December/January’s Child was52_AnnCooperGay_Adult ... ANN COOPER GAY Executive/Artistic Director of the Canadian Children’s Opera Company.

52_AnnCooperGay_babyAnn was born in Texas. After graduating form Austin College (Sherman, Texas), she taught music and English in Hamburg, Germany, before coming to Canada in 1970 to attend the University of Toronto Opera School. She sang her 1971 debut with the COC as a Lady-in-Waiting in Macbeth, then toured as Despina (Così fan tutte), Mimì (La bohème) and Violetta (La traviata). She sang Sara Riel in Louis Riel with the COC in Toronto and at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C.(recorded for Centrediscs).

An accomplished
conductor, singer, organist, pianist, flutist and collaborator, Ann’s enthusiasm, high energy and artistic standards have left her imprint on the University of Toronto Women’s Chorus,  the U of T Hart House Orchestra,  and string orchestras of the Toronto Board of Education. She founded the Children’s Choir at the Royal Conservatory, and the High Park Choirs of Toronto. Ann’s Canadian experience came full circle when she accepted the reins of the CCOC from John  Tuttle: “My very first opera performance at the U of T Opera School was in Britten’s The Little Sweep - I sang alongside members from the CCOC!”

Ann lives in Toronto with her husband, conductor and composer Errol Gay.


Earliest musical memory?


Age 4 or 5, at the University of North Texas (Denton): a concert and the stage filled with grand pianos. Years later my mom confirmed this happened.


First experiences, instruments?


Singing in school and at church; learning to count from the church organist. I played the piano constantly (no time to help with chores!), began flute in the school band at 9,  and the church organ at 10. I later learned to play the oboe, took up strings in order to teach school orchestra, and even bought a lever harp!


The point at which you began to think of yourself as a musician?


Probably when I took over the church organist job at age 14!


Ever think of doing anything else?


I was a bit of a rebel -decided to enter college as a French major, not music. I had only taken Latin and Spanish, so my French career lasted one semester.


If you could meet face to face with your childhood self, is there anything you would like to say to her?


Dream as high as possible. Also, music will always be your best friend!


This month’s contest

52-MYSTERY_CHILD_Feb10

“Miss X….standing by!”, circa 1964, in Ridgeway Ontario; later, Toronto,  London, Paris, Salzburg, Houston, Vienna and Boston.

FEBRUARY’S Child….

Bearded or not, she’s quite a lady. The “pitch-bitch” some of her consorts call her. She can enter laughing operatically, and continue until the entire audience is laughing too.

Think you know who FEBRUARY’s child is? Send your best guess to musicschildren@thewholenote.com. Please provide your mailing address just in case your name is drawn!

Winners will be selected by random draw among correct replies received by February 20 2010.

Last Month’s Winners and Prizes: congratulations to ...


Annie Odom, who won the early bird prize in December: two tickets to the Canadian Opera Company’s production of Carmen  (Jan 27- Feb 27); Anne-Katherine Dionne and Diane Harvey: a pair of tickets to the premiere of The Canadian Children’s Opera Company’s The Secret World of Og (Enwave Theatre, May 5-9 2010). This newly commissioned opera by composer Dean Burry is based a novel book by Pierre Berton (who said it was his favourite of the 47 books he wrote). Music Director Ann Cooper Gay is joined by stage director Joel Ivany and 225 performers from all divisions of the company; Vera Tichy and Deborah Davis: the CCOC’s self-produced CD There and Back Again  “… verismo to mythical while singing in nine different languages and celebrating five Canadian composers - three of whom are opera composers.” (available from canadianchildrensopera.com); Eniko Gaspar and R. Pekilis: the Juno-nominated recording of the CCOC commissioned opera A Midwinter Night’s Dream, by composer Harry Somers and librettist Tim Wynne-Jones (CentreDiscs CMCCD 12306),  recorded in 2006 with conductor Ann Cooper Gay.

Music’s Children gratefully acknowledges Ken Hall, Richard Truhlar and CentreDiscs, Jenny, and Elaine.


DECEMBER’s Child is…NOVEMBER’s Child!

December_childA few readers were sharp enough to identify November’s mystery child, in spite of the fact that her childhood photo did not reproduce as well as we’d hoped.

Their names were entered in a special draw for a magnificent prize: a fine pair of tickets to attend The Canadian Opera Company’s production of Carmen at the Four Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts (January 27 2010, 7:30pm).

The heat, dust, and sexual energy of George Bizet’s Spain will heat things up in Janaury in this co-production with Opéra de Montréal and San Diego Opera.

Carmen is conducted by Rory Macdonald and directed by Justin Way, and  features Beth Clayton as Carmen, Jessica Muirhead as Micaëla, Bryan Hymel as Don José, and Paul Gay as Escamillo, with sets by designer Michael Yeargan.

Congratulations to...Annie Odom

If you guessed correctly and did not win this prize, your name will be re-entered in the December draw.

For those of you who were stumped, or who went cross-eyed looking at November’s contest, here is another photo of this determined young musician, already intensely aware of the importance of being on top of your score, and thinking on your feet!!

Today she is “surrounded by more children than you could, ahem, shake a stick at”, whose 2010 musical adventures will take them to the bullfights in Seville in January, to Cyprus in February, and in May to a fantastical place of caverns and rivers inhabited by green-skinned Ogs.

Think you know who DECEMBER’S child is?

Send your best guess to:
musicschildren@thewholenote.com

(Please provide your mailing address, just in case your name is drawn!)

Winners will be selected by random draw among correct replies received by January 20, 2010.

57a_nov_mystery_childSummer, McKinney, Texas - circa 1946

NOVEMBER’s Child…

You’re never too young to be taken seriously as a musician (as November’s Child knew back then, and believes today, surrounded by more children than you could, ahem, shake a stick at.) Look for her Company (but not her name - that would be too easy!) in our Nov 28th listings.

Think you know who NOVEMBER’s child is?

Send your best guess to musicschildren@thewholenote.com (please provide your mailing address, just in case your name is drawn!

Winners will be selected by random draw among correct replies received by November 20, 2009.

October's Child Was...

57b_oct_mystery_child

clarinetist Joaquin Valdepeñas: whose stylish sunglasses, ready grin and energetic manner have, by all accounts, accompanied his journey from Torreón and Tijuana, in Mexico, through Anaheim CA, to California State University, and on to Yale, before coming in for a landing in

Toronto when he auditioned for the TSO. Principal clarinet of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra since Sept 1980, he has also conducted the TSO on many occasions.

An extremely active soloist, chamber musician and conductor he has participated in festivals throughout the world including Banff, Vancouver, Casals, Edinburgh, Marlboro, Mostly Mozart, Nagano, and Korea. He is also a founding member of the Amici Chamber Ensemble who are in the 21st season of their concert series at the Glenn Gould Studio.

Joaquin has recorded extensively for CBC, Centrediscs, Naxos, Sony and Summit and was featured in a PBS documentary about the Aspen Music Festival both as clarinetist and conductor.

57c_joaquin_adultEarliest musical memory?

Seven years old - I used to walk past a music store on my way to school. There was a clarinet in the window, and I was mesmerized by it. Destiny? I don’t know

Other family musicians?

I am the only musician although there was a lot of music in my home. My mother had a beautiful voice but was not trained. She often sang at family gatherings. I had a huge family with lots and lots of cousins, aunts and uncles. At birthdays or other gatherings there were always guitars and singing.

First experiences of collaborative music making?

I joined the band in grade 7. My buddies and I wanted to play the trumpet (there’s a kind of boy thing with the trumpet)  but by the time the got to the V’s (Valdepeñas!) they were out of trumpets and I ended up with a clarinet. Of course, at the time, it was all about Herb Alpert. We all wanted to be like that. I still remember vividly playing with my colleagues, struggling to make a sound.

The school had a great programme. One period a day: the teacher was this young guy in his 20s. He had such much energy and enthusiasm. He taught us music theory, but he would also have us get up and conduct the band, and this is where I got my conducting bug. We had a marching band too, and we had to be the entertainment at games, assemblies. I had this very real sense of belonging to something.

Thoughts on clarinet as a  first instrument?

Not ideal for really young kids. Better to wait until those teeth have finished coming and going. And kids with small hands…sometimes their fingers are too skinny to cover the holes. The recorder can be a place to start, but it’s kind got a bad rep from being used in school programmes. Piano is good….

The point when you thought of yourself as a musician?

I never imagined making a living playing music, I had not declared my university major but I thought I’d learn some economics - but found I didn’t actually like numbers! But through the Music Department I had a weekly 30 min. lesson. I had never had a private lesson until then and was very lucky that the teacher was Kalman Bloch (principal of the Los Angeles Philharmonic). He was one of the most wonderful musicians I have known. Those first lessons was the time when I started to feel alive musically.

If I had not allowed myself just to say “okay, I’m going to work really hard and see where this goes” I can’t think what would have become of me.

If you could travel back through time and meet face to face with a younger Joaquin  is there anything you would offer?

In school we had to give the instruments back in June. Then in September you’d have forgotten everything and have to get back to where you were. So maybe a clarinet of his own…but maybe not too many lessons so soon …

Recordings /

Upcoming engagements?

We’ve just finished editing Amici’s new CD Armenian Chamber Music which is scheduled for a spring, 2010 release. On Dec 5 I’ll be in Lindsay, Ontario, with the ARC Ensemble (Artists of the Royal Conservatory) playing the Brahms’ Clarinet Quintet.

Then Amici has its second concert of the season

Torreón, Mexico: circa 1955

48_child_Oct

Not dressed for a Canadian winter! But 30 seasons in the snow have not taken the wave out of his hair or the wind out of his sails.

Look for his photo in two different ads in this issue of theWholeNote, and his name in a single sentence featuring both Bernstein and Mozart.

Think you know who OCTOBER’s child is?

Send your best guess to

musicschildren@thewholenote.com

(please provide your mailing address, just in case your name is drawn!)

Winners will be selected by random draw among correct replies received by October 20, 2009.

CONGRATULATIONS TO

OUR SEPTEMBER WINNERS!

Nancy Martin and Julie Goldstein, as guests of Toronto Consort, each win a pair of tickets to Oh Henry!

Music’s Children gratefully acknowledges Les Voix Humaines, david Fallis and the Toronto Consort, the good people at Analekta and ATMA and Jessica Parkes.

SEPTEMBER’s  CHILD was….

48_Child_Sep09Susie Napper – viola da gambist, cellist, continuo player, educator, curator and consummate collaborator. Susie teaches at McGill University, and in 2001 founded the Festival international Montréal Baroque which is presented in Montreal every June. She was awarded the Prix Opus 2002 for Personality of the Year by the Conseil québécois de la musique.

Her ardent relationship with early music has generated adventurous and colourful performances of solo, duo and chamber music from the 17th and 18th centuries all across Canada and the United States, as well as in China, Japan, New Zealand, India, the Middle East, and most European countries.  She is half of the renowned viol duo “Les Voix Humaines” (with gambist Margaret Little), and is known to appear with Stradivaria in France, the Studio de Musique Ancienne de Montréal, Les Boréades, Ensemble Caprice (based in Montreal), the Trinity Consort of Portland, and Tafelmusik.

She has recorded with Harmonia Mundi, EMI, Erato, ADDA, CBC Records, Naxos, Analekta, and ATMA Classique.

Earliest musical memory?

The Cathedral at Poitiers… I was 3 and the organ was blasting (Bach?) . I remember the power, the seduction…I was mesmerized!

Other musicians in your family?

Father semi-pro pianist…played all the Beethoven sonatas, Chopin, Liszt. Mother amateur violist and music lover. My  brother (one year older) is a fantastic Jazz accordionist and pianist.

Music in your life at the time of that photo?

Ever present! Father practised 6 hours a day. We went to concerts in London several times a week. Musicians around the house…house concerts by young Martha Argerich etc!

48adult suzie w margaretFirst experiences of collaborative music making?

Cello-piano sonatas with my father. My closest friend at the time was Christopher Smith who played the cello and composed, so we played together. First recorder lessons (at school) such fun. From age 10 quartet rehearsals and concerts (at the Menuhin school before it took that name)…we were all under 15 and won all competitions with Mozart and Haydn! Cute.

Les Voix Humaine in Paris

First instrument(s)?

Piano at 6. Recorder 7. Cello 8.

Did you ever think you’d do anything else?

Painter…equal interest.

Why early music and the viola da gamba?

Loved early music from the start…it always spoke to me. I inherited the viol at 23 when my father died... began to play it immediately. I knew about the instrument but had not explored the repertoire, and knew nothing about early French music.

The viol you play today?

The Barak Norman (1703) is beautifully carved all over and has a portrait of Charles 1st instead of a scroll. The label inside states the instrument is a gift for Corelli who sent a student to collect instruments in London in 1702. Did the viol ever leave England? Did Corelli ever play it?

Are the ribbons  part of viol-playing history?

The ribbons are my own thing, but you do see ribboned instruments in paintings.

If you could travel back through time and meet face to face with the child in that photo is there anything you would like to say to her?

Don’t let them get you down! For instance: the piano teacher who said she had no talent, the private school that told her she was dumb, and the ballet teacher who told her she was too fat.

Recordings / Upcoming engagements

Telemann and the Baroque Gypsies, with Ensemble Caprice: pieces by Telemann as well as Gypsy melodies and dances from the Uhrosvka Collection (1730), arranged by Matthias Maute (ANALKETA,  October 6 209)

I Mercanti di Venezia with Montreal Baroque: Venetian 17th century music by Jewish composers Augustine Bassano, Giovanni Bassanon, and Salomone Rossi. (ATMA, May 25 2010)

Susie performs Oct 17 with Ensemble Caprice (Bach and the Bohemian Gypsies) as guests of the Barrie Concert Association.

One of Susie’s current projects has been organising the restoration of a collection of six 17th and 18th century instruments known as The Hart House Viols, and an ATMA recording of Henry Purcell’s Fantasias featuring the viols. It was released in April (ATMA 22591).

WholeNote-area audiences will have the opportunity to hear the Hart House viols live in concert  when an expanded Les Voix humaines perform as guests of the Toronto Consort (Oh Henry! Oct 30 &31).

Welcome back to our 6th season of
We are ALL Music’s Children!

SEPTEMBER’s Child…

musics child-sept2009jpg
London, England: circa 1955

What an old soul looks out of this young  face! She’s a kindred spirit to another whose face, less mobile, haunts this issue of the WholeNote.

More coincidences? Both have acquired a penchant for ribbons. Each in their own ways has crossed oceans, continents, and centuries to delight audiences. Both continue to inspire string players to free “the human voice.”

Think you know who SEPTEMBER’s child is? Send your best guess to musicschildren@thewholenote.com

(please provide your mailing address, just in case your name is drawn!)

Winners will be selected by random draw among correct replies received by September 20, 2009.

THE MUSIC’S CHILDREN SUMMER QUIZ: how many did you guess?

Which of our Children said:

There are three kinds of people in the world
John Tuttle

It’s standard rep!
...
Noel Edison

Skipping all the way to the theatre singing my part over and over again. It made me feel giddy inside... Karina Gauvin
44no1gauvin
Karina Gauvin, 1976

I didn’t decide to be a musician. It just happened
...
George Brough

We still get along well enough to play together!... Lara St. John
44no3Lara_and_Scott
Scott and Laura St. John. 1976

The winner takes it all
Louise Pitre

You are going to have the most fortunate of all lives
Jean Ashworth Bartle

Music is the great transcender!
...
Adi Braun

I have since fractured my wrist, sprained a finger, slashed through my thumb while cooking...Christina Petrowska Quilico
44no2petrowska
Christina Petrowska Quilico, 1958

I removed all the strings from the violin, and the bridge fell off.  Assuming I had permanently destroyed the instrument I threw it in the trash
...
Jackie Parker

Whose childhood photo could have been called:

You Can’t Beat This!
Robert Aitken

Babe on the Beach
Roman Borys

Happy Birthday to Yooooou!
David Fallis

This take felt good!
Guido Basso

When I grow up, I’m going to have a much nicer wig than that.
Ivars Taurins

A concert for one
Jacques Israelievitch

Trivia! Who…

…has a collection of (at least ) 64 bow ties?
Boris Brott

…played four years of girls high-school rugby?
44no5measha
Measha Brueggergosman (1986 photo)

…was told she might make a good Forest Ranger or Fire Fighter?
Denise Djokic

...sang the title track for “Little Mosque on the Prairie”?
Maryem Toller

…has a CD called “She’s Sweetest When She’s Naked”
Alison Melville

WHOSE advice was ... ?

Don’t ever squeeze a weasel!
Ruth Watson Henderson

Don’t let nobody steal your joy!
Jackie Richardson

Don’t ever trust conductors!
Angele Dubeau

Better to be in the parade than standing around watching as it goes by.
Ray Tizzard

Subdivide and conquer!
Russell Hartenberger

I would encourage everyone to expose young people to great music of all kinds. But it’s possible to develop a love for music at any stage of life.
Peter Oundjian

 

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