Soundstreams continues its 2015/16 season this March with a visit from Scotland's most celebrated composer and conductor, Sir James MacMillan. The Music of James MacMillan on March 8 at Trinity-St. Paul's Centre features MacMillan conducting Choir 21 and the Virtuoso String Orchestra, and will include choral works by MacMillan, Canadian composers R. Murray Schafer and James Rolfe, and Norway's Knut Nystedt. Audiences across Ontario will also have the opportunity to experience this exceptional program at engagements in Kingston and Kitchener on March 4 and 6.
One of today's most successful composers, Sir James MacMillan is also internationally active as a conductor, having served as Composer/Conductor for the BBC Philharmonic from 2000 to 2009. Emotionally potent, rhythmically thrilling, and richly reflective of his Catholic faith, Celtic cultural roots, and outspoken political conscience, MacMillan's choral music has won worldwide critical and popular acclaim. In this concert, he conducts his own 1993 cantata Seven Last Words from the Cross. Combining dramatic narrative with spiritual meditation, this spellbinding sequence of seven adagio movements, inspired by the four gospel accounts of the Crucifixion, is justly regarded as one of his masterpieces. Also featured is his The Gallant Weaver, a tranquil piece based on a poem by Robert Burns, rich in Scottish flavor and evocative of Celtic folk music. MacMillan is the founder of the The Cumnock Tryst music festival, and was awarded a Knighthood in 2015.
Canadian choral masters-and Soundstreams favourites-R. Murray Schafer and James Rolfe are also celebrated in this concert. Schafer's In Memoriam Alberto Guerrero pays homage to the Chilean pianist who taught such luminaries as Glenn Gould, John Beckwith, and Bruce Mather, while his Three Hymns (from The Fall into Light) is a moving exploration of the light within darkness from his epic multi-choir work commissioned and premiered by Soundstreams in 2003. James Rolfe's When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd, commissioned by Soundstreams in 2006, is a piece for eight voices based on the lyric elegy written by Walt Whitman upon the assassination of U.S. President Abraham Lincoln. Rounding out the program is Norwegian composer Knut Nystedt's Immortal Bach, an atmospheric deconstruction of Bach's mournful chorale, Come Sweet Death.
"It is Soundstreams great privilege to host Sir James MacMillan in Canada for the third time since 2000," says Soundstreams Artistic Director Lawrence Cherney. "His previous visits featured the Canadian premieres of his cantata, Raising Sparks, as well as his monumental choral work, Sun-Dogs, which we co-commissioned. This time, he conducts an entire concert featuring masterworks by Canadians R. Murray Schafer and James Rolfe alongside his own works. We are also delighted that this program will be enjoyed by even wider audiences through performances in Kingston and Kitchener."
The Music of James MacMillan
March 8, 2016 at 8:00 pm
Trinity-St. Paul's Centre, 427 Bloor Street West
Featuring:
Sir James MacMillan, conductor; Choir 21; Virtuoso String Orchestra.
Repertoire:
James MacMillan Seven Last Words from the Cross
The Gallant Weaver
R. Murray Schafer In Memoriam Alberto Guerrero
Three Hymns (from The Fall into Light)
James Rolfe When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd
Knut Nystedt Immortal Bach
A pre-show chat with Artistic Director Lawrence Cherney and Sir James MacMillan will be held at 7:00 pm before the performance.
Tickets range from $22-$67.50 and are available through The Royal Conservatory Box Office at
416-408-0208 or online at soundstreams.ca.
Ontario Tour Dates
Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing ArtsUniversity of Waterloo
March 6 at 3:00 pm, St. Peter's Lutheran Church, Kitchener, Grandphilchoir.com
SOUNDSTREAMS 2015/2016 PERFORMANCE SCHEDULE
Electric Counterpoint (part of the Ear Candy series)
Saturday, March 19, 2016 at 8:00 pm, The Theatre Centre
Steve Reich at 80
Thursday, April 14, 2016 at 8:00 pm, Massey Hall
Soundstreams also offers Salon 21, a free performance and discussion series at the Gardiner Museum.
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