Showing posts with label wallace halladay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wallace halladay. Show all posts

Friday, September 29, 2017

Recording: Contact

Artist: Contact

Song: Proximity/Response [edited excerpt] [composer: Johan Seaton]

Recorded at Yonge-Dundas Square (Intersection – Day 3), September 2, 2017.

Contact - Proximity/Response [edited excerpt]

In recent years, the Intersection Festival would normally consist of a paid concert, usually the night before the day-long extravaganza in Yonge-Dundas Square. This year, however, under the continued guidance of Burn Down The Capital's Tad Michalak the festival expanded to four events, including a pair of concerts at The Jam Factory. The day-long marathon in the concrete canyon of commerce remains at the festival's heart, though, exploring the frissons of experiencing strange and occasionally abrasive sounds competing with the city's mersh heartbeat.

Contact, the festival's founding presenter, still usually finds time to bring something fresh and different to the day. The biggest twist to this set was that the whole of the ensemble was being channelled through keyboardist Kristian Podlacha's laptop, which was especially central to this piece from Johan Seaton, which had emerged from the ensemble's Music From Scratch workshop for youth composers. Seaton was adding some subtle electronic mix feedback here, giving the piece an additional layer of hazy whoosh.

[Contact will be re-assembling to play with Elliott Sharp (last year's visiting Intersection composer) in a Burn Down The Capital show on Saturday, October 21st that mixes together some no-wave/weird-pop sounds.]

[You can see some footage from this set over at Brandon Caswell Douglas' Intersection playlist.]

Sunday, October 25, 2015

Recording: MG Encore Ensemble

Artist: MG Encore Ensemble

Songs: I Am Concrete [composer: Erik Ross; poetry: Darren O'Donnell] + Retablo: 2nd mvt, "Almayne" [composer: Allison Cameron]

Recorded at The Music Gallery ("X Avant X"), October 16, 2015.

MG Encore Ensemble - I Am Concrete

MG Encore Ensemble - Retablo: 2nd mvt, "Almayne"

This year's X Avant not only celebrated the festival's tenth anniversary, but also the Music Gallery's 40th season. No surprise, then, that the festival incorporated various methods to look back at the MG's legacy. This night, excellently curated by Chelsea Shanoff, paid tribute to the Gallery's place in the local New Music scene, bringing together several pieces that had been commissioned by the Music Gallery along with a couple tributes to noteworthy local composers who had been part of the MG's milieu. The pieces were executed by a fine ensemble of players, including: Wesley Shen (piano), Mara Plotkin (clarinet), Sharon Lee (violin), Bryan Holt (cello), Wallace Halladay (sax, melodica), Xin Wang (voice) and Dan Morphy (percussion).

The first piece here came from 2008's Concrete Toronto Music concert (celebrating the city's brutalist architecture) and is a love song from the sidewalk's perspective ("I am humble/ skin your knees on me") while the second comes from a decade earlier (when the MG was on Richmond Street), commissioned by Martin Arnold's Burdocks ensemble. It's too often the fate of contemporary Canadian chamber pieces to be premiered with some fanfare and then left to moulder in the score library, so it was exciting to see these get a proper "encore". (Arnold's "Rubber Wain", commissioned by the Gallery in 2007, even got a major revisioning, shifting the orchestration toward free reed instruments and giving it a new bounce.)

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Recording: U of T Saxophone Ensemble

Artist: University of Toronto Saxophone Ensemble

Song: Tentation d'exil [composer: Robert Lemay]

Recorded at The Music Gallery ("INTERsection: Saxopalooza"), September 1, 2013.

U of T Saxophone Ensemble - Tentation d'exil

Full review to follow. The second night of the INTERsection festival moved indoors, with a full programme from this Wallace Halladay-directed ensemble, proving that their nuthin'-but-sax mandate could lead to anything but monochromatic outcomes. They were downright happy to get loud, especially on a full-group arrangement of Jacob Ter Veldhuis' "Grab It" (which I'd previously witnessed Halladay tackling on his own). The night also included the stomping kineticism of Nicholai Korndorf's "Primitive Music" and the minimalist spacialization of John Cage's "FOUR5". But the most surprising and satisfying moments came in this fully-realized composition, where the saxes sounded like a full symphony, playing with the tone-colour of strings, brass and percussion.

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Scene Report: New Music

Scene Report: New Music

Keen readers might remember a few months ago when I was supporting a new-fangled initiative called the New Music Passport. Well, I settled in to using mine, and by chance I made it to three shows that were clustered within a few days, making for a nice chance to get a bit of an overview of a cultural realm that's a little outside my normal routines. Going to three events in a row like this was also a chance to quickly build up a repertoire of familiar faces. Besides a dedicated audience that turned out for multiple shows, one could get a sense of musicians from one organization in the crowd at the other shows — both signs of an engaged community.

Esprit Orchestra: Orion. Thursday, January 31, 2013.

The Ensemble: One of the big guns on the local New Music scene, Esprit is "Canada's only full-sized orchestra devoted exclusively to performing and promoting new orchestral music". This gives them the scale to tackle works for larger ensembles, and in turn there's a more visceral impact that you can only get from a true orchestral wall of sound.

The Venue: This show was at Koerner Hall in the Royal Conservatory of Music — a beautiful venue that I don't get to often enough. A large space that manages to feel friendly via its curvaceous features, it's a really lovely-sounding room — and as a relatively new venue, it still feels sleek and fresh. The seats also have some of the ass-friendliest cushions in town, one of those oft-overlooked features that really allow you to settle in, relax, and groove to the sounds.

The Music: This programme was assembled to celebrate three separate anniversaries. It's been thirty years since the death of Claude Vivier, who has since become one of the very select number of Canadian art music composers that is played outside his nation of birth. That alone is enough to imply that he should be more famous 'round these parts — never mind his opera/concept album-ready biographical backstory, capped with a particularly tawdry death scene.

His Orion, self-described as "a melody on the trumpet... instrument of death in the Middle Ages", really seems to reflect darkly on his own stormy life. And it might have been me reading back into those biographical facts, but given how much angst and melodrama there was in the music, the ensemble would have done well to fully embrace it, instead of reining it in enough that no one's monocles would drop out in shock. This is a piece, after all, that instructs the percussionist to start shouting, and given how the strings cut in right after that like death's choir descending, it should be a mortally-wounded cri de coeur1 — instead, what we got here was a polite bellow that sounded like Harry Belafonte's day-o. Of course, maybe I'm going beyond the writer's intent, and trying to turn this into a piece entitled "Queer Catholic Angst + Fatal Existential Crisis", but this should have simultaneously more operatically melodramatic and fucking punk rock.

The second anniversary being celebrated, taking up the second half of the programme, was the centenary of Stravinsky's Le Sacre du printemps. The Rite of Spring is rather notorious for nearly causing an art-riot on its première in April 1913 — and ever henceforth a flagpole for convention-challenging musical provocations. What musta registered then as a terrible clamour sounds more like a garden-variety cataclysm a century later, and more than the pagan ritual described in the piece's original ballet it feels like a flash-forward to the war-fury that would soon be consuming Europe. It still registers as a bracing bit of music, though, even as presented in a Johnathan McPhee's re-orchestration for reduced orchestra.

And arching over those other anniversaries is Esprit's thirtieth an an ensemble, being celebrated throughout this whole season. In a sign that they're staying relevant, the most intriguing item on the night was the unveiling of a new piece by Paul Frehner that was commissioned for the occasion. His Phantom Suns had a vibrantly visual quality to it — a hazy, warped shivering delivery that tangibly evoked the title's sundogs. The smeary microtonal slides felt like the musical equivalent of shaky 8mm handheld footage, false suns vibrating at the the edges of the frame. It didn't quite maintain the luminescence of its opening — the second movement, which moved tangentially to incorporate references to cryptography didn't register as clearly — but this was an exciting piece that will hopefully live on past this first performance.

The Vibe: This was undoubtedly the poshest of the three shows I attended. When I presented my Passport to get my $5 seat, I was expecting something up in the rafters, but was pleased to end up not too far back on the floor, in a single-seat left over in the middle of a row. When I saw Adrienne Clarkson settling into the row in front of me, I figured I had done pretty well for myself. Unsurprisingly, this had the most intense "night-at-the-symphony" vibe, and with $55 regular tickets, caters to the more bourgeois set. But if you can afford it, it's a nice night out. There was a pre-concert talk, and the concert program came with a glossy three colour cover.

Coming up: Esprit's season concludes on Thursday, March 28, 2013 with 30 and Counting!, further celebrating their anniversary season. The highlight there looks to be Burn, a new double concerto composed for the occasion by Erik Ross, featuring the sax work of Wallace Halladay (about whom there will be more below) as well as arrangements of "Purple Haze" and The Twilight Zone theme.


The Toy Piano Composers: Artistic Differences. Saturday, February 2, 2013.

The Ensemble: Now in their fifth season, TPC are "a collective of emerging composers" banding together to present new works in a smaller ensemble (the core group is six members).

The Venue: I always feel a little out of sorts going to Yorkville, but Heliconian Hall (located behind Hazleton Lanes) was a gem of a venue. The spot was new to me, but the former church has been home to the Heliconian Club (for "women in the arts and letters") since 1923. "Homey" and "cozy" come to mind, and I felt immediately relaxed in the intimate space, which doesn't fit much more than a hundred people in the audience.

The Music: All of the night's pieces were new compositions that were inspired by works of art. Most of the artworks were paintings, although Christian Floisand's Sylvian Swocery responded to a piece of concept art from the Sword & Sworcery video game and Chris Thornborrow's "Walking" was inspired by Ryan Larkin's famous NFB animation of the same name. For many, both the original pieces and the composers were on hand to give a sense of what they were responding to in the works.

All six were engagingly composed and performed, but I was especially taken with Patrick Murray's "Skin and Bone", which conveyed the inner glow and fleshy tactility of Ognian Zekoff's large-scale oil-painting of a pair of hands.

The Vibe: In "playing" music, especially self-serious art music, the sense of "play" is often lost. Even while respecting the integrity of the compositions, TPC kept a playful vibe throughout, extending to the introductions and chats with the composers.

It was noteworthy that this was the only show of these three I saw to feature woman composers — something that shouldn't be an oddity in 2013. That was one more thing that made me feel like this isn't just source-material for the academy or museum — the vibrant exuberance here was more akin to how I feel at a regular gig. The group's DIY spirit makes them the indie rock band of the New Music scene, and they should be embraced as such — this is a group that's ready for an audience outside the cloisters of the classical crowd.

The concert program was also photocopied DIY-style, and the venue has a bar at the back, so you can enjoy a beer while the music is playing. There were also free snacks on offer at intermission. As mentioned, the introductions to the pieces were well-integrated into the program itself.

Coming up: TPC's season concludes on March 23, 2013 with Threshold, with the group playing host to Montréal’s Ensemble Paramirabo. I was quickly converted to being a fan, and look forward to seeing the group again. TPC offer very affordable $10 advance tickets, so this is the group to see for anyone wanting to get their feet wet in contemporary composed music.


New Music Concerts: Canadian Music, Past, Present and Future. Sunday, February 3, 2013

The Ensemble: What might seem like a frightfully generic name is explained by the fact that NMC were the first in the field, founded in 1971 when New Music was that much newer as a concept. That makes them an institution with a bit of an old-school feel (their social media presence, for one thing, is a bit less-developed than the other groups) — but also with a proud track record and strong institutional memory in the form of musical director Robert Aitken, the group's founder who remains a ubiquitous presence at local New Music events. The group has been supporting Canadian composers from the outset, all while keeping connected with the broader global cultural context.

The Venue: Although NMC also presents some smaller shows at The Music Gallery and Gallery 345, its main home is the Betty Oliphant Theatre. Part of the National Ballet School, I'd walked past the theatre's modest Jarvis Street entrance countless times without realizing there was a high-calibre venue behind the doors. Designed as a training facility, it was "modelled after the performing space at the O'Keefe Centre", which was formerly the National Ballet's home. That meant there was a very large stage and a lot of open space in the hall, though it was still a fairly intimate space with the 300 retractable seats feeling close to the action. The huge footprint of the stage sometimes threatened to swallow up the ensemble — especially in the smaller group pieces — but it sounded very good.

The Music: A solid mix of established names and up-and-comers meant this was a good overview of the breadth of NMC's musical interests. At the established end of the spectrum, the night began with 2011's Trio for Flute, Viola and Harp by R. Murray Schafer — probably as big a celebrity as there is in the Canadian New Music firmament. This piece felt like a springtime trip to a protected forest glade, gently lyrical at first before the later movements gathered in a evening's sober stillness. That was followed by John Weinzweig's Interplay, commissioned by NMC back in '98. Weinzweig — a founder of the Canadian League of Composers and proponent of serialism — was known as the "dean of Canadian composers" for his lifetime of teaching and writing, but this piece (as implied by the title) was far more playful than didactic. A series of musical conversations between piccolo, tuba and piano, this would work perfectly as "dialogue" in a wordless cartoon, the high trills and low blurts caught in a constant back-and-forth mediated by the piano that occasionally wanted to upstage them. The comedic element was driven home midway through as the piccolo and tuba players started shuffling their chairs closer and closer to the piano, before standing up and leaning in to utter an exclamation to the pianist's face. It was a bit long, but at least managed to keep undercutting itself in ways like that.2

The "then" was rounded out by Brian Cherney's clockwork confection Die klingende Zeit while the "now" of the programme was represented by works from two young composers. I've encountered Adam Scime before, and his In The Earth And Air showed a development of some of the themes and techniques in evidence at his Music Gallery show. Here, his music flowed from his use of imagist poetry, employing texts from James Joyce, Ezra Pound and Brandon Pitts. Those were set for soprano Carla Huhtanen to sing, and while I don't fully "get" operatic singing — it doesn't convey emotional cues in a way that I can register — the layered strings created a slightly-prickly sound blanket that I could appreciate.

My fave piece of the night was the evening's other première, Brian Harman's En Masse. Part of that might arisen from the fact I was stoked to see Wallace Halladay — one of the city's best reedsmen — on stage, but Harman created an intriguing backdrop for him, with percussionist Rick Saks well-deployed here. "Inspired by elements of ritual in music", Harman evoked group-singing and incantations (especially audible in some of Halliday's ace blowing and clacking) that moved from pleasingly dreamy swoops to faster exchanges.

The Vibe: Cutting the difference between the two above shows, this had a bit of turtleneck formality set against a more stripped-down, intimate scale. Tickets are still on the steep side (this one had a walk-up price of $35), but this was a very worthy excursion. The show was preceded with a conversation between Aitken and several of the night's composers, and there were some free snacks and wine available afterwards for those inclined to mingle.

Coming up: NMC's season finishes with "A Tribute to Gilles Tremblay" on Saturday April 27, 2012, featuring works for solo piano by Louise Bessette.


By way of summing up, I should mention how pleased I was that all of these organizations chose to participate in the New Music Passport program — it's a wonderful tool to reel in curious ears and I hope it's brought back again next year. For us hoi polloi, it's an expensive proposition to dip a toe into the high culture, so anything that makes this sort of music accessible is definitely to be applauded.


1 It brought to mind John Lennon's comment: "when you're drowning, you don't say 'I would be incredibly pleased if someone would have the foresight to notice me drowning and come and help me,' you just scream."

2 On what would have been his 100th year, John Weinzweig will be receiving a "Centenary Celebration Concert" at U of T's Walter Hall on Friday, March 8, 2013. Admission is free — more info here.

Friday, January 28, 2011

Recording: Wallace Halladay

Artist: Wallace Halladay

Song: Grab It [excerpt]

Recorded at Toronto New Music Marathon, Yonge-Dundas Square, September 25, 2010.

Wallace Halladay - Grab It [excerpt]

My notes for this performance can be found here.

Festival: Toronto New Music Marathon

Toronto New Music Marathon

Yonge-Dundas Square. Saturday, September 25, 2010.

A cool afternoon, with big breezy gusts of wind and little interludes of warmth as the sun made occasional appearances. As a prelude to a day of puttering around, popped into Yonge-Dundas Square to catch the first part of a whole day's worth of programming at the third annual "New Music Marathon". An audacious bit of work to put some decidedly non-pop musics in front of the great unwashed, it was fairly quiet in the early going. Besides the usual supply of gawkers and passers-by, there were just a handful of hardy souls dragging metal chairs from the edge of the square over to spots in front of the stage, where the day's first ensemble was soundchecking. A few stalls at the back of the square contributed to the festival atmosphere.

First up on the day, and the thing I'd come by to check out was a performance of Terry Riley's "In C". One of the foundational pieces of minimalist music, "In C" is based on a flexible score — 53 "cells" that range from one to several bars of music. There is no fixed rule as to the number of repetitions a pattern may have — the musicians are to play as they see fit, listening carefully to their neighbours to not move too far ahead or behind. In this way, a delicate mesh of patterns moves in and out of focus, chance harmonies and counterpoints floating to the surface and dissipating. It's beautiful stuff.

As to how that would play in an uncontrolled environment, Contact Contemporary Music's Jerry Pergolesi sounded a bit unsure. After explaining the nature of the composition, he commented, "hopefully people will get into that." He also provided the "pulse", playing metronomic octave C notes on the marimba as a guide for all the other musicians. The ensemble was an ad hoc group of volunteers, with a dozen players including piano, toy pianos, marimba, accordion, hurdy gurdy and guitars — a smallish ensemble for "In C", although again, there's no predefined notion of what sort of ensemble this is designed for.

Once everyone on stage was settled in, the piece began in general unison before individual players started to feel their way along. After a couple minutes, the sax separated a bit and found some space and for a moment almost felt like it was soloing before ducking back into the surrounding instruments. The toy pianos on stage lent the proceedings a tinkly chiming sort of feel. Meanwhile, people walked by, a few stopping to check it out, some just perplexedly hurrying along. Wandering children improvised their own vocal contributions to the score, pitching in along to the whoosh of traffic and the occasional distant siren. And there amongst the to-ings and fro-ings of the square, there were a couple delicious moments of delicate beauty coming in and out of focus as the performers moved through the piece.

At about twenty-five minutes, it was actually turned out to be rather on the short side — a performance can last forty-five to ninety minutes. As far as these things go, this was a decent rendition, but not the most polished — the minimalist equivalent of a hearty pick-up basketball game. With the need for a quick setup and having the performers stretched out across the big outdoor stage, it looked like one result was that the players weren't hearing each other very well, which is crucial for this piece. But still, quite nice to close one's eyes, lean back and let this drift past like the cool September breeze.

Listen to an excerpt from this performance here.

After that, the between-set gap was filled in with some real-time found-sound sonic installation work by New Adventures in Sound Art. This involved mixing live input feeds from around the square into an ambient soup — soon the "walk sign is on in all directions!" announcement from the pedestrian scramble was being looped in around traffic noise and little snatches of conversation as Wallace Halladay began soundchecking on stage. Pretty cool — for my money, they could be doing this 24/7 in the square.

On the recommendation of Jonny Dovercourt (who had played guitar with the "In C" ensemble and would later take the stage for his own Hybrid Moments project), I stuck around to check out Wallace Halladay1 playing "Grab It" by Jacob ter Veldhuis. The melodic core was based on taped voices of death row prisoners, sometimes cut down to individual syllables, with the sax playing along to the melodies of the voice. As might be expected, this was not calm and mellifluous — more of an angry shout, words thrusting out like the quick stab of a spoon sharpened into a shiv.

Given the method, this brought to mind Charles Spearin's Happiness Project, which also explored the musicality of the human voice — but besides employing more of a cut-and-paste sensibility, the source material here gave this a different, angrier vibe. The whole piece ran just under ten minutes, and it was kinda awesome to hear the repeating tape loop of "grab it, motherfucker!" echoing through the square. Easy to relate to and entertaining — a perfect mix of avant-garde and accessible for an event like this.

Grab a sample of this performance here.

The Marathon went on all day til 10 p.m., and looking back over the programme now, there's some stuff that I would have really enjoyed hearing. But shopping and other wanderings beckoned, and I headed off. Anyone interested in a casual encounter with "new music" would do well to wander by themselves.2


1 The name didn't ring any bells with me, but it turns out I had seen Halladay playing previously at the fondly-remembered "Concrete Toronto Music" concert in 2008.

2 Those who dig getting things down in their daytimers well in advance should note that the next Marathon is scheduled for Saturday, September 3, 2011.