Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
New Music Festival features eclectic lineup
LUKE RATRAY Enlarge Image
Grammy Award-winning Eighth Blackbird Ensemble performs Thursday.
Button up your overcoat. Canada's Arctic takes centre stage at this year's Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra New Music Festival.
The fest's 19th edition is called Breaking New Ground and opens with an ice-breaker tomorrow night at the Winnipeg Art Gallery.
Related Items
If you can't attend every performance, here are some highlights I selected with the enthusiastic guidance of WSO composer-in-residence and festival co-curator Vincent Ho.
Opening Gala
Arctic Postcards (7:30 p.m. Saturday at Centennial Concert Hall) is full of world premieres, introducing the Arctic theme in full gale force while simultaneously celebrating 2010 as International Polar Year.
Distinguished Canadian guest composer Derek Charke will debut Falling from Cloudless Skies. He has a special interest in acoustic ecology and the study of environmental sound. His experiences in the Arctic and concern for the state of the environment crystallize in his work. "Composers and sound artists can't recreate nature but they can shine a spotlight on it," he wrote.
WSO principal cellist Yuri Hooker will premiere famed British composer John Tavener's Popule Meus.
Ho's much-publicized and long-awaited Arctic Symphony completes the evening. Inspired by his 2008 Arctic tour aboard the CGGS Amundsen as part of the Artist-on-Board program, it is a musical journal of various aspects of the frozen North in Ho's signature perceptive, contemplative style.
Throat singing and choirs
For Manitobans who love their choral music, Songs of the Earth (7:30 p.m. Sunday at Westminster United Church) is the show.
Music from Finland, Venezuela, the United States and Canada are all on the program, with some contributions from locals. The Winnipeg Singers will perform works by Winnipeg composers Andrew Balfour and Sid Robinovitch and the University of Manitoba Women's Choir will sing Rautavaara's Lorca-sarja and Jerusalem Luminosa, by one of last year's festival faves, Abbie Betinis.
The energetic Prairie Voices Choir will do what they do best -- the unusual -- in Joshua Penman's Becoming, a piece about mystical ecstasy, inspired by indigenous cultures and employing Buddhist chants among other captivating techniques.
And if you've never experienced throat singing, you're in for a treat as leading Canadian throat-singer Tanya Tagaq kicks off the evening with her own improvisation.
Jenny Lin
On Monday at the concert hall, fearless pianist and recording artist Jenny Lin will tackle Brazilian composer Arthur Kempela's Nosturnos, described by Ho as "a knuckle buster, knockout piece."
Four Paintings by Leestemaker, composed by Ho for string quintet and piano, will make its Canadian debut, with Los Angeles artist Luc Leestemaker reading his poetry between movements. He will also be displaying and auctioning off paintings.
Sheer curiosity should bring you to Metamusik (7:30 p.m. Wednesday night) where Bending Hendrix by Canadian Mike Janzen hits the concert hall stage. "Even if you've never heard of Jimi Hendrix, this is mind-blowing," says Ho. "It's a dynamite, strong work, full of virtuosic craftsmanship." Popular local guitarist Greg Lowe does the honours.
Then there's Tim Brady's The Guess Who Symphony, which features movements entitled American Woman (Rites of Strings) and Runnin' Back to Saskatoon/Concerto for Orchestra and Map. Hard to resist.
Thursday's double bill features Charke's 13 Inuit Throat Song Games with Tagaq and string orchestra in the 7:30 p.m. show and distinguished guest ensemble Eighth Blackbird Ensemble at 9 p.m. Named after Wallace Stevens' poem, Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird, the Grammy Award-winning group, made up of flutes, clarinets, violin, viola, cello, piano and percussion will play works written especially for them by Stephen Hartke, Gordon Fitzell and Pulitzer Prize winner Steve Reich. Reich's Double Sextet will blow your socks off with its driving rhythms.
The festival ends on a high note Friday with Amplify, Multiply, Remix and Redefine... Oh My! The centrepiece is New Zealander John Psathas's View from Olympus for piano, percussion and orchestra. He composed the music for the 2004 Athens Olympics. "It's pure adrenaline, in-your-face aggression," said Ho. "When I first heard it, time stood still."
There's plenty more, so check out the schedule at www.newmusicfestival.ca. See you at the festival.
gwenda.nemerofsky@shaw.ca
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition February 4, 2010 d3
More Music
- Back to Top
- Return to Music
Most Popular Music
- Supreme Court won't consider reducing $675,000 verdict against student who downloaded music
- Ian Astbury's struggles provide ammo for new Cult album 'Choice of Weapon'
- Slash recruits Canadians for band; doesn't expect Velvet Revolver reunion
- Sammy Hagar says he's not surprised Roth-Van Halen tour has postponed dozens of dates
- Underwood admits she yells at refs, opposing players during NHL hubby's games
- Page turned: Country star Tim McGraw looks to rev up career with help of Big Machine Records
- POP and ROCK: Adam Lambert
- Il Divo launches North American tour in Canada with opener Nikki Yanofsky
- Country legend George Jones hospitalized again with respiratory infection; dates postponed
- Canadian DJ Kid Koala says new Deltron 3030 disc 'crushes' beloved debut
- Donna Summer, Queen of Disco, dies at 63: hits included 'Last Dance,' 'Bad Girls'
- Supreme Court won't consider reducing $675,000 verdict against student who downloaded music
- Van Halen mum on why it has postponed its summer concert dates
- Underwood admits she yells at refs, opposing players during NHL hubby's games
- Sammy Hagar says he's not surprised Roth-Van Halen tour has postponed dozens of dates
- Il Divo launches North American tour in Canada with opener Nikki Yanofsky
- Slash recruits Canadians for band; doesn't expect Velvet Revolver reunion
- Mira Black performs at News Café today
- Ian Astbury's struggles provide ammo for new Cult album 'Choice of Weapon'
- POP and ROCK: Adam Lambert
- Aging rockers Van Halen can still bring it
- Adam Yauch of the Beastie Boys dies at 47; rapper had been in treatment for cancer
- Donna Summer, Queen of Disco, dies at 63: hits included 'Last Dance,' 'Bad Girls'
- At 66, Ottawa's Bruce Cockburn pleased to have another shot at fatherhood
- Get sauced at city’s newest festival
- Supreme Court won't consider reducing $675,000 verdict against student who downloaded music
- The choirboys
- Doctor: Bee Gees star Robin Gibb has colorectal cancer, wakes from coma
- We still danced the night away
- Photographer reveals drug addiction while unmasking private life of Celine Dion
- David Lee Roth was cool with Kool's big party sound
- Concerts
- Great Big Seachange: Alan Doyle branches out with first solo album
- Donna Summer, Queen of Disco, dies at 63: hits included 'Last Dance,' 'Bad Girls'
- Get sauced at city’s newest festival
- Fogerty’s travelin’ band to stop here on Sept. 20
- Musical class of 2012
- Aging rockers Van Halen can still bring it
- Rammstein gig a flaming success
- Saucy new fest on tap
- A solid performance with true Spanish flair
- At 66, Ottawa's Bruce Cockburn pleased to have another shot at fatherhood
- We still danced the night away
- Rammstein to play here for first time on May 10
“We need to carefully add all the diverse elements that people need to live in a place: restaurants, workplaces, nice residences, perception of safety, green space, convenient transport, nearby schools for the kids they would like to have - if any piece is missing, the outcome will not last long.”
Posted by: goldenbob
Article: A SHED is not enough
Ads by Google









You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is register and/or login and you can join the conversation and give your feedback.
The Winnipeg Free Press does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. These terms were revised effective April 16, 2010; View the changes. New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.