Steven Page at the Centennial Theatre

Best known as the long time front man for the Bare Naked Ladies, Steven Page has embarked on a new creative journey with his solo career. Arguably one of the most talented singer/songwriters of the past two decades, Page has emerged with a decidedly upbeat, energetic and catchy pop sound of his own.  Steven Page’s distinctive voice is among the most instantly recognizable in pop music and consequently the sound of his recent solo album,Page One is both familiar and undeniably fresh.  Since leaving the Barenaked Ladies Page has scored music for Ontario’s Stratford Shakespeare Festival, and recorded an orchestral chamber-pop album with the Art of Time Ensemble which included interpretations of songs by Leonard Cohen, Radiohead and The Weakerthans.

7:30 p.m. March 9   Centennial Theatre, 2300 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver

604.984.4484         centennialtheatre.com

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Vancouver Recital Society presents baritone Florian Boesch

Vancouver Recital Society (VRS) presents the highly regarded Austrian baritone Florian Boesch in his Vancouver debut . Boesch will be joined by noted piano accompanist Roger Vignoles, a distinguished musician who regularly partners the world’s most talented vocalists. Together they will perform an all-German program of songs by Schumann and Schubert.   Boesch has become one of the leading singers of his generation and a much in-demand artist. He has gained an international reputation as a superlative interpreter of lied, as well as being a commanding presence on the opera stage. Critics have showered him with praise.  The Guardian enthused: “Boesch’s expressiveness was extraordinary: the sensibility to words and vocal colours was both vivid and tender, while the narrative gripped. Stunning.”

One performance only:    3:00 p.m. February 19                                                                   Chan Centre for the Performing Arts                                                                               Vancouver Recital Society  604-602-0363   vanrecital.com

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Confessions of the Other Woman: a chat with the playwright– Valerie Sing Turner

Valerie Sing Turner is an incredible talent. A dancer, a musician, an actor and now a playwright.   The world premiere of “The Other Woman” opens at the Shadbolt Centre in Burnaby at the end of February.  We had a chance to chat with the playwright between her busy rehearsal schedule for the world premier.

ET: You’ve got a world premiere coming up.  Is that exciting?

VST:  Yes, it’s exciting and scary and overwhelming  — but really exciting.

ET:  Probably more so than regular opening, especially as it is your debut play. How long did it take you to write it?

VST: I started writing it in January 2005, so it’s been a pretty long haul. I’ve had four development workshops over the last seven years.  Because I’ve included dance –I was working  to see how that affects the text and vice versa – and working with the projections to see how that affects everything.

ET:  So you weren’t happy with just doing a straightforward play?  You just had to bring everything to the table

VST:  I didn’t expect to make it so complicated for my very first piece, but it just turned out that way. I have a dance background and there is just something about  the piece – the themes I was trying to explore. I was trying to figure  it out – and at times it just felt that there were times when I knew dance could express that.  Yes, the dance has been there from the very beginning.

ET:  Do you personally have experience as “the other woman?”

VST:  (Laughs)  I know everybody is going to ask me that – but I did lots of research.  I guess people will come to see the play and of course wonder if it’s a reflection of my life, and  as it is my first play – there are some details from  my personal life that are going to be  there. Some of the themes are conscious. There are some characters, some people I wanted to honor and include. I was thinking that this might be the only play I write and – it’s a touchstone for me in a way. There are certain things that are a part of me that will show up in this play.  On the other hand, you know it’s not – I don’t want people to go away thinking that this is one person’s biography.

I think a lot of people have experienced that – being in love and being attracted to people you probably shouldn’t be attracted to. How far does it go – where does that lead and how do you feel about yourself and your perception of who you are. How does that affect what you do next, or how you live your life.

VST:   It always intrigues, and I know it can be devastating.  But you feel very alive.

ET:  There’s a mysterious stranger involved.  Is this intuition or conscience?

VST:  The mysterious being in the play is called “The Dancer.”  He shows up fairly early on in the piece and draws viewers into the work – through fantasy or dance. There are six dances in the piece as well as video and the music. The play very much evokes the movie musicals – those with the Fred Astaire and Gene Kelly – the main characters contextualize the theme. The main character used to watch these movies with her grandmother  — and developed this idea of love based on these movies.

The dancer shows up and draws her into that world – he challenges her.  But he’s also trying to reconnect her with the person she was when she was young.  Because in that situation she was surrounded by love from the grandmother.  I don’t know, it’s was actually a more innocent time, and not losing yourself as you become older – is life becomes more complex, but en route how we became who we are. We can’t leave those things behind.   We will be a more complete person. We often forget who we are – the really important parts of ourselves.

ET:  Seem to have such a wonderful connection to this.  What kind of life experiences have you had that have helped you write this play?  How much do you draw from your own family background?

VST:  I am Chinese Canadian. I am not going to ignore that fact. There are elements in the play that make reference to this – her grandmother is in it – and it’s more of her grandmother’s history and story that brings in this element.

She is a modern Canadian Chinese woman. She has never been to China and has no experience of that except through her grandmother.  Again, it is a part of her. It’s a part of her roots, but it doesn’t define her.  It’s all her own experiences which define her.

ET: How much does the dance and music  that you’re involved in (you have a Bachelor Music from UVIC) and you’ve got dance in your background. How much does that really impact on your writing as a playwright.

VST:  It has a great deal of impact because – I experience the world through my physical sensibilities.  As a dancer there is a particular way I experience things. As a musician you experience particular vibrations – it’s always been a huge part of who I am and how I interpret and negotiate my way through the world. If I didn’t have classical music to get me through the day sometimes I wouldn’t know how to cope.

ET:  The talents that you bring to the table are quite astounding. I was reading your resume and thinking, “Ohmygosh, one of these multi-talented people. But I also think that people are beginning to understand – perhaps more so than a couple of decades ago – that if you have one talent moving into another talent isn’t that difficult, because of the creativity in your mind – would you say that is

VST: I agree completely.  We are all creative beings and how that gets expressed – we all have things we naturally gravitate towards, but I think that once we find expression through one we are able to find expression through another – and we don’t need to feel that we are limited to a certain box.  Look at children – they want to try everything. That’s the way it should be.

ET:  You’re going to be performing in three different spaces – the Shadbolt, the Evergreen Cultural Centre and Performance Works.   What are the logistics involved in that?

VST: Yes, it’s something our designers and directors have to be aware of from the start. Our set is very simple anyway. Because of the dances we can’t have the set cluttered with furniture and things. My co-producers are looking for a run and a life beyond its premiere.  We are looking ahead to touring.  That could be great. It’s exciting because a piece of theatre is so ephemeral – every performance really just happens once. And then it’s gone.

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Don’t miss “Confessions of the Other Woman”written by and starring  Valerie  Sing  Turner,  Kevin  Loring and Matt  Ward

Performances:  The Shadbolt Centre Arts, Burnaby    February 22 to Feb. 25 604.205.3000    shadboltcentre.com

Performance Works, Granville Island  February 29 to March 11   604.873.3311  vancouverplayhouse.com

Evergreen Cultural Centre, Coquitlam   March 13 to March17   604.927.6555  evergreenculturalcentre.ca

 

 

 

 

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Music and mortar: a discussion with VSO’s Maestro Bramwell Tovey

If Maestro Bramwell Tovey ever decides to quit his career in music, the segue into being a stand-up comedian should come quite easily to him.   His immense charm and talent were definitely one of the most delightful parts of a recent concert featuring those lilting Viennese Waltzes and a bit of Mahler, in the Mahler Plus Festival which Tovey conducted in mid-January.  Prior to that concert I had the opportunity to speak with the maestro in his brand new offices in the Orpheum Annex  Building — home of the new VSO music school and recital hall.  The building is so new to Tovey that he hadn’t quite got his office organized, with boxes still lining one wall of an efficient-looking, modern office.

BT: I’ve just got into this office, I’ve not even unpacked these boxes. I got it about two weeks ago. Most of my work I do away from this room, as you can imagine .

Yes, I suppose we have come a long way. When I started with the VSO this building wasn’t here, and now we’ve got four storeys of a state-of-art music school, recital hall in the Orpheum Annex and these offices on top.  In terms of bricks and mortar we’ve come leaps and bounds from where we were – 40,000 feet plus more.

There’s always the challenge of filling two-and-half thousand seats every week – three or four times, which we are sort of managing.  This is our ninth successive year with no deficit, which we are very proud about.  Jeff  Alexander (VSO President and CEO) and I began with the VSO on the same day.  We get along really well and we’ve had a united vision for the orchestra.

EV:  So you and Vancouver Opera are almost on the same page, fiscally.  I think it’s been nine or ten years that they’ve been in the black.  You’ve done a lot of opera yourself.  The Inventor and Filomena – tell me about that.

BT: I usually do one opera a year, sometimes two.  They take a long time.  Sometimes several weeks and it means being away from the kids and the kids don’t like that.  Also, in the symphony business you change programs at least once a week, but if you do an opera you work with it for a month-and-a-half.  You live with a piece and get deeply into it. That’s kind of fun.  Once a year it’s fun.

EV: With the Mahler Plus you are also performing yourself.

BT:  Yes, I am playing the piano this weekend, which is a bit of a sweat – I was playing quite intensely for a couple of months. In October/November  I went to Australia and played and conducted. I still play a lot .

EV:  What was the genesis for this Festival? I am always curious about these kinds of programmes get put together.

BT:  We have a fixed number of Master Works and a fixed number at the Chan Centre, and a fixed number of Musically Speaking and Pops Concerts.  We’ve been trying to expand the season, but with these fixed numbers of subscription series we either expand the schedule or try something new.

We thought we’d try something new on this occasion and after a lot of internal discussion we came up with the idea of Mahler Plus Festival, which was to end with a performance of the Mahler 2nd Symphony.  And then we added chamber concerts, and a light music concert on Saturday. We are playing pieces that influenced Mahler; pieces by composers whom Mahler knew; or pieces that have been influenced by Mahler, or pieces that were somehow related to him.

For example tonight Marquita Lister will sing some Gershwin songs, which seems a bit of a stretch, but Mahler was in New York, as music director of the Philharmonic at exactly the time that young George Gershwin was growing up in Brooklyn and going to concerts.  Mahler was the teacher of Schoenberg, and Schoenberg was the teacher of Gershwin.  We have a Strauss Waltz arranged by Schoenberg.  Mahler Plus gives us a chance to explore some of these connections.

EV:  Good idea – I look at this and I find this fascinating – I like when you are tested mentally. I always think, “That’s interesting – why?”

You’ve got some stupendous concerts coming up – you’ve got Renee Fleming singing at the end of March.

BT: She’s wonderful.  She came about two or three years. Unfortunately I will not be able to conduct for her this time, as I won’t be in town. But the last time I conducted for her and she’s a delight. She is every bit as nice as you would imagine.

EV: Yes.  She certainly comes across that way in the intermission sessions with the Met Opera HD films.   So coming up we have Renee and the Wizard of Oz!

BT: That will be interesting – those are specialized concerts, like West Side Story and Bugs Bunny, with Jeff Tyzik – gives us a chance to play with a live orchestra music from the films.  It’s quite the spectacle.

EV: It’s quite fun. I’ve always been really happy when I see people who can lighten up the aspect of “serious music.”

BT:  Really, what we do is very difficult, but it’s not brain surgery; it’s not rocket science. Nobody is going to die coming to a concert – at least I hope not.  But I think we can have some fun with it.  Sometimes the topics are very serious.  Last year we did the John Adams “Dr. Atomic Symphony”, which deals with a very serious issue. It really depends on what the music is, but generally speaking – especially the charity music – the object of these hosted concerts is to – bring people into the hall so they can relax and can absorb what’s being done without being intimated by it. It’s amazing how many people feel intimated.  No one should feel intimidated by coming to the symphony.

EV:  You have succeeded in that, inasmuch as you are excellent in making people relaxed with your presentations and explanation of the music we are about to hear.

What about the coming season?  Anything interesting to report there?

BT: Next year’s season will be announced at the beginning of March – but all kinds of things are coming up on the horizon – the 100th anniversary of  Stravinsky’s “The Rite of Spring .”  We’ve just had the 100th anniversary of the death of Mahler, coming up in a few weeks.  Although we are not doing anything to commemorate it, in 2014 is the 100th anniversary of the sinking of the Titanic. And in a couple of years we shall have the 100th anniversary of the start of The Great Wear. These big historical events had a lot of bearing on music and music making.  Stravinsky’s “Rite of Spring” was one of the epoch defining moments of that century.

EV: Again, I am so impressed with the work you have done with the VSO over the last 12 years.  I hope that will continue for a long, long time.

BT:  It’s been a wonderful time – I’m really enjoying it. My wife and kids, I don’t think, will ever want to leave Vancouver.  The kids have grown up here.  One of my children was actually born here.  I have two girls. EmmeLine is 11 and Jessica is 13 and I have an older son Ben.

EV: Do you still play a lot of jazz piano?

BT: I am playing some jazz tonight, accompanying Marquita Lister in the Gershwin songs.  I still enjoy playing and best of all I love accompanying, singers, and I love playing chamber music, and solo jazz – more than with a trio because I enjoy the freedom it gives you. With a trio you are restricted by conventions.  I enjoy it. I notice that if I ever get out of practice when you are older it takes longer to get back in – harder than it was 10 years ago.

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You can see and hear Bramwell Tovey conduct the VSO in concerts featuring Stravinsky, Prokofiev and Tchaikovsky on February 4 and 6.  Beethoven and Elgar will be the composers featured on Feburary 18 and 20.  Tovey will also be conducting “The Last Night of the Proms” on May 30th.   Order tickets through the VSO Customer Service line at 604.876.3434 

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Arts Club: Do You Want What I Have Got? A Craig’s List Cantata

Bill Richardson and Veda Hille

Your personal ads — set to music! Irregular hats for cats, mounted lobsters, autographed copies of the Bible: this premiere from composer Veda Hille and the CBC’s Bill Richardson explores what humanity has to offer and turns it into sidesplitting musical fare. Who wouldn’t want a broken time machine, for free? Come and take a look at the vagaries and intimacies of the internet!   This production is part of the 2012 PuSh Festival.  8:00 p.m. January 19 to February 11     7:30 pm January 24 (Talk Back Tuesday)                                  Arts Club Revue Theatre Granville Island          www.artsclub.com      www. push.ca

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