Homage to Shostakovich

Dmitri Shostakovich died on 9th August 1975; the day after my 18th birthday and I remember the feeling of sadness and hurt I felt when I heard the news.  The 50th anniversary is being celebrated by a fair number of concerts featuring the great man’s works including one given my members of the COC Ensemble Studio in the RBA on Thursday.

The material featured was comparatively unknown even by the standards of Shostakovich songs which are, in general, much less well known than his symphonic and chamber works.  Matters started playfully enough with a four hands arrangement of Waltz No.2 played with appropriate whimsy by Brian Cho and Mattia Senesi  It was followed by the first of two sets by Duncan Stenhouse; two of the songs from Four Romances on Poems by Pushkin, Op.46.  Using text by Pushkin allowed the composer to express sentiments about authority that would otherwise have been very risky and these pieces are sombre.  They were very solidly sung with some impressive floaty high notes, variation of colour and fine work by Senesi.  Shostakovich rarely lets one forget he started out as a pianist! Continue reading

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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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

The Ensemble Studio kicks off a new season

Wednesday lunchtime saw the members of the COC’s Ensemble Studio kick of the free concert series season in the RBA.  It was good.  Pianists Brian Cho and Mattia Senesi started off in fine style with a four hands version of the overture to The Barber of Seville and then it was on to the singing.

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10th Annual Centre Stage Competition

Thursday night at the Four Seasons Centre saw the tenth iteration of the COC’s Centre Stage: Ensemble Studio Competition.  It’s a competition for young singers for cash prizes and, more opaquely, potential places in the COC’s Ensemble Studio.

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L-R: Duncan Stenhouse, Emily Rocha, Elisabeth St-Gelais

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