Baroque / classique / Opera

Festival de Lanaudière : Les Arts florissants par… William Christie et Les Arts Florissants! à l’Amphithéâtre Fernand-Lindsay

by Rédaction PAN M 360

Pour son retour au Festival, William Christie a fait le choix d’un symbole : partager avec le public le court opéra de Marc-Antoine Charpentier qui a donné son nom à l’ensemble… Les Arts florissants! Les trois précédentes visites de William Christie et des Arts Florissants à Lanaudière furent des soirées d’enchantement comme seuls ces maîtres du baroque nous en réservent. Présenté dans un format double avec une autre pièce lyrique du même compositeur, ce nouveau spectacle met en lumière les lauréats du Jardin des Voix, leur célèbre académie pour jeunes chanteurs. Un véritable récit des origines, qui nous plonge dans le faste du Grand Siècle, dans le Versailles de Louis XIV et où danse et chant se mêlent à une musique exquise.

For his return to the Festival, William Christie has chosen to share with us the short opera by Marc-Antoine Charpentier from which comes his ensemble’s name, Les Arts florissants! William Christie’s three previous visits to Lanaudière with Les Arts florissants were enchanting events, as only the baroque masters can bring us. Presented as a double feature with another lyric work by the same composer, this new production brings to us to the shining starts of the Jardin des Voix, their celebrated academy for young singers. A veritable origin story that brings us into the height of the Grand siècle of Versailles and Louis XIV, where dance and song combine through exquisite music.

Programme/program

Marc-Antoine Charpentier, Les Arts florissants et/and La Descente d’Orphée aux enfers

POUR ACHETER VOTRE BILLET, C’EST ICI!

Ce contenu provient de la Place des Arts et est adapté par PAN M 360

classique / Contemporary / post-romantique

Festival de Lanaudière : Chostakovitch par Payare et l’OSM à l’Amphithéâtre Fernand-Lindsay

by Rédaction PAN M 360

À l’orée d’une grande tournée des festivals européens, Rafael Payare et l’Orchestre symphonique de Montréal retrouvent le Festival – cette fois dans l’imposante Dixième de Chostakovitch. La puissance évocatrice de cette œuvre peint la biographie même de son créateur, artiste contraint, muselé par un régime dictatorial (la Russie stalinienne) avec lequel il entretint toute sa vie une relation complexe et inextricable. En première partie, Alisa Weilerstein restitue le concerto de Gabriela Ortiz, écrit pour elle et créé par le Los Angeles Philharmonic la saison dernière.

Before embarking on a tour of European festivals, Rafael Payare and the Orchestre symphonique de Montréal find themselves at the Festival, this time with the imposing Tenth Symphony of Shostakovich. The evocative power of this work reflects the biography of its creator, a restrained artist muzzled by the dictatorial regime of Stalinist Russia, under whose auspices he spent his life and with whom he had a complex and inextricable relationship. In the first half of the concert, Alisa Weilerstein performs Gabriela Ortiz’s cello concerto, written for her and premiered during the Los Angeles Philharmonic’s 2024-2025 season.

Programme/program

Gabriela Ortiz, Dzonot
Dmitri Chostakovitch, Symphonie no 10 en mi mineur, op. 93/Symphony No. 10 in E minor, Op., 93

POUR ACHETER VOTRE BILLET, C’EST ICI!

Ce contenu provient de la Place des Arts et est adapté par PAN M 360

classique / Contemporary / Piano

Festival de Lanaudière : Charles-Richard Hamelin avec l’OSQ – légendes nordiques à l’Amphithéâtre Fernand-Lindsay

by Rédaction PAN M 360

Pour leurs débuts conjoints à Lanaudière, Clemens Schuldt et l’Orchestre symphonique de Québec nous proposent des œuvres à la mesure de leurs extraordinaires qualités. Depuis l’arrivée de Clemens Schuldt à la direction musicale en 2023, le tandem formé par l’Orchestre symphonique de Québec et le chef allemand fait des merveilles. Au programme : le concerto pour piano de Grieg – l’un des plus beaux et des plus connus – défendu par nul autre que Charles Richard-Hamelin, un morceau du grand compositeur québécois Jacques Hétu, puis la délicieuse fantaisie orchestrale de Zemlinsky sur le conte d’Andersen, trésor de couleurs chatoyantes et de poésie.

For their debut together at the Festival, Clemens Schuldt and the Orchestre symphonique de Québec propose works equal to their extraordinary abilities. Since his arrival as music director in 2023, the team formed by German conductor Clemens Schuldt and the Orchestre symphonique de Québec have made a notable impact. On the programme: Grieg’s piano Concerto, one of the most beautiful and well known, played by none other than Charles Richard-Hamelin; a piece by the great Québecois composer Jacques Hétu, and the exquisite orchestral fantasy after the Andersen fairy tale, a treasure of rich musical colours and poetry.

Programme

Jacques Hétu, Le Tombeau de Nelligan, op. 52
Edvard Grieg, Concerto pour piano en la mineur, op. 16
Alexander Zemlinsky, La petite sirène (Die Seejungfrau)

Program

Jacques Hétu, Le Tombeau de Nelligan, op. 52
Edvard Grieg, Piano concerto in A Minor, op. 16
Alexander Zemlinsky, The Little Mermaid (Die Seejungfrau)

POUR ACHETER VOTRE BILLET, C’EST ICI!

Ce contenu provient de la Place des Arts et est adapté par PAN M 360

Classical

Festival de Lanaudière | A Lanaudière magic named Nagano

by Frédéric Cardin

Last Friday, August 1st, the Amphithéâtre de Lanaudière hosted the OSM, and especially Kent Nagano as its conductor, in a return that could almost be described as triumphant. The audience was waiting for him and was probably ready to applaud any performance by the conductor. Fortunately, Kent Nagano offered a very beautiful musical interpretation of three rich works in terms of color and polyphonic language.

For the colors, Debussy’s Rhapsody for Clarinet and Orchestra in B-flat Major, L. 116, with Todd Cope, solo clarinetist of the OSM, fulfilled the beautiful promises of a rich and wonderfully colorful score. The numerous interpretive pitfalls in the score were well-handled and even enhanced by the soloist’s notable ease, to whom the guest conductor provided skillful and nuanced orchestral support.

As the opening piece, Webern’s Op. 1, the Passacaglia in D minor received the treatment it deserved, with a very beautiful breadth of strings, still tinged with Romanticism, doubled by more modernist/impressionistic contrapuntal voices in the woodwinds. Webern had not yet crossed the bridge to atonality, which makes this Passacaglia still eminently accessible to the general public, while also allowing them to become acquainted with a premonition of the refined complexity of this composer’s language.

The concert, performed without an intermission, concluded with Symphony No. 3 in F major, Op. 90, with its great polyphonic richness and magnificent themes and melodies. I was wondering if Kent Nagano would present us with Brahms’ historically informed vision, such as what we hear in his recording of the same work on the BIS label, which was released a few weeks ago. I was talking to you then, in the album review (READ HERE), about the great freedom of movement, the rhythmic ease, the airy breath of the voices that the conductor brought to the reading of this music. Although recently released, the recording in question dates back to 2019. Over all this time, Nagano has had plenty of time to refine his vision. So, what was it like? Well yes, what you hear on the album is definitely there, with even more conviction and oxygen. The very famous third movement, Poco allegretto, collectively lifted us up with its poignant melody and the natural tenderness with which the conductor brought it to life. A beautiful magic that everyone gathered was able to capture and feel.

Sustained applause forced Kent Nagano to return to the stage six times. The public loves him, and if you’d like to learn more about his perception of the affection between him and Quebec, in addition to his vision of Brahms, LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW I CONDUCTED WITH KENT NAGANO HERE.

Choral Music / Classical / période romantique

Festival de Lanaudière | A Successful Choral Evening for Akamus

by Alexis Desrosiers-Michaud

On Friday and Saturday at the Lanaudière Festival, a diptych of Felix Mendelssohn’s oratorios Paulus and Elias was performed. For the occasion, the Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin (Akamus) and the Audi Jugendchorakademie visited us, all under the direction of Martin Steidler. According to artistic director Renaud Loranger, “this is the first time in Canada that the two oratorios have been presented in this way, and also sung in German; the usual language is English. We were there on Friday.

In front of a sparse audience and an almost empty lawn, this magnificent concert took place. Over the course of the two-hour evening, everything fell into place. The orchestra, enlarged for the occasion, played on period instruments (with a snake!), leaving plenty of room for the choir. The choristers’ pronunciation is precise and impeccable. They skilfully varied the palette of colors, being sometimes incisive (“Lapidez-le”), sometimes gentle, notably in the various chorales. One of the evening’s highlights was the appearance of Jesus at the end of Act 1. Performed by the women’s voices, it was an extremely luminous passage, without being angelic or honeyed.

Among the soloists, it was viola Ulrilke Malotta who was the best, despite singing only two short interventions. Her voice is deep and resonant. The soprano Marie-Sophie Pollak has a beautiful voice, but never stands out during the evening. Replacement tenor Magnus Dietrich does well, but remains too stoic, despite the fact that he was the soloist who best embodied and “played” his roles of Stephen and Barnabas. Finally, bass Krešimir Stražanac had a few problems during the evening. Sometimes too rounded, his emotions and words were lost. He would have gained by sticking to the score and not trying to give more.

Finally, a word about the overall presentation of the concert. There was room for improvement in the choice of images projected on the giant screens. All too often, there were images of instrumentalists not in the foreground, and this does the spectator high up in the valley no favors at all. And that’s in addition to correcting mistakes in the surtitles.

Photo Credit : Gabriel Fournier

Baroque / Opera

Festival de Lanaudière | The Coronation of Poppea, the triumph of Octavia and the mastery of Alarcon

by Frédéric Cardin

On the strength of a masterful Orfeo in 2023, the Cappella Mediterranea conducted by Leonardo Garcia Alarcon made an eagerly awaited return to Lanaudière with Monteverdi’s “other” opera, The Coronation of Poppea. A different work, conceived at the very end of the composer’s life (whereas Orfeo was written some thirty years earlier) and subject to commercial dictates unheard of for opera at the time. On this subject, READ the interview I conducted with Mr. Alarcon in preparation for this concert.

Alarcon was surrounded by his faithful colleagues on instruments and vocals, many of whom were there in 2023. The same calibre, then, with the addition of Lanaudière’s Pascale Giguère, called in at the last minute to replace a sick violinist. Hats off to Ms. Giguère, and we’re justifiably proud of her, for the musician’s playing was fully up to the standard of the ensemble.

In a more sparing gauge than for Orfeo (see again the interview mentioned above), the Cappella demonstrated its perfect match with the score, as much in the suggestion of emotions as in the precision of the melodic and accompanying lines. And, once again, the splendour of the singers was on display. Countertenor Niccolo Balducci in the role of Nero was imperial, but without grandiloquence. Sophie Juncker, who was said to be indisposed by a virus, held her part very well, even if there were occasional lapses in the strength of her projection. Nothing to make us sulk, that said. The secondary roles were all of a very high standard: the solemn Edward Grint (Seneca), the amorous and even naive Lucia Martin Carton (Drusilla), the slightly pitiful and even loser Christopher Lowrey (Othon, splendidly ridiculous in his Hawaiian t-shirt) and the truculent Samuel Boden in a panoply of small roles (a nurse, Arnalta, Damigella, etc.), which he performed with humour and casualness, despite the use of a tablet on which he consulted his score. One can only imagine the increased impact his performance would have if he knew how to do without it!

But beyond all that, I was particularly charmed by soprano, Mariana Flores in the role of Octavia, a noble and somewhat haughty empress, humiliated by the rejection of her emperor husband and driven to plot like a villain to save her marriage and, above all, her title and reputation.

In an exquisite tight-fitting dress, she was as desirable as a queen should be in legend. But her Olympian presence gave her the appropriate emotional distance, betraying a character that Nero described as ‘frigid.’ An accusation often tinged with misogyny, but which here refers to the typical attitude of a matron from a prestigious and aristocratic lineage, whose scorned dignity can only be expressed by a certain contempt for the world. Yesterday, Mariana Flores had the most accomplished voice, the most qualitatively holistic, powerfully expressive in her anger, poignant despite her reserve in her ideal high-pitched murmurs. A voice without tonal flaw or timbral approximation. For your humble servant, the queen of the evening, despite her final downfall in the libretto.

On the whole, too, the acting is impressive, embodied and clearly the result of long and expert work. You believe it from start to finish. Leonardo Garcia Alarcon demonstrated the full depth of his mastery of Monteverdian language and style. Another triumph for the musical director. We wonder what miracle he will bring us next time, but we can only look forward to it.

That said, audiences will have to be worthy of receiving this artistic quality, by coming in greater numbers. Otherwise, at some point, people will tire of offering exceptional programmes to sparse audiences. 

Choral Music / Classical / Modern Classical / période romantique

Festival de Lanaudière | Magistral Opening

by Alexandre Villemaire

The 47th edition of the Festival de Lanaudière opened with a bang, as sonorous as the first note of the masterpiece of this July 4 concert inaugurating a month of music in the Lanaudière region. Led by Rafael Payare, the Orchestre symphonique de Montréal and the OSM Chorus delivered a masterful performance of Carl Orff’s landmark secular cantata Carmina Burana. This was the first time in thirteen seasons that the work had been performed at the festival. An excellent opportunity for listeners and music lovers to discover or rediscover the work.

The first part featured two works with contrasting pictorial characters. The opening work was “Icarus” by composer Lena Auerbach. Eminently descriptive, the work of course refers to the figure from Greek mythology who, wanting to get too close to the sun, burnt his wings and ended up drowning. It’s an example of human nature’s desire to push back its limits through boasting and greed. The work oscillates between different moods, sometimes tense, sometimes lyrical. The first section establishes a dialogue between strings and woodwinds in this affect. A second section takes on more dramatic accents with the intervention of the brass, followed by a passage of great lyricism in the strings that flows into a harmonic anxiety that culminates in an evocation almost of a funeral march with the intervention of tubular bells. A third, calmer section is introduced by the harp in dialogue with the pizzicati of the violins, before a counter-melody interpreted by first violinist Andrew Wan progresses in an evanescent suraiguity that eventually melts into the ethereal sound of musical glasses. All in all, a well-cut composition with fine orchestration and imaginative orchestral effects.

After this ethereal piece, Rachmaninov’s “Rhapsody on a Theme” by Paganini moves into a wild register. Taking up the already virtuoso work of Italian violinist and composer Niccolo Paganini, Rachmaninov’s equally complex treatment was led by German pianist Kirill Gerstein. He demonstrated great pianistic agility in expressing the various passages, supported by a precise Rafael Payare. The only discomfort we felt was that the orchestra, even in its instrumental support role, was a little too sonically recessed.

Masterpiece. From the first stroke of the timpani and the first note of the chorus singing “O Fortuna”, we are taken on a solid musical journey. The words are clear, the pronunciation and articulation precise, and the various dynamics Payare brings to bear are roundly executed. The OSM conductor opted for a sequence of each of the twenty-five movements in attaca for his interpretation, keeping the attention and the audience and giving the work a clear narrative direction to its medieval poems tackling themes such as the constant nature of fortune and wealth, joy and the pleasures of alcohol and the flesh. Among the finest moments is the ninth movement, “Reie”, which features a superb, intimate passage between the voices. The entire In Taberna sequence, literally “at the tavern”, was aptly staged by countertenor Lawrence Zazzo and baritone Russell Braun. The unique tenor aria “Olim lacus colueram” (Once I dwelt on a lake), literally a swan’s lament describing the various stages leading to its being eaten, was both comic and disturbing, but unambiguously clear. Equally unambiguous was the duet between soprano Sarah Dufresne and Russell Braun “Tempus est iocundum”, (Time is joyous) where the inflections of the vocal line and the acceleration leave no doubt as to the nature of the text, which describes a scene of committed love. Both Dufresne and Braun delivered a heartfelt, vocally arresting interpretation of their respective arias.

With a masterful start to its fourth season, we can only wish the Festival de Lanaudière good luck for the rest of its programming.

Publicité panam
classique

Festival de Lanaudière: Mahler et le chant de la nuit

by Rédaction PAN M 360

Gustav Mahler et sa Septième, c’est un cosmos entier qui tient dans le creux de la main, celui du monde viennois et d’une certaine idée de la culture : de l’apothéose du classicisme à la modernité énigmatique du premier vingtième siècle, jamais poussée aussi loin, peut-être, que dans ce mastodonte symphonique créé dans une Europe marchant inconsciemment vers l’abîme. L’Orchestre symphonique de Montréal et Rafael Payare, dont l’interprétation de la Cinquième Symphonie, à l’été 2022, est restée gravée dans toutes les mémoires, restituent la puissance évocatrice de ce chef-d’œuvre, dans le cadre idéal de l’Amphithéâtre.

Gustav Mahler and his Seventh Symphony hold an entire cosmos in the palm of your hand, that of the Viennese world and a certain idea of culture: from the apotheosis of classicism to the enigmatic modernity of the first twentieth century, never pushed so far, perhaps, as in this symphonic behemoth created in a Europe marching unconsciously towards the abyss. The Orchestre symphonique de Montréal and Rafael Payare, whose performance of the Fifth Symphony in the summer of 2022 remains etched in everyone’s memory, restore the evocative power of this masterpiece in the ideal setting of the Amphitheatre.

POUR ACHETER VOTRE BILLET, C’EST ICI!

Ce contenu provient du Festival de Lanaudière et est adapté par PAN M 360.

classique

Festival de Lanaudière: La Cinquième de Beethoven par les Grands Ballets

by Rédaction PAN M 360

De nouveau cet été, Les Grands Ballets Canadiens foulent les planches de l’Amphithéâtre et retrouvent le public lanaudois pour une soirée d’émotion à fleur de peau et de prouesses chorégraphiques, entre la Cinquième de Beethoven – évoquant la liberté, la force tragique du destin, la transformation perpétuelle du monde – et un pot-pourri d’extraits parmi les plus célèbres du répertoire de ballet.

Once again this summer, Les Grands Ballets Canadiens take to the stage at the Amphitheatre and welcome back the Lanaudière public for an evening of raw emotion and choreographic prowess, between Beethoven’s Fifth – evoking freedom, the tragic force of destiny, the perpetual transformation of the world – and a medley of some of the most famous excerpts from the ballet repertoire.

POUR ACHETER VOTRE BILLET, C’EST ICI!

Ce contenu provient du Festival de Lanaudière et est adapté par PAN M 360.

classique

Festival de Lanaudière: Prométhée et la Septième de Beethoven

by Rédaction PAN M 360

Dans le cadre idéal de l’Amphithéâtre, Jonathan Cohen et Les Violons du Roy convient Beethoven – sa majestueuse Septième, son message humaniste, son désir irrépressible de liberté et de fraternité universelle – puis son interprétation du mythe de Prométhée, toujours brûlant d’actualité, tant il nous ramène aux fondements mêmes de l’éthique…sans oublier un détour chez Mozart, maître incontesté de la mélodie et de la gymnastique instrumentale la plus confondante.

In the ideal setting of the Amphitheatre, Jonathan Cohen and Les Violons du Roy welcome Beethoven – his majestic Seventh, his humanist message, his irrepressible desire for freedom and universal brotherhood – followed by his interpretation of the myth of Prometheus, which is still so topical today, as it takes us back to the very foundations of ethics… not forgetting a detour to Mozart, undisputed master of melody and the most confounding instrumental gymnastics.

POUR ACHETER VOTRE BILLET, C’EST ICI!

Ce contenu provient du Festival de Lanaudière et est adapté par PAN M 360.

classique

Festival de Lanaudière: Tchaïkovski et Rimski – Korsakov par Payare et l’OSM

by Rédaction PAN M 360

Deux compositeurs de génie, monstres sacrés de leur art, contemporains, compatriotes, que pourtant presque tout sépare sur le plan esthétique. Tchaïkovski et Rimski – l’exaltation sentimentale du premier, profondément attaché aux traditions musicales européennes, puis le geste orientalisant et la fascination de l’Ailleurs du second, réunis dans un concert qui de chacun fait entendre l’œuvre possiblement la plus connue, la plus emblématique. Rafael Payare et l’OSM sont au rendez-vous, ainsi que le fabuleux pianiste Yoav Levanon, dans ses débuts avec orchestre au Canada.

Two composers of genius, sacred monsters of their art, contemporaries, compatriots, yet almost everything separated them aesthetically. Tchaikovsky and Rimsky – the sentimental exaltation of the former, deeply attached to European musical traditions, and the orientalizing gesture and fascination with Elsewhere of the latter, brought together in a concert that features perhaps the best-known, most emblematic work of each. Rafael Payare and the OSM are on hand, as is the fabulous pianist Yoav Levanon, making his Canadian orchestral debut.

POUR ACHETER VOTRE BILLET, C’EST ICI!

Ce contenu provient du Festival de Lanaudière et est adapté par PAN M 360.

classique

Festival de Lanaudière: Nicolas Ellis et Farah Alibay en orbite!

by Rédaction PAN M 360

C’est le genre de rencontre inusitée dont Lanaudière s’enorgueillit, celle d’un jeune chef d’orchestre québécois dont la carrière explose, déjà habitué du Festival, et d’une scientifique de haut vol, associée à la NASA, qui gravite dans les plus hautes sphères de l’aérospatiale. Nicolas Ellis et son Orchestre de l’Agora nous font voyager dans la stratosphère, avec les Planètes de Holst et la suite orchestrale Orion de Claude Vivier, expertement secondés par l’ingénieure Farah Alibay.

It’s the kind of unusual encounter that Lanaudière is proud of, that of a young Quebec conductor whose career is exploding, already a Festival regular, and a high-flying scientist, associated with NASA, who gravitates in the highest spheres of aerospace. Nicolas Ellis and his Orchestre de l’Agora take us on a journey into the stratosphere, with Holst’s Planets and Claude Vivier’s orchestral suite Orion, expertly assisted by engineer Farah Alibay.


POUR ACHETER VOTRE BILLET, C’EST ICI!

Ce contenu provient du Festival de Lanaudière et est adapté par PAN M 360.

Subscribe to our newsletter