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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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symphonic tone poem, ballet music and similar works.<br />

McHale and Poster perform neither as soloists nor as players fully<br />

integrated into the ensemble. Eidelman has, unusually, created a flexible<br />

role for the two pianists that lies somewhere between the concerto<br />

form and a fantasia featuring the keyboards, perhaps akin to Saint-<br />

Saëns Carnival of the Animals. The two pianists do appear convincingly<br />

as full-scale soloists in the second movement’s cadenza. For the<br />

balance of the work, however, they emerge from and retreat back into,<br />

the ensemble at the composer’s will.<br />

As a highly skilled orchestrator, Eidelman’s mastery of colour and<br />

subtle shading is superb. He describes finding the inspiration for<br />

the Symphony in the reflection of water and writes in a way that<br />

uses the pianos to enhance the emotional image of its various characters,<br />

whether still, flowing or turbulent. It’s easy to hear why his<br />

film scores like Star Trek VI and Christopher Columbus have been so<br />

successful.<br />

The disc’s second work is Eidelman’s Night in the Gallery for<br />

orchestra and piano. Here pianist Michael McHale becomes part of the<br />

composer’s palette for recreating the impressions he experienced on<br />

viewing specific paintings by acknowledged masters.<br />

Nadia Shpachenko’s latest release The Poetry of Places (Reference<br />

Recordings, FR 730, www.referencerecordings.com) is a collection of<br />

original and highly imaginative works for piano, assorted instruments<br />

and effects. The concept for the recording<br />

project is an exploration of the relationship<br />

between music and its space. Shpachenko<br />

writes briefly about her experiences of space<br />

on performance, including the performers<br />

and the audience. Her curiosity has led to<br />

commissions from eight composers to write<br />

specifically about their impressions of spaces<br />

and places as represented by architecture.<br />

The variety of this repertoire is remarkable. Shpachenko performs<br />

a veritable tour of structures ancient and modern, producing extraordinary<br />

colours and textures from her Steinway D. Her composers<br />

sometimes add a second piano, voice, a toy piano, percussion and<br />

electronics to build their works. The subjects include Ireland’s<br />

5,000-year-old Newgrange, Aaron Copland’s home in upstate New<br />

York, Bangladesh’s National Assembly, a small cottage on an island<br />

in rural New York state, the American Visionary Art Museum and a<br />

couple of architectural projects by Frank Gehry.<br />

Each composer provides a few notes on the subject of the commission<br />

and it’s immediately striking how much common ground they<br />

share with Shpachenko on this abstract challenge. The strong affinity<br />

between the principal performer and the composers has produced a<br />

thoroughly engaging disc.<br />

VOCAL<br />

Handel – Dixit Dominus; Bach & Schütz<br />

– Motets<br />

Ottawa Bach Choir; Lisette Canton<br />

ATMA ACD2 2790 (atmaclassique.com/En)<br />

!!<br />

The Ottawa Bach<br />

Choir and Ensemble<br />

Caprice join forces<br />

in this recording for<br />

thrilling performances<br />

of Baroque<br />

masters Handel,<br />

Bach and Schütz.<br />

From the outset<br />

of Dixit Dominus,<br />

the quick pace and precision with which<br />

the chorus deftly moves through Handel’s<br />

ever-running and cascading phrases is aweinspiring.<br />

Daniel Taylor guests for the alto<br />

aria Virgam virtutis in which the interplay<br />

between his golden voice and the continuo<br />

instruments is sublime. Soprano Kathleen<br />

Radke maintains a wonderfully relaxed vocal<br />

line through the execution of elaborate lines<br />

in Tecum principium in die virtutis and<br />

later she and Kayla Ruiz create enchanting<br />

chemistry in the soaring duet De torrente in<br />

via bibet.<br />

Looking back almost a century, next on<br />

the recording are rarely heard Passion Motets<br />

from Heinrich Schütz’s Cantiones Sacrae.<br />

Heavily influenced by Italian madrigals of the<br />

time, Lisette Canton coaxes the full anguish<br />

of the thematic material from the choir in<br />

emphasizing dissonances and highly expressive<br />

rhetoric. The recording ends with homage<br />

to the choir’s eponym. In Bach’s Komm, Jesu,<br />

komm, excellent recording technique and<br />

choice of venue shine through, with a lovely<br />

resonance from the start and an erudite interchange<br />

captured in the dialogue of a choir<br />

divided into two sections by the composer.<br />

Dianne Wells<br />

New Works<br />

Da Capo Chamber Choir<br />

Independent DC 003-18<br />

(dacapochamberchoir.ca)<br />

! ! Waterloo-based<br />

DaCapo Chamber<br />

Choir is celebrating<br />

its 20th anniversary<br />

with this release<br />

featuring Canadian<br />

choral works by six<br />

established and four<br />

What we're listening to this month:<br />

thewholenote.com/listening<br />

distantSong<br />

Reiko Füting<br />

distantSong features the deeply<br />

humanistic compositions of Reiko<br />

Füting performed by AuditivVokal<br />

Dresden, Art d’Echo, loadbang, the<br />

Corrine Byrne:Kozar:Duo, Damask,<br />

and Oerknal<br />

Late Bloomer<br />

Fuat Tuaç<br />

Fuat’s album is a collage of Turkish<br />

folk music, chansons françaises,<br />

jazz and bossa nova in 5 different<br />

languages, available on all major<br />

streaming sites<br />

Vanishing<br />

Fides Krucker and Tim Motzer<br />

Vanishing is a transcendent,<br />

cinematic and utterly beguiling<br />

musical conversation between avantgarde<br />

vocalist Fides Krucker and<br />

experimental guitarist Tim Motzer.<br />

Worlds in which to disappear.<br />

Talismã<br />

Mark Duggan<br />

New recording project from<br />

vibraphonist Mark Duggan, rooted<br />

in the Brazilian styles of samba,<br />

bossa nova and choro, featuring<br />

Marco Tulio and Louis Simão.<br />

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

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