Ludwig van Toronto

Critic’s picks: Toronto concerts and opera May 13 to 19

Cellist Winona Zelenka teams up with Pianist Mauro Bertoli at Gallery 345 on Monday night.
Cellist Winona Zelenka teams up with Pianist Mauro Bertoli at Gallery 345 on Monday night.

MONDAY

The quietest day of the week serves up three stellar chamber choices:

TUESDAY

This season-closing seven-piece programme and more than a dozen musicians mix East and West in a celebration of what we have in common with new music in China. The concert includes three premieres as well as pieces by R. Murray Schafer and Kaija Saariaho. This closes a bold Soundstreams season before the gang takes this show on the road to Beijing. Details here.

TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY

University of Toronto opera prof Darryl Edwards runs a summer study programme in Sulmona, a small Italian town in the Abruzzo region. Toronto’s Aradia Ensemble has been in residence the last two years and, last summer, Edwards invited along organist-composer Andrew Ager, who sat under his Panama hat, writing a new opera for the group, using a libretto by Jeffrey Lewis. This is its official premiere. U of T’s Michael Patrick Albano directs. Details here.

WEDNESDAY

The Toronto Mendelssohn Choir closes its own season with Beethoven’s great Missa Solemnis. Artistic director Noel Edison has chosen an excellent quartet of soloists: sorpano Shannon Mercer, mezzo Krisztina Szabó, tenor Michael Colvin and baritone Michael Adair. The performance is with full orchestra. Details here.

WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY & SATURDAY

Gerstein should be able to put an individual stamp on his Toronto Symphony début with the warhorse Piano Concerto No. 1 by Peter Ilytch Tchaikovsky. The short, early Wednesday programme starts with Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov’s Russian Easter Festival Overture. The two longer programmes also include Béla Bartók’s exciting Concerto for Orchestra. Wednesday details here. Other details here.

THURSDAY

Artistic director Joel Ivany and music director Christopher Mokrzewski have adapted Mozart’s Marriage of Figaro to 21st urban life, complete with a new libretto in English. This is a great opportunity for a free sneak peek. For more on the company and this project, click here.

FRIDAY

One OF southwestern Ontario’s great organists and choir leaders teams up with violinist Alexa Wilks, cellist Samuel Bisson and flutist Laura Bolt for a rich and eclectic programme for the Organix festival that includes a substantial Victorian rarity, the Suite for Violin, Cello and Organ by Joseph Rheinberger. You’ll find all the details here.

The Rheinberger Suite, published in 1887, is a stunner. Here it is in an 1891 arrangement that substitutes piano and strings for the organ (the credits appear in the video clips):

SATURDAY

This dynamic duo did pop-up concerts in Toronto coffee houses last week. This week, it’s a full, all-Bach programme in one swoop. You’ll find the details on the Facebook page for Classical Revolution Toronto, here.

OPERA

Sopranos Hélène Guilmette, left, and Isabel Bayrakdarian in the Canadian Opera Company’s production of Dialogues des carmélites (Michael Cooper photo).

John Terauds