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Volume 29 Issue 6 | June, July & August 2024

  • Text
  • Calypso
  • August
  • Jazz
  • Musical
  • Festival
  • Toronto
  • Album
  • Classical
  • Theatre
  • Trio
  • Thewholenotecom
Gloria Blizzard and Jesse Ryan talk on saving calypso; fiftieth anniversary reprise of the Frog Bog sound walk (bet no-one's said that before!); Gregory Oh on the necessity of failure and curatorial choices that break down barriers; fanfares for an uncommon man at the RCM; and festivals galore in our 20th annual summer green pages; plus a summer's worth of music in our listening room. All this and more!

with the nuances

with the nuances of)pedalling, Longendyke brings to the fore the most important aspect of this repertoire: its intimacy. Williams’ music is written in the form of portraits. Each is so vivid that the characters shimmer through the speakers like holographic images, dancing (as holograms do) as they are conjured by Longendyke’s pianism. They are interspersed – as are Green’s – in sets of Debussy’s Préludes. The most eloquent moments come during the set that begins with the Prélude Voiles, through Williams’ Yvar to Les sons et les parfums tournenet dans l’air du soir. Raul da Gama Voyages (Debussy; Alice Ping Yee Ho) Philip Chiu ATMA ACD2 2844 (atmaclassique.com/en) ! In 2023, Philip Chiu, pianist, Montreal resident and inaugural recipient of the generous Prix Goyer, was once again fêted, this time with a JUNO award for Fables (ATMA Classique). Boldy jumping generations, continents and styles in both showcasing and finding the synergies between the work of Maurice Ravel and the Anishinaabekwe composer Barbara Assiginaak in a single recorded artefact, Fables proved a musically satisfying enough formula that Chiu has revisited this interdisciplinary idea with 2024’s equally excellent Voyages. Here, handling the music of Claude Debussy and Alice Ping Yee Ho with equal aplomb, Chiu puts forth a “deeply personal album” that explores in sound the notion of belonging. As a Chinese native, transplanted Torontonian and a long-time Quebecer, the reflective idea of nostalgia – perhaps for a place, time or community that may be here or may not yet have materialized – is woven throughout the recording. Take, for example, Ho’s three-part suite Hong Kong Nostalgia that through tempo, key and changing compositional forms affords Chiu opportunity to, as he states in the liner notes, “attempt to capture something elusive to me: a sense of belonging.” Just as there is a kind of searching aesthetic present compositionally in this suite – from the Connaught Centre to The Ten Thousand Buddhas Monastery to that city’s Night Markets – there is an introspective and wanderlust quality to Chiu’s playing as he plumbs the compositional depths through an exploration of “reflections and musings.” What is beautifully captured, however, is Chiu’s distinct touch, playful mastery of the instrument and ongoing creativity. Andrew Scott MODERN AND CONTEMPORARY Known and Unknown – solo piano works by Rodney Sharman Rachel Kiyo Iwaasa Redshift Records TK539 (rodneysharman.com) Patrick Giguere – Intimes Exubérances Cheryl Duvall Redshift Records TK545 (patrickgiguere.ca) Nova Pon – Symphonies of Mother and Child Turning Point Ensemble; Owen Underhill Redshift Records TK564 (novapon.com) ! Rounding up some of Redshift’s recent releases we see that this West Coast label continues to bring significant Canadian compositions to light with impressive frequency. To enjoy the whimsical ingenuity of Rodney Sharman’s work on Known and Unknown, even before you listen to a single note or phrase played by pianist Rachel Kiyo Iwaasa who interprets his whimsy, you may be well advised to consider everything that is part of the known world to be unknown. Such is the bewilderment and wonder of his music that the very air around you may be filled with green people, with crimson eyes and glittering silver and golden hair – a kind of ecstasy experienced should you dare let a proverbial genie out of a prismatic bottle. For instance, in the first three parts of the recording fabled – and real – operatic characters from Monteverdi, Puccini, and Wagner – yes, even Wagner, whose dogma was cast in bronze – are turned inside out. Genders are not merely reversed but inverted so that characters are imbued with wholly new personalities. Now imagine what this might do with your senses, set free of convention. Suddenly – even if you are stuck in conventions that are long dead – you can revel in beauty of an unexpected kind, be awestruck by love of a different sort, experiencing music played – no! sung – by a pianist who uses a tangy inimitable harmonic language to drive you to the delightful madness of a new, full-blooded romanticism, like a spell cast by Sharman’s bewitching compositions. On Intimes Exubérances Cheryl Duvall’s highly inflected interpretations of Patrick Giguère’s laudable compositions are of a different kind than the pianistic expressions of the music reviewed above. The repertoire is, of course, equally impressive but as befits the tenor and meaning of the work, what is impressive here is not just the magnificent and reactive pianism on show, but also Duvall’s maturity. Her performances of the four sections of this work possess a stunning èlan: magnificently ethereal in Partie I – à la frontière d l’intangible, by turns, tenderly delicate and rhythmically rippling in the Partie II – tisser le présent and with a biting drive in Partie III – corps, hors de temps. Finally, Partie IV – lueurs en voix is brilliantly virtuosic, with an understanding of the striking light and shade of this movement. All told, the excellent sound and annotations tilt the balance dramatically in favour of Duvall’s serious and enlivening artistry. Composers who venture into the realm of chamber work do so at their own peril, especially when they de rigueur must live up to the brilliant standards set by older contemporaries and look over their shoulders at past masters such as Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven and Bartók. But Nova Pon, for one, has gone past intimidation to produce a long piece World Within, and the significant five-movement Symphonies of Mother and Child. It is clear from the first strains of World Within that the composer knows the importance of embracing the past while going her own way. The swirling gestures at the outset are like jolts of Bartók that quickly give way to Pon’s forceful and expressive sound world. Likewise, the organically arranged five movements of Symphonies of Mother and Child give the correct impression of being an intensely felt work from solemn to invigorating ideas, with ample contrapuntal interplay to keep the narratives rich and layered. The performers of the Turning Point Ensemble show how masterfully attuned to the vision and artistry of Nova Pon and how deeply they have interiorised this music in their idiomatically turned-out recital. Raul da Gama Brent Lee – Homstal Brent Lee; Various Artists Centrediscs CMCCD32223 (cmccanada. org/shop/homstal) ! Windsor Ontario composer and media artist Brent Lee’s work explores relationships among music, image and technology, especially through multimedia 66 | June, July & August 2024 thewholenote.com

performance. A professor of Integrated Media in the School of Creative Arts at the University of Windsor, he’s composed music for orchestra, interactive media and film soundtracks. Lee’s recent work integrates electroacoustic composition, improvisation, saxophone performance, videography, Max computer programming and field recording. His Homstal project reflects those interests. Homstal, the Old English word meaning “home” or “homestead,” reflects that much of the work on this project was accomplished at his studio in rural Ontario. While the six Homstal album tracks are studio productions, each can be presented as an audiovisual environment allowing for improvisation and site-specific variation. In his liner notes Lee acknowledges that Homstal “grew directly out of my work with my friends in the Noiseborder Ensemble and I am grateful for their generous collaboration. … Martin Schiller plays electric bass on Overtro and Aaron Eichler plays the long snare drum sample used in DOT 1000.” A quiet, chill, non-metric chamber jazz vibe presides over the album articulated by Lee’s eloquent sax playing and his chosen harmonic textures. The opening track for instance begins with soft spacialised sax key clack sounds, joined by a wandering cantabile soprano sax melody featuring sustained notes delicately ornamented with alternate fingerings. A seemingly un-metred treble melody on upright piano is then added; in turn the whole is deftly contextualised by several layers of electronic sounds. A dreamy Southwestern Ontario mist seems to have settled on Lee’s Homstal music. Andrew Timar Anthony Rozankovic – Origami Louise Bessette ATMA ACD2 2895 (atmaclassique.com/en) ! Friends in Montreal have spoken for years about composer Anthony Rozankovich so it’s a delight to finally have a collection of his music to display some of this talent. Origami is an album of his music for solo piano performed with enormous dedication, virtuosity and sensitivity by Louise Bessette. Some of these works began life as film scores and others were composed as concert pieces; most are between three and four minutes long but a few are longer. Accessible but sophisticated, Rozankovich’s music displays his deep understanding of the building blocks of music: this is tonal, lyrical music but not at all facile or predictable. The listener is rewarded over and over again with gorgeous moments of introspection and nostalgia, complex counterpoint, some grit and even some humour. The composer has a fondness for waltz-like episodes but always he shows us his delicious mastery of harmony, taking us in unexpected directions and into curious sidebars. As a favourite, I might choose the thoughtful nostalgia of Avenue Zéro or Errance but I also love the fusion-inspired Andalouse Running Shoes and the quirky and rhapsodic Pigeon Biset (Rock Dove) which is available online but not on the disc itself. If there’s a shortcoming to this collection, it might be that the music is too interesting to use as background music and requires time to enjoy. It’s time well spent. Fraser Jackson What Brings You In Leslie Ting; Various Artists People Places Records PPR | 045 (peopleplacesrecords.bandcamp.com) ! Toronto-based violinist and interdisciplinary artist Leslie Ting’s creative output has incorporated elements of installation and theatre as much as pure musical expression. Her unusual career trajectory is also of note. After working as a licensed optometrist, from 2013-2017 she served as Associate Principal Second violinist in the Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony Orchestra. Ting’s theatre work Speculation layered the music of John Cage and Beethoven with a monologue and projections to tell the story of her mother “slowly losing her vision, while [Leslie] makes a career change to pursue her dream of becoming a professional musician.” An unconventional, ambitious debut album What Brings You In is much more than a violin recital of contemporary repertoire. Calling it, “A violinist confronts the noise of her psyche in an electroacoustic soundscape,” Ting operates both as a director and performer in the project, employing talk therapy, hypnotherapy, dreamwork, sandplay, somatics and reiki in her creative process with her co-musicians. Having been produced as a live theatrical event and a web-based installation, for this five-track audio recording of What Brings You In Ting has collaborated with several Canadian musicians: Germaine Liu on percussion and amplified sandbox, while Matt Smith, Rose Bolton and Julia Mermelstein provided electronic sounds, the latter two also contributing compositions. The album also features Ting as eloquent solo violinist, beginning with Linda Catlin Smith’s delicately austere violin and percussion composition Dirt Road. Bolton’s What we're listening to this month: thewholenote.com/listening Sibelius 2 & 5 Yannick Nézet-Seguin, Orchestre Métropolitain A striking fusion of national romanticism, patriotic wind and artistic maturity in these iconic symphonies, with concentration and austerity. ...of dreams unveiled Clare Longendyke Debussy's Piano Préludes curated alongside music of Amy Williams and Anthony R. Green for a debut "rich in nuance, texture, and shape" (Textura). Voyages Philip Chiu Explore intimate and universal territories through the spellbinding notes of this album, woven from memories, family stories and musical reveries. Nova Pon: Symphonies of Mother and Child Turning Point Ensemble From classical roots, the composer's contemporary, personal voice blossoms in beautifully rich, acutely sensitive, deftly organized music -- powerful emotional journeys for soloistic chamber orchestra. thewholenote.com June, July & August 2024 | 67

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