Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
Life

EMV Announces Transformative 2017/18 Season and Summer Bach Festival

Darpan News Desk, 28 Mar, 2017 11:42 AM
    Early Music Vancouver (EMV) announces its 2017 Vancouver Bach Festival and 2017/18 Main Season, bringing a staggering list of events to venues in and around Vancouver. Throughout the season, EMV will play host to a dazzling array of returning favourites and world-class artists, including Angela Hewitt, Gli Angeli Genève, Austria’s Ensemble Cinquecento, Karina Gauvin, Amanda Forsythe, Suzie LeBlanc, Charles Daniels, The Tallis Scholars, Stephen Stubbs and Monica Huggett. The festival and season will also introduce groundbreaking collaborations with an eclectic array of local organizations, including Vancouver Opera, Friends of Chamber Music, Vancouver Chopin Society, Vancouver Cantata Singers, and the Pacific Baroque Orchestra led by conductor Alexander Weimann. 
     
    Following its inaugural success last summer, the Vancouver Bach Festival returns August 1 through August 11 with fourteen concerts over two weeks mostly centered around Christ Church Cathedral in downtown Vancouver. The festival kicks off with an intriguing new perspective on Bach’s Cello Suites performed by star Canadian cellist Matt Haimovitz. This programme includes new “overtures” preceding each of the suites written by composers including Philip Glass and David Sanford. Similarly intimate and exciting festival offerings include Bach’s Italian Concerto and French Overture performed by harpsichordist Alexander Weimann, as well as virtuosic chamber cantatas performed by two of Europe’s emerging stars of the baroque singing world, American counter-tenor Terry Wey and Sweden’s Jenny Högström. Larger scale concerts include Songs of Religious Upheaval; an exquisite program of English Reformation polyphony from Austria’s superb Ensemble Cinquecento; and The Fountains of Israel, a transitional masterpiece written in 1623 by Johann Schein, a composer and organist who previously held Bach’s posting at the Thomas Kirche in Leipzig. 
     
    EMV will start the New Year with a duo of two-night collaborations: First, Friends of Chamber Music partner for a weekend of concerts exploring the legacy of the string quartet on period instruments. Then in February, Vancouver Chopin Society co-presents award-winning Polish pianist Janusz Olejniczak, in two recitals of repertoire by Chopin. 
     
    The spring season continues with a parade of internationally-renowned early and classical music greats, including soprano Suzie LeBlanc with Ensemble Constantinople; pianist Angela Hewitt performing The Goldberg Variations in a continuation of EMV’s multi-year “Goldberg Experience” project; The Tallis Scholars recognizing the centenary of WWI with a programme entitled War and Peace; and soprano Karina Gauvin performing Baroque opera arias from 18th century St. Petersburg in EMV’s first co-production with Vancouver Opera. 
     
    Early Music Vancouver subscribers can attend any four Vancouver Bach Festival or 2017/18 Season performances for the price of three. All subscriptions including more than four concerts also enjoy a 25% discount. Subscriptions are available online at earlymusic.bc.ca/tickets/subscriptions/ or by phone through the Chan Centre Box Office at 604.822.2697.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    How To Use Your Voice To Get The Dream Job

    How To Use Your Voice To Get The Dream Job
    Instead of resorting to a conventional written resume, sending your prospective employer a videotape recording of your professional credentials may increase your chances of getting hired, new research shows.

    How To Use Your Voice To Get The Dream Job

    Robots Programmed To Mimic Actions Of Child To Calm Little Patients In Alberta

    Robots Programmed To Mimic Actions Of Child To Calm Little Patients In Alberta
    CALGARY — It’s a robot designed to bring comfort to little patients at Alberta Children’s Hospital. Four robots are being used to calm children getting injections or other medical procedures by giving high fives, telling jokes and stories or playing music.

    Robots Programmed To Mimic Actions Of Child To Calm Little Patients In Alberta

    Unemployment Can Change Your Personality

    Unemployment Can Change Your Personality
    Unemployment could be a vicious cycle. It can change peoples' core personality -- making some less conscientious, agreeable and open -- which may make it difficult for them to find new jobs, says a study.

    Unemployment Can Change Your Personality

    Check Partner's Fingers As You Kneel To Propose

    Check Partner's Fingers As You Kneel To Propose
    Have a good look at your partner's fingers during the ring ceremony as men with short index fingers and long ring fingers are nicer towards women, says a study.

    Check Partner's Fingers As You Kneel To Propose

    'Indo-European' Languages First Emerged 6,500 Years Ago

    'Indo-European' Languages First Emerged 6,500 Years Ago
    Using data from over 150 languages, linguists from University of California, Berkeley have found that "Indo-European languages" originated 5,500-6,500 years ago on the Pontic-Caspian steppe stretching from Moldova, Ukraine to Russia and western Kazakhstan.

    'Indo-European' Languages First Emerged 6,500 Years Ago

    Women Doctors At Higher Divorce Risk

    Women Doctors At Higher Divorce Risk
    Female physicians are approximately one and a half times more likely to be divorced than male physicians of a similar age, says a study.

    Women Doctors At Higher Divorce Risk