TORONTO — This year, the Toronto Music Garden
celebrates its 10th anniversary of outstanding free
performances in a unique setting, and popular garden tours.
Summer Music in the Garden 2009 will see the return of many
favourite Music Garden performers from the past 10 seasons,
while more than 30 artists will make their Music Garden debut.
From June 28-September 20, Summer Music in the Garden
presents 20 free outdoor concerts and dance performances
involving more than 90 artists in total. This year’s eclectic
lineup includes five dance performances, ranging from Korean to
Baroque to contemporary. Two dances will be world premieres: one
by choreographer Carol Anderson featuring dancer Claudia Moore
on Sept. 3, and another by Andrea Nann Dreamwalker Dance Company
with multimedia composer Tom Kuo, on Sept. 10.
The concerts take place on Thursday evenings at 7pm and
on most Sundays at 4pm. The free tours of the Toronto
Music Garden, led by volunteers from the Toronto Botanical
Garden, return for another season, taking place on Wednesdays
at 11am, June 3-September 30, and on Thursdays before
every concert at 5:30pm from July 2-September 10. Admission to
the park and all its programming is free.
Both Summer Music in the Garden and the guided tours are
produced by Harbourfront Centre in partnership with
City of Toronto Parks, Forestry and Recreation, and with the
generous support of Toronto Culture, Margaret & Jim Fleck,
George Dembroski, David Graham, Sandra & Jim Pitblado and
William & Phyllis Waters. Renowned Canadian composer Ann Southam
has generously commissioned the new dance by Carol Anderson to
music by J.S. Bach (Sept. 3); Harbourfront Centre has
commissioned Leika, by Andrea Nann Dreamwalker Dance Company and
multimedia artist Tom Kuo, which receives its world premiere on
Sept. 10. Summer Music in the Garden is curated for Harbourfront
Centre by Artistic Director Tamara Bernstein.
The Toronto Music Garden is a City of Toronto park, located on
the waterfront at 475 Queens Quay West (on the water’s edge
side), between Bathurst Street and Spadina Avenue. The Garden is
wheelchair-accessible and open year-round. For information on
the Toronto Music Garden and its current programmes, the public
can call Harbourfront Centre, 416-973-4000 or visit
harbourfrontcentre.com/torontomusicgarden. For information
on other City of Toronto parks and gardens, the public can call
416-338-0338 or visit toronto.ca/parks_gardens.
10TH ANNIVERSARY SUMMER MUSIC IN THE GARDEN SCHEDULE
All concerts are approximately one hour long (except where
noted) and take place weather permitting. Concerts are cancelled
in the event of inclement weather.
Sunday, June 28, 4pm
Shauna and Friends
Renowned Canadian cellist Shauna Rolston leads six
outstanding student cellists from the University of Toronto's
Faculty of Music in music by Elgar, Massenet, Kreisler and
others, arranged for cello solo, duo, and ensemble. As a
prelude, Barbara Croall (cedar flutes and First Nation
drum) and Anita McAlister (trumpet and conch shell)
perform Croall’s Calling from Different Directions, which
was composed for the Music Garden in summer 2008. Calling
from Different Directions is a short, arresting piece that
invokes the four sacred directions, bringing together
instruments from different cultural "directions": trumpet, conch
shell, traditional cedar flutes and First Nations hand drum.
Thursday, July 2, 7pm
Samulnori!
This exuberant Toronto ensemble returns with traditional Korean
drumming and dance—rooted in nature; transplanted to Canada.
Sunday, July 5, 4pm
Orfea and the Golden Harp
Theatre Cotton Robes presents their delightful adaptation
of the Orfeo myth for the whole family. A little girl shoulders
her golden harp and journeys to the Underworld to bring her
beloved grandfather back to life; along the way we hear music
from 400 years of opera, including Monteverdi, Mozart and
Offenbach. Performed by baritone Lawrence Cotton, soprano
Brooke Dufton and pianist Rachad Feizoullaev. (For
information about Theatre Cotton Robes, visit
www.theatrecottonrobes.com.)
Thursday, July 9, 7pm
Quartets with a Past
The Kirby String Quartet presents four classical works
that look back to earlier composers: Beethoven’s Quartet Op.
74, Mendelssohn’s Capriccio Op. 8, Brahms’ Quartet
Op. 67, third movement, and Stravinsky’s neo-classical
Concertino. Aisslinn Nosky and Julia Wedman
(violins), Max Mandel (viola), Carina Reeves
(cello).
Thursday, July 16, 7pm
Moonlight, Mountains and Flowing Streams: Voices of Ancient
China
The China Court Trio performs music from the Yuan, Ming
and Qing dynasties. Wen Zhao, (pipa – Chinese lute),
Yongli Xue, (zheng – Chinese zither), Yu Cheng Zhang
(bowled clay flute and vertical flute). (For information about
Wen Zhao, visit wendyzhao.com.)
Sunday, July 19, 4pm
Does This Drum Make My Brass Sound Big?
The brass and percussion sections of the National Youth
Orchestra of Canada return with a delightful, varied
programme that showcases outstanding young Canadian musicians.
(For information about the National Youth Orchestra of Canada,
visit nyoc.org.)
Thursday, July 23, 7pm
Another knock at the door
Toronto’s Shiraz Ensemble presents a heady brew of
Persian art music and original compositions. Yashar Salek
(Daf/Dayereh), Nima Rahmani (Santoor), Saeed Kamjoo
(Kamanche), Araz Salek (Tar), Shahin Fayaz (Rabab).
A co-presentation with Small World Music.
Sunday, July 26, 4pm
Oiseaux Interurbains/Migratory Songflutes
Alison Melville performs acoustic and electronic music
from the 12th to 21st centuries, for various flutes, recorders
and recorded sound, including works by Bach, Telemann, Hildegard
of Bingen, Jacob van Eyck, Peter Hannan, Linda C. Smith, Ben
Grossman and the performer. (For information about Alison
Melville, visit alisonmelville.com.)
Thursday, July 30, 7pm
Behind the Masques
The period musicians of Toronto Masque Theatre, with
renowned Montreal dancer-choreographer Marie-Nathalie
Lacoursière, reveal different faces of baroque
dance—courtly, theatrical, grotesque. Lacoursière will also
perform several baroque dances reflected in the design of the
Music Garden. "[Marie-Nathalie Lacoursière] has set a new
standard for historical dance in Toronto."—Robert Everett-Green,
reviewing Toronto Masque Theatre in the Globe and Mail,
April 25, 2009. (For information about Toronto Masque Theatre,
visit torontomasquetheatre.ca.)
Thursday, August 6, 7pm
Strong and Free
True North Brass returns with a programme that will
delight and dazzle. Raymond Tizzard and Richard
Sandals (trumpets), Joan Watson (French horn),
Alastair Kay (trombone) and Scott Irvine (tuba). (For
information about True North Brass, visit truenorthbrass.com.)
Sunday, August 9, 4pm
Passage to India
Singer Bageshree Vaze and tabla virtuoso Vineet Viyas
perform classical North Indian ragas, along with
classically-based songs from early Bollywood. (For information
about Bageshree Vaze, visit bageshree.com and for information
about Vineet Viyas, visit vineetvyas.com.)
Thursday, August 13, 7pm
Coming out of Hayd’n
The Cecilia String Quartet performs the Quartet in C
Major, Op. 74 No. 1, by the "father of the string quartet,"
Joseph Haydn, and the sparkling, newly discovered String
Quartet No. 1 in E-flat Major by French composer Theodore
Dubois (1837-1924). Sarah Nematallah and Min-Jeong Koh
(violins), Caitlin Boyle (viola) and Rebecca Wenham
(cello). (For information about the Cecilia String Quartet,
visit ceciliastringquartet.com.)
Sunday, August 16, 4pm
Utopian Voices
In the early baroque, fans of the renaissance cornetto and the
newly perfected violin duked it out over which instrument was
closest to the human voice. Happily, we don’t have to choose
when the virtuosi of FOLIA—baroque violinist Linda
Melsted and cornettist Kiri Tollaksen—perform
glorious music by Castello, Frescobaldi, Gabrieli and others.
With Borys Medicky, harpsichord.
Thursday, August 20, 7pm
"My Unrest": Yiddish Songs for a New Day
Grammy-nominated singer Adrienne Cooper (New York) and
world-renowned pianist Marilyn Lerner (Toronto) perform
music from their new CD: settings of Yiddish modernist poems on
love, longing, war and migration by contemporary composers
including Sarah Gordon, Frank London, Fima Chorny and the
performers. (For information about Marilyn Lerner, visit
marilynlerner.com.)
Sunday, August 23, 4pm
Accordions for a Weill
Four virtuoso accordionists—Ina Henning, Eugene Laskiewicz,
Joseph Macerollo and Alexander Sevastien—perform a
wide-ranging programme of music, from Bach to Piazzola.
Mezzo-soprano Ali Garrison joins Henning in songs by Kurt
Weill, and accompanies dancer-choreographer Claudia Moore
in Moore’s touching dance, For Heddy, to the Brecht/Weill
song, Nana’s Lied. "Heddy was my dear grandma from Germany who
loved parties, was a fabulous cook and worked at the Broadway
Market in Buffalo. She lived to be 97. Nana's Song makes me
think of her and inspired me to make this dance."—Claudia
Moore
Thursday, August 27, 7pm
Echoes of Ancient Boundaries
In ancient Japan, village boundaries extended as far as the
sound of their taiko drums carried. The thrilling sounds of
Toronto’s outstanding taiko ensemble Nagata Shachu
(formerly known as the Kiyoshi Nagata Ensemble) transcend the
boundaries of East and West, past and present. (For information
about Nagata Shachu, visit nagatashachu.com.)
Sunday, August 30, 4pm
Percussion from a Suitcase
Find out what happens when a percussionist—the spectacular
Aiyun Huang of Montreal—creates a programme for which all
the instruments fit into her suitcase! Music by Matthew Burtner,
Alvin Lucier, Javier Alvarez, Roberto Sierra, Georges Aperghis
and John Adams. (For information about Aiyun Huang, visit
aiyunhuang.com.)
Thursday, September 3, 7pm
Bach at Dusk – With Claudia
Winona Zelenka continues her journey through Bach’s six
suites for solo cello. This summer, she performs the Suite
No. 4 in E-flat Major for solo cello; for the last three
movements of the piece (Sarabande, Bourree I and II, and Gigue),
Ms. Zelenka is joined by dancer Claudia Moore in the
world premiere of a new work by choreographer Carol
Anderson. The dance has been generously commissioned by
renowned Canadian composer Ann Southam.
Please note: This is a 30-minute concert due to early sunset.
(For information about Winona Zelenka, visit winonazelenka.com.
(For more information on Claudia Moore, visit
danceumbrella.net/clients_moonhorse.htm.)
Thursday, September 10, 7pm
Leika
In a new work commissioned by Harbourfront Centre, Andrea
Nann Dreamwalker Dance Company and multimedia composer
Tom Kuo reveal hidden secrets of the Music Garden through
music, dance and interactive play. Please note: This is a
30-minute concert due to early sunset. Pre-performance audience
participation encouraged from 6:30-7pm. (For information about
Andrea Nann, visit dreamwalkerdance.com.)
Sunday September 20, 4pm
The Sanssouci Quartet
This exciting new Boston-Toronto quartet on period instruments
performs Boccherini’s Quartet in D Major and Mozart’s Quartet
in D Minor, K. 421. Abigail Karr and Karina Fox
(violins), Sarah Darling (viola), Kate Haynes
(cello). And to close: a reprise of Barbara Croall’s
Calling from Different Directions, performed by Anita
McAlister and the composer. (See June 28 concert.)
TORONTO MUSIC GARDEN TOURS
Guided tours begin at 11am on Wednesdays: June 3, 10, 17, 24;
July 1, 8, 15, 22, 29; August 5, 12, 19, 26; September 2, 9, 16,
23, 30.
Pre-concert guided tours begin at 5:30pm on Thursdays: July 2,
9, 16, 23; August 6, 13, 30, 27; September 3, 10.
Visitors are invited to take a free 45-minute walking
tour led by Toronto Botanical Garden tour guides. Tours
start in the west end of the Garden in the Prelude section.
Self-guided 70-minute audio tours (English only) hosted by Yo-Yo
Ma and Julie Moir Messervy are also available for a rental fee
of $5 (free rentals for children). Private group tours are also
available ($5 per person). For reservations, call 416-397-1366
or visit torontobotanicalgarden.ca.
TORONTO MUSIC GARDEN BACKGROUND
The Toronto Music Garden is one of Toronto’s most enchanted
locations. The Garden was conceived by internationally renowned
cellist Yo-Yo Ma and designed by Boston-based landscape
artist Julie Moir Messervy. Its design interprets Bach’s
Suite No. 1 in G Major for Unaccompanied Cello, with each
dance movement within the suite corresponding to a different
section of the Garden: Prelude, Allemande, Courante, Sarabande,
Menuett and Gigue. A unique and magical venue, the Toronto Music
Garden is the only garden/park in the world known to be directly
inspired by a specific piece of music.
The Toronto Music Garden opened in 1999; concerts have been held
there every summer since 2000. Since 2001, the concerts have
been produced by Harbourfront Centre in partnership with City of
Toronto, under the artistic direction of Tamara Bernstein.
The Garden itself is lovingly maintained by City of Toronto
Parks, Forestry and Recreation, as well as volunteers.
The Toronto Music Garden, located on Queens Quay West at the
foot of Spadina Avenue, is easy to reach by public transit. From
Spadina Station take the 510 (Union Station) streetcar south.
From Union Station take the Harbourfront LRT (509 or 510
streetcar) going west from inside Union Station. Call the
Toronto Transit Commission at 416-393-4636 for transit
information.
FOCUS: Shift
Harbourfront Centre wants you to shift gears.
What does it mean to change your perspectives on idea, explore
new ways of approaching an old notion or to literally shift
gears? From June to September, Harbourfront Centre explores the
idea of "shift" throughout its programming. How does an
ever-changing culture influence the lives and experiences of
artists? What happens when we view the world from a different
vantage point? What can be learned from migration, relocation
and transformation?
Harbourfront Centre: Change perspectives.
SHIFT is part of an ongoing focus in programming. Our Lens. Your
View.
|
|