Commedia meets Busby Berkeley

The annual Donizetti festival in Bergamo makes a point of resurrecting less well known Donizetti operas.  In 2022 Chiara e Serafina; Donizetti’s first commission for La Scala, got the treatment.  It’s got some very decent music if you like early Donizetti.  The Sestetto in Act 2 is particularly well constructed and it’s generally tuneful and allows the singers to strut their stuff.

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An Ode to James Bowman

bowman4Iconic British countertenor James Bowman passed away last March.  On Sunday night at Trinity-St. Pauls the Early Music folks at UoT presented a tribute to the man and his career.  It was very well done.  Music associated with Bowman; mostly Purcell and Britten, was interspersed with video and personal recollections/testimonials that fully reflected the considerable influence Bowman had on the English music scene and on the more widespread acceptance of the countertenor voice in the classical music world generally. Continue reading

The Raptur’d Soul

Theodora - ArcangeloHandel’s Theodora is probably performed more nowadays as a staged opera than as an oratorio.  The same is true for several of his other English language oratorios; notably Semele.  It was in that format I was introduced to Theodora by Peter Sellar’s famous production at Glyndebourne, which I loved, but I had never sat down and listened to the piece until getting my hands on a recent recording on the Alpha label.  Bottom line, I think it’s some of Handel’s best music.  Maybe the second part isn’t as inspired as the first and third  but it abounds in truly great airs and the libretto is really tight; dramatic and carefully constructed.

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4×10

Sheffer - Four-Ten-Minute-Operas4×10: Four Ten Minute Operas is a new record from the Royal Scottish National Orchestra and composer/conductor Jonathan Sheffer.  It’s a bit like a Tapestry “shorts” show but with orchestral accompaniment.  There are, indeed, four operas which last roughly ten minutes each.  All are to English language texts.

The same group of singers is drawn on for each opera and, while each has music well adapted to the mood, there is a basic similarity.  The music is tonal and the vocal line is highlighted.  It’s easy to listen to and the texts are all perfectly comprehensible without reference to the libretti though those are available on-line. Continue reading

The Colour of Joy

The Canadian Art Song Project presented their latest commission in the RBA on Wednesday lunchtime.  But first we got Jorelle Williams and Steven Philcox with four songs by iconic Canadian/American composer R. Nathaniel Dett.  I confess that early 20th century American song is rarely to my taste and the first three Dett songs I found workmanlike but not especially interesting.  The fourth though; The Winding Road to a text by Tertius Van Dyke I found much more interesting.  It seemed that Dett had allowed himself to be more “American”.  There were influences from both “Negro music” and marching band here with an overall effect not unlike some of Charles Ives’ songs.  I can’t knock the performance though.  It did full justice to the songs; especially the last.

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Known to Dreamers

Known-to-dreamersKnown to Dreamers: Black Voices in Canadian Art Song is a new CD from Centrediscs and the Canadian Art Song Project containing Canadian art songs composed by or setting lyrics by Black Canadians, sung by Black Canadians.  The first set on the disk is Robert Fleming’s The Confession Stone (Songs of Mary) which sets texts by Owen Dodson’s texts about the life of Christ from his mother’s point of view.  It’s a very beautiful piece and must be in the running for the most performed Canadian song cycle of all time!  Curiously though it’s only been recorded commercially once before (by Caroline Gélinas on ATMA Classique).  The singer here is Measha Brueggergosman-Lee.  She wouldn’t be my first choice for this piece but she sings it pretty well.  I find her style a bit mannered but she’s accurate and her diction is good.  Steven Philcox accompanies with great skill (as he does on all the tracks).

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Toronto Summer Music 2024

This year’s Toronto Summer Music festival is titled Voices Within and includes the expected eclectic mix of vocal and chamber music with a few surprises.  There’s also the Academy Program, the Shuffle concerts, Community Choir and so on.  Last night the main stage line up was officially announced.  It’s quite exciting.

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Wot no Brahms?

futurepastoralePrevious concerts from the Happenstancers have typically featured fairly conventional chamber music either arranged or combined in unusual ways; sometimes mixed with more modern/contemporary material.  Saturday night’s concert at Redeemer Lutheran was a bit different.  Titled Future Pastorale it was built around Claude Vivier’s 1968 work Ojikawa plus the text of Psalm 131 (also used, in French, by Vivier) and text from the “Introduction” to Blake’s Songs of Innocence; “Piping down the valleys wild.  Piping songs of pleasant glee” etc with lambs, shepherds and clouds.

Performing were Brad Cherwin on clarinet, Louis Pino on percussion and soprano Hilary Jean Young.  All three were also heavily involved with the plentiful electronics and the performance was significantly enhanced by Billy Wong’s imaginative lighting and there was some interesting stage business for some numbers.

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Side by Side

The Confluence Concert series is noted for its imaginative and eclectic mix of musical styles so it’s no surprise that when they put on a programme of workshops for young artists and then let them loose on stage the only thing one can expect for sure is the unexpected.  And so it was with Side by Side at the Heliconian Club on Thursday night.

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