Cultural return | The already classic moments of the next six months

Montreal classical music lovers will have no shortage of choices this year. The Press offers you an overview of what we won’t want to miss until the sunny days of summer arrive.




A piano giant at Pro Musica

PHOTO ARCHIVES AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

Pianist Fazil Say

Pro Musica made a big splash by opening its season (henceforth only winter) with a recital by the immense Turkish pianist Fazil Say. Music lovers who go to hear him at the Pierre-Mercure Hall on Sunday, January 21 (3 p.m.) will have the chance to hear this true force of nature in the Sonata no 23, Appassionata », by Beethoven, the Liebestod by Wagner (transcribed by Liszt), a selection of Preludes by Debussy, but also one of his own works – Say is an experienced composer. Note that the latter will also occur in the Concerto in G by Ravel on April 10 and 11 with the Quebec Symphony Orchestra.

Swedish intrigues at the Montreal Opera

PHOTO ARCHIVES THE PRESS

Canadian soprano of Lebanese origin Joyce El-Khoury

Announced in 2015, the operatic version of the piece Christine, the boy queen (2012) by Michel Marc Bouchard will finally be premiered this winter at the Opéra de Montréal (February 3 to 11) with music by Julien Bilodeau, who collaborated with the playwright for The beauty of the world (2022). It is the soprano Joyce El-Khoury, the Madama Butterfly of last May, who will play the famous “King of Sweden” (as the androgynous sovereign was called). The baritone Étienne Dupuis will be his cousin – and successor – Karl Gustav. Director Angela Konrad will be at the helm, alongside Jean-Marie Zeitouni and the Montreal Symphony Orchestra.

The new “Million Dollar Trio” in Montreal

PHOTO JOSEP MOLINA, PROVIDED BY THE ARTISTS

Isabelle Faust, center, accompanied by cellist Jean-Guihen Queyras and pianist Alexander Melnikov

It happens that immense soloists come together in a trio on a more or less lasting basis. We think of the legendary “Million Dollar Trio” formed in the 1950s by Jascha Heifetz, Arthur Rubinstein and Gregor Piatigorsky. We are not far from it with the violinist Isabelle Faust, the pianist Alexander Melnikov and the cellist Jean-Guihen Queyras, three champions of their respective instruments who have brought us some of the most exhilarating chamber music records of recent years . They will be at Bourgie Hall on February 12 (after having played the day before at the Club musical de Québec) in the Threesomeo 2 of Schumann, the Epigrams of Carter and the Threesomeo 1 by Brahms.

Two French requiems at the Violons du Roy

PHOTO MARTIN CHAMBERLAND, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

Opening concert of the Montreal Symphony Orchestra season devoted to the vocalizations of Beethoven, with conductor Bernard Labadie

We especially know Bernard Labadie in the music of the 18th centurye century. Hence the interest in hearing him conduct the Chapelle de Québec and the Violons du Roy in a repertoire far from his usual paths, the requiems of Fauré and Duruflé, two masterpieces of the modern French choral repertoire composed respectively in 1887-1888 (for the most part) and in 1947. This pandemic postponement (the concert was to take place at the end of March 2020) will allow us to hear the finest of Quebec singing, the soprano Magali Simard-Galdès, the mezzo- soprano Julie Boulianne and baritone Jean-François Lapointe, with the assistance of organist Thomas Annand. An unmissable event at the Maison symphonique on Sunday February 18 (2 p.m.).

Great Parisian visit to the Maison symphonique

PHOTO TAKEN FROM THE ARTIST’S SITE

Conductor Klaus Mäkelä

Klaus Mäkelä is a true phenomenon. At only 27 years old, the Finn is at the head of the Oslo Philharmonic AND the Paris Orchestra! More recently, he added the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra to his hunting list. It is at the invitation of the OSM that he will visit the Maison symphonique on March 19 with his Parisian ensemble. We can hear it in two absolute masterpieces from the turn of the 20th century.e symphonic century, the Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun by Debussy and Fire Bird of Stravinsky, in addition to Piano Concertoo 2 by Rachmaninov, which will allow us to hear in Montreal the Korean Yunchan Lim, whose recent victory in the Van-Cliburn Competition at just 18 years old shook the musical world.

From one passion to another at the OSM

PHOTO ERICK LABBÉ, LE SOLEIL ARCHIVES

Conductor Masaaki Suzuki

The OSM has the excellent habit of inviting, every spring, a conductor from the world of early music. After the Passion according to Saint Matthew of Bach two years ago with Paul McCreesh and Creation of Haydn last year with Bernard Labadie, it will be the turn of the Japanese Masaaki Suzuki, on March 27 and 28, to come and take a tour of the Maison symphonique in the Passion according to Saint John by Bach. One of the greatest specialists in the Cantor’s music (he has recorded all his cantatas and produced a complete set of his works for organ), Suzuki will be surrounded by the OSM Choir and five soloists, including the renowned tenor Werner Güra.

The “Philadelphia Sound” and Nézet-Séguin in a venue near you

PHOTO CHRIS LEE, THE NEW YORK TIMES ARCHIVES

Conductor Yannick Nézet-Séguin will be in Montreal with the Philadelphia Orchestra on April 19.

We can’t say that we rarely hear Yannick Nézet-Séguin in Montreal. What is less common is to hear it with an ensemble other than the Orchester Métropolitain. This will be done on April 19 with the Philadelphia Orchestra, of which he has been musical director since 2012. They will compete against the Symphony no 3 by Rachmaninov, which the Russian composer wrote specifically for the band, whose sound (of strings in particular) was already renowned when it was created in 1936. Montrealers will also be able to hear the Symphony no 4 by the African-American composer Florence Price, of whom Nézet-Séguin and the American orchestra have become ardent defenders with two highly acclaimed recordings for Deutsche Grammophon.

Tragic end of season at the Metropolitan

PHOTO ARCHIVES THE PRESS

The late composer José Evangelista

With two or three Mahler symphonies per season these years, the OSM and Rafael Payare have made the music of the Austrian composer a specialty. Missing from this recent list, however, is the fateful Symphony no 6 in A minor, which the Orchester Métropolitain and Yannick Nézet-Séguin will present on June 16 to close the season. It is in the finale of this work that the famous hammer blows are heard, symbol of the “tragic” (this is the nickname of the score) which struck Mahler several times during his life. OM will also highlight at the start of the concert the disappearance of José Evangelista with his work Alap & Gat.


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