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Volume 25 Issue 3 - November 2019

On the slim chance you might not have already heard the news, Estonian Canadian composing giant Udo Kasemets was born the same year that Leo Thermin invented the theremin --1919. Which means this is the centenary year for both of them, and both are being celebrated in style, as Andrew Timar and MJ Buell respectively explain. And that's just a taste of a bustling November, with enough coverage of music of both the delectably substantial and delightfully silly on hand to satisfy one and all.

On the slim chance you might not have already heard the news, Estonian Canadian composing giant Udo Kasemets was born the same year that Leo Thermin invented the theremin --1919. Which means this is the centenary year for both of them, and both are being celebrated in style, as Andrew Timar and MJ Buell respectively explain. And that's just a taste of a bustling November, with enough coverage of music of both the delectably substantial and delightfully silly on hand to satisfy one and all.

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their own sensibilities and artistic voices to the project. It is a dialogue<br />

that explores the edges of the possibilities available when people<br />

of diverse cultures are able to work collaboratively with sensitivity,<br />

respect and a willingness to listen to each other. Soprano Melody<br />

Courage sums it up this way: “You can expect to be moved and transformed,<br />

musically and spiritually.”<br />

Britta Byström<br />

Lebenbom Memorial Award for Female Composers in 2015 from the<br />

Detroit Symphony Orchestra, was selected to bring her unique artistic<br />

language to bear in the creation of the music.<br />

In the casting of Two Odysseys, great care was taken to reflect<br />

diverse Indigenous and non-Indigenous perspectives. The performers<br />

include two narrators—Yolanda Bonnell and Heli Huovinen, each<br />

fluent in their respective languages of Cree and Sámi, as well as vocal<br />

soloists Melody Courage, Asitha Tennekoon and Bud Roach. The<br />

musical performers also include a choir assembled by Soundstreams<br />

as well as a chamber ensemble. Métis soprano soloist Melody Courage<br />

provides a quick peek into her experience of the rehearsal process<br />

in a short excerpt from the promotional video available on the<br />

Soundstreams website, in which she reflects on “…the amount of<br />

pride I feel performing with so many ridiculously talented Indigenous<br />

artists that I’ve met for the first time … It’s in the stages of coming<br />

together and it feels very magical.”<br />

Both works examine the question of how we live together as a<br />

human community on this earth, and how we journey on to the<br />

land of the dead. Each piece is based on ancient stories from the<br />

two traditions. The Cree story tells the tale of the Trickster character<br />

Weesageechak (coyote) and Migisoo (eagle) and their desire to<br />

be reunited with loved ones. The Gállábártnit of the Sámi story are<br />

the “sons of the son of the sun,” hunter/inventor star beings who<br />

come to earth from the “belt” of the constellation known in European<br />

cosmology as Orion. This mix of Indigenous stories, languages, directors,<br />

librettists, narrators and soloists intermingle here in an art form<br />

with European roots, in music created by two composers who bring<br />

IN WITH THE NEW QUICK PICKS<br />

!!<br />

NOV 12, 8PM: New Music Concerts/Faculty of Music, U of T. Kasemets@100.<br />

Palestrina: Tu es Petrus; Kasemets: Trigon; Märt-Matis Lill: When the Buffalo Went<br />

Away; Kozlova-Johannes: Horizontals; Kasemets: 4’33” Fractals; Future is past…is…<br />

now. Ensemble U:; Stephen Clarke, piano. Walter Hall, Edward Johnson Building.<br />

!!<br />

NOV 17, 8PM: The Music Gallery.<br />

History Series: Celebrating Casey<br />

Sokol. An evening with one of the<br />

Music Gallery’s co-founders as he<br />

moves on from a storied career<br />

teaching improvisation at York<br />

University. The evening will be part<br />

improvised soirée/part interview with<br />

food and drinks.<br />

!!<br />

NOV 24, 8PM: The Music Gallery.<br />

Emergents I: Sarah Albu & Mári Mákó<br />

+ Anoush Moazzeni. Blend of electronics,<br />

improvisation and notated<br />

works. Sarah Albu, vocalist; Mári<br />

Mákó, composer/sound artist; Anoush<br />

Moazzeni, piano/improvisation/<br />

composer.<br />

!!<br />

NOV 24, 8PM: Toronto Improvisors<br />

Orchestra. TIO Celebrates Casey<br />

Sokol. Casey Sokol, piano; Eugene<br />

Casey Sokol<br />

Martynec, laptop; Rod Campbell,<br />

trumpet; Bill Gilliam, piano; Ambrose Pottie, percussion. Array Space<br />

!!<br />

NOV 26 AND 27, 8PM: Confluence Concerts. “An Evening with Marion Newman:<br />

What Is Classical Indigenous Music?” Marion Newman, mezzo; Rebecca Cuddy, mezzo;<br />

Evan Korbut, baritone; Gordon Gerrard, piano; Ian Cusson, composer. Heliconian Hall.<br />

!!<br />

DEC 1, 8PM: Esprit Orchestra. “Sustain.” Andrew Norman: Sustain, for orchestra;<br />

Adam Scime: Afterglow, concerto for violin and orchestra; José Evangelista:<br />

Accelerando, for orchestra. Véronique Mathieu, violin; Alex Pauk, conductor. Koerner<br />

Hall.<br />

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

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

Kasemets@100<br />

TUESDAY NOVEMBER 12, <strong>2019</strong><br />

University of Toronto, Walter Hall | 80 Queen’s Park<br />

ENSEMBLE U: (ESTONIA) | STEPHEN CLARKE PIANO<br />

Works by Udo Kasemets, Märt-Matis Lill & Tatjana Kozlova-Johannes<br />

Introduction 7:15 | Concert 8:00 | Reservations 416.961.9594 www.NewMusicConcerts.com<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>November</strong> <strong>2019</strong> | 37

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