Schulich School of Music events
McGill Symphony Orchestra: Alexis Hauser, artistic director
Alexis Hauser, artistic director Programme: Jean Lesage : Beatitudines pour orchestre Gustav Holst : Les planètes with the women of the McGill University Chorus
McGill Early Music Ensembles
Valerie Kinslow & Betsy MacMillan, coordinators
McGill Symphony Orchestra: Alexis Hauser, artistic director
Alexis Hauser, artistic director Programme: Jean Lesage : Beatitudines pour orchestre Gustav Holst : Les planètes with the women of the McGill University Orchestra
CIRMMT Distinguished Lecture Series: Robert Duke, "Learning and refining music performance skills"
"Learning and refining music performance skills"Robert Duke, The University of Texas at Austin, USA Website
I Medici di McGill Orchestra
("Physicians of McGill"). Tel. 514-398-3603. Lecture on Biology of Music Martin Karlicek, piano A. Dvorak: Czech Suite, Op. 39 A. Dvorak: Piano Concerto, Op. 33
VivaVoce: Singing Extempore
In the Renaissance, 10-year-old choirboys could make up music on the spot, music that sounded like real compositions! How did they do that? Musicologist- conductor Peter Schubert has researched the question and has trained members of VivaVoce to produce expert counterpoint on tunes made up by you, the audience. The program includes pieces by Josquin, Jacquet, Palestrina and Praetorius that show their improvisatory origins. (A collaboration with the Fondazione Giorgio Cini of Venice)
VivaVoce: The Twilight of Tonality
Strange things started happening around 1900... The familiar melodies and chords of Romantic music were transformed into unsettling soundscapes, frightening but mysteriously attractive. Take the thrilling voyage from Brahms to Schoenberg, through Bax and Morawetz, ending up with a new work written for VivaVoce by Nicolas Gilbert.