Queen of the Night Communion

There was a time when site specific productions were very much part of the Toronto opera scene but, like much else, they seemed to disappear with the pandemic.  So it was especially pleasing to see Tapestry Opera, Luminato and Metropolitan United Church combining for just such an event.

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Alexander Capellazzo at Met United

I don’t pay as much attention to the free concert series at Metropolitan United as I should but yesterday I made it there to hear tenor Alexander Cappellazzo and pianist Narmina Afandiyeva in a programme of 20th and 21st century song.

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McKenzie at Met

Today’s noon hour concert at Metropolitan United Church featured soprano McKenzie Warriner and pianist Christine Bae.  Ellita Gagner was also scheduled to sing but, unfortunately, she was not able to do so due to illness.  So we got a hastily reorganised programme.

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Maeve Palmer’s Met debut

Metropolitan United Church that is.  Not the other place.  Anyway, it was a very pleasant Thursday lunchtime recital in which Maeve was accompanied on piano by Helen Becqué.  It was essentially a “turn of the century” (as in around 1900) programme.

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The first set was Debussy’s Ariettes Oubliees.  The six songs are very Debussy.  Maeve sang them idiomatically, in excellent French and with a fair amount of variation in emotional intensity from quite restrained to exuberant.  She does “exuberant” rather well.  Equally excellent and idiomatic playing from Helen who also provided a bit of a break between song sets with pieces drawn from the Preludes Op. 12 of Luise Adolpha Le Beau.

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Abraham, an oratorio

I really wanted to like David Warrack’s new piece Abraham that premiered last night at the Metropolitan United Church.  It’s described as an oratorio and tells the story of the patriarch Abraham and uses that as a jumping off point for arguing for the breaking down of barriers between Jews, Christians and Muslims based on their shared heritage(*).  Given recent events in Canada and elsewhere that’s obviously a worthy goal and the whole thing was in aid of the Metropolitan United Church Syrian Refugee Fund; reason enough, in itself, to go.

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