Ludwig van Toronto

Toronto classical concert picks for January 20 to 26, 2014

Louis Lortie joins -- and leads -- the Toronto Symphony on Wednesday and Thursday nights (Hiroyuki Ito photo)
Louis Lortie joins — and leads — the Toronto Symphony Orchestra in more Mozart this week (Hiroyuki Ito photo).

20 Monday

A dozen of Toronto’s finest string players are getting together to play two Romantic gems: Felix Mendelssohn’s beloved Op. 20 Octet and Peter Ilytch Tchaikovsky’s ravishing “Souvenirs de Florence” Sextet.

This should be quite an evening to begin an incredible week of public musicmaking at University of Toronto’s Faculty of Music that includes masterclasses and a recital by Stephanie Blythe as well as the arrival of Gabriel Prokofiev to headline its annual festival of new music.

You can check out the full performance calendar here.

21 Tuesday

This great virtuoso makes his annual visit to Toronto with a stimulating programme that ranges from the late Impromptus of Franz Schubert and a sonata by Nikolai Medtner to a little something by Hamelin himself. You’ll find all the details here.

22-23 Wed. & Thu.

Our city’s flagship orchestra concludes its annual Mozart festival with one of Canada’s flagship pianists and violinists, concertmaster Jonathan Crow. It means we get a piano concerto — the engaging No. 22, K482, — as well as some chamber-scale works, including a violin sonata — No. 18, K301. You’ll find all the details here.

23 Thursday

Here is how this wonderfully talented duo describes the first in a projected series of art song recitals at Chalmers House: “Carla Huhtanen and Adam Sherkin celebrate the musicality of Winter in a recital of songs from Canada and Scandinavia. The inaugural performance includes works by Ana Sokolovic, Omar Daniel, Jeffrey Ryan, Jean Sibelius and Ture Rangstrom. Also on the programme: Winter Aubade (2009) for solo piano, by American composer Daniel Crozier.” You’ll find further details here.

23- Thu. to Sat.

Artistic director Larry Beckwith sent along this description:

“We are currently in rehearsal for Toronto Masque Theatre’s upcoming cabaret show Arlecchino Allegro. The show features the incomparable mezzo soprano Laura Pudwell, violist da gamba Felix Deak, recorder player Avery MacLean and lute/guitar player Terry McKenna. The evening is hosted by Nicholas and Mina from the Gorgonetrovich Corps de Ballet Nationale. We are playing and singing music from the late Spanish Renaissance and early Italian Baroque; composers such as Luis Milan, Frescobaldi, Barbara Strozzi and Dario Castello. However, during the course of the evening, we are required to perform arrangements of music that is seemingly further and further away from our core repertoire. For a variety of reasons, the hosts get more and more ornery as they throw music at us by Debussy, Schubert, Mozart, Roy Orbison and others. It’s a fun program in the tradition that I think people are coming to expect from Toronto Masque Theatre: juxtapositions of great music from wildly different styles and eras.

“It is a great treat to work with Laura Pudwell again. She is gamely throwing herself into the wide range of songs and arias she’s been asked to learn and she possesses the golden combination of a strong musical technique, emotional depth and a wicked sense of humour.

“Arlecchino Allegro is a great antidote to the winter blahs with its lively mix of beautiful performances of a wide array of superb music and snappy improv comedy in a warm and relaxed setting. Come join us!”

You’ll find performance and ticket details here.

24 Friday

This remarkable German violinist arrives with a serious recital programme consisting entirely of sonatas by Ludwig van Beethoven — Nos 3, 4, 9 and 10. You’ll find the details here.

25 Saturday

This excellent choir led by Ottawa-based master organist and choral conductor Matthew Larkin presents at programme of sacred Magnificats — settings of what is now called the Song of Mary — in this acoustically rich space. For tickets, click here.

26 Sunday

Young Montreal-born, Berlin-based conductor-composer Samy Moussa joins composer-DJ Gabriel Prokofiev to place Toronto’s great new-music orchestra at the forefront of the current state of contemporary art music. You’ll find the details here.

John Terauds