Kaffeehaus

Kaffeehaus is the Toronto Bach Festival’s somewhat less formal concert. It played twice on Saturday at Church of the Holy Trinity and we caught the evening show. It’s set up to replicate Herr Zimmermann’s coffee house in Leipzig with RH Thomson playing Zimmermann. It’s staged in the round with a central stage surrounded by cafe style tables with extra seating around the edges. Coffee (not recommended!), tea, wine and beer are available. It’s quite a fun concept though the “in the round” set up means one is looking at people’s backs rather a lot!

The main work on the programme was Bach’s cantata Hercules am Scheidewege, BWV 213 with various other pieces and interventions by Herr Zimmermann inserted between numbers. There was some excellent singing from countertenor Nicholas Burns as Hercules, soprano Sherezade Panthaki as Pleasure, tenor Asitha Tennekoon as Virtue and bass Stephen Hegedus as Mercury. A small ensemble including valveless horns provided excellent accompaniment. Toronto has some excellent baroque musicians and with the likes of John Abberger, Julie Wedman and Chris Bagan performing it was as good as one would expect. It was also quite imaginatively set up with some singing from the periphery as well as the stage creating an antiphonal effect.

Additional music included the overture from Handel’s Hercules, the Pachelbel Canon and Telemann’s Concerto for Four Violins played extremely well by four young violinists from UoT’s Collegium Musicum.

Preview of Empire of Wild

Empire of Wild; music by Ian Cusson, libretto by Cherie Dimaline, is based on the latter’s novel of the same name and will feature as part of the COC’s main stage season in May 2027. Last Wednesday the COC orchestra with soloists performed five excerpts from the opera in the RBA. The summary version is that it’s most unusual. It’s very grand, it’s tonal, it has numbers yet there is something very modern about it. I suppose one could just say it’s very Ian Cusson!

Continue reading

Don Giovanni and domestic violence

The first production by Benevolence Opera Project took place on Friday evening at the Redwood Theatre. It was a benefit for the Redwood Shelter for women and children fleeing abuse. One could argue that the choice of Mozart’s Don Giovanni was a bit odd in the circumstances but it certainly got conversation going around the issues!

Continue reading

Opera 5 Toronto Opera Festival Preview

How many singers can you fit in a clown car one hour lunchtime recital in the RBA? Opera 5 managed eighteen ranging from Krisztina Szabó and Greg Dahl to a whole posse of interns plus Trevor Chartrand at the piano. Besides material obviously related to the upcoming (June 3rd to 14th) festival at Theatre Passe Muraille there was Mozart, Strauss (R), musical theatre and Die Fledermaus. It was all really well done but I’m just going to talk about the material that’s most relevant to the festival.

Continue reading

Turn of the Screw in Aldeburgh

The death last week of Dame Felicity Lott had me thinking about English singers of that generation who featured a lot in the first live opera and recordings that I experienced back in the 1970s. A bit of digging around led me to a 1993 recording of Britten’s The Turn of the Screw with Philip Langridge (who died in 2010) as Quint and Felicity Lott (not yet a Dame) as the Governess. It also, perhaps surprisingly, features American Wagnerian Nadine Secunde as Miss Jessel. Less surprisingly, it was recorded in Aldeburgh with Steuart Bedford conducting.

Continue reading

James Coole-Stevenson and Vlad Soloviev

Thursday Noon at Met recital was given by baritone James Coole-Stevenson accompanied by Vlad Soloviev. The first part of the recital was all Canadian art song. Jocelyn Mortlock’s Involuntary Love Songs; which are varied in mood and quite lyrical, Ian Cusson’s “You Held Out the Light” from Breakfast for Barbarians which is short and very Ian Cusson., with a shimmering piano part and finally James Rolfe’s Moths. This is a very complex cycle about light and dreaming and very varied from the boomy “night is a river” to the delicate “The river of dreams” and much more. It was all sung with great attention to text backed up by impeccable diction and sharp characterisation. As is usually the case with contemporary song the pianist has a lot to do and Vlad did it really well. It’s good to see someone programme so much contemporary Canadian song.

Continue reading

Is Art even possible?

Artists exist to create Art. Why does the state of the world today make them question that purpose and has it always been so? Susanna Fournier and ted witzel have been asking themselves that, and why they keep trying to give up Art (and failing) for twelve years during which time the world has just got even more fucked up. The result is take rimbaud; a play by Susanna Fournier, directed by ted witzel currently playing at Buddies in Bad Times in partnership with the Howland Company.

Continue reading

Les adieux – Emily and Duncan edition

As has become the custom, the two members of the Ensemble Studio completing their stints at the end of this season gave a “Les adieux” recital in the RBA on Tuesday. It was time to say goodbye to Emily Rocha and Duncan Stenhouse with Liz Upchurch as our stalwart accompanist.

Emily chose a programme of mostly French chansons which was really rather lovely. She sang smoothly and expressively in Bizet’s Chanson d’avril and with a rather elegant languor in Paladilhe’s Psyché. There was more of the same in songs by Debussy and Poulenc; beauty, control, expressiveness! The one venture intoi opera was “Prendi, per me sei libero” from Donizetti’s l’elisir d’amore reminding us that she will be singing Adina at the COC next season. Elegant singing here too, coupled with plenty of heft.

Continue reading

Leandra Dahm at Mazzoleni Hall

Student recitals are another great opportunity to hear great music for free. On Sunday I attended soprano Leandra Dahm’s recital at Mazzoleni Hall. It was a caredfully curated programme lasting just over an hour and it was really good.

Continue reading