Voices Lifted

The final concert of this year’s Toronto Bach Festival was Voices Lifted; a presentation of four of Bach’s chorale cantatas at Eastminster United. These pieces typically use the classic Lutheran chorale text sung quite simply to bookend material reworked from biblical sources into a mixture of arias, recitatives and duets. The chorale parts were sung here with two singers to each part. Accompaniment was a small period instrument ensemble anchored by Christopher Bagan on organ and conducted by John Abberger.

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Kaffeehaus

Kaffeehaus is the Toronto Bach Festival’s somewhat less formal concert. It played twice on Saturday at Church of the Holy Trinity and we caught the evening show. It’s set up to replicate Herr Zimmermann’s coffee house in Leipzig with RH Thomson playing Zimmermann. It’s staged in the round with a central stage surrounded by cafe style tables with extra seating around the edges. Coffee (not recommended!), tea, wine and beer are available. It’s quite a fun concept though the “in the round” set up means one is looking at people’s backs rather a lot!

The main work on the programme was Bach’s cantata Hercules am Scheidewege, BWV 213 with various other pieces and interventions by Herr Zimmermann inserted between numbers. There was some excellent singing from countertenor Nicholas Burns as Hercules, soprano Sherezade Panthaki as Pleasure, tenor Asitha Tennekoon as Virtue and bass Stephen Hegedus as Mercury. A small ensemble including valveless horns provided excellent accompaniment. Toronto has some excellent baroque musicians and with the likes of John Abberger, Julie Wedman and Chris Bagan performing it was as good as one would expect. It was also quite imaginatively set up with some singing from the periphery as well as the stage creating an antiphonal effect.

Additional music included the overture from Handel’s Hercules, the Pachelbel Canon and Telemann’s Concerto for Four Violins played extremely well by four young violinists from UoT’s Collegium Musicum.

Samuel Mariño with Tafelmusik

Yesterday I saw the second of two performances by Venezuelan male soprano Samuel Mariño with Tafelmusik at Trinity St. Paul’s. The programme was a mixture of virtuoso baroque arias by various composers interspersed with relatively short instrumental pieces.

Samuel Mariño with Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra. Photo by Dahlia Katz.

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Brilliant Brandenburg

TBF_Website_Working_V1-37So to Eastminster United last night for the opening concert of the Toronto Bach Festival.  We got three concerti bookended by (I think) a sinfonia from one of the cantatas; an excuse to show off the trumpets and timpani recruited for Sunday’s oratorios, and an arrangement of the Air on the G String.  Festival director John Abberger contributed a scholarly programme note on the general issue of Bach concerti.  Bottom line, there aren’t very many of them but they can be rearranged for a pretty wide range of instrumental options.  Last night we got the Concerto for Oboe BWV1056, Concerto for Flute, Violin and Harpsichord BWV 1044 and the much better known Brandenburg Concerto No. 1 BWV 1046.

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Lutheran Masses

The final concert of this year’s Toronto Bach Festival at Saint Barnabas Anglican Church featured two of the little performed Latin masses written for Leipzig (or possibly for Count Franz Anton von Sporck of Lysá.  Sources vary).  In any event they are unusual for liturgical music.  Based on previously written cantatas for the most part, they incorporate elements not much seen in church music.

allbach

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