Baroque / classique

Violons du Roy, Celebrating Friendship at The Crossroads of Baroque and Classical Music

by Mona Boulay

Continuing their 40th-anniversary series, Les Violons du Roy presented their Jonathan Cohen, Mozart, and Friendship concert at the Palais Montcalm on Thursday. As the title suggests, the program offered a repertoire drawn both from Mozart’s works and from those of his close friends.

The evening opened with the Sinfonia for Strings in F Major, Fk. 67, by Wilhelm Friedemann Bach, eldest son of his famous father Johann Sebastian. This work is a very interesting choice, with avant-garde colours for its time, in the midst of the transition from Baroque to Classical. There are daring harmonic tensions right from the opening of the Vivace, perfectly underlined by Les Violons du Roy, who give us a superb version of the work. This is an opportunity for each orchestra section to shine, particularly in the Allegro, where the question-and-answer play of the theme is wonderfully executed, a veritable wave of sound moving from one part of the chamber orchestra to the next.

The concert continues with two guests: Mélisande McNabney on fortepiano and Isaac Chalk on viola, for a concert in C Major by Michael Haydn, older brother of the more famous Joseph Haydn, and, as the title suggests, also close to Mozart. The piece highlights each of the two soloists in turn, despite their rather different playing styles: on the one hand, the pianist’s precise, subtle touch, and on the other, the violist’s more rocambolic, baroque flights of fancy. While there is no doubting the individual quality of each of these two performers, their joint playing is open to question. Indeed, while each shines in his or her solo parts, the duet parts sometimes lack synchronization and ensemble playing, especially for the ornamentation effects or the rallentando and accelerando, typical of the style of the period. The staging may have something to do with this: Melisandre at the pianoforte has her back to Isaac Chalk.

After a short intermission, Les Violons du Roy return to the stage, this time with two flutes, two natural horns, and a bassoon. The wind section swells the ranks for the Symphony in E-flat Major by Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, also the son of Johann Sebastian, and a friend of Mozart. At the start of the piece, it seems that one of the horns is struggling to warm up, the instrument being renowned for its technical difficulty. The piece unfolds well, although the flutes, often in their lower registers, are hard to hear, yet they stand upright in the middle of the stage, giving greater visual impact than aural impact.

The concert closes with Mozart’s Clarinet Concerto in A major. Stéphane Fontaine, clarinet teacher at the Conservatoire de Québec and principal clarinet of the Orchestre Symphonique de Québec, brilliantly interprets the soloist’s part with a well-rounded, worked-out sound, mastered from low to high register, with absolutely remarkable soft nuances. Her highly successful performance leaves a strong impression on the audience as she closes the concert, accompanied by all the subtlety of Les Violons du Roy, decidedly masters in the art of dosage, finesse and precision.

Latest 360 Content

Soul of Zoo Unveils “Connection,” The Result of Collaborations From Here and Abroad

Soul of Zoo Unveils “Connection,” The Result of Collaborations From Here and Abroad

Birds of Prrrey – Peace Love Homicide

Birds of Prrrey – Peace Love Homicide

Truck Violence – The weathervane is my body

Truck Violence – The weathervane is my body

Nuits d’Afrique 2026 | Senny Camara and Yamoussa Bangoura Join their Strings

Nuits d’Afrique 2026 | Senny Camara and Yamoussa Bangoura Join their Strings

Nuits d’Afrique 2026 | A Leading Voice to Kick Off the 40th Anniversary

Nuits d’Afrique 2026 | A Leading Voice to Kick Off the 40th Anniversary

La Noce 2026 | The Day I Discovered Angine de Poitrine

La Noce 2026 | The Day I Discovered Angine de Poitrine

La Noce 2026 | Etran de L’Aïr lights Up La Noce

La Noce 2026 | Etran de L’Aïr lights Up La Noce

La Noce 2026 | Groovy Aardvark : A legendary powerhouse

La Noce 2026 | Groovy Aardvark : A legendary powerhouse

Kallisto – Chameleon

Kallisto – Chameleon

La Noce 2026 | Le Belladone salvateurice

La Noce 2026 | Le Belladone salvateurice

FIJM 2026: Atsuko Chiba Shapeshifts During JazzFest

FIJM 2026: Atsuko Chiba Shapeshifts During JazzFest

FIJM 2026: Yoo II Avec Nolan Potter Brings Krautrock Madness to JazzFest

FIJM 2026: Yoo II Avec Nolan Potter Brings Krautrock Madness to JazzFest

FIJM 2026 I Tanya Tagaq Summons the Spirits

FIJM 2026 I Tanya Tagaq Summons the Spirits

FIJM 2026 I Patrick Watson Dazzles Place Des Arts

FIJM 2026 I Patrick Watson Dazzles Place Des Arts

FIJM 2026 | Solarium: full light on some exciting Keb Jazz

FIJM 2026 | Solarium: full light on some exciting Keb Jazz

La Noce 2026 | Enfants Sauvages éclairs chauds chauds

La Noce 2026 | Enfants Sauvages éclairs chauds chauds

FIJM 2026 | McBride / Lage, what a way to end the FIJM !

FIJM 2026 | McBride / Lage, what a way to end the FIJM !

FIJM 2026 | A Love Supreme played straightforward by Isaiah Collier’s Quartet

FIJM 2026 | A Love Supreme played straightforward by Isaiah Collier’s Quartet

FIJM 2026 | Kassa Overall Crumbles the Boundary Between Jazz and Hip Hop

FIJM 2026 | Kassa Overall Crumbles the Boundary Between Jazz and Hip Hop

FIJM 2026 | Domi & JD Beck: vibe, energy, musicianship

FIJM 2026 | Domi & JD Beck: vibe, energy, musicianship

FIJM 2026 | Anamaria Oramas Showcases Authentic Colombian Jazz

FIJM 2026 | Anamaria Oramas Showcases Authentic Colombian Jazz

FIJM 2026 | The Art of the Perfect Trio at Upstairs with Billy Childs

FIJM 2026 | The Art of the Perfect Trio at Upstairs with Billy Childs

FIJM 2026 | A Kind of Blue moment

FIJM 2026 | A Kind of Blue moment

FIJM 2026 | Day 10 | July 4 | Modibo Keita’s Picks

FIJM 2026 | Day 10 | July 4 | Modibo Keita’s Picks

Subscribe to our newsletter

Inscription
Infolettre

"*" indicates required fields

Type of Suscribers