William Kentridge. Photo by Adine SagalynOpera-goers heading out of the current COC production of Wozzeck wondering what makes the show’s director/designer William Kentridge tick should make their way to the online Kentridge Studio – a website that is yet another layer to his art. If you do, check out the 1988 essay by Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev in the Reading Room titled William Kentridge’s Ubu Projects.

Read more: FROM UBU TO WOZZECK AND BEYOND | William Kentridge’s generative journey

L to R: Cecilia Livingston, Donna McKevitt, Tim AlberyBack in the dark days of the pandemic, when concerts were little more than memories, I spoke with composer Cecilia Livingston for the December 2020-January 2021 issue of The WholeNote about Garden of Vanished Pleasures, a project she was involved with at the time. Originally presented as a livestream production by Soundstreams in early 2021, the piece went on to become a finalist in Opera America’s Awards for Excellence in Digital Opera. Now, it is set to receive a fully staged live performance by Soundstreams.

Read more: Musical Gardens For Spring

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

Ron Korb in his studio. The flute he is playing is the Bansuri. On the stand: another bansuri and a shakuhachi. Photo by Jade YeI first met Ron almost 45 years ago when we were both studying with Robert Bick at York University. Bick had recently returned to Toronto from Brattleboro, Vermont where he had been studying with the great French flautist and teacher, Marcel Moyse, who, before the Second World War, had been the flute teacher at the Paris Conservatoire.

Read more: A CELEBRATION OF SAKURA - Ron Korb, flutist and multi-instrumentalist

First rehearsal of "Life After". L to R: Alex Edwards, Mariand Torres, Britta Johnson, Ryan Lewis, Kaylee Harwood. Photo by Michael Cooper.This April, acclaimed Canadian composer, writer, and lyricist Britta Johnson’s Life After returns to the city where it began, in a new production at the CAA Ed Mirvish Theatre. I saw the first professional production back in 2017 at Canadian Stage’s Berkeley Street Theatre and remember being captivated by the fluidity of the staging, the deeply felt yet often funny writing, and the way the songs carried the audience into the heart of the characters’ emotions.

Read more: Life After's Full Circle

La Reine-garcon, Opéra de Montréal & The Canadian Opera Company's first ever co-production, is at The Four Seasons Centre through February 15. Pictured here, Joyce El-Khoury (Christine) and Pascale Spinney (Countess Ebba Sparre) from the February 2024 premiere in Montreal. Photo by Vivienne Gaumand.A feminist before the term existed, an intellectual and art connoisseur, a friend of René Descartes, a modern woman demanding freedom to live her life as she pleases, most likely a lesbian? The Montreal Opera - Canadian Opera Company co-production La Reine-garçon, libretto by Michel-Marc Bouchard based on his eponymous play, would suggest so. How historically accurate is it, though? I consulted Veronica Buckley’s Christina Queen of Sweden: The Life of a European Eccentric (2004) to start finding out.

Read more: La Reine-garçon: A thoroughly modern Christina? Or not.

Miloš Valent. Photo by BHS.Tafelmusik Baroque Ensemble is making good use of its emerging hybrid artistic leadership model: a three-player artistic co-directorship (Brandon Chui, Dominic Teresi, and Cristina Zacharias), mentored by Principal Guest Director Rachel Podger. Together they are in the process of putting together a storied season. February and March alone will bring 11 performances of four different programs.

Read more: When musicians meet at the crossroads

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

Ladies of the Canyon co-creators Raha Javanfar and Hailey Gillis (l-r)One of my favourite things at Soulpepper is their concert series. Under the leadership originally of creator and music director Mike Ross and now under Frank Cox-O’Connell, each concert explores a new theme, artist or group of artists, interweaving words and music in a uniquely satisfying way particular to the story or stories that emerge.

Read more: Ladies of the Canyon at Soulpepper

Ted Haberer at Jazz BistroMuch like the word “jazz” itself, the origin of the term “jam session” is up for debate, but there’s no denying the multi-layered potential that jam sessions unleash: community building, essential education, artistic exploration and audience engagement. Before we dive in, though, for the uninitiated, what can you expect from such an evening?

Read more: Hot Damn, Let's Jam!
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