British soprano Mary Bevan and pianist Roger Vignoles gave a recital of French chansons in Walter Hall on Monday night. The concept was that the songs were paired; one being a setting of Baudelaire by a male composer and the other song by a female composer of the the same period. With two exceptions all the composers were French and with one exception from roughly the fin de siècle. So Duparc, Déodat de Séverac, Fauré Debussy and de Bréville were paired variously with the predictable; les sœurs Boulanger and Pauline Viardot, and less predictable; Mel Bonis, Marguerite Canal, Amy Beach (American) and Jeanne Landry (Canadian and much later).
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Final adieux
The last concert of the season in the COC’s free concert season took place in the RBA on Thursday. It was the farewell concert for Queen Hezumuryango and Wesley Harrison plus a second farewell for Brian Cho and Mattia Senesi.
Invocations
Thursday night at the Jane Mallett Theatre Soundstreams and Music Toronto presented a concert featuring the Gryphon Trio (Annalee Patipatanakoon – violin, Roman Borys – cello, Jamie Parker – piano) and others. Also two world premières.
First up was the première of Vivian Fung’s Prayer; a short piece for violin (Lara St.John) and piano. It’s a rather beautiful short piece with a melismatic beginning that gets more dramatic and then morphs to a kind of searching quality. It was followed by Amy Beach’s Invocation for violin and piano, Op. 55 of 1904. It’s a competent, melodic piece in the Romantic tradition. Pleasant enough. Continue reading
Show Me The Way
Show Me The Way is a new double CD from baritone Will Liverman, pianist Jonathan King and various collaborators featuring vocal works by female American composers. It draws on a wide range of influences from Ella Fitzgerald to Will’s mother.
There are several song cycles; some composed for the album or not previously recorded. There’s A Sable Jubilee with music by Jasmine Barnes and text by Tesia Kwarteng. It’s a celebration of “blackness” in various moods incorporating jazz influences into a complex tonal structure. It’s beautifully sung by Liverman and very skilfully accompanied by King on piano. Continue reading
Deb Voigt in recital
Deborah Voigt appeared with Brian Zeger at Koerner Hall last night. I guess I was expecting something rather more ebullient from Ms. Voigt but what we got was a perfectly decent, slightly low key, recital with a heavy emphasis on American repertoire and very little banter, though she did unwind a bit toward the end of the program.

Deb Voigt and Brian Zeger at Carnegie Hall 2007

