Friday, December 4, 2009
Monday, September 21, 2009
Paul Merkelo Benefit Concert
West Brome Church (Knowlton)
Paul Merkelo, solo trumpet, OSM
Alain Lefèvre, piano
Marie-Ève Poupart, violin (Prix d'Europe 2009)
Michelle Abraham, violin
Davis Joachim, guitar
Join us to celebrate 10 years of the Fonds Paul Merkelo
This concert raises money for the Paul Merkelo Bursary. This bursary is awarded to a promising young competitor in the OSM Standard Life Competition. The beautiful old church is an ideal setting for such an event. Meet the musicians after the concert.
Price: $100 Concert, wine et taxes - Tax receipt
100 seats only - Seats not reserved
Door prize
R.S.V.P. : Michèle Paré (514-982-6809)
West BromeChurch (old church) : 26, chemin McCurdy, West Brome
West Brome INN : 128, route 139, West Brome
Suggested :
Dinner at the Auberge after the concert
Visit of nearby wineries before the concert
Monday, January 5, 2009
OSM / January at the OSM
KENT NAGANO in Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring Bach’s Mass in B Minor presented in collaboration with Tafelmusik The world’s great concert halls: a program paying tribute to the OSM on tour
January at the OSM
OSM Standard Life Competition: prize-winners’ concert
Montreal, January 5, 2009 – The Orchestre symphonique de Montréal is launching the new year with seven concerts in January 2009. Music director Kent Nagano rejoins the OSM musicians for two exceptional programs. The first features a pair of masterworks of the early 20th century, The Rite of Spring by Igor Stravinsky and The Song of the Earth by Gustav Mahler. Like a cubist painting by Picasso, the Rite proposes a new conception of musical time, which becomes a multifaceted mosaic. The Song of the Earth, meanwhile, inspired by a collection of Chinese poems rewritten by Mahler himself, remains one of the most sublime examples of music ever imagined.
Kent Nagano will also be conducting the Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra and Chamber Choir, specialists in the music of Bach, who will be joined by some musicians from the OSM in the Cantor of Leipzig’s majestic Mass in B Minor, a monument of the sacred choral repertoire. A unique musical event in Montreal, the Mass is being given at the OSM for the first time in over 20 years.
The excellence of the OSM has been confirmed in a dazzling way in the course of some 40 national and international tours, during which the Orchestra has had the privilege of playing in several of the mythical concert halls of the world. These include Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris, the Gewandhaus in Leipzig, the Musikverein in Vienna, the Royal Festival Hall in London and Suntory Hall in Tokyo. The musicians, under the direction of conductor in residence Jean-François Rivest, will be revisiting some of the works performed in those halls.
Over the years, the OSM Standard Life Competition has become a compulsory stage for many young musicians, not only from Montreal but from across Canada, an indispensable springboard as they aspire to a musical career. The 69th edition, devoted to voice and to winds, was held this past November, and the two winners who tied for the Grand Prize, Hubert Tanguay-Labrosse and Keith Dyrda, will be the guest soloists for the first concert of 2009, under the direction of Mark Wigglesworth. Hearing them will help listeners understand just why they so unambiguously bowled over the members of the prestigious jury.
Information and reservations: 514 842-9951 or www.osm.ca
THE JANUARY CONCERTS:
January 11 at 2:30 p.m. (Salle Wilfrid-Pelletier) Musical Sundays: OSM Standard Life Competition. Mark Wigglesworth, conductor; Hubert Tanguay-Labrosse, clarinetist and Keith Dyrda, trombonist.
January 13 and 14 at 8 p.m. (Salle Wilfrid-Pelletier) Grand Concerts: The Rite of Spring with Kent Nagano. Kent Nagano, conductor; Christian Gerhaher, baritone; Stuart Skelton, tenor.
January 16 at 8 p.m. and January 18 at 2:30 p.m. (Salle Wilfrid-Pelletier) Panasonic Signature Performances: Bach’s Mass in B Minor. Kent Nagano, conductor; Sibylla Rubens, soprano; Renata Pokupic, mezzo-soprano; Christoph Genz, tenor; Detlef Roth, bass; Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra & Chamber Choir.
January 20 at 8 p.m. (Salle Wilfrid-Pelletier) Air Canada Classical Escapes: The World’s Great Concert Halls: The OSM on Tour. Jean-François Rivest, conductor; Hélène Guilmette, soprano; Brian Manker, OSM principal cello.
January 21 at 10:30 a.m. (Salle Wilfrid-Pelletier) Symphonic Matinees: The World’s Great Concert Halls: The OSM on Tour. Jean-François Rivest, conductor; Hélène Guilmette, soprano; Brian Manker, OSM principal cello.
Information on the month’s concerts:
Musical Sundays:
OSM Standard Life Competition
Two grand prizes were awarded at the 69th edition of the OSM Standard Life Competition, which took place last November. “Exceptionally, given the remarkable level of the two first prizes in the woodwinds and brass categories, the jury decided unanimously to award two OSM Standard Life Grand Prizes,” Mr. Welz Kauffman, chairman of the jury, explained at the time. We will therefore be hearing Keith Dyrda, a bass trombonist born in Manitoba in 1981, in the Concerto by Henri Tomasi, composed in 1956, a work featuring an especially refined orchestration and brimming with rhythmic energy; while clarinetist Hubert Tanguay-Labrosse, born in Québec in 1989, will be performing Carl Maria von Weber’s Concerto No. 1, which wonderfully exploits the expressive powers of the clarinet and abounds with brilliant use of tone coloration, especially in the instrument’s low and middle registers.
The concert will take place under the direction of British conductor Mark Wigglesworth, winner of the Kondrashin International Conducting Competition in 1989, a guest of the great European and American orchestras, and who led the Sydney Symphony Orchestra at the closing ceremonies of the 2000 Olympic Games. In the second part of the program he will conduct Sergei Rachmaninov’s Symphony No. 2, a work of subtle architecture and of exemplary mastery and maturity. The author Michel-R. Hofmann describes it admirably in these terms: “All the poetic intensity of a beautiful Russian landscape, with its tall white birches, its serene, almost smiling melancholy, its distant hues of blue, can be heard to sing in it . . . against a tranquil and rippling background of strings.”
A Yamaha pre-concert will be presented in the Piano Nobile by Marie-Josée Simard at 1:30 p.m. Recognized as an outstanding performer on percussion instruments, she has been heard in numerous concerts in Canada, Mexico, Paris, New York, and in Poland and Belgium as well as on tour in China and Korea, and has been forging a reputation for excellence on the national and international scene for 25 years. She will be heard in Wind and the Bamboo Grove for marimba by Keiko Abe, Élan for vibraphone by Francois Bourassa, and Marshmallow for marimba by David Freedman.
Musical Sundays
January 11 at 2:30 p.m.
Salle Wilfrid-Pelletier, Place des Arts
Mark Wigglesworth, conductor
Hubert Tanguay-Labrosse, clarinetist
Keith Dyrda, trombonist
Carl Maria von Weber Clarinet Concerto No. 1
Henri Tomasi Concerto for Trombone and Orchestra
Sergei Rachmaninov Symphony No. 2
1:30 to 2 p.m.: Yamaha Pre-concert with Marie-Josée Simard.
Tickets starting at $24.75
Information and reservations: 514 842-9951 or www.osm.ca
Grand Concerts:
The Rite of Spring with Kent Nagano
This program, under the direction of music director Kent Nagano, tackles two masterpieces written at almost the same time, but with fundamentally different esthetics. The Rite of Spring constitutes one of the pillars of musical modernism. As was the case with Petrushka, The Rite of Spring was born of a vision that came to Stravinsky in 1910. He wrote in his autobiography, Chroniques de ma vie: “I had a glimpse in my imagination of the spectacle of a great pagan rite: wise elders, sitting in a circle and observing a young girl dance herself to death, a girl they are sacrificing to the god of spring to earn his benevolence. This was the theme of The Rite of Spring.” The ballet is divided into two tableaux: Adoration of the Earth (sacred dances progressively transform into savage trances that end in combat between rival tribes who carry the young girls off), and The Sacrifice (one of the girls must be sacrificed to the Earth, and dies after a frenetic dance). It will be recalled that the OSM won a Félix award for record of the year in 1985 for its recording of this work.
In the second part of the concert, Kent Nagano will conduct Das Lied von der Erde (The Song of the Earth), the penultimate work finished by Gustav Mahler. This “symphony with voices” marks, for its composer, a return to life after a series of severely testing experiences. In 1907, in the space of three months, he was forced to resign his post at the Vienna Court Opera, to which he had dedicated 10 years of his life; he lost his older daughter, Maria Anna (“Putzi”), who was only four; and he was diagnosed with a grave heart defect. The themes dealt with are therefore of a poignant humanity: the difficulty of the human lot, man’s essential needs, consolation. Made up of six lieder with orchestra, sung alternatively by tenor and baritone voices, the work is a poem of the human condition, of detachment from appearances to unite with the eternity of the Earth.
Baritone Christian Gerhaher has collaborated in his career with the likes of Helmuth Rilling and the Internationale Bachakademie Stuttgart, Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Sir Neville Marriner, Philippe Herreweghe, Heinz Holliger and Trevor Pinnock. His last disc was named best vocal recording by Gramophone magazine in 2006. Australian tenor Stuart Skelton, a member of the Metropolitan Opera and the Bayerische Staatsoper, will sing in place of Edgaras Montvidas who was originally announced.
Grand Concerts
January 13 and 14 at 8 p.m.
Salle Wilfrid-Pelletier, Place des Arts
Kent Nagano, conductor
Christian Gerhaher, baritone
Stuart Skelton, tenor
Igor Stravinsky The Rite of Spring
Gustav Mahler Das Lied von der Erde (The Song of the Earth)
Pre-concert discussion at 7 p.m.: Catherine Mercier interviews musicologist Guy Marchand.
Tickets starting at $24.75
Information and reservations: 514 842-9951 or www.osm.ca
Panasonic Signature Performances:
Bach’s Mass in B Minor
Bach’s Mass in B Minor, one of the monuments of the sacred choral repertoire, is a profoundly expressive and humanistic profession of faith and a touching appeal for mercy. Some musicologists (Gilles Cantagrel, in particular) have noted the ecumenical aspect of the work, Catholic in form and Lutheran in spirit. The fact that Bach, a Lutheran, conceivably dedicated the work to the Elector of Saxony, who was in the process of converting to Catholicism, may partially account for this. The score was not published until 1833, decades after Bach’s death, and the composer therefore never heard a complete version performed. The premiere seems to have taken place in Leipzig in 1859. Musically speaking, what is to be found in the mass is mastery of the horizontal dimension of counterpoint and the vertical dimension of harmonization of the basso continuo.
Kent Nagano will be conducting the Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra and Chamber Choir, specialists of this repertoire. The soloists will be German soprano Sybilla Rubens, who has recorded Bach cantatas as well as the St. Matthew Passion, and who was heard with the OSM in last season’s Christmas Oratorio; Croatian mezzo-soprano Renata Pokupic, who sang the Mass in B Minor in 2004 at the BBC Proms with Sir John Eliot Gardiner before undertaking a tour with him; German tenor Christoph Genz, first prize at Leipzig’s Bach Competition and at England’s Grimsby International Singers Competition and who has recorded the St. John Passion with Ludwig Güttler as well as Bach cantatas with Sir John Eliot Gardiner; and German bass Detlef Roth, who sang in Bach’s St. John Passion with the OSM in 2006 and in the Christmas Oratorio last season.
Panasonic Signature Performances
January 16 at 8 p.m. and January 18 at 2:30 p.m.
Salle Wilfrid-Pelletier, Place des Arts
Kent Nagano, conductor
Sibylla Rubens, soprano
Renata Pokupic, mezzo-soprano
Christoph Genz, tenor
Detlef Roth, bass
Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra and Chamber Choir
Johann Sebastian Bach Mass in B Minor
Pre-concert discussion at 7 p.m. on January 16 and at 1:30 p.m. on January 18. Kelly Rice welcomes musicologist Guy Marchand.
Tickets starting at $24.75
Information and reservations: 514 842-9951 or www.osm.ca
Air Canada Classical Escapes:
The World’s Great Concert Halls: The OSM on Tour
The period of the Orchestre symphonique de Montréal’s great international tours began in April 1962, when the OSM traveled to Europe for the first time, under the direction of conductors Zubin Mehta and Jacques Beaudry, with stops in Moscow, Leningrad, Kiev, Vienna and Paris. The first visit of a Canadian orchestra to the old world, the tour was the result of lengthy negotiations. Audience excitement was especially intense in Russia, where the Orchestra filled every hall, including the 6,000-seat Kremlin Palace. Since then, the OSM has had the opportunity of being heard all over Canada, in Europe, the United States, South America, Asia, and in the Canary Islands. This program offers a reinterpretation of some of the works performed on tour – such as the Mother Goose Suite by Maurice Ravel, the Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun by Claude Debussy and the symphonic poem Don Juan by Richard Strauss – or certain scores associated with a city visited by the Orchestra: Saint Petersburg (at the time Leningrad) with the Variations on a Rococo Theme by Piotr Ilyitch Tchaikovsky, Leipzig (a city associated with the genius of Bach) or Vienna (which saw the premiere of several Mozart operas).
Air Canada Classical Escapes
January 20 at 8 p.m.
Salle Wilfrid-Pelletier de la Place des Arts
Jean-François Rivest, conductor
Hélène Guilmette, soprano
Brian Manker, OSM principal cello
Maurice Ravel Mother Goose Suite
Johann Sebastian Bach Cantata BWV 21, “Seufzer, Tränen, Kummer, Not”
Johann Sebastian Bach Cantata BWV 211, “Heute Noch”
Piotr Ilyitch Tchaikovsky Variations on a Rococo Theme
Claude Debussy Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Nozze di Figaro, “Deh vieni, non tardar”
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Recitative and concert aria “A Berenice… Sol nascente in questo giorno,” K. 70/61c
Richard Strauss Don Juan
Tickets starting at $24.75
Information and reservations: 514 842-9951 or www.osm.ca
Symphonic Matinees:
The World’s Great Concert Halls: The OSM on Tour
A repeat of the program of the day before, minus one of the Bach cantatas and Debussy’s Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun.
Air Canada Classical Escapes
January 21 at 10:30 a.m.
Salle Wilfrid-Pelletier, Place des Arts
Jean-François Rivest, conductor
Hélène Guilmette, soprano
Brian Manker, OSM principal cello
Maurice Ravel Mother Goose Suite
Johann Sebastian Bach Cantata BWV 211, “Heute Noch”
Piotr Ilyitch Tchaikovsky Variations on a Rococo Theme
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Nozze di Figaro, “Deh vieni, non tardar”
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Recitative and concert aria “A Berenice… Sol nascente in questo giorno,” K. 70/61c
Richard Strauss Don Juan
Tickets starting at $24.75
Information and reservations: 514 842-9951 or www.osm.ca
The Orchestre symphonique de Montréal is presented by Hydro-Québec
in association with National Bank
Labels: Kent Nagano, montréal, Orchestre symphonique de Montrèal, osm, Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra and Chamber Choir