How many Indigenous artists does it take to make an opera Indigenous?

How many Indigenous artists does it take to make an Opera Indigenous? That was one of many questions up for discussion at Stories Don’t Die presented by the Artists of Indians on Vacation at the Terminal Theatre on Saturday afternoon. The backdrop to all this of course is the withdrawal of Edmonton Opera from their role in the creation and presentation of Ian Cusson and Royce Vavrek’s Indians on Vacation in February following the not entirely unexpected “revelation” that Thomas King; author of the novel on which the opera is based, is not Indigenous as he had long claimed. Edmonton Opera chose, unilaterally, to pull out after a protest by a small group of Indigenous activists in Edmonton. To the protesters, the false claim by Thomas King was reason enough to cancel an opera they hadn’t seen but is it? The Artists of Indians on Vacation clearly believe otherwise and Stories Don’t Die makes a strong case for its survival and further development.

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In Terra Pax

The last Soundstreams concert of the season took place at the Jane Mallett Theatre on Saturday evening. In Terra Pax: Lamenting the losses of war was curated by Anna Pidgorna. While by no means only about the Russian invasion of Ukraine that was a strong thread running through the concert.

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Operamania II

I really enjoyed Operamania at the Great Hall last November so I was rather looking forward to Operamania II at The Parkdale Hall on Friday evening. Basically it was the same folks; Opera Revue augmented by Greg Finney, Ryan Downey and Queen Hezumuryanga plus the four wrestlers of Junction City Wrestling and much of it was the same fun material so it should have been a blast.

The Junction City Wrestlers at the first Operamania -. photo credit: Gerry Hubley @justwrestlingca
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Werther at the COC

The COC’s production of Massenet’s Werther opened at the Four Seasons Centre on Thursday evening. My full review is published at Bachtrack.

TL/DR version… there’s some excellent music making but the production doesn’t really elevate a rather dull, sentimental opera.

Victoria Karkacheva as Charlotte and Russell Thomas as Werther. Photo: Michael Cooper

@bachtrack

Von ewiger Liebe

I suppose one of the most well known “relationship” stories in classical music history is the one concerning the marriage of Robert and Clara Schumann, his illness and death and the role that Johannes Brahms played in Robert’s last years and Clara’s subsequent life.  So why not create a song recital programme around that theme using songs by all three composers?  That’s what Liz Upchurch and Jane Archibald have done and they presented it in Temerty Theatre on Wednesday evening.

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Opera Pub back at the Tranzac

Maeve Palmer

I finally made it to AtG’s Opera Pub for the first time in a long time.  Ladst couple of times I went it was at the Drake and that just felt so wrong!  It’s now at the Tranzac which just makes all kinds of sense.  It’s a decent size, it has a pretty good bar and it’s easily accessible on the the TTC.  And it feels like a pub, not the lobby of a five star hotel.  Also it has lots of AtG history including the original La Bohème (2011) and the 2017 remount.  Stay there please AtG. Continue reading

Opera 5 interns in the RBA

Opera 5’s interns for their Toronto Operas Festival gave a recital in the RBA on Monday.  It was a varied mix f opera, song and musical theatre; from Mozart and Strauss to Camelot and Spamalot.  Both the rep and the performances demonstrated the emphasis that the Schulich School; with which all the performers are affiliated, puts on musical theatre compared to some of its competitors.

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Spiders, vampires, curses?

This year’s offering from the Artists’ Studio of the Canadian Children’s Opera Company was Judith Weir’s The Black Spider.  One doesn’t get many opportunities to see a Weir opera, let alone one composed for young performers, so this was very welcome.  That it’s a very funny mash up of several gothic/horror tropes is a definite bonus.  Throw in a lively production with whole hearted and skilful performances and it makes for a great show.

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Karma with a twist

Karma, by Aksam Alyousef, is the latest in what seems to be a genre of plays about second generation Canadians or people who came to Canada at a very young age needing to return to their ancestral homeland to discover/resolve some mystery.  See, for. example, The Green Line at Buddies last year.

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How to Catch Creation is a very smart, cross-generational take on relationships and creativity

Christina Anderson’s How to Catch Creation is a very cleverly constructed play that sucks the audience into it’s world of shifting relationships and coincidences that, at first blush, seem too pat.  Along the way it explores what makes us creative and what makes us lose our creativity and, interestingly, how that’s related to the most basic act of creativity, biological reproduction.  It’s currently playing at the Young Centre ina production directed by Mumbi Tindyebwa Otu.

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