March 2025

So what looks fun in March?

  • March 1st (Dydd Gŵyl Dewi Sant) Apocryphonia have a “classical meets punk” concert called Brews, Beauties and Brawlers at St. Olave’s Anglican Church at 7.30pm.  PWYC.
  • March 5th Canadian Art Song Project have their annual gig at noon in the RBA.
  • Crow’s Theatre have a new adaptation of Measure for Measure in the Studio Theatre.  Previews on the 6th and 7th, opening on the 8th and running to March 16th.

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The Christina and Louis Quilico Awards – 2025 edition

Tuesday evening in the RBA members of the COC Ensemble Studio competed for the biannual Christina and Louis Quilico Awards.  These days every time I attend a singing competition, which I have been doing much less of, I ask myself why.  There are really three reasons:

  • The music to faffing about ratio is pretty low,
  • If one knows the contestants one has a pretty good idea what they are going to sing and one has probably heard it before,
  • The judges give no reasons for their decisions which are as often as not inscrutable.

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歌曲 Kakyoku

Thursday lunchtime in the RBA saw Teiya Kasahara, Chihiro Yasufuku and Simone Luti perform 歌曲 Kakyoku: Journey in Japanese Song.  It was an interesting contrast with Sam Chan’s exploration of Western representation of Asia and Asian in Western classical music the day before.  This time all the music was by Japanese composers setting Japanese texts but (in some sense at least) in the Western classical style/tradition.  In its way it forms part of the broader “modernisation” of Japan that took place after the Meiji Restoration.

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Identität/個性

Wednesday’s lunchtime concert in the RBA was given by Ensemble Studio graduates Samuel Chan and Rachael Kerr, reuniting for the first time since ES days.  Nowadays Sam is Fest at Theater Kiel and the recital was built around his attempt to probe his identity as a Chinese-Canadian performing Western opera for (mostly) Germans.  Sam is a pretty deep, thoughtful kind of guy so it wasn’t surprising that this was an unusual and carefully curated recital.  It was also quite wonderfully performed.

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February 2025

Before looking forward to next month I want to mention a couple of things this weekend that I haven’t previously noticed.  Saturday (Jan 25th) at 12.30pm there is a Met HD broadcast of new production of Aida with a pretty interesting looking cast.  Later, at 6pm there’s a rather special concert at the Arts and letters Club to celebrate the 100th birthday of Morry Kernerman (former assistant concertmaster of both the TSO and OSM).  The concert is presented by Canzona Chamber Players and wiull feature Trio Uchida-Crozman-Chiu. Continue reading

Sara Schabas in the RBA

Wednesday’s lunchtime recital in the RBA was given by Wirth Vocal Prize winner Sara Schabas and pianist Alexey Shafirov.  It was a varied and virtuosic programme.  Five composers and five languages were involved and the works performed ranged in date from the 1815 to 2000.

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January 2025

jan2025So what’s in store for Toronto early in the New Year?

  • December 29th 2024 and January 3rd and 4th 2025, Toronto Operetta Theatre are presenting Kalman’s Countess Maritza at the Jane Mallett Theatre.
  • Bad New Days are presenting Adam Paolozza’s Last Landscape; a meditation on environmental collapse, at Buddies in Bad Times.  Preview is on the 12th with opening on the 14th and running until the 26th.
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Classical feuds

DI-00433Tuesday’s RBA concert with members of the Ensemble Studio was themed around composer rivalries though not the really toxic ones.  No Mozart/Salieri or Wagner/Meyerbeer here!  The most convincing as a rivalry was the first; Berlioz vs Rossini.  So Queen Hezumuryango sang “Le spectre de la rose” with some sensitive handling of the text and a pretty fiery “Cruda sorte” from L’Italiana in Algeri with plenty of emotion.  I definitely like her voice more when she’s going for drama as she’s got plenty of power and expressiveness.

Next up was Duncan Stenhouse with four pieces that illustrated the complex relationship between Brahms, Wagner and Dvořák.  “Der Tod, das ist die kühle Nacht” from the Vier Lieder Op. 96 and “Při řekách babylonských” from the Biblické písně  were sung with excellent control and expressiveness but if there’s a connection it’s not obvious to me.  The two operatic pieces though; “Běda!, Běda!” from Rusalka and “Abendlich strahlt der Sonne Auge” from Das Rheingold have, I think, more obvious affinities; both dramatically and musically.  Both were very well sung.  It’s so good to have a genuine bass in the Ensemble again! Continue reading

Coming up in December

december2024Here’s what’s coming down for the holiday season, as best I know:

  • December 3rd sees the Ensemble Studio performing a lunchtime concert in the RBA.
  • Soundstreams has a concert called Invocations on December 5th at the Jane Mallet Theatre.
  • Also on the 5th Oraculum opens at Buddies in Bad Times.  Previews are the 1st and 3rd and the run extends to the 15th.
  • On the 8th Opera Revue have BACH Humbug at the Redwood; the antidote to holiday music.
  • Confluence have their annual Young Associate curated gig at Heliconian on the 10th.
  • VOCES8 are appearing at Koerner Hall on the 13th.

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UoT Opera in the RBA

On Wednesday it was UoT Opera’s turn in the RBA.  Pretty much the whole graduate programme appeared in a series of duets, trios and larger ensemble numbers staged by Mabel Wonnacott.  The theme was “love” (well it had to be that or “death”.. this is opera). It was a French and German programme so there was fairly mainstream stuff like the Antonia/Hoffmann duet from Les contes d’Hoffmann and “Hab mir’s gelobt” from Der Rosenkavalier but also rarer material like “Doute de la lumière” from Thomas’ Hamlet.

uotoperarba

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