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Volume 29 Issue 2 | October & November 2023

With this issue we start a new rhythm of publication -- bimonthly, October, December, February April, June, and August. October/November is a chock-a-block two months for live music, new recordings, and news (not all of it bad). Inside: Christina Petrowska Quilico, collaborative artist honoured; Kate Hennig as Mama Rose; Global Toronto 2023 reviewed; Musical weavings from TaPIR to Xenakis at Esprit; Fidelio headlines an operatic fall; and our 24th annual Blue Pages directory of presenters. This and more.

With this issue we start a new rhythm of publication -- bimonthly, October, December, February April, June, and August. October/November is a chock-a-block two months for live music, new recordings, and news (not all of it bad). Inside: Christina Petrowska Quilico, collaborative artist honoured; Kate Hennig as Mama Rose; Global Toronto 2023 reviewed; Musical weavings from TaPIR to Xenakis at Esprit; Fidelio headlines an operatic fall; and our 24th annual Blue Pages directory of presenters. This and more.

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IN WITH THE NEW<br />

MUSICAL WEAVINGS<br />

WENDALYN BARTLEY<br />

BO HUANG<br />

W<br />

eaving disparate threads together to create<br />

something new is a fundamental approach for any<br />

creative artist, and in the world of contemporary<br />

music, the spectrum of elements interwoven into new<br />

works continues to progressively expand. Numerous<br />

concerts scheduled for <strong>October</strong> and <strong>November</strong> exemplify<br />

this trend, with some of these concerts drawing inspiration<br />

from the past to achieve this evolution.<br />

TaPIR director<br />

Aiyun Huang<br />

TaPIR: On <strong>November</strong> 1, the<br />

Technology and Performance<br />

Integration Research Lab (TaPIR)<br />

at U of Toronto’s Faculty of Music<br />

is presenting New Ways for<br />

Old Works, a concert that spotlights<br />

older electronic music<br />

compositions that used live electronics.<br />

These works have become<br />

increasingly difficult to perform<br />

as the older electronic media<br />

and machinery originally used<br />

presents performance and preservation<br />

problems. TaPIR’s research<br />

addresses this issue by recreating obsolete technology using current<br />

software. Their aim is to develop a catalogue of documentation for<br />

pre-existing works that are rarely performed in order to encourage<br />

future performances.<br />

The repertoire for the concert on <strong>November</strong> 1 includes pieces by<br />

Micheline Saint-Marcoux (1972), Susan Frykberg (1991), and two works<br />

from 1981 and 1985 by Norma Beecroft. In my exchange with TaPIR<br />

director Aiyun Huang she stated that she chose to feature the works<br />

of these women electronic music pioneers “not only because of their<br />

beautiful music, but also because of how they were side-stepped in<br />

the early years of Canadian music.” She hopes concerts such as the<br />

<strong>November</strong> 1 event will renew musical interest in these composer’s<br />

works now that it is possible to perform them with updated technology.<br />

X Avant: The Music Gallery’s<br />

upcoming X Avant XVIII series<br />

running from <strong>October</strong> 11 to 15 opens<br />

with a concert that will include<br />

another approach to reworking older<br />

music. On <strong>October</strong> 11, the sound<br />

performance and installation Six<br />

Turntables will be featured. This<br />

initiative is the culmination of several<br />

sound-art workshops organized by<br />

Christopher Willes in partnership with<br />

Akash Bansal at the Toronto Public<br />

Library and The Music Gallery between<br />

2017 and <strong>2023</strong>.<br />

A group of emerging artists were<br />

asked to engage with and reinterpret<br />

1970s Canadian avant-garde music<br />

sourced from the Toronto Reference<br />

Library’s vinyl collection, including<br />

some recordings from the Music<br />

Gallery Editions label. The chosen<br />

recordings focused on early electronic<br />

music techniques, sonic meditation,<br />

turntablism, and Fluxus event<br />

Six Turntables' Akash Bansal<br />

(Top) and Christopher Willes<br />

23-24 SEASON<br />

EYES<br />

WIDE OPEN<br />

WELCOMING NEW ARTISTIC DIRECTOR<br />

THOMAS BURTON<br />

I WILL<br />

HOLD YOU<br />

OCT 28TH<br />

POULENC’S<br />

GLORIAJEWELS OF<br />

THE FRENCH REPERTOIRE<br />

MAR 9TH<br />

WINTER<br />

WAKING<br />

DEC 19TH<br />

THE NOTEBOOKS<br />

OF LEONARDO DAVINCI<br />

MAY 11TH<br />

22 | <strong>October</strong> & <strong>November</strong> <strong>2023</strong> thewholenote.com

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