<br />

Duruflé: motets; and other works. David<br />

Briggs, organ; Choir of St. James Cathedral.<br />

65 Church St. 416-364-7865 x<strong>23</strong>4. From $20.<br />

●●8:00: Tafelmusik. Safe Haven. Program<br />

created by Alison Mackay. Works by Corelli,<br />

Lully, Bach and Vivaldi. Elisa Citterio, director.<br />

Trinity-St. Paul’s Centre, 427 Bloor St. W.<br />

416-964-6337. From $19. Also Jan 18, 20(both<br />

at 8pm), 21(3:30pm), 21(8pm, George Weston<br />

Recital Hall).<br />

Saturday <strong>January</strong> 20<br />

●●2:00: Home Music Club. An Afternoon of<br />

Chamber Music. Selections for piano, strings,<br />

winds and voice. Northern District Public<br />

Library, Room 224, 40 Orchard View Blvd.<br />

416-393-7610. Free.<br />

●●2:00: Living Arts Centre. Shen Yun.<br />

4141 Living Arts Dr., Mississauga.<br />

905-306-6000. $100-$150. Also Jan 19,<br />

20(7:30pm), 21(2pm), <strong>23</strong>(7:30pm).<br />

●●2:00: Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Mozart@262<br />

Festival: Mozart Jupiter Symphony.<br />

Mozart: Rondo for Violin and Orchestra<br />

from Serenade No.7 “Haffner” K248b; Adagio<br />

in E for Violin and Orchestra K261; Piano<br />

Concerto No. <strong>23</strong> in A K488; Symphony No.41<br />

in C K551 “Jupiter”. Charles Richard-Hamelin,<br />

piano; Adrian Anantawan, violin; Peter<br />

Oundjian, conductor. Roy Thomson Hall,<br />

60 Simcoe St. 416-593-1285. $30.75-$148.<br />

Also Jan 19(7:30pm, Roy Thomson Hall),<br />

20(8pm, Koerner Hall), 21(3pm, Toronto Centre<br />

for the Arts).<br />

●●3:00: York Region Chamber Music. The<br />

Story of Babar the Elephant. Gershwin: Rhapsody<br />

in Blue (arr. Joachim Linckelmann); Poulenc:<br />

The Story of Babar the Elephant (arr.<br />

Frédéric Lacroix). Quintroversy Woodwind<br />

Quintet (Shaelyn Archibald, flute; Danielle<br />

Johannes, oboe; Jessica Tse, clarinet; Megan<br />

Morris, bassoon; Jay Austin, french horn).<br />

Richmond Hill Centre for the Performing<br />

Arts, 10268 Yonge St., Richmond Hill. 905-<br />

787-8811. $25, $20(st/children).<br />

●●7:30: Academy Concert Series. Dvořák<br />

on the Low. Dvořák: String Quartet No.2 in<br />

G Op.77; Onslow: String Quintet No.26 in g<br />

Op.67. Mark Fewer, violin; Elizabeth Loewen<br />

Andrews, violin; Emily Eng, viola; Kerri<br />

McGonigle, cello; Joseph Phillips, bass. Eastminster<br />

United Church, 310 Danforth Ave.<br />

416-629-3716. $20; $14(sr/st); $5(under 18).<br />

●●7:30: Canadian Opera Company. Rigoletto.<br />

Music by Giuseppe Verdi. Roland Wood,<br />

baritone (Rigoletto); Anna Christy, soprano<br />

(Gilda); Stephen Costello, tenor (Duke of<br />

Mantua); Joshua Guerrero, tenor (Duke of<br />

Manuta); Christopher Alden, director; Stephen<br />

Lord, conductor. Four Seasons Centre<br />

for the Performing Arts, 145 Queen St. W. 416-<br />

363-8<strong>23</strong>1. $35-$225. Also Jan 27(4:30pm),<br />

Feb 1, 4(2pm), 6, 9, 11(2pm), 17, 21, <strong>23</strong>.<br />

●●7:30: Living Arts Centre. Shen Yun. See<br />

Jan 19 for details. Also Jan 20(2pm), 21(2pm),<br />

<strong>23</strong>(7:30pm).<br />

●●7:30: Opera by Request. Salome. Music by<br />

R. Strauss. Naomi Eberhard, soprano (Salome);<br />

Michael Robert-Broder, baritone<br />

(Jochanaan); Jason Lamont, tenor (Herod);<br />

Leah Giselle Field, mezzo (Herodias); Ryan<br />

Harper, tenor (Narraboth); and others; William<br />

Shookhoff, piano and conductor. College<br />

Street United Church, 452 College St. 416-<br />

455-<strong>23</strong>65. $20.<br />

●●7:30: SoundCrowd. Movie Night. Songs and<br />

themes from Back to the Future, Harry Potter<br />

and Pitch Perfect performed a cappella.<br />

Bloor Street United Church, 300 Bloor St. W.<br />

soundcrowd.ca. Free.<br />

●●8:00: Guitar Society of Toronto. Thibaut<br />

Garcia. Works by Albéniz, Rodrigo, Tarrega<br />

and others. St. Simon-the-Apostle Anglican<br />

Church, 525 Bloor St. E. 416-964-8298.<br />

$35/$30(adv); $30(sr/st)/$25(adv).<br />

●●8:00: Tafelmusik. Safe Haven. Program<br />

created by Alison Mackay. Works by Corelli,<br />

Lully, Bach and Vivaldi. Elisa Citterio, director.<br />

Trinity-St. Paul’s Centre, 427 Bloor St. W.<br />

416-964-6337. From $19. Also Jan 18, 19(both<br />

at 8pm), 21(3:30pm), <strong>23</strong>(8pm, George Weston<br />

Recital Hall).<br />

●●8:00: Toronto Symphony Orchestra.<br />

Mozart@262 Festival: Mozart Jupiter Symphony.<br />

Mozart: Rondo for Violin and Orchestra<br />

from Serenade No.7 “Haffner” K248b;<br />

Adagio in E for Violin and Orchestra K261;<br />

Piano Concerto No. <strong>23</strong> in A K488; Symphony<br />

No.41 in C K551 “Jupiter”. Charles<br />

VERDI<br />

RIGOLETTO<br />

JAN 20 –<br />

FEB <strong>23</strong><br />

coc.ca<br />

54 | <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


Richard-Hamelin, piano; Adrian Anantawan,<br />

violin; Peter Oundjian, conductor. Roy Thomson<br />

Hall, 60 Simcoe St. 416-593-1285. $30.75-<br />

$148. Also Jan 19(7:30pm, Roy Thomson Hall),<br />

20(2pm, Koerner Hall), 21(3pm, Toronto Centre<br />

for the Arts).<br />

Sunday <strong>January</strong> 21<br />

●●1:00: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. UofT Symphony Orchestra Concerto<br />

Competition Finals. Walter Hall, Edward<br />

Johnson Building, University of Toronto,<br />

80 Queen’s Park. 416-408-0208. Free.<br />

●●2:00: Living Arts Centre. Shen Yun. See<br />

Jan 19 for details. Also Jan 20(2pm and 7:30),<br />

<strong>23</strong>(7:30pm).<br />

●●2:00: Royal Conservatory. Russell Braun<br />

Sings Schumann’s Dichterliebe. Mazzoleni<br />

Concert Hall, Royal Conservatory, 273 Bloor<br />

St. W. 416-408-0208. SOLD OUT.<br />

●●2:30: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. Opera Student Composer Collective:<br />

Vengeance. Performed with Surtitles.<br />

Michael Patrick Albano, director; Sandra<br />

Horst, conductor. MacMillan Theatre, Edward<br />

Johnson Building, 80 Queen’s Park. 416-408-<br />

0208. Free.<br />

●●3:00: Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Mozart@262<br />

Festival: Mozart Jupiter Symphony.<br />

Mozart: Rondo for Violin and Orchestra from<br />

Serenade No.7 “Haffner” K248b; Adagio in<br />

E for Violin and Orchestra K261; Piano Concerto<br />

No. <strong>23</strong> in A K488; Symphony No.41 in<br />

C K551 “Jupiter”. Charles Richard-Hamelin,<br />

piano; Adrian Anantawan, violin; Peter Oundjian,<br />

conductor. Roy Thomson Hall, 60 Simcoe<br />

St. 416-593-1285. $30.75-$148. Also<br />

Jan 19(7:30pm, Roy Thomson Hall), 20(2pm<br />

and 8pm, Koerner Hall).<br />

●●3:30: Tafelmusik. Safe Haven. Program created<br />

by Alison Mackay. Works by Corelli, Lully,<br />

Bach and Vivaldi. Elisa Citterio, director. Trinity-St.<br />

Paul’s Centre, 427 Bloor St. W. 416-964-<br />

6337. From $19. Also Jan 18, 19, 20(all at 8pm),<br />

<strong>23</strong>(8pm, George Weston Recital Hall).<br />

●●4:30: Christ Church Deer Park. Jazz Vespers.<br />

TBA. 1570 Yonge St. 416-920-5211. Freewill<br />

offering. Religious service.<br />

●●5:00: Nocturnes in the City. Highlights<br />

from Czech and World Operas. John Holland,<br />

baritone; Danielle Dudycha, soprano;<br />

William Shookhoff, piano. St. Wenceslaus<br />

Church, 496 Gladstone Ave. 416-481-7294.<br />

$25; $15(st).<br />

●●8:00: Continuum Contemporary Music.<br />

Time Travels Light. Oesterle: California; Staniland:<br />

Time Travels Light; Orion Constellation<br />

Theory v.1 & 2; Evans: new work. Rob Power<br />

and Ryan Scott, percussion. Guests: TorQ Percussion<br />

Quartet. 918 Bathurst Centre for Culture,<br />

Arts, Media and Education, 918 Bathurst<br />

St. 416-924-4945. $30; $20(sr/arts workers);<br />

$10(st).<br />

Monday <strong>January</strong> 22<br />

●●7:30: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. Musicians from Marlboro. Beethoven:<br />

String Trio in c Op.9 No.3; Penderecki: Quartet;<br />

Brahms: Clarinet Quintet in b Op.115.<br />

Anthony McGill, clarinet; Emilie-Anne Gendron,<br />

violin; David McCarroll, violin; Daniel<br />

Kim, viola; Marcy Rosen, cello. Walter<br />

Hall, Edward Johnson Building, University<br />

of Toronto, 80 Queen’s Park. 416-408-0208.<br />

$40; $25(sr); $10(st).<br />

JANUARY 22<br />

7:30 PM<br />

music.utoronto.ca<br />

Tuesday <strong>January</strong> <strong>23</strong><br />

●●12:00 noon: Canadian Opera Company.<br />

Vocal Series: Interpretations of Love. Joshua<br />

Guerrero, tenor. Richard Bradshaw Amphitheatre,<br />

Four Seasons Centre for the Performing<br />

Arts, 145 Queen St. W. 416-363-8<strong>23</strong>1.<br />

Free. First-come, first-served. Late seating<br />

not available.<br />

●●12:10: Nine Sparrows Arts Foundation/<br />

Yorkminster Park Baptist Church. Lunchtime<br />

Chamber Music. Angus Sinclair, ragtime<br />

piano. Yorkminster Park Baptist Church,<br />

1585 Yonge St. 416-241-1298. Free; donations<br />

welcomed.<br />

●●7:30: Living Arts Centre. Shen Yun. See<br />

Jan 19 for details. Also Jan 20(2pm and<br />

7:30pm), 21(2pm).<br />

<strong>January</strong> <strong>23</strong> at 8pm<br />

STEPHEN<br />

HOUGH<br />

●●8:00: Music Toronto. Stephen Hough,<br />

Piano. Debussy: Clair de lune (Suite bergamasque);<br />

Images Bk II; Schumann: Fantasie<br />

Op.17; Debussy: La terrasse des audiences<br />

au clair de lune (Préludes Bk II); Images Bk I;<br />

Beethoven: Sonata in F Minor Op.57 “Appassionata”.<br />

St. Lawrence Centre for the Arts,<br />

27 Front St. E. 416-366-77<strong>23</strong>. $50-$55; $10(st,<br />

full time).<br />

●●8:00: Tafelmusik. Safe Haven. Program<br />

created by Alison Mackay. Works by Corelli,<br />

Lully, Bach and Vivaldi. Elisa Citterio, director.<br />

SAFE HAVEN<br />

JAN <strong>23</strong>,<br />

GEORGE WESTON RECITAL HALL,<br />

TORONTO CENTRE FOR THE ARTS<br />

tafelmusik.org<br />

George Weston Recital Hall, 5040 Yonge St.<br />

416-964-6337. From $15. Also Jan 18, 19, 20(all<br />

at 8pm, Trinity-St. Paul’s Centre), 21(3:30pm,<br />

Trinity-St. Paul’s Centre).<br />

Wednesday <strong>January</strong> 24<br />

●●12:00 noon: Yorkminster Park Baptist<br />

Church. Noonday Organ Recitals: Angus Sinclair.<br />

1585 Yonge St. 416-922-1167. Free.<br />

●●5:30: Canadian Opera Company. World<br />

Music and Jazz Series: Jazz Cubano. Humber<br />

College Latin Jazz Ensemble; Hilario Durán,<br />

conductor. Richard Bradshaw Amphitheatre,<br />

Four Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts,<br />

145 Queen St. W. 416-363-8<strong>23</strong>1. Free. Firstcome,<br />

first-served. Late seating not available.<br />

●●7:30: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. New Music Festival: Karen Kieser<br />

Prize Concert. Tyler Versluis: Three<br />

Unuttered Miracles for accordion and percussion;<br />

Riho Maimets: Three Movements<br />

for Marimba; Nicole Lizée: Isabella Blow at<br />

Somerset House; and other works. Michael<br />

Bridge, accordion; Michael Murphy, percussion;<br />

Jonny Smith, marimba; Cecilia String<br />

Quartet. Walter Hall, Edward Johnson Building,<br />

University of Toronto, 80 Queen’s Park.<br />

416-408-0208. Free.<br />

Thursday <strong>January</strong> 25<br />

●●12:00 noon: Canadian Opera Company.<br />

Vocal and Chamber Music Series: Meet the<br />

Orchestra Academy. COC Orchestra Academy;<br />

Members of the COC Orchestra; Artists<br />

from the COC Ensemble Studio. Richard<br />

Bradshaw Amphitheatre, Four Seasons Centre<br />

for the Performing Arts, 145 Queen St. W.<br />

416-363-8<strong>23</strong>1. Free. First-come, first-served.<br />

Late seating not available.<br />

●●12:10: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. Electroacoustic Music Concert. Lizée:<br />

Malfunctionlieder; Martynec: Improvisation;<br />

and other works. Maeve Palmer, soprano; Joy<br />

Lee. Walter Hall, Edward Johnson Building,<br />

University of Toronto, 80 Queen’s Park. 416-<br />

408-0208. Free. Also 5pm.<br />

●●1:00: Miles Nadal JCC. Hollywood’s Oscar-<br />

Winning Songs. Historical lecture with live<br />

piano music. Popular songs written for<br />

Oscar-winning films by Jewish songwriters.<br />

Jordan Klapman, piano. 750 Spadina Ave. 416-<br />

924-6211 x155. $5.<br />

●●7:30: University of Toronto Faculty<br />

of Music. New Music Festival: Architek<br />

Percussion. Works by Nicole Lizée and Eliot<br />

Britton. Walter Hall, Edward Johnson Building,<br />

University of Toronto, 80 Queen’s Park.<br />

416-408-0208. Free.<br />

●●7:30: York Masonic Temple. Mozart’s<br />

Masonic Journey: The Mysteries of The Magic<br />

Flute. Dillon Parmer, tenor (Tamino); Sara<br />

Schabas, soprano (Pamina); Gregory Finney,<br />

baritone (Papageno); Nicole Dubinsky, soprano<br />

(Queen of the Night); John Forster, bass<br />

(Sarastro); Christina Faye, piano; Brainerd<br />

Blyden-Taylor, narrator. 1100 Millwood Rd.<br />

mozart.valleyoftoronto.com. $60. Also Jan 27.<br />

Reception to follow.<br />

●●8:00: Toronto Symphony Orchestra.<br />

Holst The Planets. Stravinsky: Funeral Song;<br />

Estacio: Trumpet Concerto; Holst: The Planets.<br />

Andrew McCandless, trumpet; Women<br />

of the Elmer Iseler Singers; John Storgårds,<br />

conductor. Roy Thomson Hall, 60 Simcoe<br />

St. 416-593-1285. $34.75-$148. Also Jan 26,<br />

27(both at 7:30pm).<br />

Friday <strong>January</strong> 26<br />

●●1:30: York University Department of<br />

Music. Music @ Midday: Aria with Me. Young<br />

singers from the studios of Stephanie Bogle,<br />

Norma Burrowes, Karen Rymal and Lawrence<br />

Wiliford. Tribute Communities Recital<br />

Hall, Accolade East Building, YU, 4700 Keele<br />

St. 647-459-0701. Free.<br />

●●5:45: Toronto Mozart Players. Toronto<br />

Mozart Festival: Cocktail Hour Concert.<br />

Mozart: Arias and duets. Natalya Gennadi,<br />

soprano; Lyndsay Promane, mezzo; Helen<br />

Becqué, piano. Church of the Redeemer,<br />

162 Bloor St. W. 647-478-7532. $25.<br />

●●7:00: Brampton Folk Club. Friday Folk<br />

Night. Swing Night. Moo’d Swing and Hot<br />

Swing Caravan. St. Paul’s United Church<br />

(Brampton), 30 Main St. S., Brampton. 647-<br />

<strong>23</strong>3-3655 or 905-874-2800. $18; $15(sr/st).<br />

●●7:30: Burlington Performing Arts Centre.<br />

The Slocan Ramblers. Bluegrass. Burlington<br />

Performing Arts Centre, Community Studio<br />

Theatre, 440 Locust St., Burlington. 905-681-<br />

6000. $40. Series discount available.<br />

●●7:30: Toronto Symphony Orchestra.<br />

Holst The Planets. Stravinsky: Funeral Song;<br />

Estacio: Trumpet Concerto; Holst: The Planets.<br />

Andrew McCandless, trumpet; Women<br />

of the Elmer Iseler Singers; John Storgårds,<br />

conductor. Roy Thomson Hall, 60 Simcoe St.<br />

416-593-1285. $34.75-$148. Also Jan 25(8pm),<br />

27(7:30pm).<br />

●●7:30: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. New Music Festival: In Memory of<br />

Steven Stucky. Xak Bjerken, piano. Walter<br />

Hall, Edward Johnson Building, University<br />

of Toronto, 80 Queen’s Park. 416-408-0208.<br />

Free.<br />

●●8:00: Arraymusic. Four New Works. Works<br />

by Bruton, Groven, Parkinson and Schoorl (all<br />

world premieres). Array Space, 155 Walnut<br />

Ave. 416-532-3019. PWYC. 7pm: pre-concert<br />

talk.<br />

●●8:00: Royal Conservatory. Quiet Please,<br />

There’s a Lady On Stage: Calypso Rose with<br />

Kobo Town. Koerner Hall, Telus Centre,<br />

273 Bloor St. W. 416-408-0208. $35-$80.<br />

Saturday <strong>January</strong> 27<br />

●●3:00: Toronto Mendelssohn Choir. Choral<br />

Conductors Symposium Concert. Classical<br />

and contemporary choral music. Toronto<br />

Mendelssohn Choir; Elora Singers. Yorkminster<br />

Park Baptist Church, 1585 Yonge St. 416-<br />

408-0208. Free (donations accepted).<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> | 55


●●4:00: Toronto Singing Studio Celebration<br />

Choir. Joyful, Joyful! Works by Haydn, Vivaldi,<br />

Mozart and others. Linda Eyman, conductor.<br />

Bloor Street United Church, 300 Bloor St. W.<br />

416-455-9<strong>23</strong>8. $20; $15(sr/st). Cash only at<br />

the door.<br />

●●4:30: Canadian Opera Company. Rigoletto.<br />

See Jan 20 for details.<br />

●●6:30: VIVA! Youth Singers of Toronto. The<br />

Time of Snow. VIVA!’s five choirs, ages 4 ​to<br />

adults. Trinity-St. Paul’s Centre, 427 Bloor St.<br />

W. 416-788-8482. $2​5; $​20​(sr/st).<br />

●●7:00: York Masonic Temple. Mozart’s<br />

Masonic Journey: The Mysteries of The Magic<br />

Flute. Dillon Parmer, tenor (Tamino); Sara<br />

Schabas, soprano (Pamina); Gregory Finney,<br />

baritone (Papageno); Nicole Dubinsky, soprano<br />

(Queen of the Night); John Forster, bass<br />

(Sarastro); Christina Faye, piano; Brainerd<br />

Blyden-Taylor, narrator. 1100 Millwood Rd.<br />

mozart.valleyoftoronto.com. $60. Also<br />

Jan 25. Reception to follow.<br />

●●7:30: Canzona Chamber Players. In Concert.<br />

Works by Clara Schumann, Brahms and<br />

Shostakovich. Trio Ink (Yosuke Kawasaki, violin;<br />

Wolfram Koessel, cello; Vadim Serebryany,<br />

piano). St. George the Martyr Church, 197 John<br />

St. 647-248-4048. $25. Also Jan 28(2pm, St.<br />

Andrew by-the-Lake Church, Toronto Island).<br />

●●7:30: Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Holst<br />

The Planets. Estacio: Trumpet Concerto;<br />

Holst: The Planets. Andrew McCandless,<br />

trumpet; Women of the Elmer Iseler Singers;<br />

John Storgårds, conductor. Roy Thomson<br />

Hall, 60 Simcoe St. 416-593-1285. $34.75-<br />

$148. Also Jan 25(8pm), 26(7:30pm).<br />

●●7:30: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. University of Toronto Symphony<br />

Orchestra at the New Music Festival. Mozart:<br />

Symphony No.38 in D K504 “Prague”; R.<br />

Strauss: Four Last Songs Op.10 Nos.1 & 8 and<br />

Op.48 Nos.2 & 3; Korngold: Themes and Variations<br />

Op.42; Hindemith: Symphony - Mathis<br />

der Maler. Brittany Cann, soprano; Uri Meyer<br />

and Samuel Tan, conductors. MacMillan Theatre,<br />

Edward Johnson Building, 80 Queen’s<br />

Park. 416-408-0208. $30; $20(sr); $10(st).<br />

Pre-performance chat.<br />

●●8:00: Arraymusic. Rat Drifting 3: Four New<br />

Improvisations. Rebecca Bruton, Marielle<br />

Groven, Stephen Parkinson and Holger Schoorl,<br />

composer-performers. Array Space, 155 Walnut<br />

Ave. 416-532-3019. PWYC, $15 suggested.<br />

HAPPY Chamber Music at<br />

BIRTHDAY<br />

St. George on Yonge<br />

MOZART<br />

Sunday April 24, 7:30 pm<br />

featuring<br />

Scott St. John, violin<br />

& Sharon Wei, viola<br />

SAT. JAN. 27<br />

8PM<br />

Chris Gongos, horn<br />

Vanessa May-Lok Lee, piano,<br />

Joyce Lai, violin<br />

canadiansinfonietta.com<br />

A. Concerts in the GTA<br />

●●8:00: Canadian Sinfonietta. Happy Birthday<br />

Mozart. Overture to Apollo and Hyacinthus<br />

Overture K38; Sinfonia Concertante for<br />

violin, viola and orchestra; Symphony No.29<br />

in A K201. Scott St. John, violin; Sharon Wei,<br />

viola. Glenn Gould Studio, 250 Front St. W.<br />

647-812-0839. $35; $30(sr); $20(st).<br />

●●8:00: Royal Conservatory. Music Mix: DJ<br />

Jazzy Jeff and the Playlist with Skratch Bastid.<br />

Koerner Hall, Telus Centre, 273 Bloor St.<br />

W. 416-408-0208. $40-$55.<br />

●●8:00: Scaramella. Ode to Music. Works<br />

by Michael East and Christopher Simpson.<br />

Elizabeth Rumsey, viol; Caroline Ritchie,<br />

viol; Esteban La Rotta, theorbo. Victoria College<br />

Chapel, 91 Charles St. W. 416-760-8610.<br />

$20-$30.<br />

●●8:00: Toronto Mozart Players. Toronto<br />

Mozart Festival: Happy Birthday, Wolfgang!<br />

Mozart: Quintet in E-flat for Piano and Winds;<br />

Sherkin: New Work. Adam Sherkin, composer<br />

and piano. Church of the Redeemer,<br />

162 Bloor St. W. 647-478-7532. $35; $15(st).<br />

Concert will end with the cutting of a sacher<br />

torte.<br />

Sunday <strong>January</strong> 28<br />

●●2:00: Canzona Chamber Players. In Concert.<br />

Works by Clara Schumann, Brahms and<br />

Shostakovich. Trio Ink (Yosuke Kawasaki, violin;<br />

Wolfram Koessel, cello; Vadim Serebryany,<br />

piano). St. Andrew by-the-Lake Anglican<br />

Church, Cibola Ave., Toronto Island. 647-248-<br />

4048. $25. Also Jan 27(7:30pm, St. George<br />

the Martyr Anglican Church).<br />

●●2:00: Toronto Mozart Players. Toronto<br />

Mozart Festival: Celebrating the Master. Mozart:<br />

Symphony No.40 in g; Regina Coeli K276;<br />

Coronation Mass in C. Pax Christi Chamber<br />

Choir; Singers selected from the Toronto<br />

Mozart Vocal Competition and Masterclass<br />

Series; David Bowser, composer. Church of<br />

the Redeemer, 162 Bloor St. W. 647-478-7532.<br />

$35; $15(st).<br />

I N S P I R E D B Y<br />

JANUARY 28, <strong>2018</strong><br />

3PM<br />

●●3:00: Amici Chamber Ensemble. Inspired<br />

by Strauss. Duett Concertino; Piano Quartet<br />

in c Op.13; Lieder: Die Nacht, Morgen,<br />

Traum durch die Dämmerung, Zueignung.<br />

Guests: Sasha Djihanian, soprano; Soovin<br />

Kim, violin; Joaquin Valdepeñas, clarinet;<br />

David Hetherington, cello; Serouj Kradjian,<br />

piano. Mazzoleni Concert Hall, Telus Centre,<br />

273 Bloor St. W. 416-408-0208. $45; $40(sr);<br />

$15(under 31); $10(st).<br />

●●6:30: Music at St. Thomas’s. Evensong Prelude.<br />

Julia Morson, soprano; Matthew Larkin,<br />

organ and director of music. St. Thomas’s<br />

Anglican Church (Toronto), 383 Huron St.<br />

613-962-3636. By donation.<br />

●●7:00: Music at St. Thomas’s. Evensong.<br />

Matthew Larkin, organ and director of music.<br />

St. Thomas’s Anglican Church (Toronto),<br />

383 Huron St. 613-962-3636. By donation.<br />

Religious service.<br />

●●7:30: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. New Music Festival: Jazz Faculty with<br />

Special Guests. Walter Hall, Edward Johnson<br />

Building, University of Toronto, 80 Queen’s<br />

Park. 416-408-0208. Free.<br />

Monday <strong>January</strong> 29<br />

●●12:30: York University Department of<br />

Music. Music @ Midday: Classical Instrumental<br />

Recital. Student soloists. Tribute Communities<br />

Recital Hall, Accolade East Building, YU,<br />

4700 Keele St. 647-459-0701. Free.<br />

EVOKING THE ELEGIAC<br />

<strong>January</strong> 29<br />

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart,<br />

Jurgis Juozapaitis, Maurice<br />

Ravel, Bedrich Smetana<br />

www.associates-tso.org<br />

●●7:30: Associates of the Toronto Symphony<br />

Orchestra. The Small Concerts: Evoking the<br />

Elegaic. Mozart: Piano Trio in B-flat K502;<br />

Juozapaitis: Light of the Moon; Ravel: Minuet<br />

and Rigaudon from Le tombeau de Couperin;<br />

Smetana: Piano Trio in g Op.15. Zephyr Piano<br />

Trio: Terry Holowach, violin; Edward Hayes,<br />

cello; Ilona Damasiute-Beres, piano. Trinity-<br />

St. Paul’s Centre, 427 Bloor St. W. 416-282-<br />

6636. $22; $20(sr/st).<br />

Tuesday <strong>January</strong> 30<br />

●●12:00 noon: Canadian Opera Company.<br />

Piano Virtuoso Series: Bravura Piano. Works<br />

by Debussy and Liszt. Leon Bernsdorf, piano.<br />

Richard Bradshaw Amphitheatre, Four<br />

Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts,<br />

145 Queen St. W. 416-363-8<strong>23</strong>1. Free. Firstcome,<br />

first-served. Late seating not available.<br />

●●12:10: Nine Sparrows Arts Foundation/<br />

Yorkminster Park Baptist Church. Lunchtime<br />

Chamber Music. Gina Lee, piano. Yorkminster<br />

Park Baptist Church, 1585 Yonge St.<br />

416-241-1298. Free; donations welcomed.<br />

Wednesday <strong>January</strong> 31<br />

●●10:00am: Royal Conservatory. Discovery<br />

Series: Glenn Gould School Concerto<br />

Competition Finals. Koerner Hall, Telus Centre,<br />

273 Bloor St. W. 416-408-0208. Free.<br />

CLOSE ENCOUNTERS<br />

… IN SALZBURG<br />

WED JAN 31 | 11AM<br />

HELICONIAN HALL<br />

SAT FEB 3 | 2PM<br />

TEMERTY THEATRE,<br />

TELUS Centre<br />

tafelmusik.org<br />

●●11:00am: Tafelmusik. Close Encounters …<br />

in Salzburg. Works by Biber. Thomas Georgi,<br />

viola d’amore. Heliconian Hall, 35 Hazelton<br />

Ave. 416-964-6337. $45(adv). Also Feb 3(Temerty<br />

Theatre, 2pm).<br />

●●12:00 noon: Yorkminster Park Baptist<br />

Church. Noonday Organ Recitals: Andrew<br />

Adair. 1585 Yonge St. 416-922-1167. Free.<br />

●●12:30: Organix Concerts/All Saints Kingsway.<br />

Kingsway Organ Concert Series Listings.<br />

Sarah Svendsen, organ. All Saints<br />

Kingsway Anglican Church, 2850 Bloor St. W.<br />

416-571-3680. Freewill offering. 45-minute<br />

concert.<br />

●●8:00: Toronto Symphony Orchestra. A<br />

European Romance. Liadov: The Enchanted<br />

Lake Op.62; Falla: Nights in the Garden of<br />

Spain for Piano and Orchestra; R. Strauss:<br />

Don Juan Op.20; R. Strauss: Suite from Der<br />

Rosenkavalier Op.59. Ingrid Fliter, piano;<br />

Juraj Valcuha, conductor. Roy Thomson Hall,<br />

60 Simcoe St. 416-593-1285. $34.75-$148.<br />

Also Feb 2(7:30pm).<br />

●●8:00: Westwood Concerts. Five for Five.<br />

Penderecki: Quartet for Clarinet and Strings;<br />

Brahms: Piano Trio No.1; Bruch: 8 Pieces; and<br />

other works. Rebekah Wolkstein, violin; Yosef<br />

Tamir, viola; Amy Laing, cello; Michael Westwood,<br />

clarinet; Megumi Okamoto, piano.<br />

Gallery 345, 345 Sorauren Ave. 416-822-9781.<br />

$20; $15(sr/st).<br />

Thursday February 1<br />

●●12:00 noon: Canadian Opera Company.<br />

Vocal and Chamber Music Series: Mr. Tambourine<br />

Man. Corigliano: Mr. Tambourine<br />

Man – Seven Poems of Bob Dylan. Artists<br />

from The Glenn Gould School; Topher<br />

Mokrzewski, conductor. Richard Bradshaw<br />

Amphitheatre, Four Seasons Centre for the<br />

Performing Arts, 145 Queen St. W. 416-363-<br />

8<strong>23</strong>1. Free. First-come, first-served. Late seating<br />

not available.<br />

●●12:00 noon: Encore Symphonic Concert<br />

Band. In Concert. Big Band swing, jazz, film<br />

scores and marches. Wilmar Heights Centre,<br />

963 Pharmacy Ave., Scarborough. 416-<br />

346-3910. $10.<br />

●●12:10: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. Thursdays at Noon: Rob Macdonald,<br />

Guitar. Helmut Oehring: K.A.L.T. Walter<br />

56 | <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


Hall, Edward Johnson Building, University<br />

of Toronto, 80 Queen’s Park. 416-408-0208.<br />

Free.<br />

Dr. Draw, 18-stringed hybrid guitar/violoncello/drums.<br />

77 Wynford Dr. 416-646-4677.<br />

$40. Ticket price includes same day Museum<br />

admission.<br />

●●8:00: Burlington Performing Arts Centre.<br />

Gord Bamford. Country music. Burlington<br />

Performing Arts Centre, Main Theatre,<br />

440 Locust St., Burlington. 905-681-6000.<br />

$69. Series discount available.<br />

●●8:00: Burlington Performing Arts Centre/Orillia<br />

Opera House. Compagnie Marie<br />

Chouinard. Dance. 24 Preludes by Chopin;<br />

The Rite of Spring. Burlington Performing<br />

Arts Centre, Main Theatre, 440 Locust St.,<br />

Burlington. 905-681-6000. $49; $19(youth).<br />

Series discount available.<br />

Lake Op.62; Falla: Nights in the Garden of<br />

Spain for Piano and Orchestra; R. Strauss:<br />

Don Juan Op.20; R. Strauss: Suite from Der<br />

Rosenkavalier Op.59. Ingrid Fliter, piano;<br />

Juraj Valcuha, conductor. Roy Thomson Hall,<br />

60 Simcoe St. 416-593-1285. $34.75-$148.<br />

Also Jan 31(8pm).<br />

●●7:30: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. Instrumentalis: Trios and Quartets.<br />

Graduate student instrumentalists collaborate<br />

on trio and quartet repertoire. Walter<br />

Hall, Edward Johnson Building, University<br />

of Toronto, 80 Queen’s Park. 416-408-0208.<br />

Free.<br />

Saturday February 3<br />

MFC’s Festival<br />

of Friends<br />

SAT. FEBRUARY 3,<br />

7:30PM<br />

Join us<br />

mfchoir.com<br />

●●5:30: Adam Sherkin. Chopin: Poetic<br />

Jest. Write Off the Keyboard Series. Chopin:<br />

Scherzo No.3 Op.39 and No.4 Op.54,<br />

Impromptu No.2 Op.36; Sherkin: Punch,<br />

Revisited (2015). Verse and prose by David<br />

James Brock. Adam Sherkin, piano; Andrea<br />

Runge, actor. Glenn Gould Studio, lobby,<br />

250 Front St. W. 416-205-5000. $30; $26(sr);<br />

$22(35 and under).<br />

●●7:30: Canadian Opera Company. Rigoletto.<br />

See Jan 20 for details.<br />

GALA for<br />

MENTAL HEALTH<br />

LLOYD ROBERTSON,<br />

LUBA GOY & FRIENDS<br />

Feb 1, <strong>2018</strong><br />

WE ALL HAVE A STORY<br />

905.787.8811<br />

●●7:30: High Notes Avante Productions. Gala<br />

for Mental Health. Luba Goy, Lloyd Robertson,<br />

Michael Landsberg, Orlando Da Silva,<br />

Giles Tomkins, and others. Richmond Hill Centre<br />

for the Performing Arts, 10268 Yonge St.,<br />

Richmond Hill. 905-787-8811. $10-$65.<br />

●●7:30: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. Jazz Composers Concert. Walter<br />

Hall, Edward Johnson Building, University<br />

of Toronto, 80 Queen’s Park. 416-408-0208.<br />

Free.<br />

●●8:00: Aga Khan Museum. Musical Inventions<br />

by Paolo Angeli featuring Dr Draw.<br />

Avant-garde tunes rooted in Sardinian music.<br />

February 1 at 8pm<br />

ST. LAWRENCE<br />

QUARTET<br />

●●8:00: Music Toronto. St. Lawrence Quartet.<br />

Haydn: Quartet in C Op.33 No.3 “The Bird”;<br />

Janáček: Quartet No.2 “Intimate Letters”;<br />

Tchaikovsky: Quartet No.3 in e-flat Op.30. St.<br />

Lawrence Centre for the Arts, 27 Front St. E.<br />

416-366-77<strong>23</strong>. $50-$55; $10(st, full time).<br />

●●8:00: Royal Conservatory. Daniil Trifonov.<br />

Koerner Hall, Telus Centre, 273 Bloor St. W.<br />

416-408-0208. SOLD OUT.<br />

●●8:00: Soundstreams. Almost Unplugged.<br />

Andréa Tyniec, violin; Jesse Zubot, violin. Buddies<br />

in Bad Times Theatre, 12 Alexander St.<br />

416-975-8555. $20.<br />

Friday February 2<br />

●●12:10: Music at St. Andrew’s. Noontime<br />

Recital. Bach: Prelude and Fugue in D;<br />

Debussy: Poissons d’or; Beethoven: Piano<br />

Sonata No.32 in c Op.111. David Potvin, piano.<br />

St. Andrew’s Church (Toronto), 73 Simcoe St.<br />

416-593-5600 x<strong>23</strong>1. Free.<br />

●●6:15: Music at St. Thomas’s. Candlemas:<br />

Procession and Solemn Eucharist. Matthew<br />

Larkin, organ and director of music.<br />

St. Thomas’s Anglican Church (Toronto),<br />

383 Huron St. 613-962-3636. By donation.<br />

Religious service.<br />

●●7:30: Burlington Performing Arts Centre.<br />

The Fugitives. Indie Folk Collective. Burlington<br />

Performing Arts Centre, Community Studio<br />

Theatre, 440 Locust St., Burlington. 905-681-<br />

6000. $45. Series discount available.<br />

●●7:30: Living Arts Centre. Amanda<br />

Rheaume. 4141 Living Arts Dr., Mississauga.<br />

905-306-6000. $20-$35.<br />

●●7:30: Toronto Symphony Orchestra. A<br />

European Romance. Liadov: The Enchanted<br />

SONGS FROM A<br />

CELTIC HEART<br />

Annual Fundraising Event<br />

FEBRUARY 3<br />

amadeuschoir.com<br />

●●2:00: Amadeus Choir of Greater Toronto.<br />

Songs From a Celtic Heart. Tom Leighton,<br />

guitar and vocals; Lydia Adams and Joan<br />

Andrews, conductors; Shawn Grenke, conductor<br />

and piano. Jubilee United Church,<br />

40 Underhill Dr. 416-446-0188. $50; $40(sr);<br />

$25(under 30). Also 7pm. Annual fundraising<br />

event. Complimentary snacks, cash bar,<br />

games and silent auction.<br />

●●2:00: Tafelmusik. Close Encounters ... in<br />

Salzburg. Works by Biber. Thomas Georgi,<br />

violist. Temerty Theatre, 273 Bloor St. W. 416-<br />

964-6337. $45(adv). Also Jan 31(Heliconian<br />

Hall, 11am).<br />

●●7:00: Amadeus Choir of Greater Toronto.<br />

Songs From a Celtic Heart. Tom Leighton,<br />

guitar and vocals; Lydia Adams and Joan<br />

Andrews, conductors; Shawn Grenke, conductor<br />

and piano. Jubilee United Church,<br />

40 Underhill Dr. 416-446-0188. $50; $40(sr);<br />

$25(under 30). Also 2pm. Annual fundraising<br />

event. Complimentary snacks, cash bar,<br />

games and silent auction.<br />

●●7:30: Opus 8. After Dark. From the rude,<br />

joking songs of Mozart and Morley, to fresh<br />

pop arrangements dealing with love, lust,<br />

and licentiousness. Works by Mozart, Purcell,<br />

Warlock, Palestrina and others. Heliconian<br />

Hall, 35 Hazelton Ave. 647-<strong>23</strong>3-5803. PWYC.<br />

Licensed bar.<br />

●●7:30: Royal Conservatory. Discovery<br />

Series: Glenn Gould School Vocal Showcase.<br />

Mazzoleni Concert Hall, Telus Centre,<br />

273 Bloor St. W. 416-408-0208. $15.<br />

●●7:30: Mississauga Festival Choir. Festival<br />

of Friends Annual Massed Choral Festival.<br />

Resonance Youth Choir and others in solo<br />

and massed repertoire. Eden United Church,<br />

3051 Battleford Rd., Mississauga. 416-986-<br />

5537. $25; $15(12 and under). All proceeds will<br />

go to Alzheimer Society, Peel.<br />

●●7:30: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. Wind Ensemble: Disparate Places.<br />

Giroux: Just Flyin’; Nishimura: Lake Superior<br />

Suite; McPhee: Concert for Wind Orchestra;<br />

Sigur Rós: Ára Bátur; Kodály: Háry János<br />

Suite. Strings of the UofT Symphony Orchestra;<br />

Gillian Mackay, conductor. MacMillan Theatre,<br />

Edward Johnson Building, 80 Queen’s<br />

Park. 416-408-0208. $30; $20(sr); $10(st).<br />

●●8:00: Burlington Performing Arts Centre.<br />

A Night At The Opera. Act II music from<br />

Bizet’s Carmen. Julie Nesrallah, mezzo-soprano;<br />

Lauren Margison, soprano; Richard<br />

Margison, tenor; Gary Relyea, bass-baritone;<br />

Robert Kortgaard, piano. Burlington<br />

Performing Arts Centre, Main Theatre,<br />

440 Locust St., Burlington. 905-681-6000.<br />

$69.50. Series discount available.<br />

●●8:00: Oakville Symphony Orchestra.<br />

Vienna: City of Music. Guest: Mehdi Ghazi,<br />

piano. Oakville Centre for the Performing<br />

Arts, 130 Navy St., Oakville. 905-815-2021.<br />

$27-$56. Also Feb 4(2pm).<br />

●●8:00: Royal Conservatory. TD Jazz: Gerald<br />

Clayton and Friends - The Blues. Koerner<br />

Hall, Telus Centre, 273 Bloor St. W. 416-408-<br />

0208. $40-$90.<br />

●●8:00: Scarborough Philharmonic Orchestra/Infiniti<br />

Music and Arts Centre. Serenades<br />

and Stories. Mozart: Serenade in c;<br />

Serenata Transformata; Austria and the US<br />

from International Suite; Compositions from<br />

SPO’s <strong>2017</strong> New Composer Workshop; Grand<br />

Gallop Through Mysterious Lands. Scarborough<br />

Philharmonic Chamber Orchestra; The<br />

Winds of the Scarborough Philharmonic;<br />

Ronald Royer, conductor. Infinti Strings,<br />

351 Ferrer St., Unit 1, Markham. www.spo.ca.<br />

$30; $25(sr); $15(st); $10(child).<br />

●●8:00: Sony Centre for the Performing<br />

Arts. Tao: Drum Heart. 1 Front St. E. 1-855-<br />

872-7669 or 416-916-7878. $55-$95.<br />

Sunday February 4<br />

●●2:00: Canadian Opera Company. Rigoletto.<br />

See Jan 20 for details.<br />

●●2:00: Oakville Symphony Orchestra.<br />

Vienna: City of Music. Guest: Mehdi Ghazi,<br />

piano. Oakville Centre for the Performing<br />

Arts, 130 Navy St., Oakville. 905-815-2021.<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> | 57


$27-$56. Also Feb 3(8pm).<br />

VOICE<br />

B OX<br />

OPERA IN CONCERT<br />

I DUE FIGARO<br />

by Saverio Mercadante<br />

Narmina Afandiyeva,<br />

Music Director<br />

February 4 at 2:30 pm<br />

www.operainconcert.com<br />

A. Concerts in the GTA<br />

Beste<br />

Kalender<br />

●●2:00: Royal Conservatory. Sunday Interludes:<br />

Derek Gripper. Mazzoleni Concert<br />

Hall, Telus Centre, 273 Bloor St. W. 416-408-<br />

0208. Free.<br />

●●2:30: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. Choirs in Concert: Music for a Sunday<br />

Afternoon. Works by Nancy Telfer and others.<br />

Women’s Chamber Choir; Men’s Chorus;<br />

Women’s Chorus; Tracy Wong, conductor.<br />

MacMillan Theatre, Edward Johnson Building,<br />

80 Queen’s Park. 416-408-0208. $30;<br />

$20(sr); $10(st).<br />

●●2:30: Voicebox/Opera in Concert. I due<br />

Figaro. Music by Saverio Mercadante. Beste<br />

Kalender, mezzo-soprano; Ilana Zarankin,<br />

soprano; Holly Chaplin, soprano; Nicholas<br />

Borg, baritone; Opera in Concert Chorus;<br />

Narmina Afandiyeva, music director and<br />

piano. St. Lawrence Centre for the Arts,<br />

27 Front St. E. 416-366-77<strong>23</strong>. $22-$52.<br />

●●3:00: Toronto Symphony Orchestra.<br />

Toronto Symphony Youth Orchestra Winter<br />

Concert. Dukas: The Sorcerer’s Apprentice;<br />

Mozart: Flute Concerto No.1 K313/285c;<br />

Dvořák: Symphony No.8. Sarah Pollard, flute;<br />

Earl Lee, conductor. Toronto Centre for the<br />

Arts, 5040 Yonge St., North York. 416-593-<br />

1285. $44.25-$100.50.<br />

●●3:00: Vesnivka Choir. Tribute to Zenoby<br />

Lawryshyn. Music written and arranged by<br />

Zenoby Lawryshyn. Humber Valley United<br />

Church, 76 Anglesey Blvd., Etobicoke. Free.<br />

Donations accepted towards publication of Z.<br />

Lawryshyn’s works.<br />

●●3:00: Windermere String Quartet. Young<br />

Blood, Part II. Mozart: Quartet in B-flat K172;<br />

Arriaga: Quartet No.1 in d; Schubert: Quartet<br />

in g D173. St. Olave’s Anglican Church,<br />

360 Windermere Ave. 416-769-0952. $25;<br />

$20(sr); $10(st). On period instruments.<br />

●●4:00: Church of St. Mary Magdalene<br />

(Toronto). Organ music for Candlemas.<br />

Andrew Adair, organ. 477 Manning Ave. 416-<br />

531-7955. Free.<br />

●●4:00: Georgetown Bach Chorale. The<br />

Power of the Piano, the Passion of Strings!<br />

Taneyev: Piano Quintet in g Op.30. Piano Hall,<br />

157 Main St. S., Georgetown. 905-873-9909.<br />

$45. Reception to follow.<br />

●●4:30: Christ Church Deer Park. Jazz Vespers.<br />

TBA. 1570 Yonge St. 416-920-5211. Freewill<br />

offering. Religious service.<br />

LAND’S END ENSEMBLE<br />

Schoenberg by Webern<br />

SUN. FEB. 04 @ GALLERY 345<br />

www.NewMusicConcerts.com<br />

●●7:00: Show One Productions. George<br />

Li, Piano. Silver medalist in the 15th International<br />

Tchaikovsky Competition. Haydn:<br />

B. Concerts Beyond the GTA<br />

IN THIS ISSUE: Barrie, Belleville, Burlington, Cambridge, Dundas,<br />

Guelph, Haliburton, Hamilton, Innisfil, Kingston, Kitchener, London,<br />

Midland, Niagara Falls, North Bay, Norwood, Orangeville, Orillia, Owen<br />

Sound, Peterborough, Picton, Port Dover, Port Hope, Sault Ste. Marie,<br />

St. Catharines, Wasaga Beach, Waterdown, Waterloo, Welland.<br />

Friday <strong>December</strong> 1<br />

●●12:00 noon: First-St. Andrew’s United<br />

Church. Friday Advent Noon Recital. Ken<br />

Baldwin, trumpet; Terry Mead, piano and<br />

organ. First-St. Andrew’s United Church,<br />

350 Queens Ave, London. 519-679-8182. Free<br />

will offering. Lunch following $7.<br />

●●7:30: Melos Choir and Period Instruments.<br />

A Star in the East III. Advent and Marian<br />

chant, Renaissance dances, carols and<br />

motets. Works by Lassus, Scheidt and Praetorius.<br />

Guests: Sine Nomine; Holly Gwynne-<br />

Timothy, artistic director. St. George’s<br />

Cathedral (Kingston), 270 King St. E., Kingston.<br />

613-767-7245. $25; $10(st). Pre-concert<br />

lecture at 7pm. CD launch reception to follow<br />

concert.<br />

●●7:30: University of Waterloo Department<br />

of Music. Rejoice in the Lamb: Chamber<br />

Choir. Britten: Rejoice in the Lamb; works<br />

by Sandström, Ešenvalds, Corlis, Biebl and<br />

others. Jan Overduin, organ; Mark Vuorinen,<br />

conductor. Knox Presbyterian Church (Waterloo),<br />

50 Erb St. W., Waterloo. 519-885-<br />

8220 x24226. $10; $5(sr/st).<br />

●●8:00: Folk Under the Clock. The Once: An<br />

East Coast Christmas. Modern indie folk trio<br />

from Newfoundland. Geraldine Hollett; Phil<br />

Churchill; Andrew Dale. Market Hall Performing<br />

Arts Centre, 140 Charlotte St., Peterborough.<br />

705-749-1146. $37.50; $25(st).<br />

●●8:00: Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony.<br />

Jonathan Crow Plays Beethoven. Jörg Widmann:<br />

Con brio Concert Overture; Mendelssohn:<br />

Symphony No.3 in a “Scottish”;<br />

Beethoven: Violin Concerto in D. Jonathan<br />

Crow, violin, Pablo Rus Broseta, conductor.<br />

Centre in the Square, 101 Queen St.<br />

N., Kitchener. 519-745-4711 or 1-888-745-4717.<br />

$19-$82. Also Dec 2.<br />

●●8:00: Registry Theatre. Sultans of String:<br />

A Christmas Caravan. Guest: Rebecca Campbell,<br />

vocals. 122 Frederick St., Kitchener. 519-<br />

578-1570. $30.<br />

●●8:00: Wilfrid Laurier University Faculty of<br />

Music. Laurier Percussion Ensemble. Maureen<br />

Forrester Recital Hall, 75 University Ave.,<br />

Waterloo. 519-884-1970 x2432. Free.<br />

Saturday <strong>December</strong> 2<br />

●●2:00: Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony.<br />

Youth Orchestra: Concert 1. Centre in the<br />

Square, 101 Queen St. N., Kitchener. 519-745-<br />

4711 or 1-888-745-4717. $13; $11(child).<br />

●●3:00: Westben Concerts at The Barn.<br />

Upper Canada Christmas. Narrated concert.<br />

Susanna Moodie and Catharine Parr Traill,<br />

vocalists; Westben Choruses; Donna Bennett<br />

and Brian Finley, directors. Norwood<br />

United Church, 4264 Hwy 7, Norwood. 705-<br />

653-5508 or 1-877-883-5777. $25; $15(st);<br />

$5(youth). Also Nov 25(Campbellford, 1pm),<br />

Nov 26(Campbellford, 3pm), Dec 3 (Peterborough,<br />

3pm).<br />

●●4:00: Hamilton Children’s Choir. Annual<br />

Holiday Concert: Welcome Christmas (Fah<br />

Who Foraze). Guest: Ian Thomas, narrator.<br />

Ryerson United Church (Hamilton), 842 Main<br />

St. E., Hamilton. 905-527-1618. $10-$30.<br />

●●7:00: Kawartha Youth Orchestra. Gloria!<br />

St. Cecilia Singers; St. Paul’s Singers. Market<br />

Hall Performing Arts Centre, 140 Charlotte<br />

St., Peterborough. 705-868-5050. $20;<br />

$5(youth). Silent auction. Reception. Bake<br />

sale.<br />

●●7:00: Skyway Connection Chorus. Christmas<br />

Cabaret. Skyway Connection; Supertoniic<br />

Quartet; Nuance Quartet. Royal<br />

Canadian Legion (Waterdown), 9 Hamilton St.<br />

N., Waterdown. 905-630-7464. $25.<br />

●●7:30: Arcady. Handel’s Messiah. Ronald<br />

Beckett, conductor. Lighthouse Festival Theatre,<br />

247 Main Street, Port Dover. 519-583-<br />

2221. $30.<br />

●●7:30: Choralis Camerata. Handel’s Messiah.<br />

Jocelyn Fralick, soprano; Jillian Yemen,<br />

mezzo; Bud Roach, tenor; Michael York, baritone;<br />

David Braun, conductor; Lynne Honsberger,<br />

accompaniment. Knox Presbyterian<br />

Church (St. Catharines), 53 Church St., St.<br />

Catharines. 905-646-9225. $28; $25(sr);<br />

$12(st). Also Dec 3(2:30pm, Welland).<br />

●●7:30: Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and<br />

Performing Arts, Brock University. Viva<br />

Voce Choral Series. Brock University Choirs,<br />

conductor Rachel Rensink-Hoff. Cairns Hall,<br />

FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre, 250 St.<br />

Paul St., St. Catharines. 905-688-0722. $15;<br />

$10 (sr/st); $5 eyeGo program.<br />

●●7:30: Musicata - Hamilton’s Voices. Christmas<br />

Concert. Church of St. John the Evangelist,<br />

320 Charlton Ave. W., Hamilton.<br />

905-628-5<strong>23</strong>8. $25; $20(sr); $5(st).<br />

●●8:00: Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony.<br />

Jonathan Crow Plays Beethoven. Jörg Widmann:<br />

Con brio Concert Overture; Mendelssohn:<br />

Symphony No.3 in a “Scottish”;<br />

Beethoven: Violin Concerto in D. Jonathan<br />

Crow, violin, Pablo Rus Broseta, conductor.<br />

Centre in the Square, 101 Queen St. N., Kitchener.<br />

519-745-4711 or 1-888-745-4717. $19-<br />

$82. Also Dec 1.<br />

Sunday <strong>December</strong> 3<br />

●●2:00: University of Waterloo Department<br />

of Music. UW Jazz Ensemble. Featuring<br />

jazz classics. Michael Wood, conductor.<br />

Great Hall, Conrad Grebel University College,<br />

140 Westmount Rd. N., Waterloo. 519-<br />

885-8220 x24226. $10; $5(sr/st). Reception<br />

following.<br />

●●2:30: Choralis Camerata. Handel’s Messiah.<br />

Jocelyn Fralick, soprano; Jillian Yemen,<br />

mezzo; Bud Roach, tenor; Michael York,<br />

baritone; David Braun, conductor; Lynne<br />

Honsberger, accompaniment. Welland Centennial<br />

Secondary School, 240 Thorold Rd.,<br />

Welland. 905 646 9225. $28; $25(sr); $12(st).<br />

Also Dec 2(7:30pm, St. Catharines).<br />

●●2:30: Guelph Chamber Choir. Carols For<br />

Christmas (plus Christmas CD Release!). Canadian<br />

and other repertoire for choir and/or<br />

hand bells; seasonal readings. Guelph Chamber<br />

Choir, Gerald Neufeld, conductor; Alison<br />

MacNeill, accompanist; guests: Bells Ablaze,<br />

Susan Carscadden-Mifsud, conductor.<br />

St. George’s Anglican Church (Guelph),<br />

99 Woolwich St., Guelph. 519-763-3000. $25;<br />

$20(group of 4 or more); $10(30 and under/<br />

st); $5(14 and under).<br />

●●2:30: Kingston Symphony. Masterworks<br />

Series: Ryan and Tchaikovsky. Mascall:<br />

Grunge; Ryan: Equilateral; Tchaikovsky: Symphony<br />

No.5. Gryphon Trio. Isabel Bader Centre<br />

for the Performing Arts, 390 King St. W.,<br />

Kingston. 613-530-2050. From $50.<br />

●●2:30: Scottish Rite Tuscan #551 A.F. &<br />

A.M. Christmas in Silver. Holiday favourites<br />

and sing-along carols. Weston Silver Band.<br />

Scottish Rite Club of Hamilton, 4 Queen St. S.,<br />

Hamilton. 1-888-655-9090. $25; $20(sr/st);<br />

$5(under 15).<br />

●●3:00: La Jeunesse Youth Orchestra. Home<br />

for the Holidays! Michael Lyons, music director;<br />

Guests: Voices of Victory Choir (Lindsay).<br />

Port Hope United Church, 34 South St., Port<br />

Hope. 1-866-460-5596. $20; free(under 12).<br />

●●3:00: Westben Concerts at The Barn.<br />

Upper Canada Christmas. Narrated concert.<br />

Susanna Moodie and Catharine Parr Traill,<br />

vocalists; Westben Choruses; Donna Bennett<br />

and Brian Finley, directors. Northminster<br />

United Church, 300 Sunset Blvd, Peterborough.<br />

705-653-5508 or 1-877-883-5777. $25;<br />

$15(st); $5(youth). Also Nov 25(Campbellford,<br />

1pm), Nov 26(Campbellford, 3pm), Dec 2(Norwood,<br />

3pm).<br />

●●7:00: Barrie Concert Band. Christmas at<br />

the Beach. Lighthouse Community Church,<br />

800 Sunnidale Rd., Wasaga Beach. 705-481-<br />

1607. Donations to the food bank welcomed.<br />

58 | <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


Piano Sonata in b HobXVI:32; Chopin: Piano<br />

Sonata No.2 in b-flat Op.35; Rachmaninoff:<br />

Variations on a Theme of Corelli; Liszt:<br />

Consolation No.3 in E; Hungarian Rhapsody<br />

No.2 in C-sharp. Koerner Hall, Telus Centre,<br />

273 Bloor St. W. 416-408-0208. $35 and up.<br />

●●8:00: New Music Concerts. Land’s End<br />

Ensemble. H. Lee: Imaginary Garden VII;<br />

Clarke: Delirium Nocturnum; Ricketts: Graffiti<br />

Songs; Schoenberg (arr. Webern): Kammersymphonie<br />

Op.9 (Quintet version). Land’s<br />

End Ensemble (John Lowry, violin; Beth Root<br />

Sandvoss, cello; Suzanne Ruberg-Gordon,<br />

piano); James Campbell, clarinet, Robert Aitken,<br />

flute. Gallery 345, 345 Sorauren Ave. 416-<br />

961-9594. $35; $25(sr/arts workers); $10(st).<br />

7:15pm: pre-concert talk.<br />

Tuesday February 6<br />

●●12:10: Nine Sparrows Arts Foundation/<br />

Yorkminster Park Baptist Church. Lunchtime<br />

Chamber Music: Rising Stars Recital.<br />

Students from the Glenn Gould School. Yorkminster<br />

Park Baptist Church, 1585 Yonge St.<br />

416-241-1298. Free; donations welcomed.<br />

●●7:30: Canadian Opera Company. Rigoletto.<br />

See Jan 20 for details.<br />

February 6 at 8pm<br />

ALEXEI<br />

LUBIMOV<br />

●●8:00: Music Toronto. Alexei Lubimov,<br />

Piano. Mozart: Sonata in D K311; Adagio in b<br />

K540; Beethoven: Sonata No.7 in D Op.10 No.3;<br />

Stravinsky: Sonata (1924); Debussy: Nine<br />

Preludes, Book 1: nine selections. St. Lawrence<br />

Centre for the Arts, 27 Front St. E. 416-<br />

366-77<strong>23</strong>. $50-$55; $10(st, full time).<br />

Wednesday February 7<br />

●●12:00 noon: Canadian Opera Company.<br />

Chamber Music Series: Brahms Clarinet<br />

Quintet. Brahms: Clarinet Quintet in b Op.115.<br />

Dionysis Grammenos, clarinet; Ensemble<br />

Made In Canada. Richard Bradshaw Amphitheatre,<br />

Four Seasons Centre for the Performing<br />

Arts, 145 Queen St. W. 416-363-8<strong>23</strong>1.<br />

Free. First-come, first-served. Late seating<br />

not available.<br />

●●7:30: Canadian Opera Company. The<br />

Abduction from the Seraglio. Music by W.<br />

A. Mozart. Jane Archibald, soprano (Konstanze);<br />

Mauro Peter, tenor (Belmonte);<br />

Claire de Sévigné (Blonde); Owen McCausland,<br />

tenor (Pedrillo), Goran Jurić, bass<br />

(Osmin); Wajdi Mouawad, director; Johannes<br />

Debus, conductor. Four Seasons Centre<br />

for the Performing Arts, 145 Queen St. W.<br />

416-363-8<strong>23</strong>1. $35-$225. Also Feb 10, 13, 16,<br />

18(2pm), 22, 24(4:30pm).<br />

●●7:30: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. Vocalis (Graduate Singers Series):<br />

Winternächte - Lieder über Träume und<br />

MOZART THE<br />

ABDUCTION<br />

FROM THE<br />

SERAGLIO<br />

FEB 2 – 25<br />

coc.ca<br />

Sehnsucht (Winter Nights - Songs of Dreams<br />

and Longing). Mia Bach and Marje Zschiesche<br />

Stock, curators. Victoria College Chapel,<br />

91 Charles St. W. 416-408-0208. Free.<br />

... Concerts Beyond the GTA<br />

●●7:30: Attila Glatz Concert Productions.<br />

Festival of Stars. Doo-wop, Motown, country,<br />

pop, and rock-and-roll hits. Featuring Neil<br />

Sedaka; Under the Streetlamp; Mickey Gilley.<br />

Club Italia, 2525 Montrose Rd., Niagara Falls.<br />

416-3<strong>23</strong>-1403. $42 and up. Also Dec 4(2pm<br />

and 8pm).<br />

●●8:00: Aeolian Hall. Sultans of String: A<br />

Christmas Caravan. Guest: Rebecca Campbell,<br />

vocals. 795 Dundas St. E., London. 519-<br />

672-7950. $30-$35.<br />

●●8:00: Kitchener-Waterloo Chamber Music<br />

Society. Raffi Besalyan, Piano. KWCMS Music<br />

Room, 57 Young St. W., Waterloo. 519-886-<br />

1673. $35; $20(st). MOVED TO MAR 14, <strong>2018</strong>.<br />

Monday <strong>December</strong> 4<br />

●●2:00: Attila Glatz Concert Productions.<br />

Festival of Stars. Doo-wop, Motown, country,<br />

pop, and rock-and-roll hits. Featuring Neil<br />

Sedaka; Under the Streetlamp; and Mickey<br />

Gilley. Club Italia, 2525 Montrose Rd., Niagara<br />

Falls. 416-3<strong>23</strong>-1403. $42 and up. Also 8pm;<br />

Dec 3(7:30pm).<br />

●●7:30: University of Waterloo Department<br />

of Music. Instrumental Chamber Ensembles.<br />

Six different chamber ensembles will<br />

play classical music ranging from Brahms<br />

to Koechlin. Chapel, Conrad Grebel University<br />

College, 140 Westmount Rd. N., Waterloo.<br />

519-885-8220 x24226. Free. Reception<br />

following.<br />

●●8:00: Attila Glatz Concert Productions.<br />

Festival of Stars. Doo-wop, Motown, country,<br />

pop, and rock-and-roll hits. Featuring Neil<br />

Sedaka; Under the Streetlamp; and Mickey<br />

Gilley. Club Italia, 2525 Montrose Rd., Niagara<br />

Falls. 416-3<strong>23</strong>-1403. $42 and up. Also 2pm;<br />

Dec 3(7:30pm).<br />

Tuesday <strong>December</strong> 5<br />

●●12:00 noon: Marilyn I. Walker School of<br />

Fine and Performing Arts, Brock University.<br />

RBC Foundation Music@Noon. Piano<br />

and guitar students. Cairns Hall, FirstOntario<br />

Performing Arts Centre, 250 St. Paul St., St.<br />

Catharines. 905-688-0722. Free.<br />

●●7:30: Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine<br />

and Performing Arts, Brock University.<br />

The University Wind Ensemble. Zoltan Kalman,<br />

conductor. Partridge Hall, FirstOntario<br />

Performing Arts Centre, 250 St. Paul St., St.<br />

Catharines. 905-688-0722. $12; $5(child);<br />

$5(eyeGo); free(Brock students).<br />

Wednesday <strong>December</strong> 6<br />

●●12:15: St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church<br />

(Kitchener). Wednesday Noon-Hour Concerts.<br />

Renaissance School of the Arts Flute<br />

Choir; Wendy Wagler, conductor. 54 Queen<br />

St. N., Kitchener. Free. 11:30am: Optional lowcost<br />

lunch available in the foyer.<br />

●●7:30: St. George’s Cathedral (Kingston).<br />

Advent Concert. Gershwin: Rhapsody in<br />

Blue; and other works. Valery Lloyd-Watts<br />

and Clare Gordon, piano duo. 270 King St. E.,<br />

Kingston. 613-548-4617. $15.<br />

●●8:00: Kitchener-Waterloo Chamber Music<br />

Society. Alex DaCosta, Violin and Beth Ann De<br />

Souza, Piano. Program TBA. KWCMS Music<br />

Room, 57 Young St. W., Waterloo. 519-886-<br />

1673. $30; $20(st).<br />

Thursday <strong>December</strong> 7<br />

●●12:15: St. George’s Cathedral (Kingston).<br />

Advent Concert. Mulberry School Choir;<br />

Margaret Moncrieff, director. 270 King St.<br />

E., Kingston. 613-548-4617. Free. Voluntary<br />

offering.<br />

●●7:00: Magisterra Soloists. Baroque Christmas.<br />

Bach: Brandenburg Concerto No.3;<br />

Corelli: Christmas Concerto Grosso; Vivaldi:<br />

Double Concerto in d; Bach: Double Concerto<br />

in d; Telemann: Viola Concerto. St. Luke’s<br />

Anglican Church (London), 1204 Richmond<br />

St., London. 416-930-4842. $25; $20(sr);<br />

$15(st); $10(under 10). Also Dec 10(3pm, Windermere<br />

on the Mount).<br />

Friday <strong>December</strong> 8<br />

●●12:00 noon: First-St. Andrew’s United<br />

Church. Friday Advent Noon Recital. Catholic<br />

Central Chamber Choir; Don Sills, director.<br />

First-St. Andrew’s United Church,<br />

350 Queens Ave, London. 519-679-8182. Free<br />

will offering. Lunch following $7.<br />

●●7:00: Liona Boyd. In Concert: A Winter Fantasy.<br />

Andrew Dolson, guitar. Guests: Midland<br />

Children’s Community Choir. St. Paul’s United<br />

Church (Midland), 308 King St., Midland.<br />

www.ticketfly.com/event/1566380-lionaboyd-winter-fantasy-midland/.<br />

$30.<br />

●●8:00: First-St. Andrew’s United Church<br />

(London). The Gift of the Magi. Sonja Gustafson;<br />

Francesca Ranalli; Todd Wieczorek; Chad<br />

Louwerse; Terry Head; George Jolin, director.<br />

350 Queens Ave., London. 519-679-8182.<br />

$45(6:30pm dinner & show); $20(8pm show<br />

only). Also Dec 9(3pm and 8pm).<br />

●●8:00: Kitchener-Waterloo Chamber<br />

Music Society. Toronto Serenade Quartet<br />

with Elena Kalabeev, Piano. Rare Quintets by<br />

Sibelius and Berger. KWCMS Music Room,<br />

57 Young St. W., Waterloo. 519-886-1673.<br />

$35; $20(st).<br />

Saturday <strong>December</strong> 9<br />

●●2:00: Lyrica Chamber Choir of Barrie.<br />

Magnificat. Arnesen: Magnificat; works by<br />

Ola Gjeilo. Chamber strings; organ; Steve<br />

Winfield, conductor; Brent Mayhew, piano.<br />

Burton Avenue United Church, 37 Burton<br />

Ave., Barrie. 705-722-0271. $17; $14(sr/st).<br />

Also 7:30pm.<br />

●●2:00: Peterborough Symphony Orchestra.<br />

Hollywood for the Holidays. Music from<br />

Home Alone, The Polar Express, It’s a Wonderful<br />

Life, and other films. Guests: Kawartha<br />

Youth Orchestra; Peterborough Pop Ensemble;<br />

Michael Newnham, conductor. Showplace Performance<br />

Centre, 290 George St. N., Peterborough.<br />

705-742-7469. $30; $10(st). Also 7:30pm.<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> | 59


●●2:30: Niagara Symphony Orchestra. All<br />

Through the House: A Holiday Wassail! Colin<br />

Anthes, director; Laura Secord Secondary<br />

School Concert Choir; Bradley Thachuk, conductor.<br />

FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre,<br />

250 St. Paul St., St. Catharines. 905-688-<br />

0722 or 1-855-515-0722. $32; $32(sr/30 and<br />

under); $12(st/arts/child); $5(eyeGO). Also<br />

Dec 9(7:30pm), Dec 10(2:30pm).<br />

●●3:00: First-St. Andrew’s United Church<br />

(London). The Gift of the Magi. Sonja Gustafson;<br />

Francesca Ranalli; Todd Wieczorek; Chad<br />

Louwerse; Terry Head; George Jolin, director.<br />

350 Queens Ave., London. 519-679-8182. $20.<br />

Also Dec 8, 9(both at 8pm).<br />

●●7:00: Huronia Symphony Orchestra. HSO<br />

Christmas List. Corelli: Concerto Grosso in g<br />

“Christmas Concerto”; Anderson: A Christmas<br />

Festival, Sleigh Ride; Tormé: Chestnuts<br />

Roasting on an Open Fire; Prokofiev: Troika;<br />

Strauss: Pizzicato Polka; Waldteufel: The<br />

Skaters’ Waltz; traditional Christmas favourites<br />

and carol sing. Guests: Youth Songsters<br />

of Innisfil featuring the choirs of Alcona Glen<br />

Elementary and Lake Simcoe Public Schools.<br />

Oliver Balaburski, conductor. Innisfil Community<br />

Church, 1571 Innisfil Beach Road,<br />

Innisfil. 705-721-4752. $25; $10(st); $5(child).<br />

●●7:30: Barrie Concert Band. Christmas<br />

Goes “Pop”. Collier Street United Church,<br />

112 Collier St., Barrie. 705-481-1607. $20;<br />

$15(sr/st); free(under 5).<br />

●●7:30: Georgian Bay Symphony. Christmas<br />

Cheer. Mozart: Clarinet Concerto in A;<br />

and other seasonal works. Rob Tite, clarinet;<br />

François Koh, conductor. East Ridge Community<br />

School, 1550 8th St. E., Owen Sound.<br />

519-372-0212. $35; $33(sr); $5(st).<br />

●●7:30: Grand Philharmonic Choir. Handel’s<br />

Messiah. With projected images from the St.<br />

John’s Bible. Jacqueline Woodley, soprano;<br />

Marjorie Maltais, mezzo; Andrew Haji, tenor;<br />

Russell Braun, baritone; Kitchener-Waterloo<br />

Symphony; Mark Vuorinen, conductor. Centre<br />

in the Square, 101 Queen St. N., Kitchener.<br />

519-578-1570. From $30.<br />

●●7:30: Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing<br />

Arts. Charlie Brown Christmas.<br />

Taurey Butler Trio; Éléonore Lagacé, vocalist.<br />

390 King St. W., Kingston. 613-533-2424. $29-<br />

$55; $15-$27(st).<br />

B. Concerts Beyond the GTA<br />

●●7:30: Kokoro Singers. Prelude to Winter.<br />

Works by Rutter and Martin; arrs. by Bolden,<br />

Hatfield and Weir. Brenda Uchimaru,<br />

conductor. Guests: Cambridge Girls’ Choir<br />

(Peter West, conductor). Rockway Mennonite<br />

Church, 47 Onward Ave., Kitchener. 289-<br />

439-9447. $20; $15(sr/st); free(under 13). Also<br />

Dec 17(3:30pm, Hamilton).<br />

●●7:30: Lyrica Chamber Choir of Barrie.<br />

Magnificat. Arnesen: Magnificat; works by<br />

Ola Gjeilo. Chamber strings; organ; Steve<br />

Winfield, conductor; Brent Mayhew, piano.<br />

Burton Avenue United Church, 37 Burton<br />

Ave., Barrie. 705-722-0271. $17; $14(sr/st).<br />

Also 2:00.<br />

●●7:30: Niagara Symphony Orchestra. All<br />

Through the House: A Holiday Wassail! Colin<br />

Anthes, director; Laura Secord Secondary<br />

School Concert Choir; Bradley Thachuk, conductor.<br />

FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre,<br />

250 St. Paul St., St. Catharines. 905-688-<br />

0722 or 1-855-515-0722. $67; $62(sr); $32(30<br />

and under); $12(st/arts/child); $5(eyeGO).<br />

Also Dec 9(2:30pm), Dec 10(2:30pm).<br />

●●7:30: Peterborough Symphony Orchestra.<br />

Hollywood for the Holidays. Music from<br />

Home Alone, The Polar Express, It’s a Wonderful<br />

Life, and other films. Guests: Kawartha<br />

Youth Orchestra; Peterborough Pop Ensemble;<br />

Michael Newnham, conductor. Showplace<br />

Performance Centre, 290 George St. N.,<br />

Peterborough. 705-742-7469. $30; $10(st).<br />

Also 2pm.<br />

●●8:00: First-St. Andrew’s United Church<br />

(London). The Gift of the Magi. Sonja Gustafson;<br />

Francesca Ranalli; Todd Wieczorek; Chad<br />

Louwerse; Terry Head; George Jolin, director.<br />

350 Queens Ave., London. 519-679-8182.<br />

$45(6:30pm dinner & show); $20(8pm show<br />

only). Also Dec 8(8pm), 9(3pm).<br />

●●8:00: North Bay Symphony. Sultans of<br />

String: A Christmas Caravan. Capitol Centre,<br />

150 Main St. E., North Bay. 705-474-4747. $45,<br />

$15(st); free(child - under 13 - with Adult or<br />

Student ticket).<br />

Sunday <strong>December</strong> 10<br />

●●2:30: Georgian Music. Christmas Memories.<br />

Monica Whicher, soprano; Judy Loman,<br />

harp; Marty Smyth, organ;. St. Andrew’s<br />

Presbyterian Church (Barrie), 47 Owen St.,<br />

Barrie. 705-726-1181. $65.<br />

●●2:30: Kingston Symphony. Messiah. Handel:<br />

Messiah. Kingston Chamber Society;<br />

Bethany Hörst, soprano; Erin Lawson, mezzo;<br />

Christopher Mayell, tenor; David Pike, baritone.<br />

Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing<br />

Arts, 390 King St. W., Kingston. 613-530-<br />

2050. From $40; $25(30 and under).<br />

●●2:30: Niagara Symphony Orchestra. All<br />

Through the House: A Holiday Wassail! Colin<br />

Anthes, director; Laura Secord Secondary<br />

School Concert Choir; Bradley Thachuk, conductor.<br />

FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre,<br />

250 St. Paul St., St. Catharines. 905-688-<br />

0722 or 1-855-515-0722. $67; $62(sr); $32(30<br />

and under); $12(st/arts/child); $5(eyeGO).<br />

Also Dec 9(2:30pm and 7:30pm).<br />

●●2:30: Peterborough Community Carol<br />

Sing. Christmas Carol Concert. Salvation<br />

Army Temple (Peterborough), 219 Simcoe St.,<br />

Peterborough. communitycarolsing.com.<br />

Freewill offering in support of the Christmas<br />

Hamper Fund.<br />

●●3:00: Magisterra Soloists. Baroque Christmas.<br />

Bach: Brandenburg Concerto No.3;<br />

Corelli: Christmas Concerto Grosso; Vivaldi:<br />

Double Concerto in d; Bach: Double Concerto<br />

in d; Telemann: Viola Concerto. Windermere<br />

on the Mount Chapel, 1486 Richmond St.,<br />

London. 416-930-4842. $25; $20(sr); $15(st);<br />

$10(under 10). Also Dec 7(7:30pm, St. Luke<br />

the Evangelist Anglican Church).<br />

●●3:00: Orillia Brassworks Christmas. In<br />

Concert. Albert Greer, director; St. James<br />

Concert Choir; Andrea Donais, soprano. St.<br />

James’ Anglican Church (Orillia), 58 Peter St.<br />

N., Orillia. 705-726-4168. Freewill donation.<br />

●●3:00: Rosewood Consort. Bethlehem.<br />

Praetorius: Joseph Lieber; Byrd: Lulla, Lullaby;<br />

Balbastre (arr. Potvin): Variations on Où<br />

s’en vont des gais bergers. Stephane Potvin,<br />

conductor. Grace Lutheran Church (Hamilton),<br />

1107 Main St. W., Hamilton. 905-648-<br />

5607. PWYC, $20 suggested. Reception to<br />

follow.<br />

●●3:00: Symphony on the Bay. A Double-<br />

Reed Christmas. Vivaldi: Christmas Concerto;<br />

Vaughan Williams: Fantasia on Christmas<br />

Carols; and other works. Fraser Jackson,<br />

bassoon; Claudio Vena, conductor. Burlington<br />

Performing Arts Centre, 440 Locust St.,<br />

Burlington. 905-681-6000. $43; $36.50(sr);<br />

$24.50(16-24); $12(under 16).<br />

●●7:30: Serenata Choir. Carols by Candlelight.<br />

Gary Heard, conductor. St. Mark’s Anglican<br />

Lutheran Church (Midland), 303 Third<br />

St., Midland. 705-526-6800. Freewill offering.<br />

All proceeds to the Guesthouse emergency<br />

shelter.<br />

Tuesday <strong>December</strong> 12<br />

27 th annUaL<br />

CiviC Christmas<br />

Carol ConCert<br />

Presented by the<br />

City of st. Catharines<br />

Tues Dec.12th<br />

Noon<br />

Doors Open<br />

11:30 a.m.<br />

●●12:00 noon: City of St. Catharines. 27th<br />

Annual Civic Carol Concert. Carols and singalong.<br />

Laura Secord Secondary and Holy<br />

Cross Secondary School Choirs; Civic Brass<br />

Ensemble; Peter M. Partridge, conductor;<br />

Ross R. Stretton, organist-producer. St.<br />

Thomas’ Church, 99 Ontario St., St. Catharines.<br />

905-688-5601 x2160. Freewill offering.<br />

Proceeds to Christmas Community Care.<br />

●●7:30: Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing<br />

Arts. National Arts Centre Orchestra.<br />

Copland: Fanfare for the Common<br />

Man; Mozart: Violin Concerto No.3; Sibelius:<br />

Symphony No.1. Alexander Shelley, conductor;<br />

Jessica Linnebach, violin. 390 King<br />

St. W., Kingston. 613-533-2424. $29-$55;<br />

$15-$27(st).<br />

Wednesday <strong>December</strong> 13<br />

●●12:15: St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church<br />

(Kitchener). Wednesday Noon-Hour Concerts.<br />

Cambridge Girls’ Choir; Peter West,<br />

conductor. 54 Queen St. N., Kitchener. Free.<br />

11:30am: Optional low-cost lunch available in<br />

the foyer.<br />

●●2:30: Seniors Serenade. Innisdale Christmas.<br />

Karen Parnell and Innisdale Secondary<br />

School Students. Grace United Church (Barrie),<br />

350 Grove St. E., Barrie. 705-726-1181.<br />

Free. 3:30pm: tea and cookies $5.<br />

●●7:30: Plumbing Factory Brass Band. The<br />

Golden Age of Brass. Von Suppé: Jolly Robbers<br />

Overture; Beethoven: Marsch des<br />

York’schen Korps; Mendelssohn: War March<br />

of the Priests; Thomas: Raymond Overture;<br />

works by Grafulla; and other works. Byron<br />

United Church, 420 Boler Rd., London. 519-<br />

471-1250 or 519-659-3600. $15/$13(adv);<br />

$10(st)/$8(adv).<br />

Thursday <strong>December</strong> 14<br />

● ● 12:15: St. George’s Cathedral (Kingston).<br />

Advent Concert. Allan Pulker, flute. 270 King<br />

St. E., Kingston. 613-548-4617. Free. Voluntary<br />

offering.<br />

60 | <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


●●7:00: Cirque Musica Holiday. Believe.<br />

Incredible feats of strength, skill, and grace<br />

to great holiday music favourites performed<br />

by a live symphony. RBC Theatre, Budweiser<br />

Gardens, 99 Dundas St., London. www.budweisergardens.com/events/detail/cirquemusica-holiday-spectacular.<br />

$40-$115.<br />

●●8:00: Regent Theatre. Sultans of String:<br />

A Christmas Caravan. Guest: Rebecca<br />

Campbell, vocals. Regent Theatre (Picton),<br />

224 Main St., Picton. 613-476-8416. $30.<br />

Friday <strong>December</strong> 15<br />

●●12:00 noon: First-St. Andrew’s United<br />

Church. Friday Advent Noon Recital. Laudamus<br />

Bells; Terry Head, director. First-St.<br />

Andrew’s United Church, 350 Queens Ave,<br />

London. 519-679-8182. Freewill offering.<br />

Lunch following for $7.<br />

●●7:30: Cirque Musica Holiday. Believe.<br />

Incredible feats of strength, skill, and grace<br />

to great holiday music favourites performed<br />

by a live symphony. Peterborough Memorial<br />

Centre, 151 Lansdowne St,, Peterborough.<br />

tickets.memorialcentre.ca. $24-$79.99.<br />

●●7:30: Orchestra Kingston/Frontenac<br />

Women’s Chorus. A Christmas Story. Christmas<br />

music for orchestra and choir, with<br />

guest Darrel Bryan, tenor. Sydenham Street<br />

United Church, 82 Sydenham St., Kingston.<br />

613-766-4345. $25; $20(sr/st), free(under 12).<br />

●●8:00: Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony.<br />

Yuletide Spectacular. Joni NehRita, vocalist;<br />

Mike Nadjewski, narrator; Grand Philharmonic<br />

Choir; Grand Philharmonic<br />

Children’s Choir; Carousel Dance Company;<br />

Daniel Bartholomew-Poyser, conductor. Centre<br />

in the Square, 101 Queen St. N., Kitchener.<br />

519-745-4711 or 1-888-745-4717. $19-$86. Also<br />

Dec 16(2:30pm and 8pm), 17(2:30pm).<br />

Saturday <strong>December</strong> 16<br />

●●2:30: Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony.<br />

Yuletide Spectacular. See Dec 15. Also<br />

Dec 16(8pm), 17(2:30pm).<br />

●●7:00: Orangeville Community Band. Music<br />

of Christmas. Vocal music, concert band,<br />

sing-along. Majestic Concert Band; children’s<br />

choir; Joy Spencer, music director.<br />

Westminster United Church (Orangeville),<br />

247 Broadway Ave., Orangeville. 519-942-<br />

9673. $20/$15(adv); $15(sr)/$10(adv);<br />

$10(child)/$5(adv). Registered charity.<br />

●●7:30: Chorus Niagara. Big Band Christmas.<br />

Lindberg: Christmas Cantata; festive<br />

carols, audience sing-alongs and seasonal<br />

music. Chorus Niagara; 20-piece Big Band;<br />

John Sherwood, jazz piano. FirstOntario Performing<br />

Arts Centre, 250 St. Paul St., St.<br />

Catharines. 1-855-515-0722 or 905-688-<br />

0722. $43; $41(sr); $28(under 30); $18(st);<br />

$15(child); $5(eyeGo).<br />

●●8:00: Kitchener-Waterloo Chamber<br />

Music Society. Penderecki String Quartet.<br />

Beethoven’s Birthday Concert. Beethoven:<br />

Quartets No.5, Op.18 No.5; No.7, Op.59 No.1;<br />

No.16 Op.135. KWCMS Music Room, 57 Young<br />

St. W., Waterloo. 519-886-1673. $40; $25(st).<br />

●●8:00: Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony.<br />

Yuletide Spectacular. See Dec 15 for details.<br />

Also Dec 17(2:30pm).<br />

●●8:00: Sault Symphony. Sultans of String:<br />

A Christmas Caravan. Sault Community Theatre<br />

Centre, 1007 Trunk Rd., Sault Ste. Marie.<br />

705-945-7299. $31; $<strong>23</strong>(sr); $8(child/st). Also<br />

Dec 17(Elliot Lake).<br />

Sunday <strong>December</strong> 17<br />

●●2:30: Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony.<br />

Yuletide Spectacular. See Dec 15 for details.<br />

●●3:30: Kokoro Singers. Prelude to Winter.<br />

Works by Rutter and Martin; arrs. by Bolden,<br />

Hatfield and Weir. Brenda Uchimaru, conductor.<br />

Guests: Cambridge Girls’ Choir (Peter<br />

West, conductor). Grace Lutheran Church<br />

(Hamilton), 1107 Main St. W., Hamilton. 289-<br />

439-9447. $20; $15(sr/st); free(under 13). Also<br />

Dec 9(7:30pm, Kitchener).<br />

●●4:00: Hamilton Children’s Choir. The Simple<br />

Joys. Ilumini Choir Special Concert. Hamilton<br />

Philharmonic Orchestra String Quartet.<br />

Christ Church Cathedral, 252 James St.<br />

N., Hamilton. hamiltonchildrenschoir.com.<br />

$20-$30.<br />

●●4:00: St. George’s Cathedral (Kingston).<br />

Christmas Lessons and Carols. Cathedral<br />

Christmas Choir and Children’s Choir.<br />

270 King St. E., Kingston. 613-548-4617. Free.<br />

Religious service.<br />

●●4:30: Music At St. Thomas’. Carols by<br />

Candlelight: A Festival of Nine Lessons<br />

and Carols. St. Thomas’ Choral Academy.<br />

St. Thomas’ Anglican Church (Belleville),<br />

201 Church St., Belleville. 613-962-3636.<br />

Freewill offering. Religious service.<br />

●●7:00: Huronia Symphony Orchestra. HSO<br />

Christmas List. Corelli: Concerto Grosso in g<br />

“Christmas Concerto”; Anderson: A Christmas<br />

Festival, Sleigh Ride; Tormé: Chestnuts<br />

Roasting on an Open Fire; Prokofiev:<br />

Troika; Strauss: Pizzicato Polka; Waldteufel:<br />

The Skaters’ Waltz; traditional Christmas<br />

favourites and carol sing. Guests: Maestro<br />

Music Centre Children’s/Youth Choir and Collier<br />

Street Choir School. Oliver Balaburski,<br />

conductor. Collier Street United Church,<br />

112 Collier St., Barrie. 705-721-4752. $25; $10<br />

(st); $5 (child).<br />

●●7:30: Arcady. There’s a Song in the Air: A<br />

Timeless Holiday Classic. Beckett. Ronald<br />

Beckett, director; Tammy Whetham, staging.<br />

Cambridge Arts Theatre, 47 Water St. S.,<br />

Cambridge. 1-800-838-3006. $25; $10(st).<br />

Monday <strong>December</strong> 18<br />

●●7:30: Peterborough Singers. Handel’s Messiah.<br />

Suzie LeBlanc, soprano; Erin Fisher,<br />

mezzo-soprano; Colin Ainsworth, tenor;<br />

Andrew Tees, bass; Ian Sadler, organ; Paul<br />

Otway, trumpet; Stan Ewing, timpani; Sydney<br />

Birrell, conductor. Emmanuel (George<br />

St.) United Church, 534 George St. N., Peterborough.<br />

705-745-1820. $30; $20(under 30);<br />

$10(st).<br />

Tuesday <strong>December</strong> 19<br />

●●7:30: Kingston Symphony. Candlelight<br />

Christmas. Kingston Choral Society. Isabel<br />

Bader Centre for the Performing Arts,<br />

390 King St. W., Kingston. 613-530-2050.<br />

From $10. Also Dec 20.<br />

Wednesday <strong>December</strong> 20<br />

●●12:00 noon: Music at St. Andrews. Sarah<br />

Svendsen, Organ and Rita Arendz, Horn.<br />

St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church (Barrie),<br />

47 Owen St., Barrie. 705-726-1181. $5;<br />

free(st).<br />

●●7:30: Kingston Symphony. Candlelight<br />

Christmas. Kingston Choral Society. Isabel<br />

Bader Centre for the Performing Arts,<br />

390 King St. W., Kingston. 613-530-2050.<br />

From $10. Also Dec 19.<br />

Thursday <strong>December</strong> 21<br />

●●12:15: St. George’s Cathedral (Kingston).<br />

Advent Concert. Jeff Hanlon, guitar. 270 King<br />

St. E., Kingston. 613-548-4617. Free. Voluntary<br />

offering.<br />

MISHAABOOZ’S<br />

REALM<br />

DEC 21 & 22 @ 7:30pm<br />

NLPAP | Haliburton<br />

BOX OFFICE 1-855-455-5533<br />

HighlandsOperaStudio.com<br />

●●7:30: Highlands Opera Studio. Mishaabooz’s<br />

Realm. Music by Andrew Balfour.<br />

Northern Lights Performing Arts Pavilion,<br />

5358 County Rd. 21, Haliburton. 1-855-455-<br />

5533. $25. Also Dec 22.<br />

Friday <strong>December</strong> 22<br />

●●7:00: Highlands Opera Studio. Mishaabooz’s<br />

Realm. Music by Andrew Balfour.<br />

Northern Lights Performing Arts Pavilion,<br />

5358 County Rd. 21, Haliburton. 1-855-455-<br />

5533. $25. Also Dec 21.<br />

Saturday <strong>December</strong> <strong>23</strong><br />

● ● 7:30: Guelph Chamber Choir. Handel’s<br />

Messiah. Guelph Chamber Choir, Gerald<br />

Neufeld, conductor, Alison MacNeill, accompanist;<br />

Meredith Hall, soprano; Daniel Taylor,<br />

countertenor; Neal Banerjee, tenor;<br />

Alex Dobson, baritone; Musica Viva Orchestra<br />

on period instruments. River Run Centre,<br />

35 Woolwich St., Guelph. 519-763-3000. $40;<br />

$35(group of 4 or more); $10(30 and under/<br />

st); $5(14 and under).<br />

Saturday <strong>December</strong> 30<br />

●●2:30: Attila Glatz Concert Productions.<br />

Salute to Vienna New Year’s Concert. Lilla<br />

Galambos, soprano; Thomas Weinhappel,<br />

baritone; Kiev-Aniko Ballet of Ukraine<br />

and International Champion Ballroom Dancers;<br />

Strauss Symphony of Canada; Niels<br />

Muus, conductor. FirstOntario Concert Hall,<br />

1 Summers Ln., Hamilton. 855-872-5000.<br />

$39-$95.<br />

Wednesday <strong>January</strong> 3<br />

●●12:00 noon: Midday Music with Shigeru.<br />

Michael Adamson, violin and Philip Adamson,<br />

piano. Works by Beethoven, Martucci, Morris<br />

and Elgar. Hi-Way Pentecostal Church,<br />

50 Anne St. N., Barrie. 705-726-1181. $5;<br />

free(st).<br />

Thursday <strong>January</strong> 4<br />

●●12:00 noon: Wilfrid Laurier University Faculty<br />

of Music. Music at Noon. Katie Schlaikjer,<br />

cello. Maureen Forrester Recital Hall,<br />

75 University Ave., Waterloo. 519-884-1970<br />

x2432. Free.<br />

Wednesday <strong>January</strong> 10<br />

●●2:30: Seniors Serenade. Mike Lewis Plays<br />

His “F” List. Songs beginning with F. Mike<br />

Lewis, piano. Grace United Church (Barrie),<br />

350 Grove St. E., Barrie. 705-726-1181. Free.<br />

3:30pm: tea and cookies $5.<br />

Thursday <strong>January</strong> 11<br />

●●12:00 noon: Wilfrid Laurier University<br />

Faculty of Music. Music at Noon. Guy Few,<br />

trumpet; Stephanie Mara, piano. Maureen<br />

Forrester Recital Hall, 75 University Ave.,<br />

Waterloo. 519-884-1970 x2432. Free.<br />

●●8:00: Kitchener-Waterloo Chamber Music<br />

Society. Scott St. John, Violin and Catherine<br />

Chi, Piano. Violin works by Willan, Grattan,<br />

Champagne and L. Smith. KWCMS Music<br />

Room, 57 Young St. W., Waterloo. 519-886-<br />

1673. $30; $20(st).<br />

Friday <strong>January</strong> 12<br />

●●8:00: Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony.<br />

Elgar’s Cello Concerto and Mozart’s Jupiter.<br />

Hindemith: Overture to Cupid and Psyche;<br />

Elgar: Cello Concerto in e; Mozart: Prelude<br />

to Apollo and Hyacinthus; Mozart: Symphony<br />

No.41 in C “Jupiter”. Denise Djokic, cello; Tung-<br />

Chieh Chuang, conductor. Centre in the<br />

Square, 101 Queen St. N., Kitchener. 519-745-<br />

4711 or 1-888-745-4717. $19-$86. Also Jan 13.<br />

Saturday <strong>January</strong> 13<br />

●●3:00: 5 at the First Chamber Music Series.<br />

Piano Trio Masters: AYR Trio. Beethoven:<br />

Piano Trio in D major Op.70 No.1 “Ghost;”<br />

Staniland: Solstice Songs; Brahms: Trio in C<br />

major No.2 Op.87. AYR Trio: Yehonatan Berick,<br />

violin; Rachel Mercer, cello; Angela Park,<br />

piano. First Unitarian Church of Hamilton,<br />

170 Dundurn St. S., Hamilton. 905-399-5125.<br />

$20; $15(sr); $5(st/unwaged); free(under 12).<br />

●●7:30: Southern Ontario Lyric Opera.<br />

Encore: Favourite Opera Arias. Jean Stilwell,<br />

mezzo; Joni Henson, soprano; David Pomeroy,<br />

tenor. Burlington Performing Arts Centre,<br />

440 Locust St., Burlington. 905-681-6000.<br />

$20-$65.<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> | 61


The magic of live opera with<br />

Jean Stilwell,<br />

Joni Henson &<br />

David Pomeroy<br />

Saturday Jan 13, 7:30pm<br />

Burlington<br />

southernontariolyricopera.com<br />

●●8:00: Jeffery Concerts. Love Triangle.<br />

Haydn: Piano Trio No.45 in E-flat HobXV:29;<br />

Wijeratne: Love Triangle; Beethoven: Piano<br />

Trio No.7 in B-flat Op.97 “Archduke”. Gryphon<br />

Trio. Wolf Performance Hall, 251 Dundas St.,<br />

London. 519-672-8800. $40.<br />

●●8:00: Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony.<br />

Elgar’s Cello Concerto and Mozart’s Jupiter.<br />

Hindemith: Overture to Cupid and Psyche;<br />

Elgar: Cello Concerto in e; Mozart: Prelude<br />

to Apollo and Hyacinthus; Mozart: Symphony<br />

No.41 in C “Jupiter”. Denise Djokic, cello; Tung-<br />

Chieh Chuang, conductor. Centre in the<br />

Square, 101 Queen St. N., Kitchener. 519-745-<br />

4711 or 1-888-745-4717. $19-$82. Also Jan 12.<br />

Sunday <strong>January</strong> 14<br />

●●2:30: Kingston Symphony. Korngold and<br />

Shostakovich. Beethoven: Overture to Leonore<br />

No.3; Korngold: Violin Concerto; Shostakovich:<br />

Symphony No.5. Jonathan Crow,<br />

violin. Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing<br />

Arts, 390 King St. W., Kingston. 613-530-<br />

2050. From $10.<br />

●●8:00: Kitchener-Waterloo Chamber<br />

Music Society. AYR Trio. Beethoven: Op.70/1<br />

B. Concerts Beyond the GTA General admission.<br />

“Ghost”; Brahms: No.2 Op.87; Staniland: Solstice<br />

Songs. Angela Park piano; Yehonatan<br />

Berick, violin; Rachel Mercer, cello. KWCMS<br />

Music Room, 57 Young St. W., Waterloo. 519-<br />

886-1673. $35; $20(st).<br />

Tuesday <strong>January</strong> 16<br />

●●12:15: Wilfrid Laurier University Faculty<br />

of Music. Maureen Forrester Singers. First<br />

United Church (Waterloo), 16 William St. W.,<br />

Waterloo. 519-884-1970 x2432. Free.<br />

Thursday <strong>January</strong> 18<br />

●●12:00 noon: Music at St. Andrews. Christopher<br />

Dawes, Organ. St. Andrew’s Presbyterian<br />

Church (Barrie), 47 Owen St., Barrie.<br />

705-726-1181. $5; free(st).<br />

●●12:00 noon: Wilfrid Laurier University Faculty<br />

of Music. Music at Noon. Kimberly Barber,<br />

mezzo; Anna Ronai, piano; Christine<br />

Vlajk, viola. Maureen Forrester Recital Hall,<br />

75 University Ave., Waterloo. 519-884-1970<br />

x2432. Free.<br />

●●7:00: Magisterra Soloists. Magisterra at<br />

the Museum: “Entartete Musik” - Music of the<br />

Holocaust. Works by Krása, Weiner, Morawetz,<br />

Klein and Schulhoff. Museum London<br />

Theatre, 421 Ridout St. N., London. 519-661-<br />

0333. $30; $25(sr); $15(st); $10(child).<br />

●●8:00: Kitchener-Waterloo Chamber Music<br />

Society. Andre LaPlante, Piano. Schubert:<br />

Sonata in A D664; Liszt: Funerailles; Sposalizio;<br />

Chopin: Two Nocturnes; Sonata No.<br />

2 “Funeral March”. KWCMS Music Room,<br />

57 Young St. W., Waterloo. 519-886-1673.<br />

$40; $25(st).<br />

Friday <strong>January</strong> 19<br />

●●8:00: Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony.<br />

Casablanca: The Film with Live Orchestra.<br />

Evan Mitchell, conductor. Centre in the<br />

Square, 101 Queen St. N., Kitchener. 519-745-<br />

4711 or 1-888-745-4717. $19-$86. Also Jan 20.<br />

Saturday <strong>January</strong> 20<br />

●●2:30: Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony.<br />

Spectacular Strings. Margaret Wise Brown:<br />

The Runaway Bunny; and other works.<br />

Bénédicte Lauzière, concertmaster; Ann<br />

Baggley, narrator; Evan Mitchell, conductor.<br />

Centre in the Square, 101 Queen St. N., Kitchener.<br />

519-745-4711 or 1-888-745-4717. $18;<br />

$11(child).<br />

●●7:30: Barrie Concerts. Liszt’s Twelve Colossal<br />

Transcendental Études. Sheng Cai, piano.<br />

Hi-Way Pentecostal Church, 50 Anne St. N.,<br />

Barrie. 705-726-1181. $85.<br />

●●7:30: Niagara Symphony Orchestra.<br />

Honey and Rue. Wagner: Siegfried Idyll; Previn:<br />

Honey and Rue; Ravel: Mother Goose<br />

(complete ballet). Claire de Sévigné, soprano;<br />

Bradley Thahuck, conductor. FirstOntario<br />

Performing Arts Centre, 250 St. Paul St.,<br />

St. Catharines. 905-688-0722 or 1-855-515-<br />

0722. $67; $62(sr); $32(30 and under); $12(st/<br />

arts/child); $5(eyeGO). Also Jan 21(2:30pm).<br />

●●8:00: Kitchener-Waterloo Chamber Music<br />

Society. Capella Intima. Program TBA. Sheila<br />

Dietrich, soprano; Jennifer Enns Modolo,<br />

mezzo; Bud Roach, tenor; David Roth, baritone.<br />

KWCMS Music Room, 57 Young St. W.,<br />

Waterloo. 519-886-1673. $35; $20(st).<br />

●●8:00: Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony.<br />

Casablanca: The Film with Live Orchestra.<br />

Evan Mitchell, conductor. Centre in the<br />

Square, 101 Queen St. N., Kitchener. 519-745-<br />

4711 or 1-888-745-4717. $19-$86. Also Jan 19.<br />

Sunday <strong>January</strong> 21<br />

●●2:30: Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing<br />

Arts. Faculty Artist Series: Marjan<br />

Mozetich Retirement Concert. Mozetich: Bassoon<br />

Concerto; and other works. Katie Leger,<br />

bassoon. 390 King St. W., Kingston. 613-533-<br />

2424. $10-$28.<br />

●●2:30: Niagara Symphony Orchestra.<br />

Honey and Rue. Wagner: Siegfried Idyll; Previn:<br />

Honey and Rue; Ravel: Mother Goose<br />

(complete ballet). Claire de Sévigné, soprano;<br />

Bradley Thahuck, conductor. FirstOntario<br />

Performing Arts Centre, 250 St. Paul St.,<br />

St. Catharines. 905-688-0722 or 1-855-515-<br />

0722. $67; $62(sr); $32(30 and under); $12(st/<br />

arts/child); $5(eyeGO). Also Jan 20(7:30pm).<br />

●●4:30: Music At St. Thomas’. A Clarinet<br />

and Bassoon Duo Concert. Works by Bach,<br />

Beethoven, Poulenc and Koechlin. François<br />

Laurin-Burgess, clarinet; Antoine Saint-Onge,<br />

bassoon. St. Thomas’ Anglican Church (Belleville),<br />

201 Church St., Belleville. 613-962-<br />

3636. Admission by donation.<br />

Tuesday <strong>January</strong> <strong>23</strong><br />

●●12:00 noon: Marilyn I. Walker School of<br />

Fine and Performing Arts, Brock University.<br />

RBC Foundation Music@Noon. Timothy White,<br />

trumpet; Lesley Kingham, piano. Cairns Hall,<br />

FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre, 250 St.<br />

Paul St., St. Catharines. 905-688-0722. Free.<br />

Wednesday <strong>January</strong> 24<br />

●●8:00: Kitchener-Waterloo Chamber<br />

Music Society. Mauro Bertoli, Piano and<br />

Lucia Luque, Violin. Beethoven: Romance in F;<br />

Franck: Sonata; Schumann: Sonata No.1; Piazzolla:<br />

Gran Tango; Sarasate: Carmen Fantasy.<br />

KWCMS Music Room, 57 Young St. W., Waterloo.<br />

519-886-1673. $30; $20(st).<br />

Friday <strong>January</strong> 26<br />

●●7:30: Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and<br />

Performing Arts, Brock University. Encore!<br />

Professional Concert Series: Jump. Guy Few,<br />

trumpet and piano; Stephanie Mara, piano.<br />

Partridge Hall, FirstOntario Performing Arts<br />

Centre, 250 St. Paul St., St. Catharines.<br />

905-688-0722 or 1-855-515-0722. $28.50;<br />

$22.50(sr/st); $12.50(child); $5(eyeGo).<br />

●●8:00: Don Wright Faculty of Music. Pirates<br />

of Penzance. Music by Sir Arthur Sullivan.<br />

Libretto by W.S. Gilbert. Tyrone Paterson,<br />

music director; Theodore Baerg, stage director.<br />

First-St. Andrew’s United Church,<br />

350 Queens Ave, London. 519-672-8800. $30;<br />

$20(sr/st). Also Jan 27, Feb 2, 3(all at 8pm),<br />

4(2pm).<br />

Saturday <strong>January</strong> 27<br />

DOVER<br />

QUARTET<br />

SATURDAY, JANUARY 27<br />

2:00 p.m.<br />

CHAMBER<br />

MUSIC<br />

HAMILTON.CA<br />

●●2:00: Chamber Music Hamilton. Dover<br />

String Quartet. Schumann: String Quartet<br />

No.2 in F major Op.41 No.2; Ullmann: String<br />

Quartet No.3; Zemlinsky: String Quartet No.2.<br />

Art Gallery of Hamilton, 1<strong>23</strong> King St. W., Hamilton.<br />

905-525-7429. $35; $30(sr); $15(st).<br />

●●2:30: Kingston Symphony. Rachmaninoff<br />

and Beethoven. Wagner: Prelude to<br />

Act 1 of Lohengrin; Rachmaninoff: Piano Concerto<br />

No.3; Beethoven: Symphony No.5. Avan<br />

Yu, piano. Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing<br />

Arts, 390 King St. W., Kingston. 613-<br />

530-2050. From $10. Also Jan 28.<br />

●●7:00: Wilfrid Laurier University Faculty of<br />

Music. Laurier Choirs. First United Church<br />

(Waterloo), 16 William St. W., Waterloo. 519-<br />

884-1970 x2432. $15; $8(sr/st).<br />

●●8:00: Don Wright Faculty of Music. Pirates<br />

of Penzance. See Jan 26 for details.<br />

Sunday <strong>January</strong> 28<br />

●●2:30: Kingston Symphony. Rachmaninoff<br />

and Beethoven. Wagner: Prelude to<br />

Act 1 of Lohengrin; Rachmaninoff: Piano Concerto<br />

No.3; Beethoven: Symphony No.5. Avan<br />

Yu, piano. Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing<br />

Arts, 390 King St. W., Kingston. 613-<br />

530-2050. From $10. Also Jan 27.<br />

●●3:00: Dundas Valley Orchestra. Afternoon<br />

at the Opera. Rossini: Overture to La<br />

gazza ladra; Handel (arr. A. Luck): Largo from<br />

Xerxes; Gounod: Que fais-tu blanche tourterelle<br />

from Roméo et Juliette; Puccini: Quando<br />

m’en vo from La bohème; Weber: Overture<br />

to Oberon; and other works. Tessa Victoria<br />

Laengert, soprano; Rebecca Cuddy, mezzo;<br />

Dundas Celebration Singers; Laura Thomas,<br />

music director. St. Paul’s United Church (Dundas),<br />

29 Park St. W., Dundas. 905-387-4773.<br />

Free; donations welcome.<br />

●●7:00: Wilfrid Laurier University Faculty<br />

of Music. Laurier Jazz Ensemble. Maureen<br />

62 | <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


Forrester Recital Hall, 75 University Ave.,<br />

Waterloo. 519-884-1970 x2432. $15; $8(sr/st).<br />

Tuesday <strong>January</strong> 30<br />

●●12:00 noon: Marilyn I. Walker School of<br />

Fine and Performing Arts, Brock University.<br />

RBC Foundation Music@Noon. Zoltan Kalman,<br />

clarinet; Erika Reiman, piano. Cairns Hall,<br />

FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre, 250 St.<br />

Paul St., St. Catharines. 905-688-0722. Free.<br />

Thursday February 1<br />

●●12:00 noon: Wilfrid Laurier University<br />

Faculty of Music. Music at Noon. Faculty<br />

Woodwinds. Maureen Forrester Recital Hall,<br />

75 University Ave., Waterloo. 519-884-1970<br />

x2432. Free.<br />

●●8:00: Kitchener-Waterloo Chamber Music<br />

Society. Composers & Improvisers Association,<br />

WLU Faculty of Music. Student composers<br />

and performers (woodwind quintet<br />

and flute/piano duo). KWCMS Music Room,<br />

57 Young St. W., Waterloo. 519-886-1673.<br />

$15; $10(st).<br />

Friday February 2<br />

●●8:00: Don Wright Faculty of Music. Pirates<br />

of Penzance. See Jan 26 for details.<br />

●●8:00: Jeffery Concerts. Stories from Russia.<br />

Mendelssohn: Quartet in D Op.44, No.1;<br />

Janáček: String Quartet No.1 “Kreutzer<br />

Sonata”; Beethoven: Quartet in F Op.59 No.1<br />

“Razumovsky”. Calidore String Quartet. Wolf<br />

Performance Hall, 251 Dundas St., London.<br />

519-672-8800. $40.<br />

Saturday February 3<br />

●●2:30: Niagara Symphony Orchestra. Fun<br />

with Fables. Maltz: Aesop’s Fables; Dorff: Goldilocks<br />

and the Three Bears; Woods: The Ugly<br />

Duckling. Bradley Thachuk, conductor. Cairns<br />

Hall, FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre,<br />

250 St. Paul St., St. Catharines. 905-688-<br />

0722 or 1-855-515-0722. $67; $62(sr); $32(30<br />

and under); $12(st/arts/child); $5(eyeGO).<br />

Also Feb 4.<br />

●●7:30: Peterborough Symphony Orchestra.<br />

Paris Bustle and Blues. Ravel: Ma mère<br />

l’oye and Bolero; Gershwin: An American in<br />

Paris and Rhapsody in Blue. Anastasia Rizikov,<br />

piano; Michael Newnham, conductor. Showplace<br />

Performance Centre, 290 George St.<br />

N., Peterborough. 705-742-7469. $20-$48.50;<br />

$10(st).<br />

●●8:00: Don Wright Faculty of Music. Pirates<br />

of Penzance. See Jan 26 for details.<br />

●●8:00: Wilfrid Laurier University Faculty<br />

of Music. Laurier Wind Orchestra. Wilfrid<br />

Laurier University, Theatre Auditorium,<br />

75 University Ave. W., Waterloo. 519-884-1970<br />

x2432. $15; $8(sr/st).<br />

Sunday February 4<br />

●●2:00: Don Wright Faculty of Music. Pirates<br />

of Penzance. See Jan 26 for details.<br />

●●2:30: Niagara Symphony Orchestra. Fun<br />

with Fables. Maltz: Aesop’s Fables; Dorff: Goldilocks<br />

and the Three Bears; Woods: The Ugly<br />

Duckling. Bradley Thachuk, conductor. Cairns<br />

Hall, FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre,<br />

250 St. Paul St., St. Catharines. 905-688-<br />

0722 or 1-855-515-0722. $67; $62(sr); $32(30<br />

and under); $12(st/arts/child); $5(eyeGO).<br />

Also Feb 3.<br />

Monday February 5<br />

●●8:00: Kitchener-Waterloo Chamber Music<br />

Society. Ensemble Made in Canada. Brahms:<br />

Clarinet Quintet; and other works. Elissa Lee,<br />

violin; Sharon Wei, viola; Rachel Mercer,cello;<br />

Angela Park, piano; Dionysis Grammenos,<br />

clarinet. KWCMS Music Room, 57 Young St.<br />

W., Waterloo. 519-886-1673. $40; $25(st).<br />

Tuesday February 6<br />

●●12:00 noon: Marilyn I. Walker School of<br />

Fine and Performing Arts, Brock University.<br />

RBC Foundation Music@Noon. Voice students.<br />

Cairns Hall, FirstOntario Performing<br />

Arts Centre, 250 St. Paul St., St. Catharines.<br />

905-688-0722. Free.<br />

Wednesday February 7<br />

●●8:00: Kitchener-Waterloo Chamber Music<br />

Society. Katie Schlajker, Cello and Heather<br />

Taves, Piano. Schumann: Fantasiestücke<br />

Op.73; Adagio and Allegro Op.70; Gesänge der<br />

Frühe, Op.133 (piano solo); 5 Stücke im Volkston,<br />

Op.102; and other works. KWCMS Music<br />

Room, 57 Young St. W., Waterloo. 519-886-<br />

1673. $30; $20(st).<br />

●●8:00: Wilfrid Laurier University Faculty<br />

of Music. Student Composer Series. Maureen<br />

Forrester Recital Hall, 75 University Ave.,<br />

Waterloo. 519-884-1970 x2432. Free.<br />

C. Music Theatre<br />

These music theatre listings contain a wide range of music theatre types including<br />

opera, operetta, musicals and other performance genres where music and drama<br />

combine. Listings in this section are sorted alphabetically by presenter.<br />

●●Against the Grain Theatre. Bound. Music<br />

by George Frideric Handel, libretto by Joel<br />

Ivany. COC Jackman Studio, 227 Front St. E.<br />

647-367-8943. $35. Opens Dec 14, 8pm. Runs<br />

to Dec 16. Thurs/Fri(8pm), Sat(6pm/9pm).<br />

●●Alexander Showcase Theatre. A Musical<br />

Celebration! A 30th anniversary cabaret. Alumnae<br />

Theatre, 70 Berkeley St. 416-324-1259. $30-<br />

$50. Opens Dec 9, 8pm. Also Dec 10(2pm).<br />

●●Annex Singers. <strong>December</strong> Diaries: A<br />

Choral Drama. Jane Mallett Theatre, St Lawrence<br />

Centre for the Arts, 27 Front St E.<br />

416-968-7747. $35; $25(sr/st). Opens Dec 9,<br />

7:30pm. Also Dec 10(3pm).<br />

New Year’s Eve • 7:00 pm<br />

Tickets: 416.872.4255<br />

roythomsonhall.com<br />

Opera Stars,<br />

Chorus & Orchestra<br />

Roy Thomson Hall<br />

●●Attila Glatz Concert Productions/Roy<br />

Thomson Hall. Bravissimo! Opera’s Greatest<br />

Hits. Selections from Così fan tutte, Madama<br />

Butterfly, Rigoletto, Don Giovanni, Tosca and<br />

others. Barbara Bargnesi and Francesca<br />

Sassu, sopranos; Carolyn Sproule, mezzo;<br />

David Pomeroy, tenor; Massimo Cavalletti,<br />

baritone. Roy Thomson Hall, 60 Simcoe St.<br />

416-872-4255. from $55. Dec 31, 7pm.<br />

●●Burlington Performing Arts Centre. A<br />

Night at The Opera. Act II music from Bizet’s<br />

Carmen. Julie Nesrallah, mezzo; Lauren Margison,<br />

soprano; Richard Margison, tenor;<br />

Gary Relyea, bass-baritone; Robert Kortgaard,<br />

piano. Burlington Performing Arts<br />

Centre, Main Theatre, 440 Locust St., Burlington.<br />

905-681-6000. $69.50. Feb 3, 8pm.<br />

●●Canadian Opera Company. The Magic Victrola.<br />

Libretto by David Kersnar and Jacqueline<br />

Russell. Works by Bizet, Mozart, Puccini<br />

and others. Members of the COC’s Ensemble<br />

Studio; Ashlie Corcoran, director. Richard<br />

Bradshaw Amphitheatre, Four Seasons Centre<br />

for the Performing Arts, 145 Queen St.<br />

W. 416-363-8<strong>23</strong>1. $30; free(children under<br />

12), Maximum of 2 free children’s tickets for<br />

each adult ticket sold. Additional children’s<br />

tickets $10. Dec 2, 11am. Also Dec 2(1:30pm);<br />

Dec 3(10:30am and 1:30pm).<br />

●●Canadian Opera Company. Vocal Series:<br />

Wirth Vocal Prize Showcase. Simone<br />

McIntosh, mezzo. Richard Bradshaw Amphitheatre,<br />

Four Seasons Centre for the Performing<br />

Arts, 145 Queen St. W. 416-363-8<strong>23</strong>1.<br />

Free. First-come, first-served. Late seating<br />

not available. Dec 5, 12pm.<br />

RIGOLETTO<br />

VERDI<br />

JAN 20 –<br />

FEB <strong>23</strong><br />

coc.ca<br />

●●Canadian Opera Company. Rigoletto.<br />

Music by Giuseppe Verdi, libretto by Francesco<br />

Maria Piave. Four Seasons Centre for<br />

the Performing Arts, 145 Queen St. W. 416-<br />

363-8<strong>23</strong>1. $35-$225. Opens Jan 20, 7:30pm.<br />

Runs to Feb <strong>23</strong>. Days and times vary, visit coc.<br />

ca for details.<br />

●●Canadian Opera Company. The Abduction<br />

from the Seraglio. Music by Wolfgang Amadeus<br />

Mozart, libretto by Christoph Friedrich<br />

Bretzner with adaptations by Gottlieb Stephanie.<br />

Four Seasons Centre for the Performing<br />

Arts, 145 Queen St. W. 416-363-8<strong>23</strong>1. $35-<br />

$225. Opens Feb 7, 7:30pm. Runs to Feb 24.<br />

Days and times vary, visit coc.ca for details.<br />

MOZART THE<br />

ABDUCTION<br />

FROM THE<br />

SERAGLIO<br />

FEB 2 – 25<br />

coc.ca<br />

●●Cathedral Bluffs Symphony Orchestra.<br />

Subscription Concert #2. Humperdinck: Hansel<br />

and Gretel. Tryptych Concert & Opera.<br />

P.C. Ho Theatre, Chinese Cultural Centre<br />

of Greater Toronto, 5183 Sheppard Ave. E.,<br />

Scarborough. 416-879-5566. $35 and up;<br />

$30(sr/st); free(under 12). 7:15pm: Pre-concert<br />

talk. Dec 9, 8pm. Also Dec 10(2pm).<br />

●●Civic Light Opera Company. The Wizard<br />

of Oz. Music, lyrics and book by Joe Cascone<br />

and James P. Doyle, based on the film. Zion<br />

Cultural Centre, 1650 Finch Ave. E. 416-755-<br />

1717. $28. Opens Nov 29, 7pm. Runs to Dec 10.<br />

Wed (7pm), Thurs-Sat(8pm), Sun(2pm). Note:<br />

extra show Dec 9, 2pm.<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> | 63


●●Coal Mine Theatre. Rumours, by Fleetwood<br />

Mac: A Coal Mine Concert. Coal Mine Theatre,<br />

1454 Danforth Ave. coalminetheatre.com.<br />

$45. Opens Feb 4, 7:30pm. Runs to Feb 25.<br />

Tues-Sat(7:30pm), Sun(2pm).<br />

●●Crow’s Theatre. A&R Angels. Created<br />

by Kevin Drew. Streetcar Crowsnest,<br />

345 Carlaw Ave. 647-341-7390. $20-$50.<br />

Opens Nov 20, 8pm. Runs to Dec 9. Mon-<br />

Sat(8pm), Wed/Sat(2pm). Note: no matinee<br />

Nov 22.<br />

●●Dancyn Productions. Aladdin: A Panto in<br />

One Arabian Night. Regent Theatre, 50 King<br />

St. E., Oshawa. 905-721-3399. $29. Opens<br />

Dec 28, 7pm. Runs to Dec 31. Thurs-Sat(7pm),<br />

Sat/Sun(1pm).<br />

●●Drayton Entertainment. Kings and<br />

Queens of Country. Featuring hits of early<br />

country music. St. Jacob’s Schoolhouse<br />

Theatre, 11 Albert St. W., St. Jacob’s. 1-855-<br />

372-9866. $27-$46. Opens Sep 19, 2pm.<br />

Runs to Dec 24. Tues-Thurs/Sat/Sun(2pm),<br />

Thurs-Sat(7:30pm).<br />

●●Drayton Entertainment. Beauty and the<br />

Beast. Music by Alan Menken, lyrics by Howard<br />

Ashman and Tim Rice, book by Linda<br />

Woolverton. Dunfield Theatre Cambridge,<br />

46 Grand Ave. S., Cambridge. 1-855-372-<br />

9866. $27-$46. Opens Nov 22, 2pm. Runs<br />

to Dec 31. Wed/Thurs/Sat(2pm), Thurs-<br />

Sat(7:30pm), Sun(1pm/7pm). Note: extra<br />

shows Dec 19&27, 7:30pm. Note: no mat<br />

Dec 20, no eve Dec 24&31.<br />

●●Drayton Entertainment. Honk. Music by<br />

George Stiles, lyrics and book by Anthony<br />

Drewe. St. Jacobs Country Playhouse,<br />

40 Benjamin Rd. E., Waterloo. 1-855-372-<br />

9866. $27-$46. Opens Nov 29, 10:30am. Runs<br />

to Dec 24. Wed(10:30am), Thurs/Sat(2pm),<br />

Thurs-Sat(7:30pm), Sun(11:30am/4pm). Note:<br />

extra shows Dec 12, 19(10:30am). Note: no<br />

eve show Dec 14. Note: Dec 24 show is at 1pm.<br />

●●Dreamtheatre Productions. My Fair<br />

Lady. Music by Frederick Loewe, lyrics and<br />

book by Alan Jay Lerner. Michael Power/St.<br />

Joseph Secondary School, 105 Eringate Dr.<br />

dreamtheatreproudctions.com. $30. Opens<br />

Jan 18, 7:30pm. Runs to Jan 20.<br />

●●Dundas Valley Orchestra. Afternoon at<br />

the Opera. St. Paul’s United Church (Dundas),<br />

29 Park St. W., Dundas. 905-387-4773. Free;<br />

donations welcome. Jan 28, 3pm.<br />

●●Factory Theatre/b current performing<br />

arts. Trace. Written, composed and performed<br />

by Jeff Ho. Nina Lee Aquino, director.<br />

Factory Studio Theatre, 125 Bathurst St. 416-<br />

504-9971. $20-$50. Opens Nov 11, 8pm. Runs<br />

to Dec 3. Tues-Sat(8pm), Sun(2pm).<br />

●●First-St. Andrew’s United Church. The Gift<br />

of the Magi. Music by David Conte, libretto<br />

by Nicholas Giardini. First-St. Andrew’s<br />

United Church, 350 Queens Ave, Waterloo.<br />

519-679-8182. $20. Opens Dec 8, 8pm. Also<br />

Dec 9(3pm).<br />

●●Grand Theatre. A Christmas Carol.<br />

Adapted for the stage by Dennis Garnhum.<br />

Music by Jeremy Spencer. Grand Theatre,<br />

471 Richmond St, London. 519-672-8800.<br />

$29.95-$88. Opens Nov 28, 7:30pm. Runs to<br />

Dec 30. Tues-Sat(7:30pm), Sat/Sun(1pm).<br />

Note: extra shows Dec 6, 27(1pm). Note: no<br />

show Dec 21.<br />

●●Irregular Entertainment. Grease -- The<br />

Musical. Music, lyrics and book by Jim Jacobs<br />

and Warren Casey. Winter Garden Theatre,<br />

189 Yonge St. 1-855-985-5000. $29-$159.<br />

C. Music Theatre<br />

Opens Nov 1, 1:30pm. Runs to Dec 10. Tues-<br />

Sat(7:30pm), Wed/Sat/Sun(1:30pm).<br />

●●Jaybird Productions. Cabaret. Music by<br />

John Kander, lyrics by Fred Ebb, book by Joe<br />

Masteroff. Al Green Theatre, 640 Spadina<br />

Rd. jaybirdproductions.ca. $30-$50. Opens<br />

Nov 30, 8pm. Runs to Dec 2. Thurs/Fri(8pm),<br />

Sat(2pm).<br />

●●Lower Ossington Theatre. Buddy Holly<br />

Winter Concert. Featuring Zachary Stevenson<br />

performing Buddy Holly hits. Randolph<br />

Theatre, 736 Bathurst St. 1-888-324-6282.<br />

$39.99. Opens Dec 12, 7:30pm. Also Dec 13, 14.<br />

●●Lower Ossington Theatre. Annie. Music<br />

by Charles Strouse, lyrics by Martin Charnin,<br />

book by Thomas Meehan. Randolph Theatre,<br />

736 Bathurst St. 1-888-324-6282.<br />

$49.99-$64.99. Opens Dec 8, 7:30pm. Runs<br />

to Jan 14. Fri/Sat(7:30pm), Sat(3:30pm),<br />

Sun(12pm/4pm). Note: no 4pm show on<br />

Dec 31. Note: extra show Jan 4(2pm).<br />

●●Mainstage Theatre Company. The Addams<br />

Family. Music and lyrics by Andrew Lippa,<br />

book by Marshall Brickman and Rick Elice,<br />

based on characters created by Charles<br />

Addams. Papermill Theatre, Todmorden Mills,<br />

67 Pottery Rd. 416-396-2819. $35; $20(st).<br />

Opens Dec 15, 7:30pm. Runs to Dec 17. Fri/<br />

Sat(7:30pm), Sat/Sun(2pm).<br />

●●Marigon Productions/Next Stage Theatre<br />

Festival. Rumspringa Break. Music by<br />

Colleen Dauncy, lyrics by Akiva Romer-Segal,<br />

book by Matt Murray. Factory Theatre Mainspace,<br />

125 Bathurst Ave. info@colleenandakiva.com.<br />

$15. Opens Jan 4, 9:15pm. Runs<br />

to Jan 14. Days and times vary. Visit fringetoronto.com<br />

for details.<br />

●●Mirvish. Bat Out of Hell: The Musical.<br />

Music, lyrics and book by Jim Steinman. Ed<br />

Mirvish Theatre, 244 Victoria St. 416-872-1212.<br />

$29-$139. Opens Oct 14, 8pm. Runs to Jan 7.<br />

Tues-Sat(8pm), Wed(1:30pm), Sat/Sun(2pm).<br />

Note: no show Dec 26. Note: Extra show<br />

Dec 28(1:30pm).<br />

●●Mirvish. Dr Seuss’s The Lorax. Music<br />

and lyrics by Charlie Fink, adapted for the<br />

stage by David Greig. Royal Alexandra Theatre,<br />

260 King St. W. 416-872-1212. $59-$165.<br />

Opens Dec 9, 7:30pm. Runs to Jan 21. Tues-<br />

Sat(7:30pm), Wed/Sat/Sun(1:30pm). Note:<br />

also Dec 14&28(1:30pm).<br />

●●Mirvish. Million Dollar Quartet. Features<br />

music of Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl<br />

Perkins, and Elvis Presley. Panasonic Theatre,<br />

651 Yonge St. 416-872-1212. $59-$89. Opens<br />

Dec 12, 8pm. Runs to Jan 7. Tues-Sat(8pm),<br />

Wed(1:30pm), Sat/Sun(2pm).<br />

●●National Ballet of Canada. The Nutcracker.<br />

Music by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, with<br />

libretto by James Kudelka. James Kudelka,<br />

choreographer. Four Seasons Centre for the<br />

Performing Arts, 145 Queen St. W. 416-345-<br />

9595. $39-$190. Opens Dec 9, 2pm. Runs to<br />

Dec 30. Days and times vary. Visit national.<br />

ballet.ca for details.<br />

●●Nocturnes in the City. Highlights from<br />

Czech and World Operas. John Holland, baritone;<br />

Danielle Dudycha, soprano; William<br />

Shookhoff, piano. St. Wenceslaus Church,<br />

496 Gladstone Ave. 416-481-7294. $25;<br />

$15(st). Jan 21, 5pm.<br />

●●Onstage Uxbridge. Oklahoma! Music by<br />

Richard Rodgers, lyrics and book by Oscar<br />

Hammerstein II. Uxbridge Music Hall, 16 Main<br />

St. S., Uxbridge. onstageuxbridge.com.<br />

$24. Opens Jan 18, 7:30pm. Runs to Jan 27.<br />

Thurs-Sat(7:30pm), Sat/Sun(2pm).<br />

●●Opera by Request. Salome. Music and<br />

libretto by Richard Strauss. William Shookhoff,<br />

piano and conductor. College Street<br />

United Church, 452 College St. 416-455-<strong>23</strong>65.<br />

$20. Jan 20, 7:30pm.<br />

●●Podium Concert Productions. Nine (in<br />

concert). Music and lyrics by Maury Yeston,<br />

book by Arthur Kopit. Trinity St. Paul’s Centre<br />

for the Arts, 427 Bloor St. W. 647-800-<br />

4745. $39-$89. Opens Jan 12(7:30pm). Also<br />

Jan 13(2pm/7:30pm).<br />

●●Port Hope Festival Theatre. Robin Hood:<br />

The Panto. Written, directed and visual<br />

effects by Antonio Sarmiento. Cameco Capitol<br />

Arts Centre, 20 Queen St., Port Hope. 1-800-<br />

434-5092. $27-$35. Opens Nov 16, 7pm. Runs<br />

to Dec <strong>23</strong>. Days and times vary. Visit<br />

capitoltheatre.com for details.<br />

●●Randolph Academy. Moll. Music and lyrics<br />

by Leslie Arden, book by Leslie Arden and<br />

Cathy Eliot with Anna T. Cascio. Annex Theatre,<br />

736 Bathurst St. 416-924-2243. $22.<br />

Opens Nov 28, 8pm. Runs to Dec 2. Tues-<br />

Sat(8pm), Sat(2pm).<br />

●●Ross Petty Productions. A Christmas<br />

Carol. Tracey Flye, director/choreographer.<br />

Elgin Theatre, 189 Yonge St. 1-855-599-9090.<br />

$27-$99. Opens Nov 24, 7pm. Runs to Dec 31.<br />

Days and times vary. Visit rosspetty.com for<br />

details.<br />

●●Shaw Festival. A Christmas Carol. Adapted<br />

for the stage by Tim Carroll. Paul Sportelli,<br />

music director. Royal George Theatre,<br />

85 Queen St, Niagara on the Lake. 1-800-511-<br />

7429. $30-$50. Opens Nov 15, 1pm. Runs to<br />

Dec <strong>23</strong>. Days and times vary. Visit shawfest.<br />

com for details.<br />

●●Soulpepper Concert Series. A Very Soulpepper<br />

Christmas. A family concert celebrating<br />

the sounds of the season from around<br />

the globe. Mike Ross, music director. St.<br />

Lawrence Centre for the Arts: Jane Mallett<br />

Theatre. 27 Front St E. 416-866-8666. $25-<br />

$70. Opens Dec 15, 8pm. Runs to Dec 17. Fri/<br />

Sat(8pm), Sat/Sun(2pm).<br />

ON STAGE JANUARY 10, <strong>2018</strong><br />

PETER SHAFFER<br />

AMADEUS<br />

TICKETS START AT $35<br />

● ● Soulpepper. Amadeus. By Peter Shaffer.<br />

Directed by Albert Schultz. Baillie Theatre,<br />

Young Centre for the Performing Arts,<br />

50 Tank House Lane, Distillery Historic District.<br />

416-866-8666. Tickets from $35. Jan 10,<br />

7:30pm to Feb 10, 7:30pm.<br />

●●Scarborough Music Theatre. The Addams<br />

Family. Music and lyrics by Andrew Lippa,<br />

book by Marshall Brickman and Rick Elice,<br />

based on characters created by Charles<br />

Addams. Scarborough Village Community<br />

Centre, 3600 Kingston Rd. 416-267-9292. $30;<br />

$27(sr/st); $25(ch). Opens Feb 1, 8pm. Runs<br />

to Feb 17. Thurs-Sat(8pm), Sun(2pm). Note:<br />

Feb 17 show at 2pm.<br />

●●Southern Ontario Lyric Opera. Encore.<br />

Favourite opera arias. Burlington Performing<br />

Arts Centre, 440 Locust St., Burlington. 905-<br />

681-6000. $20-$65. Jan 13, 7:30pm.<br />

RUDDIGORE<br />

<strong>January</strong> 26-28<br />

February 1-4<br />

●●St. Anne’s Music & Drama Society. Ruddigore,<br />

or The Witch’s Curse. Music by Arthur<br />

Sullivan, lyrics by W. S. Gilbert. St. Anne’s Parish<br />

Hall, 651 Dufferin St. 416-922-4415. $27;<br />

$22(sr/st). Opens Jan 26, 7:30pm. Runs to<br />

Feb 4. Thurs/Fri(7:30pm), Sat/Sun(2pm). Also<br />

Jan 27 at 7:30pm.<br />

●●Talk is Free Theatre. Candide (A Satirical<br />

Musical). Music by Leonard Bernstein, lyrics<br />

by Richard Wilbur, John Latouche and Stephen<br />

Sondheim, book by Hugh Wheeler. Mady<br />

Centre for the Performing Arts, 1 Dunlop St.<br />

W., Barrie. 705-792-1949. $37.50-$40.80.<br />

Opens Nov <strong>23</strong>, 7:30pm. Runs to Dec 2. Wed/<br />

Thurs(7:30pm), Fri/Sat(8pm), Sat(2pm).<br />

●●Tapestry Opera. Tapestry Briefs: Winter<br />

Shorts. Jacqueline Woodley, soprano; Erica<br />

Iris, mezzo; Keith Klassen, tenor; Alex Dobson,<br />

baritone; Artists of the 2016 Composer-<br />

Librettist Laboratory. Dancemakers Studio,<br />

Distillery Historic District, 9 Trinity St. 416-<br />

537-6066. From $25. Opens Dec 1(8pm). Runs<br />

to Dec 3. Fri/Sat(8pm), Sun(4pm).<br />

●●Tarragon Theatre. Mr. Shi and His Lover.<br />

Music by Njo Kong Kie, libretto by Kjo Kong Kie<br />

and Wong Teng Chi. Tarragon Theatre Mainspace,<br />

30 Bridgman Ave. 416-531-1827. $55;<br />

$49(sr); $29(st). Opens Nov 15, 8pm. Runs<br />

to Dec 17. Tues-Sat(8pm), Wed(1:30pm), Sat/<br />

Sun(2:30pm).<br />

●●Tarragon Theatre. Hamlet. Written by William<br />

Shakespeare, music by Thomas Ryder<br />

Payne. Richard Rose, stage director. Tarragon<br />

Theatre Mainspace, 30 Bridgman Ave.<br />

416-531-1827. $55; $49(sr); $29(st). Previews<br />

begin Jan 2, 8pm. Runs to Feb 11. Tues-<br />

Sat(8pm), Wed(1:30pm), Sat/Sun(2:30pm).<br />

●●Theatre Ancaster. Annie. Music by Charles<br />

Strouse, lyrics by Martin Charnin, book by<br />

Thomas Meehan. Ancaster High School,<br />

64 | <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


374 Jerseyville Rd, Ancaster. 905-304-7469.<br />

$32; $27(sr); $17(st). Opens Nov 17, 7:30pm.<br />

Runs to Dec 2. Fri-Sat(7:30pm), Sun(1:30pm).<br />

Note: Extra show Nov 25 at 1:30pm.<br />

●●Theatre Aquarius. Joseph and the Amazing<br />

Technicolour Dreamcoat. Music by Andrew<br />

Lloyd Webber, lyrics by Tim Rice. Theatre<br />

Aquarius, 190 King William St, Hamilton. 905-<br />

522-7529. $40 and up. Opens Nov 29, 7pm.<br />

Runs to Dec 24. Tues-Sat(7pm), Sat/Sun(1pm).<br />

●●Theatre Aurora. If/Then. Music by Tom<br />

Kitt, lyrics by Brian Yorkey. Theatre Aurora,<br />

150 Henderson Dr, Aurora. 905-727-3669.<br />

$25; $<strong>23</strong>(sr at box office); $10(st at box<br />

office). Opens Jan 25, 8pm. Runs to Feb 3.<br />

Thurs-Sat(8pm), Sun(2pm).<br />

●●Theatre Orangeville. The Last Christmas<br />

Turkey, The Musical. Music and lyrics by Clive<br />

VanderBurgh, book by Dan Needles. Orangeville<br />

Town Hall Opera House, 87 Broadway,<br />

Orangeville. 519-942-34<strong>23</strong>. $36. Opens<br />

Nov 30, 8pm. Runs to Dec <strong>23</strong>. Days and times<br />

vary. Visit theatreorangeville.ca for details.<br />

●●Theatre Passe Muraille. The Tale of a Town<br />

- Canada. Created, directed, and performed<br />

by Lisa Marie DiLiberto and Charles Ketchabaw.<br />

Theatre Passe Muraille Mainspace,<br />

16 Ryerson Ave. 416-504-7529. $17-$38.<br />

Opens Dec 13, 7:30pm. Runs to Dec 17. Wed-<br />

Sat(7:30pm), Sat/Sun(2pm).<br />

●●Theatre Sheridan. Trap Door. Music and<br />

lyrics by Anika Johnson and Britta Johnson,<br />

book and additional lyrics by Morris Panych.<br />

Macdonald-Heaslip Hall, 1430 Trafalgar Rd,<br />

Oakville. 905-815-4049. $25. Opens Nov 28,<br />

7:30pm. Runs to Dec 10. Tues-Thur(7:30pm), Fri-<br />

Sat(8pm), Sat/Sun(2pm). Note: no show Dec 3.<br />

●●Theatre Sheridan. Into the Woods. Music<br />

and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, book by<br />

James Lapine. Studio Theatre, 1430 Trafalgar<br />

Rd, Oakville. 905-815-4049. $25. Opens<br />

Nov 30, 7:30pm. Runs to Dec 9. Tues-<br />

Sat(7:30pm), Sat(2pm).<br />

●●Theatre Unlimited Performing Arts.<br />

Joseph and the Amazing Technicolour<br />

Dreamcoat. Music by Andrew Lloyd Webber,<br />

lyrics by Tim Rice. Meadowvale Theatre,<br />

6315 Montevideo Rd, Mississauga. 905-615-<br />

4720. $30; $28(sr/st). Opens Jan 19, 8pm.<br />

Runs to Jan 28. Thurs-Sat(8pm), Sun(2pm).<br />

Note: extra performance Jan 27 at 2pm.<br />

●●Toronto Masque Theatre Salon Series.<br />

Peace on Earth: A Christmas Salon. The<br />

Atrium, 21 Shaftesbury Ave. 416-410-4561.<br />

$25. Opens Dec 17(7:30pm). Also Dec 18.<br />

Tonatiuh Abrego<br />

Vania Chan<br />

by Leonard Bernstein<br />

Derek Bate<br />

Conductor<br />

Guillermo Silva-Marin<br />

Stage Director<br />

Dec. 28<br />

to Jan.7<br />

torontooperetta.com<br />

●●Toronto Operetta Theatre. Candide. Music<br />

by Leonard Bernstein. Tonatiuh Abrego,<br />

tenor; Vania Chan, soprano; Elizabeth Beeler,<br />

soprano; Cian Horrobin, tenor; Derek Bate,<br />

conductor. St. Lawrence Centre for the Arts,<br />

27 Front St. E. 416-366-77<strong>23</strong>. $49-$95. Opens<br />

Dec 28, 8pm. Runs to Jan 7. Days and times<br />

vary. Visit torontooperetta.com<br />

●●Torrent Productions. Pinocchio: A Merry<br />

Magical Pantomime. Royal Canadian Legion<br />

#001, 243 Coxwell Ave. 1-800-838-3006.<br />

$35; $25(ch). Opens Dec 22, 7pm. Runs to<br />

Dec 31. Tues/Wed/Thurs/Sat/Sun(2pm),<br />

Thurs-Sat(7pm).<br />

●●University of Toronto Faculty of Music.<br />

Opera Student Composer Collective: Vengeance.<br />

Performed with Surtitles. Michael<br />

Patrick Albano, director; Sandra Horst, conductor.<br />

MacMillan Theatre, Edward Johnson<br />

Building, 80 Queen’s Park. 416-408-0208.<br />

Free. Jan 21, 2:30pm.<br />

●●Unsung Heroes Productions. Sing for<br />

Tomorrow 5. Vaughan City Playhouse Theatre,<br />

1000 New Westminster Dr, Thornhill.<br />

unsungheroesproductions.com. $40-$90.<br />

Opens Feb 6, 7:30pm. Also Feb 7, 8.<br />

●●Victoria College Drama Society. The<br />

Drowsy Chaperone. Music and lyrics by Lisa<br />

Lambert and Greg Morrison, book by Bob Martin<br />

and Don McKellar. Isabel Bader Theatre,<br />

93 Charles St. W. 416-978-8849. $15; $10(sr/<br />

st). Opens Nov 29, 8pm. Also Nov 30, Dec 1.<br />

VOICE<br />

B OX<br />

OPERA IN CONCERT<br />

I DUE FIGARO<br />

by Saverio Mercadante<br />

Narmina Afandiyeva,<br />

Music Director<br />

February 4 at 2:30 pm<br />

www.operainconcert.com<br />

Beste<br />

Kalender<br />

●●Voicebox/Opera in Concert. I due Figaro.<br />

Music by Saverio Mercadante. Beste Kalender,<br />

mezzo-soprano; Ilana Zarankin, soprano; Holly<br />

Chaplin, soprano; Nicholas Borg, baritone. St.<br />

Lawrence Centre for the Arts, 27 Front St. E.<br />

416-366-77<strong>23</strong>. $22-$52. Feb 4, 2:30pm.<br />

●●Wavestage Theatre. Big Fish. Music and<br />

lyrics by Andrew Lippa, book by John August,<br />

based on the novel. Newmarket Theatre,<br />

505 Pickering Cres, Newmarket. wavestagetheatre.com.<br />

$28; $24(sr/st). Opens<br />

Jan 25, 7:30pm. Runs to Jan 28. Thurs-<br />

Sat(7:30pm), Sun(1pm).<br />

●●Young People’s Theatre. Beauty and the<br />

Beast. Music by Alan Menken, lyrics by Howard<br />

Ashman and Tim Rice, book by Linda<br />

Woolverton. Young People’s Theatre, 165 Front<br />

St. E. 416-862-2222. $10-$49. Opens Nov 6,<br />

10:15am. Runs to Dec 31. Days and times vary.<br />

Visit youngpeoplestheatre.ca for details.<br />

D. In the Clubs (Mostly Jazz)<br />

As we approach the goal of realizing our intention of listing club events in a searchable format,<br />

we take a step back before taking two steps forward. In this issue, while we do list<br />

regular recurring events at some clubs, we do not have detailed listings. Please visit the<br />

clubs’ websites or use the phone number provided for further information. We apologize<br />

for this temporary inconvenience.<br />

120 Diner<br />

120 Church St. 416-792-7725<br />

120diner.com (full schedule)<br />

All shows: PWYC ($10-$20 suggested)<br />

Every Tue 6pm Leslie Huyler Group; Every<br />

Wed 6pm Madoka Murata: Discovery<br />

Through the Arts; 8pm Lisa Particelli’s Girls<br />

Night Out Jazz Jam; Dec 1 6pm Andrew Merrigan<br />

Presents His Very Talented Friends:<br />

<strong>Volume</strong> 4 PWYC/$10-$20 suggested. Dec 2<br />

6pm The Hampton Avenue 4 PWYC/$10-$20<br />

suggested; 9pm Chris Birkett and Friends<br />

PWYC/$10-$20 suggested. Dec 3 6pm Kent<br />

Sheridan: White Boy Lost in the Blues $20<br />

cover; 8:30 All Sondheim!: Charlotte Moore<br />

with John Hughes $20 cover. Dec 21 6pm L J<br />

Folk: Celebrate Me Home PWYC.<br />

Alleycatz<br />

2409 Yonge St. 416-481-6865<br />

alleycatz.ca<br />

All shows: 9pm unless otherwise indicated.<br />

Call for cover charge info.<br />

Every Mon 8:30pm Salsa Night. Every Tue<br />

Bachata Night. Every Wed Midtown Blues<br />

Jam. Every Thurs 7:30pm Claudia Lopez<br />

Duo Jazz.<br />

Dec 1, 15, Jan 19, 27 Lady Kane; Dec 2, 22,<br />

30, Feb 2 Gyles Band; Dec 8 & Jan 27 Lady<br />

Kane; Dec 9 3:30 Jazz Matinee, 9:30 Red Velvet;<br />

Dec 16, Jan 13, Feb 3 Soular; Dec <strong>23</strong>, 29,<br />

Jan 5 Parkside Drive; Dec 31 New Year’s Party<br />

with Gyles Band; Jan 6 Von; Jan 11 Comedy<br />

Night; Jan 12 Urban Jive; Jan 20 Sound<br />

Parade; Jan 26 Red Velvet<br />

Artword Artbar<br />

15 Colbourne St., Hamilton. 905-543-8512<br />

artword.net (full schedule)<br />

Dec 1 8pm Mark McNeil with Tales from Hamilton<br />

tip jar. Dec 2 8pm The New Cumberland<br />

Bluegrass Band $15. Dec 7-16 Tue-Sat 8pm,<br />

Sun Dec 10 matinee at 3pm (no show Monday)<br />

Charly’s Piano $20.<br />

The Black Swan Tavern<br />

154 Danforth Ave., 416-469-0537<br />

winterfolk.com<br />

Dec 8 8pm Winterfolk XVI Preview & Benefit<br />

+ Birthday Bash The Achromatics, David<br />

Storey, Tony Quarrington, Brian Gladstone,<br />

Piper Hayes and others $10 minimum<br />

donation<br />

Sun, Dec 17 at 4:30pm<br />

Ellington’s Nutcracker with<br />

The Brian Barlow Big Band.<br />

Christ Church Deer Park, 1570 Yonge St.<br />

(north of St. Clair at Heath St.)<br />

Admission is free; donations are welcome.<br />

The Blue Goose Tavern<br />

1 Blue Goose St. 416-255-2442<br />

thebluegoosetavern.com (full schedule)<br />

Every Sun 4pm Blues at The Goose. Big<br />

Groove featuring Downchild`s Mike Fitzpatrick<br />

& Gary Kendall with Special Guests<br />

Dec 3 Steve Marriner & Curtis Chaffey;<br />

Dec 10 Kevin McQuade & Martin Alex Aucoin;<br />

Dec 17 Raoul Bhaneja & Darren Gallen<br />

Bloom<br />

<strong>23</strong>15 Bloor St. W. 416-767-1315<br />

bloomrestaurant.com<br />

All shows: 19+. Call for reservations.<br />

Burdock<br />

1184 Bloor St. W. 416-546-4033<br />

burdockto.com (full schedule)<br />

Dec 1 6:30pm Kalyna Rakel feat. Kevin<br />

Breit, Jacob Gorzhaltsan & George Chenery<br />

$15/$10(adv); 9pm François Klark<br />

$15/$12(adv). Dec 2 6:30pm The O’Pears<br />

w/ Danielle Knibbe $20/15(adv); 9pm Winona<br />

Wilde w/ Campbell Woods $12/$10(adv).<br />

Dec 3 6:30pm Son of Town Hall w/ Abigail<br />

Lapell $15/$10(adv). Dec 4 Century Thief w/<br />

Creature Speak $10/$8(adv). Dec 5 9pm Bad<br />

History Month, Chris, Low Sun & Dinosaur<br />

Island $10/$8(adv). Dec 6 9pm Confabulation<br />

Presents: Family Stories $10/$8(adv);<br />

9:30 Naked Wild, Pleasure Craft & Sly<br />

Why: Kid $10/$8(adv). Dec 7 9pm Chelsea<br />

McBride’s Socialist Night School: The<br />

Christmas $15/$10(adv). Dec 8 6:30 Catalyst<br />

Ensemble $15/$10(adv); 9pm Oh Geronimo<br />

‘The Sled’ Sneak Preview w/ Little Coyote<br />

& Peter van Helvoort $15/$10(adv). Dec 9<br />

6:30pm Deon Blyan & The Myth of Fingerprints<br />

Band $12/$10(adv); 9pm A Tribute<br />

to BUH - Guelph County Line & The Mandevilles<br />

$10/$8(adv). Dec 10 6:30pm SOA<br />

$15/$12(adv); 9pm Lindsay Foote w/ Aimée<br />

Butcher & Brandon Wall $15/$10(adv). Dec 11<br />

9pm Honesty, Manshun & Rogue Tenant<br />

$10/$8(adv). Dec 12 9pm Unbridled Futurism<br />

$10/$8(adv). Dec 13 6:30pm The Band Named<br />

Crow & The Anthology Project $12/$10(adv);<br />

9pm The Cluttertones w/ John Millard & Germaine<br />

Liu $15/$10(adv). Dec 14 9pm Bousada<br />

w/ Sly Why: Kid $10/$8(adv). Dec 15 9pm Session<br />

Americana $15/$10(adv). Dec 17 8pm<br />

Community Celebration of the Vocal Arts<br />

$10/$8(adv). Dec 18 9pm Nick Donneff / Rob<br />

Featuring some of Toronto’s best<br />

jazz musicians with a brief reflection<br />

by Jazz Vespers Clergy<br />

Save these dates for <strong>2018</strong>,<br />

musicians TBA:<br />

Sun, Jan 7 | Sun, Jan 21 |<br />

Sun, Feb 4 | at 4:30pm.<br />

416-920-5211<br />

www.thereslifehere.org<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> | 65


McLaren $10/$8(adv). Dec 20 9pm Marie<br />

Goudy 12tet feat. Jocelyn Barth $12/$10(adv).<br />

Dec 21 9pm Origins $20/$15(adv). Dec 29<br />

9pm The Hollowbodies $15/$12(adv). Dec 30<br />

9pm Shirwan w/ Katelin Albert & Jordan<br />

Randall $15/$10(adv). Jan 7 9pm The Last<br />

Revel & The Slocan Ramblers $20/$15(adv).<br />

Jan 31 9pm Daniel Champagne $15/$10(adv).<br />

Feb 4 9pm Heavy Bell $15/$12(adv).<br />

Castro’s Lounge<br />

2116 Queen St. E. 416-699-8272<br />

castroslounge.com (full schedule)<br />

All shows: No cover/PWYC<br />

Every Tue Every Fri 5:30pm The Straight<br />

Eights; 10pm I Hate You Rob. Every Sat 6pm<br />

Thelonious Hank. Every Sun 9pm Watch This<br />

Sound - Vintage Jamaican Music.<br />

C’est What<br />

67 Front St. E. (416) 867-9499<br />

cestwhat.com (full schedule)<br />

Dec 1 10pm Metronome Chomsky. Dec 2<br />

3pm The Boxcar Boys PWYC; 10pm Collective<br />

Arts Brewing Presents: Old.Soul.Rebel Suggested<br />

contribution $10. Dec 3 7pm Bob Wegner<br />

CD Release PWYC. Dec 7 10pm Garage<br />

Baby PWYC. Dec 8 10pm Felix’s Belt. Dec 9,<br />

<strong>23</strong>, Jan 6, 20, Feb 3 3pm The Hot Five Jazzmakers<br />

PWYC. Dec 9 9pm Bring Your Own<br />

Vinyl Party Free. Dec 10 7pm Song Studio<br />

Open Mic Free. Dec 14 10pm Jessica Speziale<br />

with Emily Mac and Leaving Esmeralda<br />

PWYC. Dec 15 10pm The Responsables Suggested<br />

contribution $10. Dec 16 3pm Thelonious<br />

Hank PWYC; 9pm Bring Your Own Vinyl<br />

Party Free. Dec 17 7pm Women in Music Vol. 3<br />

$10-$15. Dec 21 10 pm Jack Walker’s Festivus<br />

Miracle PWYC. Jan 4 10pm Blind Cats PWYC.<br />

Emmet Ray, The<br />

924 College St. 416-792-4497<br />

theemmetray.com (full schedule)<br />

All shows: No cover/PWYC<br />

Gate 403<br />

403 Roncesvalles Ave. 416-588-2930<br />

gate403.com (full schedule)<br />

All shows: PWYC.<br />

Every Mon 7pm Jazz Mondays with the<br />

Jim Hamel Trio and featured guests. Every<br />

Wed 7pm Julian Fauth Blues Night. Every<br />

Sat 5pm Bill Heffernan’s Saturday Sessions.<br />

Grossman’s Tavern<br />

379 Spadina Ave. 416-977-7000<br />

grossmanstavern.com (full schedule)<br />

All shows: No cover (unless otherwise noted).<br />

Every Sat 4.30 The Happy Pals Dixieland jazz<br />

jam. Every Sun 4pm New Orleans Connection<br />

All Star Band; 10pm Sunday Jam with<br />

Bill Hedefine. Every Wed 10pm Action Sound<br />

Band w/ Leo Valvassori.<br />

Hirut Cafe and Restaurant<br />

2050 Danforth Ave. 416-551-7560<br />

Every Sun 3pm Hirut Sundays Open Mic.<br />

Dec 1 & Jan 5 8pm In the Round Master<br />

Singer/Songwriter Series PWYC. Dec 7 &<br />

Jan 4 8pm Franklin Ave Swingtet PWYC.<br />

Dec 5, 19, Jan 2, 16 8pm Finger Style Guitar<br />

Association PWYC. Dec 15 & Jan 12 8:30pm<br />

E=Jazz and Latin Jazz w/ Don Naduriak<br />

PWYC/by donation. Dec 28 & Jan 25 8pm<br />

The Daniel Barnes Low Stress Trio PWYC/<br />

suggested $10. Dec 18 & Jan 29 8pm The<br />

D. In the Clubs (Mostly Jazz)<br />

Tequila Mockingbirds Community Singalong<br />

Free. Dec 29 & Jan 26 9pm Hirut Hoot Cabaret<br />

$5. Dec 31 9pm Hirut New Year’s Eve<br />

Extravaganza.<br />

Home Smith Bar – See Old Mill, The<br />

Hugh’s Room<br />

2261 Dundas St. W 416 533 5483<br />

hughsroom.com<br />

All shows: 8:30pm unless otherwise noted<br />

Dec 1 John Sheard Vinyl Café Tribute<br />

$30/$25(adv). Dec 2 Tribute to Muddy<br />

Waters & Howlin’ Wolf $38/$35(adv).<br />

Dec 3 Còig $30/$25(adv). Dec 4 7:30pm<br />

Soulville: An R&B Cabaret $20/$15(adv).<br />

Dec 6 Minor Empire - CD Launch $30/<br />

($25(adv). Dec 7 The Bills 20th Anniversary<br />

Show $30/$25(adv. Dec 8 The Hogtown<br />

All-Stars $30/$25(adv). Dec 9 Carlos<br />

del Junco $35/$30(adv). Dec 13 A Quartette<br />

Christmas $55/$50(adv). Dec 15 Craig<br />

Cardiff $30/$25(adv). Dec 16 Anthony<br />

Gomes $38/$35(adv). Dec 17 matinee Ault<br />

Sisters $30/$25(adv); $15(12 & under).<br />

Dec 19 A Bluesy Christmas $38/$35(adv).<br />

Dec 20 Lazer Lloyd $25/$20 adv). Dec 28 Don<br />

Ross $50/$45(adv). Dec 29 Suzie Vinnick<br />

$30/$25(adv). Dec 30 Wintergarten<br />

Orchestra $30/$25(adv). Dec 31 New Year’s<br />

Eve with Chris Whiteley & Diana Braithwaite<br />

$55/$50(adv). Jan 5 James Taylor<br />

Tribute $30/$25(adv). Jan 13 The Jitters<br />

$30/$25(adv). Jan 18 Tété $30/$25(adv).<br />

Jan 19 Garnet Rogers $35/$30(adv).<br />

Jan 20 Paul Reddick $25/$20(adv).<br />

Jan 17 Jazz FM91 - President’s Choice Concert<br />

Series: Molly Johnson $55. Jan 27 Lori<br />

Cullen $30/$25(adv). Jan 31 The Fugitives<br />

$30/$25(adv). Feb 3 The Flying Bulgar<br />

Klezmer Band: 30th Anniversary Concert<br />

$35/$30(adv)<br />

Jazz Bistro, The<br />

251 Victoria St. 416-363-5299<br />

jazzbistro.ca<br />

Dec 1 9pm The Maureen Kennedy Quartet<br />

$15. Dec 2 9 pm Scott Hamilton and the<br />

Mark Eisenman Trio $20. Dec 8 9pm The<br />

Willows $20. Dec 9 7:30pm and 10pm Matt<br />

Dusk CD release event for “Old School Yule”<br />

$39, recording included with ticket purchase<br />

(**ticket required, purchase ticket<br />

online). Dec 10 7pm CD launch event for Adi<br />

Braun’s “Moderne Frau” $20. Dec 15 9pm Stu<br />

Mac $20. Dec 16 9pm Robert Scott’s “Charlie<br />

Brown’s Christmas” $20. Dec 17 7pm Sam<br />

Broverman “A Jewish Boy’s Christmas” $15.<br />

Dec 18 8:30pm Christopher Wilson’s “Cocktails<br />

and Candy Canes Cabaret” $15. Dec 20<br />

6pm Faith Amour “Jazz for Christmas” $20.<br />

Dec <strong>23</strong> 9pm Robi Botos and Hilario Duran<br />

$25. Dec 29 & 30 9pm Galen Weston “The<br />

Space Between” $20. Dec 31 5pm “Soul Stu” -<br />

Dinner and Show Package.<br />

Jazz Room, The<br />

Located in the Huether Hotel, 59 King St. N.,<br />

Waterloo. 226-476-1565<br />

kwjazzroom.com (full schedule)<br />

All shows: 8:30pm-11:30pm unless otherwise<br />

indicated. Attendees must be 19+. Cover<br />

charge varies (generally $12-$25)<br />

Dec 1 New Vibes $18. Dec 2 Louis Simao<br />

Ensemble $25. Dec 8 8:30pm Elaine Riddock<br />

$16. Dec 9 8:30pm Yvette Tollar Group $18.<br />

FAITH<br />

AMOUR<br />

& Friends<br />

JAZZ FOR CHRISTMAS<br />

Wednesday<br />

Dec 20, 7pm<br />

faithamourjazz.com<br />

Dec 15 8:30pm The Woodhouse with Barbra<br />

Lica $25. Dec 16 8:30pm Bob Brough Quartet<br />

$18. Dec 20 7pm Faith Amour & Friends.<br />

Dec 22 8:30pm Tom Nagy’s Christmas $20.<br />

Dec <strong>23</strong> 8:30pm Lorne Lofsky Trio $16. Dec 29<br />

8:30pm Rebecca Binnendyk $20. Dec 30<br />

8:30pm Phoenix Jazz Group $16. Dec 31<br />

8:30pm New Years Eve with Rufus & Guests.<br />

Lula Lounge<br />

1585 Dundas St. W. 416-588-0307<br />

lula.ca (full schedule)<br />

Every Fri 7:30pm Early Jazz & World Sessions<br />

free before 8pm; Every Fri 10:30pm<br />

Havana Club Cuba Libre Fridays $15; Every<br />

Sat 10:30pm Salsa Saturdays $15. Dec 3<br />

6:30pm Gregg Stafford - New Orleans Stomp.<br />

Dec 8 7:30pm Zim Zum $15. Dec 11 7pm<br />

Reunite the Moneka Family $20. Dec 13 8pm<br />

An Evening of Native Jazz: Songbirds & Nightingales<br />

of Turtle Island $30/$25(adv). Dec 17<br />

7pm The Woodhouse featuring Barbra Lica<br />

$22/$18(adv). Dec 26 8pm Rebel Vibez Presents<br />

Stages $10. Dec 27 7pm Gary Morgan<br />

& PanAmericana $20. Dec 31 10:30pm New<br />

Year’s Eve Salsa Party with Cafe Cubano & DG<br />

Santiago Valazsquez $50(show); $140(dinner<br />

& show)<br />

Manhattans Pizza Bistro & Music Club<br />

951 Gordon St., Guelph 519-767-2440<br />

manhattans.ca (full schedule)<br />

All shows: PWYC.<br />

Every Tue Open Stage hosted by Paul, Pete<br />

& Ron.<br />

Mây Cafe<br />

876 Dundas St. W. 647-607-2032<br />

maytoronto.com (full schedule)<br />

Dec 2 7:30pm Sounds of the City Holiday Food<br />

Drive hosted by T Dots Records at May Cafe!<br />

A night of live music, comedy, great food and<br />

drinks. $10 Dec 15 Brownman Akoustic Quartet’s<br />

Xmas Jazz Concert $15 Jan 13 & 26 8pm<br />

Sounds of the City.<br />

Mezzetta Restaurant<br />

681 St. Clair Ave. W. 416-658-5687<br />

mezzettarestaurant.com (full schedule)<br />

All shows: 9pm, $8 (unless otherwise noted).<br />

Every Wed 9 & 10:15pm Wednesday Concert<br />

Series. Cover $10.<br />

Monarch Tavern<br />

12 Clinton St. 416-531-5833<br />

themonarchtavern.com (full schedule)<br />

Every Tues 9pm Vinyl Night $5; Every<br />

Thu 10pm Monarch Karaoke $5. Dec 11 and<br />

Jan 8 7:30pm Martin Loomer & His Orange<br />

Devils Orchestra $10.<br />

N’awlins Jazz Bar & Dining<br />

299 King St. W. 416-595-1958<br />

nawlins.ca<br />

All shows: No cover/PWYC.<br />

Every Tue 6:30pm Stacie McGregor. Every<br />

Wed 7pm The Jim Heineman Trio. Every Thur<br />

8pm Nothin’ But the Blues with Joe Bowden.<br />

Every Fri & Sat 8:30pm N’awlins All Star<br />

Band; Every Sun 7pm Brooke Blackburn.<br />

Nice Bistro, The<br />

117 Brock St. N., Whitby. 905-668-8839<br />

nicebistro.com (full schedule)<br />

Old Mill, The<br />

21 Old Mill Rd. 416-<strong>23</strong>6-2641<br />

oldmilltoronto.com<br />

The Home Smith Bar: No reservations. No<br />

cover. $20 food/drink minimum. All shows:<br />

7:30pm-10:30pm<br />

Every Tues, Thu, Fri, and Sat.<br />

Nov 30 Robin Banks with Ted Quinlan,<br />

Richard Whiteman. Dec 1 Canadian Jazz<br />

Quartet & Friends Celebrate First Fridays.<br />

Dec 2 Mike Downes with David Restivo, Larnell<br />

Lewis. Dec 5 In Concert and Conversation<br />

with Gene DiNovi. Dec 7 Genevieve<br />

Marentette Trio with Robert Scott,<br />

George Koller. Dec 8 Sean Bray’s Peach<br />

trio. Dec 9 Brian Blain’s Blues Campfire.<br />

Dec 14 John Sherwood Trio. Dec 15 Jordana<br />

Talsky. Dec 16 Barry Elmes Quartet.<br />

Dec 21 Alex Samaras Trio. Dec 22 Alison<br />

Young Quartet. Dec <strong>23</strong> Adrean Farrugia Trio.<br />

Dec 31 New Year’s Eve Jazz Party hosted<br />

by Alex Pangman and her Alleycates. $150<br />

ticket (advance tickets only) includes buffet<br />

from 7:30pm music from 8pm and sparkling<br />

wine at 11:45. ALSO Dining Room - Dec 11<br />

8pm JAZZFM.91 Sound of Jazz Concert Series:<br />

Matt Dusk’s Old School Yule $45 reservations<br />

recommended.<br />

Only Café, The<br />

972 Danforth Ave. 416-463-7843<br />

theonlycafe.com (full schedule)<br />

All shows: 8pm unless otherwise indicated.<br />

Paintbox Bistro<br />

555 Dundas St. E. 647-748-0555<br />

paintboxbistro.ca (full schedule)<br />

Pilot Tavern, The<br />

22 Cumberland Ave. 416-9<strong>23</strong>-5716<br />

thepilot.ca<br />

All shows: 3:30pm. No cover.<br />

Every Sat 3pm Saturday Jazz.<br />

Dec 2 Alex Dean Quartet. Dec 9 Jake Koffman<br />

Quartet. Dec 16 Sugar Daddies Sextet.<br />

Dec <strong>23</strong> Norman Marshall Villeneuve Quintet.<br />

Dec 30 Adrean Farrugia Quartet.<br />

Poetry Jazz Café<br />

224 Augusta Ave. 416-599-5299<br />

poetryjazzcafe.com (full schedule)<br />

Reposado Bar & Lounge<br />

136 Ossington Ave. 416-532-6474<br />

reposadobar.com (full schedule)<br />

66 | <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


Reservoir Lounge, The<br />

52 Wellington St. E. 416-955-0887<br />

reservoirlounge.com (full schedule). Every<br />

Tue, 8:45pm Tyler Yarema and his Rhythm.<br />

Every Wed 9pm The Digs. Every Thursday<br />

9:45pm Mary McKay. Every Fri 9:45pm Dee<br />

Dee and the Dirty Martinis. Every Sat 9:45pm<br />

Tyler Yarema and his Rhythm. Dec 7 pm Alex<br />

Pangman.<br />

Rex Hotel Jazz & Blues Bar, The<br />

194 Queen St. W. 416-598-2475<br />

therex.ca (full schedule)<br />

Call for cover charge info.<br />

Every Wed 6:30pm Alex Coleman’s A/C<br />

Unit. Every Thu 6:30pm Worst Pop Band<br />

Ever. Every Fri 4pm Hogtown Syncopators;<br />

6:30pm Bugaloo Squad. Every Sat 12noon<br />

The Sinners Choir.<br />

Dec 1 9:45pm Chuck Jackson. Dec 2 3:30pm<br />

Neon Eagle;7pm Brecker Brothers; 9:45pm<br />

Alex & Her Alleycats. Dec 3 Club Django; 7pm<br />

Kelzkonnection; 9:30pm Ethiojazz. Dec 4<br />

& 11 6:30pm University of Toronto Student<br />

Jazz Ensembles; Dec 4 9:30pm Off the Road<br />

Big Band. Dec 5 6:30pm Chris Gale Quartet;<br />

9:30pm Edmar Colon. Dec 6 9:30 Uncertainty<br />

Principle. Dec 7 9:30pm Lauren Falls Five.<br />

Dec 8 9:45pm Bernie Senensky. Dec 9<br />

7pm Brecker Brothers; 9:45pm Anti-Gravity<br />

Machine. Dec 10 & 17 12noon Excelsior<br />

Dixieland Jazz; 7pm Teri Parker Trio. Dec 10<br />

9:30pm Barry Romberg. Dec 11 9:30pm Jake<br />

Wilkinson’s Be-Bop Christmas. Dec 12 & 19<br />

6:30pm Brian de Lima Trio. Dec 12 9:30pm<br />

Classic Rex Jam. Dec 13 & 14 9:30pm Alec<br />

Dean Jazz Orchestra. Dec 15 9:45pm Walter<br />

Kemp 3oh Plus. Dec 16 3:30pm Chris<br />

Hunt Tentet + 2; 7pm Alec Trent’s Triple Bari;<br />

9:45pm Dave Young Quintet. Dec 17 9:30pm<br />

Zimzum. Dec 18 6:30pm Peter Hill Quintet.<br />

Dec 18 & 19 9:30pm Jabfung. Dec 20<br />

9:30pm Mike Field Quintet. Dec 21 9:30pm<br />

Freeman Dre. Dec 22 9:45pm Bob Brough<br />

Quartet. Dec <strong>23</strong> 3:30pm Jerome Godboo;<br />

7pm Alec Trent’s Triple Bari; 9:45pm Russ<br />

Nolan. Dec 26 8pm The Sinners Choir. Dec 27<br />

9:30pm Mr. Marbelsz. Dec 28 9:30pm Frank<br />

Botos. Dec 29 9:45pm Kiki Misumi Sextet.<br />

Dec 30 3:30pm Laura Hubert Band; 7pm<br />

Alec Trent’s Triple Bari; 9:45pm Justin Bacchus<br />

Xmas. Dec 31 9:30pm New Year’s<br />

Grooveyard.<br />

Salty Dog Bar & Grill, The<br />

1980 Queen St. E. 416-849-5064<br />

thesaltydog.ca (full schedule)<br />

Every Tue 7-10pm Jazz Night. Every<br />

Thu 8:30pm Karaoke. Every Fri 9:30pm<br />

Blues Jam - house band with weekly featured<br />

guest.<br />

Sauce on Danforth<br />

1376 Danforth Ave. 647-748-1376<br />

sauceondanforth.com<br />

All shows: No cover.<br />

Every Mon 9pm Funky Mondays. Every<br />

Tue 6pm Julian Fauth Plays Barrel-House<br />

Jazz. Every Thursday 8pm An Evening of<br />

Music with Steven Koven and Artie Roth.<br />

Every Sat 4pm Saturday Matinees.<br />

Tranzac<br />

292 Brunswick Ave. 416-9<strong>23</strong>-8137<br />

tranzac.org<br />

3-4 shows daily, various styles, in four different<br />

performance spaces. Mostly PWYC.<br />

Every Mon 10pm Open Mic Mondays. Every<br />

Tuesday 8pm Annex Ukelele Jam Every<br />

Thursday 7:30pm Bluegrass Thursdays<br />

Every Fri 5pm The Friends of Hugh Oliver<br />

(folk). Every Sunday 7pm The Rhythmicaturgically<br />

Syncopated Social Hour Jazz Jam.<br />

Dec 10 10pm The Lina Allemano Four. Dec 12<br />

10 pm Michael Davidson and guests. Dec 19<br />

10pm The Ken McDonald Quartet. Dec 26<br />

10pm Nick Fraser presents. Dec 27 10pm<br />

Galas and Fundraisers<br />

●●Dec 15 7:30: Church of St. Peter and St.<br />

Simon-the-Apostle. A fundraiser presenting<br />

good music and a reading of A Child’s Christmas<br />

in Wales by Dylan Thomas featuring radio<br />

personality Tom Allen and Canadian actress<br />

Jayne Lewis. Save room for dessert. Refreshments<br />

included at intermission. All proceeds<br />

will benefit the refugee projects of the<br />

church. 525 Bloor St. E. 416-9<strong>23</strong>- 8714. $20.<br />

GALA for<br />

MENTAL HEALTH<br />

LLOYD ROBERTSON,<br />

LUBA GOY & FRIENDS<br />

Feb 1, <strong>2018</strong><br />

WE ALL HAVE A STORY<br />

905.787.8811<br />

●●Feb 1 7:30: High Notes Avante. High Notes<br />

Gala for Mental Health. Join Luba Goy, Lloyd<br />

Robertson, Michael Landsberg, Orlando Da<br />

Silva, Giles Tomkins and others for this exciting<br />

evening in support of mental health initiatives.<br />

Richmond Hill Centre for the Performing<br />

Arts, 102868 Yonge St., Richmond Hill. Tickets<br />

at 905-787-8811 or rhcentre.ca. $10-$65.<br />

Lectures, Salons and Symposia<br />

●●Dec 3 2:00: Toronto Opera Club. Love at<br />

First Sight! Guest Speaker: Iain Scott. Room<br />

330, Faculty of Music, Edward Johnson Bldg.,<br />

80 Queen’s Park Cr. W. 416-924-3940. $10.<br />

●●Dec 7 7:30: Darchei Noam Synagogue. Four<br />

Jewish Musical Titans (Part 4: George Szell).<br />

Rick Phillips examines four master musicians<br />

and their music. A mix of lecture, music, and<br />

discussion. 864 Sheppard Ave. W. 416-638-<br />

4783. $20 per lecture.<br />

●●Dec 10 2:00-5:00: Classical Music Club<br />

Toronto. Beethoven 9. In some cultures,<br />

<strong>December</strong> is a month where Beethoven’s<br />

Ninth Symphony is performed as often as Handel’s<br />

Messiah is in the English-speaking world.<br />

To celebrate this occasion, we will be examining<br />

recent recordings of this epic work. 416-<br />

898-2549. Annual membership: $25(regular);<br />

Bellweather 4. Dec 29 10pm The Ryan Driver<br />

Sextet. Dec 30 8pm The Special Interest<br />

Group. Jan 2 10pm Peripheral Vision. Jan 6<br />

10om Heavy Ethics Jan 7 7:30pm Harrington.<br />

Jan 9 10pm Michael Davidson and guests.<br />

Jan 12 7:30pm Tanya Gill Quartet; 10pm Harley<br />

Card. Jan 14 10pm The Lina Allemano<br />

Four. Jan 16 10pm The Ken McDonald Quartet.<br />

Jan 18 10pm The Special Interest Group.<br />

Jan 21 7:30pm Diane Roblin with guests.<br />

E. The ETCeteras<br />

$10(sr/st). Free for first-time visitors. Donations<br />

accepted for refreshments.<br />

●●Jan. 7 5:00: St. Olave’s Church. Giles<br />

Bryant: Cathedral and Parish Music. Epiphany<br />

Choral Evensong at 4pm followed by Epiphany<br />

Tea. Dr. Giles Bryant traces Anglican church<br />

music from just before the Prayer Book to the<br />

main forms now used in cathedrals and parish<br />

churches. His illustrated talk at the piano<br />

will focus on Tallis, Purcell, Maurice Greene,<br />

S.S. Wesley, Stanford, Howells and their parish<br />

contemporaries. St. Olave’s Church, Bloor<br />

and Windermere. Contributions appreciated.<br />

Information at 416-769-5686 or stolaves.ca.<br />

●●Jan 14 2:00-5:00: Classical Music Club<br />

Toronto. Romantic Cello Concertos. The lush<br />

tone of the cello has provided the inspiration<br />

for a number of 19th-century masterworks for<br />

this instrument combined with the growing<br />

virtuosity of the symphony orchestra. To commemorate<br />

this musical partnership, we will be<br />

examining recent audio and video recordings.<br />

416-898-2549. Annual membership: $25(regular);<br />

$10(sr/st). Free for first-time visitors.<br />

Donations accepted for refreshments.<br />

10pm Makeshift Island (Rebecca Hennesey).<br />

Jan <strong>23</strong> 7:30pm Fergus Hambleton and guests.<br />

Jan 24 10pm Bellweather 4. Jan 26 10pm<br />

The Ryan Driver Sextet. Jan 28 3pm Michael<br />

Laderoute; 5pm Steve Paul Simms and<br />

guests; 10pm Chris Adriaanse. Jan 30 10pm<br />

Nick Fraser Presents. Feb 2 10pm Heavy Ethics.<br />

Feb 4 7:30pm Harrington. Feb 6 10pm<br />

Peripheral Vision.<br />

●●Jan <strong>23</strong> 7:00: University of Toronto Faculty of<br />

Music. Composers’ Forum with Nicole Lizée. Walter<br />

Hall, 80 Queen’s Park Cr. 416-408-0208. Free.<br />

●●Jan 24 7:00: Canadian Opera Company.<br />

Opera Insights: Baritone Bravado. Join Head<br />

of the COC Ensemble Studio Liz Upchurch and<br />

singers Samuel Chan, Bruno Roy and Neil Craighead<br />

as they explore the baritone voice in all its<br />

fascinating facets. Education Centre, Four Seasons<br />

Centre for the Performing Arts, 145 Queen<br />

St. W. Tickets at coc.ca/OperaInsights or 416-<br />

363-8<strong>23</strong>1. Registration opens Jan 9. Free.<br />

●●Jan 25 7:00: Tafelmusik. The Listening Club:<br />

The Battle for Good Taste. The desire to possess<br />

good taste in music was an occupation<br />

of the 18th century, highlighted by an ongoing<br />

battle between the French and the Italians.<br />

Join BBC Radio host Dr. Hannah French and<br />

Tafelmusik violinist Christopher Verrette<br />

who examine both sides of this debate. Trinity-St.<br />

Paul’s Centre, 427 Bloor St. W. 416-964-<br />

6337. $25.<br />

●●Jan 31 7:00: Canadian Opera Company.<br />

Opera Talks: The Trials of Teen Love – Rigoletto.<br />

Join Wayne Gooding in a multi-media<br />

YIP’S<br />

MUSIC<br />

FESTIVAL<br />

COMPETITION<br />

Celebrating Today’s Talent<br />

Nurturing Tomorrow’s Stars<br />

$10,000 in trophies and prizes!<br />

Piano Violin<br />

Voice Musical Theatre<br />

Erhu Guzheng<br />

Traditional Chinese Music Ensemble<br />

Chamber Music<br />

Crystal Award Competition<br />

<strong>2018</strong> Competition Dates (Saturdays & Sundays):<br />

Apr 21/22, 28/29, May 5/6<br />

Application Deadline:<br />

Tues, Feb 20, <strong>2018</strong><br />

ymf.yips.com (905) 948-YIPS (9477) x2211<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> | 67


exploration of Rigoletto and explore the way<br />

a timeless tale plays out through Verdi’s brilliant<br />

bel canto music. Toronto Public Library,<br />

Don Mills, 888 Lawrence Ave. E. Register by<br />

calling the Don Mills branch of the Toronto<br />

Public Library at 416-395-5710. Free.<br />

Master Classes<br />

●●Jan 7 2:30: Li Delun Music Foundation &<br />

Steinway Piano Gallery. Piano Master Class<br />

and Conversation by Kum Sing Lee, jury of<br />

International Competitions Chopin (Warsaw).<br />

2651 John St., Markham. canadaticketbox.<br />

com, 905-946-8040. $20, $15.<br />

●●Jan 24 10am-12pm. University of Toronto<br />

Faculty of Music. Composition Master Classes<br />

with Nicole Lizée. Walter Hall, 80 Queen’s Park<br />

Cr. 416-408-0208. Free. Also Jan 26.<br />

Screenings<br />

●●Dec 10 4:00: Toronto Jewish Film Society/Royal<br />

Conservatory of Music. The Concert.<br />

Film about Bolshoi conductor Andrei<br />

Simoniovich Filipov’s journey from disaster<br />

to triumph. Guest speaker: Jordan Klapman,<br />

musicologist. Al Green Theatre, 750 Spadina<br />

Ave. 416-924-6211 x606. $15; $10(18-35). In<br />

French and Russian with English subtitles.<br />

Also 7:30.<br />

●●Jan 30 6:30: Royal Conservatory. Strad<br />

Style. Self-described “nobody” Danny Houck<br />

pours all his time and energy into his obsession:<br />

violins. When Danny befriends violin virtuoso<br />

Razvan Stoica on Facebook, he makes a<br />

rash fanboy promise to create a perfect replica<br />

E. The ETCeteras<br />

of a world-famous violin – Guarneri’s Il Cannone<br />

– for Stoica’s next concert. Jonathan<br />

Crow, concertmaster of the Toronto Symphony<br />

Orchestra, will bring along his own Guarneri<br />

and participate in a post-show Q&A. Hot Docs<br />

Ted Rogers Cinema, 506 Bloor St. W. Tickets at<br />

the door or at hotdocscinema.ca. $17.<br />

Singalongs, Jams, Circles<br />

●●Dec 3 2:30-5:00 Choral Bonanza Team.<br />

Messiah Sing-along. Handel: Messiah (Christmas<br />

Portion). Dr. Richard Heinzle, conductor;<br />

Sapphire Navaratnarajah, accompanist. Richmond<br />

Hill Presbyterian Church, 10066 Yonge<br />

St., Richmond Hill. 416-568-9838. Choral<br />

singers participation fee: $25. Suggested<br />

donation for concert: $10. Concert is at<br />

7:00. Choral singers are asked to pre-register<br />

at ChoralBonanza@gmail.com if possible<br />

(required if you need a score: Watkins Shaw<br />

ed.). Soloists and orchestra musicians: no fee,<br />

please email a short resume to ChoralBonanza@gmail.com.<br />

●●Dec 20 7:30: Toronto Shape Note Singing<br />

Community. Monthly Sacred Harp Singing.<br />

Everyone is welcome, no experience necessary.<br />

There are songbooks to borrow. Music<br />

room, Bloor Street United Church, 300 Bloor<br />

St. W. 647-838-8764. PWYC donation. 7:00:<br />

Short introductory workshop.<br />

●●Jan 19 7:30-10:00: Toronto Recorder Players<br />

Society. Mount Pleasant Road Baptist<br />

Church, 527 Mt. Pleasant Rd. Bring your<br />

recorders and music stand. 416-779-5750.<br />

Non-members $15.<br />

●●Jan 21 2:00-4:30: CAMMAC Toronto Region.<br />

Reading for Singers and Instrumentalists.<br />

Kodály’s Budávari Te Deum. Eszter Horvath,<br />

conductor. Christ Church Deer Park, 1570 Yonge<br />

St. 416-781-4745. $10; $6(members).<br />

Spoken Word, Performance Art<br />

●●Dec 3 7:00: Runnymede United Church.<br />

Annual Reading of Charles Dickens’ A Christmas<br />

Carol. Performed by Ben Heppner, Gill Deacon,<br />

Susan Ormiston, RH Thomson, Nancy Palk,<br />

Lisa Horner, and Jeff Douglas. 432 Runnymede<br />

Rd. runnymedeunited.org. $25.<br />

Tours<br />

●●Jan 14 10:30am: Canadian Opera Company.<br />

90-Minute Tour of the Four Seasons<br />

Centre. Led by a trained docent. Includes<br />

information and access to the Isadore and<br />

Rosalie Sharp City Room, the Richard Bradshaw<br />

Amphitheatre and R. Fraser Elliott Hall,<br />

as well as backstage areas such as the wig<br />

rooms and dressing rooms, the orchestra<br />

pit, and other spaces that only a stage door<br />

pass could unlock. Four Seasons Centre for<br />

the Performing Arts, 145 Queen St. W. 416-<br />

363-8<strong>23</strong>1. coc.ca. $20(adults); $15(sr/st). Also<br />

Jan 21 & 28.<br />

Workshops<br />

●●Dec 2 10am-5pm: International Resource<br />

Centre for Performing Artists. From Rags<br />

to Reasonable! Financial Management /<br />

Planning for Artists with Chris Enns. Operatic<br />

tenor and certified financial planner<br />

Chris Enns discusses the basics of financial<br />

management, with such topics as budgeting<br />

with variable incomes (morning); and speaks<br />

about financial planning (afternoon). Canadian<br />

Music Centre, 20 St. Joseph St. 416-<br />

362-1422. $75.<br />

●●Dec 3 1:30-4:00: Toronto Early Music Players<br />

Organization. Workshop coached by<br />

recorder player Vincent Lauzer. Armour<br />

Heights Community Centre, 2140 Avenue Rd.<br />

Bring your early instruments and a music<br />

stand. $20. 416-779-5750. tempotoronto.net.<br />

●●Dec 3 2:30-5:00: International Resource<br />

Centre for Performing Artists. Artists New<br />

to Canada. Performer/composer Shahriyar<br />

Jamshidi, a recent newcomer to Canada;<br />

and musician, writer and teacher Marcelo<br />

Puente, who came to Toronto from Chile in<br />

1974, share their experiences of establishing<br />

music careers in this country, providing guidance<br />

and suggestions for newcomer artists<br />

facing the same challenges. 918 Bathurst St.<br />

416-362-1422. Free.<br />

●●Jan 14 1:30-4:00: Toronto Early Music Players<br />

Organization. Workshop coached by viol<br />

player Joelle Morton. Armour Heights Community<br />

Centre, 2140 Avenue Rd. Bring your<br />

early instruments and a music stand. 416-779-<br />

5750. tempotoronto.net. $20.<br />

●●Feb 4 1:30-4:00: Toronto Early Music<br />

Players Organization. Workshop coached<br />

by recorder player Colin Savage. Armour<br />

Heights Community Centre, 2140 Avenue Rd.<br />

Bring your early instruments and a music<br />

stand. 416-779-5750. tempotoronto.net. $20.<br />

TORONTO SUMMER MUSIC<br />

COMMUNITY<br />

ACADEMY<br />

July 30-August 4<br />

Attention adult amateur musicians! Join<br />

the artists of the Toronto Summer Music<br />

Festival for a week of music making and fun.<br />

Choose from three programs:<br />

Chamber Music<br />

Piano Masterclass with Angela Cheng<br />

Chamber Choir<br />

For application information, visit<br />

torontosummermusic.com<br />

68 | <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


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AUDITIONS & EMPLOYMENT<br />

OPPORTUNITIES<br />

AUDITION for VIVA! Youth Singers of<br />

Toronto. Five choirs from age 4 through<br />

adults. Inclusion program for special<br />

needs. Also, NON-AUDITIONED - VIVA!<br />

Community Choir. For info: Kathryn at<br />

info@vivayouthsingers.com or www.<br />

vivayouthsingers.com. Audition Date:<br />

Saturday, <strong>January</strong> 6. Audition Fee $25.<br />

Available pro bono positions with<br />

the KINDRED SPIRITS ORCHESTRA: Oboe,<br />

Horn, Trumpet, Bass Trombone, sectional<br />

Violins, Violas, Violoncellos and Contrabasses.<br />

The KSO is an auditioned-based civic orchestra<br />

in residence at Flato Markham Theatre.<br />

For information, visit KSOchestra.ca or<br />

e-mail GM@KSOrchestra.ca.<br />

COUNTERPOINT COMMUNITY ORCHESTRA<br />

– now in our 33 rd season. We invite volunteer<br />

musicians in all sections to play with us at Monday<br />

evening rehearsals. Our next concerts are on<br />

<strong>December</strong> 9, March 24, and June 9. Contact<br />

info@ccorchestra.org. www.ccorchestra.org.<br />

PIANO ACCOMPANIST REQUIRED: The<br />

Grace Notes is an established 13 member SSA<br />

singing group that performs in retirement<br />

homes and long-term care facilities. We all<br />

donate our time and gifts to the group. The<br />

group plays a wide variety of music - gospel,<br />

jazz, fiddling, show tunes, folk, etc. The piano<br />

parts are interesting and challenging. We<br />

practice twice a month on Friday mornings<br />

and perform once a month on Wednesday<br />

afternoons. We carry two accompanists; the<br />

duties are split. It’s fun! Contact Steve Prime<br />

at primestephen@gmail.com or 647-524-7331<br />

PLAYERS NEEDED for children’s concert<br />

band program at St. Albans Boys and<br />

Girls Club. Age 9+. All levels welcome.<br />

Wednesdays from 6-7:30. $180 for 12 week<br />

session. Please contact Michelle Clarke for<br />

more info 416-534-8461. stalbansclub.ca/<br />

st-albans-band<br />

THE EAST YORK CONCERT BAND has<br />

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FLUTE, PIANO, THEORY LESSONS. RCM<br />

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SERVICES<br />

ACCOUNTING AND INCOME TAX SERVICE<br />

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CD LINER NOTES, PROMO MATERIAL,<br />

CONCERT PROGRAMS, LIBRETTI, WEB SITE<br />

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and editing for correct spelling and grammar,<br />

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VENUES AVAILABLE / WANTED<br />

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thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> 1, <strong>2017</strong> - February 7, <strong>2018</strong> | 69


REMEMBERING<br />

Celebrating<br />

Cathy<br />

Elliott<br />

Composer, Writer, Director, Performer, Teacher<br />

June 5, 1957 to October 15, <strong>2017</strong><br />

I<br />

first met Cathy Elliott back in the early summer of<br />

2004 when I stage managed her in an experimental<br />

musical production at the Toronto Fringe Festival.<br />

The days were long and intense, yet Cathy’s spirit shone<br />

through all of the stress with her laughter-infused<br />

genuine warmth and caring for everyone in the company.<br />

More recently, when I started to adapt and direct Shakespeare plays<br />

for the DAREArts Foundation’s summer camps our paths crossed<br />

again, as Cathy wore many hats for DA in marketing and publicity as<br />

well as her now almost legendary work with the foundation in First<br />

Nations communities in Northern Ontario. One memorable summer<br />

she came to our rescue when the artist in charge of teaching our<br />

campers about set design was called away at the last minute. Cathy<br />

was there, ideas and plans ready to implement, energy to burn and to<br />

spare, to make everything work out well.<br />

In mid-October of this year I heard with delight that she had<br />

just completed a very successful first workshop of the new musical<br />

Starlight Tours at Sheridan College, and Facebook was full of glowing<br />

posts from the participants about the inspiration of working with<br />

her. Created by Cathy with Leslie Arden, this musical, like a lot of her<br />

most recent work, combined two central themes in her life – her brilliant<br />

talent as a musical theatre creator and her desire to honour and<br />

share her heritage as an Indigenous artist and proud member of the<br />

Mi’kmaq nation.<br />

The next day, October 16, I was shocked to hear that she was gone,<br />

killed the night before by a car while walking near her home in<br />

Alliston, Ontario. This was even more of a shock since her career was<br />

just beginning to soar, with her acclaimed performance this year in<br />

Corey Payette’s new musical about the residential schools, Children<br />

of God, at Urban Ink in Vancouver and at the National Arts Centre<br />

in Ottawa. There was also the successful workshopping of Starlight<br />

Tours, her recent one-woman musical Moving Day, and another<br />

new musical very close to her heart, Lonecloud, about to begin its<br />

public journey at Native Earth Performing Arts’ Weesageechak Festival<br />

this week.<br />

This past Sunday, November 19, there was a beautiful celebration<br />

of Cathy organized by her partner, Leslie Arden, and Native Earth,<br />

at their performance space at Daniel’s Spectrum in Regent Park. It<br />

was an amazing evening, not only moving but joyous, full of love and<br />

laughter, many stories from her friends and family, and performances<br />

from her musicals.<br />

It was also a showcase of her work over the years: several songs from<br />

The Talking Stick commissioned by the Charlottetown Festival in 2011,<br />

the first all-Indigenous musical performed there; a sweet and moving<br />

solo from Silas Marner sung by the ageless Glynis Ranney; scenes from<br />

Lonecloud featuring Herbie Barnes in the title role of the Mi’kmaq<br />

medicine man who performed in Wild West shows; and excerpts from<br />

Fireweeds: Women of the Yukon from 1993, the musical she researched<br />

while performing as Diamond Tooth Gertie in the Yukon. The songs<br />

from this musical were feminist and galvanizing – why isn’t this a<br />

more widely known classic of Canadian musical theatre? The evening<br />

wrapped up with a magical rendition of “Stories Have Souls” from<br />

the in-progress Lonecloud sung by Arden, and then Cathy herself in a<br />

recorded version of From the Heart from The Talking Stick, to a final<br />

video photo montage (created by Michael Morey).<br />

These last two songs can be seen as theme songs for Cathy,<br />

combining as they do the use of music to tell stories, the content of<br />

those stories being rooted in her Indigenous heritage and her desire<br />

to explore and share that heritage with the world – and, even if those<br />

stories begin in darkness like Starlight Tours, always looking for<br />

messages of love and hope.<br />

These goals seem to have really begun when Cathy was the first<br />

Indigenous artist invited to join the charitable foundation DAREarts,<br />

as they headed up north to Webequie for their first time working with<br />

Indigenous youth, using arts, story and song to give confidence and<br />

inspire leadership. This was a partnership with Cathy that continued<br />

for ten years, only stopped by her passing, and would include her<br />

directing a documentary film about the experience, Fill My Hollow<br />

Bones, narrated by Graham Greene.<br />

Marilyn Field, founder and director of DAREArts, has spoken about<br />

how that first trip for Cathy “was the beginning of her embracing<br />

and finding her Indigenous self,” that she seemed to find “her voice<br />

coming from deep inside herself.” Laura Mackinnon, lead teacher for<br />

DAREArts, who worked with Cathy for five years travelling all over<br />

the remote areas of the North (even to Tuktoyaktuk in the Arctic),<br />

put into words what many are feeling: “She taught me so much about<br />

Indigenous culture, about artistic generosity, storytelling and the<br />

power of a limitless imagination.”<br />

Cathy leaves an immense legacy that we are lucky to have.<br />

Sheridan College has established a Cathy Elliott Memorial<br />

Scholarship for Indigenous students: Sheridancollege.ca/giving-tosheridan/ways-to-give/memorial-or-tribute-giving/cathy-elliottmemorial-scholarship.aspx;<br />

and DAREArts has created the Cathy<br />

Elliott Fund to Empower Indigenous Youth – darearts.com.<br />

–Jennifer Parr<br />

70 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


<strong>December</strong>'s Child<br />

Jane Archibald<br />

MJ BUELL<br />

WE ARE ALL MUSIC’S CHILDREN<br />

Born in Truro, Nova Scotia, soprano Jane Archibald’s <strong>2017</strong>/18 season<br />

includes three productions with the Canadian Opera Company, as<br />

well as Carmina Burana with the Joven Orquesta Nacional d’Espana<br />

in Madrid and Rinaldo with the English Concert. Recent engagements<br />

have taken her to major opera houses in Zurich, Paris, Milan, Berlin,<br />

London and the Metropolitan Opera.<br />

What’s your earliest memory of music? I imagine it must have been<br />

hearing singing, as all parents sing to their babies, but I don’t recall<br />

a specific moment. My father played the piano daily, and I imagine I<br />

heard that even in utero!<br />

What did your parents do? My father was a physician (GP). My<br />

mother worked for the government before and after we were born,<br />

and was a homemaker for 15 years during our childhood.<br />

Musicians in your family? My father probably should have been<br />

a musician – he was a talented amateur jazz pianist and it gave him<br />

great joy to play. My younger brother and sister both played in the<br />

school band. My mother doesn’t consider herself musical, but she is<br />

very artistic and creative.<br />

Your first recollection of yourself making music? Singing to myself!<br />

I took piano lessons and group cello lessons for a few years and played<br />

trumpet in the school band. I never progressed beyond a beginner<br />

level of playing in any of those instruments. My favourite of the three<br />

was trumpet!<br />

Jane Archibald lives in Halifax, Nova Scotia, with her husband<br />

(tenor Kurt Streit), her children and multiple dust-bunnies.<br />

Beyond music, some of her other hobbies include reading,<br />

bargain hunting, baking, sleeping-in and DIY projects.<br />

A first music teacher? My first music teacher was my school music<br />

teacher, Mary Shephard. She was intense and I adored her classes.<br />

Every spring, when the local music festival took place, all other classes<br />

took a decidedly second seat to preparing to compete in the local<br />

festival – it was a point of pride to win first place.<br />

Early experiences of making music with other people? I started<br />

taking solo voice lessons at age 11 and I loved that (obviously!!). But<br />

most of my time was actually spent making music in groups, which<br />

was very fulfilling. I played in the school band in elementary school<br />

and junior high (trumpet) and I sang in every choir around; I was in<br />

a nationally recognized girls’ choir called the First Baptist Girls’ Choir<br />

which exposed me to lots of choral works, Bach being a particular<br />

favourite. I also performed in school musicals in junior high and<br />

high school. All that kept me very busy and mostly very happy and<br />

engaged. It taught me so many life lessons and prepared me extremely<br />

well for my future career.<br />

What would you say to parents hoping their young children will<br />

grow up to love and make music? Encourage it, however it comes!<br />

First off, turn on the radio and sing around the house. Buy tickets to<br />

live events instead of – or in addition to – another toy. Then help them<br />

find an outlet to make music, especially in a group (choir/orchestra/<br />

band.) It’s such a thrilling experience and truly teaches so many<br />

important life skills, in addition to the sheer joy they will feel when<br />

they play/sing. If they continue to want to pursue it on a serious level<br />

as a soloist, they will let you know. You can use those community<br />

contacts you’ve made to help you navigate finding teachers and<br />

opportunities.<br />

Don’t miss our full-length interview<br />

with Jane Archibald at thewholenote.com<br />

Jane Archibald at Diane’s Clams<br />

in Five Islands, Nova Scotia.<br />

the gift<br />

of music<br />

We grow up with an appetite for<br />

music when it’s a natural part of childhood.<br />

And while a music career is not<br />

for everyone, we all need music to enrich<br />

our lives.<br />

This season please give the gift of music to a young person:<br />

maybe tickets for a live performance; music classes; a good<br />

recording or a music store gift certificate. But you don’t have to<br />

spend money: play music and share the listening, make music<br />

and invite participation.<br />

Maybe most importantly, get them singing, or singing along<br />

– even if you think you cannot. Smile, take a deep breath, and<br />

sing together like there’s no tomorrow. And then, probably,<br />

there will be one.<br />

“My mother would sing to me after each bath (I still love<br />

baths); my eldest brother had a blues band and my father<br />

attempted to sing in church. It wasn’t amazing. But music was<br />

always playing in the house!” — Ambur Braid<br />

“There was never a time when I did not hear music. Hearing my<br />

parents sing every week in church, it was just a part of our life …”<br />

— Peter Mahon<br />

“ … playing in a rhythm band in our living room, organized<br />

as a neighbourhood project by my mother; singing and dancing<br />

with my young sister to the accompaniment of a wind-up Edison<br />

phonograph …” — John Beckwith<br />

“ … my dad playing some tunes on his violin – he would take out<br />

his violin and play from a book with old folk songs like Amazing<br />

Grace and Jeannie with the Light Brown Hair.” — Julia Wedman<br />

A new contest will appear in our February edition.<br />

CONGRATULATIONS TO OUR WINNERS!<br />

Jane Archibald will sing the role of Konstanze in The Abduction from the Seraglio<br />

(Die Entführung aus dem Serail) in the Canadian Opera Company’s brand new<br />

production (February 7 to 24, <strong>2018</strong>). Violence on the high seas, and human trafficking?<br />

Death threats? Xenophobia? No, not the news of the day: it’s Mozart.<br />

Konstanze and her maid Blonde are kidnapped by pirates and sold into slavery in<br />

Turkey, and the rest of this singspiel’s twists and turns might just be about how<br />

much we stand to learn when our cultural assumptions, and the things we think<br />

we know about ourselves and others, get shaken or stirred. Directed by Wajdi<br />

Mouawad and conducted by Johannes Debus, the cast includes Mauro Peter,<br />

Claire de Sévigné, Owen McCausland, Goran Jurić and Peter Lohmeyer.<br />

A pair of tickets each has been won by:<br />

RAHILA FAZILUDDIN, DORIS GRANT,<br />

DEBRA CHANDLER, JOAN MCGORMAN<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 71


DISCOVERIES | RECORDINGS REVIEWED<br />

DAVID OLDS<br />

Last month a CD of late works by Elliott<br />

Carter gave me occasion to muse about the<br />

brushes with greatness I have been privileged<br />

with, thanks to my relationship with<br />

New Music Concerts. A new CD – Complete<br />

George Crumb Edition <strong>Volume</strong> 18 (BRIDGE<br />

9476 bridgerecords.com) – gives me that<br />

opportunity once again. Although it seems<br />

more recent, I realize it has been more than<br />

a dozen years since George Crumb was<br />

last in Toronto as the guest of NMC. For several decades after NMC’s<br />

founding in 1971, a tradition developed that Crumb’s new works<br />

would receive their second performances in Toronto; in the case of<br />

the celebrated Idyll for the Misbegotten for amplified flute and three<br />

percussionists, dedicated to Robert Aitken, this city was the location<br />

of its world premiere. That tradition continued in 2003 when the<br />

composer’s daughter Ann Crumb sang the Canadian premiere of the<br />

recently composed …Unto the Hills, Songs of Sadness, Yearning and<br />

Innocence, with the New Music Concerts ensemble.<br />

On that occasion it was my great pleasure to spend several days<br />

in the company of the 74-year-old composer and his family. In the<br />

intervening years Crumb has not slowed down much, as this disc<br />

attests, with a new work from 2012 – The Yellow Moon of Andalusia,<br />

Spanish Songbook III for Mezzo-Soprano and Amplified Piano –<br />

and recently revised versions of 1979’s Celestial Mechanics, Cosmic<br />

Dances for Amplified Piano, Four Hands and Yesteryear, A Vocalise<br />

for Mezzo-Soprano, Amplified Piano and Percussion originally<br />

written in 2005. Central to the disc is a 2001 composition, Eine Kleine<br />

Mitternachtmusik, A Little Midnight Music, Ruminations on ‘Round<br />

Midnight by Thelonious Monk for Amplified Piano, a nine-movement<br />

tribute to both Monk and Mozart performed by Marcantonio Barone.<br />

Amplification is one of the key elements of Crumb’s music, not to<br />

make it louder per se, but to make audible some of the subtle effects<br />

that the performers are called upon to execute, be it whistle tones on<br />

a flute or plucked notes or pedalled washes of harmonics inside the<br />

piano. This is very much a part of the Mitternachtmusik, along with<br />

other Crumb signature sounds and techniques, from dramatic knocks<br />

on the piano’s frame to shimmering glissandi on the strings, gentle<br />

melodies juxtaposed with brash interjections – veritable explosions<br />

of sound – and vocalizations from the pianist. Crumb’s characteristically<br />

descriptive movement titles include Cobweb and Peaseblossom;<br />

Incantation; Golliwog Revisited (with a nod to Debussy) and Cadenza<br />

with Tolling Bells.<br />

There is another personal connection for me on this recording. The<br />

soprano in the two vocal works is Tony Arnold, who performed a<br />

stunning rendition of György Kurtág’s Kafka Fragments with violinist<br />

Movses Pogossian for New Music Concerts at Gallery 345 last season.<br />

Arnold is no stranger to Crumb’s music – she received a Grammy<br />

nomination for her performance of Ancient Voices of Children – and<br />

is in fact the dedicatee of Yesteryear. That title was inspired by a line<br />

from François Villon, “Mais où sont les neiges d’antan,” rendered most<br />

famously into English by Dante Gabriel Rosetti as “But where are the<br />

snows of yesteryear?,” a line declaimed and later whispered in the<br />

original archaic French toward the end of the 11-minute work. As the<br />

composer’s preface tells us, “the singer is vainly searching for her lost<br />

youth and beauty and laments their inevitable erosion by the relentless<br />

passage of time.” There is some ritual involved in the performance,<br />

as is often the case in Crumb’s music. In this instance, over the<br />

duration of the piece the singer moves between nine stations – spread<br />

around the concert hall in the original version but restricted to the<br />

stage in the 2013 revision.<br />

Both Yesteryear and The Yellow Moon of Andalusia are first recordings.<br />

In the latter, Crumb returns to the poetry of Federico García<br />

Lorca, which has been the inspiration for many of his works since the<br />

1960s, including the above-mentioned Ancient Voices of Children.<br />

While the earlier works used the original Spanish, here Crumb<br />

sets English translations of the poems. The comprehensive booklet<br />

includes both the originals and the translations. We have to thank<br />

Bridge Records for their thoroughness, not only in the preparation of<br />

this recording, which also includes the piano duo Quattro Mani and<br />

percussionists David Nelson and William Kerrigan, but for undertaking<br />

such an exhaustive catalogue of works by one of the unique<br />

voices of our time.<br />

I am pleased to note that this month we<br />

have reviews of four Analekta discs, and that<br />

they all feature contemporary (or at least<br />

20th-century in the case of André Mathieu)<br />

composers. I point this out because although<br />

this Quebec label is highly respected for its<br />

releases, for the most part they stick to more<br />

conventionally classical repertoire, even<br />

though some of their artists are renowned<br />

for their commitment to contemporary<br />

music. The Gryphon Trio has been a major “exception to this rule.”<br />

The Gryphon’s 19-title discography includes half a dozen Analekta<br />

releases of contemporary music, so kudos to them. The most recent<br />

of these is Into the Wonder (AN 2 9521 analekta.com), on which<br />

they join the Thunder Bay Symphony Orchestra under the direction<br />

of Arthur Post to perform the music of Jordan Pal. Described by<br />

Ludwig van Toronto as “the country’s current it-boy composer,” at 34,<br />

Pal is currently the RBC affiliate composer of the Toronto Symphony<br />

and his music has been performed by every significant orchestra<br />

across Canada.<br />

Starling – Triple concerto for violin, cello, piano and orchestra was<br />

commissioned by the Gryphon Trio and the Thunder Bay Symphony<br />

in 2013. It is a scintillating work in three movements, opening with an<br />

orchestral flourish that develops into a 15-minute flight, a “murmuration”<br />

with only brief moments of respite, mostly in the form of lyrical<br />

cadenzas from the solo trio. It is exhilarating how Pal sustains the<br />

momentum throughout. The Largo second movement begins in dark<br />

brass timbres that once again give way to gorgeously lyrical passages<br />

from the soloists, especially in the cello lines. But one word of caution,<br />

or at least a cautionary tale for me. Many years ago I discovered how<br />

close the sound of a cello can be to that of a saxophone when I first<br />

heard Kabalevsky’s Cello Concerto No.2. About midway through, the<br />

solo cello gives way to an alto saxophone cadenza so seamlessly that<br />

it takes several seconds for the ear to recognize what has just gone on.<br />

I had a similar experience when I first listened to Starling, which I<br />

did on small computer speakers. I was convinced I was hearing saxophone<br />

at several points in the recording and emailed Pal to ask if this<br />

was the case because I did not see any saxophonists credited in the list<br />

of orchestra members. He assured me that he had not included saxophone<br />

in the instrumentation and subsequent listening on proper<br />

speakers has confirmed this. That’s why I make a point of listening on<br />

my stereo system before passing judgement on discs – basic computer<br />

72 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


systems simply don’t provide accurate sound. The finale, Presto –<br />

Electric and Wild is simply that, a moto perpetuo once again reminiscent<br />

of a thousand starlings soaring and swirling together in the sky.<br />

I think I will let the composer speak for himself about the title<br />

piece, also commissioned by the TBSO, which at half an hour<br />

comprises just under half of the disc. “Into the Wonder celebrates the<br />

creative will of our universe. Evoking birth and death, creation and<br />

destruction, universal interconnectedness and the rapture of love, this<br />

piece seeks to capture the mystery, awe and wonder of life. Nature’s<br />

own great works of art are reminders that we are a part of this<br />

magnificent range of possibilities, that we are part of something much<br />

greater. This symphony celebrates all that is beautiful.” Is this simply<br />

the naïve vision of a young man couched in slick orchestral finery?<br />

This is certainly not “new music” in the sense of Carter or Crumb, but<br />

it is genuinely attractive, well-crafted and brilliantly executed. Does it<br />

succeed in its aspirations? I welcome you to judge for yourselves.<br />

Concert note: The Gryphon Trio joins the Kingston Symphony in<br />

a performance of Jeffrey Ryan’s triple concerto Equilateral (which<br />

they recorded with the Vancouver Symphony, Naxos 8.572765) on<br />

<strong>December</strong> 3 at the Isabel Bader Centre for Performing Arts, Kingston.<br />

On <strong>December</strong> 7 they return to Music Toronto to perform works by<br />

Haydn, Brahms and Marjan Mozetich. In the new year the trio heads<br />

to Western Canada for a number of concerts around British Columbia<br />

(<strong>January</strong> 19 through February 3), with a side trip to the Edmonton<br />

Chamber Music Society on <strong>January</strong> 26.<br />

I’m not normally drawn to so-called new<br />

age music, and I think that’s the category<br />

cellist Margaret Maria’s Carried by an Angel<br />

would most naturally fall into, yet I find<br />

myself drawn to it. In 2011 Margaret Maria<br />

Tobolowska left the position she held with<br />

the National Arts Centre Orchestra for a<br />

dozen years to pursue a solo career as cellist<br />

and chamber musician, composer and<br />

producer. I must confess that I was a little<br />

off-put by the statement on the cover of the promotional copy of the<br />

disc I received: “The beauty of the Archangel Raffaele, the bringer of<br />

healing, comfort and compassion has been brought to me. The music<br />

is full of energy that heals, sings, dances on the edge of winged spirits<br />

and brings such indescribable beauty in colours that shimmer and<br />

are full of love.” I am not a believer in angels, nor spiritual healing<br />

and at first did not think I should be the one to comment on the<br />

disc. But as a cellist, and lover of many diverse sorts of music, I gave<br />

it a try, and then another. It is ostensibly a solo cello disc, but more<br />

accurately, a solo cellist disc. There are many layerings of lines that<br />

together produce dense and lush melodic textures, a lovely wash of<br />

sound that is warm and immersive. The overall effect is orchestral,<br />

but in a unique way since all of the sounds are made by cello, with<br />

some computer processing, so there is a welcoming homophony. To<br />

me it is reminiscent of the music of Arvo Pärt if you imagine a piece<br />

like Spiegel im Spiegel on an orchestral scale. If you are curious, you<br />

can check our Margaret Maria’s website (enchanten.com) and her<br />

Enchanten channel on YouTube.<br />

Liszt’s Consolation No.3 and Hungarian Rhapsody No.2. I am a little<br />

surprised that the CD booklet, which includes an extended article<br />

about the repertoire by Jed Distler in three languages, contains not a<br />

word about this fabulous young performer. There is lots of information<br />

available on his own website however – georgelipianist.com –<br />

including such tidbits as he made his first public performance at the<br />

age of ten (2005) at Boston’s Steinway Hall, and in 2011 performed<br />

for president Obama at the White House in an evening honouring<br />

Chancellor Angela Merkel. If the disc is any indication, the concert<br />

will be a barnburner not to be missed by the cognoscenti. Now, if he<br />

could just find time to learn some new repertoire!<br />

Concert note: George Li’s recital takes place at Koerner Hall on<br />

February 4.<br />

We welcome your feedback and invite submissions. CDs and<br />

comments should be sent to: DISCoveries, WholeNote Media<br />

Inc., The Centre for Social Innovation, 503 – 720 Bathurst St.<br />

Toronto ON M5S 2R4. We also encourage you to visit our website<br />

thewholenote.com where you can find enhanced reviews in the<br />

Listening Room with audio samples, upcoming performance details<br />

and direct links to performers, composers and record labels.<br />

David Olds, DISCoveries Editor<br />

discoveries@thewholenote.com<br />

TAFELMUSIK MEDIA NEW RELEASE<br />

NOW AVAILABLE!<br />

TALES OF TWO CITIES:<br />

THE LEIPZIG-DAMASCUS<br />

COFFEE HOUSE<br />

CD & DVD<br />

tafelmusik.org<br />

“A phenomenon that was<br />

unexpected and powerful”<br />

– The Globe and Mail<br />

And a quick final note. 2015 Silver<br />

Medalist in the International Tchaikovsky<br />

Competition George Li has just released his<br />

inaugural CD, Live at the Mariinsky (Warner<br />

Classics 0190295812942). It was recorded in<br />

St. Petersburg one year ago and it features<br />

exactly the same repertoire the young superstar<br />

performed in Vancouver in October and<br />

will perform again in Toronto in February:<br />

piano sonatas by Haydn (Hob.XVI:32) and<br />

Chopin (Op.35), Rachmaninov’s Variations on a theme of Corelli, and<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 73


STRINGS<br />

ATTACHED<br />

TERRY ROBBINS<br />

Les Tendres Plaintes: Works by Jean-<br />

Philippe Rameau (Centaur CRC 3603) is<br />

the second solo CD from Canadian guitarist<br />

Sylvie Proulx; it’s a collection of transcriptions,<br />

mostly of dance movements, from<br />

harpsichord suites by the leading French<br />

Baroque composer.<br />

Three of the transcriptions, including the<br />

title track, are by Proulx, with the remaining<br />

12 being by other guitarists including John Duarte and Andrés Segovia.<br />

Given the inherent difficulties in transcribing harpsichord music for<br />

guitar – the reduced range, the unavoidability of playing fewer notes,<br />

and in particular the handling of ornamentation – everything here<br />

works extremely well, helped no doubt by the guitar’s greater capabilities<br />

for expressive playing.<br />

Proulx’s performances are clean and clearly defined, with a<br />

complete absence of extraneous noise and a lovely range of colour,<br />

tone and contrast. It’s terrific playing.<br />

There’s more excellent – and fascinating<br />

– guitar playing on François Campion<br />

Music for Baroque Guitar (Brilliant<br />

Classics 95276), with Bernhard Hofstötter<br />

playing a Baroque guitar attributed to<br />

Matteo Sellas of Venice, from about 1640.<br />

The colour booklet photos show an astonishingly<br />

beautiful instrument. It’s a fivecourse<br />

guitar, tuned the same as the top<br />

five strings of the modern guitar, with the top E a single string and<br />

the other four doubled, either in unison (A, G and B strings) or at the<br />

lower octave (D string).<br />

In 1705 Campion published one of the last five-course guitar<br />

books, and continued to add handwritten pieces to his own personal<br />

copy throughout his life. These manuscript pieces often exceeded<br />

the published works in size and difficulty, and form the basis of<br />

this recital.<br />

In the excellent booklet Hofstötter remarks on the instrument’s<br />

“…full-bodied and velvety dark sound which radically differs from<br />

comparable modern instruments” and is “round, fully resonating and<br />

at the same time subtle and fragile.” It’s exactly that. Hofstötter is a<br />

lutenist, and it shows; the sound here seems like a bridge between<br />

the lute and the classical guitar. It’s meticulously clean playing of<br />

some very intricate and technically demanding music – the Bach-like<br />

fugues and dance forms in particular – and a simply fascinating CD.<br />

Whenever you see a 2CD box set from the<br />

wonderful cello and piano duo of Matt<br />

Haimovitz and Christopher O’Riley you<br />

know you’re in for something special, and<br />

so it proves with Troika, their latest release<br />

of Russian music by Shostakovich, Prokofiev<br />

and Rachmaninoff on the Pentatone<br />

Oxingale Series label (PTC 5186 608).<br />

CD1 is devoted to Shostakovich and<br />

Prokofiev, with the former’s Waltz No.2 and Cello Sonata in D Minor<br />

Op.40 and the latter’s Troika from Lieutenant Kijé and Cello Sonata<br />

in C Major Op.119.<br />

CD2 has Rachmaninoff’s Cello Sonata in G Minor Op.19 and<br />

his famous Vocalise before the duo takes a customary left turn<br />

into contemporary Russian music with two of their own arrangements:<br />

Kukushka, by the singer-songwriter Victor Tsoi; and Pussy<br />

Riot’s Punk Prayer – Virgin Mary, Put Putin Away, complete with<br />

Haimovitz’s use of a glass slide on the strings and a crushed Styrofoam<br />

cup behind the bridge to achieve some grunge punk bass distortion!<br />

The duo’s arrangement of Lennon & McCartney’s Back in the<br />

U.S.S.R. completes a terrific set.<br />

Angèle Dubeau and La Pietà are back with<br />

another CD in their Portrait series, this time<br />

featuring music by Max Richter, who has<br />

been particularly active in film, theatre and<br />

television (Analekta AN 2 8745).<br />

Previous Portrait CDs featured Philip<br />

Glass, Arvo Pärt, John Adams and Ludovico<br />

Einaudi, and Dubeau says that the more she<br />

listens to composers gravitating around the<br />

minimalist movement the more she wants to interpret their music: “I<br />

enjoy the moments of introspection that these works bring.”<br />

Those moments are possibly the result of the lack of any real<br />

development: each of the 16 short pieces here (15 are less than five<br />

minutes) essentially sets a mood and keeps it, with little opportunity<br />

for anything other than “Here’s an idea…”<br />

Apart from the really lovely Mercy for solo violin and piano, and<br />

Winter II, recomposed by Richter from Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons, all<br />

tracks are arrangements by François Vallières and Dubeau of pieces<br />

from Richter’s solo albums Memoryhouse, The Blue Notebooks –<br />

Disconnect, Songs From Before and From Sleep, the films Waltz with<br />

Bashir and Perfect Sense, and the television scores for The Leftovers<br />

and Black Mirror-Nosedive.<br />

As always, playing and recording standards are absolutely topnotch.<br />

It’s essentially easy, pleasant – and, yes, introspective – listening<br />

that will be warmly welcomed by Dubeau’s many regular admirers.<br />

Violinist Nuné Melik makes an impressive<br />

recording debut with the CD Hidden<br />

Treasure: Rediscovered Music from<br />

Armenia with pianist Michel-Alexandres<br />

Broekaert (DOM Forlane FOR 16886<br />

domdisques.com).<br />

Born in Siberia of Armenian/Georgian/<br />

Jewish heritage, Melik moved to Montreal<br />

in 2009 and began to explore the music of<br />

composers from her upbringing; this recital<br />

program grew out of the resulting Hidden Treasure project. Judging by<br />

her playing here, it’s clearly been an emotional and rewarding journey.<br />

The central work on the disc is the Violin Sonata in B-flat Minor<br />

by Arno Babadjanian, written in Russia in 1959 and criticized as<br />

“formalist” by the Soviet authorities. Babadjanian’s close friend Dmitri<br />

Shostakovich thought highly of it, and his influence is clearly felt;<br />

there are hints of Prokofiev in the slow movement, too.<br />

Lovely short pieces by Komitas Vardapet, Aram Khachaturian and<br />

Alexander Spendiarian complete the disc. There’s passionate, rhapsodic<br />

playing from Melik and sympathetic support from Broekaert,<br />

who also has a short solo.<br />

Concert note: Nuné Melik and Michel-Alexandres Broekaert perform<br />

in Toronto on <strong>December</strong> 7 at the Yamaha Recital Space at Atelier<br />

Rosemarie Umetsu.<br />

J.S. Bach: Sonatas for Violin and<br />

Harpsichord BWV 1014-1019 with violinist<br />

Mark Fewer and Hank Knox (Leaf Music<br />

LM 216) is the third set of these works I’ve<br />

received in recent years, following the<br />

outstanding releases from Catherine Manson<br />

and Ton Koopman (harpsichord) and the<br />

Duo Concertante pairing of Nancy Dahn and<br />

Timothy Steeves (piano).<br />

74 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


Although there is accomplished playing here the harpsichord is<br />

prominent and rather heavy, and its lack of dynamic range tends<br />

to give the performances a somewhat mechanical feel, with the<br />

violin sounding more like a separate voice than an integrated<br />

partner. Koopman’s sound is much softer and much more attuned to<br />

Manson’s playing.<br />

There are occasional significant differences in interpretation too,<br />

notably in the Adagio of the F minor sonata, where Fewer – unlike<br />

Manson and Dahn – opts to separate and shorten the eighth note<br />

double-stops.<br />

As always, it comes down to personal taste. If you prefer these works<br />

strong and bright and with harpsichord there is much here you will<br />

enjoy, although Manson and Koopman and Duo Concertante both<br />

offer more sensitive readings.<br />

Concert notes (out of province): Hank Knox performs solo recitals<br />

at Salle Georges-Codling in Sorel-Tracy, QC on <strong>December</strong> 3 and at<br />

Redpath Hall in Montreal, QC on <strong>January</strong> 31.<br />

Fantasia is the 35th studio album from<br />

violin superstar Anne Akiko Meyers, this<br />

time with the Philharmonia Orchestra<br />

conducted by Kristjan Järvi (Avie Records<br />

AV<strong>23</strong>85). The title track is by the Finnish<br />

composer Einojuhani Rautavaara, written in<br />

2015 at the request of Meyers, who worked<br />

on it with the composer in Helsinki only<br />

months before his death in July 2016. Meyers<br />

describes it as “transcendent” and having “the feeling of an elegy with<br />

a very personal reflective mood.” It’s a lovely work that clearly has<br />

great emotional significance for her.<br />

The Violin Concerto No.1 Op.35 by Karol Szymanowski dates from<br />

1916, and was one of the first works to reflect the life-changing influence<br />

of his 1914 trips to North Africa and to Paris, where he met<br />

Debussy and Ravel. It’s a simply glorious single-movement work full<br />

of sensuous and exotic melody and lush orchestration, and with an<br />

extremely demanding solo part that rarely leaves the stratosphere.<br />

Ravel’s dazzling Tzigane, in the orchestral version, completes a<br />

simply outstanding CD.<br />

In the old LP days the Bruch and<br />

Mendelssohn Violin Concertos were<br />

frequent companions, and the tradition<br />

continues on a new CD from the Polishborn<br />

violinist Kinga Augustyn, with the<br />

Janáček Philharmonia Orchestra under<br />

Jakub Klecker (Centaur CRC 3585).<br />

The Bruch Concerto No.1 in G Minor has<br />

a lovely opening, with Augustyn displaying a big, bright tone. Tempos<br />

are never rushed, and there is beautiful orchestral support.<br />

The performance of the Mendelssohn Concerto in E Minor follows<br />

the same pattern, with unhurried tempos, accuracy in the details and<br />

some lovely orchestral moments. There’s sweetness and warmth in<br />

the playing, but never a hint of superficiality: these are thoughtful<br />

performances that bring delightful playing from all concerned.<br />

Massenet’s Meditation from Thaïs is the final track, and again it’s a<br />

performance that leans toward the understated – a sensitive, simple<br />

reading with great depth that makes for a very effective ending to an<br />

impressive CD.<br />

The outstanding German cellist Gabriel<br />

Schwabe is the soloist in the complete Saint-<br />

Saëns Works for Cello and Orchestra with<br />

the Malmö Symphony Orchestra under<br />

Marc Soustrot (Naxos 8.573737).<br />

The two Cello Concertos – No.1 in A Minor,<br />

Op.33 and No.2 in D Minor, Op.119 – are<br />

the major works here, although the lesserknown<br />

five-movement Suite in D Minor,<br />

Op.16bis from 1919 has much to recommend it. It was written for<br />

cello and piano and later orchestrated by the composer, as were the<br />

two other short works here: the Romance in F Major, Op.36 and the<br />

Allegro appassionato in B Minor, Op.43. Paul Vidal’s orchestration of<br />

The Swan from Carnival of the Animals completes the CD.<br />

With his great tone and terrific technique Schwabe easily negotiates<br />

the difficult challenges of the second concerto, with some particularly<br />

lovely playing in the simply beautiful central Andante sostenuto.<br />

There is fine orchestral support from Soustrot and the Malmö<br />

orchestra. All in all, an outstanding disc.<br />

There’s cello playing at the complete<br />

opposite end of the spectrum on Sweet<br />

Anxiety, the first solo CD from the<br />

American cellist Ashley Walters featuring<br />

new works for cello from 2002-2013 (populist<br />

records PR014 populistrecords.com).<br />

Walters says that she seeks “to challenge<br />

your perception of what the cello… is capable<br />

of,” and she certainly succeeds.<br />

Nicholas Deyoe provides two tracks: For Stephanie (on our wedding<br />

day) and the title track another anxiety, the latter drawing some<br />

astonishing playing from Walters. Luciano Berio’s Sequenza XIV is<br />

predominantly percussive; it’s heard here in a performing edition<br />

created by Walters.<br />

Wolfgang von Schweinitz’s Plainsound-Litany is a hypnotic<br />

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André Mathieu: Concerto No. 3<br />

Alain Lefèvre, JoAnn Falletta,<br />

Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra<br />

An inspired restoration of André<br />

Mathieu’s famous Concerto No. 3.<br />

with JoAnn Falletta and the Buffalo<br />

Philharmonic Orchestra. Spectacular!<br />

Crazy<br />

T. Patrick Carrabré<br />

T. Patrick Carrabré explores<br />

the edges of beauty - that place<br />

where darkness meets light and<br />

inspiration can lead to obsession.<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 75


sequence of precisely tuned double stops; Wadada Leo Smith’s<br />

Sweet Bay Magnolia with Berry Clusters includes improvisational<br />

sequences. Andrew McIntosh’s Another Secular Calvinist Creed<br />

provides a serene, contemplative end to the recital.<br />

Walters is simply brilliant throughout the disc, and the short<br />

printed examples of the scores (other than the Berio) give some idea of<br />

the challenges she faced.<br />

On Violin Muse the British violinist Madeleine Mitchell presents a<br />

program of world premiere recordings of works by British composers<br />

(Divine Art dda 25160).<br />

The major work here is the two-movement Violin Concerto “Soft<br />

Stillness” by Welsh composer Guto Pryderi Puw, commissioned by<br />

Mitchell and heard in a live BBC Radio recording from 2016. It’s an<br />

effective piece, with Mitchell accompanied by the BBC National<br />

Orchestra of Wales under Edwin Outwater.<br />

Mitchell is joined by Cerys Jones in Judith<br />

Weir’s delightful Atlantic Drift – Three<br />

pieces for two violins, based on Gaelic<br />

folk tunes.<br />

Pianist Nigel Clayton is the accompanist<br />

in the remaining works: Geoffrey Poole’s<br />

Rhapsody; David Matthews’ Romanza<br />

Op.119a; Sadie Harrison’s lovely Aurea Luce;<br />

Michael Berkeley’s Veilleuse; and Michael<br />

Nyman’s Taking it as Read.<br />

There’s excellent playing throughout by all concerned.<br />

Concert notes (out of province): Madeleine Mitchell performs<br />

Schoenberg's Phantasie with pianist Ian Pace in a free concert at the<br />

Performance Space, College Building, City University of London (UK)<br />

on <strong>December</strong> 8 and is featured in live performance and talk on BBC<br />

Essex on <strong>December</strong> 13.<br />

Keyed In<br />

ALEX BARAN<br />

David Jalbert already has five recordings<br />

in the ATMA catalogue. His newest is<br />

Stravinski – Prokofiev Pétrouchka, L’oiseau<br />

de feu, Roméo et Juliette – Transcriptions<br />

pour piano (ATMA Classique ACD2<br />

2684). It shows why he’s considered one<br />

of the younger generation’s finest pianists.<br />

His performance of Danse russe from<br />

Pétrouchka explodes into being with astonishing<br />

speed and alacrity. Jalbert possesses a<br />

sweeping technique that exudes ease and persuasive conviction.<br />

The three extracts from L’Oiseau de feu require, and Jalbert<br />

obviously has it, complete command of the keyboard for the Danse<br />

that begins the set. Equally demanding is the introspection necessary<br />

for the following Berceuse. The Finale builds to a colossal orchestral<br />

finish that loses nothing in this transcription for piano.<br />

According to the disc’s informative liner notes, the ten pieces<br />

from Prokofiev’s ballet Romeo and Juliet Op.75 are from Prokofiev’s<br />

original piano score, and owing to the composer’s facility with the<br />

instrument, are highly idiomatic. One of the set’s most engaging<br />

pieces is The Montagues and the Capulets, driven rhythmically by<br />

its relentless bassline. Jalbert has a complete understanding of these<br />

three stage works and the contemporary language their composers<br />

used to tell their stories.<br />

Concert note: Pianists David Jalbert and Wonny Song perform music<br />

inspired by dance, theatre and visual art on <strong>January</strong> 14 for Mooredale<br />

Concerts and Music & Truffles at Walter Hall.<br />

Alain Lefèvre has recorded an intriguing<br />

work with the Buffalo Philharmonic<br />

Orchestra under Joann Falletta: André<br />

Mathieu – Concerto No.3 (Analekta AN 2<br />

9299). Written at age 13 while marooned<br />

with his family in North America by the<br />

outbreak of WWII, unable to return to<br />

France where he had been studying on a<br />

scholarship from the Quebec government,<br />

the work was intended to launch Mathieu’s<br />

career with the influential decision makers of the New York music<br />

scene. Unfortunately, not much came of it until 1946, when a newly<br />

created Quebec production company approached Mathieu for the<br />

rights to use his Concerto No.3 in a film (La Forteresse/Whispering<br />

City) to be shot entirely in Quebec. As things turned out, only major<br />

portions of the second movement were used in the film score.<br />

Until recently, this had been the only record of the work. Mathieu<br />

himself recorded it in 1947, and this same version, revised by Marc<br />

Bélanger, was recorded by Philippe Entremont in 1977 and made<br />

famous by Alain Lefèvre in 2003. Eventually renamed the Concerto de<br />

Québec, the recording by Jean-Philippe Sylvestre with the Orchestre<br />

Métropolitain and conductor Alain Trudel was reviewed here<br />

in October.<br />

In 2008 the original autograph score for two pianos was discovered<br />

in Ottawa. Since then, composer and conductor Jacques Marchand<br />

has prepared a critical edition that is faithful to the original manuscript.<br />

This is its first full recording. It has all the sweeping gestures of<br />

its period and a devilishly difficult piano part. Lefèvre’s performance<br />

at the keyboard is masterful. He and the BPO perform the work with<br />

astonishing authenticity, restoring a fascinating chapter to Canadian<br />

music history of that period.<br />

American pianist David Glen Hatch exploits<br />

his pianistic link to Brahms in Brahms<br />

& Rubinstein (Centaur CRC 3565/3566).<br />

Brahms’ student Carl Friedberg taught at<br />

Juilliard in the late 1940s; Hatch’s own<br />

teacher Joanne Baker won an audition to<br />

study there with Friedberg. Hatch recalls<br />

numerous instructions from Baker, handed<br />

down by Friedberg from Brahms, about<br />

his intentions for various passages in the Piano Concerto No.1 in D<br />

Minor Op.15. It’s fascinating to consider the extent to which Hatch’s<br />

performance is connected to the composer in this way. Hatch’s<br />

approach overall is quite deliberate in his slightly slower tempi. The<br />

second movement in particular reveals numerous opportunities to<br />

dwell on phrases and Brahms’ characteristic harmonic shifts.<br />

As substantial as the Brahms concerto is, the Rubinstein Concerto<br />

for Piano and Orchestra No.4 in D Minor Op.70 seems an even<br />

grander conception. It may have to do with Rubenstein’s orchestrations,<br />

but somehow Hatch seems truly in his element with the<br />

composer’s great pianistic gestures. The concertos are an excellent<br />

pairing for this two-disc recording.<br />

Robert and Linda Ang Stoodley style themselves<br />

as Piano à Deux. Their new disc,<br />

France Revisited – Music by Onslow,<br />

Debussy and Poulenc (Divine Art dda<br />

25132) is an example of piano four hands<br />

performance at its very best. One of the<br />

disc’s many treats is the appearance of<br />

music by George Onslow. Because his<br />

oeuvre is largely for chamber strings, his<br />

76 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


very few piano works tend to be overlooked. The unique voice of this<br />

19th-century composer is deeply intriguing as heard in the Sonata<br />

for Piano Four Hands No.1 in E Minor Op.7. It’s surprisingly forward<br />

looking despite its early catalogue entry.<br />

Petite Suite delivers all the rich impressionistic orchestrations with<br />

which we associate Claude Debussy, and Piano à Deux are consistently<br />

excellent in how they portray the composer’s lightly programmatic<br />

intent.<br />

The duo has also transcribed the Poulenc Chansons de l’amour et<br />

de la guerre, and done so with a gifted ear that preserves the wistful<br />

nostalgia that Poulenc infused into each song.<br />

Concert notes (out of province): Details of upcoming performances<br />

can be found at pianoadeux.com/events.<br />

José Menor is an extraordinary pianist with<br />

a fearsome technique and unrivalled fluidity<br />

of touch. His new recording Goyescas –<br />

Enrique Granados (IBS Classical IBS-8<strong>2017</strong>)<br />

demonstrates how he brings these gifts<br />

to his exploration of this major composition<br />

of Spanish piano music. Menor goes<br />

to considerable effort in his liner notes to<br />

explain how this music captured his imagination<br />

and compelled him to study it from a composer’s perspective<br />

rather than just a pianist’s. His study of the original manuscripts<br />

recommended by the Granados family helped him profoundly in<br />

discerning the composer’s intent in writing the suite, which deals<br />

with the course of love and death.<br />

Menor admits being attracted by the work’s many, deep contrasts<br />

and its expressive intensity. This is most powerfully evident in El amor<br />

y la muerte. It’s astonishing to imagine that this century-old work<br />

contains such modern tone clusters and rhythmic freedom. Under<br />

the hands of Menor it becomes a revealing expression, ahead of its<br />

time, and potently magical. The suite is slightly abridged for lack of<br />

recording space but the disc does include a rare performance of a<br />

single short manuscript, Crepúsculo, that may have been Granados’<br />

first draft of some of the suite.<br />

Harpsichordist Gilbert Rowland has<br />

completed a substantial project with his<br />

recording Johann Mattheson 12 Suites for<br />

Harpsichord (Athene ath <strong>23</strong>301.1 divineartrecords.com).<br />

The three-disc set is a valuable<br />

document shedding some light on<br />

the music of a hitherto obscure composer.<br />

Mattheson was a contemporary of Handel<br />

and came to know him well as a friend<br />

and colleague. He is said to have written numerous operas, oratorios,<br />

What we're listening to this month:<br />

sacred works and music for organ. Most of these manuscripts were<br />

kept in Hamburg, where Mattheson lived and worked for much of<br />

his life. Allied bombing of the city during WWII destroyed most of<br />

the Mattheson documents, leaving little for modern scholars to study.<br />

Fortunately, the 12 Suites for Harpsichord, dating from 1714, have<br />

survived. They are well-conceived mature works written in the French<br />

dance suite style. Rowland plays a 2005 copy of a French instrument<br />

from 1750 by Goermans.<br />

Andrew Wright has recorded a second disc<br />

in his series of operatic transcriptions, The<br />

Operatic Pianist II (Divine Art dda 25153<br />

divineartrecords.com). Opera transcriptions<br />

were, in their day, the equivalent of<br />

pop song covers. They also provided travelling<br />

pianists with ample popular repertoire<br />

for performance. Liszt may be the bestknown<br />

contributor to the form, although a<br />

great many composers dabbled in the genre.<br />

Wright clearly has a wonderful working grasp of this repertoire and<br />

knows how to bring forward the vocal line as well as how to portray<br />

the orchestral colour that any given emotional moment requires. His<br />

playing is consistently fabulous, whether he’s pounding out Liszt’s<br />

Rienzi Fantasy or Saint-Saëns’ Concert Paraphrase on Thaïs. It’s easy<br />

to understand how these transcriptions achieved “hit” status in the<br />

time before the gramophone and digital access to opera performances.<br />

Misuzu Tanaka has, at first blush, twinned<br />

a pair of unlikely composers in her<br />

new release, Janáček, Bach - In concert<br />

(Concertant Classics CD PR201601 concertantclassics.com).<br />

She admits, however, that<br />

in the process of the recording she discovered<br />

that both were having the same effect<br />

on her. Tanaka’s performance of the Bach<br />

Partita No.6 in E Minor BWV 830 reveals her<br />

strict adherence to the perfection of Bach’s structure. It also uncovers<br />

the emotional richness of the minor key. This last consideration is<br />

where she makes the link to Janáček. His Moravian heritage and his<br />

links to Czech folk music are reflected in the emotional content of<br />

On an Overgrown Path, Books 1 and 2. Minor keys are prevalent.<br />

Melancholy is pervasive. In its own way, this shared feature is, for<br />

Tanaka, the point of connection.<br />

Tanaka approaches Janáček with an intent to uncover the inspired<br />

simplicity of his music. She moves through the numerous parts of<br />

Books 1 and 2 with thoughtful deliberation, capturing the essence<br />

of the composer’s evocative titles: Words Fail, Unutterable Anguish,<br />

In Tears, for example. Her playing is as perfect for Janáček as it is for<br />

thewholenote.com/listening<br />

Dog's Breakfast<br />

Barry Elmes Quintet<br />

Cornerstone Records Inc. presents<br />

Dog's Breakfast, the long-awaited<br />

6th CD by the award-winning Barry<br />

Elmes Quintet showcasing new<br />

compositions and jazz standards.<br />

Encount3rs<br />

Canada's National Arts Centre<br />

Orchestra, Alexander Shelley<br />

The National Arts Centre Orchestra<br />

conducted by Alexander Shelley<br />

perform original orchestral scores<br />

for new ballets by three of Canada's<br />

most exciting composers.<br />

Entangled Pathways<br />

Gilliam, Milmine, Pottie<br />

Entangled Pathways by Gilliam,<br />

Milmine & Pottie is a unique<br />

combination of free floating melodies,<br />

jazz idioms, modal-chromatic<br />

tonalities and improvised creations.<br />

France Revisited<br />

Piano-à-Deux<br />

Robert Stoodley and Linda Ang<br />

Stoodley present a suitably Gallic<br />

program of Debussy, Poulenc and<br />

George Onslow – music both very<br />

familiar and refreshingly new.<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 77


Bach. What a wonderfully unlikely pair.<br />

Concert notes (out of province): Misuzu Tanaka performs a duo<br />

concert with Maksim Shtrykov, clarinet at the Fairmont Chamber<br />

Music Society in Fairmont, WV on <strong>December</strong> 10, at the Highlands<br />

Chapel Concert Series in Seattle, WA on <strong>January</strong> 14 and the Third<br />

Sunday Concert Series in Albany, CA on <strong>January</strong> 21. Tanaka also<br />

gives a solo recital for Sunset Music and Arts in San Francisco, CA on<br />

<strong>January</strong> 20.<br />

Martin Perry’s third recording Martin Perry<br />

Piano – Hugo Weisgall, Piano Sonata & Paul<br />

Hindemith, Ludus Tonalis (Bridge 9467)<br />

continues his artistic focus on contemporary<br />

piano music, and specifically on substantial<br />

forms. The disc opens with a three-movement<br />

Sonata for Piano by Hugo Weisgall,<br />

a Moravian immigrant to the US in 1920<br />

whose serious pursuit of music study at<br />

Peabody and Curtis, and privately with composers like Roger Sessions,<br />

helped form the rigorous approach he developed in his own writing.<br />

His language tends towards a 12-tone, relaxed serialism where the<br />

musical ideas are rather long. There’s a good deal of highly contrasted<br />

emotional content that Perry handles beautifully, giving the sonata<br />

what the liner notes call an “operatic” quality.<br />

In the same vein, the Hindemith Ludus Tonalis has an illuminating<br />

subtitle: Studies in Counterpoint, Tonal Organization and Piano<br />

Playing. Hindemith writes a fugue in each of the 12 major keys, joined<br />

by interludes that help establish the new key. The opening Praeludium<br />

is played inverted and in reverse as the Postludium. It’s all rather cerebral,<br />

but Perry uses the distinct character of each fugue and interlude<br />

to colour the work in the most creative way. It’s a very engaging<br />

performance.<br />

Andree-Ann Deschenes describes herself<br />

as a “French-Canadian pianist specializing<br />

in the passionate music of Latin and<br />

South America.” Currently doing doctoral<br />

work at California State University in<br />

LA, her latest recording Villa-Lobos /<br />

Castro (191061746096 aadpiano.com)<br />

is a rich program revealing the skill and<br />

artistic mastery of this very gifted pianist.<br />

Opening with the Villa-Lobos four-part Ciclo Brasileiro W374,<br />

Deschenes establishes her credentials as a serious student of these<br />

Latin composers. With an unerring sense of rhythm for every turn of<br />

phrase and ornament, she navigates through the Villa-Lobos and the<br />

five Tangos para Piano by Juan José Castro, finishing with a brilliant<br />

performance of Festiva by José Maria Vitler. It’s a terrific recording<br />

with a tremendous amount of energy, humour and astonishing talent.<br />

Norman Krieger puts two wonderful standard<br />

repertoire items on his newest CD:<br />

Beethoven Piano Concertos No.3 Op.37 &<br />

No.5 Op.73 (Decca DD41154 / 4815583).<br />

The Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra under<br />

Joann Falletta performs beautifully with<br />

Krieger. They appear to have an agreement<br />

that the Concerto No.3 will not be<br />

overly furious and that the “Emperor”<br />

will similarly not be too imperiously grand. The outer movements<br />

of the concertos are sufficiently strong and emphatic where they<br />

need be, and the middle, slow movements are given ample space<br />

to breathe. The Concerto No.5 is especially effective in this way. The<br />

playing throughout is excellent. To top things off, the recordings are<br />

live concert performances that bring their own unique energy to the<br />

music. It’s a successful collaboration that shows promise.<br />

VOCAL<br />

Luigi Boccherini - Arie da Concerto<br />

Amaryllis Dieltiens; Capriola di Gioia; Bart<br />

Naessens<br />

Evil Penguin Records Classic EPRC 00<strong>23</strong><br />

(eprclassic.eu)<br />

!!<br />

This is an<br />

ensemble on a<br />

mission – what<br />

it calls rehabilitating<br />

Boccherini.<br />

Overshadowed by<br />

Mozart and Haydn<br />

and receiving<br />

mixed comments<br />

in Grove’s Dictionary, Boccherini’s few vocal<br />

compositions – few because Boccherini’s<br />

patrons overwhelmingly demanded instrumental<br />

music – convey, according to Capriola<br />

di Gioia, a rare insight into the potential of<br />

the human voice. And so to the seven pieces<br />

selected by the Capriola di Gioia. Caro padre,<br />

a me non dei is a worthy introductory piece<br />

with an almost jaunty interpretation by<br />

Dieltiens – an approach repeated in Se non ti<br />

moro allato.<br />

And yet, the heart of this CD is its intense<br />

concentration on classical themes. As perhaps<br />

might be expected from a piece with an<br />

inspiration of this nature, Caro luci, che<br />

regnate begins with a more stately character,<br />

a tone taken up by Dieltiens as she sings of<br />

Jason’s predicament in Issipile. Misera, dove<br />

soni is a worthy combination of a classical<br />

theme with a text and instrumental scoring<br />

for strings which could have been written<br />

by any of the great Baroque composers who<br />

preceded Boccherini.<br />

Capriola di Gioia’s varied choice of<br />

Boccherini’s Arie da concerto allows the<br />

listener to make up his or her mind as to<br />

whether the composer has actually been<br />

rehabilitated. This CD from Dieltiens and<br />

Naessens means Boccherini does deserve to<br />

be listened to. Indeed, the final track Se d’un<br />

amor tiranno with its sprightly string playing,<br />

deep continuo and pleading voice encapsulates<br />

all the reasons for doing just that.<br />

Michael Schwartz<br />

Lux<br />

Choeur de l’eglise St. Andrew and St. Paul;<br />

Jean-Sébastian Vallée<br />

ATMA ACD2 2771<br />

!!<br />

While this CD<br />

obviously represents<br />

a Christmas disc, it<br />

is rather more than<br />

that. The program<br />

is anchored by<br />

modern arrangements<br />

of traditional<br />

carols such<br />

as Once in Royal David’s City and O Come<br />

All Ye Faithful. But much of the material is<br />

more adventurous and many pieces were<br />

composed only recently. Of particular interest<br />

is In the Bleak Midwinter, a setting of a poem<br />

by Christina Rossetti. Singers and their audiences<br />

will be familiar with this piece either in<br />

the setting of Harold Darke or in the much<br />

finer one by Gustav Holst. But this CD gives<br />

us a contemporary alternative by the Welsh<br />

composer Paul Mealor. That anthem is very<br />

fine, as are a number of others. An older kind<br />

of music is represented in the songs of<br />

Mendelssohn and Herbert Howells.<br />

The Choir of the Church of St. Andrew and<br />

St. Paul, a Montreal church, is an impressive<br />

body of 45 singers, in part professional, in<br />

part amateur. I recognized two names: that of<br />

the lead baritone Nathaniel Watson, whom<br />

we have often heard in Toronto, and that of<br />

the alto Duncan Campbell, who is the son of<br />

the soprano Kathryn Domoney and the baritone<br />

David Campbell. The choice of material<br />

is adventurous. It achieves the rare feat of<br />

presenting traditional Christmas music but<br />

also so much more than that.<br />

Hans de Groot<br />

’Twas But Pure Love<br />

Ottawa Bach Choir; Lisette Canton<br />

Canto 2016 (ottawabachchoir.ca)<br />

!!<br />

The splendid choral offerings on this<br />

recording range from Renaissance to<br />

78 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


contemporary<br />

works and it was<br />

recorded just in<br />

time for the holiday<br />

season last year in<br />

celebration of the<br />

Ottawa Bach Choir’s<br />

15th anniversary. It<br />

includes recording<br />

premieres for two<br />

Canadian works. The first, Sailor’s Carol by<br />

Matthew Larkin (director of music, Christ<br />

Church Cathedral, Ottawa), is based on a<br />

text by Cornish poet Charles Causley. With a<br />

lovely harp intro and simple chordal accompaniment,<br />

three descriptive verses lead to the<br />

chant Ave maris stella, creating a sense of<br />

great awe at the everlasting guidance of a star.<br />

The Darkest Midnight in <strong>December</strong> by Kelly-<br />

Marie Murphy again features lovely passages<br />

by harpist Caroline Léonardelli, while the<br />

women of the choir present a gentle, yet<br />

sublimely shimmering interpretation of a<br />

1728 text by Irish priest, Fr. William Devereux.<br />

Early works performed beautifully by the<br />

full choir include Tomás Luis de Victoria’s<br />

O magnum mysterium, an unaccompanied<br />

motet realized in all its haunting splendour.<br />

Bach’s Lobet den Herrn, alle Heiden, BWV<br />

<strong>23</strong>0 provides a lively contrast with its doublefugue<br />

passages, showcasing each of the<br />

choirs’ sections and their superb tonal and<br />

rhythmic agility, as well as deftness of hand<br />

(and foot) by organist Jonathan Oldengarm.<br />

Dianne Wells<br />

Wagner – Siegfried<br />

O’Neill; Goerne; Cangelosi; van Mechelen;<br />

Melton; Hong Kong Philharmonic<br />

Orchestra; Jaap van Zweden<br />

Naxos 8.660413-16<br />

!!<br />

Siegfried is the real McCoy of the Ring<br />

Cycle, the epicentre packed with scenes of<br />

high drama, superhuman achievement and<br />

much of the Ring’s<br />

most beautiful<br />

music. And it’s also<br />

the most optimistic<br />

part of the Cycle;<br />

each act ends on a<br />

high note, reserving<br />

the best to the<br />

end with the most<br />

unusual love duet ever written. There is a<br />

fairy-tale atmosphere, a happy ending as well<br />

as unforgettable musical and dramatic highlights<br />

that usually translate into a glorious<br />

night at the opera.<br />

This dramatic new Ring is the brainchild<br />

of Dutch conductor Jaap van Zweden, former<br />

concertmaster of the Royal Concertgebouw<br />

Orchestra. Discovered by Leonard Bernstein,<br />

he is now music director of four major<br />

orchestras, fulfilling a dream to record his<br />

own Ring Cycle with an orchestra he would<br />

whip into a Wagnerian superpower and pick<br />

the best possible singers available today. Each<br />

opera was recorded as a live concert performance,<br />

one per year beginning in 2015, so this<br />

is the third installment.<br />

The title role, Siegfried, is the biggest<br />

casting problem of any Ring attempt, but<br />

fortunately New Zealand heldentenor Simon<br />

O’Neill, a young, athletic fellow who could<br />

look good even on a rugby field, solves this<br />

problem wonderfully. He is a natural, not<br />

only powerful, enthusiastic and tireless, but<br />

also sensitive and tender. Wotan, here called<br />

the Wanderer (as he is no longer in charge of<br />

things), is Matthias Goerne, another excellent<br />

choice, one of the greatest baritones in<br />

the world today. David Cangelosi became<br />

the audience favourite with his characterful,<br />

incisive singing as Mime, the evil dwarf. In<br />

closing, it’s worth buying this set for the<br />

famous Forging Song alone. There were<br />

sounds coming out of the Hong Kong Cultural<br />

Centre never heard before!<br />

Janos Gardonyi<br />

James MacMillan - Stabat Mater<br />

The Sixteen; Britten Sinfonia; Harry<br />

Christophers<br />

CORO COR16150<br />

!!<br />

James MacMillan<br />

gained his early<br />

prominence with<br />

the orchestral piece<br />

The Confession of<br />

Isobel Gowdy. Since<br />

then he has generally<br />

been recognized<br />

as the leading<br />

Scottish composer<br />

of his generation. He is a Roman Catholic in<br />

a largely Protestant country. Sacred music<br />

has always been central to his creative work.<br />

In the last half decade he has developed<br />

a close relationship with the outstanding<br />

chamber choir The Sixteen (conducted by<br />

Harry Christophers). This CD gives us a sense<br />

of that collaboration. The Stabat Mater is<br />

an anonymous 13th-century Latin poem<br />

that depicts the Virgin Mary at the foot of<br />

the Cross and proceeds to meditate on her<br />

sorrow and appeals to her as an intercessor<br />

with her son.<br />

There have been a number of previous<br />

attempts to give musical shape to the text. The<br />

versions by Josquin and Pergolesi are especially<br />

notable. On this CD the hymn is given<br />

in the form of the Medieval plainsong. The<br />

following four tracks give us MacMillan’s<br />

elaboration. It is a brilliant work, dazzlingly<br />

performed by the full choir, the soloists<br />

(all of them members of the choir) and<br />

the accompanying chamber orchestra, the<br />

Britten Sinfonia. In a prefatory note in the<br />

CD booklet, Christophers ranks MacMillan as<br />

one of the three great composers of religious<br />

music, along with Victoria and Poulenc. If one<br />

is only looking at the Catholic world, it is hard<br />

to disagree with that.<br />

Hans de Groot<br />

What we're listening to this month:<br />

thewholenote.com/listening<br />

George Crumb Edition, Vol. 18<br />

George Crumb<br />

Grammy Award-winning composer<br />

George Crumb, now in his 88th<br />

year, continues to compose highly<br />

expressive, colorful and dramatic<br />

music.<br />

The Greatest Invention<br />

Harley Card<br />

Captivating instrumental compositions<br />

performed by; Harley Card on guitar,<br />

David French on saxophone, Matt<br />

Newton on piano, Jon Maharaj on<br />

bass, and Ethan Ardelli on drums.<br />

Hidden Treasure - Rediscovered<br />

Music from Armenia<br />

Violinist Nuné Melik presents<br />

Hidden Treasure, a Personal<br />

Exploration of Music from Armenia<br />

With Michel-Alexandre Broekaert,<br />

piano<br />

Into the Wonder<br />

Jordan Pal, Gryphon Trio, Thunder Bay<br />

Symphony Orchestra, Arthur Post<br />

Into the Wonder features wonderful<br />

recordings of works by composer<br />

Jordan Pal and performed by the<br />

Gryphon Trio and the Thunder Bay<br />

Symphony Orchestra.<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 79


James Rolfe – Breathe<br />

Suzie LeBlanc; Alexander Dobson; Monica<br />

Whicher; Toronto Consort; David Fallis;<br />

Toronto Masque Theatre; Larry Beckwith<br />

Centrediscs CMCCD 24517<br />

(musiccentre.ca)<br />

!!<br />

The title track,<br />

Breathe, in its<br />

performance here,<br />

is by far one of the<br />

most extraordinarily<br />

beautiful recordings<br />

experienced in<br />

recent memory. The<br />

blending of texts,<br />

ancient (Hildegard<br />

von Bingen, Antonio Scandello) and modern<br />

(Anna Chatterton), is mirrored by the<br />

use of period instruments for new music.<br />

Composer James Rolfe infuses the work with<br />

connections between human emotion and<br />

the natural world represented by the four<br />

elements – water, earth, air and fire – so<br />

exquisitely. For example, we enjoy the sensation<br />

of love overflowing (as water does) with<br />

undulating chordal textures and an abundance<br />

of cascading note sequences as Suzie<br />

LeBlanc, Katherine Hill and Laura Pudwell<br />

magically intertwine their voices.<br />

The two masques on the recording further<br />

demonstrate this Toronto composer’s exceptional<br />

gift for intermingling qualities of early<br />

music with contemporary techniques whilst<br />

coaxing subconscious elements to seep<br />

through in performance. In Europa, the roles<br />

of the title character (Suzie LeBlanc) and<br />

her long-searching fiancé Hiram (Alexander<br />

Dobson) are both composed and sung with<br />

an extraordinary measure of pathos as they<br />

submit themselves to the will of the gods.<br />

And a refreshing new interpretation of the<br />

mythical Aeneas and Dido provides a much<br />

more intimate view of the doomed romance.<br />

As Dido, Monica Whicher is both stately and<br />

vulnerable, Alexander Dobson both bold and<br />

conflicted as Aeneas, while characters such as<br />

the spritely Mercury (Teri Dunn) and the Goat<br />

(Vicki St. Pierre) provide comic relief, if somewhat<br />

malevolent. Kudos to Larry Beckwith<br />

and David Fallis for their direction of these<br />

performances.<br />

Dianne Wells<br />

Sing Me at Midnight - Songs by John Greer<br />

Tracy Dahl; Kevin McMillan; Delores<br />

Ziegler; John Greer<br />

Centrediscs CMCCD 24717 (musiccentre.ca)<br />

!!<br />

This Canadian<br />

Art Song Project<br />

CD features works<br />

for voice and<br />

piano by noted<br />

Canadian accompanist,<br />

conductor<br />

and pedagogue John<br />

Greer. Spanning the<br />

past 30 years, the four song cycles comprise<br />

20 songs with a variety of genres, voice types<br />

and moods. I am particularly partial to the<br />

cycle Sing Me at Midnight (1993) sung by lyric<br />

baritone Kevin McMillan, whose rich sound<br />

and ringing top suits these dramatic settings<br />

of sonnets by Wilfred Owen. Adept chromatic<br />

harmony conveys the pain of How Do I Love<br />

Thee, while percussive clusters accentuate<br />

the Anthem for Doomed Youth’s white-hot<br />

anger. Greer offers effective settings of evocative,<br />

religiously based poetry by Marianne<br />

Bindig in the cycle The Red Red Heart (1995).<br />

Tracy Dahl’s agile soprano handles the high<br />

tessitura well and is also attractive at the<br />

lower end in the opening, dancing song The<br />

Beginning.<br />

The late Romantic style of The House of<br />

Tomorrow (1986) raised my eyebrows, till<br />

I tuned in to the evocation of childhood<br />

in these songs. The centrepiece, Midnight<br />

Prayer, a setting of the pensive poem by<br />

Aleksey Khomyakov in translation, is given<br />

a rich, expressive performance by American<br />

mezzo-soprano Dolores Zeigler. Finally, A<br />

Sarah Binks Songbook (1988) brings us<br />

mock-serious ditties wittily set by Greer, with<br />

allusions to various vocal genres. Tracy Dahl<br />

becomes the Canadian “prairie songstress,”<br />

her operatic persona elevating the work with<br />

perfect diction and much humour. John<br />

Greer’s collaborative pianism is exemplary<br />

throughout.<br />

Roger Knox<br />

Crazy - Songs by T. Patrick Carrabré<br />

Naomi Forman; Mary Jo Carrabré<br />

Winter Wind Records WWR <strong>2017</strong>-01<br />

(tpatrickcarrabre.com)<br />

!!<br />

In his song<br />

cycle Crazy, T.<br />

Patrick Carrabré,<br />

dean of music at<br />

Brandon University,<br />

explores “border<br />

territory… mental<br />

illness or other<br />

demons” afflicting<br />

“composers who have lost their grounding in<br />

the ecstasy and anguish that is creativity.”<br />

The first three songs – Death, Murder and<br />

Lust – reveal Carrabré having something<br />

powerful to say and not at all timid about<br />

saying it. His wife, pianist Mary Jo Carrabré,<br />

inhabits the keyboard’s left half, reinforcing<br />

the songs’ darkness while supporting<br />

the passionate vocalism of soprano Naomi<br />

Forman. Composer Carrabré adds what I<br />

consider unnecessarily intrusive electronics<br />

and percussion; the bass-heavy piano alone<br />

would have been more appropriate for the<br />

songs’ stark beauty.<br />

The sombre mood changes with the fourth<br />

song, Burnt, evoking Spanish guitar music.<br />

Things go much further afield in the final<br />

song, Pain, a wailing rock song over the<br />

relentless loud thump of electronic dance<br />

music. An additional, speakers-bursting<br />

EDM “Audiation Remix” of Pain ends the CD,<br />

which also includes a stand-alone song, The<br />

Garden, for soprano and piano, thankfully<br />

sans electronics.<br />

I’m mystified by Carrabré’s jolting venture<br />

into rock; the other songs display a genuine<br />

expressive talent that belongs in the concert<br />

hall, not the rock-concert arena.<br />

At only 32 minutes, this CD left me wanting<br />

to hear more of Carrabré’s “classical” works<br />

(I’d previously heard only one), but glad to<br />

have heard the five non-rock songs. The texts,<br />

by Rilke, Tasso, Goethe, García Lorca and<br />

Marvell, are available, with translations, on<br />

the composer’s website.<br />

Michael Schulman<br />

CLASSICAL AND BEYOND<br />

Altri canti d’amor - 17th Century<br />

Instrumental Works<br />

L’Estro d’Orfeo; Leonor de Lera<br />

Challenge Classics CC72760<br />

(lestrodorfeo.com)<br />

! ! This is a CD<br />

with two pleasant<br />

surprises. One is a<br />

track from undervalued<br />

Renaissance<br />

composer, Barbara<br />

Strozzi. The other<br />

is a contemporary<br />

set of divisions on a<br />

Renaissance theme composed by the presentday<br />

artistic director of the CD, Leonor de<br />

Lera. Instrumental this collection may be, but<br />

the traditional description of the cornetto as<br />

being the closest instrument to the human<br />

voice is borne out by Josué Meléndez’s playing<br />

of Monteverdi’s Sinfonia; it is as if an ethereal<br />

choir is in attendance. Meléndez’s cornetto<br />

returns in L’Eraclito Amoroso by Strozzi, here<br />

as an example of diminuzioni, or extemporixed<br />

ornamentations.<br />

The contribution from de Lera is her own<br />

diminuzioni on Apollo’s Lament, originally<br />

by Francesco Cavalli. De Lera’s playing probes<br />

the qualities of her Taningard violin built<br />

in Rome in 1739. She is admirably complemented<br />

by the plucked instrument playing of<br />

Josep Maria Martí.<br />

The selection on this CD is enhanced by<br />

the inclusion of variations on popular tunes<br />

from the Renaissance. Fuggi dolente core is<br />

one such set, again played on Baroque violin;<br />

while this piece is often scored for voice,<br />

listeners to this particular variation will not<br />

miss that human aspect.<br />

L’Estro d’Orfeo’s choices are centred on<br />

Venice’s prolific output and yet there is<br />

still room for pieces by Marco Uccellini of<br />

Modena. Listen once again to the brilliance<br />

in every sense of the word of the Baroque<br />

violin and basso continuo in Uccellini’s Ninth<br />

Sonata. And in his Aria Quarta sopra la<br />

“Ciaccona.”<br />

Michael Schwartz<br />

80 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


Tales of Two Cities<br />

Trio Arabica; Alon Nashman; Jeanne<br />

Lamon; Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra<br />

Tafelmusik Media TMK 1035 DVDCD<br />

(tafelmusik.org)<br />

!!<br />

Tales of Two<br />

Cities is an<br />

enchanting musical<br />

journey through<br />

the palatial worlds<br />

of two prominent<br />

18th-century<br />

cities – Leipzig<br />

and Damascus.<br />

Although separated<br />

by 3,000 kilometres,<br />

these<br />

cities shared a<br />

surprising number of common threads;<br />

both were located at the intersections of<br />

major trade and travelling routes, both were<br />

known as cultural and learning centres, and<br />

both nurtured a tradition of coffee houses<br />

in which music performances were flowing.<br />

Cleverly conceived, programmed and scripted<br />

by the creative mind of Tafelmusik’s own<br />

Alison Mackay, and narrated by the charming<br />

Alon Nashman, Tales of Two Cities comes<br />

as a DVD/CD combo, featuring the music<br />

portion of the concert on CD. The DVD<br />

includes a filmed live performance at the<br />

Aga Khan Museum, a video on restoration of<br />

the Dresden Damascus Room, behind-thescenes<br />

footage from rehearsals and a splitscreen<br />

video of the orchestra performing<br />

Bach’s Sinfonia.<br />

I absolutely loved Tales of Two Cities. The<br />

inventive combination of music and literary<br />

selections coupled with stunning images and<br />

historically informed narration was only transcended<br />

by the excellence of all the musicians<br />

involved. Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra<br />

presents a fresh, vibrant, theatrical interpretation<br />

of music by Telemann, Handel<br />

and Bach (all onetime residents of the city<br />

of Leipzig). The virtuosity of Dominic Teresi<br />

(bassoon), Patrick Jordan (viola) and Aisslinn<br />

Nosky (violin) is just as entertaining as it is<br />

admirable. Trio Arabica, featuring Maryem<br />

Tollar (voice, quanun), Naghmeh Farahmand<br />

(percussion) and Demetri Petsalakis (oud),<br />

evokes the longing, beauty and delicacy<br />

of Damascus of the past with gorgeous<br />

performances of the traditional melodies.<br />

The final number, an intriguing combination<br />

of Telemann and traditional Arabic<br />

music, unites all the performers and brings<br />

the narrative to a conclusion by telling the<br />

story of young, present-day Syrian scholars<br />

working alongside German mentors on<br />

restoring the Damascus Room in Dresden.<br />

Highly recommended.<br />

Ivana Popovic<br />

Concert note: A free screening of Tales of<br />

Two Cities will be presented at the Aga Khan<br />

Museum on <strong>December</strong> 10 at 2pm.<br />

Brahms - The Piano Trios<br />

Emanuel Ax; Leonidas Kavakos; Yo-Yo Ma<br />

Sony Classical 88985 40729 2<br />

!!<br />

The Piano Trios<br />

form a critical, if<br />

less well-known<br />

feature of Brahms’<br />

creativity within the<br />

world of chamber<br />

music. To an extent,<br />

Brahms picked up<br />

the torch at the<br />

point at which Beethoven had laid it down,<br />

but although he used Beethoven’s music,<br />

along with that of Schubert, as a point of<br />

departure, these trios are highly singular<br />

creations, with a sound world that is altogether<br />

unique. Each of the three instruments<br />

is stretched to its limits as if Brahms wanted<br />

to create orchestral depth and colour using<br />

just three players.<br />

Another fascinating aspect of The Piano<br />

Trios – particularly in Piano Trio No. 3 in<br />

C Minor Op.101 – is Brahms’ treatment of<br />

the string players as soloists, giving both<br />

the violin and cello some sonorous passages<br />

that are ideally suited to their respective<br />

characteristics. Also noteworthy is the fact<br />

that Brahms’ wealth of powerfully sculpted<br />

ideas amply rewards attentive listening.<br />

These performances of The Piano Trios by<br />

Emanuel Ax, Leonidas Kavakos and Yo-Yo<br />

Ma are without question the most authoritative<br />

and distinguished accounts of the<br />

works. Ax, Kavakos and Ma play with unique<br />

breadth of insight and a feeling of spontaneous<br />

inspiration, a quality that comes all too<br />

infrequently to studio recordings like these.<br />

The Sony recorded sound is at once brilliant<br />

and truthful, but it also has exceptional<br />

spaciousness.<br />

Raul da Gama<br />

Vaughan Williams – Fantasia on Sussex Folk<br />

Tunes and other works<br />

Martin Rummel; Deutsche<br />

Staatsphilharmonie Rheinland-Pfalz;<br />

Karl-Heinz Steffens<br />

Capriccio CD C5314<br />

!!<br />

This collection<br />

of shorter delights,<br />

lollipops so to say,<br />

opens with the<br />

jaunty overture to<br />

the comic opera,<br />

The Poisoned Kiss, a<br />

“romantic extravaganza.”<br />

The most<br />

interesting work is the Fantasia on Sussex<br />

Folk Tunes for cello and orchestra. Vaughan<br />

Williams was a collector of folk music and as<br />

Bartók did with Hungarian tunes, he incorporated<br />

them into his compositions. Vaughan<br />

Williams was quite familiar with Sussex<br />

County and had been collecting material<br />

there since his school days in the village of<br />

Rottingdean in East Sussex. His Fantasia, a<br />

work new to me, was premiered in 1930 with<br />

Pablo Casals as soloist. Instantly recognizable<br />

as Vaughan Williams, there are five folk<br />

tunes incorporated in a conversation between<br />

soloist and orchestra, making this a compelling<br />

and interesting workout for cellist and<br />

orchestra. It deserves to be popular.<br />

What we're listening to this month:<br />

thewholenote.com/listening<br />

J.S. Bach: Sonatas for Violin and<br />

Harpsichord<br />

Mark Fewer & Hank Knox<br />

Internationally acclaimed violinist<br />

Mark Fewer and harpsichordist<br />

Hank Knox perform six treasured<br />

violin Sonatas by J.S. Bach<br />

Johann Mattheson - 12 Suites for<br />

Harpsichord (1714)<br />

Gilbert Rowland<br />

Following the successful three-volume<br />

series of Handel’s harpsichord suites,<br />

Rowland turns to the lesser known but<br />

very skilled German composer.<br />

Katana of Choice: Music for<br />

Drumset Soloist<br />

Ben Reimer<br />

Called a “virtuosic, genre-bending<br />

wiz”, Reimer plays composed works<br />

for drumset, ranging in influence<br />

from electronica, jazz fusion, film<br />

noir and martial arts.<br />

Lux<br />

The Choir of the Church of St.<br />

Andrew and St. Paul<br />

The Choir of the Church of St.<br />

Andrew and St. Paul presents<br />

Lux, a collection of sacred songs<br />

associated with the Nativity.<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 81


The earliest work, the Bucolic Suite of 1900,<br />

also known as the Pastoral Suite, is just that,<br />

euphoric thoughts of countryside life. In the<br />

Fen Country is no stranger to the catalogues<br />

and paints a picture of the lonely and desolate<br />

Fen country in the east of England. There<br />

are three movements – Explorer, Poet and<br />

Queen – arranged from the 1957 inspiring<br />

film, The England of Elizabeth. The five works<br />

add up to a novel and interesting collection,<br />

brilliantly played and recorded. The Elizabeth<br />

of Three Portraits from “The England of<br />

Elizabeth” refers to the Elizabeth of the 16th<br />

century. The Armada and all that.<br />

Bruce Surtees<br />

MODERN AND CONTEMPORARY<br />

ConNotations<br />

Mei Yi Foo; Philipp Hutter; Bartosz Woroch;<br />

Ashley Wass; Britten Sinfonia<br />

Orchid Classics ORCH100065<br />

(orchidclassics.com)<br />

!!<br />

ConNotations<br />

is a very impressive<br />

disc. It features<br />

pianist Mei Yi<br />

Foo with a trumpeter<br />

(Philipp<br />

Hutter), a violinist<br />

(Bartosz Woroch)<br />

and another pianist<br />

(Ashley Wass) together with the Britten<br />

Sinfonia conducted by Clement Power. The<br />

superlative recording owes much, first, to the<br />

choice of repertoire. The Shostakovich Piano<br />

Concerto in C Minor Op. 35 for strings, piano<br />

and solo trumpet is a combination as unusual<br />

as the concerto’s form, which consists of four<br />

through-flowing movements which sound<br />

like just one. Foo’s playing makes the music<br />

rise up like a ferocious beast and both Foo<br />

and Hutter are brilliant throughout.<br />

On Alban Berg’s Chamber Concerto for<br />

piano and violin with 13 wind instruments<br />

there’s a fruitful tension between the soloist’s<br />

expansive Romanticism and the no-nonsense<br />

rigour of Power, a tension that matches<br />

the composer’s ideals. Berg restricts the<br />

concerto’s accompaniment to 13 wind instruments,<br />

yet he ingeniously produced some<br />

marvellously unusual colourings. Foo’s piano<br />

is given the solo duties in the first movement,<br />

Woroch’s violin in the second and then they<br />

finally combine together in a show of rousing,<br />

immediate expressiveness in the finale.<br />

While Camille Saint-Saëns may have<br />

written The Carnival of the Animals mainly<br />

for the amusement of his friends in 1886, its<br />

serious beauty should never be underestimated.<br />

In the hands of Foo and Wass there<br />

are moments of great magic, with the most<br />

beautiful and spectacular of all heard during<br />

the rippling arpeggios of the mysterious<br />

Aquarium (VII).<br />

Raul da Gama<br />

Concert note: New Music Concerts presents<br />

Berg’s Chamber Concerto and a new work<br />

by Michael Oesterle inspired by it, with<br />

soloists MingHuan Xu, violin and Winston<br />

Choi, piano (Duo Diorama) at Betty Oliphant<br />

Theatre on <strong>January</strong> 14.<br />

Encount3rs<br />

National Arts Centre Orchestra; Alexander<br />

Shelley<br />

Analekta AN 2 8871-2 (analekta.com)<br />

!!<br />

This past April,<br />

three new abstract<br />

ballets (lacking<br />

storylines), each<br />

lasting about half<br />

an hour, premiered<br />

at Ottawa’s<br />

National Arts<br />

Centre. This 2CD<br />

set presents their scores, created by three<br />

Canadian composers already-prominent in<br />

their 30s and 40s.<br />

According to Phi, Caelestis choreographer<br />

Jean Grand-Maître, “Ten seemingly<br />

nude dancers” perform “a whirlwind of raw,<br />

emotional, primal and often erotic gestures<br />

before a backdrop of contrasting aesthetics.”<br />

The first movement of Andrew Staniland’s<br />

atmospheric score is steadily motoric; the<br />

next two are slow and solemn, creating<br />

the intended striking contrast between the<br />

dancing and the music.<br />

Nicole Lizée’s colourful orchestral score for<br />

Keep Driving, I’m Dreaming utilizes “archaic”<br />

electronic devices, including turntables and<br />

reel-to-reel machines. It’s a collage of many<br />

stylistically unrelated episodes, with bits of<br />

pop music and science-fiction sound effects.<br />

The audience members, if not the dancers,<br />

were probably kept on their toes, wondering<br />

what they would hear next.<br />

Dark Angels, writes choreographer<br />

Guillaume Coté, reflects “the resistance and<br />

struggle that one can experience living in new<br />

territory.” Kevin Lau says his score “resembles<br />

a symphony in scope and form,” beginning<br />

and ending with a “hammer” of six<br />

repeated notes. It’s surely more symphonic<br />

than balletic, in three connected sections – a<br />

powerful Allegro, a slow middle highlighting<br />

a heartfelt cello solo and a propulsive, percussion-heavy<br />

finale.<br />

Alexander Shelley and the NAC Orchestra<br />

give these disparate, attention-grabbing-andholding<br />

scores the committed, high-energy<br />

performances they richly deserve.<br />

Michael Schulman<br />

Katana of Choice<br />

Ben Reimer<br />

Redshift Records TK456<br />

(redshiftrecords.org)<br />

!!<br />

Virtuoso Montreal percussionist Ben<br />

Reimer has made a name for himself as a<br />

leading drum soloist, shredding works by<br />

elder statesmen of the jazz drumset (Baby<br />

Dodds, Tony<br />

Williams), as well as<br />

works by leading art<br />

music composers<br />

such as Nicole Lizée<br />

and Lukas Ligeti.<br />

Reimer reinforces<br />

that reputation in<br />

Katana of Choice<br />

his inaugural album<br />

(available on vinyl and digital download).<br />

Reimer puts his cards on the table in Drum<br />

Dances by New Zealand composer John<br />

Psathas (b. 1966), the first four tracks on<br />

the album. Arranged by Ben Duinker, these<br />

sleekly crafted pieces, framed by the brilliant<br />

keyboard percussionism of Montreal’s<br />

Architek Percussion Quartet, are an apt<br />

frame for Reimer’s abundant technique and<br />

musicality.<br />

The intense Ringer by Nicole Lizée – found<br />

only on the digital version of the album – is a<br />

tour de force for drumset soloist. Vernacular<br />

drum references are handled with sensitivity<br />

by both composer and performer, notwithstanding<br />

the aggressive pairing of high-octave<br />

glockenspiel melodies and high-frequency,<br />

high-hat rhythms.<br />

The lengthy Katana of Choice, also by<br />

Lizée and featuring the accomplished TorQ<br />

Percussion Quartet, is perhaps the most<br />

ambitious work on the recording. Reimer’s<br />

drumming here is fully incorporated into<br />

the ensemble texture. The work is inspired<br />

by duel-based narrative video games and<br />

wuxia martial arts films, as the composer’s<br />

notes state. The music moves unrelentingly<br />

from one imaginary scene to another “with<br />

unexpected twists in which [musicians] trade<br />

off, pushing one another technically and<br />

sonically.” Katana of Choice is an exhilarating<br />

musical ride – as is the entire album.<br />

Andrew Timar<br />

Concert note: Ben Reimer and Architek<br />

Percussion perform the music of Nicole Lizée<br />

and Eliot Britton at Walter Hall on <strong>January</strong> 25<br />

as part of the University of Toronto New<br />

Music Festival. (out of province) Ben Reimer<br />

and Vicky Chow perform music of Nicole<br />

Lizée including Katana of Choice with video<br />

accompaniment at Roulette in Brooklyn, NY<br />

on <strong>December</strong> 16.<br />

Poems and Dreams<br />

Rebecca Jeffreys; Alexander Timofeev<br />

Independent (rebeccajeffreys.com)<br />

! ! Flutist Rebecca<br />

Jeffreys, though<br />

not well known<br />

in this part of the<br />

world, has accomplished<br />

a great deal<br />

as a performer,<br />

teacher and music<br />

director. She was a<br />

founding director and member of Virginia’s<br />

Woodbridge Flute Choir, teaches privately in<br />

Peperell, Massachusetts near Boston and at<br />

82 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


St. Anselm College in New Hampshire, and<br />

performs with guitarist, Mike Loce. On this<br />

CD she premieres the work of five contemporary<br />

composers, ably accompanied by<br />

pianist, Alexander Timofeev. The notes make<br />

it clear that Jeffreys has a personal connection<br />

with most if not all of the composers.<br />

For example, composer Kevin Walker is the<br />

owner of the recording studio where the<br />

recording was made, and was co-executive<br />

producer of the CD with Jeffreys. The CD also<br />

makes it apparent that Jeffreys is part of a<br />

lively and creative musical circle, from which,<br />

I hope, there will be more to come.<br />

Of the five, the works which stood out for<br />

me were the second movement of Jeffrey<br />

Hoover’s Romantic Sonata – Poems of Light,<br />

with its lyrical writing for both instruments,<br />

and Walker’s Flute Suite in D Major,<br />

a very accomplished piece of work. Adrienne<br />

Albert’s Acadian Dreams utilized Cajun<br />

music and was a tribute to Jeffreys’ father’s<br />

Acadian ancestry. It is encouraging to see<br />

evidence like this of a vibrant music culture<br />

hidden from view in the United States. May it<br />

continue to prosper.<br />

Allan Pulker<br />

JAZZ AND IMPROVISED<br />

Dog’s Breakfast<br />

Barry Elmes Quintet<br />

Cornerstone Records CRST CD 147<br />

(cornerstonerecords.com)<br />

!!<br />

Drummer<br />

Barry Elmes first<br />

formed his quintet<br />

in 1991, and<br />

through the years<br />

it’s been a showcase<br />

for Canada’s<br />

finest proponents<br />

of mainstream<br />

modern jazz as well as the leader’s engaging<br />

compositions. Through the years, the group<br />

has had few personnel changes, adding to its<br />

sense of a collective personality.<br />

The latest incarnation establishes its<br />

authority immediately with a performance of<br />

Freddie Hubbard’s Little Sunflower, a modal<br />

anthem of the 60s imbued here with new<br />

vigour, from bassist Steve Wallace’s pulsing<br />

ostinato through a string of sharply focused<br />

solos from trumpeter Brian O’Kane, guitarist<br />

Lorne Lofsky and tenor saxophonist Mike<br />

Murley, all of it carried along by Elmes’ secure<br />

and lively drumming which comes to the fore<br />

at the conclusion.<br />

The material is divided between Elmes’<br />

recent compositions and jazz standards. The<br />

former includes the witty title track, a subtle<br />

cool jazz episode that could readily substitute<br />

for a Mancini movie theme, while the floating<br />

Terminal 2 and the funky Pierre Berton’s<br />

Pig bring distinctly Toronto inspirations to<br />

the proceedings. The absolute highlights,<br />

though, are two standards. Murley brings a<br />

fine balance of silk, grit and lyricism to Spring<br />

Can Really Hang You Up the Most, while<br />

Lofsky’s touch is unerring, compounding a<br />

glassy electric guitar sound with a striking<br />

melodic conception on Beautiful Love, a<br />

sustained trio performance with Wallace and<br />

Elmes that makes one hope for a CD devoted<br />

to the three.<br />

Stuart Broomer<br />

Conert note: The Barry Elmes Quintet<br />

performs at the Home Smith Bar in The Old<br />

Mill on <strong>December</strong> 16.<br />

solstice/equinox<br />

Diana Panton<br />

Independent (dianapanton.com)<br />

!!<br />

solstice/equinox<br />

by Diana Panton is<br />

another gorgeously<br />

perfect recording<br />

that the Hamilton<br />

jazz singer makes<br />

a nearly annual<br />

habit of releasing<br />

with ease. Multiple<br />

albums into her discographic career at this<br />

point – and in the exceptional company of<br />

multi-instrumentalist Don Thompson and<br />

guitarist Reg Schwager – the trio (fleshed<br />

out here with Guido Basso and Phil Dwyer)<br />

sounds not like a collection of hired musicians,<br />

but rather like a working jazz group<br />

that exhibits simpatico and a shared investment<br />

in the music heard here. Panton sings<br />

effortlessly throughout and swings with a<br />

bubbly buoyancy that reminds this listener<br />

of not only Blossom Dearie, but trumpeter<br />

Art Farmer, who also prefigured a relaxed<br />

and swinging time feel. Further, Thompson’s<br />

always beautiful musical arrangements and<br />

the thoughtful repertoire choice create the<br />

perfect casting for Panton’s voice and delivery<br />

to shine. With the theme of seasonal change<br />

threading through the recording and tying<br />

the repertoire together, Panton and band offer<br />

up a true jazz vocal recording that captures all<br />

involved at their musical finest. The recording<br />

quality is also of note, and helps to create a<br />

sonic space that is intimate and revealing.<br />

Nearly a decade into this group’s affiliation,<br />

here’s hoping that theirs is a musical relationship<br />

that continues for many more.<br />

Andrew Scott<br />

REV<br />

Ernesto Cervini’s Turboprop<br />

Anzic Records ANZ-0089-2<br />

(ernestocervini.com)<br />

!!<br />

In 2015, entrepreneur,<br />

composer<br />

and drummer<br />

Ernesto Cervini<br />

introduced his<br />

North American<br />

Sextet, Turboprop,<br />

featuring a crosssection<br />

of noted<br />

contemporary jazz musicians, including Tara<br />

Davidson on alto and soprano sax, Joel Frahm<br />

on tenor, William Carn on trombone, Adrean<br />

Farrugia on piano and Dan Loomis on bass.<br />

Their debut self-titled CD was a huge success.<br />

What we're listening to this month:<br />

thewholenote.com/listening<br />

Meter<br />

Autorickshaw<br />

Autorickshaw's 5th studio album 'Meter'<br />

is a journey through cultural cuttingedge<br />

Indo-fusion: mixing traditional<br />

south and north Indian music with other<br />

contemporary art forms.<br />

Misuzu Tanaka in Concert. Music<br />

of Janácek and Bach<br />

Misuzu Tanaka<br />

Debut live album. Structural<br />

perfection and the display of raw<br />

uninhibited emotions from the two<br />

masters create an unexpected yet<br />

perfect pairing.<br />

Moderne Frau<br />

Adi Braun<br />

Adi Braun - Moderne Frau!<br />

Women of Weimar Berlin were the<br />

first pantsuit nation. Experience<br />

the music of Weill, Spoliansky,<br />

Grothe and Braun!<br />

Nathaniel: A Tribute to Nat King Cole<br />

Ori Dagan<br />

Visit Ori Dagan's YouTube channel<br />

to see "Nathaniel: A Tribute to Nat<br />

King Cole," the first visual album in<br />

the jazz genre!<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 83


Cervini and company’s brand-new offering<br />

includes five original pieces (two composed<br />

by Cervini – who also acts as producer here),<br />

two pop covers and one vintage Tin-Pan-<br />

Alley-era jazz standard. The project is also<br />

masterfully recorded by John “Beetle” Bailey,<br />

capturing all of the dynamism and excitement<br />

of a live performance, and mixed on the hot<br />

side, with a definite New York City sensibility.<br />

Farrugia is without question one of the<br />

most extraordinarily talented young jazz<br />

pianist/composers on the scene today, and his<br />

composition The Libertine is a perfect opener<br />

for REV. The tune kicks things off with a tasty<br />

drum intro from Cervini, followed by seamless<br />

section work and non-Euclidean penetrating<br />

lines, rife with dynamics and sonic<br />

colours, as well as a complex and percussive<br />

piano solo by Farrugia and burning<br />

tenor work from Frahm. Another standout<br />

is Cervini’s Granada Bus, which strives to<br />

capture the essence of Spain, and shines with<br />

a stirring solo on soprano from Davidson.<br />

Other strong contributions include the fullthrottle,<br />

post-bop title track, Radiohead’s The<br />

Daily Mail, featuring a stellar bass solo from<br />

Loomis, and the swinging and soulful Med<br />

Flory-ish Pennies From Heaven. Truly something<br />

for everyone!<br />

Lesley Mitchell-Clarke<br />

Concert note: Turboprop celebrates the<br />

release of REV with two performance at The<br />

Rex, <strong>January</strong> 11 and 12.<br />

The Greatest Invention<br />

Harley Card<br />

Independent DYM003 (harleycard.ca)<br />

Hypnagogia Polis<br />

Simon Legault; Jules Payette; Andrew<br />

Boudreau; Adrian Vedady; Louis-Vincent<br />

Hamel<br />

Effendi Records FND146<br />

(effendirecords.com)<br />

!!<br />

Two new and<br />

strikingly different<br />

albums by Canadian<br />

jazz guitarists<br />

demonstrate the<br />

health and diversity<br />

of that instrument<br />

in this country.<br />

Harley Card has<br />

been active in the Toronto music scene since<br />

2003 as a sideman, composer, teacher and<br />

bandleader. The Greatest Invention is the<br />

third album under his own name and features<br />

Card on guitar with Jon Maharaj (bass), Matt<br />

Newton (piano), David French (saxophone)<br />

and Ethan Ardelli (drums). The “invention” is<br />

the bicycle and the album opens with the title<br />

tune, containing a repeating riff reminiscent<br />

of spinning gears or wheels. The orchestration<br />

is sophisticated, with Card’s guitar and<br />

French’s resonant tenor saxophone weaving<br />

throughout most of the piece, sometimes in<br />

harmony, other times with alternating melodies<br />

while the drums and piano punctuate<br />

the piece with<br />

their own counterpoint.<br />

This initial<br />

song sets the tone<br />

for the album,<br />

which highlights<br />

Card’s compositional<br />

skills. The<br />

song is four and<br />

a half minutes but the only solo (guitar)<br />

lasts 90 seconds; the rest is intricate<br />

ensemble playing.<br />

Card’s liner notes add insight to our<br />

listening and he mentions studying with<br />

Phil Nimmons, an influence that is heard<br />

throughout. It is a treat to listen to a jazz<br />

album that develops compositional and<br />

ensemble ideas at length rather than the<br />

more typical head/solo(s)/head structure.<br />

The most ambitious piece is The Shadows of<br />

Shea Pines, which is almost nine minutes<br />

with three movements. It begins with a slow<br />

saxophone and acoustic guitar ballad (with a<br />

touch of Epistrophy) then moves into smooth<br />

jazz and finishes with a melodic bossa novainspired<br />

section.<br />

Hypnagogia Polis is Montreal guitarist<br />

Simon Legault’s third album and the first<br />

with a quintet. Hypnogogia is the transitional<br />

state from wakefulness to sleep and<br />

many of the songs have a hypnotic, luminescent<br />

quality. The opening Aethereal Spheres<br />

begins with a wickedly tight ostinato pattern<br />

set up by the piano (Andrew Boudreau)<br />

and bass (Adrian Vedady). Then the saxophone<br />

(Jules Payette) and guitar enter with<br />

a contrapuntal unison melody while Louis-<br />

Vincent Hamel’s drums underpin the action.<br />

This sophisticated playfulness permeates the<br />

album. Euphemized Blues has a groovy lilting<br />

melody which loops around several times<br />

before Legault takes off on one of his lyrical<br />

and swirling solos.<br />

Legault’s album benefits from the virtuosity<br />

of the soloists. The tunes are inventive<br />

and reminiscent of Metheny or Scofield, but<br />

the highlights are the freewheeling improvisations,<br />

particularly with Legault’s fleet<br />

lines and Payette’s wailing and lyrical sax.<br />

Boudreau adds some fine piano work as well<br />

and it all makes for a clever and sophisticated<br />

disc.<br />

Ted Parkinson<br />

Concert note: The Alex Samaras Trio (with<br />

Harley Card and Jon Maharaj) performs at<br />

The Old Mill on <strong>December</strong> 21.<br />

Alleviation<br />

Mikkel Ploug<br />

Songlines SGL 16<strong>23</strong>-2 (songlines.com)<br />

!!<br />

Mikkel Ploug is<br />

a Danish guitarist<br />

who works regularly<br />

with his own<br />

jazz groups as well<br />

as Equilibrium, a<br />

trio with singer<br />

Sissel Vera Pettersen<br />

and clarinetist Joachim Badenhorst, a fascinating<br />

improvising chamber group that has<br />

found a home with Vancouver’s Songlines<br />

label. This solo acoustic guitar disc continues<br />

Ploug’s association with the label.<br />

Both the solo and acoustic aspects are<br />

departures for Ploug, who recounts his<br />

discovery and acquisition of a particularly<br />

apt mid-40s Gibson Bannerhead guitar, a<br />

steel-string, mahogany-bodied, flat top more<br />

apt to supply chorded accompaniments to a<br />

folk singer. Instead it’s inspired some of the<br />

most beautiful and unexpected solo guitar<br />

music one might wish to hear. On one level<br />

it’s distinguished by Ploug’s investment in<br />

its special sound store, its fret clatter and<br />

squeaks, the kind of string noise some seek to<br />

surmount and that others love. Its resonance<br />

is even more appealing, with Ploug using<br />

finger picking on most pieces, exploring the<br />

instrument’s warm account of triads and<br />

seventh chords then extending the spectrum<br />

to create dense weaves of contrasting<br />

harmonic languages, sometimes beginning a<br />

phrase in one world and ending in another.<br />

One of the most lustrous is Couleurs<br />

d’Olivier, a Messiaen inspiration in which<br />

diatonic scales ascend into dense chromaticism;<br />

another is Circle Wind, a cycling<br />

piece inspired by Steve Reich that creates an<br />

added dimension with metallic fret noise.<br />

This is consistently engaging music, bridging<br />

many genres.<br />

Stuart Broomer<br />

Inroads<br />

Gordon Grdina Quartet<br />

Songlines SGL 16<strong>23</strong>-2 (songlines.com)<br />

! ! Since his 2006<br />

debut, Think Like<br />

the Waves with jazz<br />

greats Gary Peacock<br />

and Paul Motian,<br />

Vancouver guitarist<br />

Gordon Grdina has<br />

pursued multiple<br />

musical paths, setting his guitar amidst his<br />

jazz-based ensembles, the classically influenced<br />

third stream music of the East Van<br />

Strings or Dan Mangan’s rock band, while<br />

concurrently exploring the oud, a Middle<br />

Eastern lute, in both traditional and contemporary<br />

applications. Inroads summarizes and<br />

synthesizes that decade of exploration, while<br />

presenting Grdina in a stellar group of New<br />

York-based musicians: Oscar Noriega on alto<br />

saxophone, clarinet and bass clarinet; Russ<br />

Lossing on piano and electric piano; and<br />

Satoshi Takeishi on drums.<br />

Grdina’s disparate influences here<br />

range through Béla Bartók, the rock band<br />

Soundgarden and free jazz, while his compositions<br />

pass through divergent moods, densities<br />

and methodologies. The opening Giggles<br />

is limpidly beautiful unaccompanied piano,<br />

while Not Sure is chameleon-like, moving<br />

from rapid-fire guitar aggression through<br />

lyrical piano and alto saxophone passages<br />

84 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


and then on to thrashing drums and howling<br />

saxophone, presenting many of Grdina’s<br />

elements in a single piece.<br />

Some of the most affecting pieces are also<br />

models of brevity. Kite Flight is a tantalizing<br />

explosion of lower register guitar, raucous<br />

bass clarinet and elemental percussion, while<br />

Semantics, a guitar/clarinet duet, is subtly<br />

evanescent. That same delicacy informs<br />

the longer Fragments in its blend of piano<br />

and oud, while contrasting Middle Eastern<br />

elements energize Apocalympics. It’s a fascinating<br />

program in which Grdina takes his<br />

materials in very different directions.<br />

Stuart Broomer<br />

Intersections<br />

Emie R Roussel Trio<br />

Effendi Records FND148<br />

(effendirecords.com)<br />

!!<br />

It is quite impossible<br />

not to be<br />

seduced by the<br />

cultivated and<br />

masterful pianism<br />

of Emie R Roussel,<br />

whose music on<br />

Intersections is<br />

patently expansive<br />

and at times a veritable masterclass in how to<br />

build assiduous climaxes, how to intelligently<br />

scale one’s dynamics and how to balance the<br />

music’s massive textures in sonorously judicious<br />

proportions. Her music is vivid. Each<br />

piece is a unique narrative. Musical character<br />

is well rounded and each piece is always<br />

fully developed before its natural denouement<br />

announces a natural demise.<br />

On three occasions the trio is expanded<br />

into a quartet and on each resulting work<br />

the addition of another musician – whether<br />

the vocalist on Away, the trumpeter on De<br />

Tadoussac à Auckland or the bassist on<br />

Tout le monde ensemble – is timely and<br />

perfectly placed. It’s surely an indication that<br />

the ideas and the material dictate the direction<br />

that the music should take. Rhythm is<br />

also an essential tool throughout and Roussel<br />

depends greatly on her left hand bass lines,<br />

together with the flights of fancy by her<br />

drummer, Dominic Cloutier and bassist,<br />

Nicolas Bédard, as a means of communicating<br />

ideas as well as shaping the structure<br />

of each piece.<br />

Each piece also has its own unique charisma,<br />

and flowing from this each gathers<br />

momentum, swinging to its climax with<br />

the wind of melody and harmony under its<br />

proverbial wings. All of this yields a magical<br />

and quite unforgettable album from a pianist<br />

of whom much is expected in the future.<br />

Raul da Gama<br />

The Vancouver Concert<br />

John Stetch & Vulneraville<br />

Independent (johnstetch.com)<br />

!!<br />

Splitting his<br />

time between<br />

New York and<br />

British Columbia,<br />

Edmonton-born<br />

pianist John Stetch’s<br />

recent Vancouver<br />

concert was a rare<br />

opportunity to<br />

display locally the contiguous rapport he’s<br />

developed with his Big Apple cohort of tenor<br />

saxophonist Steve Kortyka, bassist Ben Tiberio<br />

and drummer Philippe Lemm, collectively<br />

called Vulneraville. Four-fifths of the disc<br />

is made up of Stetch’s compositions, which<br />

mix the rigour of notated pieces with jazz’s<br />

dramatic timbral fluctuations.<br />

This is particularly apparent on Rondeau,<br />

related to a two-part Renaissance form with<br />

one part of the structure set to one musical<br />

line and the second to another. Stetch’s<br />

extravagant keyboard technique easily adapts<br />

the mode, especially in the second section<br />

when his emphasis on the piano’s higherpitched<br />

dynamics is furthered by Kortyka’s<br />

thickened obbligatos and increasingly<br />

powerful crunches from Lemm. It’s these<br />

sorts of high-quality themes and variations<br />

that inform the pianist’s other tunes, with<br />

Oscar’s Blue-Green Algebra, another<br />

example. Mixing church-like processional<br />

motifs with chunks of pure keyboard swing,<br />

he suggests Oscar Peterson’s hefty approach<br />

to the piano.<br />

Oddly enough though, Stetch ends the<br />

concert with a straight-ahead version of the<br />

standard Things Ain’t What They Used to<br />

Be. While the performance exudes romping<br />

excitement, with ample space for scorching<br />

breaks from each quartet member – even<br />

Tiberio, who is buried in the mix elsewhere<br />

– the choice is unfortunate. Things<br />

have changed as Stretch’s compositions and<br />

Vulneraville’s playing demonstrate. A less<br />

straight-ahead treatment would have been a<br />

better choice to affirm the title of the track.<br />

Ken Waxman<br />

Contumbao<br />

Hilario Durán<br />

Alma Records ACD92272<br />

(almarecords.com)<br />

!!<br />

Passionate,<br />

innovative, expressive,<br />

dynamic, evocative,<br />

sophisticated,<br />

genius – superlatives<br />

consistently<br />

used to describe the<br />

towering musicality<br />

and virtuosity that<br />

is pianist, composer, arranger and bandleader,<br />

Hilario Durán. Born in Havana, Cuba and<br />

based in Toronto for the past 20 years, Durán<br />

has been wowing the world with his creative<br />

approach to Afro-Cuban and Latin jazz, one<br />

breathtaking concert after another.<br />

Contumbao is a project that literally has<br />

brought Durán back to his Cuban roots.<br />

Recorded at Havana’s legendary EGREM<br />

studios (whose storied roster includes<br />

Orquesta Aragón, Arturo Sandoval, Chucho<br />

Valdés and the Buena Vista Social Club, and<br />

where Durán had recorded hundreds of<br />

sessions), it was Durán’s dream to get back<br />

What we're listening to this month:<br />

thewholenote.com/listening<br />

The Operatic Pianist, volume II<br />

Andrew Wright<br />

A rich collection of transcriptions<br />

of themes and fantasies from the<br />

opera, following the highly praised<br />

first album.<br />

Poems and Dreams<br />

Rebecca Jeffreys<br />

Rebecca Jeffreys and Alexander<br />

Timofeev present a collection of<br />

original works for flute and piano,<br />

exploring the new sounds of living<br />

composers.<br />

Portrait: Max Richter<br />

Angèle Dubeau & La Pietà<br />

One of Canada's greatest violinists<br />

performs works by influential<br />

post-minimalist composer Max<br />

Richter with her wonderful string<br />

orchestra La Pietà. Sublime!<br />

Rev<br />

Ernesto Cervini's Turboprop<br />

Featuring Tara Davidson, Joel Frahm,<br />

William Carn, Adrean Farrugia, Dan<br />

Loomis and Ernesto Cervini<br />

"A shoot-the-lights-out blast of a<br />

listen" Downbeat Magazine<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 85


there and play with some of his favourite<br />

musical collaborators, including two original<br />

bandmates from his 1990s band, Perspectiva:<br />

guitarist Jorge Luis Valdés (“Chicoy”) and<br />

bassist Jorge Reyes.<br />

Contumbao is a heartfelt homage to Cuba’s<br />

rich, musical history. Indeed, Durán dedicates<br />

his album of new compositions to<br />

Cuban music and its many musical styles<br />

“whose music and rhythms run through my<br />

veins.” This is apparent from the pulsating<br />

rhythms of the title track, and the spirited<br />

rumbas, El Tahonero and Rumba de Cajón,<br />

to the poignant Parque 527 – Durán’s former<br />

Havana address – and the exhilarating Duo<br />

Influenciado, performed with his friend and<br />

champion, the aforementioned Cuban piano<br />

great, Chucho Valdés.<br />

All the superlatives in the world can’t do<br />

justice to the experience of listening to Durán<br />

and his stellar cast of musical compatriots. In<br />

fact, Contumbao may leave you speechless!<br />

Sharna Searle<br />

Jondo<br />

Joshua Rager Nonet<br />

Bent River Records BRR-<strong>2017</strong>02<br />

(joshrager.com)<br />

!!<br />

With his highly<br />

alluring nonet<br />

recording entitled<br />

Jondo, pianist Josh<br />

Rager enters a<br />

field crowded with<br />

stellar performances<br />

by pianists.<br />

However, his<br />

multi-layered idiomatic compositions and<br />

their memorable execution set him somewhat<br />

apart from the rest of the tribe. The repertoire<br />

may be named after the rhythmically rich and<br />

mysterious Jondo, but the album derives most<br />

of its richness from the opening, extended<br />

work, the Prodigal Son Suite. It is a work that<br />

is by turns poised, polished, intimate and<br />

exuberant. Rager – with his lustrous pianism<br />

– leads an ensemble that works like a welloiled<br />

machine, playing his compositions with<br />

authority and élan and doing a remarkable<br />

job of getting under Rager’s sonic skin.<br />

For his part the pianist swings with palpable<br />

enjoyment and as in the way he makes<br />

his trills into mischievous flourishes – especially<br />

on songs such as Child’s Play and 3<br />

Legged Dog – as well as in the rich variety<br />

of articulation and dynamic gradation<br />

throughout the rest of the recording. The<br />

pacing of his Zen-like piece, The Master<br />

Waits, and the tricky movements of The<br />

Inside Track, reveal Rager to be both a writer<br />

and pianist of distinct personality, ever sensitive<br />

and careful never to become overbearing.<br />

In the end, how one will react to this<br />

recording will largely depend on one’s taste<br />

for music that emerges from a large tonal<br />

palette. To that end, everything that the Joshua<br />

Rager Nonet serves up on Jondo is brimful<br />

with infectious delight and enjoyment.<br />

Raul da Gama<br />

Thank You for Listening<br />

The Joe Bowden Project<br />

Independent (joebowden.bandcamp.com)<br />

!!<br />

As a young<br />

teenager, I was<br />

taught to repeat<br />

the phrase “thank<br />

you for listening”<br />

when taking a<br />

post-performance<br />

bow. Joe<br />

Bowden should feel<br />

free to repeat this phrase over and over as<br />

he deserves endless praise and respect for<br />

his brilliant work as composer, drummer,<br />

arranger and bandleader in his latest release.<br />

Originally from Halifax, Bowden moved to<br />

Toronto in the early 1980s where he studied at<br />

Humber College and was musically inspired<br />

by listening to and working with many jazz<br />

musicians. His music here is driven by a<br />

mature understanding of jazz style, rhythms,<br />

and awe-inspiring musicianship.<br />

Bowden’s ten musicians play with a deep<br />

respect for his music and artistry. Mingus is<br />

an upbeat toe-tapping tradition-flavoured<br />

tune with a locked-in groove between the<br />

drums and Rich Brown’s bass. I’m Here Again<br />

is a slower quasi-ballad, featuring Michael<br />

Occhipinti’s modernistic guitar solos and<br />

Manuel Valera’s chromatic runs and intervals<br />

on piano. Devil Five lives up to its title,<br />

featuring a wide interval, almost minimalistic<br />

repeating bass line, zippy piano runs and<br />

Bowden’s virtuosic drum solos. Nice change<br />

of pace with FSC (Funky Soul Calypso), a fun<br />

get-up-and-dance tune featuring Joy Lapps-<br />

Lewis’ steel pan artistry.<br />

Bowden writes on the CD jacket “Pursuit of<br />

Happiness, is it reality or a dream?” Like the<br />

track of the same name, the reflection, improvisations<br />

and grooves make this a dreamy<br />

musical reality!<br />

Tiina Kiik<br />

You’re Gonna Hear From Me<br />

Mary-Catherine Pazzano<br />

Glorious Feeling Records<br />

!!<br />

On her debut<br />

release, elegant<br />

chanteuse Mary-<br />

Catherine Pazzano<br />

has not only<br />

shown exceptional<br />

good taste in<br />

presenting 12 fine<br />

compositions from<br />

musical theatre, film and the Great American<br />

Songbook, but she has also conscripted<br />

a superb lineup of musical collaborators,<br />

including Don Buchanan on piano (also<br />

co-producer), Jason Hunter on saxophones,<br />

Pat Collins on bass and Steve James on drums.<br />

Arranged and produced by Pazzano, she<br />

has selectively dipped into the catalogues of<br />

venerable composers such as Jerome Kern,<br />

Oscar Hammerstein, Harry Warren, Cole<br />

Porter, Henry Mancini and Johnny Mercer as<br />

well as contemporary artists, Joni Mitchell<br />

and Billy Joel.<br />

First up is the stirring (and rarely<br />

performed) title track, written for the cult<br />

film Inside Daisy Clover starring Natalie<br />

Wood. Pazzano shines throughout with<br />

energy and luscious tone, as she soars with<br />

her quartet. Buchanan and Pazzano have<br />

included one well-written original composition,<br />

A Simple Conversation – which has<br />

the potential to become a contemporary<br />

jazz standard. Another standout is Mancini<br />

and Mercer’s Charade, from the hit movie<br />

of the same name starring Audrey Hepburn.<br />

Haunting and languid, this tune is set as<br />

perfectly as a Tiffany solitaire – with a manyfaceted<br />

voice/bass section in front, followed<br />

by an up-tempo sequence and fine bass solo<br />

from Collins.<br />

Pazzano possesses a gorgeous, classically<br />

trained contralto voice capable of projecting<br />

the full gamut of emotions, as well as an<br />

uncanny skill with rendering the lyrics of<br />

current music, jazz standards and show tunes.<br />

A fine opening salvo!<br />

Lesley Mitchell-Clarke<br />

Concert notes: Mary-Catherine Pazzano<br />

has a number of upcoming performances<br />

in the GTA: <strong>December</strong> 1 at the Jazz Room in<br />

Waterloo with the Penderecki String Quartet,<br />

Joni NehRita and the New Vibes Quintet;<br />

<strong>January</strong> 25 at Jazz Bistro in Toronto with Don<br />

Buchanan, piano, Pat Collins, bass, and Steve<br />

James, drums; and March 9 as part of Women<br />

Music Revolutionaries at the Registry Theatre,<br />

Kitchener.<br />

Nathaniel: A Tribute to Nat King Cole<br />

Ori Dagan<br />

Independent ODCD03 (oridagan.com)<br />

Nat “King” Cole & Me<br />

Gregory Porter<br />

Blue Note 5791468<br />

! ! Nat King Cole<br />

had an incredibly<br />

prolific recording<br />

career, producing<br />

an astounding 30<br />

albums, despite his<br />

early death at age<br />

45. He was a pop<br />

artist as much as<br />

a jazz singer and piano player, and he was<br />

much loved for his velvety voice and gentlemanly<br />

demeanour. So it’s no surprise that<br />

this month we have not one, but two tribute<br />

albums to the legendary musician.<br />

Toronto singer Ori Dagan, known for his<br />

scat-singing talents, inventiveness and lighthearted<br />

tune choices (check out his Super<br />

Mario medley on YouTube!), is true to form<br />

on Nathaniel: A Tribute to Nat King Cole.<br />

With Mark Kieswetter, Nathan Hiltz, Ross<br />

McIntyre and Mark Kelso accompanying,<br />

we’re treated to familiar Cole songs (Nature<br />

Boy) and a few lesser known (Lillette), as well<br />

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as some original<br />

compositions<br />

inspired by Cole’s<br />

music and life.<br />

American souljazz<br />

singer Gregory<br />

Porter has come<br />

out with a tender<br />

tribute to his<br />

boyhood musical<br />

hero. With the 80-piece London Studio<br />

Orchestra – masterfully arranged by Vince<br />

Mendoza – featured on most of the tracks,<br />

Nat “King” Cole & Me is big, string-laden and<br />

lush. Porter’s warm voice is similar in tone to<br />

Cole’s but he doesn’t attempt to imitate. His<br />

straight, heartfelt delivery allows the lyrics to<br />

speak for themselves. Many of the big hits are<br />

covered including Mona Lisa and L-O-V-E,<br />

and all the emotional stops are pulled<br />

out on Smile.<br />

These two albums are so different in style<br />

that a Cole fan could do well by adding both<br />

to their collection.<br />

Cathy Riches<br />

Swinging on a Star<br />

Tardo Hammer Trio<br />

Cellar Live CL110717 (cellarlive.com)<br />

!!<br />

To play bebop,<br />

one needs to deal<br />

with two competing<br />

impulses: master<br />

the instrument –<br />

amass the fluency<br />

required to float at<br />

heightened tempi,<br />

navigate harmonic complexities and execute<br />

ornamented lines that are part of this music’s<br />

tradition – and utilize a relaxed phraseology<br />

that is anything but frenetic and that comes<br />

across as “not trying too hard.” No doubt, to<br />

play with the sort of authenticity that stellar<br />

musicians Tardo Hammer, Lee Hudson and<br />

Steve Williams bring to Hammer’s Swinging<br />

On A Star is difficult. But to listeners, the<br />

effort is hidden, the inventive spirit of musical<br />

collaboration and taste displayed.<br />

In the spirit of disclosure, I, as guitarist<br />

and occasional liner-note writer, am affiliated<br />

with Cellar Live, the label on which<br />

Hammer’s disc is released. Nonetheless, as an<br />

objective jazz fan, I am routinely impressed<br />

by their expanding catalogue of great releases<br />

of which Swinging On A Star is no exception.<br />

Drinking from the well of Bud Powell,<br />

Barry Harris and Thelonious Monk, Hammer<br />

and company offer an auditory snapshot of<br />

a blue-chip jazz trio on any given night. Yes,<br />

there are arrangements and unique repertoire;<br />

however, this recording fits comfortably<br />

within the tradition of blowing sessions,<br />

wherein beauty is revealed through improvisatory<br />

extrapolations that spin forward<br />

when three masters come together in<br />

a comfortable listening environment.<br />

Overall, a swinging recording that marries<br />

beautiful songs, improvisatory excellence<br />

and, as a bonus, insightful liner notes by<br />

Morgan Childs.<br />

Andrew Scott<br />

Metamorphosis<br />

LAMA + Joachim Badenhorst<br />

Clean Feed CF433 CD<br />

(cleanfeed-records.com)<br />

!!<br />

Metamorphosis<br />

is true to its title<br />

only if the term<br />

includes transmogrifying<br />

one way<br />

and subsequently<br />

taking a completely<br />

opposite form, as<br />

this Canadian/<br />

Belgian foursome does on this CD. Initially on<br />

Metamorphosis I, it appears that the brassy<br />

emphasis from Portuguese trumpeter Susana<br />

Santos Silva and pressurized flutters from<br />

Belgian bass clarinetist Joachim Badenhorst<br />

are going to be mere bagatelles to the polyrhythmic<br />

undulations from Portuguese<br />

keyboardist Gonçalo Almeida, which seem<br />

to subsume all other timbres into a crackling<br />

electronic wash. But not only is there soon<br />

space for brass and reed counterpoint, once<br />

the sounds flow into Metamorphosis II, the<br />

pulsating tick-tock of Canadian drummer<br />

Greg Smith kicks into gear and is joined<br />

by string plucks from Almeida, who has<br />

switched to double bass, an expansion<br />

creating a powerful acoustic jazz trope.<br />

This movement from electronic to acoustic<br />

continues throughout the CD, through faultless<br />

changes of pitch and tempo. Especially<br />

striking is how Badenhorst and Silva appear<br />

to be going their separate ways, examining<br />

extended techniques, involving, for instance,<br />

contralto hollow tones from the clarinetist<br />

and billowing plunger excursions from the<br />

trumpeter, only to interlock onto a series of<br />

connective riffs in the nick of time.<br />

Officially Badenhorst is still a guest of<br />

the LAMA trio, but it’s evident that the four<br />

have evolved a strategy that gives everyone<br />

a chance at textural exploration as a notable<br />

group sound is produced.<br />

Ken Waxman<br />

Somewhere Sacred<br />

Chris Wallace’s Many Names<br />

GB Records (chriswallacedrums.com)<br />

!!<br />

Jazz musician/<br />

drummer/composer<br />

Chris Wallace hails<br />

from Regina, but his<br />

varied career has<br />

seen him working<br />

in Europe, the<br />

United States and<br />

Canada, residing/<br />

working in Edinburgh, Scotland from 2002<br />

to 2013 when he moved to Toronto. So many<br />

locales and musical experiences, along with<br />

his compositional process he describes as<br />

“allowing myself to be open to something I<br />

don’t fully understand and that is where the<br />

music comes from – somewhere sacred,”<br />

must have influenced his smart contemporary<br />

jazz compositions here, featuring his<br />

outstanding band Many Names – Jeff King<br />

What we're listening to this month:<br />

thewholenote.com/listening<br />

Sideralis<br />

Roberto Ottaviano QuarkTet<br />

Roberto Ottaviano, saxophones;<br />

Alexander Hawkins, piano; Michael<br />

Formanek, bass; Gerry Hemingway,<br />

drums<br />

A sound exploration, a manifesto of<br />

gratitude to John Coltrane (1967-<strong>2017</strong>)<br />

Stravinski - Prokofiev<br />

David Jalbert<br />

Canadian pianist David Jalbert is<br />

featured on this recording of piano<br />

transcriptions of Russian ballet<br />

repertoire. He brilliantly performs<br />

music from Stravinsky and Prokofiev.<br />

Verdi's Guitar<br />

Alan Rinehart<br />

Guitarist Alan Rinehart presents<br />

solo guitar by 19th-century<br />

composer Josef Kaspar Mertz on<br />

his debut Ravello release.<br />

Violin Muse<br />

Madeleine Mitchell<br />

A fabulous collection of<br />

contemporary works by leading<br />

British composers – all world<br />

premieres. Works for violin/piano,<br />

two violins and violin/orchestra.<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 87


(tenor sax), Adrean Farrugia (piano) and<br />

Daniel Fortin (double bass).<br />

Wallace the composer and Wallace the<br />

drummer both listen astutely, have complex<br />

technical prowess and unique musical storytelling<br />

capabilities. Wallace’s drumming is<br />

dense and colourful yet never overwhelming,<br />

and fully supportive of his colleagues – as best<br />

heard in Chapter Zero where his backdrop<br />

supports King’s sax stylings, Farrugia’s florid<br />

piano, Fortin’s driving bass and the occasional<br />

band quasi-unison sections. More reflective is<br />

the opening of the title track, with a luscious<br />

sax melody, laid-back groove, superb bass<br />

solo and wide-pitch piano explorations.<br />

New-music sounds appear in the pitch leaps<br />

in the sax and the chromatic florid piano<br />

runs of Visitation. Nice musical conversations<br />

between the players flavour the more traditional<br />

jazz sounding A Memory of 10.<br />

With touches of many styles throughout<br />

performed by great multi-faceted musicians/improvisers,<br />

Wallace’s challenging jazz<br />

welcomes repeated listening.<br />

Tiina Kiik<br />

Entangled Pathways<br />

Gilliam, Milmine & Pottie<br />

Melos Productions MPCD 005<br />

(bill-gilliam.com)<br />

!!<br />

This challenging<br />

and enervating<br />

recording<br />

is a collection<br />

of original<br />

music created<br />

by the acoustic<br />

trio of pianist Bill<br />

Gilliam, soprano<br />

saxophonist Kayla Milmine and drummer<br />

Ambrose Pottie. The creative group originally<br />

met through the noted Toronto Improvisers<br />

Orchestra (TIO) and soon began writing<br />

and performing impressive free music<br />

together. According to Gilliam (the producer<br />

and primary composer), “Some pieces are<br />

composed using free-floating melodies, jazz<br />

idioms and modal-chromatic tonalities, while<br />

other pieces are freely improvised creations.”<br />

Although perhaps gestated by different<br />

processes, the 12 impressive tracks all seem<br />

to lead to a central concept of connectedness,<br />

alternate realities and divergent pathways<br />

that may yet resonate together like strands<br />

in a web; in other words, musical quantum<br />

entanglement.<br />

The Singularity is well-placed in the<br />

program, as it seems to portend the sonic<br />

and emotional musical journey ahead.<br />

Gilliam’s lush, powerful and insistent piano<br />

lines are both appealing and unnerving,<br />

and Milmine’s commitment to this extraordinary<br />

and technically challenging music is<br />

evident with every note that she plays – she<br />

bends that piece of cold metal to her will, and<br />

makes it sing.<br />

Mountain Dance is a standout. One of the<br />

most visual and rhythmically complex pieces<br />

on the CD, the action is propelled by Pottie,<br />

who remains completely musical while deftly<br />

driving the trio into the nether regions. Also,<br />

the groovy and exotic Porous Borders utilizes<br />

unison and descending lines as well as<br />

modal dissonance and stark piano statements<br />

to create a feeling of nervous isolation<br />

– all rendered with a sense of irony, as true<br />

isolation may be nothing more than a selfimposed<br />

construct.<br />

Lesley Mitchell-Clarke<br />

Concert Note: Gilliam, Milmine & Pottie<br />

perform at the Burdock on February 6.<br />

Aladdin’s Dream - The Firebirds Play Carl<br />

Nielsen<br />

The Firebirds<br />

ILK 269 CD (ilkmusic.com)<br />

!!<br />

Tweaking the<br />

compositions<br />

of Denmark’s<br />

most prominent<br />

composer to new<br />

ends, The Firebirds<br />

– tenor saxophonist/clarinetist<br />

Anders Banke, keyboardist Anders Filipsen<br />

and percussionist Stefan Pasborg – discover<br />

hitherto hidden grooves in Carl August<br />

Nielsen’s (1865-1931) work.<br />

Concentrating on extracts from Aladdin,<br />

the Helios Overture and Little Suite for<br />

Strings, the trio emphasizes eastern Eurasian<br />

dance-like motifs with pliable keyboard<br />

shakes and ney-like reed outbursts, while<br />

adding a pronounced, almost rock-like beat<br />

to the tunes. If a combination of tenor sax<br />

blasts and drum backbeats suggest heavy<br />

metal tropes on The Market Place in Ispahan,<br />

remember that rock style is now as prominent<br />

in Scandinavia as the buoyancy of Nielsen’s<br />

tunes, exemplified by Filipsen’s animated<br />

key chiming. The Helios Overture provides<br />

the most varied instance of the trio’s sound<br />

reconstitution. Evolving from sophisticated<br />

saxophone and ruffled keyboard timbres at<br />

the beginning, to a snaking, stop-time melody<br />

examination in the middle, to an intense<br />

display of agitated snare pops and splashing<br />

cymbal from Pasborg, the convivial theme<br />

returns as light swing by the finale, helped by<br />

the keyboardist’s walking bass line.<br />

The band’s name came about after the<br />

trio recorded a CD which transformed some<br />

Stravinsky compositions into semi-improvised<br />

theme and variations. The three<br />

have now proven they can perform similar<br />

alchemy on another composer’s work with<br />

this CD. There are plenty of other modern<br />

composers whose work could provide<br />

material for equal transformations.<br />

Ken Waxman<br />

POT POURRI<br />

Meter<br />

Autorickshaw<br />

Tala-Wallah Records TW006<br />

(autorickshaw.ca)<br />

!!<br />

Autorickshaw,<br />

the critically<br />

acclaimed, worldtouring<br />

Toronto<br />

group is reconnecting<br />

with its<br />

early band roots in<br />

its 15th anniversary<br />

season. Its previous<br />

album The Humours of Autorickshaw was<br />

enriched by more than a dozen musicians<br />

appearing in complex studio mixes. On<br />

Meter, Autorickshaw returns to its core: Suba<br />

Sankaran (voice, percussion), Ed Hanley<br />

(tabla, vocal and other percussion) and Dylan<br />

Bell (bass, voice, vocal drums, keyboards).<br />

Meter serves up new compositions by each<br />

member as well as works by other Toronto<br />

musicians. Covers are again a feature here:<br />

Peter Gabriel’s Mercy Street, Paul Simon’s<br />

Me and Julio Down by the Schoolyard and<br />

perhaps most surprisingly, the traditional<br />

Francophone J’entends le Moulin, all get<br />

the Autorickshaw treatment. The short but<br />

delightful Thom Petti by Suba Sankaran begins<br />

with the phrase “ta-thom, thom-ta,” derived<br />

from Carnatic (South India) solkattu (onomatopoetic<br />

drum syllables) as vocalized by all three<br />

musicians. These phrases echo the percussive<br />

clickety-clack of a long train ride though India<br />

with its track gaps, curves and straightaways,<br />

heard as superimpositions of several rhythmic<br />

feels. The addition of a harmonically rich vocalized<br />

chord – imitating a passing train horn –<br />

adds sparkle to the onomatopoeic fun.<br />

Another musically outstanding moment<br />

comes halfway through the song The Trouble<br />

with Hari, composed by Toronto jazz veteran<br />

Gordon Sheard. Bell’s electric bass joins<br />

Sankaran’s jazz-inflected scatting, Carnatic<br />

solkattus and sargams (solfège recitation) in<br />

exact melodic coupling, call-response and<br />

harmonic comping. It’s a sterling example<br />

of the kind of inspired border-crisscrossing<br />

musical experience the album offers listeners<br />

up for adventure.<br />

Andrew Timar<br />

Moderne Frau<br />

Adi Braun<br />

Independent (adibraun.com)<br />

! ! Perhaps Adi<br />

Braun is playing to<br />

her strengths on<br />

Moderne Frau. But<br />

rarely is the seduction<br />

of Weimar<br />

Berlin cabaret been<br />

performed with a<br />

sassier va-va-voom<br />

88 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


and oomph than on the 13 songs of this<br />

recording. Now that could well be due in part<br />

to the outstanding musicians on the album,<br />

but there is nothing whatsoever that can<br />

outshine Braun’s luminously sung performance.<br />

Clearly Braun’s redemptive gods are<br />

Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill and she makes<br />

every gesture count meaningfully on this disc,<br />

where biting satire and burlesque meet outrageously<br />

colourful art song.<br />

Certainly the music speaks in a special way<br />

to Braun. She reveals their secrets in seductive<br />

whispers; there is a burning lust for life<br />

played out in these lyrics, especially in the<br />

music of Brecht and Weill, but Moderne Frau,<br />

the title track (her own compositon), is also<br />

an outstanding example of her creativity,<br />

as is Speak Low from the pen of Weill and<br />

Ogden Nash.<br />

Braun clearly revels in the intensity of the<br />

songs’ drama and it is this aspect of the disc<br />

that spotlights her vocals throughout. The<br />

vocalist’s larger-than-life persona is also a<br />

perfect fit for this repertoire and she isn’t<br />

afraid to push it to its limits either. The results<br />

are often more beautiful and nuanced than<br />

expected. The edgiest moments come in<br />

Mackie Messer, perhaps the defining moment<br />

on the entire disc, closely followed by the<br />

bittersweet tenderness of It Never Was You.<br />

Raul da Gama<br />

Concert Note: Adi Braun celebrates the<br />

launch of Moderne Frau at the Jazz Bistro on<br />

<strong>December</strong> 10.<br />

Brass Fabulous<br />

Jason Rosenblatt & Orkestra Severni<br />

Independent (rachellemisch.com)<br />

!!<br />

Founded in 2009 by trombonist Rachel<br />

Lemisch, the Montreal-based Orkestra<br />

Severni (Northern Orchestra) performs brass<br />

band repertoire of Klezmer, Moldavian and<br />

Serbian traditions. Besides their great energetic<br />

performances here, what makes their<br />

debut release even more exciting is that all 11<br />

tracks are original<br />

works rooted in<br />

the new Eastern<br />

European music<br />

genre by composer/<br />

pianist/harmonica<br />

player Jason<br />

Rosenblatt.<br />

Rosenblatt’s<br />

compositions embody many styles. The<br />

opening Sirba from the three-movement Sirba<br />

a la Oscar is driven by fast upbeat rhythms<br />

that are always in control. A great effect is<br />

having its final cadence resolve into the introduction<br />

of the next movement, Hora, a work<br />

comprised of more traditional-sounding<br />

melodies, rhythms and exquisite dynamic<br />

shifts. The striking rhythmic bounces of the<br />

silences between the resounding brass shots<br />

in the third movement, Freylach, showcase<br />

the musicians’ tight ensemble technique.<br />

Rosenblatt Kid’s Contra features a descending<br />

chromatic line that makes for happy walking<br />

music with a carnival feel. Nice style contrast<br />

is Chassidic Love Tango, with its traditional<br />

tango groove interspersed with brief threequarter<br />

waltz sections. The closing Anshei<br />

Brzezan Nign has a lullaby-feel ending with<br />

sublime held-piano sounds.<br />

All the accomplished band musicians,<br />

along with special guest Ben Holmes<br />

(trumpet) play brilliantly. Sound quality is<br />

great too. Brass Fabulous lives up to its name.<br />

This a spectacular addition to the brass band<br />

repertoire, well deserving of lots of fans and<br />

of lots of listening hours.<br />

Tiina Kiik<br />

The Book of Transfigurations<br />

Dálava<br />

Songlines SGL 2408-2 (songlines.com)<br />

!!<br />

About the group Dálava, reviewer Mark<br />

Tucker wrote, “… I was both chilled and<br />

thrilled by the fusion of avant-garde, ancient,<br />

and progressive musics…” After listening<br />

to their second<br />

album The Book of<br />

Transfigurations,<br />

released on<br />

the Vancouver<br />

boundary-crashing<br />

Songlines label,<br />

I’d have to agree.<br />

Dálava’s project<br />

crosses and combines several genres, disciplines,<br />

generations and continents. At its<br />

core is the duo of American vocalist Julia<br />

Ulehla and guitarist Aram Bajakian (known<br />

for his work with John Zorn and with Lou<br />

Reed). Musical and life partners, they perform<br />

Moravian folk songs of the 19th and early-20th<br />

century transcribed over 100 years ago by<br />

Ulehla’s Czech musicologist great-grandfather.<br />

The songs are then transfigured through their<br />

21st-century sensibilities, informed by world<br />

music, creative jazz and post-rock.<br />

Ulehla is currently working on her PhD<br />

researching Moravian song with UBC ethnomusicologist<br />

Michael Tenzer. Her scholarship<br />

is amply illustrated in the lavish<br />

36-page booklet (including original lyrics<br />

with English translations and commentary)<br />

and it richly informs Dálava’s interpretations.<br />

As for Bajakian, he keeps busy<br />

gigging on guitar with other bands, including<br />

the American-Hungarian folk/art-rock band<br />

Glass House Ensemble.<br />

The duo’s music, while a profoundly<br />

personal statement, is also emotionally<br />

supported and amplified on the album by<br />

leading musicians on the Vancouver creative<br />

music scene: cellist Peggy Lee, Tyson Naylor<br />

on multi-keys, bassist Colin Cowan and Dylan<br />

van der Schyff on drums.<br />

Ulehla and Bajakian have reportedly<br />

already made a splash in the Czech Republic<br />

with their live interpretations of this material.<br />

I predict Dálava’s affective music will gain<br />

many more global fans with this release.<br />

Andrew Timar<br />

Something in the Air: Seven Musical Voices for the Future<br />

KEN WAXMAN<br />

The year just ending marked one important milestone in<br />

musical history. The first so-called jazz record was issued in<br />

1917 by the Original Dixieland Jass Band (ODJB). Obviously<br />

that musical designation, which in its century of existence has gone<br />

through as many permutations and retrenchments as so-called<br />

classical music has in many centuries, is far different then the<br />

ODJB’s primitive efforts. But jazz/improvised music continues<br />

to evolve, buttressed by new voices. Here is a group of youngish<br />

improvisers who will likely still be contributing to the shape of jazz<br />

during its 125th anniversary – and probably for years afterwards.<br />

First is Vancouver-born, Brooklyn-based pianist Kris Davis, 37,<br />

whose presence on advanced jazz sessions over the past half-decade<br />

or so has become almost as ubiquitous as Lennon-McCartney<br />

tunes at retro-60s parties. Sing Me Some Cry (Clean Feed CF 428<br />

CD cleanfeed-records.com) finds the Canadian pianist in a combo<br />

led by bassist Eric Revis, featuring tenor<br />

saxophonist/clarinetist Ken Vandermark<br />

and drummer Chad Taylor. Although each<br />

of the other players has extensive experience,<br />

there are points at which Davis<br />

dominates. Good Company, for instance,<br />

which begins with a J. Arthur Rank-like<br />

gong resonation from Taylor’s cymbals<br />

and reed asides in brief Morse Code-like<br />

dashes, retains its tension from the pianist’s kinetic pressure, with<br />

the saxophonist’s peek-a-boo contributions hardening into pressurized<br />

honks that unroll in tandem with keyboard tinkling. Obliogo<br />

features a middle section where high-frequency piano notes slice<br />

kinetically through saxophone snorts and string elaboration from<br />

Revis, but maintain the composition’s careful shape. Instructively<br />

Rye Eclipse, the one Davis composition, is multi-sequenced and<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 89


more complex. Mixing Revis’ sliding bass notes with stopped piano<br />

keys, Vandermark’s sheets of sounds become staccato just as the piano<br />

playing becomes more percussive. The result shapes reed overblowing,<br />

string reverberations and complex drum beats into a groove of storytelling<br />

and solid forward motion.<br />

Another pianist who is equally valuable<br />

in international collaborations as leader<br />

and sideperson is the United Kingdom’s<br />

Alexander Hawkins, 36. On Sideralis<br />

(Dodicilune Dischi Ed 354 dodicilune.it),<br />

he joins veteran American heavy hitters,<br />

bassist Michael Formanek and drummer<br />

Gerry Hemingway as part of Italian saxophonist<br />

Roberto Ottaviano’s QuarkTet, to<br />

interpret ten of Ottaviano’s compositions that range from rhythm<br />

numbers to ballads. Checking off the saxophonist’s influences, Planet<br />

Nichols, Ottaviano’s stop-time salute to pianist Herbie Nichols, gets<br />

much of its rollicking shape from Hawkins’ high-frequency key splatters<br />

and crescendos, with a walking bass line and cymbal breaks also<br />

contributing. At the same time the power of Formanek’s accompaniment<br />

on Planet John Lee Hooker, coupled with singular soprano<br />

saxophone breaths, makes the tune appear more a salute to Charles<br />

Mingus than the Mississippi bluesman. Replete with shadowing of<br />

the composer’s every breath on Berenice’s Code, Hawkins’ keyboard<br />

caressing preserves the balladic mood while moving the piece linearly.<br />

Centaurus’ lilt is cemented by inner piano string plucks that confirm<br />

the composition’s jocular theme, with Hemingway’s bell pealing and<br />

the pianist’s key slaps and crunches deconstructing and extending<br />

the melody until the saxophonist’s tiny reed bites reel it into straightahead<br />

swing. This same freedom that never exceeds its parameters is<br />

displayed on the title tune. Stopped keys and scrubbing slides from<br />

the pianist plus the drummer’s rubs provide the perfect contrast to<br />

Ottaviano’s intense note puffing. Subsequent return to a rumbling<br />

pulse confirms the tune’s gentle motion and the collaborative skill of<br />

this ad-hoc quartet.<br />

Minimalist and experimental, Timeless<br />

(JACC Records 034 jacc-records.com) is a<br />

duet between Portuguese guitarist Marcelo<br />

dos Reis and French pianist Eve Risser,<br />

35, who made her reputation working in<br />

ensembles as different as France’s Orchestra<br />

National de Jazz and in a rock-oriented<br />

duo. With both instruments prepared with<br />

numerous objects, as well as played straight,<br />

the selections are compressed and cramped, inhabiting a narrow<br />

spectrum, but never abandoning rhythm or feelings. A piece such<br />

as Balance Spring, for instance, suggests computer-generated wave<br />

forms even though there is no electronic processing. Instead, as the<br />

guitarist creates a strummed continuum, the pianist emphasizes carefully<br />

thought out patterns, culminating in chiselled movements. In<br />

the same way, clanks and crunches from internal piano strings plus<br />

external ones on the guitar neck, produce timbres on Hourglass that<br />

could have come from a vibraphone. This sound, jolted along with<br />

bottleneck-guitar slashes, reaches a thematic crescendo that’s almost<br />

lyrical as Riser’s splayed and sharp tones amalgamate into melodic<br />

interface. With the tracks reflecting ambience as well as aggression, a<br />

piece like the extended Water Clock reflects this strategy in miniature.<br />

While dos Reis’ metallic string sawing and percussive strums narrow<br />

the interface to a single, almost static line, Risser’s sharp strokes<br />

move from aping the guitarist’s heft and power to become chromatic.<br />

Eventually, sweeping acoustic piano lines reveal an underlying melody<br />

that sets up an unconventional groove.<br />

Of course it’s not just pianists who will determine the future of<br />

21st-century improvised music. Horn players and drummers will make<br />

their own noises. Take for example two of the players in the Amok<br />

Amor (AA) quartet, American trumpeter Peter Evans, 36, and German<br />

drummer Christian Lillinger, 33. Their work<br />

with alto saxophonist Wanja Slavin and<br />

bassist Petter Eldh on We Know Not What<br />

We Do (Intakt CD 279intaktrec.ch), shows<br />

their interactive skills in one of the many<br />

bands in which they participate. It’s the same<br />

story with Chicago-based tenor saxophonist<br />

Dave Rempis, 42, and drummer Tim Daisy,<br />

41, featured on The Halfway There Suite<br />

(Relay Recordings 016 timdaisy.com) by the<br />

drummer`s Celebration Sextet. Different discs could find Rempis in the<br />

leadership role or both as sidefolk.<br />

Composers as well as players – Evans wrote two tunes on We Know<br />

Not What We Do and Lillinger three – the key to their talents is how<br />

carefully they work in an organized setting, as on Pulsar, the Evanspenned<br />

first track. It’s lavish and lovely, notched with contrapuntal<br />

slurs and staccato tremors from the horns as the drummer’s percussive<br />

bumps and focused rim shots keep the tune bouncy and relaxed.<br />

These ambulatory dynamics are also present on Trio Amok, a Lillinger<br />

composition, pushed along with percussion bumps and rumbles and<br />

resonating pumps from bassist Petter Eldh. While Evans’ spectacular<br />

brassiness adds to the tune’s tautness, a respite after he intertwines<br />

open-horn brays with staccato tongue flutters from Slavin dissipates<br />

the tension. A more striking instance of the drummer’s dexterity is on<br />

A Run through the Neoliberalism, another of his compositions, during<br />

which altissimo reed squalls and trumpet tattoos set up as a staccatissimo,<br />

near-bebop romp. The drummer’s accompaniment may crackle<br />

and churn, but as the horns’ work explodes the theme into atoms, his<br />

cymbal cascades and rim shots glue it back into a swinging whole.<br />

With some of the other tracks utilizing palindromes, balladic melancholy,<br />

fiery stomps and rhythmic stop-time sequences, AA keeps the<br />

session engaging and moving. The saxophonist and bassist get solo<br />

space as well, with the combination of power and bluster from the<br />

rhythm section and inventive flutters and echoes from the horns<br />

ensuring that while predicting what sounds will appear next is nearly<br />

impossible, the knowledge that they will be first-class is confirmed.<br />

Daisy and Rempis are other first-class<br />

sound explorers featured on The Halfway<br />

There Suite along with Chicago associates,<br />

clarinetist James Falzone, trumpeter<br />

Russ Johnson, cellist Fred Lonberg-Holm<br />

and visiting New Yorker, trombonist Steve<br />

Swell. Composed as a birthday present<br />

for himself and the featured musicians, it<br />

isn’t clear whether Daisy’s CD title refers<br />

to mortality or the length of the four-part<br />

suite that lasts only 33 minutes. But like brevity being the soul of wit,<br />

the arrangements and solo work are exceptional enough to not need<br />

more length. Rempis’ showcase is on Part 2, where his skyscraperhigh<br />

multiphonics and glossolalia bring energetic freedom to the<br />

piece which otherwise flows along with orchestral calm and a steady<br />

jazz groove. Falzone’s solo tone is closest to so-called legitimate as<br />

he negotiates linkages between the two genres. Swell, and to a lesser<br />

extend Johnson, are the disrupters. The trombonist sprays many of<br />

the arrangements with gutbucket-styled slurs and tailgate-like elaborations.<br />

With the cellist scratching out notes and Daisy replicating<br />

kettle-drum-like pressure, Part 3 rolls from crescendos to diminuendos<br />

without breaking the melodic continuum. These disparate<br />

currents climax in the concluding Part 4, with stop-time polyphony<br />

shattered by a clean trumpet blast that joins with cello pumps to herd<br />

the sequence into a finale that swings, and neatly refers back to the<br />

introduction on Part 1. Throughout, Daisy’s solos, whether involving<br />

press rolls and bass drum stomps or freer jumping and double time<br />

rhythms, don’t draw attention, but advance the suite.<br />

On the evidence here, the Celebration Sextet is a lot more than<br />

halfway along to reaching musical goals. It’s another confirmation of<br />

how from their ideas and those of the players on the other CDs, jazz<br />

innovation will thrive in the years to come.<br />

90 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


Old Wine, New Bottles<br />

Fine Old Recordings Re-Released<br />

Bernstein Remastered<br />

BRUCE SURTEES<br />

Leonard Bernstein - The Remastered Edition (100 CDs)<br />

Sony 541714<br />

In her 1998 DVD Reaching for the Note, Susan Lacey<br />

recalls the way the moment felt. “It is very rare that<br />

someone dies and the whole community seems to<br />

be part of that event. It’s as if everything else stopped<br />

and for that moment the world turned around<br />

that event.”<br />

Such was the case in New York City following<br />

the death of Leonard Bernstein on October 14,<br />

1990. When the funeral cortege left from the<br />

Dakota, his apartment on the Upper West<br />

Side, there was already a large gathering<br />

across 72nd Street to pay homage and see<br />

him off. “There was this phalanx of<br />

motorcycle cops and police cars<br />

leading this enormous cortege<br />

out to Brooklyn’s Greenwood<br />

cemetery… When we came<br />

out on the Brooklyn side of<br />

the East River there was a big<br />

construction project and in<br />

spite of all the cops and motorcycles<br />

and police cars and everything,<br />

we came to a dead halt.<br />

And on the side were all these hard<br />

hats and mothers of various sorts with<br />

baby carriages and Orthodox Jews who just<br />

happened to be passing by. A perfect crosssection<br />

of New York City. And finally the sirens began again as this<br />

slowly started to move out, all these people! I especially remember the<br />

hard hats all waved and took off their hats and said. ‘Goodbye Lenny,<br />

goodbye.’ I can’t think of anything, anything, in the world that would<br />

have pleased Lenny more than that.”<br />

Leonard Bernstein – The Remastered Edition does not pretend to<br />

be in any way encyclopedic, but it gives profound insight into every<br />

facet of his musical life. New York City claimed him but Bernstein,<br />

conductor, composer, pianist, educator, author and music lecturer<br />

was born in Lawrence, Massachusetts on August 25, 1918, the eldest<br />

of three children of Ukrainian-Jewish parents. Soon after, they moved<br />

to Boston where father Samuel built up a prosperous business in<br />

hairdressing supplies. Samuel expected, naturally, that his elder son<br />

would go to college, return and take over the business. However, when<br />

Leonard was only ten, cousin Lillian’s unwanted upright piano was<br />

moved into their parlour and the die was cast. From the first note he<br />

knew that music was his calling. He could play by ear the tunes he<br />

had heard and improvise freely. At 13, he composed a piano concerto<br />

with a program, “a war between the Russians and the Gypsies.” At 14,<br />

after a disastrous year with two really incompetent teachers, he went<br />

to Heinrich Gebhard, one of Boston’s most respected teachers who<br />

entrusted him to his assistant, Helen Coates. She completely understood<br />

her earnest pupil’s impatience with practise and studies but<br />

instilled in him self-discipline. Bernstein credited her with being<br />

a decisive influence in his training. When he became known and<br />

successful he sent for her to be his personal secretary. She became his<br />

close friend and lifelong personal assistant and representative. Their<br />

letters are part of the Bernstein Collection in the Library of Congress.<br />

At 16, he heard his first live concert when he went with his<br />

father to hear the Boston Symphony under Serge Koussevitzky who<br />

later became his teacher and close friend. He attended<br />

the Boston Latin School. In the summers at Sharon,<br />

Massachusetts, he produced and directed shows with the<br />

Boston Public School Orchestra with entertainments like<br />

Gilbert & Sullivan and Carmen. He graduated in 1935<br />

and thence to Harvard, where he met many of those<br />

who would become his lifelong friends. He studied<br />

with Walter Piston, Edward Burlingame Hill<br />

and Arthur Tillman Merritt. He met Aaron<br />

Copland who became a major influence.<br />

Also, Dimitri Mitropoulos<br />

asked him to play and was<br />

so exceedingly impressed<br />

that he invited Bernstein<br />

to rehearsals with the<br />

Boston Symphony.<br />

For Bernstein’s part,<br />

he was taken by the<br />

older conductor’s<br />

intellect, his unique<br />

conducting style<br />

and his personal<br />

dynamism. He graduated<br />

from Harvard in<br />

1939 and enrolled at the Curtis<br />

Institute of Music in Philadelphia<br />

where he studied conducting with<br />

Fritz Reiner, orchestration with Randall<br />

Thompson, counterpoint with Richard Stöhr<br />

and score reading with Renée Longy Miquelle. Reiner said later that<br />

Bernstein received the only “A Grade” he ever awarded. After Curtis he<br />

spent some time in NYC, then in Boston where Koussevitzky, who was<br />

sort of a father figure, was a major influence on Bernstein’s emotional<br />

interpretations.<br />

Shortly after he had been appointed (under Artur Rodziński)<br />

assistant conductor of the New York Philharmonic, Bernstein made<br />

his life-changing major conducting debut. Guest conductor Bruno<br />

Walter was unable to conduct the afternoon concert of November 14,<br />

1943. Bernstein was told early that morning that he was to conduct<br />

the concert. He had not rehearsed but stood before the orchestra and<br />

conducted the concert that was heard coast to coast on the CBS Radio<br />

Network. A star was born and Leonard Bernstein was well on his way.<br />

In 1958, after he guest conducted major orchestras around<br />

the world, he was appointed music director of the New York<br />

Philharmonic, a post he held until 1969. After that he was seen and<br />

heard around the world conducting and teaching, making recordings<br />

and videos and, when he could make time, composing. In truth<br />

he most solemnly desired to be remembered as a composer. Consider<br />

his works for the theatre that include Peter Pan (1950), On the Town<br />

(1944), Trouble in Tahiti (1952), West Side Story (1957) and Candide<br />

(1956 rev.1973 rev.1989); also all the ballets, Fancy Free (1944),<br />

Facsimile (1946) and Dybbuk (1974), all of which are included in this<br />

unique edition of the remastered original recordings. His own works<br />

for the concert hall chosen for inclusion are the three symphonies,<br />

Jeremiah (Symphony No.1, 1942), The Age of Anxiety (Symphony<br />

No.2, 1949 rev.1965) and Kaddish (Symphony No.3 1963 rev. 1977).<br />

Prelude, Fugue and Riffs (commissioned by Woody Herman in 1949)<br />

is here with Benny Goodman. Torontonians heard this work with<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 91


DON HUNTSTEIN<br />

Leonard Bernstein at the dressing room, Lincoln Center, February 1970<br />

Bernstein conducting the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra in Roy<br />

Thomson Hall in the late 1980s.<br />

Mahler figured prominently in Bernstein’s programs, recording<br />

all the symphonies except the Eighth with the Philharmonic during<br />

his tenure there. His Mahler was something to hear and see, as his<br />

demeanour suggested an enraptured identification with the composer.<br />

Mahler’s symphonies Two, Three, Six and Nine are here together with<br />

Kindertotenlieder and excerpts from Rückert Lieder both with Jennie<br />

Tourel, and Des Knaben Wunderhorn and Lieder eines fahrenden<br />

Gesellen with Christa Ludwig, Walter Berry and Dietrich Fischer-<br />

Dieskau. In this unique collection are the works of 70 composers<br />

from A to Z in compositions ranging from marches, incidental music,<br />

ballets, encore-type pieces, chamber music, concertos, symphonies,<br />

operas, ballet music, lieder, film music, overtures, etc. Assisting<br />

artists include Isaac Stern, Lucas Foss, Adele Addison, Glenn Gould,<br />

Eileen Farrell, Andre Watts, Charles Bressler, Felicia Montealegre,<br />

Benny Goodman, Zino Francescatti, Regina Resnik, Erich Kunz,<br />

Yehudi Menuhin, Julius Baker, Judith Raskin, Judith Blegen, Robert<br />

Casadesus, Barbara Cook and others. Also heard are the Juilliard<br />

String Quartet, the Westminster Choir, the Vienna Philharmonic<br />

Orchestra, the Vienna State Opera Chorus and the Camerata<br />

Singers, among others.<br />

In summary: this edition is a collection of some significant<br />

recordings from 1945 to c.1976 issued by Columbia/Sony,<br />

either recently or newly remastered for the occasion. The opulent<br />

boxed set of 100 CDs in original covers includes a lavishly illustrated,<br />

196-page hardcover book of presentation quality outlining<br />

the often complex remastering of the process. Compared to the<br />

previous releases of all the recordings that I have sampled these<br />

new incarnations are a revelation. For instance, I was disappointed<br />

in the perfunctory performance on the original release of Liszt’s<br />

Faust Symphony, also with the version on The Royal Edition.<br />

However, in this new presentation the sound is immediate and<br />

dynamic, revealing playing that is most certainly alert.<br />

I wonder, out of the many hundreds of Bernstein performances of<br />

so many different works in the Sony archives, how particular recordings<br />

were chosen. It certainly wasn’t the choice of someone or other<br />

with little or no knowledge, nor was it a computer’s choice based on<br />

sales. For example, the performance of The Age of Anxiety decided<br />

upon is the original mono version recorded on February 27, 1950<br />

with soloist Lucas Foss, a recording that required a lot of time and<br />

dedication to restore the less-than-mint original elements. How<br />

much easier it would have been to utilize the 1965 performance with<br />

Philippe Entremont. Regardless, it is the earlier performance that we<br />

hear on this well-chosen collection. Well-chosen indeed; there are<br />

works one would never think of including, but there is not one that I<br />

would remove.<br />

There are complete details of every disc at arkivmusic.com and an<br />

interesting YouTube video about the project, titled Leonard Bernstein<br />

– The Art of Remastering.<br />

H A N N A F O R D S T R E E T S I L V E R B A N D P R E S E N T S<br />

Christmas Cheer<br />

Tuesday, <strong>December</strong> 12th, <strong>2017</strong><br />

7:30 PM<br />

Metropolitan United Church<br />

Ben Heppner,<br />

Host and Tenor Soloist<br />

Elmer Iseler Singers<br />

Lydia Adams, Artistic Director<br />

Tickets available online at www.hssb.ca By Phone: 416.366.77<strong>23</strong> or 1.800.708.6754<br />

92 | <strong>December</strong> <strong>2017</strong> / <strong>January</strong> <strong>2018</strong> thewholenote.com


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SAT DEC 16 ◆ 2 PM<br />

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CHOIR & ORGAN CONCERTS<br />

ELMER ISELER<br />

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Season of Joy<br />

Lydia Adams, conductor<br />

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TUE DEC 19 ◆ 12 PM<br />

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SUNDAY, DECEMBER 3, 2PM<br />

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Free tickets can be reserved<br />

starting Monday, November 27.<br />

New York-based Canadian pianist<br />

Francine Kay plays “with such<br />

richness of sonority, [and] such<br />

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She will perform Janácek’s Piano<br />

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WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 7:30PM / MAZZOLENI CONCERT HALL<br />

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Hear artists on the cusp of major careers. Solo and chamber works are<br />

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Generously supported by the Rebanks Family<br />

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SUNDAY, DECEMBER 10, <strong>2017</strong> 3PM<br />

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Recognized by London’s Evening<br />

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The Glenn Gould<br />

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Ensemble<br />

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 14, 7:30PM<br />

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String students from The Phil and<br />

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