Ludwig van Toronto

Critic’s picks: Toronto concerts for February 18 to 24

Dancer Sean Ling and pianist John Kameel Farah are part of a free lunchtime performance on Tuesday (John Lauener photo).
Dancer Sean Ling and pianist John Kameel Farah are part of a free lunchtime performance on Tuesday (John Lauener photo).

TUESDAY

Four pieces played on the piano by John Kameel Farah and choreographed by Peggy Baker are worth a standing-room-only lunchtime at the Four Seasons Centre. Three of the dances are solos, starting with an improvisation on the part of both dancer Sahara Morimoto and pianist. Newer musical works are by John Cage and Michael J. Baker. The programme ends with a five-dancer ensemble piece set to a Prélude by Alexander Scriabin.

WEDNESDAY

Farahat, a graduate student at University of Toronto and organist at St Basil’s Church at St Michael’s College, should have some fun on the massive 1928 Casavant organ at this cavernous church, making for a nice midday break if you’re in the neighbourhood.

THURSDAY

Pianists Jenna Douglas and Timothy Cheung accompany members of the Ensemble Studio in a concert of late-Romantic treats. There are bonbons by Johannes Brahms, Hugo Wolf and Erich Korngold woven into a Richard Strauss-heavy programme. The event ends with bass-baritone Neil Craighead singing an ode to music, steadfast love and a life well lived, “Wie schön ist doch die Musik,” from Die Schweigsame Frau by Strauss. You’ll find the full programme details here.

Listen to “Wie schön,” as sung by Thomas Quasthoff shortly before he retired, at a Vienna State Opera gala (the conductor is Peter Schneider):

THURSDAY TO SUNDAY

The period-instrument orchestra and chamber choir team up under conductor Ivars Taurins for a rich programme. Mozart’s Requiem doesn’t fill a whole evening, so Taurins has added mid-18th century fare by Bach children Johann Christoph and Carl Philipp Emanuel, as well as two Mozart updates of J.S. Bach fugues. The excellent quartet of soloists is soprano Nathalie Paulin, mezzo Laura Pudwell, tenor Lawrence Wiliford and baritone Nathaniel Watson. You’ll find all the details here.

FRIDAY

It’s one of those unbalanced weeks where several great concert choices fall on one night. Here are but three choices among several more that should satisfy the heart of people looking for intimate musical experiences:

SATURDAY

Wesley Shen

In its Emergents series, the Music Gallery tries to curate programmes with broad appeal featuring younger performers. This particular concert brings together two very different sensibilities.

The evening opens with pianist Wesley Shen and bassoonist Michael Macaulay. In duo they present Jean Fançaix’s late Deux pièces as well as a sonata by 20something composer Raphael Fusco. Shen is also playing excerpts from Ann Southam’s remarkable piano-solo work, Glass Houses.

The rest of the concert is given over to Shannon Graham and her nine instrumental conspirators known as the Storytellers, an ensemble that refuses to recognize borders between art music, jazz and pop.

You can’t go wrong for $10. You’ll find all the details here.

SUNDAY

Yao Guang Zhai

The Toronto Symphony Orchestra’s phenomenal young associate principal clariet Yao Guang Zhai joins his orchestral colleague, bassonist Fraser Jackson, and Toronto collaborative pianist Monique de Margerie in an wildly eclectic programme that ranges from George Frideric Handel to Astor Piazzolla to the premiere of a new suite by clarinetist-composer Martin Van de Ven. You’ll find the details here.

John Terauds