COVER Volume 1 Issue 7 April 1996

Changing of the guard at Echo: I have been back and forth by e-mail over the course of April, with Alan Gasser, who has been part of Toronto’s choral scene for as long as The WholeNote has been around. In fact, back in our very first season, when we were still called Pulse and not afraid of being tongue-in-cheeky, he shows up in an April 1996 cover story by “Viola Jones” toasting the birth of TaxiCabaret, a seven-member cab service which will “combine singing ability with skill at piloting a taxi around town, serenading their customers on the fly.”

Read more: Joyful Resistance

L'ensemble vocal Les voix du coeurThe other day, there was a detailed message on The WholeNote's voicemail. It was from a long-time Toronto resident who explained that she was wanting to join a choir for the first time in many years, wanting to reconnect with the sense of community she’d felt singing with others in her youth, especially now because she was confident being in a choir would help her recovery from a recent stroke.

Read more: What to Look For If You're Choir Curious

Singsations at Yorkminster Park Baptist Church, September 2024The comforting smell of coffee lingered in the air as conductor Jean-Sébastian Vallée listened to the fading notes of the morning’s final song. More than a hundred people had gathered in red-carpeted Yorkminister Park Baptist Church on a Saturday this past September for a special Mendelssohn Choir Singsation workshop celebrating the choir’s 130th anniversary. TMChoir, as Toronto’s largest and oldest choral organization is now known, has offered Singsations since 1999.

Read more: Jean-Sébastian Vallée’s Toronto’s Mendelssohn Choir

“Sips and Shanties” Resound Choir’s fifth anniversary celebration. Photo by Joanne Lavoie PXLChandeliers shone down on empty tables. A handful of other early-admitted guests chatted next to the cash-only bar as RESOUND Choir warmed up. Many of the 60 singers wore a gold pin with the choir’s symbol: a phoenix. Their dress for the evening was otherwise business casual.

The singers filed off their risers and front-of-house opened the doors. Within ten minutes, an audience of almost 300 packed the room.

I’d gone to LVIV Pavilion Banquet Hall in Oshawa mid-October for a concert called Sips & Shanties. RESOUND Choir was celebrating its fifth anniversary with a program of Canadian folk music and works by contemporary Indigenous composers. I was particularly curious to hear how they’d handle songs popularized by the Rankin Family, who formed a big part of the soundtrack of my childhood in Nova Scotia.

Read more: Packed Oshawa banquet hall for RESOUND’s fifth anniversary

Daniel LevitinRenowned neuroscientist Daniel J. Levitin paused as he sang the word “strings” and looked over the neck of his guitar to the audience in the University of Toronto’s Desautels Hall. The air felt charged. Instinctively, we knew what he wanted. For a brief moment, many of the two-hundred-plus gathered began singing along, some harmonizing at the end of a song we’d all just heard for the first time.

Read more: Music As Medicine: The healing powers of a song-filled life

Babεl Chorus - founded in 2018 by Elaine Choi - performing "Cultural Landscapes" at PODIUM National Choral Conference, Montreal 2024, singing in Arabic, Seriac, Japanese, Cantonese, Mandarin and Malaysian.One day in the golden late ’80s in Hong Kong, almost past the reaches of Elaine Choi's memory, she balanced on her mother's piano bench. She was about three years old. Her mother helped one of her small fingers find middle C. The note resonated through the black upright Yamaha, as it did for the many piano students who filled Choi’s childhood home. Choi's own lessons with her mother turned out to be the beginning of an impressive international music career bridging East and West. But not as a performance soloist. Instead, Choi found success in one of music's most collaborative genres – as a conductor for choral music.

Read more: Community Through Song: Elaine Choi’s Choral Journey

Don Wright Faculty of Music ChoraleFor those of you who haven’t tried it yet, the “Just Ask” feature under the Listings tab on our website is a handy way of filtering our daily event listings to show only the types of music that you are interested in. For example, select “choral” for the February 1 to April 7 date range covered in this issue’s listings, and you get details of 72 events – far and away the largest single category we list.

Read more: Vocal Music and Community Building

Sing Along Messiah, TafelmusikFor a classical work that features in only 19 of the 123 concerts in this issue’s listings that involve a choir (or choirs), Handel’s Messiah still commands a lot of Christmas concert attention. (I think the rule is I am allowed to say “Christmas” if I use “Messiah” in the same sentence.)

Read more: The 6.47% Solution - Handel’s Messiah still holds its own

musica intima. Photo by Wendy D.The 20th century term “postmodern” is often uncritically applied to a whole range of artistic expressions that are not easily compartmentalizable – wherever influences and traditions whose conceits lie on a continuum somewhere between antithetical and oppositional are blended together. Sometimes, though, it is entirely appropriate, as was the case with Andrew Balfour’s beautiful and important piece, NAGAMO (Ojibway for “sing”), recently presented on a coast-to-coast tour by Balfour and musica intima.

Read more: NAGAMO: Andrew Balfour & musica intima

Members of the TMS in rehearsal. Photo by Taylor Long.Here’s some good news for a change: there’s a new professional chamber choir in Toronto, the city that barely has any, and none independent from larger arts organizations. Meet the Toronto Mendelssohn Singers, the new 24-member chamber choir within the larger Toronto Mendelssohn Choir, now forging its own path, mostly by way of contemporary music and commissions. 

Read more: Singing For More Than Just Their Supper!
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