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Volume 27 Issue 5 | March 4 - April 15, 2022

"Hard to watch and impossible to ignore"--on the Russian invasion of Ukraine; Tafelmusik goes live again in a tribute to Jeanne Lamon; TSO MD reunion as Centennial Countdown kicks off; PASS=Performing Arts Sunday Series at the Hamilton Conservatory of the Arts ...; crosstown to the TRANZAC, Matthew Fava on the move; all this and more ....

IN WITH THE NEW Beverley

IN WITH THE NEW Beverley Johnston Johnston’s Voice & Devaux’s Imagined Sounds WENDALYN BARTLEY BO HUANG Two concerts, one in early March, the other in early April, resonate with the day on the calendar set aside to celebrate the historical, cultural and political achievements of women: International Women’s Day (IWD) on March 8. This special day has its origins in Russia, a fact that feels significantly ironic – as I sit writing this column, Russia has begun its invasion of Ukraine. On March 8, 1917, the women textile workers of Petrograd rose up to demand “Bread and Peace” – which meant for these women an end to World War I, to food shortages and to czarism. It remained a holiday primarily in Communist countries until 1967 when second-wave feminists in Western Europe, the UK and North America adopted the date as a day of action, highlighting issues such as equal pay, reproductive rights, and the prevention of violence against women. On March 8 of 2022, percussionist virtuoso Beverley Johnston will be performing a series of compositions that highlight various mythic and real-life female characters in a concert she is calling Finding HER Voice. When I asked Johnston whose voice she is referring to in the title she responded by saying that it has several meanings. “It can be my own voice because I’ve been incorporating a lot of voice into the percussion works that I’ve been learning, either by singing or speaking. Metaphorically, the title draws attention to how women through the ages have empowered themselves, found their voice and become stronger within themselves.” Johnson uses her voice in all of the pieces, and even though she is not a trained singer, she became comfortable using her voice due to her experience as a member of the URGE collective in the 1990s and in workshops with Richard Armstrong, an original member of the Roy Hart Theatre known for its pioneering of extended vocal techniques. These activities “empowered me to know that it’s okay to find that gruff quality in the voice, and allowed me not to be afraid to use my voice,” she said. Two of the works on the program are composed by Alice Ping Yee Ho: Woman Runs with Wolves (2010) and Witch on Thin Ice (2019). The first work was inspired by a story from the well-known book Women Who Run With the Wolves written by Clarissa Pinkola Estés. After reading the book, Ho approached Johnston with the idea of writing a trilogy of pieces for Johnston to perform about iconic female figures, the first based on the myth of La Loba, the opening story in Estés’ book. It tells the tale of a woman who gathers the bones of wolves, sings over them, and brings them to life in the form of first a wolf, and then a woman. Coincidentally, Johnston had also read the Estés book and was enthusiastic about the idea. When Ho proposed Yoko Ono as a second character, Johnston was more reluctant at first due to the fierce opposing opinions held about Ono. However, after reading more about 14 | February 2022 thewholenote.com

L to R: Alice Ping Yee Ho, Holly Winter, Keiko Devaux MARIE ISABELLE ROCHON Ono’s life, her peace-activist work, and understanding that Ono’s work is rooted in the avant-garde of the 1960s, particularly Ono’s use of vocal screaming, Johnston embraced the project; Witch on Thin Ice is the result. Johnston described her role in the piece as alternating between being an accompanist to a video, and other moments when “I grab the microphone and start screaming Yoko Ono style and playing the drums at the same time.” The video uses both animation and slides from various periods of Ono’s life, spanning from her early childhood up to her husband John Lennon’s death. Other works include To the Earth (1985) by Frederic Rzewski who pays homage to Mother Earth with a Homeric style text and a performance on pitched flowerpots, and the world premiere of Eris (2021) by Christos Hatzis, a work based on the Greek myth of the Judgement of Paris. In the story, the Prince of Troy (Paris) has to choose from among three goddesses: Hera, Athena, and Aphrodite, which ultimately leads to the catastrophic consequence of war with Troy. The piece is named after Eris, the Greek goddess of strife and discord. The second world premiere on the program, wild with the world of color (2021), is composed by Holly Winter, whose work Johnston heard during an online Continuum concert. After a conversation between Winter and Johnston, they agreed that the new work would highlight three moments in Georgia O’Keeffe’s life. During the performance, Johnston will be wearing a paper dress that she will rip while performing in a duet with an audio playback full of ripping sounds and O’Keeffe’s spoken voice. In keeping with the legacy of IWD, proceeds from the concert will go to Nellie’s Shelter. Imagined Sounds Imagined Sounds is the title of a concert on April 10 produced by New Music Concerts that offers a fitting connection with Johnston’s March 8 event. The evening’s program is curated by Montreal-based composer Keiko Devaux, conducted by Juliane Gallant and includes several works by female composers. Devaux’s 2020 Azrieli Prizewinning work Arras will be featured: to complement this award, she was invited to create an entire program of works that inspired her imagination. Composing Arras gave Devaux the opportunity to consider the meaning of her own Canadian identity, a blending of Japanese and French backgrounds. In the piece, she investigates her contrasting cultural upbringing by incorporating the influences of environmental soundscapes, such as bird and wind sounds, the sound of a Japanese weaving loom similar to the model her grandparents used, and Japanese sacred chant. Although we do not hear literal recordings of these sounds in Arras, Devaux’s process involved transcribing the rhythmic patterns she heard in the recordings, and using a computerbased process called spectral analysis to identify the complexity of pitches that make up any given sound. All the differences and commonalities in these varied sound sources were then integrated into an instrumental score. One of Devaux’s key interests as a composer is an inquiry into how we imagine sounds in our mind, the ways in which we remember sounds and the relationship many composers have had over time with musical works from the past. “Those memories can be either consciously or unconsciously integrated into a composer’s work,” she University of Toronto Choral Conducting Symposium July 5-8, 2022 Dr. Jamie Hillman Elmer Iseler Chair in Conducting Dr. Hilary Apfelstadt Professor Emerita of Choral Studies Dr. Darryl Edwards Associate Professor, Voice Studies Joy Lee Collaborative Pianist thewholenote.com March 4 - April 15, 2022 | 15 UofT.me/conducting

Volumes 26-29 (2020- )

Volumes 21-25 (2015-2020)

Volumes 16-20 (2010-2015)

Volumes 11-15 (2004-2010)

Volumes 6 - 10 (2000 - 2006)

Volumes 1-5 (1994-2000)