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Volume 23 Issue 9 - June / July / August 2018

PLANTING NOT PAVING! In this JUNE / JULY /AUGUST combined issue: Farewell interviews with TSO's Peter Oundjian and Stratford Summer Music's John Miller, along with "going places" chats with Luminato's Josephine Ridge, TD Jazz's Josh Grossman and Charm of Finches' Terry Lim. ) Plus a summer's worth of fruitful festival inquiry, in the city and on the road, in a feast of stories and our annual GREEN PAGES summer Directory.

PLANTING NOT PAVING! In this JUNE / JULY /AUGUST combined issue: Farewell interviews with TSO's Peter Oundjian and Stratford Summer Music's John Miller, along with "going places" chats with Luminato's Josephine Ridge, TD Jazz's Josh Grossman and Charm of Finches' Terry Lim. ) Plus a summer's worth of fruitful festival inquiry, in the city and on the road, in a feast of stories and our annual GREEN PAGES summer Directory.

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are among the musicians taking part in two more chamber music<br />

concerts, one (<strong>August</strong> 1) bearing the weighty title “War in the 20th<br />

Century” and the other (<strong>August</strong> 3) focusing on a cornerstone of string<br />

players’ repertoire, Brahms’ Sextet No.1 in B-flat Major, Op.18.<br />

Apart from the mainstage events, there are reGENERATION<br />

concerts, in which TSM academy fellows and mentors perform<br />

together; and members of the academy also participate in lunchtime<br />

concerts. There are pay-what-you-can hour-long late afternoon<br />

performances by TSM artists and daytime chats that provide insight<br />

into the world of classical music. However much you decide to take in<br />

of TSM’s ambitious programming, you will be well-rewarded.<br />

Stratford Summer Music<br />

Founder and artistic producer John Miller’s 18 years at the helm<br />

of Stratford Summer Music come to an end this year (<strong>July</strong> 16 to<br />

<strong>August</strong> 26) with a festival filled with something for everyone, from<br />

Bach brunches to the Blind Boys of Alabama, and Tanya Tagaq interpreting<br />

the classic silent film Nanook of the North. My personal<br />

must-see list has Marc-André Hamelin and Jan Lisiecki at the top.<br />

Miller has been trying to book Hamelin since day one; he’s finally got<br />

him in a typical Hamelinesque program that mixes the well-known<br />

-- Schumann and Chopin -- with the lesser-known: Weissenberg<br />

and Castelnuovo-Tedesco. Be assured that Canada’s greatest pianist<br />

will charm and astound. Lisiecki, who has been on a stellar trajectory<br />

over most of his young career, makes his ninth appearance in<br />

Stratford (and Miller warns it may be his last for a while, since he’s in<br />

so much demand).<br />

Montreal Chamber Music Festival<br />

Getting an early start on summer, the Montreal Chamber Music<br />

Festival has several attractive concerts in mid-<strong>June</strong>. The Rolston<br />

String Quartet continues their Banff Competition grand tour pairing<br />

Shostakovich’s String Quartet No.7 (his shortest at 13 minutes) with<br />

Steve Reich’s powerful Different Trains (<strong>June</strong> 12). Later that night,<br />

the Rolstons and Andre Laplante perform Schumann’s iconic Piano<br />

Quintet Op.44. Amit Peled plays Bach and Bloch on Pablo Casals’<br />

1733 Matteo Gofriller cello (<strong>June</strong> 15). Four pianists (Alon Goldstein,<br />

David Jalbert, Steven Massicotte and Wonny Song) in various combinations<br />

play Mozart, Wilberg (his Fantasy on Themes from Bizet’s<br />

Carmen), Stravinsky’s Petroushka and more (<strong>June</strong> 15). The New York<br />

Philharmonic String Quartet (the principals of the famous orchestra)<br />

make their Canadian debut with a program of Haydn, Shostakovich<br />

and Borodin (<strong>June</strong> 16).<br />

Festival of the Sound<br />

The 39th edition of the Festival of the Sound is varied and extensive:<br />

from the world premiere of Sounding Thunder, Timothy Corlis<br />

and Armand Garnet Ruffo’s work honouring the renowned Ojibwe<br />

WWI sniper, Francis Pegahmagabow, to a series pairing Bach with<br />

Mozart, Debussy, Dvořák, Schubert, Schumann and Brahms; from<br />

concerts featuring the emerging pianist Charles Richard-Hamelin, to<br />

The Mosaïque Project, for which Ensemble Made in Canada commissioned<br />

14 award-winning Canadian composers to each write a fourminute<br />

movement for piano quartet inspired by a particular province,<br />

territory or region, thus creating a unique musical quilt representing<br />

the diversity of Canada. The breadth and depth of this beloved festival<br />

on the shore of Georgian Bay continues to astonish.<br />

Clear Lake Chamber Music Festival<br />

Under the artistic direction of father-and-son pianists Alexander<br />

and Daniel Tselyakov, Manitoba’s first chamber music festival is a<br />

long weekend of well-chosen repertoire set in Riding Mountain<br />

National Park (<strong>July</strong> 26 to 29). This year’s highlights include Alexander<br />

Tselyakov performing Mozart’s “Elvira Madigan” Piano Concerto<br />

No.21 K467 arranged for piano and string quartet; an evening of<br />

masterworks by Bruch, Poulenc and Dohnányi with Alexander and<br />

strings; Mozart’s Piano Quartet No.2 K493 with Daniel Tselyakov; and<br />

a midday seriously fun concert complete with coffee and pastries. A<br />

unique festival.<br />

Inna Perkis & Boris Zarankin<br />

FOUNDERS AND ARTISTIC DIRECTORS<br />

concerts take place at<br />

TRINITY-ST. PAUL’S CENTRE<br />

427 Bloor Street West<br />

<strong>2018</strong> | 2019<br />

24th SEASON PREVIEW<br />

a season of groundbreaking<br />

musical moments<br />

featuring<br />

Tom ALLEN, host<br />

Allison ANGELO, soprano<br />

Tyler DUNCAN, baritone<br />

Lara DODDS-EDEN, piano<br />

Igor GEFTER, cello<br />

Andrew HAJI, tenor<br />

Julie HEREISH, cello<br />

Erica Iris HUANG, mezzo soprano<br />

Sheila JAFFÉ, violin<br />

Elina KELEBEEV, piano<br />

Andrea LUDWIG, mezzo soprano<br />

Shannon MERCER, soprano<br />

Maeve PALMER, soprano<br />

Inna PERKIS, piano<br />

Ernesto RAMIREZ, tenor<br />

Mark SKAZINETSKY, violin<br />

Krisztina SZABO, mezzo soprano<br />

Micah YUI, piano<br />

Boris ZARANKIN, piano<br />

Ilana ZARANKIN, soprano<br />

Julia ZARANKIN, host<br />

among others<br />

OCTOBER 21, <strong>2018</strong> | 3 PM<br />

a mystery of history:<br />

1889 in Paris and Vienna<br />

FEBRUARY 3, 2019 | 3 PM<br />

24th annual Schubertiad<br />

APRIL 14, 2019 | 3 PM<br />

to the letter:<br />

an epistolary journey<br />

JUNE 9, 2019 | 3 PM<br />

Russian salon:<br />

ages & stages<br />

Early Bird Subscribers will receive<br />

TWO complimentary tickets<br />

to the salon of their choice!<br />

for tickets and information, please call 416.466.63<strong>23</strong> or visit<br />

offcentremusic.com<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>June</strong> | <strong>July</strong> | <strong>August</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | 19

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