Category Archives: Music

Kitsilano Showboat has great summer show line up with lots of cultural diversity

I saw a bagpiper playing beside Cornwall Ave. by the Kitsilano Showboat on Tuesday evening. 

I walked back to discover there were Scottish dancers from the Stave Falls Scottish Dancers from Mission BC.  Imagine my surprise to find a dancer with both Japanese and Scottish heritage.

It was fun to watch the dancing.  There was a sword dance, country dances, and even some vaudeville numbers.  It's always amusing to watch the little  ones dancing and trying to keep in time.  The older dancers are much more competent and doing well for a non-competitive dance group, so you know they genuinely are dancing for the love of the activity.

After the show I talked with Barry Leinbach, executive for the Kitsilano Showboat Society.  Barry was MCing the event as he is taking over from his mother Bea Leinbach who has helmed the Kitsilano Showboat for decades.  Beatrice Leinbach has volunteered her time to this venerable Vancouver summer cultural institution for over 60 years, and has recived the Order of BC and the Order of Canada.

I used to watch the shows at the Kitsilano Showboat when I was a young child in the '60's, when my parents would bring our family down to Kitsilano Beach.  It was always amazing watching the performers on stage, wiht the ocean and mountains in the background.

The Showboat season only started on Monday.  Thank goodness the weather has been good.

On Tuesday, The Vancouver Firefighters Band performed with firefighter/opera singer Andy Greenwood.  But sadly I was unable to attend.  Andy has been a friend of my girlfriend's parents for the last few years.  It's amazing what you can find when you walk around in your neighborhood.

Check for upcoming FREE shows starting at 7pm
There are lots of ethnic cultural groups performing and even some surprises!
www.kitsilanoshowboat.com

Music for a New World special concert April 20 at Centennial Theatre in North Vancouver

This sounds like an incredible concert!  World Music in a bottle marked Vancouver World Music Collective.

And I know and have performed with many of the featured musicians.  Silk Road Music's Qiu Xia He and Andre Thibault have performed at Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner & First Night events since 2004.  In the past few years I have become a big fan or Orchid Ensemble's Lan Tung, as she plays her erhu.

Pepe Danza plays with Andre and Qiu Xia in the group Joutou which mixes French Canadian and Celtic with Chinese music styles.  I love Amy Stephen's accordion playing with Mad Pudding. And then add in all the other brilliant performers and styles from all over the world such as Khac Chi's Vietnamese stylings or the latin and african rhythms of their fellow World Music Collective musicians.

Too bad, I can't skip dragon boat practice on Sunday to attend.  I'd be there otherwise!

newworld.jpg

Music for a New World


Sunday, April 20


2 pm

From the Centennial Theatre website

This incredible collaboration brings together 17 of Vancouver’s best
world music artists in a one of a kind partnership in which influences
from around the world mix into a melting pot of sights and sounds.
Centred on a spirit of cooperation and collaboration, Music for a New World celebrates the diversity of world music.

Members include Amir Haghighi, Jou Tou, Khac Chi, the Masabo Culture
Company, Orchid Ensemble, Silk Road and Tzimmes. Together their music
draws from Quebecois, Uruguayan, Irish, Chinese, Vietnamese, West
African and Jewish roots. Performances include everything from ancient
traditional music, to jazz, Celtic, several Latin styles, contemporary
songs, as well as new music. It is an astounding collection of
experience and ability.

Join the celebration and experience the diversity and excitement of this unique musical event!

www.vancouverworldmusic.org

Music for a New World is presented in cooperation with the Vancouver International Children's Festival  http://www.childrensfestival.ca/

Music for a New World is presented in association with the
North Shore Multicultural Society    www.nsms.ca

Check out the Vancouver Sun Article:

Eclectic offering lets kids hear world music

Sunday afternoon's Music for A New World project, spearheaded by the Vancouver World Music Collective at North Vancouver's Centennial Theatre,

Heather Pawsey “knocks 'em dead” singing soprano at Dead Serious concert


Soprano Heather Pawsey and pianist Rachel Iwassa pose with Todd Wong after a successful “Dead Serious” concert – photo Tim Pawsey

Ever attended a concert at a funeral home?  Or how about the Vancouver Crematorium?

In the latest venue for the New Music in New Places, opera soprano Heather Pawsey brought the theme of death and dying out into the open.  No bagpipes playing Amazing Grace.  But pianist Rachel Iwasaa accompanied Pawsey, as did flautist Kathryn Cernauskas.

It was a very interesting evening, full of surprises.  Guests first met at the Hamilton-Harron Funeral Home at Fraser St. and 38th Ave.  We then walked up Fraser St. across from the Mountain View cemetary, to 41st Ave.  It was a chilly evening, as we crossed Fraser, and made our way to the Vancouver Memorial Services and Crematorium.

Atmosphere was created in the service rooms.  The accoustics were good, and it seemed like any concert setting in a Church.  Ushers were dressed in robes.  One even wore gloves with skeleton designs.  Hand shakers created a bone-rattling sound, as the musicians entered the stage area.  Pawsey sang two new songs by composer Leslie Uyeda, based on poetry by Joy Kogawa: Zen Graveyard; and Stations of Angels.  Cernauskas accompanied on bass flute for this world premiere.

After these two songs, we exited through a different door, and walked downstairs past memorial places for urns.  Seeing the flowers and pictures honouring deceased loved ones gave the evening a thoughtful dynamic.  We filed out the back door and up some stairs, coming beside still more memorial plaques along the walls of the building.  Next we walked south through the cemetary, then East towards Fraser St.

Back at the Hamilton-Harron Funeral Home, we viewed some of the artist displays by S.D. Holman.  There was a unique altar display featuring tiny sugar sculptures in the shapes of human skulls, apparently a tradition for Mexican Day of the Dead celebrations.

In the service room, draperies hung down the aisle along with artworks suspended from the rafters.  It all spoke to images of death and transition.  The piano was draped over with a white cloth.

Rachel Iwaasa entered the room, and started playing piano.  A disembodied voice was heard.  Where was it coming from?  From the piano.

After the song, Heather Pawsey revealed herself, by lifting off the white drapery off herself and the piano.

The evening followed with a variety of songs, some solemn, some joyous, and some like Rodney Sharman's “Crossing Over”- obviously campy.   Composer Chris Sivak set the Phyllis Webb poem “Treblinka Gas Chamber” to music for another world premiere.  My favorite musical piece was the Kurt Weill song, “Complainte de la Seine”, sung in French as was “Mon Cadavre est doux comme un gant” by Francis Poulenc, with words by Louise de Vilmorin.

The final highlight was another world premiere, The Gashlycrumb Tinies by Edward Gorey, set to music by Robert Ursan.  It is a musical version of the macabre ABC book by Gorey, in which goes through an alphabet of children's names, who each strangely die untimely deaths.

Truely, an interesting evening.

Below is an e-mail from Heathere Pawsey, performer and producer of the Dead Serious event

Hey Todd,

Thanks for the great write-up. You really captured all the elements of what we
were trying to achieve with the concert (profundity, fun, reflection, remembrance).
I'm so glad you enjoyed it.

I think that's the first time I've been able to present THREE world premieres in
a single concert. As you know, I'm very passionate about promoting the
creative work of Canada's fantastic composers. You know Leslie, I believe.
She is one of the most profound and brilliant composers in this country - period.

Chris Sivak is a 4th year student at UBC; I met him when he was attending Cap
College and writing music for some of my singing students. He wrote "Treblinka
Gas Chamber" as a gift for me; I didn't know he had done it until I found the
score in my mailbox at the college.

Rob is an old friend since Grade 9. We toured the prairies together singing with
Prairie Opera, and one year we premiered his children's opera The Snow Queen
and toured it (it was also broadcast by CBC Radio). I was very honoured to be
able to sing the music of three composers I know and respect so highly.

Mined Over Matter coming up on March 16 at the BC Museum of Mining! I'll let
you know more details. Off to the first workshop of Veda Hille's new children's
opera Jack Pine for Vancouver Opera (and rehearsing Fidelio in the evenings).
Life is never DULL!

Cheers
Heather

Chinese New Year week… Gung Haggis Fat Choy style

It's Chinese New Year week….

here are some FUN events this week…. after recovery from Gung Haggis Fat Choy Chinese Robbie Burns Dinner recovery….

Tuesday February 5, 2008 – 6:00 PM

CITY COOKS with Simi Sara

Channel 13 in Metro Vancouver
Our cooking dragon boat chef Dan Seto (Chinese Canadian Historical Society of B.C.)

  1. Lotus Root Soup
  2. Steamed Pork with Salt Fish
  3. Green Beans with Fooyi Bean Cake

Check out
TUESDAY to Saturday FEB 5 – 9th
BANANA BOYS
Firehall Theatre
The fun play by Leon Aureas, based on the Terry Woo novel
Back from a hit run last year… manic comedy and Asian identity… or Asian confusion.

THURSDAY Feb 7
CHINESE NEW YEAR DAY
– Kilts Night at Doolin's Irish Pub
FREE pint of Guinness if you wear a kilt.
8:00pm – Raphael to greet you.
Hockey game starts a 7:00 pm – expect music by Halifax Wharf Rats to begin afterwards around 9:30

FRIDAY Feb 7 – 16
THE QUICKIE
– Playwrights theatre centre on Granville Island
– this is the play excerpted at Gung Haggis dinner
– this is by the same group that did Twisting Fortunes last year

purchase tickets online via PayPal at www.scriptingaloud.ca/quickie.

Tickets
are selling fast, especially for the Friday, February 8 show.  Don't
miss it. Last year, seats sold out 36 hours in advance.

Friday and Saturday Feb 9 & 10
OOZOOMAY! UZUME TAIKO
with special guest Ben Rogalsky
Japanese Taiko drums with a multi-instrumentalist who plays accordion along with mandolin, tenor banjo and Javanese gamelan  – how can Gung Haggis not resist???

Norman Rothstein Theatre
950 West 41st Ave.

SUNDAY  FEBRUARY 10,
CHINATOWN
NEW YEAR PARADE

12 noon

Place: Parade starts from the Millennium Gate (Pender
and Taylor St.), winds through Pender, Gore and Keefer.


Remember to bring your camera along with family and friends!


Visit
www.cbavancouver.ca
for more info.

Poster


Flyer front
/ back


Sunday February 10

CHINESE NEW YEAR CONCERT
Dr. Sun Yat Sen Garden Courtyard
(part of the 2010 Cultural Olympiad)
10:30 -11:30
1:30 – 3:30

– featuring Silk Road Music
+ Uzume Taiko
+ Loretta Leung Dancers
+ many many more!!!

download the program: click here

http://www.silkroadmusic.ca/sitefiles/olympiad.htm

DEAD SERIOUS
at CHAPEL ARTS
(CANCELLED due to illness)

2:30pm
featuring soprano Heather Pawsey and pianist Rachel Iwassa

but see them:

Friday, February 15 concert of DEAD Serious 
7:30 p.m. at Vancouver Memorial Services and Crematorium / Hamilton-Harron Funeral
Home, 5390 Fraser Street) will TAKE PLACE AS SCHEDULED.
If you would like to make reservations,
please call 604-325-7441.

Italian Girl delights opera audience – but BC's best kept secret is bass Randall Jakobsh as Mustafa


Italian Girl in Algiers

Vancouver Opera


Queen Elizabeth Theatre


January 26, 29. 31 and February 2nd 2008

An Italian girl in a Muslim harem?  A Korean soprano wife singing in
Italian to her German-Canadian bass husband?  Opera is so very
multicultural, and Vancouver Opera's new production of Rossini's
“Italian Girl in Algiers” is a delight!

Can you imagine anything crazier than one of the opera's stars, Randall Jakobsh playing Mustafa, dancing around “naked” behind a towel, or being “powdered” by his servants while singing to a beautiful Rossini score?

I have always loved Rossini's music.  Many generations have grown up
identifying Rossini's “William Tell Overture” as “The Lone Ranger
Theme” – the musicality burned into our brains.  The Italian
Girl in Algiers also has many memorable passages that dusted off my
early memories of listening to one of the essential classical music
collections – Rossini Overtures.

Vancouver Opera's new production of “Italian Girl In Algiers”
originally presented in 1813, is now set during the roaring '20's, a
time of mad-cap comedy described as Emily Earhart meets the Marx
Brothers.  This sets the stage for the audience to accept the absurd
comedic plots and situations that are to come, and all accompanied by a
gorgeous Rossini musical score.

Now imagine sitting in the audience, when a 1920's bi-plane flies over
your head, then sputters, crash landing on stage of the Queen Elizabeth
Theatre.  It actually happens… and the audience claps enthusiastically!

The opera opens with a super huge gigantic book on stage, that opens up to reveal the set design – the palace of the Governor of Algiers.  Just like a bedtime story,  the message is this: don't take this opera seriously… sit back and enjoy the story.

The Governor Mustafa has grown tired of  his wife Elvira, and thinks that an exotic Italian girl will bring him happiness.  He decides to send his wife off with Lindoro, an Italian slave at his court captured only 3 months earlier by Mustafa's pirates.  Suddenly, an airplane crashes, Isabella is looking for her lost love Lindoro.  The pirates take this “Italian Girl” to Mustafa who is instantly infatuated with Isabella, who is shocked to see her beloved Lindoro, who is supposedly being married off to Elvira, who is still in love with Mustafa. This is a comedy of love infatuations and a battle of the sexes begins.  Oh… and then there is Taddeo, the would-be Italian suitor of Isabella, during Lindor's absence. He accompanied Isabella in her search for Lindoro… what a stand up guy! Not!

Soprano Sandra Piques Eddy is perfect as a Katherine Hepburnish, pants wearing, independent woman named Isabella looking for her lost love Lindora, played by lyric tenor John Tessier, who was captured by pirates. Their voices are wonderful.  But despite this ensemble cast, Eddy clearly shines the brightest, as she loves her role as an Isabella who can tame men with a look or a wave.

Randall Jakobsh plays Mustafa, the governor of Algiers, who is instantly smitten by the vivaciously exotic Isabella. This is his debut performance with the Vancouver Opera, and his first appearance as Mustafa.  It's a perfect fit, and expect Jakobsh to be getting calls from around the world for this Rossini play as he brings so much life into a this hilarious role.

Sookhyung Park, plays Elvira the Governor's wife that he is handing her over to Lindora, to make way for this new “Italian Girl” to be added to his harem.  The Korean born Park, balances both her anger and love for Mustafa, and learns from Isabella what it takes to properly “train a husband.”

Rounding out the cast is Hugh Russell as Taddeo, who brings additional comic relief.  Mustafa wants to impress Isabella, and so he names Taddeo as Grand Kaimakan (a lieutenant position amongst his followers).  Taddeo meanwhile does everything he can to thwart Mustafa's advances on Isabella.

But who is Randall Jakobsh, and why should BC opera goers be proud of him?

Imagine a younger, sexier, slimmer Ben Heppner singing Bass – and born and rasied in Vernon BC.  This is Randall.

If there ever was a role made for Randall Jakobsh to demonstrate his abilities, this might be it.  It allows Randall to be charming and sexy, but this also pushes him in his first bufo-comedy role.  He shared with me that this is the hardest role he has ever done, and he was quite anxious about his Vancouver Opera debut when I talked with him on Boxing Day in Vernon. 

But after watching Jakobsh on stage in not much more than a “towel” while singing in a “bath” while the audience laughed at the unexpected rubber ducky, we can all be assured that Randall's star is rising.  He was calm, and looked to be having fun in his role, even when not singing.  He asked what we thought of his “dancing bear” as he hammed it up on stage singing about his infatuation with the Italian Girl, while his slaves powdered him and washed him “behind the towel.”  I had to laugh because when Randall had come over to the house to visit in Vernon, it had been us sitting in the hot tub, and inviting him to come join us.

Vancouver Chinese Music Ensemble plays with guitarist/composer John Oliver

Vancouver Chinese Music Ensemble plays with guitarist/composer John Oliver


[photo of musicians]

Vancouver Chinese Music Ensemble
Autumn Concert

Friday, November 9, 2007 at 8pm
Norman Rothstein Theatre
950 West 41st Avenue (at Oak)

What happens when you take 5 very talented classically trained Chinese musicians and mix them up with composer/guitarist John Oliver, who likens his style to “an experimental mix inspired by John McLaughlin, Pat Methany
Group, Robert Fripp, and World Music, processed through computer
granular synthesis?”

All
these musicians are incredible solo artists in their own right. 
VCME leader and erhu player Ji-Rong Huang can often be found sometimes
at the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Gardens playing his “chinese violin” with
accompanying tracks on a cd player.  One time I discovered him
playing Hungarian Dance #5 – and I thought it would be great if we
could play together if I brought over my accordion.

Zhi Min Yu
is also the duet partner of John Oliver for their guitar / roan duo
when they perform together as the Oliver Yu Duo.  Zhi Min has also
performed with the Silk Road Music Ensemble and appeared in the CBC
television performance special “Gung Haggis Fat Choy” in 2004 and 2005.

Zhong
Xi Wu plays suona – an ancient Chinese reed pipe instrument.  But
I have also seen Zhong Xi perform bagpipes, and he performed in 2005 at
Gung Haggis Fat Choy with his wife Karen Wong.

Also performing
as part of VCME are Wei Li on zheng (Chinese zither), Qing Hua Zhen on
yangqin (Chinese hammered dulcimer) and Angela Wang on pipa (Chinese
lute) and vocal.

Guest artists artists include Kathryn Cernauskas (who performed at last
year's Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner) on flute, Laurence Mollerup on bass
and Bruce Henczel on percussion and marimba + John Oliver on MIDI
guitar.

Check out these amazing musicians and find out how East-West musical fusion blends with traditional Chinese music!

Info:
(604) 683-8240
zhaozhao @ dkam.ca

Robert Plant and Alison Krauss: What if Led Zeppelin went bluegrass?

Robert Plant and Alison Krauss: What if Led Zeppelin went bluegrass?

I grew up on Led Zeppellin Music… particularly LZ IV with Stairway to Heaven, Black Dog and Rock and Roll.  Over the last 10 years, I have listened to a lot of Alison KraussI saw her performance in Vancouver two years ago with Union Station, and also her performance with the “Down From the Mountain” tour of the music and musicians from the movie soundtrack for “Oh Brother Where Art Thou?” 

But Robert Plant, lead singer for Led Zeppellin with Alison Krauss, and produced by T-Bone Burnett?  Did somebody slip some magic mushrooms into the sweet potatoe pie?

This is definitely crossing musical boundaries, as well as both sides of the Atlantic.  Lots of blues and rockabilly riffs here.  I have been listening to it everyday since it was released on Tuesday Oct 23.  Check out this YouTube video:

YouTube – Alison Krauss and Robert Plant Duet for

A look at the making of Raising Sand, a duet collaboration
8 min – Rated 5.0 out of 5.0
www.youtube.com/watch?v=g5KF4dKq-6I