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Volume 30 Issue 2 | October & November 2024

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October/November 2024 containing our 30th annual presenter directory (25th under the Blue Pages name) is now available for viewing. Also first four instalments of ART OF THE ARC -- a concert curators' Q & A, with more to follow online and in print throughout the fall. Also View from Up Here parses the difference between a two lane highway and a two-way street; Choral Scene digs into singing and health; Music Theatre taps joy-fuelled offerings at London's Grand Theatre and elsewhere; In with the New looks at Letters to God; Classical and Beyond tackles a 212-listing 68 days; thirteen new recordings in our listening room and more.

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complex reflections on love, before reaching an explosive and moving finale with the tango-infused Misatango. Q2: The concert as a whole? For The Love Affair, several pragmatic factors influenced the programming. The first half features the TMSingers, our professional chamber choir, accompanied by piano, which allows us to focus on more intimate, lighter works like Brahms’ Liebeslieder Walzer and Drei Quartette. These pieces don’t require a large ensemble, making them perfect for our chamber forces and easier to rehearse efficiently. In contrast, the second half brings in the full power of the 160 voices of the Toronto Mendelssohn Choir, accompanied by a chamber orchestra. This shift is both thematic and practical: it allows for the performance of Martín Palmeri’s Misatango, a larger, more demanding work that requires the depth and intensity of a full choir and instrumental ensemble. This progression from smaller forces to full choir also gives the concert a natural build in energy and impact. Q3: Shaping the season? Similar to the concert I just discussed, the idea of Dare to Discover permeates the entire 2024-2025 season, encouraging audiences to experience both the familiar and the new. Visionaries: Vivaldi & Da Vinci blends music and multimedia to explore genius across disciplines, while Festival of Carols offers a fresh take on holiday traditions with surprising musical selections this year. The season balances innovation with timeless works, inviting both performers and audiences to explore bold interpretations and premieres, like those by Aaron Manswell. Each concert, much like *The Love Affair,* is a carefully curated journey, blending discovery with tradition. The season itself forms an arc, with Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis at its centre. That concert is not only a tribute to the choir’s storied past but also a bold, forward-looking statement in choral artistry. Revisiting this monumental work, first performed in Canada by TMChoir nearly a century ago, honours our history while showcasing our ongoing commitment to artistic excellence and innovation. It reflects the culmination of our anniversary season and our dedication to pushing choral boundaries into the future. Jean-Sébastien Vallée is Artistic Director of the Toronto Mendelssohn Choir. The Love Affair takes place at Koerner Hall, Royal Conservatory of Music at 3pm, November 3. Chris Friesen THE ART OF THE ARC ( 4 ) (4) Chris Friesen: Trinity Bach Project Q1: The opening work? The opening work of TBP’s first program of the season, Henry Purcell’s 1685 anthem, I Was Glad, is constructed as a lovely little musical triptych. It’s a vocal painting of Psalm 122 existing in three hinged panels, as it were. The first panel shimmers with trilling rhythms evocative of laughter and bright conversation as the ensemble sings of ascending the Temple Mount alongside one’s spiritual and familial relations. The middle panel drops a minor third to a new key and more solemn tone, with the injunction to pray for the peace of Jerusalem and those who live there. Then the third panel resumes the initial setting and buoyant mood in a polyphonic doxology that has great fun tangling up the words, “as it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end” (a phrase that envisions all time and eternity as a wellcomposed triptych!). Q2: The concert as a whole? Following the introduction provided by Purcell, the main event of our season opener is a pair of Bach’s cantatas linked by significant references to roses. One of them, BWV 72 (“Everything according to God’s will”), leaps into action with dramatic urgency from the strings and oboes at a vigorous tempo in A minor. The other, BWV 182 (“King of heaven, welcome”), begins with a sweet, stately processional duet between solo violin and baroque recorder in G Major. I listened to these two cantatas a lot over the summer in both possible orders, often while jogging, tracking the progression of their energy and trying to put myself in the ears of an imaginary audience who might be hearing them for the first time. Both sequences had features that recommended them. In the end BWV72 won out as first in line due to the intensity of its opening (we launch the boat of the season by crashing it directly into the waves), its shorter length and the flow from its final stalwart hymn tune into the natural instrumental interlude provided by the opening of cantata BWV182. Even more importantly, this order allows us to conclude the entire program with the blissful dance of BWV182’s final movement. Like Purcell’s anthem at the outset, it sings of delighted communal entry into a cherished home, with recorder, strings and choir trading a melody back and forth like revelers holding hands in a circle. It never hurts to leave one’s audience in a state of musical euphoria at the end of a concert, right? TBP has also been developing a tradition over the past two seasons of wrapping things up with the functional equivalent of a benediction. After the euphoria of the concluding applause, we typically lean to a place of reflection and rest as a final send-off. In this program, we do so with Maurice Duruflé’s gentle a cappella classic, Ubi Caritas, which gives the assurance, “Where charity and love are, God is there.” Q3: Shaping the season? Season planning for Trinity Bach Project has tended to look less like an executive blueprint and more like a path laid down by walking. This season is no exception, as we continue to tweak repertoire decisions, line up venues, and settle performance and rehearsal dates for programs February through May. That caveat aside, there have been a couple of implicit principles guiding construction of the season. In the recent past we’ve presented a lot of pairings of Bach with other choral composers (“Bach and Mendelssohn,” “Bach and Rheinberger,” “Bach and Tallis,” etc.). This year we’re venturing more into curation along thematic lines, as with our season opener, “Bach and Roses.” There’s a program coming up in the new year, still to be officially titled, which will be along the lines of “Bach and Life Passages,” since it includes both a wedding and a funeral cantata. We’re also planning an instrumental-only program in early January, “Bach and Epiphany,” which conceives of three concertos as the gifts of the Magi. Six or seven months from now we’ll aim to conclude the trajectory of 2024-25 with another joyful dance, in a program built around the exultant cantata BWV117, “Praise and honour to the highest good.” Trinity Bach Project: rehearsing Brahms’ Geistliches Lied, Op. 30, before the May 13, 2023 concert, Bach and Brahms. Chris Friesen is Executive Director of Trinity Bach Project. Bach and Roses will be performed Oct 3, 1pm at Trinity College Chapel; Oct 4, 8pm at Little Trinity Church, Nov 13, 8pm, at Grace Church on-the-Hill, and Nov 17, 3pm, at Metropolitan United Church. SIMON REMARK 12 | October & November 2024 thewholenote.com

2024 GALA CONCERT Monday October 28 – 7:30 pm Maison symphonique de Montréal / Livestreamed globally on Medici TV Orchestre symphonique de Montréal Chorus Musicians of the OSM Andrew Megill, Chorusmaster Featuring Premieres by AMP Laureates Josef Bardanashvili, Yair Klartag, Jordan Nobles and Juan Trigos azrielifoundation.org/gala thewholenote.com October & November 2024| 13

Volumes 26-30 (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)