SING ON
Spotlight on volunteering with the Calgary Philharmonic
Hayes Family raises community through music
CCVO building a thriving Calgary through support for non-profit sector
David Sussman shares behind-the-scenes of helping out in the Orchestra
— celebrating 60 years
Official Program of the Calgary Philharmonic | Music Director Rune Bergmann | Spring 2023 | Volume 47 No.
3
Chorus
Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra
205 8 Ave SE
Calgary, AB T2G 0K9 Box Office: 403.571.0849 calgaryphil.com
Simon MacLeod | Managing Editor
Janet Bwititi | Editorial Advisor
Omar Jeha | Art Director
Don Anderson
Marisa Barber
Carole + Steve Clement
Miranda Martini
Jocelyn Morlock
Stephania Romaniuk
David Sussman | Contributors
on the cover
Mark Dumbrique
Katt Hryciw
Catherine Lasuita
Crystal Tan
shot by HarderLee Studios featured in the cover story on page 28
Venue Partner
For advertising inquires, please email Simon MacLeod at smacleod@calgaryphil.com
Prelude is published three times a year by the Calgary Philharmonic Society. Copyright 2023 by Calgary Philharmonic Society. No part of this publication may be reproduced without express written consent of the publisher.
Message from the President + CEO
Orchestra Chorus
cover story
Celebrating the first 60 years of the Calgary Philharmonic Chorus
Katherine Chi performs Beethoven
Marvel Studios Presents Black Panther in Concert feature Q + A with volunteers Carole + Steve Clement
Brahms: A German Requiem
Diana Cohen in Concert
Brass Transit: The Music of Chicago
Let Voices Resound
Chamber Music at the Bella: Night 1
Chamber Music at the Bella: Night 2
Movie Magic: Morricone + Bernstein
On Stage with Branford Marsalis
Supporters
Corb Lund in Concert
Will's Jams
feature The Hayes Family: Building a Musical Community feature Volunteering and Community Prosperity feature Musical Voluntary
Elgar's Cello Concerto
We acknowledge that we come together and create music on land known by the Blackfoot name Moh'kinsstis, which we also call Calgary. This land is on the traditional territories of the Blackfoot Confederacy (Siksika, Piikani, and Kanai First Nations), the Îyâxe Nakoda (Chiniki, Bearspaw, and Wesley First Nations), and the Tsuut'ina First Nations, as well as the Métis Nation of Alberta, Region 3. We honour this land and all those who share it in a spirit of peace, friendship, and respect.
SPRING 2023 | 3
04
34 37 38 40 42 44
18 20 22 24 48
54 26
28 30 06 09 16 12
10 21
Administration
Siân Alcorn
| Sales Assistant
Alysha Armanious | Manager, Education + Outreach
Megan Beaudoin
| Digital Marketing Specialist
Janet Bwititi | Director, Marketing + Sales
Scott Carey
| Grant Writer
Sonny Carmona | Marketing + Sales Coordinator
Felicia Chow | Office Administrator
Viviana D’Ambrosio | Associate Director, Development
Manisha Dangol
| Development Officer
Andrea Davison
| Interim Director, Artistic + Education
Marian Dyck
| Box Office Support
Dennis Envoldsen
| Visual Content Specialist
Willem Fraser
| Development Officer
Laura Gillespie
| Operations Accountant
Rob Grewcock
| Music Librarian
Hello everyone,
The Calgary Phil belongs to everyone, and it is powered by people. From the Chorus to the Board, the smiling volunteers helping at events, and those toiling on the Cork and Canvas Gala Committee and the Ad Astra Campaign Committee, the Calgary Phil is incredibly fortunate to have such talented people helping it. I recently met another raft of hard-working volunteers in the wee small hours in a local casino counting room — that’s dedication!
A massive THANK YOU to everyone who gives so much time and energy to supporting our communities through the Calgary Phil.
The magnificent Calgary Philharmonic Chorus celebrates its 60th birthday this year. We are rare in Canada to have such a resource in our city, as an integral part of the Calgary Phil. They’ve come back stronger than ever following the pandemic, with a recordbreaking 119 volunteer singers at most recent count. Celebrate this special anniversary with us at Let Voices Resound in April.
If you’re reading this at a concert, please come and say hi to me and other colleagues in the lobby — and thank our wonderful volunteers, too!
Marc Stevens President + CEO
Karen Halford-Edwards
| Intermediate Accountant
Joanne Harada
| Artistic Planning Advisor
Courtney Ilie
| Associate Director, Sales
Omar Jeha
| Graphic Designer
Lisa Korolyk
| Events Coordinator
Dagny MacGregor
| Sales Manager
Simon MacLeod
| Communications Manager
Tayla Mapatac
| Front of House Coordinator
Adam Masson | Concert Operations Coordinator
Derek Muzyka
| Director, Finance + Administration
Daniel Pelton
| Operations Assistant
Ziga Poromon
| Box Office Support
Megan Robertson
| Assistant to the President + CEO
Barbara Soles
| Senior Development Officer
Crystal L Spicer
| Production Manager
Jason Stasiuk
| Manager, Artistic Operations
Marc Stevens | President + CEO
Jessica Szeto
| Information Systems + Technology Specialist
Michael Thomson
| Director, Orchestra Operations
Board of Directors
Glenn Bontje
Monica Cheng
Fern Cyr
Niki Dunne
Rebecca Finley-Schidlowsky
Corinne Grigoriu
| Governance Committee Chair
Samuel Hayes
| Finance + Audit Committee Chair
Don Herman
James Kusie
Dr. John Lacey
Christine Macnab
Elizabeth Middleton
Tracy Seaman
Donovan Seidle
Casey Smith
Marc Stevens
| Ex-officio
Lorna Tsai
Janet Yuchem
| Board Chair
Calgary Philharmonic Foundation Trustees
Courtney Burton | Secretary
David Daly | Vice President
Joel Douglas | Treasurer
Samuel Hayes
Jim Hughes
Letha MacLachlan QC
Eileen Marikar | Assistant Treasurer
Byron Neiles
Ellen Parker
Ryan Stasynec | President
For an up-to-date list on administration, board members, and trustees, visit calgaryphil.com/about.
4 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com | 403.571.0849
What do I wear to the Orchestra?
Whatever you want! At the Calgary Phil, there is no formal dress code. We want you to feel happy and relaxed so you can enjoy the performance. Most attendees wear business-casual attire, but you will see everything from jeans to cocktail wear. Dress in your own style and what makes you most comfortable.
What is your mobile phone policy?
One of the joys of a live concert is you can sit back and experience the music without distractions, but we also know you don’t want to miss an important message or call. So, if you leave your mobile device on, we simply ask that you turn the sound off, turn the brightness down, and be considerate of your neighbours.
Where can I find parking?
There are several parking lots in the area but leave yourself time to find a spot as they fill up fast. Underground parking is available at Arts Commons and the nearby Civic Plaza and TELUS Convention Centre parkades. If you take the CTrain, the stations are located one block from Arts Commons. Also, bike racks can be found on Stephen Avenue in front of the Jack Singer Concert Hall.
Are drinks allowed in the concert hall?
Yes! All drinks are permitted in the concert hall, with the exception of the occasional concert. Many people arrive early to enjoy a drink in the lobby before the performance. You can also pre-order your drinks before the concert and pick them up from the bar at intermission.
Can I take photos in the concert hall?
We'd love for you to share your Calgary Phil experience and capture your favourite moments. For most concerts, you can take a quick photo, but don’t use flash — it can interfere with the musicians’ performance.
When do I clap?
This is our most common question. Traditionally, in classical music culture, audiences hold their applause until the end of an entire piece (there can be multiple movements, with short breaks between them, in one piece). This is intended to respect the performers’ focus and the flow of the music. You’ll know when the piece is finished because the conductor typically puts their arms down completely and turns to the audience. But, if you do happen to clap before the piece is finished, that’s okay! The musicians will be happy to know you’re enjoying the performance.
What happens if I’m late?
We realize even the best laid plans sometimes go sideways. Ushers do their best to seat latecomers at appropriate breaks in the performance, but in some cases, this may not be possible until the completion of an entire work. We don’t want you to miss anything, so you can listen to the music and watch the screens in the lobby.
How long is a concert?
Concert length varies, but a typical performance starting at 7:30PM is about two hours long including a 20-minute intermission. Shorter concerts may not feature an intermission. Symphony Sundays for Kids concerts are held on select Sundays at 3PM, and are usually one hour long with no intermission.
For more questions and the most up-to-date Health + Safety measures, visit calgaryphil.com/ plan-your-visit.
FALL 2022 | 5
Whether you are new to the Calgary Phil or you've been coming to concerts for years, here are the answers to some frequently asked questions to make your experience as enjoyable as it can be.
Orchestra
Rune Bergmann | Music Director
Karl Hirzer | Associate Conductor
Cris Derksen | Artistic Advisor
Roberto Minczuk | Music Director Laureate
Hans Graf | Music Director Laureate
Mario Bernardi | Conductor Laureate
Cenek Vrba | Concertmaster Emeritus
First Violins
Diana Cohen | Concertmaster
John Lowry
| Associate Concertmaster
Donovan Seidle | Assistant Concertmaster
Eric Auerbach
Edmund Chung
Hangyul Kim
Olga Kotova
Bonnie Louie
Genevieve Micheletti
Maria van der Sloot
Hojean Yoo
Second Violins
Lorna Tsai | Principal
Stephanie Soltice-Johnson | Assistant Principal
Erin Burkholder
Jeremy Gabbert
Hyewon Grillet-Kim
Craig Hutchenreuther
Minnie Min Kyung Kwon
Theresa Lane
Adriana Lebedovich
Steven J Lubiarz
Violas
Laurent Grillet-Kim | Principal
Marcin Swoboda
| Assistant Principal
Arthur Bachmann
Jeremy Bauman
Peter Blake
Michael Bursey
Alisa Klebanov
Jesse Morrison
Cellos
Arnold Choi | Principal
Josué Valdepeñas | Assistant Principal
Dongkyun An
Kathleen de Caen
Thomas Megee
David Morrissey
Daniel Poceta
Basses
Sam Loeck
| Principal
Kyle Sanborn | Assistant Principal
Matthew Heller
Trish Bereti-Reid
Patrick Staples
Jonathan Yeoh
Flutes
Sara Hahn-Scinocco | Principal
Gwen Klassen | Assistant Principal
Piccolo
Gwen Klassen
Oboes
Alex Klein
| Principal
David Sussman
| Assistant Principal
English Horn
David Sussman
Clarinets
Slavko Popovic
| Principal
Jocelyn Colquhoun
| Assistant Principal
Bassoons
Antoine St-Onge
| Principal
Michael Hope
| Assistant Principal
Horns
Position to be filled
| Principal
Jennifer Frank-Umana
| Associate Principal
Position to be filled
| Assistant Principal
Maxwell Stein
| Assistant Principal
Heather Wootton
| Assistant Principal
Trumpets
Adam Zinatelli
| Principal
Miranda Cairns
| Assistant Principal
Trombones
James Scott
| Principal
Position to be filled
| Assistant Principal
Bass Trombone
David Reid
| Principal
Tuba
Tom McCaslin
| Principal
Timpani
Alexander Cohen | Principal
Percussion
Position to be filled
| Principal
Harp
Tisha Murvihill | Principal
Learn more about our musicians at calgaryphil.com/ musicians.
The Calgary Phil is proud to perform live symphonic music for Alberta Ballet, Calgary Opera, and the Honens International Piano Competition.
Repertoire often requires extra musicians including:
Rolf Bertsch, keyboard
Jeremy Brown, saxophone
Sean Buckley, percussion
Stan Climie, clarinet
Aidan Dugan, oboe
John Feldberg, bassoon
Gareth Jones, trumpet
Janet Kuschak, cello
Malcolm Lim, percussion
Sarah MacDonald, flute
Nikki McCaslin, trombone
Elisa Milner, violin
Emily Phernambucq, flute
Richard Scholz, trumpet
Eva Sztrain, violin
Doug Umana, horn
Georgia Vogeli, violin
The
6 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com | 403.571.0849
Leave of absence
members of the Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra are members of The Calgary Musicians Association, Local 547 of the American Federation of Musicians of the United States and Canada.
Norwegian conductor Rune Bergmann is Music Director of the Calgary Philharmonic, Artistic Director and Chief Conductor of the Szczecin Philharmonic in Poland, and Music Director of Switzerland’s Argovia Philharmonic. Guest engagements in the 2022/2023 Season bring Bergmann once again to the podiums of the Baltimore, North Carolina, and Málaga Symphony Orchestras. He will also make his debut with the recently formed ADDA Simfònica in Spain. Bergmann’s recent guest engagements include concerts with the Baltimore, Colorado Detroit, Edmonton, Houston, New Jersey, and Pacific symphony orchestras in North America, and the Bergen Philharmonic, Orchestra della Svizzera Italiana, Orquesta Sinfónica Portuguesa, Norwegian National Opera Orchestra, Orquesta de València, Staatskapelle Halle, Wrocław Philharmonic, and the Risør Festival in Europe, to name a few. Bergmann has also led performances of Il barbiere di Siviglia and La Traviata at the Norwegian National Opera and he made his US operatic debut in Yale Opera’s production of Britten’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, as staged by Claudia Solti. Previous guest engagements have led him to such auspices as the Oslo Philharmonic, New Mexico Philharmonic, Münchner Symphoniker, Mainfranken Theater Würzburg, Philharmonie Südwestfalen, as well as the symphony orchestras of Malmö, Helsingborg, Kristiansand, Stavanger, Trondheim, Karlskrona, and Odense.
Karl Hirzer Associate Conductor
Karl Hirzer can’t remember a time when he didn’t want to be a musician. Growing up in New Westminster, BC in a household filled with music, his parents had Glenn Gould and Louis Armstrong on the stereo, and his mother sang along to Irish folk songs on the radio. He was 'composing' at the family piano by age four and formal piano lessons began at six. At 12, he started playing guitar in metal bands and dreamed of becoming a rock star while simultaneously perfecting Chopin études and Beethoven sonatas, earning his ARCT at 17. Today he is Associate Conductor of the Calgary Philharmonic and has led orchestras from Vancouver to Halifax, from the Gstaad Festival to education concerts in Warsaw. Hirzer studied to become a solo pianist at the University of Victoria before getting his Master of Music at McGill University. He got his first taste of conducting an orchestra during his undergrad and basked in the wondrous experience of sharing his musical ideas with musicians and audiences through simple gestures. He believes music plays an essential role in our lives and is especially committed to exploring music by living composers. He is also heavily invested in bringing music to young audiences. He continues to perform as an instrumentalist and also composes his own music, blending genres while mixing acoustic and electronic instruments. Heads up — Karl Hirzer’s first album of original material will be released in spring of 2023.
Cris Derksen Artistic Advisor
Juno-nominated Cris Derksen is an internationally respected Indigenous cellist and composer. In a world where almost everything — people, music, cultures — gets labelled and slotted into simple categories, Derksen represents a challenge. Originally from Northern Alberta, she comes from a line of chiefs from North Tallcree Reserve on her father’s side and a line of strong Mennonite homesteaders on her mother’s. Derksen braids the traditional and contemporary, weaving her classical background and her Indigenous ancestry together with new school electronics to create genre-defying music. As a performer, Derksen has appeared nationally and internationally as a soloist and in collaboration with some of Canada’s finest, including Tanya Tagaq, Buffy Sainte-Marie, Naomi Klein, and Leanne Simpson, to name a few. Recent concert destinations include Hong Kong, Australia, Mongolia, Sweden, and a whole lot of Canada: the place Derksen refers to as home. Derksen’s 2021 commissions included pieces for the Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra, Ottawa’s Chamberfest, the City of Toronto, Edmonton New Music, the Edmonton Symphony with support from the National Arts Centre, Vancouver’s Blueridge Chamber Festival, Vancouver Transform Cabaret, and a four-part docuseries for the Knowledge Network.
SPRING 2023 | 7
Rune Bergmann
Music Director
Your Phil. Your Style.
Show your love for the Calgary Phil with our NEW limited edition pullover hoodies! These hoodies are cozy, pill resistant, and feature our icon(ic) logo. Proceeds from all merch sales directly support your Orchestra and help us keep the music playing.
Visit calgaryphil.com/shop.
Mark Bartel Chorus Director
Dr. Mark Bartel is in demand as a versatile conductor and music educator. After a 16-year tenure in the United States, he returned to Canada in 2019 to join the faculty at Ambrose University as Associate Professor of Music. Since arriving in Calgary, he has been Chorus Director with the Calgary Philharmonic Chorus, as well as Artistic Director of the Spiritus Chamber Choir. Bartel is known for his musical, educational, and community collaborations and has established a reputation as a successful builder of choirs and choral programs. He has conducted college and university choirs for over 20 years and has extensive experience leading a wide range of community choirs in both the United States and Canada. In addition to his interest in choralorchestral works and choral music of the Baroque period, he brings his expertise as a solo singer and teacher of applied voice to his work with choirs. Bartel is a passionate advocate of the impact of the choral experience in the lives of choristers, in communities, and society at large.
8 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com | 403.571.0849
Edmund Chung
First Violin
Chorus
About the Chorus
Established in 1963, the Calgary Philharmonic Chorus is one of only two choruses in Canada that is part of a major professional symphony orchestra. The Chorus performs a wide variety of repertoire, including oratorio, opera, light classics, contemporary music, pops, and commissioned new works. In a typical season, the acclaimed ensemble is featured in four to eight concerts with the Orchestra. The Chorus is made up of more than 115 dedicated volunteer singers from Calgary and surrounding communities who come from all walks of life. Celebrating its 60th anniversary in 2023, the Chorus delivers excellence in the performance of choral music and promotes the enjoyment and development of choral singing in Calgary communities.
Mark Bartel
| Chorus Director
Evan Mounce
| Assistant Chorus Director
Brendan Lord
| Interim Chorus Director
Katt Hryciw
| Chorus Administrator
Sopranos
Karine Baumgardner
Katherine Biggart
Ellen Borak
Michelle Bozynski
Tricia Bray
Carolyn Byers
Christina Candra
Twylla Jayne Conn
Sheila Cook
Laura Davis
Ina Dobrinski
Larissa Donnelly
Megan Duckett
Gail Feltham
Sue Galcher
Sim Galloway
Carolyn Hatt
Robyn Hauck
Dale Hensley
Jessica How
Amethyst Klintberg
Melody Littel
Freya Melax
Gillian Posey
Colleen Potter
Brier Reid
Becky Salmond
Lisa Sears-Walsh
Joan Simmins
Barbara Soles
Becky Standing
Chantelle Stevenson
Melissa Symanczyk
| Section Representative
Crystal Tan
Norma Webb
Chelsea Woodard
| Principal
Betsy Woolner
Altos
Margaret Anderson
Susan Bell
Barbara Boland
Michelle Cariou
Indrani Chatterjee
| Section Representative
Tanya Chow
Breanne Coady
Bernie Constantin
Yvonne Courtney
Ruth Cross
Shirley Cumming
Gillian Forster
Racheal Githumbi
Kay Harrison
Pat Heitman
Amanda Holt
Helen Isaac
Allison Johnson
Cynthia Klaassen
Heather Klassen
Marlene Krickhan
Catherine Lasuita
Megan Lundrigan
Barbara Mathies
Susan Mendonca
Julia Millen
| Principal
Patty Mino
Cindy Neufeld
Britt Odegard
Mara Osis
Karen Palmer
Anastasiya Petruk
Anne Rodger
Monica Samper
Liv Sawyer
Patti Vaillant
Julia Vanden Heuvel
Vitaliia Vash
Kaitlin Walker
Tenors
Tim Ahrenholz
Dean Allatt
Tim Bell
| Section Representative
Keevin Berg
Tristram Chivers
Philip Dano
Pat Favaro
Richard Harding
Katt Hryciw
James Hume
Juan Manuel López
Eric Ma
Jason Ragan
| Principal
Peter Rilstone
Richard Seale
Dennis Voth
Basses
Archie Adams
Odeniyi Ayo-Ajayi
Bamzy Banwo
Aaron Bartholomew
| Principal
Cam Bischoff
Glenn Bontje
Ian Charter
Chad Conrad
Tim Cooke
Kevin Di Filippo
Arthur Dick
Alan Dornian
Mark Dumbrique
| Section Representative
John Ghitan
Al Huber
Brady King
Eric Klaassen
Drew Kotchan
David Mark
Martin Mobach
Keith Odegard
Dave Pattison
Dana Salter
David Schey
Greg Wagland
Richard Wanner
Keith Wyenberg
SPRING 2023 | 9
10 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com | 403.571.0849
© Sam Obadero
A SOUND FUTURE
The Hayes Family: Building a Musical Community
By Stephania Romaniuk
Although visionary arts supporters Sam and Angela Hayes have only recently started attending Orchestra concerts with their young daughters, Sophia and Ella, the family’s story with classical music, and involvement with the Calgary Philharmonic, begins much further back. Sam was born in the United Kingdom but raised in Holland, and as a young person with a recently acquired CD player, he had walked past a store with trays of CDs for sale. “I chose Chopin’s Nocturnes — and I fell in love with them.” His wife, Angela Hayes, is a proud Albertan whose early musical tastes were influenced by her grandfather, who loved listening to opera, and she studied piano in her youth. Angela took part in school and community choirs and was a Cpossibilities member while in university, the Calgary Phil program that allows young people to experience the joys of orchestral music.
The two met in 2011 when Sam moved to Calgary, and they began attending orchestra concerts together. Both shared a commitment to contributing to their communities, and while still in their twenties, Sam and Angela became members of the Calgary Phil’s patron programs. However, as Angela puts it, “You don’t know where you can have the most impact until you get involved.”
With a professional background in strategy and analytics, and already familiar with the world of volunteerism in the non-profit sector, Sam joined the Board and now represents the Society on the Calgary Philharmonic Foundation. Affectionately dubbed “the money man,” Sam has been integral to strengthening fiscal accountability, lengthening budget planning, and securing the financial sustainability of the Orchestra. As Chair of the Finance and Audit Committee, one
of his first priorities was to build a reserve fund that would help shield the Orchestra from unexpected financial challenges. “Ang and I made a multi-year commitment to build the reserve fund. This is one of the factors that determines the financial health of an organization,” shares Sam.
From there, Sam and Angela transitioned to supporting programming by establishing the Hayes Family Concerts. “We wanted to donate in a way that supported the foundational operations of the Orchestra, and potentially inspire others to do the same,” Angela explains. These concerts are already built into the season, such as Nordic Greats in January 2020 and the upcoming Elgar’s Cello Concerto concert this May, a concert that means a lot to them, considering their passion for the cello and strings. When they were not able to sponsor a concert as planned due to COVID-19, Sam and Angela donated instead to Ad Astra, the Foundation’s endowment campaign. Despite the unexpected change of plans, they were still able to give to the Orchestra where the need was greatest.
Another reason for sponsoring concerts was their own growing family. Now, Sam and Angela see including their daughters as an important part of their work. “We hope that by involving them now, when they are older, they will continue supporting the Orchestra,” says Angela, inspired by other Calgary Phil patrons who have involved their families over the long term. For the moment, favourite orchestral experiences for Sophia and Ella include the Instrument Discovery Zoo at Symphony Sundays for Kids concerts, “Maestro Karl and how he makes the sounds of the orchestra” — and the escalators at the Jack Singer Concert Hall!
Beyond growing their family’s involvement, Sam and Angela share the Calgary Phil’s belief that orchestral music is for everyone. They each enjoy bringing first-time attendees to concerts, who are often surprised to see how multi-faceted orchestral music can be. Angela is enthusiastic about introducing young audiences to the Calgary Phil’s An Orchestra Adventure — an online resource for kids, and Sam was excited to support Suncor Energy in sponsoring Jeremy Dutcher in Concert in the fall of 2019 — an incredible experience not only artistically but because of the impact it had on new and diverse audiences witnessing the visionary Tobique First Nation artist perform live. As part of his work in contributing to the accessibility of the organization, Sam also believes in making concerts as accessible as possible — not the least of which because he understands the many additional mental health benefits of listening to music, and orchestral music in particular. “I believe that the Orchestra is fundamental to the vibrancy of our city and mental health of Calgarians. We all have to manage our well-being, and if the Orchestra can positively influence mental health, then everyone deserves access to orchestral music for that benefit alone.”
As Sam and Angela’s involvement with the Orchestra has grown, so too has the impact it has had on them personally. Both speak of the strong friendships they have made, including musicians with whom they have hosted house concerts. “I see the faces on stage, and they’re not just faces anymore, but people with stories. And some of those stories intertwine with mine, and that just enriches the whole experience,” shares Sam. “The more we get involved, the more we get out of every concert we go to.”
SPRING 2023 | 11
Brahms: A German Requiem
Friday 24 March / 7:30PM
Saturday 25 March / 7:30PM
Jack Singer Concert Hall
Curated Series 2
Supported by Guest Artist Supporter: Naomi + John Lacey Virtuoso Program
Chorus Supporter: Borak Forte Program Program
Rune Bergmann, conductor Brendan Lord, interim chorus director
Meigui Zhang, soprano
Peter Barrett, baritone
Calgary Philharmonic Chorus
Johannes Brahms
A German Requiem, Op. 45 68'
I. Selig sind die da Leid tragen
II. Denn alles Fleisch es ist wie Gras
III. Herr, lehre doch mich
IV. Wie lieblich sind deine Wohnungen
V. Ihr habt nun Traurigkeit
VI. Denn wir haben hie
VII. Selig sind die Toten
This concert has no intermission Program and artists subject to change without notice
Surtitles by Michael Chadwick
A German Requiem, Op. 45
Johannes Brahms
(1833 to 1897)
Johannes Brahms’ catalogue contains a good deal of choral music, both with and without accompaniment. A German Requiem lies within the accompanied sector, as do several impressive shorter works such as Schicksalslied (Song of Destiny) and Triumphlied (Song of Triumph).
The longest of all his compositions, the Requiem is the work that established his international reputation, evolving over several years. As early as 1854, he began a large-scale work. He eventually used two of its movements in his Piano Concerto No. 1, and a third evolved into the second movement of the Requiem.
The death of his beloved mother in 1865 spurred him to complete the Requiem. He may also have intended it as a final gesture of respect to his mentor, Robert Schumann, who had died 10 years earlier and whose list of unrealized projects (unbeknownst to Brahms until many years later) included a requiem sung in German. Brahms composed the greater part of his piece in Zurich, Switzerland, completing the first version during the summer of 1866. By then, it had acquired six movements and the title, A German Requiem. In this form, it premiered at the cathedral in Bremen, Germany, on Good Friday, 1868. It was a great success, but Brahms was still not satisfied with it. The following summer, he added another movement, the fifth, and the work was finally finished.
He feared that the title would be misinterpreted as indicating a work that he designed solely for performance by German people. Such was not at all his intention. He wished to address his Requiem to all humanity, not to any particular segment of it. It is solely the language of the text that is reflected in the title. Brahms assembled the words himself, drawing upon the Lutheran Bible. He selected verses from the Old and New Testaments, drawing upon the Psalms, the writings of the prophets, the Gospels, the Epistles, and the Book of Revelation.
Language and text are only the most superficial of its unique qualities.
12 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com
| 403.571.0849
In many respects, it differs from most other works of its kind. A requiem is a ritual specifically associated with the Roman Catholic faith. It is performed in honour of someone who has died, and its text is sung in Latin. Traditional settings of this text are, in essence, prayers for the peaceful resting of the dead, who are threatened with the terrors of the Last Judgement. This latter concept is set forth most strongly in the Dies Irae, the Day of Wrath section of the traditional requiem text. Brahms omitted this portion completely, substituting a less fearinducing, more uplifting view of the same concept. This exemplifies the contents and manner of the work as a whole. In the German Requiem, Brahms concentrated not on seeking forgiveness for those who have left this earth but on offering consolation to those still here, mourning their departed loved ones.
The piece’s unorthodox content was recognized from the beginning. In fact, the city fathers of Bremen only gave permission for the premiere after Brahms agreed to allow, as a gesture to established beliefs, the performance of the aria, I Know That My Redeemer Liveth, from George Frideric Handel’s Messiah, after the fourth movement of the German Requiem. That practice has seldom, if ever, been repeated. Brahms’ German Requiem long ago established itself, without the need for interpolations, as precisely what its composer intended it to be: a heartfelt, universal gift of hope.
Program notes by Don Anderson © 2023 Rune Bergmann biography on page 7 Calgary Philharmonic Chorus biography on page 9
Brendan Lord Interim Chorus Director
Brendan Lord holds a Bachelor of Arts (Music) degree from Augustana University College, and Master of Music and Doctor of Musical Arts degrees in Choral Conducting from the University of Alberta. Recognized for his unique blend of artistic and administrative abilities, Dr. Lord is equally comfortable in the boardroom and on the podium. As an administrator, he is the Executive Director of Choir Alberta, Project Manager of Music Conference Alberta, and Advisor for Alberta Music Advocacy Alliance. Artistically, he has conducted choirs at all levels, including Calgary’s Spiritus Chamber Choir, Edmonton All-City Children’s Choir, Sherwood Park Festival Singers, and Sangkor Women’s Ensemble at the University of Alberta Augustana Campus. Between 2001 and 2016, Dr. Lord was a Sessional Instructor at the University of Alberta, where he taught courses in conducting, music theory, and musicianship.
Meigui Zhang’s 2022/2023 Season features an exciting role debut as Euridice opposite Jakub Józef Orliński in San Francisco Opera’s Orfeo ed Euridice, her Atlanta Opera debut as Zerlina in Don Giovanni, and a return to the Metropolitan Opera covering Ilia in Idomeneo. She is also engaged as the soprano soloist in Mozart’s Requiem with the North Carolina Symphony, Brahms’ A German Requiem with the Calgary Philharmonic, Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis with Bard College’s The Orchestra Now, and Bruckner’s Te Deum with the New Jersey Symphony. 2021/2022 sparkled with notable performances in esteemed venues. At the Metropolitan Opera, Zhang sang an “energetic, bright-voiced Thibault” in Sir David McVicar’s Don Carlos under the baton of Yannick NézetSéguin, as well as reprised her “warm, honeyed” Barbarina in Le nozze di Figaro. She also made her triumphant debut at the San Francisco Opera, starring in the lead role of Dai Yu in Bright Sheng’s The Dream of the Red Chamber.
SPRING 2023 | 13
Meigui Zhang Soprano
A recipient of the Ian Rosenblatt Bursary at the Wexford Festival in Ireland and a top prizewinner at the Montreal International Music Competition, baritone Peter Barrett is one of Canada’s most important and acclaimed artists on the opera and concert stage. The 2021/2022 Season saw him appear in Gianni Schicchi with the Canadian Opera Company, La bohème with Edmonton Opera, and the world premiere of Nicole Lizée’s R.U.R.: A Torrent of Light with Toronto’s Tapestry Opera. Barrett looks forward to 2022/2023 engagements with the Calgary Philharmonic and Calgary Opera, and returns to the Canadian Opera Company and Edmonton Opera. Other performance highlights include Valentin in Faust for Vancouver Opera, Wolseley in Louis Riel at the Canadian Opera Company, Mozart’s Requiem with the Newfoundland Symphony Orchestra, Marcello in La bohème for the Minnesota Opera, and Emile De Becque in Rodgers & Hammerstein’s South Pacific with the Calgary Opera. The Newfoundlander made his debut at the Metropolitan Opera as Malatesta in Don Pasquale opposite Anna Netrebko, and subsequently covered the role of Dr. Falke in Die Fledermaus and Lord Cecil in Maria Stuarda. Barrett is an alumnus of the Ensemble Studio of the Canadian Opera Company and Tanglewood’s Music Institute.
14 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com | 403.571.0849
Peter Barrett Baritone
BECOME A MEMBER TODAY! FIND OUT MORE avenuecalgary.com /membership
SPRING 2023 | 15 Experience the lush sounds and tastes of Italy at this one-night-only gala in support of the Calgary Philharmonic THURSDAY 11 MAY 2023 | FAIRMONT PALLISER
Diana Cohen in Concert
Friday 31 March / 7:30PM
Saturday 1 April / 7:30PM
Jack Singer Concert Hall
Curated Series 1
Supported by Guest Artist Supporter: Naomi + John Lacey Virtuoso Program Program
Yue Bao, conductor Diana Cohen, violin
Felix Mendelssohn The Hebrides (Fingal’s Cave), 10' Op. 26
Mieczysław Weinberg Violin Concerto in G Minor, Op. 67 26'
I. Allegro molto
II. Allegretto
III. Adagio
IV. Allegro risoluto
Intermission 20'
Ludwig van Beethoven Symphony No. 8 in F Major, Op. 93 26'
I. Allegro vivace e con brio
II. Allegretto scherzando
III. Tempo di menuetto
IV. Allegro vivace
The Hebrides (Fingal’s Cave), Op. 26 Felix Mendelssohn (1809 to 1847)
In 1829, Felix Mendelssohn and a friend visited Scotland. They journeyed to the Hebrides, the widely scattered group of islands off the northwest coast. On 7 August, they travelled by steamboat to the fishing port of Tobermory.
According to Mendelssohn scholar R Larry Todd, “That evening, Felix wrote to his sister, Fanny, ‘In order to make you understand how extraordinarily the Hebrides affected me, the following came to my mind there.’ ‘The following’ was a draft opening of the Hebrides Overture, complete with orchestral cues and dynamics and in nearly final form.” Reaching the island of Staffa the following day, the travellers paid a visit by rowboat to its most famous attraction: the flooded grotto known as Fingal’s Cave, named after a hero of Gaelic mythology. Mendelssohn turned his impressions of the Hebrides into this concert overture. It is one of his most Romantic and atmospheric works, one that draws close to the colourful fantasy world of such contemporaries of his as Berlioz and Liszt.
Violin Concerto in G Minor, Op. 67
Mieczysław Weinberg
(1919 to 1996)
Like his close friend, Dmitri Shostakovich, Mieczysław Weinberg suffered greatly under the repressive regime of dictator Joseph Stalin’s Soviet Union for what the authorities labelled 'progressive' tendencies. Previously, when he was living in Poland, his Jewish faith earned him and his relatives further repression. His parents and his sister died in a Nazi concentration camp. He composed a large amount of music, including 26 symphonies, 17 string quartets and seven operas. In 1948, several of his compositions were banned during the same Soviet government purge that brought Shostakovich into potentially lethal disrepute. Weinberg was saved from what might have been a dire end by Stalin’s death in 1953. Within a few years, his music began to be 'rehabilitated.' It was taken up first by prominent Soviet musicians and later by international ones as well. Recordings and live performances solidified his reputation. Musicologist Lyudmila Nikitina wrote, “Weinberg’s works sometimes have a strong
16 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com
| 403.571.0849
Program and artists subject to change without notice
element of commemoration, with reference to his formative years in Warsaw and to the war that ended that earlier life. His style can be described as modern yet accessible. His earlier works exhibit Neo-romantic tendencies and draw significantly on folk music, while his later works are more complex and austere. However, even in those later, more experimental works, he retains a keen sense of tradition that variously maintains itself in using classical forms or lyrical melodic lines. Always masterfully crafted, many of his instrumental works contain highly virtuosic writing and make significant technical demands on performers.” He composed the propulsive and deeply expressive Violin Concerto in 1959.
Symphony No. 8 in F Major, Op. 93
Ludwig van Beethoven (1770 to 1827)
Like Ludwig van Beethoven’s other even-numbered symphonies (except for No. 6, the ever-popular ‘Pastoral’), Symphony No. 8 has suffered relative neglect. Its subtlety and lack of spectacular elements appearing throughout the odd-numbered symphonies make it unlikely to deliver the same impact. Nevertheless, a close listen, hand-in-hand with a readjustment of expectations, reveals much worth celebrating. He composed the fifth and sixth symphonies in close succession, premiering at the same concert in 1808, and he later repeated this pattern, completing symphonies No. 7 and No. 8 in 1812. His eighth symphony is a light-hearted work but far from a light-headed one. It glances backward toward the Classical style of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Franz Joseph Haydn, with touches of Beethoven’s characteristically brusque sense of humour added in. It premiered in February 1814, during one of the outrageously long concerts Beethoven regularly staged to introduce new works. This program included two other compositions that had already earned great favour: the gloriously invigorating Symphony No. 7 and the ludicrous ‘battle symphony,’ Wellington’s Victory. The eighth symphony’s positioning at that event, and the comparisons it invited, worked against its success, resulting in a lukewarm reaction.
Program notes by Don Anderson © 2023
Yue Bao Conductor
Conductor Yue Bao serves as the Ting Tsung and Wei Fong Chao Foundation Assistant Conductor of the Houston Symphony. Bao made her subscription debut with the Houston Symphony on their opening night concert of the 2020/2021 Season and led the orchestra at their Summer concert series at the Miller Theater in 2021 and 2022. She made her Chicago Symphony Orchestra debut at the 2021 Ravinia Festival and has since debuted with the San Francisco Symphony, the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, and Minnesota Orchestra. This season, Bao debuts with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, the Seattle Symphony, and the Calgary Philharmonic. Bao was the Bruno Walter Memorial Foundation Conducting Fellow at the Cabrillo Festival of Contemporary Music. In 2018, she served as the David Effron Conducting Fellow at the Chautauqua Music Festival, where she returned as a guest conductor in the 2022 Season. She has worked extensively in the United States and abroad. Equally at home with both symphonic and operatic repertoire, she has conducted Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky’s Eugene Onegin, Georges Bizet’s Carmen, Kurt Weill’s Mahagonny: Ein Songspiel, and Gian Carlo Menotti’s The Medium Along with her Artist Diploma from The Curtis Institute of Music, where she was the Rita E Hauser Conducting Fellow and studied with Yannick Nezet-Sèguin, Bao holds Bachelor of Music degrees in orchestral conducting and opera accompanying from the Shanghai Conservatory of Music and a Master of Music degree in orchestral conducting from the Mannes School of Music.
Violin
Diana Cohen has a multifaceted career as a concertmaster, chamber musician, and soloist. She is the Concertmaster of the Calgary Philharmonic and Founder and Artistic Director of the acclaimed music festival ChamberFest Cleveland. Last July, Diana and her husband, pianist Roman Rabinovich launched ChamberFest West (chamberfestwest. com), an annual international summer chamber music festival bringing the most exciting musicians from around the globe to Calgary. Cohen has appeared as a soloist with numerous orchestras, has performed at some of the most prestigious festivals, and collaborated with renowned artists, including Garrick Ohlsson, Mitsuko Uchida, Jonathan Biss, and members of the Juilliard, Dover, Miro, and Parker string quartets. Cohen has toured and recorded with the Grammy Award-winning Orpheus Chamber Orchestra and performed with the East Coast Chamber Orchestra, Cleveland Orchestra, and New York Philharmonic. A Cleveland Institute of Music graduate, she studied with Donald Weilerstein and received the Jerome Gross Prize. In 2022, Diana received the prestigious Alumni Achievement Award from the Cleveland Institute of Music. Cohen’s father, Franklin, was longtime Principal Clarinet of the Cleveland Orchestra, and her brother Alexander is Principal Timpani for the Calgary Phil. Her late mother, Lynette Diers Cohen, was an esteemed bassoonist. Cohen lives in Calgary with her husband and her three-year-old, Noa Lynette, who sings and dances all day long.
SPRING 2023 | 17
Diana Cohen
Brass Transit: The Music of Chicago
Friday 14 April / 7:30PM
Saturday 15 April / 7:30PM
Jack Singer Concert Hall
Pops
Supported by Associate Conductor Supporter: Mary Rozsa de Coquet Program
Karl Hirzer, conductor Brass Transit, band
Performing songs from the list below: 25 or 6 to 4 / Beginnings / Call on Me / Colour My World / Doctor My Eyes / Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is? / Feelin’ Stronger Every Day / Free / Hard Habit To Break / Hard To Say I’m Sorry (Medley) / If You Leave Me Now / I’m a Man / Just You ‘n’ Me / Last Time This Time / Make Me Smile / Questions 67 and 68 / Saturday in the Park / Searchin’ So Long / You’re the Inspiration
Concert includes a 20-minute intermission Program and artists subject to change without notice
4 things about
Chicago
What's in a name?
Originally called Chicago Transit Authority, the band released their first self-titled album in 1969. Shortly after, the real CTA threatened to take them to court over the name, and Chicago was born. Later, the band almost sued the CTA for using the song Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is? to advertise their bus services without prior permission!
Chicago is a big time band
Over the years, the band released more than a few songs alluding to the concept of time. Their single 25 or 6 to 4 is about writing a song in the middle of the night, and the song's title is the time at which the song is set: 3:35 or 3:34AM, or ‘twenty-five or [twenty]-six to four.’ Fans have many different theories about what the lyrics mean — everything from a quantity of illicit drugs to the name of a famous person in code — but lyricist Robert Lamm rejects all theories that it means anything deeper.
Hard times for hard rock
Chicago owned the 70s, but they entered the 80s hanging by a thread. Band members struggled with substance abuse, lead guitarist Terry Kath had passed away, they were dropped by their label, and lead vocalist and bassist Peter Cetera was on his way out. Led by a new label, new producers, and new musicians, the band started exploring a new sound. With less of the classic ‘horn rock’, they became known for lush power ballads like You’re the Inspiration. A big part of the shift in their sound happened when they began working with Canadian producer David Foster, a household name for many Calgarians, since he wrote the theme for the 1988 Winter Olympics, Can’t You Feel It?
The band plays on
One of the longest-running music groups of all time with almost 30 band members over the years, Chicago defined the ‘horn rock’ genre and combined rock and roll with musical genres from classical music and jazz to R&B and pop music, and even tackled spoken word. The band still tours today, and just released its 26th studio album in 2022 — Born for This Moment
18 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com |
403.571.0849
Brass Transit Band
Brass Transit was formed in 2008 and brought together eight of the most talented and accomplished awardwinning musicians. Their sole purpose was to pay tribute to one of the world’s greatest and most successful pop/rock groups of all time, Chicago. Since then, the group has toured North America, dazzling audiences with their flawless performances and spectacular attention to every detail of the Chicago songbook. Hits like: Saturday in the Park, 25 or 6 to 4, If You Leave Me Now, and You’re the Inspiration have left crowds in awe and on their feet more than once during a show, evoking comments like “Spine-Tingling,” “Brought me back to my youth,” and “Perfect in every detail.” Brass Transit goes far beyond just imitating the songs; they embody the music. They recently produced their first CD taking top hits from the 70s and recording them with horns in the Chicago style. The result is a fresh approach to some of the greatest hits of that era. They have also recently scored their show for full symphony with luscious orchestral arrangements that are truly spellbinding. Brass Transit will bring you back to the most memorable times of your life.
2023/2024 Concert Season
DISCOVER World-Class Chamber Music
MASTERS SERIES
Israeli Chamber Project
Gryphon Trio—
30th Anniversary Tour
Danish String Quartet
Accademia de’ Dissonanti & Elinor Frey, cello
Doric String Quartet
HORIZONS SERIES
A Day with Suzanne –a tribute to Leonard Cohen
Ensemble Phoenix Munich
Strings Voyage
Eunice Kim, violin & Xavier Foley, bass
Banff International String Quartet Competition Winner: Isidore String Quartet
Art. Right here on your doorstep. See what’s on:
Welcome to our 47th Season! Subscriptions available May 15, 2023 at calgarypromusica.ca
Photo: Danish String Quartet, by Caroline Bittencourt @calpromusica @calgarypromusica email info@calgarypromusica.ca web calgarypromusica.ca
SPRING 2023 | 19
Karl Hirzer biography on page 7
Let Voices Resound
Friday 21 April / 7:30PM
Jack Singer Concert Hall
Curated Series 3
Supported by Chorus Sponsor: Borak Forte Program
Please refer to the special 60th anniversary concert program, featuring the program for tonight’s concert, a look back on the Chorus’ history, and program notes about the music. This commemorative program guide will be available in the lobby at Let Voices Resound on 21 April.
Concert includes a 20-minute intermission Program and artists subject to change without notice
Let Voices Resound celebrates the 60th anniversary of the Calgary Philharmonic Chorus, featuring music for chorus and the Jack Singer Concert Hall's Carthy Organ. The Chorus will perform works by William Walton, Bob Chilcott, Jonathan Dove, Eric Whitacre, Laura Hawley, Kristopher Fulton, Mark Sirett, and Ruth Watson Henderson, and will be joined by Cantaré Children’s Choir, Neil Cockburn, and soloists for this special concert.
The Chorus is made up of more than 115 dedicated volunteer singers in Calgary from all walks of life — they are musicians, artists, scientists, engineers, teachers, medical personnel, legal experts, skilled trades people, and much more. While many have years of musical training, they all share a common interest — singing. Over the years, the Chorus has become one of Calgary’s leading musical institutions, delivering excellence in the performance of choral music and promoting the enjoyment of choral singing in Calgary communities. The large vocal ensemble is one of only two choruses in Canada that is part of a major professional symphony orchestra. Want to get involved? Learn more about auditions at calgaryphil.com/chorus.
On Friday 21 April, the Chorus will move from the Choir Loft down to centre stage at the Jack Singer Concert Hall. Appearing without the Orchestra, you have the chance to hear the Chorus perform stunning choir music in this unique concert experience, featuring songs with themes of celebration, joy, beauty, unity, mythology, and of course, light and hope.
20 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com | 403.571.0849
VOLUNTEERING and COMMUNITY PROSPERITY
By Marisa Barber
Calgary’s non-profit sector is an integral part of life in the city and touches the lives of nearly every Calgarian. From arts and culture to sports and recreation, mental health, and support services, local non-profits support our communities. Many of these organizations rely on volunteers to operate day-to-day and have the most impact possible on those accessing services.
Alberta is a giving province in many ways — especially related to the gift of time. Nearly half of Alberta residents volunteer, contributing to a total of 227 million volunteer hours annually. To put that into perspective, if this volunteer labour were conservatively valued at $21/hour, it amounts to nearly $5 billion of giving. These millions of hours are vital for the prosperity of Calgary’s communities. Karen Ball, President & CEO of the Calgary Chamber of Voluntary Organizations (CCVO), states, “Going back to the 1988 Olympics and beyond, Calgary has been a city made vibrant by the contribution of our volunteers. A crucial way for Calgary to ensure all communities are prosperous now and into the future is through supporting
a culture of giving and volunteerism. Everyone plays a part in this.”
Volunteering not only ensures that Calgarians can access services, but also creates meaningful connections, building a sense of belonging and purpose between volunteers and the community.
Thriving non-profits and volunteers are cornerstones to a thriving Calgary and Alberta. To support their organizations and these volunteers, non-profits need support themselves. CCVO’s mission is to champion the non-profit sector as a connector, sense-maker, and advocate for Alberta’s non-profits and their private and public sector stakeholders.
As a connector, CCVO hosts events and engages communities to bring together non-profits in conversation about critical issues, share ideas, and further systems of support in the sector. As a sense-maker, they monitor emerging issues, provide decisionmakers with a credible source of information about sector impact, and help non-profits make sense of policy changes and sector-wide implications.
As an advocate, CCVO works to build an understanding of Alberta’s non-profit sector through research
and engagement, bringing attention to the impact of and issues facing non-profits in Calgary and across the province. CCVO keeps non-profits top of mind with governments at all levels by sharing an informed voice on critical issues affecting charities and non-profits in Alberta. Find out how you can get involved in the work they do to raise the voice of Alberta’s nonprofits at thenon-profitvote.ca.
CCVO’s recent research has provided data on the impacts of non-profits. This data is essential to successful response, recovery, and rebuilding strategies. Arts and culture organizations specifically, which make up 8% of Alberta’s non-profit and charitable sector — nearly 2,500 organizations — faced a 16% loss in revenue at the onset of the pandemic. Many organizations are working hard to recover while facing decreased resources and capacity. As CCVO believes, everyone plays a part in community prosperity, and they urge you to help support a strong return of the arts by considering donating time or treasure.
SPRING 2023 | 21
Corb Lund in Concert
Presented in partnership with the Taylor Family Foundation
Thursday 27 April / 7:30PM
Bella Concert Hall
Saturday 29 April / 7:30PM
Jack Singer Concert Hall
Specials
Supported by
Concert Supporter: Taylor Family Foundation
Associate Conductor Supporter: Mary Rozsa de Coquet
Program
Karl Hirzer, conductor
Corb Lund, vocals
Program to be announced from stage
Vocals
Corb Lund has received multiple CCMA, Juno, and international award nominations and wins. A rural Albertan hailing from the foothills of the Rocky Mountains with a long family lineage of ranchers and rodeo people, Lund is about as authentic as they come. Embracing his Western heritage and indie rock past through his music, Lund is known to filter a range of cowboy themes past and present through his unique lens — from rough-and-tumble tales of lawless frontier saloons to the sombre realities of running a modern family ranch. Most recently, Lund released Songs My Friends Wrote. Met with critical acclaim, the 10song set features Lund putting his spin on some of his favourite songs written by close friends and worldclass songwriters such as Hayes Carll, Todd Snider, Canadian Country Music Legend Ian Tyson, and more.
With Songs My Friends Wrote, Lund won his 14th career CCMA in 2022. The album is the follow-up to 2020’s critically acclaimed Agricultural Tragic, Lund’s first studio album of original material in five years, which also earned him a CCMA in 2021.
Lund also recently had his debut on stage at the historic Grand Ole Opry.
Karl Hirzer biography on page 7
22 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com | 403.571.0849
Corb Lund
Concert includes a 20-minute intermission Program and artists subject to change without notice
© Noah Fallis
© Noah Fallis
By Giuseppe Verdi
By Hector Berlioz
by Rob Herriot & Gordon Gerard
Dramatically transforming Calgary’s creative future.
Arts Commons is boldly investing in the future of Calgary. We’re reimagining the arts to reflect the diverse and evolving perspectives of Calgarians and create dynamic experiences that are accessible and relevant to everyone. Through a culture of fearless creativity, we’ll drive social and economic change that reignites our city’s downtown core.
The future starts now: artscommons.ca/ACT
SPRING 2023 | 23 www.calgaryopera.com
Macbeth Béatrice & Bénédict
April 22, 26 & 28,
May 12, 13 & 14, 2023 BY HECTOR BERLIOZ MAY 12/13/14 2023 CALGARYOPERA.COM BÉATRICE
Adapted
2023
& BÉNÉDICT
Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium
Mamdani Opera Centre
Will's Jams
Sunday 30 April / 3PM
Instrument Discovery Zoo / 2PM
Jack Singer Concert Hall Symphony Sundays for Kids
Supported by
Concert Supporter: ATB
Instrument Discovery Zoo Sponsor: Long & McQuade Musical Instruments Program
Juliane Gallant, conductor
Will Stroet, vocals and guitar
This concert will run approximately one hour and will include Will’s favourites like Big Shiny Spoons, Make Friends with an Earthworm, Let's All Dance, and orchestral wonders like The Barber of Seville, Flight of the Bumblebee, and The Four Seasons.
Instrument Discovery Zoo
Do you have a young music fan on your hands? Symphony Sundays for Kids concerts are about one hour long with no intermission and feature classical favourites every child should know.
Arrive early for the Instrument Discovery Zoo in the Jack Singer lobby, where they can visit different stations hosted by Orchestra musicians. Each station features an instrument or musical activity for children to try!
This fun, hands-on experience is the perfect way to indulge your child’s curiosity and excitement about visiting the Orchestra. The Instrument Discovery Zoo starts at 2PM and the performance starts at 3PM.
24 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com | 403.571.0849
This concert has no intermission Program and artists subject to change without notice
Juliane Gallant Conductor
Conductor Juliane Gallant works in Canada and the United Kingdom, where she trained at the National Opera Studio and the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. An Opera Awards Foundation recipient, Gallant has led productions for the Highlands Opera Studio, Gothic Opera, Hampstead Garden Opera, King’s Head Theatre, Opera on Location, St Paul’s Opera, Opera Up Close, Opera Mio, and the Clapham Opera Festival. In 2021, she made her Royal Opera House conducting debut in Mami Wata as part of the Engender Festival in collaboration with Pegasus Opera. She has appeared as a guest conductor with the Kingston Symphony Orchestra, the Nova Scotia Youth Symphony, and the Hallam Sinfonia. In 2020, Gallant was named one of two conductors in the inaugural cohort of Tapestry Opera’s Women in Musical Leadership program in partnership with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra and Pacific Opera Victoria. Gallant holds degrees from the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, Université de Moncton, University of Ottawa, and Le Conservatoire de musique et d’art dramatique de Montréal.
Juliane Gallant appears with the Calgary Phil as a member of Tapestry Opera’s Women in Musical Leadership, a program designed to collectively develop the next generation of female and non-binary conductors and music directors in Canada.
Will Stroet Vocals and Guitar
Will Stroet of Will’s Jams is a Junonominated musician, nationally recognized educator and former CBC Kids TV star. His high-energy rockpop music in English and French is full of witty wordplay and sing-along choruses, inspiring kids to be active, creative, caring, and communityminded. Stroet discovered his talent for writing music for kids while completing his Bachelor of Education at the University of British Columbia. After releasing his first album in 2005 and performing shows locally, Stroet knew he had found his calling. In 2009, he left teaching to pursue music full-time and has never looked back. To date, Stroet has performed more than 2,000 shows across Canada and China. His 12 albums in English and French have garnered national acclaim, including a 2017 Juno nomination, seven nominations from the Western Canadian Music Awards, three from the Canadian Folk Music Awards, and two from the SiriusXM Indies. In 2015, UBC’s Faculty of Education honoured Stroet in their Top 100 Alumni Awards. To learn more about Stroet and his music, visit willsjams.com. Connect with him on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter @willsjamsmusic.
SPRING 2023 | 25
tickets.mru.ca Join us for our upcoming performances at the Bella Concert Hall, MRU THROUGH THE L king Gla
7:30 PM BELLA CONCERT HALL 3 PM FEB.26.23 BELLA CONCERT HALL Bach Mass in B Minor
April.7.23
Feturing a collaboration with Claude LaPalme and Rosa Barocca baroque orchestra
Hear a world premiere by Sherryl Sewepegaham!
Elgar's Cello Concerto
Friday 5 May / 7:30PM
Saturday 6 May / 7:30PM
Jack Singer Concert Hall
Curated Series 2
Supported by
Concert Supporter: Hayes Family
Guest Artist Supporter: Naomi + John Lacey Virtuoso Program Program
Ramón Tebar, conductor Stéphane Tétreault, cello
Alexander Borodin Polovtsian Dances from Prince Igor
I. Dance of the Polvtsian Maidens
II. Polovtsian Dance
Edward Elgar Cello Concerto in E Minor, Op. 85
I. Adagio
II. Lento
III. Adagio
IV. Allegro
Sergei Rachmaninoff Symphonic Dances, Op. 45
I. Non allegro – Lento – Tempo I
II. Andante con moto (Tempo di valse)
III. Lento assai – Allegro vivace
Polovtsian Dances from Prince Igor
Alexander Borodin
(1833 to 1887)
Alexander Borodin’s career as a doctor and professor of chemistry left him little time for music. His magnum opus, the opera Prince Igor, l, lay incomplete at his death, despite nearly 20 years of intermittent labour. It was finished (and, to some extent, actually composed) by his friend, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov and Rimsky’s pupil, Alexander Glazunov. Drawn from Russian history, the plot concerns the 12th-century conflict between the forces of Igor, a Russian prince, and Konchak, the leader of an Eastern tribe, the Polovtsians. After Konchak takes Igor prisoner, he offers to set him free if he swears never to attack the Polovtsians again. Igor refuses. Konchak cannot help but admire his adversary’s bravery. To divert him from his melancholy state, he calls upon his people to entertain the Prince. They do so in the barbaric and poetic Polovtsian Dances.
Cello Concerto in E Minor, Op. 85
Edward Elgar (1857 to 1934)
'
World War I changed Europe forever, not only on the map but also in its citizens’ hearts and minds. For Edward Elgar, the leading English composer of the pre-war era, the effects of the political upheavals and battlefield carnage were devastating. The warmth and confidence that illuminated and helped to popularize such pieces as the Enigma Variations diminished markedly, never fully returning to their previous level. Elgar gave voice to the saddening of his world, to its growing inwardness and pessimism.
Other composers, such as Igor Stravinsky, turned to the lean textures and buoyant optimism of Neo-Classicism. Meanwhile, Arnold Schoenberg and his disciples deconstructed traditional musical procedures to pursue new means of expression.
In the warm, noble voice of the cello, Elgar found the perfect medium to express his brooding, nostalgic postwar emotions. The premiere of the Cello Concerto took place in London in 1919. Elgar conducted, with Felix Salmond playing the solo part.
26 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com |
403.571.0849
14
30'
Intermission
20'
35'
Program and artists subject to change without notice
It is a restrained piece compared to the more outgoing virtuoso concertos of the 19th century.
Symphonic Dances, Op. 45 Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873 to 1943)
Sergei Rachmaninoff began work on Symphonic Dances, his final composition, during the summer of 1940. It took its toll upon him, both physically and emotionally. At the final rehearsal, he turned to the orchestra and said, “Years ago, I composed for the great (basso, Feodor) Chaliapin. Now, he is dead, and so I compose for a new kind of artists, the Philadelphia Orchestra.” Eugene Ormandy conducted the first performance in January 1941. The largely negative reception crushed Rachmaninoff.
For decades, Symphonic Dances remained the stepchild of his major works for orchestra. The last 25 years have witnessed strong growth in appreciation of this moody, multi-faceted and spectacularly orchestrated work, as testified by numerous live performances and studio recordings. Rhythm plays a powerful role in it, but in terms of scale, quality of themes and ingenuity of development, it is much more a symphonic work than a balletic one.
It continued his obsession with the Dies Irae (Day of Wrath), a sombre melody drawn from the medieval plainchant Mass for the Dead. He had previously quoted it in several works, including the tone poem The Isle of the Dead and the Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini for piano and orchestra.
Program notes by Don Anderson © 2023
Ramón Tebar Conductor
Spanish Conductor Ramón Tebar is currently Conductor in Association with the Orquesta de Valencia and Artistic Director of Opera Naples. He was previously Artistic Director of the Florida Grand Opera and Principal Guest Conductor of Valencia’s Palau de les Arts Reina Sofia. As a guest conductor, Tebar regularly conducts such auspices at the Vienna State Opera, Frankfurt Opera, Teatró Colon, San Francisco Opera, Royal Swedish Opera, Teatro Regio di Parma, Barcelona’s Gran Teatre del Liceu, as well as the Copenhagen Philharmonic, Cincinnati Symphony, Munich Radio Orchestra, Prague Philharmonia, Spanish National Orchestra, Barcelona Symphony, the RTVE Orchestra in Madrid, and London’s Philharmonia, to name a few. Throughout his career, Tebar has had the pleasure of working with some of the operatic world’s greats, including such luminaries as Montserrat Caballé and Renata Scoto, and his work can be heard on recordings with Joseph Calleja and the Orquestra de la Comunitat Valenciana on the DECCA label, and with Gregory Kunde and the Orquesta Sinfonica de Navarra on Universal.
Stéphane Tétreault Cello
In addition to numerous awards and honours, Stéphane Tétreault was the 2019 recipient of the prestigious Virginia Parker Prize from the Canada Council for the Arts. He is also the 2022 laureate of the Prix Opus for Performer of the Year, awarded by the Conseil québécois de la musique and accompanied by a Canada Council grant. In 2016, Tétreault made his debut with the Philadelphia Orchestra under the direction of Yannick Nézet-Séguin and performed at the prestigious Gstaad Menuhin Festival in Switzerland. During the 2017/2018 Season, he took part in the Orchestre Métropolitain’s first European tour with Yannick NézetSéguin and made his debut with the London Philharmonic Orchestra. His debut CD, recorded with the Quebec Symphony Orchestra and conductor Fabien Gabel was chosen as 'Editor’s Choice' in the March 2013 issue of Gramophone Magazine. His second album with pianist MarieÈve Scarfone, featuring works from Haydn, Schubert, and Brahms, was chosen as Gramophone Magazine’s 'Critic’s Choice 2016' and recognized as one of the best albums of the year. Tétreault plays the 1707 “Countess of Stainlein, Ex-Paganini” Stradivarius cello, generously loaned to him by Sophie Desmarais.
SPRING 2023 | 27
THE VIEW FROM the LOFT
Celebrating the first 60 years of the Calgary Philharmonic Chorus
By Miranda Martini
Sitting inside the Jack Singer Concert Hall, you can hear the hum of the Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra tuning and the hush of the audience as 1,500 people lean forward in their seats, listening carefully for the opening strains of music.
If you’re a frequent concertgoer, your mental picture might include the loft above the Orchestra, where around 120 people are also listening carefully, preparing to make music of their own.
Katt Hryciw, a middle school teacher who sings tenor in the Calgary Philharmonic Chorus and works as the Chorus Administrator, remembers experiencing Handel’s Messiah for the first time from the loft, looking out on the Orchestra and the audience.
“When you do the Hallelujah Chorus, the whole audience stands. It’s so beautiful, I just started weeping. I was like, ‘Oh my god, what’s wrong with me?’ It was a really moving experience.”
This sentiment is echoed by several members of the Chorus, which celebrates its 60th anniversary this year. The Calgary Phil will mark the occasion on Friday 21 April with Let Voices Resound, a special concert that will see the Chorus taking centre stage for a change, performing pieces for chorus accompanied by the Jack Singer’s Carthy organ.
Catherine Lasuita, an alto in the Chorus since 1996, auditioned precisely because she wanted to see
Messiah performed but couldn’t find anyone to go with her. “So, I thought, well, why don’t I just be in it?”
However, some of her proudest moments with the Chorus have been the opportunities to premiere new works.
One such premiere stands out in recent memory as particularly special — perhaps because it was so hardwon. I Rise, a collaboration between the Calgary Phil and Pink Flamingo, presented a concert alongside the Black Lives Matter Mural Project. The concert included the Chorus’ performance of the eponymous piece by Canadian composer Laura Hawley, which was commissioned for them and based on LR Knost’s poem of the same name.
28 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com | 403.571.0849
left to right: Crystal Tan, soprano Katt Hryciw, tenor Mark Dumbrique, bass Catherine Lasuita, alto
The Chorus began work on the piece in early 2021, but was only able to perform it for an audience for the first time almost two years later.
This came after a year during which the Chorus couldn’t perform at all.
“I went through a period of denial, because I could not believe that something so fun was one of the most life-threatening activities,” Lasuita recalls. “I couldn’t wrap my head around it.”
“The thing that really captured my attention was how big it was, and seeing it from the audience, it’s amazing the amount of sound they can project.”
Tan admits she was a little intimidated when she auditioned.
“I was the last person to audition, so I was really nervous,” she says, laughing. “I tried to hit the high notes, and I remember my voice cracked.”
As the audition progressed, she relaxed and nailed the sight-reading piece the Calgary Phil had set for the audition (“I was trained in singing with solfege, so maybe that got me a bonus point,” she laughs). Now she feels completely at home among the other choristers, who are, after all, just music lovers like her.
Mark Dumbrique, a corporate insurance broker who sings bass, says the feeling of camaraderie has given him a new outlook on working as a team.
The Calgary Phil had to get creative to keep the Chorus’ momentum going throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. The Chorus was engaged in the creation of their commissioned piece, submitting poems for inclusion and meeting with Hawley to learn about her composition process.
They rehearsed online, then in their cars, then eventually masked and distanced in their Jack Singer rehearsal space. (This further complicated the already hefty logistical challenge of bringing the Orchestra and Chorus together, notes Hryciw: “If it’s hard to be louder than an orchestra normally, imagine doing that six feet apart and with a mask on.”)
When they were finally able to perform the piece for a live audience on 1 October 2022, it was an emotional experience for many.
“To perform it and realize I knew the piece so well because we had spent so much time on it…it felt really, really rewarding,” Lasuita recalls. “It’s so exciting when the composer says, ‘Wow, I’ve only heard this in my head, and now I get to actually hear a choir sing it.’”
For Crystal Tan, a graduate student from Malaysia who moved to Calgary to study music education, reconnecting with choral singing after the pandemic is what drew her to the Chorus.
Lasuita says that sometimes acquaintances are surprised to learn she’s in the Chorus. “They’ll say, ‘Oh, are you that good?’ A lot of people don’t understand that for the musicians [in the Orchestra], it’s their career. The Chorus is all volunteers.”
Some are in school, like Tan; others balance work, families, and other volunteer commitments with the demands of learning and performing the Chorus’ challenging repertoire. So what keeps them coming back season after season?
“It’s just amazing to see how there are different people in the Chorus with different backgrounds in music, and then every rehearsal, we come together and sing,” says Tan. “Honestly, I learn so much from them.”
According to Lasuita, who stepped away from the Chorus one year, she was quickly approached by her husband and two children, “who all asked me separately, ‘So when are you going back?’ I guess I’m easier to live with when I sing in the choir.”
“If you go to a symphony concert, the choristers are always there,” remarks Hryciw. “There are choristers who volunteer for almost anything that the Calgary Phil is doing. There are choristers who just want to share their love of the music with their family and with their friends. Any time I go to a concert, I’m always running into people from the Chorus, because they are so invested in the organization. It’s really a special community.”
“My previous choral experiences have largely been in smaller ensembles,” he says. “I think I’ve grown as a singer by being intentional in rehearsing, especially with the challenges of blending and shaping in a large section.” There are several choristers who have been in the Chorus for more than two or three decades. Dumbrique, who is currently in rehearsals for the Calgary Phil’s performance of Johannes Brahms’ A German Requiem, points out it’s interesting getting historical tidbits from them, but he says it’s especially meaningful to learn from the choristers who have performed the standards of choral repertoire many times.
“I find it really inspiring to see how they approach these works they’ve performed so many times with a different curiosity each time.”
Dumbrique performed with the Chorus for the first concert of Calgary Phil’s 2022/2023 Season — Beethoven’s Ode to Joy — which included the world premiere of ᓂᔭ niya (I Am), a commissioned work for the Orchestra and Chorus by Cree composer Andrew Balfour.
“One of his interesting insights was that no matter what we’re singing, it always speaks to our time,” Dumbrique remembers from working with Balfour on the piece, which was written to be performed alongside Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9
“It’s really easy to see a Beethoven Nine as this piece from only a moment of history, but there are always musical and cultural things we can learn from performing music of all kinds.”
Dumbrique reflects that the Chorus has become a beautiful, and necessary part of his life. “It’s the chance to share that with others,” he finishes. “Especially when you have these works like niya and I Rise that have very profound stories behind them, hopefully that provokes some reflection and thought, and hopefully even some action.”
SPRING 2023 | 29
“ It’s so exciting when the composer says, ‘Wow, I’ve only heard this in my head, and now I get to actually hear a choir sing it.’ ”
Katherine Chi performs Beethoven
Friday 12 May / 7:30PM
Saturday 13 May / 7:30PM
Jack Singer Concert Hall
Curated Series 1
Supported by
Guest Artist Supporter: Naomi + John Lacey Virtuoso Program
Commission Supporter: DeBoni New Works
Program
Mei-Ann Chen, conductor
Katherine Chi, piano
Jocelyn Morlock, composer
Jocelyn Morlock Interloper (World Premiere) 12'
Ludwig van Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 4 in G Major, 34' Op. 58
I. Allegro moderato
II. Andante con moto
III. Rondo: Vivace
Intermission 20'
Ludwig van Beethoven Symphony No. 4 in B-Flat Major, 34' Op. 60
I. Adagio – Allegro vivace
II. Adagio
III. Allegro vivace
IV. Allegro ma non troppo
Program and artists subject to change without notice
Interloper
Jocelyn Morlock
(b. 1959)
A 21st-century listener hearing Beethoven’s fourth symphony drinks in the mysterious slow introduction to the work, comfortably expecting the energetic first movement proper that we’ve heard dozens of times; but in 1806, beginning a work titled Symphony No. 4 in B-Flat Major in the minor mode was transgressive — then, as now, a living composer was out to surprise, to shock us, maybe make us laugh, maybe scare us a little. Beethoven was an interloper himself; he struggled to improve his social and financial status, gradually morphing from a socialist outlier to a colossus. But I’ve been wondering — must the image of Beethoven be mutated from one of quirky, humorous, disruptive artist, to deified cultural icon — and is this truly a positive transformation? I came to classical music in late adolescence — as with many composers of my generation, by way of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart — and felt like I’d passed through a magic portal. Since then, I’ve been inviting myself into the musical worlds of great western art music composers of the past and making myself at home. Interloper’s adoptive home is those first three notes of Beethoven’s fourth symphony, the unexpected minor mode, and the commensurate sense of strangeness and unreality which might be either comforting or disturbing. Elements of comedy and tragedy battle each other, and it is anyone's guess which might win.
Program note by Jocelyn Morlock © 2023
Piano Concerto No. 4 in G Major, Op. 58
Ludwig van Beethoven (1770 to 1827)
Ludwig van Beethoven won his first fame in Vienna as a pianist. He composed solo piano works for his own performance, and by 1803, the first three of his five concertos for piano and orchestra.
He created the exceptionally beautiful Piano Concerto No. 4 in 1805 and 1806. During this highly fertile period, he also produced the Violin Concerto, which shares this Piano concerto’s warm, contented nature.
30 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com |
403.571.0849
As he had done with his three previous piano concertos, he played the solo part at the first performance himself, in March 1807, before an aristocratic audience in the Vienna home of a friend. Listeners responded with polite applause. It was only when no less a soloist than Felix Mendelssohn took it up during the 1830s that it finally began to make its mark.
Symphony No. 4 in B-Flat Major, Op. 60
Ludwig van Beethoven
Beethoven did most of the work on Symphony No. 4 in 1806. One of its primary characteristics is a gruff sense of humour. That autumn, he visited his patron Prince Lichnowsky at his summer estate. There he met the Prince’s neighbour, Count Franz von Oppersdorff. The Count invited Beethoven and the Prince to his castle. He had his private orchestra perform Beethoven’s Symphony No. 2, then commissioned two new symphonies from him (No. 4 and 5) It is likely that the Count’s orchestra gave the fourth symphony its premiere. The first fully documented reading was a private one in Vienna in March 1807.
During Beethoven’s 1806 stay with the Prince, he had a stormy encounter with another guest, a French General. Beethoven refused Lichnowsky's request to play the piano to entertain the General. This was Beethoven’s way of protesting the Napoleonic Wars, which were devastating much of Europe, and continued the disgust that led him to cancel the dedication of Symphony No. 3 (Eroica) to Bonaparte.
Beethoven stormed out of the castle and trudged through the rain to spend the night in the nearest town. Before departing for Vienna the following day, he sent Lichnowsky this oft-quoted note:
Prince! What you are, you are by accident of birth. What I am, I am through myself. There have been and will be thousands of princes. There is only one Beethoven.
Program notes by Don Anderson © 2023
Mei-Ann Chen Conductor
Praised for her dynamic, passionate conducting style, Taiwanese American conductor Mei-Ann Chen has been Music Director of the MacArthur Award-winning Chicago Sinfonietta since 2011. Chen has been Chief Conductor of Austria’s Recreation Orchester at Styriarte since the fall of 2021 (following two seasons as the orchestra’s first-ever Principal Guest Conductor), making her the first female Asian conductor to hold this position with an Austrian orchestra. She also serves as the first-ever Artistic Partner of Houston’s River Oaks Chamber Orchestra since 2019, and this fall began her new role as Artistic Partner with Washington state’s Northwest Sinfonietta. Highly regarded as a compelling communicator and an innovative leader both on and off the podium, and a sought-after guest conductor, she has appeared with distinguished orchestras throughout the Americas, Europe, Taiwan, The United Kingdom, and Scandinavia, and continues to expand her relationships with orchestras worldwide (over 120 orchestras to date). Honours include being named one of the 2015 Top 30 Influencers by Musical America, the 2012 Helen M Thompson Award from the League of American Orchestras, winner of the 2007 Taki Concordia Fellowship founded by Marin Alsop, 2005 First Prize Winner of the Malko Competition, and ASCAP awards for innovative programming.
Katherine Chi Piano
Katherine Chi, firmly established as one of Canada’s most sought-after pianists, has performed throughout Europe and North America to great acclaim. As noted by The New York Times, “Ms. Chi display[s] a keen musical intelligence and a powerful arsenal of technique.” While hailed for her interpretations of Mozart, she is also acclaimed for performances of major romantic and 20th-century concertos. The Globe and Mail described Chi’s performance as “… the most sensational but, better, the most unfailingly cogent and compelling Prokofiev’s Third I have heard in years.” With her energy, character, and spunk, Chi has been described as a “shining star” (Lake Superior News) known to “bring the house down” (The Chronicle Journal), performing concerto repertoire ranging from Bach to Bartók to Liszt to Schoenberg. In 2000, Chi won first prize in the Honens International Piano Competition and was the first Canadian to win this prestigious Calgary award.
SPRING 2023 | 31
Jocelyn Morlock Composer
Jocelyn Morlock is a composer living in Vancouver, Canada, the unceded territory of the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh First Nations. She came to classical music in late adolescence by way of the film Amadeus, and felt like she’d passed through a magic portal, never to return. Her music is inspired variously by birds, insomnia, nature, fear, other people’s music and art, nocturnal wandering thoughts, lucid dreaming, death, and the liminal times and experiences before and after death. Morlock was the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra’s first female Composer-in-Residence (2014–2019), and inaugural Composer-in-Residence for Vancouver’s Music on Main (2012–2014.) She won a 2018 Juno Award for her piece My Name is Amanda Todd — written as part of the National Arts Centre Orchestra’s multi-media work Life Reflected, celebrating four remarkable Canadian women. As a listener and music educator, she has a broad-ranging interest in all kinds and styles of music and is grateful to be living in a time and place where we can hear so many diverse voices express their identity in music. She believes in the proliferation of positive energy that a large group of people can create together, through many small actions.
32 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com | 403.571.0849 Tomorrow is full of possibility.
Calgary Philharmonic
a
of
Arts
Tomorrow is on.™ 225 58 Avenue SE • 403-244-5555 10 Royal Vista Drive NW • 587-794-3195 3404 5 Avenue NE • 403-245-3725 sales • repairs • rentals • lessons in-store financing • print music where the music begins. Classical Connections Classic Examples Sunday Breakfast Raising Voices CKUA OnDemand | ckua.com CLASSICAL MUSIC LISTEN TO ANYTIME USE YOUR CAMERA TO SCAN THE QR CODE
We’re proud to support the
Orchestra,
champion
the
in Alberta.
POWERING STANDING OVATIONS atb.com
© Mark Mushet
MUSIC & LYRICS BY JIMMY BUFFETT book by GREG GARCIA & MIKE O'MALLEY directed and choreographed by JULIE TOMAINO tickets: 403-294-7447 | theatrecalgary.com produced by special arrangement with broadway licensing. (www.broadwaylicensing.com) jimmy buffett's escape to Margaritaville APR 18 - MAY 13 2023 LET THE ISLAND RYTHM SWEEP YOU AWAY THIS PRODUCTION IS MADE POSSIBLE BY THE GENEROUS SUPPORT OF THE 2023/2024 SEASON ANNOUNCEMENT COMING SOON
Marvel Studios Presents Black Panther in Concert
Presented in partnership with the Calgary International Film Festival
Thursday 18 May / 7:30PM
Friday 19 May / 7:30PM
Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium Specials Program
Lawrence Loh is Music Director of Symphoria (Syracuse, NY). Loh had a decade-plus association with the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra and continues to lead pops and other select programs. Loh’s previous positions include Music Director of the West Virginia Symphony, Music Director of the Northeastern Pennsylvania Philharmonic, Artistic Director and Principal Conductor of Syracuse Opera, Resident Conductor of the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, Associate Conductor of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra, and Associate Conductor of the Colorado Symphony Orchestra. Having a particular affinity for pops programming, Loh has been engaged for repeat performances with Chris Botti, Idina Menzel, and Ann Hampton Callaway. He is particularly adept at synchronizing live orchestral music with film and has led Star Wars, Pixar in Concert, Disney in Concert, The Wizard of Oz, and Singin’ in the Rain, among others. Loh is an active guest conductor, including engagements this season with Seattle Symphony, San Diego Symphony, and the Grant Park Festival. His festival appearances have included Bravo Vail Valley, Aspen, Mann Center in Philadelphia, and Boston University Tanglewood Institute Young Artists Orchestra. Loh received his Artist Diploma in Orchestral Conducting from Yale, his Master of Music in Choral Conducting from Indiana University, and his Bachelor of Arts and Certificate of Management Studies from the University of Rochester.
34 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com | 403.571.0849
Lawrence Loh, conductor Massamba Diop, talking drums
Ludwig Göransson Black Panther in Concert
155' (Film with Orchestra)
© Marvel Presentation licensed by Disney Concerts © All rights reserved
Concert includes a 20-minute intermission Program and artists subject to change without notice
Lawrence Loh Conductor
Massamba Diop Talking Drums
2023/2024
SPRING 2023 | 35
Massamba Diop is one the most renowned masters of the tama, a 'talking drum' from Senegal, known for its ability to replicate the sounds of human speech. Before telephones and radio, it was the tama that announced important events and sent messages between villages. Recognizing tama’s central role in African cultures, Ludwig Göransson elected to put Diop front and centre of his Oscar®-winning score for Black Panther. But, long before becoming the sound of King T’Challa, Diop was already a stalwart of the world music scene. For four decades, he toured with Baaba Maal, receiving a Grammy nomination for their album Firin’ in Fouta. Diop would perform with greats like James Brown, Mumford & Sons, Carlos Santana, and Herbie Hancock; record on Peter Gabriel’s Grammy®-winning release Passion; and appear on Playing for Change’s Songs Around the World. Diop is a Remo Percussion endorsed artist with whom he released his own signature line of mass-produced talking drums. At present, Diop tours North America for school programs and performances, specializing in collaborations with a diverse array of artists. Since 1993, Diop has co-operated the Senegal-America Project, a non-profit offering cultural exchange programs between the US and Africa, in addition to educational and healthcare initiatives. Season Revealed May 2023
World-class music and speech arts education, for every age and every stage, right here in Calgary. Learn more mru.ca/Conservatory Find your tune with the MRU Conservatory General Guideline: Grey area goes OUTSIDE of bleed 36 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com | 403.571.0849
CAROLE and STEVE
Carole and Steve Clement have volunteered thousands of hours with the Calgary Phil, lending their time and expertise in the Front of House to make sure concerts run smoothly for audiences, and also helping at marketing booths at summer festivals, supporting special events throughout the year, and even working the overnight count room shift at many casinos. We caught up with them to learn more about what they love most about volunteering with the Calgary Phil.
Q How long have you been volunteering with the Calgary Phil, and what led you to start volunteering?
A We enjoyed the Calgary Phil for some time as patrons, and then began volunteering over 20 years ago. We felt that with our love of music, and our time and energy, this would be a good fit. Who knew we’d have so much fun dressing up in homemade costumes for concerts like Harry Potter, Mary Poppins, Star Trek, and Ghostbusters!
Q What have you learned through volunteering? What have you enjoyed most?
A We’ve worked in various volunteer roles over the year, with everything from special events (Cork and Canvas, donor events, and so many more) to helping with Front of House duties for many Calgary Phil concerts, which is both a privilege and a challenge that we sincerely enjoy. We love working collaboratively with everyone to ensure concerts flow seamlessly for audiences. We enjoy being a part of this process, and we meet such wonderful people along the way!
Q Why is volunteering in your community important to you?
A There is such a need for volunteers in any community! Many organizations could not function as well as they do without volunteers. We are delighted to help out our Calgary Phil, but we also volunteer in many other ways — with Canadian Blood Services as weekly plasma donors, performing sing-alongs at several seniors homes, helping to prepare soup for a local community lunch program, and more — we live in a great community!
Q How has volunteering with the Calgary Phil helped you connect with your communities?
A Calgary Phil has excellent community programs, featuring the musicians in venues all around town. Each year, they go out to communities offering live performances at schools and other venues, bringing the Orchestra out to the people. We get a nice sense of a community when we volunteer at the various special events, and community concerts such as Sounds of the Season, and Traditional Christmas at Grace Presbyterian.
Q What are some of your favourite things to do in Calgary?
A Calgary Phil, of course! As well, we enjoy playing together in an amateur wind quartet, with Carole on clarinet and Steve on trombone. We also love hiking, kayaking, and most of all, cycling the wonderful pathway system in the city. In the winter, we hope for lots of snow so that we can strap on our snowshoes and enjoy our beautiful parks and Foothills — no mosquitoes!
The Calgary Phil celebrates the time and dedication of its volunteers and their energy and enthusiasm in ensuring our communities have opportunities to experience orchestral music. This is your opportunity to join the Calgary Phil's volunteer team, make new friends, and support our communities.
Visit calgaryphil.com/volunteer for more information.
SPRING 2023 | 37 Q + A with Volunteers
Chamber Music at the Bella: Night 1
Fanfare
Karen Donnelly
A gifted performer and a dedicated musical educator, Karen, a native of Regina, Saskatchewan, has served as Principal Trumpet of Ottawa’s National Arts Centre Orchestra since 1999. She composed this fanfare for solo trumpet in 2020, under the influence of bird song and on behalf of the Music & Beyond concerts.
Carrot Revolution
Gabriella Smith
(b. 1991)
Gabriella Smith is hailed as an “outright sensation” (LA Times). Her music comes from a love of play, exploring new sounds on instruments, building compelling musical arcs, and connecting listeners with the natural world in an invitation to find joy in climate action. She composed Carrot Revolution in 2015 for the Aizuri Quartet.
“Looking for inspiration for this string quartet,” she writes, “I suddenly remembered a quote from painter Paul Cézanne that I’d heard years ago (though which I later learned was misattributed to him): ‘The day will come when a single, freshly observed carrot will start a revolution.’ And I knew immediately that my piece would be called Carrot Revolution. I envisioned it as a celebration of that spirit of fresh observation and of new ways of looking at old things, such as the string quartet — a 250-year-old genre — as well as some of my even older musical influences like Bach, Perotin, Gregorian chant, Georgian folk songs, and Celtic fiddle tunes.”
String Quartet No. 8 in C Minor, Op. 110
Dmitri Shostakovich
(1906 to 1975)
The powerful emotional directness of String Quartet No. 8 has made it the most frequently performed of Shostakovich’s 15 examples. He composed it in 1960, and the Beethoven Quartet premiered it in Leningrad on 2 October. He wrote it during a visit to Dresden, Germany and publicly dedicated it “To the memory of the victims of fascism and war.”
38 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com | 403.571.0849
Presented in partnership with Mount Royal Conservatory Friday 26 May / 7:30PM Bella Concert Hall Specials Program Karen Donnelly Fanfare for the Backyard Bird Feeder 2' Gabriella Smith Carrot Revolution 12' Dmitri Shostakovich String Quartet No. 8 in C Minor, 20' Op. 110 I. Largo II. Allegro molto III. Allegretto IV. Largo V. Largo Intermission 20' Franz Schubert Octet in F Major, D. 803 55' I. Adagio – Allegro – Più allegro II. Adagio III. Allegro vivace – Trio –Allegro vivace IV. Andante – variations. Un poco più mosso – Più lento V. Menuetto. Allegretto – Trio –Menuetto – Coda VI. Andante molto – Allegro –Andante molto – Allegro molto
for the Backyard Bird Feeder
Program subject to change without notice
This provided Soviet authorities with a politically correct inspiration, but he gave it a personal spin by, at least inwardly, including himself among the victims. In a letter to a friend, Isaak Glikman, he revealed additional intentions: “I was thinking about the fact that if I die some time or other, it’s pretty unlikely that someone will write a work in my memory. So, I decided to write such a piece myself. The basic theme of the Quartet is DSCH (the German names for the notes d, e-flat, c, b), i.e., my initials.” Another friend, Lev Lebedinsky, wrote that Shostakovich was contemplating suicide at the time, due to his recently giving in to long-standing pressure to join the Communist party. Lebedinsky stated that Shostakovich considered the quartet an autobiography and his last will and testament. Lebedinsky convinced him not to take his own life. Fifteen years later, String Quartet No. 8 was performed at Shostakovich’s funeral.
Octet in F Major, D. 803
Franz Schubert (1797 to 1828)
Schubert’s Octet in F Major is one of the true glories of the chamber music repertoire. He composed this expansive work in 1824. He modelled it on the Septet that Ludwig van Beethoven had written nearly 25 years before, which had become one of Beethoven’s most popular works. Schubert increased the number of instruments by adding a second violin to Beethoven’s lineup. The complete ensemble consists of two violins and one viola, cello, double bass, clarinet, horn, and bassoon. At times he makes it sound like a small orchestra; at other times, the instruments take turns playing solos.
Program notes by Don Anderson © 2023
SPRING 2023 | 39
Get $15 tickets Aged 35 and under? Register for Cpossibilities at calgaryphil.com. Looking forward to seeing the Calgary Phil tonight! See you soon! Me too — can't wait!
Chamber Music at the Bella: Night 2
Trio for Flute, Cello, and Piano, Op. 45
Louise Farrenc
(1804 to 1875)
Despite her obvious talents as a pianist, composer, and teacher, the male-dominated society of mid-19th-century Europe held Farrenc (born Jeanne-Louise Dumont) back from achieving the full lofty reputation she deserved. With the recent swell in interest in female composers, she has finally begun to receive the respect she has always deserved. Anyone who enjoys the music of Farrenc’s early-romantic contemporaries, such as Chopin and Schumann, is likely to respond to her music, too. It has plentiful melodic appeal, poetry, and drama. Her catalogue includes large quantities of piano music (she composed for the instrument exclusively during the 1820s), numerous chamber works, and a handful of compositions for orchestra.
Metamorphosen, TrV 290
Richard Strauss
(1864 to 1949)
On 2 October 1943, the opera house in Munich, Germany — Strauss's home city — was destroyed by Allied bombs. The composer was moved to write to his biographer, Willi Schuh: “this was the greatest catastrophe which has ever been brought into my life, for which there can be no consolation and in my old age, no hope.”
Immediately afterwards, he sketched a few bars of music he labelled “Mourning for Munich.” He put them aside, after they reminded him of a waltz he had composed in 1939 for a documentary film about Munich, a film that was never released. He revised the waltz by adding a sombre, minor-key section inspired by the destruction of the opera house, and christened the resulting concert work Munich: A Memorial Waltz.
In September 1944, conductor Paul Sacher commissioned a new work from Strauss. The following February, the Semper Opera House in Dresden (where eight Strauss operas had premiered, as well as three of Wagner's) suffered a similar fate to Munich's.
40 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com | 403.571.0849
Presented in partnership with Mount Royal Conservatory
subject
notice Saturday 27 May / 7:30PM Bella Concert Hall Specials Program Louise Farrenc Trio for Flute, Cello, and Piano, 15' Op. 45 I. Allegro deciso III. Scherzo: Vivace Richard Strauss Metamorphosen, TrV 290 27' Intermission 20' Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Flute Quartet in D Major, K. 285 15' I. Allegro II. Adagio III. Rondeau Dmitri Shostakovich Two Pieces for String Octet, 11' Op. 11 I. Prelude II. Scherzo
Program
to change without
Then, the Vienna State Opera was heavily damaged on 12 March 1945. The next day, Strauss turned back to the 1943 'mourning' sketch and used it as the point of departure for Metamorphosen (subtitled “a study for 23 solo strings”), the work he composed in response to Sacher's commission. He completed it on 12 April, mere weeks before the end of the war.
Flute Quartet in D Major, K. 285
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
(1756 to 1791)
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and his mother set out from Salzburg in 1777 in search of a more grateful home for his brilliant talents. It was not to be. They spent three months in the German city of Mannheim, where Mozart received a commission for some flute quartets from a wealthy nobleman, Ferdinand De Jean — but he was never paid for them. They are exceptionally beautiful pieces, demonstrating his ability to write effectively for the flute — despite stating he didn’t care for the instrument.
Two Pieces for String Octet, Op. 11
Dmitri Shostakovich
(1906 to 1975)
Shostakovich was just 19 (and a recent graduate from the St. Petersburg Conservatory) when he composed this sombre and pulsating piece in 1924 and 1925. In it, he used the same instruments Felix Mendelssohn had used in his youthful work from 100 years previously: four violins, two violas, and two cellos. There’s a sharp contrast in character between the sections, the sombre Prelude and the propulsive Scherzo
Program notes by Don Anderson © 2023
SPRING 2023 | 41 Helping artists bridge the gap from emerging to established rbc.com/emergingartists ® / ™ Trademark(s) of Royal Bank of Canada. VPS110866 129105 (01/2023) E x p e r i e n c e t h e G r a n d e s t o f F e e l i n g s a t F a i r m o n t P a l l i s e r ' s H a w t h o r n D i n i n g R o o m & B a r H a w t h o r n ' s n e w c u l i n a r y t e a m r e - d e f i n e s C a l g a r y ' s d i n i n g e x p e r i e n c e w i t h a c u r a t e d m e n u f r o m A l b e r t a ' s m o s t t r u s t e d p r o d u c e r s , f a r m e r s a n d s u p p l i e r s H a w t h o r n i s a p l a c e f o r o l d s t o r i e s t o b e t o l d a n d n e w m e m o r i e s t o b e m a d e hawthorndiningroom ca | 133 9 Ave SW Calgary Keep finding new Firsts Ralph LIFELONG LEARNER (recently found his artistic side) Experience United Active Living Book your tour at UnitedActiveLiving.com
INFORM CONNECT ENLIGHTEN Calgary Herald and their award-winning journalists are dedicated to bringing you comprehensive, trustworthy stories that matter. TO SUBSCRIBE, VISIT CALGARYHERALD.COM
Stories that...
Movie Magic: Morricone + Bernstein
Friday 2 June / 7:30PM
Saturday 3 June / 7:30PM Jack Singer Concert Hall
Allison Lynch
Vocals
Allison Lynch is a Calgary-based artist, appearing as a singer, actor, multi-instrumentalist, composer, sound-designer, and musical director. Allison has performed across Canada and internationally, from Theatre Calgary to the National Arts Centre, to guest soloist appearances with the Winnipeg Symphony, the Victoria Symphony, and the Malaysian Philharmonic Orchestra in Kuala Lumpur. Lynch also composes for film, television, radio, and podcasts, and performs regularly with her jazz quartet. She has performed her original music at the Calgary Folk Music Festival, the Medicine Hat Jazz Festival, Brazilfest and the Calgary International Jazz Festival. Lynch has received four Betty Mitchell Awards for acting and composing, a Greater Victoria Critic’s Choice Award for Outstanding Musical Score, and a YYC Music Award nomination for Jazz Album of the Year for her album Skin & Flame. Her music is available on all streaming platforms.
Rune Bergmann biography on page 7
42 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com | 403.571.0849
Program
Bergmann,
Ennio Morricone The Good, the Bad and the Ugly 3' Once Upon a Time in the West 15' Cinema Paradiso 7' Once Upon a Time in America 4' Suite from The Mission 5' Intermission 20' Leonard Bernstein Symphonic Dances from West Side Story 24' Maria from West Side Story 4' Somewhere from West Side Story 4' Tonight from West Side Story 3
Pops
Rune
conductor Allison Lynch, vocals Joel Schaefer, vocals
'
and artists subject to change without notice
Program
Joel Schaefer Vocals
Joel Schaefer is so excited to be singing with the Calgary Philharmonic again! He was previously on stage with the Calgary Phil last year as JP Morgan in Ragtime: A Concert Performance. He is proud to hold a Master of Arts from the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland and is a graduate of the Randolph College for the Performing Arts in Toronto. He has performed across the country on stages such as the Four Seasons Centre and Roy Thomson Hall, and with theatre companies such as Theatre Calgary (The Louder We Get, Billy Elliot), Forte Musical Theatre (Tick, Tick… Boom!, Naughty But Nice), and Young People’s Theatre (Beauty and the Beast). He is thrilled to be singing the incredible music of Leonard Bernstein with this gorgeous orchestra. Much love to Mom, Dad, Julia, Kristi, Jamie, Garrett, and the rest of his family!
SPRING 2023 | 43
On Stage with Branford Marsalis
Friday 9 June / 7:30PM
Jack Singer Concert Hall Specials
Supported by
Concert Supporter: Heather Edwards Program
Rune Bergmann, conductor Branford Marsalis, saxophone Richard
Death and Transfiguration, Op. 24
Richard Strauss
(1864 to 1949)
Shortly after Strauss completed Don Juan, his second tone poem and the first to win success, he set to work on a third such piece, Death and Transfiguration. He conducted the premiere in Eisenach, Germany, on 21 June 1890. Five years later, he revealed his inspiration for this piece. A man dies, but the music offers the heartening possibility of a life to follow the one we know. It is a purely imaginary work, since the 25-year-old composer had not undergone any lifethreatening experiences by that point in his life. Nevertheless, it displayed remarkable maturity for one so young, in terms of creative confidence, philosophical ambition, and the skillful handling of the large, post-romantic orchestra. In it, he led listeners on a harrowing but ultimately heartening, Beethoven-like journey from darkness to light.
Escapades
John Williams (b. 1932)
John Williams is the world’s bestknown film music composer, and a highly successful conductor and recording artist. His film scores alone have received more than 50 Academy Award nominations. He also composes concert music. It adopts selected modern techniques without abandoning the fundamentals of romantic traditions. He and director Steven Spielberg have created dozens of joint projects, including many of the most popular films of the last 45 years, such as Jaws, E.T., and the Indiana Jones movies. Set during the 1960s, the 2002 movie Catch Me If You Can tells the true-life story of a clever young forger (Leonardo DiCaprio) and the veteran FBI agent (Tom Hanks) who doggedly pursues him. William’s jazz-flavoured score includes a prominent role for alto saxophone, as does this appealing concert piece that he fashioned from it.
La valse, poème chorégraphique (The Waltz, Choreographic Poem)
Maurice Ravel (1875 to 1937)
Maurice Ravel had considered composing a tribute to the Strauss family of Vienna as early as 1906.
44 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com | 403.571.0849
© Eric Ryan Anderson
Strauss Death and Transfiguration, Op. 24 25
John Williams Escapades from Catch Me If You Can 13' I. Catch Me If You Can II. The Float III. Recollections Maurice Ravel La valse, poème chorégraphique 12' Boléro 13'
'
This concert has no intermission Program and artists subject to change without notice
Had he gone ahead with it at that time, it would probably have sounded as carefree as The Blue Danube. But by the time he composed La valse in 1919–1920, both he and Europe had experienced catastrophic changes due to war. This piece reflects those changes strongly and with a mounting sense of impending catastrophe.
Boléro
Maurice Ravel
In 1928, dancer Ida Rubinstein commissioned a new ballet score from Maurice Ravel. He used the opportunity to conduct an experiment. As he put it, the score would be “uniform throughout in its melody, harmony, and rhythm, the latter being tapped out continuously on the drum. The orchestral crescendo supplies the only element of variety.” Instrumental colouring also plays a major role, an area in which Ravel had attained supreme mastery. After its premiere as a ballet, Boléro quickly won even greater success in the concert hall. Ravel found its overwhelming popularity somewhat embarrassing. Composer Arthur Honegger recalled, “Ravel said to me (possibly with tongue in cheek) 'I've written only one masterpiece, Boléro Unfortunately, there's no music in it.'” Audiences beg to differ. It may not be wise to hear it too often, but when everything falls into place, it has the power to mesmerize the senses and quicken the pulse more effectively than any other piece of music. It also gives many of the orchestra's section leaders the opportunity to perform solo passages.
Branford Marsalis
Saxophone
Branford Marsalis is an awardwinning saxophonist, band leader, featured classical soloist, and film and Broadway composer. Over a decades long career, he has won three Grammys, Emmy and Tony nominations, a citation by the National Endowment for the Arts as a Jazz Master, and more. Marsalis is increasingly sought-after as a featured soloist with such acclaimed orchestras as the New York and Los Angeles Philharmonics, and the Chicago, Detroit, North Carolina, and Düsseldorf Symphonies. Emerging from the global pandemic in January 2022, Marsalis returned to the New York Philharmonic to perform John Adam’s Saxophone Concerto and then launched a tour with the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra. He also performed John Williams’ Escapades in Tanglewood’s celebration of Williams’ 90th birthday. Even as he tours the world as a classical soloist, Marsalis continues to perform with The Branford Marsalis Quartet, formed in 1986. His work on Broadway has garnered a Drama Desk Award and Tony nominations and as a composer for film and television, his credits include original music composed for: The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks starring Oprah, Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom starring Viola Davis and Chadwick Boseman, and the Emmynominated Tulsa Burning.
Are your finances in tune? Live well and find financial harmony with us! chfinancial.ca 403.237.6570 Start the conversation to find out how SPRING 2023 | 45
Program notes by Don Anderson © 2023 Rune Bergmann biography on page 7
© Palma Kolansky
“Already a fixture in the jazz world with five albums by only the age of 16, Alexander is clearly charting his own path.” NPR
46 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com | 403.571.0849 403.265.3023 | edwardliving.com 3023 16 Street SW Calgary, AB T2T 6Y4 Live your best life. Designed with the highest standards in mind, our boutique-style community offers refined amenities and curated services. A whole new calibre of Independent Living awaits you near Marda Loop in Southwest Calgary. Come experience what life can be at The Edward. FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 2023 | 7:30pm Arts Commons, Jack Singer Concert Hall Joey Alexander Trio Don’t miss piano virtuoso and protégé of Wynton Marsalis as he makes his debut as a composer and bandleader. VIP Receptio n Sponso r Suppor ting Sponsor Public Sector Suppor t Media Sponsors Artist, program, and date subject to change. 403-294-7414 or artscommons.ca/joeyalexander Tickets available now
Support Your Phil
Every donation to your Calgary Philharmonic makes a difference for the Orchestra and in our communities. We offer a series of donor benefits to demonstrate how grateful we are for your support.
Donor events take place throughout the season and will give you a deeper understanding of your Calgary Phil and a greater appreciation of orchestral music. Depending on your level of support, you will have the opportunity to attend events with Calgary Phil musicians, exclusive donor rehearsals, donor recitals, our popular music and lecture series Music to My Ears, post-concert receptions, access to the Founders' Room, and more.
Your generosity is at the heart of the Calgary Phil as we ensure your financial support is more impactful than ever. Thanks to your dedication and enthusiasm, the Calgary Phil will continue to connect our communities and celebrate the transformative power of orchestral music.
For more information on benefit details and how you can support your Calgary Phil, visit calgaryphil.com/support.
SPRING 2023 | 47
B A C D F G E
bravo applause celebration dynamic ensemble fanfare grand
Join our community of visionary supporters
The Calgary Philharmonic Foundation is the largest annual supporter of your Calgary Phil, exceeding all levels of government support, and ensures the permanence of the Orchestra and that future generations have access to the power of orchestral music.
This program has been bringing world-class artists to perform with your Calgary Phil since 2008, enhancing musical presentations for both audiences and musicians. Many Virtuoso artists also perform at donor recitals or teach masterclasses to aspiring young musicians in our communities.
Founded by Ellen and Allen Borak, this program helps elevate the art of choral music by supporting and nurturing the development of the Calgary Philharmonic Chorus. This program provides more than 100 volunteer singers with the opportunity to grow in their performance of choral music and promotes the enjoyment of choral singing in our communities.
Elaine and Jeremy Clark, along with their daughters Keiko and Chloe, support several projects designed to empower curiosity for the Orchestra in its fullness. Adult education projects like chamber music recitals, Music To My Ears events, and pre-concert chats are meant to encourage the next generation of enthusiastic Calgary Phil supporters.
Irene and Walt DeBoni created this program to support the commissioning of new Canadian works necessary for the continued development and vitality of orchestral music. Thanks to this program, the Orchestra premieres enticing and trailblazing new works each season.
Celebrating 10 years, the MacLachlan/Ridge Emerging Artist Program helps provide outstanding young Canadian musicians with opportunities to advance their careers by performing with the Orchestra to develop Canada’s next generation of artists.
This philanthropic program was created in memory of Joyce and Dick Matthews, who were dedicated and generous supporters of your Calgary Phil for more than 50 years, providing the opportunity to recognize someone special.
Founded by Judith Kilbourne, PhilKids is an after-school program for students aged 5 to 11, bringing music to the hands and hearts of children who otherwise would not have access to such artistic development, fueling the empowerment of children through the exploration of music.
Support one of these programs, or donate to our Greatest Needs fund at calgaryphil.com/support.
JOYCE
DICK MATTHEWS PHILANTHROPIC PROGRAM
+
OPPORTUNITIES FUND
Sponsors + Supporters
SPRING 2023 | 49
Foundations Corporate Media
+ Community
Government
Artistic
Our Donors
Leadership Giving
The Calgary Philharmonic expresses its deep gratitude to the passionate and dedicated supporters whose significant lifetime giving to the Calgary Philharmonic Society and the Calgary Philharmonic Foundation helps us achieve our vision.
$10,000,000 and above
Joyce + Dick Matthews
$1,000,000 to $9,999,999
Alberta Foundation for the Arts
Calgary Arts Development Authority
Canada Council for the Arts
Walt + Irene DeBoni
John + Ethelene Gareau
Government of Canada
Dr. John Lacey
Morningside Music Bridge Foundation
Drs. Ted + Lola Rozsa
Estate of Mario James Stella
One Anonymous Donor
$500,000 to $999,999
William + Irene Bell
Marg + Paul Boëda
Cenovus Energy Inc
CNOOC (formerly Nexen)
Annie Freeze
Carol + Frank Gray
Mary Rozsa de Coquet
Robbin Shandel
Taylor Family Foundation
$250,000 to $499,999
Said Arrata
Estate of Marjory Barber
Ms. Cheryl Bishop
Leslie + David Bissett
Ellen + Allen Borak
Heather + Ian Bourne
Andrea Brussa
Norma Carroll
Heather Edwards
Flanagan Foundation
Larry + Jan Fichtner
Tony + Liz Fricke
Judith Kilbourne
KPMG LLP
Estate of Murray Lipsey
Letha MacLachlan QC
Palmer Family Foundation
Repsol Oil + Gas Canada Inc
Rozsa Foundation
Muriel A Stewart
TELUS Corporation
$100,000 to $249,999
ARC Resources Ltd
Jeff Arsenych
Jenny Belzberg
Gerald + Beverly Berkhold
BP Petroleum
Lori Caltagirone
Canada Life
Elaine + Jeremy Clark
Judith + Terence Dalgleish
James Doleman + Dori Wood
Enbridge Pipelines
Tibor Fekete
Estate of Geraldine Fish
Glasswaters Foundation
Estate of Winnifred Griffith
Richard + Lois Haskayne
Imperial Oil Ltd
Jeanette King
Estate of Evelyn Christine Kings
HD Klebanoff Memorial Fund
Macquarie Group Foundation
Allan Markin
Estate of Mary McIntosh
James + Janice Morton
Nickle Family Foundation
John + Jean Partridge
Rabinovitz Family Fund
Seagram Company Ltd
Clarice A Siebens
Margaret Southern
Carla + Klaus Springer
Trent + Josie Stangl
Mary Ann Steen
Sunesis Consulting Inc
TC Energy
TD Canada Trust
Deborah Yedlin +
Martin Molyneaux
Shirley Zielsdorf
One Anonymous Donor
Endowed Chairs
Rozsa Endowed Chair
Music Director
Rozsa Foundation Endowed Chair
Associate Conductor
Ellen + Allen Borak Endowed Chair
Chorus Master
John + Ethelene Gareau
Endowed Chair In Recognition of Cenek Vrba’s 36 years of service
Concertmaster
Peter + Jeanne Lougheed
Endowed Chair
Associate Concertmaster
Hotchkiss Endowed Chair
First Violin Section Member
HD Klebanoff Endowed Chair
First Violin Section Member
Esther Violet Hall (née Young)
Endowed Chair
Principal Second Violin
Debbie Lynne Hall (daughter of Esther Violet Hall) Endowed Chair
Assistant Principal Second Violin
Dennis Sharp + Hélène Côté Sharp
Endowed Chair
Second Violin Section Member
Dalgleish Endowed Chair 66
Eckhardt-Gramatté
Foundation Endowed Chair
In Memory of Sophie-Carmen
Eckhardt-Gramatté
Principal Viola
Naomi Lacey Endowed Chair In Honour of Philip Hansen
Principal Cello
John + Jean Partridge
Endowed Chair
Cello Section Member
Deborah Yedlin + Martin Molyneaux
Endowed Chair
Cello Section Member
Marg + Paul Boëda Endowed Chair
In Memory of Jennifer Boëda-Dahl
Principal Flute
Bill + Irene Bell Endowed Chair
Piccolo
Judith + William Kilbourne
Endowed Chair In Recognition of the Kilbourne's long-term support
Assistant Principal Horn
Frank + Carol Gray Endowed Chair
In Memory of Vincent Cichowicz
Principal Trumpet
Frank + Carol Gray Endowed Chair
In Recognition of Tim Rawlings' 42 years of service to Calgary Phil
Principal Percussion
Joyce + Dick Matthews
Endowed Chair
Piano
Named Funds
Marjory Barber Fund
Borak Forte Fund
DeBoni New Works Fund
Geraldine Fish Memorial Fund in support of the Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra
Joyce + Dick Matthews
Philanthropic Fund
Naomi + John Lacey
Virtuoso Fund
Murray Lipsey Memorial Fund in support of the Calgary Philharmonic Chorus
MacLachlan/Ridge Emerging Artist Fund
2021/2022 Donors
The Calgary Philharmonic expresses its deep gratitude to the following supporters who made generous gifts to the Calgary Philharmonic Society and the Calgary Philharmonic Foundation between 1 July 2021 and 30 June 2022. For complete listings, visit calgaryphil.com/support.
Gifts to the Calgary Philharmonic Foundation
Ad Astra Campaign
10 years or more of lifetime giving
20 years or more of lifetime giving
Gifts of $500,000 and above
Alberta Foundation for the Arts
Calgary Philharmonic Foundation Canada Council for the Arts
Government of Canada
Dr. John Lacey
Gifts of $100,000 to $499,999
Estate of Marjory Barber
Calgary Arts Development Authority
Honens Calgary Philharmonic Society Fund
Mary Rosza de Coquet
Taylor Family Foundation
One Anonymous Donor
Gifts of $50,000 to $99,999
Walt + Irene DeBoni
Heather Edwards
Government of Alberta
Letha MacLachlan QC
One Anonymous Donor
Two Anonymous Donors
50 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com | 403.571.0849
Gifts of $10,000 to $49,999
Michelle Bailey + John Whelan
Ellen + Allen Borak
Ian + Heather Bourne
Calgary Shaw Charity
Classic Foundation
Canada Life
CH Financial
Alan D Castle Endowment for the Arts
Elaine + Jeremy Clark
Walter + Ute Dilger
Estate of Esther Emmett
Enbridge Pipelines
Estate of Geraldine Fish
Annie Freeze
Tony + Liz Fricke
Glasswaters Foundation
The Globe and Mail
Jacky + Geoff Granville
Ryan Green
Philip Ireland + Sheila McIntosh
Keyera
Janice + James Morton
Chris + Ruchi Ryley
Mike Shaik
Shaw Communications
Valerie + Allen Swanson
TD Canada Trust
Viewpoint Foundation
One Anonymous Donor
Two Anonymous Donors
Gifts of $5,000 to $9,999
Jenny Belzberg
Blake, Cassels, + Graydon LLP
James + Patricia Burns
Ann Calvert
Cyril + Elizabeth Challice
Walter + Gloria Chayka
Lori Cutler + Nick Kuzyk
CWB Wealth Management –
McLean + Partners
Dynasty Power
E Ann Falk
Franklin Templeton Investments
Jan + Brian Grier
Imperial Oil Ltd
InterPipeline
Jeanette King
Dr. John Lacey
Janet + Rick Matthews
Elizabeth + Ross Middleton
The Honourable Lois E Mitchell
Mobsquad
Moon Beams Foundation
Anne Marie Peterson Legacy Fund
Janet Poyen
Clarice A Siebens
Claire + Marc Stevens
United Active Living
Welty Family Foundation
One Anonymous Donors
Gifts of $1,000 to $4,999
Ian + Gwen Anderson
Karen Ashbee
Roy, Hazel, + Nancy Austin Fund
Andrew Azmudeh
Michelle Bailey + John Whelan
Barbara R Beaton
Belinda + Thomas Boleantu
Brad Boychuk
Marion R Burrus
Eileen Butler
Richard Byers
Calgary Foundation
Jim Campbell
Bob + Sylvia Carey
Cynthia Clark
Marie-Josee Claveau +
Nicolas Tremblay
Stan Climie
Harry + Martha Cohen
Foundation
Gertrude Cohos
Gary Cole
Fern Cyr
Paula Davies
Alexandra De Freitas
Deloitte
James Doleman + Dori Wood
Judy Dofoo
Lawrence Fan
Tom + Dianne Ferguson
Donna Fonteyne
Wayne Foo Foundation
Shirley Foster
Kathleen Fox
Audrey + John Fry
Glen + Nancy Charitable
Gift Fund
Donald + Joan Greenfield
Pamela Grigg
Carolyn Guichon
Dr. Danelle J Hames
Julianna Hegg + Bill Hogg
David Henley
Mary Hetherington
Arthur Hibbard + Gloria Wong
Jevon Hills
Gordon + Joan Holland
Linda + Gordon Hong
James Hughes
Carrol Jaques + Bob Loov
Glen + Arlene Johnston
Robert Kulhawy
Lennox Family Foundation
Michael Lipnicki Fine Pianos
Dr. Jonathan Liu
Loch Gallery
Luxe Du Jour
David + Diane Macdonald
Chris MacKimmie
Simone MacRae
Peter + Heather Marreck
John + Pat Martin
Davide Martino
Masters Gallery
Laurie Matiation
Elizabeth Maurice
Dale S Meister
Richard Mercer
Elizabeth + Ross Middleton
Patricia Moore
Jean Morris + Matthew Vyse
Jean Murray
Faiz Nadir
Tae Nosal
John + Jean Partridge
Peabody Family
Lara Pella + Geoff Holub
Ruth + Garry Ramsden-Wood
Eric Ruygrok
Alex + Aliza Sarian
Henry Schultz
Rod + Wendy Schultz
Joan + Geoffrey Simmins
Roger + Lorna Smith
Don Smith + Helen Young
Alfred Sorensen
Betty J Stein
John Thompson
Erin Thrall + Peter Johnson
James Ulrich
United Church of Canada
Foundation
Russel Varnam
VivianeArt
Brent Warren
Margaret Warren
Stanley Waterman
Norma + Ron Westcott
Julie Westgate
WestJet Airlines
Mark Wittrup
Reg Worsley
Wood Pittman Fund
Deborah Yedlin + Martin
Molyneaux
Frederick Young
Janet Yuchem
Seven Anonymous Donors
Two Anonymous Donors
Gifts of $500 to $999
John Abbott
Dean Allatt
Christopher Beare
Robert Binda
Heide Blakely
Marg + Paul Boëda
Marilyn Braden
Ian Burgess
Callow + Associates
Management Consultants
Ah-Ling Cheng
Adam + Christina Carpenter
Dorothy Chisholm
F Thomas Christie
Rowena Cromwell
Joseph De Angelis
Jane + Allan De Caen
Joan Dennis
Noreen Dyke
Tibor Fekete
Larry + Jan Fichtner
David + Beverley Foy
A Gordon Giesbrecht
Corinne Grigoriu
Glen Hammerlindl
Carol Hanna
Ian Hawkins
Dr. Janice Heard
Don + Denise Herman
William Hopson
Allan Huber
Bruce + June Johnston
Valerie + Craig Johnstone
Mary Ellen Kirk
Eric Loughead
Andrew + Alison Love
Alla Magid
Sharon Martens
Estate of A V McCall
Rene + Mark McManus
Anne McWhir
Brian Neufeld
Keith + Kathleen Nicholson
Richard + Beth Olver
Joaquina + Fritz Painsi
Parker PR
Dan Phillips
Steve Poceta
Ken Potma
Marlene Raasok
Rosza Foundation
Salopek + Associates
Don Seaman
Kelly + James Scott
Ruth Scott
Douglas Soeder
Sponsor Energy
Mira Starczyk
Ingrid Vicas
Dixie + Tony Webb
Terry + Anne Wilson
Ray Woods
Holly Wong
Sol + John Wright
Anne + Frank ZinatellI
Eight Anonymous Donors
Gifts made In Honour of Andrew Azmudeh
Kim Bruce
Jim Campbell
Paul Dornian
E. Hermann
Bev MacLeod
Joyce + Dick Matthews
John David Payne
David + Martha Rempel
Lauren Ridge
Ryan Stasynec
Gary Stimson
Gifts made In Memory of Dr. James H. Acheson
Sara + Louis Binda
Arlene Christie
Judith Dalgleish
Arlene McCall
John David Payne
Dorothy Pommen
Klaus Springer
Allan Sweetser
Joyce Williams
Stacey Christina Worsley
SPRING 2023 | 51
Our Volunteers
These volunteers contributed their precious time in the 2021/2022 Season — we celebrate them and their dedication.
Mariah Atkinson
Liliane Batista
Partow Bayzaee
Irlana Bondar
Marguerite Bonnet
Frances Bradley
Peggy Chan
Candice Cheah
Teresa Chiu
Ian Churchill
Sandi Churchill
Carole Clement
Steve Clement
Lynne Dale
Carol Dann
Bing Diao
Julie Docken
James Doney
Graham Edwards
Amanda Ferguson
Shirley Foster
Brenda Frame
Dave Frame
Barbara Frasch
Prasad Ganesan
Milena Gonzalez
David Grant
Alicia Groenwweg
Brandy Hachey
Larry Hamm
Gloria Hare
Tracy Harrington
Hamish Harrison
Robin Harwig
Pamela Hinman
Tina Hoang
Nathan Hong
Aime Hutton
Elly Jarvis
Shane Kidd
Veronika Kiryanova
Amy Klintberg
Dennis Kozak
Lillian Kozak
Wendy Kunsman
Simon Larter
Jeannie Laughlin
Jenai Lieu
Elmire Limoges
Gail MacCrimmon
Shawna MacGillivary
Fiona Mackintosh
Joy Mamer
Jay Anne Mandingin
Jackie Marston
Sheila Martin
Julia Meeder
Kristy Meents
Carol Mewha
Donna Morrison
Marina Milovanova
Lynne Oishi
Faye Olubobokun
Parisa Parsa
Jolanta Pawlilowska
Marlene Payne
Elsa Penate
Luz Elena Perra
Stephanie Quilliams
Erin Swanson Reinhardt
Brin Santoro
Barbara Schultz
Doug Smith
Josephine Sauve
Kristen Smith
Sonja Stangelj
Roy Stuart
Barbara Stuber
Judy Taylor
Ryan Truong
Gloria Tse
Valerie Turner
Noah Urquhart
Mijk Van Wijk
Debbie Wagner
Larry Wagner
Gina Waks
Louis Warners
Dawne Wharton
Gayna Wong
Amir Zaidi
Ad Astra Cabinet
Michelle Bailey
Ann Calvert
Jeremy Clark
Walt DeBoni
Elizabeth Evans, Co-Chair
Dr. John Lacey, Honourary Chair
Elizabeth Middleton, Co-Chair
Ellen Parker
Ryan Stasynec
Cork + Canvas Committee
Almas Kassam
Elizabeth Middleton
Agung Nugrahaeni
Maydelin Nuñez
Tim Onyett, Committee Chair
Lucy Pei
Anna Premyslova
Lauren Ridge
Michelle Yee
We also thank the Boards of Directors of the Calgary Philharmonic Society and Foundation, and members of the Calgary Philharmonic Chorus, listed on page 4 and page 9 respectively.
Every effort has been made to ensure accuracy on the above lists. Please email any errors or omissions to volunteercoordinator@calgaryphil.com.
52 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com | 403.571.0849
Building to New Heights Together we can strengthen our community, pursue artistic excellence, and ensure a sustainable future for the Calgary Philharmonic. Support our Capital Campaign. Learn more at calgaryphil.com/AdAstra.
MUSICAL VOLUNTARY
By David Sussman, Assistant Principal Oboe
All of the players in the Calgary Philharmonic are paid professional musicians. We are engaged to perform at the highest level. However, we do many things on a voluntary basis that are related to our jobs as musicians. Within the Orchestra, we have several volunteer committees that play an important role in maintaining a strong workplace where we can focus on creating memorable experiences for our communities.
We have an Orchestra Committee made up of five musicians that regularly meets with Administration to foster a healthy rehearsal and performance environment. The Anti-Racism, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion Committee advises on initiatives that help the Calgary Phil create a sense of safety, meaning, and belonging for everyone, including employees, musicians, contractors, volunteers as well as our audiences. Our Community, Outreach, and Education Committee works on projects to help us better engage with our communities, and we even have a Coffee Committee to ensure our musicians can enjoy a hot beverage at break!
The Orchestra also has a Health and Wellness Committee to support our musician's well-being, and our Artistic Review Committee helps ensure musical material like videos put on the Calgary Phil website or on social media meet the highest
artistic standards. Our Programming Committee works with the Artistic team to give input on programming and guest artists and conductors, creating performances that musicians and audiences alike are excited about. Our Marketing Committee liaises with and gives input to the Marketing and Sales team to produce fun and educational content for social media and our blog, giving a behind-thescenes look at our musicians and what it takes to prepare for a concert. That’s a lot of committees!
But wait, there’s more!
There are two players that serve on the Calgary Philharmonic Society’s Board of Directors, helping to further the organization’s goal of creating orchestral music for everyone, and some members of the Orchestra serve on a Negotiating Team when it is time to renew our Collective Bargaining Agreement. Some musicians also work for the good of all musicians in Calgary by serving on the executive of the Calgary Musicians Association, a non-profit organization that provides services and support to help members succeed in the music business, and others help nationally by serving as a delegate or executive member of the Organization of Canadian Symphony Musicians.
Our musicians have studied their instruments for years and love to share their musical knowledge during Pre-Concert Chats. We can be found
greeting the audience from the stage at the beginning of concerts, modelling Calgary Phil merchandise (check out the photo of me wearing the fleece!), donating musician experiences at the Cork and Canvas fundraiser, posing for brochures, meeting potential donors with our Development team, and writing blog posts and articles like this one! Most of us in the Orchestra have, at some point, served on multiple committees according to our strengths and interests. I know I am grateful to all those who volunteer to ensure an excellent work environment and healthy organization.
These are just internal musical volunteer opportunities. Many musicians volunteer for other musical endeavours and, indeed, for a myriad of other causes that are dear to them including health initiatives such as Movember moustaches, animal rescue, and children with special needs, to name a few. As with most people who volunteer, we get great rewards back for our efforts as well.
Musicians are used to working collaboratively and know that some tasks are important enough for us to invest our time and energy in. We are all interested in working towards a collective goal and in some ways, volunteering mirrors the way an orchestra works together to bring a great work of music to life in real time.
©
54 | PRELUDE calgaryphil.com | 403.571.0849
HarderLee Photography