Category: 11-12 Season

  • PROGRAM NOTES: ERIC OWENS, BASS-BARITONE

    PROGRAM NOTES: ERIC OWENS, BASS-BARITONE

    Eric Owens’ recital divides neatly into two halves – a German half and a French half, with the final song a true rarity that bridges the geographical and cultural divide. The German songs (Lieder) all tend to be of a dark, serious or melancholic nature, while the French songs (mélodies) are lighter, even airy and…

  • PROGRAM NOTES: THE BEETHOVEN PROJECT

    PROGRAM NOTES: THE BEETHOVEN PROJECT

    Ludwig van Beethoven The Ten Violin Sonatas Beethoven wrote his first violin sonatas, a set of three (Op. 12) in 1797-98. Six more appeared by early 1803, making a fairly compressed time span for a medium in which Beethoven was to write just one more in 1812. All but the tenth were written before the…

  • PROGRAM NOTES: CHRISTIAN GERHAHER AND ANDRÁS SCHIFF

    PROGRAM NOTES: CHRISTIAN GERHAHER AND ANDRÁS SCHIFF

    Ludwig van Beethoven An die ferne Geliebte Adelaide, Op. 46 An die ferne Geliebte, composed in 1816, stands proudly at the beginning of Christian Gerhaher’s recital as the first important song cycle from any composer, that is,  a series of songs in which the constituent numbers are linked together by a theme or narrative of…

  • PROGRAM NOTES: KIRILL GERSTEIN

    PROGRAM NOTES: KIRILL GERSTEIN

    Johann Sebastian Bach English Suite no. 6 in D minor, BWV 811 Bach’s Partitas, English Suites and French Suites – six of each – collectively rank among the glories of the keyboard literature. Each is a four-part sequence of dance movements, all in the same key but varied by rhythm, tempo and mood: Allemande, Courante,…

  • PROGRAM NOTES: ANDREAS BRANTELID & SHAI WOSNER

    PROGRAM NOTES: ANDREAS BRANTELID & SHAI WOSNER

    Claude Debussy: Sonata for Cello and Piano Few works of Claude Debussy (1862-1918) bear generic titles like symphony, quartet, concerto or sonata. Most have descriptive or evocative titles like Printemps, Jeux, Claire de lune, La mer, Nocturnes or Ibéria. Since chamber music tends, more than any other, to rely on the traditional forms of classical…

  • PROGRAM NOTES: ELIAS STRING QUARTET

    PROGRAM NOTES: ELIAS STRING QUARTET

    Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: String Quartet no. 18 in A major, K. 464 This is the fifth of the six “Haydn” quartets – everyone a masterpiece – that Mozart wrote in the mid-1780s. The identification with Haydn derives from the older composer’s direct influence on his colleague in the matter of string quartet writing. Specific elements…

  • PROGRAM NOTES: MURRAY PERAHIA

    PROGRAM NOTES: MURRAY PERAHIA

    J. S. Bach: French Suite no. 5 in G major, BWV 816 Bach’s Partitas, English Suites and French Suites – six of each – collectively rank among the glories of the keyboard literature. Each is a four-part sequence of dance movements, all in the same key but varied in rhythm, tempo and mood: Allemande, Courante,…

  • PROGRAM NOTES: STEVEN OSBORNE

    PROGRAM NOTES: STEVEN OSBORNE

    Ludwig van Beethoven Piano Sonata (“Moonlight”) in C sharp minor, Op.27, no.2 (Sonata quasi una Fantasia) The year 1801 marked not only the dawn of a new century, but also a significant new approach on Beethoven’s part to matters of form and structure in the piano sonata. The bold use of unusual and exotic keys,…

  • PROGRAM NOTES: RODION POGOSSOV

    PROGRAM NOTES: RODION POGOSSOV

    Alessandro Stradella: “Pietà, Signore” Orphaned at the age of eleven, Alessandro Stradella went on to lead one of the most colourful lives of any composer who ever lived. He was involved in Mafiaesque schemes, had a reputation for womanizing, got himself wounded by pursuing avengers, and was eventually murdered. In between all this he found…

  • PROGRAM NOTES: FLORIAN BOESCH

    PROGRAM NOTES: FLORIAN BOESCH

    A recital of Lieder set exclusively to poems of Heinrich Heine and composed solely by Schubert and Schumann is particularly apt inasmuch as Heine was born the same year as Schubert (1797) and died the same year as Schumann (1856). He was not only one of Germany’s leading romantic authors, he also wrote about travel,…

  • PROGRAM NOTES: TINE THING HELSETH

    PROGRAM NOTES: TINE THING HELSETH

    Tine Thing Helseth, trumpet Havard Gimse, piano Next Generation Series at The Vancouver Playhouse Sunday, February 5, 2012 Bohuslav Martinů: Sonatina for Trumpet and Piano Bohuslav Martinů followed in the footsteps of his compatriots Dvořák, Smetana, Janáček and Suk in the incorporation of elements from Bohemian and Moravian folk music into his works. Martinů was…

  • PROGRAM NOTES: KHATIA BUNIATISHVILI

    PROGRAM NOTES: KHATIA BUNIATISHVILI

    Khatia Buniatishvili, piano Chan Centre for the Performing Arts Monday, January 23, 2011 Franz Joseph Haydn, piano sonata no. 33 in C minor, Hob. XVI/20 Although Haydn’s role in the development of the symphony and string quartet is secure in the minds of many people, but they are still apt to forget just how important…

  • PROGRAM NOTES: GEORGE LI

    PROGRAM NOTES: GEORGE LI

    George Li Program Notes Performance: Vancouver Playhouse, Sunday, December 4, 2011 Carl Czerny Variations on a Theme by Rode, Op. 33 (“La Ricordanza”) Most concertgoers know Carl Czerny only as the early nineteenth-century pedagogue who churned out endless dull exercises that continue to be inflicted upon piano students this day. True, he did compose a…

  • PROGRAM NOTES: SHOSTAKOVICH PRELUDES AND FUGUES

    PROGRAM NOTES: SHOSTAKOVICH PRELUDES AND FUGUES

    Dmitri Shostakovich: 12 Preludes and Fugues from Op. 87 Like many of the great composers before him (Bach, Handel, Mozart, Beethoven, Chopin, Liszt and Rachmaninoff, among others), Shostakovich possessed the skills of a keyboard virtuoso, and might well have sustained a successful career as such. Among his prizes was one from the First International Chopin…