I don’t usually give colloborative pianists headline billing but last night’s packed Koerner Hall recital certainly had an element of “They came for Ms. von Otter but stayed for Ms. Hewitt”. Hewitt was phenomenal in a program that interspersed solo piano pieces with sets of songs. In the songs she was simultaneously an individual voice and supportive of her colleague while the solo piano pieces were breathtaking; elegant Scubert and Brahms before the interval, staggeringly virtuosic Chabrier after. She’s also fascinating to watch. Continue reading
Tag Archives: faure
From Severn to Somme
Last night at Walter Hall, as part of the Toronto Summer Music Festival, Chris Maltman and Graham Johnson gave a recital that explored the experience of war through song. It was a long and varied programme with twenty two songs in four languages commemorating most of the great empires that went to war in 1914 though many of the songs were from earlier periods. At the core of the programme were early 20th century settings of English pastoral poems. Butterworth’s settings of Houseman were there but, sneakily, we got Somervell’s much less well known setting of Think no more lad. In a similar vein there were Gurney and Finzi. The Americas were represented in a characteristically rambunctious Ives setting of a horribly jingoistic McCrae poem; He is there. McCrae may be the only well known war poet who managed to survive until 1918 without developing any sense of irony. Beyond the English speaking world there were songs by Mussorgsky, Mahler, Fauré, Schumann, Wolf and Poulenc.
Blah, blah, blah, blah
The final show of the season for the Talisker Players, at Trinity St. Paul’s last night, was titled A Poet’s Love and featured baritone Alexander Dobson and actor Stewart Arnott in the usual Talisker format of alternating music and readings on a theme. The first musical piece was John Beckwith’s Love Lines which took five pieces ranging from Handel’s Where’er you walk to Gershwin’s Blah, Blah, Blah and presented them with the vocal line cleaving straightforwardly to the melody with the accompaniment “deconstructed” into “fragments” for violin, viola, cello and double bass. It’s a rather disturbing piece, especially when one knows the source material well. I’d like to hear it again. It was given an honest and engaging presentation by Dobson and the strings.
From dark to light
Today’s recital in the RBA was given by Russell Braun. Carolyn Maule and members of the COC orchestra. The programme, Journeys of the Soul, divided into two quite distinct halves. In the first, Russell was joined by Marie Bedard and Dominique Laplants (violins), Keith Hamm (viola) and Paul Widner (cello) in a performance of Samuel Barber’s Dover Beach; a setting of a text by Matthew Arnold. It’s a very dark text and rather an extraordinary choice for a twenty year old. The music is equally dark and brooding. It’s a great work for Russell though and plays well to the colours of his voice and his keen attention to text. It was a pleasure to hear in the very intimate atmosphere of the RBA.
Gryphon Trio with Robert Pomakov
Back to Koerner Hall last night for a concert of chamber music and art song. Anchoring the show were the Gryphon Trio. They kicked off with the Debussy Piano Trio in G Major. This was an enjoyable and compact piece with a very playful second movement. Then came what was, for me, the main reason for going, Mussorgsky’s Songs and Dances of Death. For this the Gryphons were joined by Toronto bass Robert Pomakov. He was excellent. Obviously completely at home singing in Russian he produced a nuanced reading of text and music. His acting with the voice was exemplary and no extraneous physical acting was required. His control of dynamics was exemplary. He has a really big voice which he deployed as appropriate but he was also capable of floating a lovely pianissimo. Accompaniment from the Gryphons was also well up to par. There are some interesting instrumental lines including making the cello go about as low as a cello can to match the bass voice. Continue reading
Toronto Summer Music Festival kicks off
Last night saw the first concert of the Toronto Summer Music festival which runs at a variety of venues until August 3rd. The theme for the festival is Paris La Belle Époque and this was reflected in last night’s opening concert being given by the distinguished French trio Trio Pennetier Pasquier Pidoux. One might question though to what extent works written in 1914 and 1923 can be said to belong to the themed era. It didn’t seem to bother a packed Koerner Hall. The reception to all three pieces given was raucous.
