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Volume 24 Issue 7 - April 2019

Arraymusic, the Music Gallery and Native Women in the Arts join for a mini-festival celebrating the work of composer, performer and installation artist Raven Chacon; Music and Health looks at the role of Healing Arts Ontario in supporting concerts in care facilities; Kingston-based composer Marjan Mozetich's life and work are celebrated in film; "Forest Bathing" recontextualizes Schumann, Shostakovich and Hindemith; in Judy Loman's hands, the harp can sing; Mahler's Resurrection bursts the bounds of symphonic form; Ed Bickert, guitar master remembered. All this and more in our April issue, now online in flip-through here, and on stands commencing Friday March 29.

Arraymusic, the Music Gallery and Native Women in the Arts join for a mini-festival celebrating the work of composer, performer and installation artist Raven Chacon; Music and Health looks at the role of Healing Arts Ontario in supporting concerts in care facilities; Kingston-based composer Marjan Mozetich's life and work are celebrated in film; "Forest Bathing" recontextualizes Schumann, Shostakovich and Hindemith; in Judy Loman's hands, the harp can sing; Mahler's Resurrection bursts the bounds of symphonic form; Ed Bickert, guitar master remembered. All this and more in our April issue, now online in flip-through here, and on stands commencing Friday March 29.

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WE ARE ALL MUSIC’S CHILDREN<br />

SOME OF APRIL’S<br />

CHILDREN<br />

Robert Aitken,<br />

Nova Scotia, circa 1935<br />

MJ BUELL<br />

We launched this contest in<br />

September 2004 (VOL 10 No.1) in<br />

an article called Music Education:<br />

Choosing a Path. We ran this<br />

photo of four-year-old Robert<br />

Aitken and the clue ”An early<br />

taste for his instrument.” Aitken<br />

was in fact licking whipped cream<br />

off an egg-beater but holding it<br />

just exactly how a little kid might<br />

hold a flute, with the kind of<br />

focused pleasure we hope to see<br />

when children first experience<br />

music-making.<br />

It’s kind of amazing, but that was nearly 15 years ago, and here we<br />

are in <strong>April</strong> <strong>2019</strong>. Since then in almost every issue we’ve tempted<br />

readers to identify a member of the music community from a childhood<br />

photo with a chance to win concert tickets and/or recordings.<br />

We follow up with a profile that looks at music in that artist’s childhood,<br />

and announce the contest winners.<br />

Where we all win is in better understanding the many things that<br />

can make a difference in their early years if people are to have musical<br />

lives. Some simple examples follow.<br />

In <strong>April</strong> 2006, conductor David Fallis talked about Lloyd Bradshaw,<br />

the choirmaster of St. George’s United Church Boy Choristers.<br />

“Through him I became a founding member of the Canadian<br />

Children’s Opera Chorus, and had such fun in the O’Keefe Centre in<br />

La Bohème, Carmen, Turandot etc. A very outgoing charismatic musician,<br />

great with kids and youth, he was the first to suggest I should<br />

consider conducting.”<br />

In <strong>April</strong> 2010, pianist Serouj Kradjan described his earliest musical<br />

memory: “ … my father ceremoniously taking the vinyl disc out of its<br />

sleeve, putting it on the disc player, the sound of the needle falling and<br />

suddenly, music filling the room. My excitement related to this process<br />

had no boundaries.”<br />

In <strong>April</strong> 2012, conductor Lydia Adams said, “CBC was a musical lifeline<br />

to us in Cape Breton, as well as in most parts of the country, I<br />

suspect. We listened to everything: Elmer Iseler conducting Handel’s<br />

Messiah each Christmas; the Christmas Eve service from King’s<br />

College, Cambridge, with David Willcocks conducting; the marvellous<br />

voices of Lois Marshall and Maureen Forrester, people I later knew and<br />

worked with …”<br />

In <strong>April</strong> 2016, soprano Mireille Asselin said, “My own strongest<br />

memory is my father picking me up and dancing me around our<br />

living room to the Temptations: “I’ve got sunshine on a cloudy day.<br />

When it’s cold outside I’ve got the month of May …”<br />

NEW CONTEST<br />

Let’s check back in on a few of<br />

APRIL’S MYSTERY CHILDREN<br />

Siblings: operatic baritone and<br />

singer/songwrite. Him: Cosi<br />

fan tutte at COC in Feb <strong>2019</strong>.<br />

Upcoming with Soundstreams’<br />

Hell’s Fury in June! His sister:<br />

currently in Germany touring her<br />

show MODERNE FRAU. Catch this<br />

musical tribute to the women of<br />

1920’s Berlin when she returns at<br />

The Jazz Bistro, <strong>April</strong> 28.<br />

1958, Ottawa<br />

Mezzo soprano, equally at home<br />

in any outfit. If you missed Barbara<br />

Croall’s Miziwe …(Everywhere…)<br />

with Pax Christie you can hear her<br />

upcoming in Against the Grain<br />

Theatre’s Kopernikus, <strong>April</strong> 4 to 13.<br />

1980, Newmarket<br />

Violist, busy chamber musician,<br />

educator and arts administrator.<br />

Six years with Toronto Summer<br />

Music. He’s at Georgian Music<br />

(Barrie) <strong>April</strong> 7, Scotia Festival<br />

(Halifax) in May and June.<br />

1967, Frankfurt, Germany<br />

Versatile pianist with a special<br />

affinity for music of the 20th and<br />

21st centuries, and a true “Friend<br />

of Canadian Music.” Upcoming<br />

with Kindred Spirits Orchestra,<br />

May 11 and June 29, performing<br />

André Mathieu’s Fourth<br />

Piano Concerto.<br />

1975, Mississauga<br />

A high tenor with astounding<br />

diction. In Idomeneo with Opera<br />

Atelier, <strong>April</strong> 4 to 13; Bach’s<br />

Magnificat with Tafelmusik in<br />

May, and Beethoven’s Mass in C,<br />

May 25, with the Bach-Elgar Choir<br />

(Hamilton).<br />

1961, Toronto<br />

Think you know who they all are? WIN PRIZES!<br />

Send your best guess by <strong>April</strong> 20 to musicschildren@thewholenote.com<br />

Previous artist profiles and full-length interviews can be read at<br />

thewholenote.com/musicschildren. Or – you can view them in their<br />

original magazine format by visiting our online back issues<br />

https://kiosk.thewholenote.com<br />

68 | <strong>April</strong> <strong>2019</strong> thewholenote.com

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