KEYED UP!: the final concert features three works for six grand pianos. Photo courtesy of Facebook page.Women from Space: In last month’s issue, I wrote about the Women from Space festival, which happened from March 8-10. I was delighted to attend some of the events, and came away feeling inspired and energized by what I heard. The festival opener was a spectacular improvisation by Bloop, the duo made up of trumpeter Lina Allemano and her performance partner Mike Smith, whose electronics wizardry was fully on display in the effects processing he conjured from the equipment at hand. At times Allemano also played various gong instruments, such as a large cow-bell with one of her hands, adding different sonorities to the mix.

Read more: Keying Up for an Inventive Spring

Freesound collective. L-R: Wesley Shen, piano; Aysel Taghi-Zada, violin; Matthew Antal, viola; Amahl Arulanandam, cello. Photo by Shawn Erker.As we endure the coldest stretch of the year, anticipating the first signs of thaw around six weeks from the release of this issue, it seems that new music activity in the city is also undergoing a bit of a hibernation, with many of the typical presenters holding off until April to resurge into action. However, as I discovered while perusing the listings, there are some signs of vibrant and percolating life out there. One concert in particular caught my eye – a performance of Morton Feldman’s 80-minute work for piano and cello entitled Patterns in a Chromatic Field, performed and produced by members of Freesound on February 29 and March 1.

Read more: Freesound Collective tackles Feldman

At The Cellar, Vancouver, in 2014: (l-r) Joey Defrancesco, Adam Thomas, Cory Weeds, Julian MacDonough, Mike Ru. Photo courtesy of Cory Weeds.There is a conventional narrative about a musician’s career trajectory, perpetuated in television and film: in the US version, the talented young musical artist plays progressively bigger stages, from high school talent shows to local clubs to Madison Square Garden, or Carnegie Hall, or the Grand Ole Opry, depending on the genre; and at the conclusion of the hero’s journey, we are left with an image of our protagonist as having arrived, as it were, on their rightful stage, never again to play in a venue smaller than an aircraft carrier.

Read more: When Small is Beautiful

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

Jane Archibald as the Vixen and Carolyn Sproule as the Dog (behind) in the Canadian Opera Company’s production of "The Cunning Little Vixen" 2024.Somehow “We’re going to the opera!” doesn’t even just mean the building or the performance. It’s about both, and the alchemy of the immersive and transformative experience we anticipate. We go to the opera for the music and for the story, familiar or not. We go for the visual stimulation of the sets and costumes. But we also go for the shared experience and the shared excitement, and because one way or another, the experience is always larger than our own lives.

Read more: Opera: The Definite Article

Jonathan (centre) and Andrew Kay (right), at the Rex in Toronto with saxophonist Pat LaBarbera and bassist Roberto Occhipinti. They will be together again for The Coltrane Sutras at The Jazz Room in Kitchener, Dec 9.Given the precariousness involved in the retail and service industries, it is something of a miracle when new grassroots venues emerge. It is not as though larger ventures – such as the nascent Allied Music Centre at Massey Hall – are without risk; presenting live music is always a tricky proposition. Large, established organizations, however, have the benefit of development departments, of long-cultivated reputations within the community, and, typically, of owning the physical space in which they host concerts. For small establishments, the math looks quite a bit different.

Read more: Precarious Independence and Big Hall Highlights

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

April 2013: how time flies. Benjamin Bowman, Andrew Burashko and Rachel Mercer in Art of Time’s live recording of Schubert’s "Piano Trio No. 2 in E Flat Major, iv. Allegro Moderato". Photo by John Lauener.The sheer number of concerts in our listings is impressive enough. Even more impressive is the resonances between seemingly unrelated events once you start to dig a little deeper and start to connect the dots. Take, as an example, Art of Time and Sinfonia Toronto, mainstay ensembles in our midst for almost as long as The WholeNote has been around. Each is in the midst of a silver anniversary, 25th season with the founding artistic directors of both groups (Nurhan Arman and Andrew Burashko) still at the helm of their respective ensembles. Both of them delight in arranging music, and in creative programming, constantly seeking to blend the familiar with the new, introducing top-flight soloists to challenge their ensembles and delight their audiences.

Read more: Connecting the Dots...

The co-creators of Chris, Mrs. – Katie Kerr (book & lyrics) and Matt Stodolak (score). Photo by Rob Anzit.December is usually filled with the return of shows we think of as old family favourites, so it is exciting when new candidates for that status take a step into the spotlight. One such is new holiday musical Chris, Mrs. making its world premiere debut in December at Toronto’s beautiful Winter Garden Theatre December 5-31.

Read more: Holiday Shows: Old Favourites and New Contenders

A “Charming” music video featuring Hélène (Divine Brown), Natasha (Hailey Gillis), and Anatole (George Krissa). Photo by Hoffworks.I walk into the Crow’s Theatre gallery space, on a mid-November day, excited to be here to sit in on the afternoon’s rehearsal of Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812. The space is familiar to me from stage managing Uncle Vanya and The Master Plan here, but I have never seen it so full of stuff. There are instruments everywhere – a double bass, two cellos, a drum set, two keyboards, two accordions, a clarinet, someone with a guitar...

Read more: Crow's, MSC, and the Great Comet of 1812
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