Friday, July 4, 2025

Romeo and Juliet at the Brott Festival

This concert took place in the L.R. Wilson Concert Hall at McMaster University. It's not a concert hall, per se, rather a multi-purpose room with rather dead acoustics and a very high ceiling. It seats about 350 and was about half full last night. I sat in the middle, about 5 rows from the stage and the sound from there was just fine since it goes straight up.

The orchestra was a big one with a full string section to balance the winds and percussion, augmented by guest players and the mentors including HPO Concert Master Stephen Sitarski. The National Academy Orchestra's players, however, took the Concert Master and First Seat roles for the solos.

They opened with Mikhail Glinka's Overture to Ruslan and Ludmilla, conducted by assistant conductor Kelly Lin. She led a very convincing performance of the Barber Adagio in a concert last week and this performance was also very impressive and played at break-neck speed. It brought to mind something composer Michael Torke said about writing successful new music for orchestra, that players practice gestures like scales and arpeggios so when they see them in new orchestral music they recognize them as just part of the vocabulary and just play them. Part of the fun of this overture is that the strings, all of them, play high speed scale passages throughout the piece and they clearly didn't challenge them much. It was a sparkling performance.

Conductor Tania Miller came on stage to conduct the next piece, Brahm's Third Symphony. It's wonderful to see these young players take on the challenges of such cornerstones of the 19th Century orchestral repertoire and for seasoned concert goers to be reacquainted with them. I enjoyed this reading of the piece. Some of the woodwind passages in the first movement were unclear. It was likely a balance issue. I was especially impressed with the ending of the slow movement which was magical. I always wait for third movement's heart aching main theme. Brahm's gives a variety of instruments the opportunity to play it as it returns again and again.

The second half was innovative. Veronica Tennant didn't narrate, rather commented  on Sergei Prokofiev's Romeo and Juliet Ballet. She told the audience that Juliet was her first leading role as an 18 years old and her last before her retirement 25 years later. Her comments punctuated a dozen movements, played by the orchestra, from suites the composer assembled from the ballet's score, all conducted by Miller. the titles of the movements were projected on a large screen behind the players. However, when they arrived at The Parting of Romeo and Juliet, a film of the scene from the ballet, with Tennant dancing the role of Juliet, was projected. Miller kept the orchestra in sync with the images and the effect was extraordinary and unique. The two following movements was accompanied by still images of Tennant the ballerina.

All and all it was a very good concert varied and balanced and Tania Miller works very well with this group of near-professions and their mentors. 

There are several concerts left the in the summer season and you can find them here.

As I've said before (and will go on saying) these orchestra concerts are a great value and support, not just the Brott Festival, but the performing arts in Hamilton and the dozens of young, aspiring musicians who participate.

Sunday, June 29, 2025

Postcards from the Sky: Brott Festival at Church of the Ascension

Last night I attended the first of 4 Brott Festival concerts I’ll see this season. This one, entitled Postcards from the Sky by Candlelight, was held at the 19th century Church of the Ascension in downtown Hamilton. The pews have been replaced with moveable seating and the venue was full on the main level with, I’d estimate, 200 patrons. 

The conductor was Martin MacDonald who was an apprentice to Boris Brott at this festival some years ago and now leads the Cathedral Bluffs Orchestra in Scarborough and Symphony Nova Scotia. It was a program of music for string orchestra, some of it familiar, all of it very accessible.


They opened with Karl Jenkins’ Palladio  which is a modern take on the Concerto Grosso. The opening movement was famously used in a De Beers diamonds ad on TV some years ago. The music is pleasant and repetitive. MacDonald mentioned that it’s standard repertoire for student string orchestras.


Assistant conductor Kelly Lin then lead the orchestra in a very beautiful reading of Samuel Barber’s Adagio for Strings. However many times one hears it, it still tugs the heart strings.


The followed it with Edward Elgar’s Serenade for Strings. In the familiar English late romantic style, It provided a nice contrast to the music that preceded it. MacDonald mentioned that it’s standard repertoire for student string orchestras. I’m guessing all of the musicians had played it before.


The solo turn in the concert was taken by the Academy Orchestra’s oboist Marie-Bianca Lebeault in Gabriel’s Oboe from Ennio Morricone’s score for The Mission. It was nicely played and, again, provided a contrast to the other music in the concert. Morricone, by the way, wrote music for more than 400 films and television shows, and more than 100 concert works. He won numerous industry awards including two Oscars.


They finished with Hamilton’s own Marjan Mozetich’s three movement Postcards from the Sky. He has a strong individual voice and has adapted the minimalistic approach in a way that makes the music sound quite different from other composers. The music is euphonious, never jarring, and very enjoyable.


The concert, played without an interval, was done in 70 minutes which was a good thing considering how hot it was in the church. The orchestra, as is always the case with this group, was well prepared and played professionally.


All in all, the Brott Festival orchestral concerts are the best “bang for your buck” value to be found in the Southern Ontario classical and pops music landscape.


They’re back on Thursday, July 3 in the Wilson Concert Hall at McMaster, with a concert featuring Brahm’s 3rd Symphony and selections form Prokofiev’s suites from the Romeo and Juliet ballet narrated by Veronica Tennant.