News & Reviews

Ian Parker

IAN PARKER, PIANO – Sunday February 2nd, 2014

Ian Parker
Ian Parker

IAN PARKER – PIANO
Matinee Performance
Sunday February 2, 2014 at 2 pm
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Back by popular request! Magnetic, easy-going and delightfully articulate, Canadian pianist Ian Parker captivates audiences wherever he goes. An enthusiastic recitalist, Ian has performed across the United States, Western Europe, Israel, and throughout Canada on tours with Debut Atlantic and Jeunesses Musicales du Canada. He made his Lincoln Center recital debut at the Walter Reade Theater in 2004, and recorded a CD with the London Symphony Orchestra under Michael Francis (Ravel Concerto in G, Stravinsky Capriccio, and Gershwin Concerto in F) which was released by ATMA Classique in 2010.

Ian Parker is not just a brilliant Canadian pianist – he is also a gourmet cook. Take a generous cup of vitality, passion and talent, stir well with a few ounces of laughter, a sprinkle of spice and you have IAN PARKER. Music and food (and wine) go hand in hand with Ian. He started taking piano lessons from his father at age three. Now, with a Masters degree from Juilliard under his belt and a basketful of outstanding awards at his side, he winters in New York City and spends summers at home in Vancouver, teaching a few select students, helping in his father’s piano studio – and cooking. www.ianparker.ca

For part of this concert Ian will be joined by Colleen Venables, a talented young violinist from Armstrong, BC. Colleen has won many 1st prizes at BC Performing Arts Festivals and took 1st prize at the 2012 Canadian National Music Festival. She has worked with artists from around the world – such as Pinchas Zukerman, Leonidas Kavakos, Andres Cardenes, Ian Swensen, Tong Wei-Dong, Tadeusz Gadzina, Nicola Benedetti, Gerardo Ribeiro, members of Shanghai Quartet, members of Miro Quartet and pianist, Ian Parker.  She enjoys dancing, singing, improvising and any form of art that allows her to express and share with other people.


Concert Program:

Ludwig van Beethoven
(1770-1827)
Piano Sonata Op 27 no 1 in E Flat
Ludwig van Beethoven
(1770-1827)
Piano Sonata Op 27 no 2 in C Sharp Minor (Moonlight)
Igor Stravinsky
(1882-1971)
Suite Italienne for violin and piano
(Colleen Venables – violin, Ian Parker – piano)
George Gershwin
(1898-1937)
Rhapsody in Blue
Intermission
Franz Liszt
(1811-1886)
Piano Sonata in B Minor

Here’s a little “teaser” of Ian’s playing for you to enjoy!


SINGLE CONCERT TICKETS
Adults – $35 Under 18 – $17.50
Students on the eyeGo program – $5

Purchase tickets at:

TICKET SELLER
Phone: (250) 549-SHOW (7469)
E-mail: boxoffice@ticketseller.ca

– or –

Visit The Performing Arts Centre Foyer
3800-34th Street, Vernon
All concerts are held in the Vernon and District Performing Arts Centre.

Extraordinary General Meeting

The North Okanagan Community Concert Association (NOCCA) constitution and by-laws have been amended in an effort to help us obtain charitable status. Anyone who holds a 2013/14 season ticket is invited to attend an Extraordinary General Meeting to approve and pass the changes at –

People Place

101-3402 27 Avenue, Vernon
Sunday February 23, 2014 at 3:00 pm (doors open at 2 pm)

To review the constitution and by-laws in advance, please send a message with your email address.

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Thank you for your response. ✨

Reside Dawson Duo

Concert Review: Duo Gets Back To Bach

Reside Dawson Duo
Flutist Christie Reside and pianist Terence Dawson check over their music before performing for North Okanagan Community Concert-goers Friday. Image credit: Christine Pilgrim

By Christine Pilgrim – Vernon Morning Star
Published: November 27, 2013

Christie Reside and Terence Dawson, she on flute and he on piano, impressed North Okanagan Community Concert-goers at the Performing Arts Centre Friday with a palate of musical choices to suit every taste.

Bach suited mine best. As Dawson said in his introduction to Sonata for Flute in C Major, “I don’t think there’s anything like Bach.”

This particular sonata is often attributed to Bach, the father (Johann Sebastian), as a flute solo, with Bach, the son (Carl Philipp Emanuel), adding keyboard accompaniment later. To my ear, Bach by any first name would sound as sweet, and Reside and Dawson maximized the effect of the sonata’s divine form and structure to perfection.

Reside and Dawson’s rapport with each other possibly stems from their long musical partnership as well as their shared love of chamber music and desire to expand its horizons. That desire obviously influenced Friday’s program.

For example, Bach’s measured sonata was contrasted by Jacques Ibert’s syncopated sonatine, Jeux (Games), written in 1923, almost 200 years after Bach died.  Dawson warned in his introduction that occasionally “Ibert adds the odd wrong note for colour.”  And the odd wrong note in the opening phrases did add colour, while the frolicking melodies added delight to the evening.

Ibert’s compositions are as eclectic as Reside and Dawson’s repertoire and worthy of exploration.  (They range from the light-hearted Jeux to sombre orchestral pieces such as La Ballade de la Geôle de Reading, inspired by Oscar Wilde’s Ballad of Reading Gaol.)

Reside chose two sonatas by German composer Sigfrid Karg-Elert. To enhance our enjoyment of the first, she prompted us to imagine the three movements, ranging from “cheerful and lovable” to “extremely slow” to “very quick and light,” as accompaniment to a silent movie. It was easy to conjure images of Chaplin’s tramp encountering a buzzing fly that made way for a butterfly and, once their airborne pas de deux was done, to see the tramp totter into the distance. That said, the music and its sensitive execution could have stood alone.

The second Karg-Elert piece, Sonata Appassionata for solo flute, showcased Reside’s virtuoso technique. Small wonder that she’s principal flutist with both Seattle and Vancouver Symphony Orchestras.

Dawson, dubbed one of Vancouver’s most respected musicians, also shone in a solo performance of the first three of seven fantasies by Johannes Brahms.

The program opened with Lorraine Desmarais’s sonata for piano and flute, also known as Jazz Sonata. Montreal’s Desmarais is an outstanding jazz pianist as well as a composer of note. Check her witty jazz rendition of The Flintstones’ theme song on-line.

I confess to a fleeting wish that the sheet music for Jazz Sonata would  have fallen to the floor so Reside and Dawson might have improvised in similar style. They would certainly have been up to the challenge if their finale, Chant de Linos (Song of Linos), was anything to go by.

Written at the end of the Second World War, this funeral lament’s overtones were sometimes harsh, discordant and even grotesque, but the tour de force exhibited the prowess of both performers and begged an encore by… who else but Bach? The second movement (Siciliana) of his Sonata in Eb Major sent everyone home satisfied.

The next NOCCA concert is with Canadian pianist Ian Parker,  Sunday Feb. 2 at 2 pm. Tickets are available at the Ticket Seller in the Performing Arts Centre or ticketseller.ca.

Reproduced with the kind permission of Christine Pilgrim and
Vernon Morning Star

Reside Dawson Duo

RESIDE DAWSON DUO – Friday November 22nd, 2013

Reside Dawson Duo
RESIDE DAWSON DUO – Piano & Flute
7:30 pm Friday November 22, 2013

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CHRISTIE RESIDE, classically trained in Eastern Canada, is now principal flutist with the Vancouver Symphony. TERENCE DAWSON, also from the East, is a concerto soloist with the VSO and National Arts Centre Orchestra. Both are chamber musicians, award winning soloists and popular teachers. As a duo, they have remarkable onstage rapport and offer programs that are delightfully sensitive and elegantly polished. They decided to join forces when they recognized their shared interest in chamber music and mutual desire to expand the number of  selections  offered  in a traditional piano/flute recital. Reviewers frequently use descriptions like “dazzling,” and “stunning”. www.residedawsonduo.com

Concert Program:

Loraine Desmarais
(b.1956)
Jazz Sonata
Theme and variations
Moderato
Rondo
Johannes Brahms
(1833-1897)
Fantasien Op. 116
Cappriccio in d minor
Intermezzo in a minor
Cappriccio in g minor
Sigfrid Karg-Elert
(1877-1933)
Sonata in B Flat Major Op. 121
Allegro amabile
Adagissimo
Sehr geschwind und leichthin
– Intermission –
Johann Sebastien Bach
(1685-1750)
Sonata in C Major BWV 1033
Andante: Presto
Adagio
Minuets I and II
Jaques Ibert
(1890-1962)
Jeux
Anime
Tendre
Sigfrid Karg-Elert
(1877-1933)
Sonata Apassionata for Solo Flute
Andre Jolivet
(1905-1974)
Chant de Linos

The price of a single ticket for this concert can be applied towards the cost of a full season’s subscription. Please visit the ticket booth in The Vernon & District Performing Arts Centre foyer for more information.

Gryphon Trio

Concert Review: A ‘Gem’ Opens Diamond Year For NOCCA

Gryphon Trio
Roman Borys (cello), Jamie Parker (with page turner Amy Friedman at piano), and Annalee Patipatanakoon (violin) comprise The Gryphon Trio who played at the Performing Arts Centre Saturday.

By Christine Pilgrim – Vernon Morning Star
Published: October 29, 2013 

The foyer at the Performing Arts Centre dripped diamonds (10 carat plastic) while another “gem” the size of a softball graced a silver draped stage drenched in classy, rich lighting to celebrate the North Okanagan Community Concert Association’s Diamond Jubilee, Saturday.

And what better way to mark the 60 years since Josephine (Joey) Karen spearheaded NOCCA’s intent, to bring acclaimed musicians to Vernon, than invite the Gryphon Trio to return? Audible sighs of pleasure filled the auditorium in appreciation of the music created by this genuine Canadian “gem.”

NOCCA’s new president, Paul Maynes, introduced each member of the trio by first name. Jamie Parker (piano) became Jamie while Annalee Patipatanakoon (violin) and her husband Roman Borys (cello) were dubbed Annalee and Roman respectively.  Thus, they all became family.

Gryphon Trio with first NOCCA President
The Gryphon Trio with the first NOCCA president Josephine (Joey) Karen and current president, Paul Maynes.

“Paul” paid tribute to the larger family of NOCCA volunteers who have contributed to the success of some 300 concerts since the first in October 1953, when Cuban pianist Jorge Bolet brought his own piano to play in a high school gym.

Jamie introduced Beethoven’s Piano Trio in D Major by suggesting its subtitle, Ghost, was a mere marketing ploy by an ambitious promoter. Yet its haunting second movement seemed perfectly chosen for this Halloween season.

Beethoven composed the trio while staying with Countess Marie von Erdödy in Vienna in 1808 when he was happy and prolific. (His 5th and 6th symphonies were composed during this period.)

The Gyphon Trio rendered Beethoven’s work to perfection, in seeming effortlessness, with harmonies so delicately and exactly drawn that each individual instrument often blended into one cohesive composite. Their frolicking calls and counter calls, echoes and answers, with the players listening and watching with trance-like intensity (especially Roman) enthralled.

The second piece, Michael Oesterle’s Centennials, was commissioned last year by the trio and demonstrates their commitment to expand musical education and promote Canadian composers.

Centennials pays tribute to three iconic figures who influenced Oesterle’s life. It may have presented a challenge to those whose comfort zone lies more in melody but it stretched the appreciation of others.

Oesterle first pays tribute to TV chef Julia Child so evocatively that some who have seen her in action mentally added dialogue to the quirky music.

Next, he celebrates Conlon Nancarrow who composed for player piano. Chattered notes between pizzicato strings and staccato piano became phrases and short conversations, reminiscent of holes being punched in piano rolls at varying intervals.

Oesterle has a persistent interest in mathematics and science and likens the focus and discipline required to excel in them to those necessary in the arts. Small wonder then that his third icon is Alan Turing, the mathematician whose genius helped Britain crack Germany’s enigma code in the Second World War.

Balm was applied to anyone needing it in the second half, with Felix Mendelssohn’s  Piano Trio in D Minor. Its theme, played sublimely on cello in the opening, set the tone for the first movement.

Mendelssohn’s work as an accomplished artist who painted detailed watercolours of places he visited on his extensive travels, lent a backdrop to the lyrical second movement introduced by the tenderest of piano solos. The quicksilvered scherzo led to the resumption of the theme in the passionate finale.

It was splendid and begged two encore pieces.

The elegant evening was rounded off with anniversary punch and goodies, animated discussion and a rare opportunity to mingle with the three consummate musicians and personable souls who comprise The Gryphon Trio. They have my vote for yet another return visit.

The NOCCA continues with its 60th anniversary season with the Reside Dawson Duo, Nov. 22. Tickets are available at the Ticket Seller in the Performing Arts Centre or ticketseller.ca.

Reproduced with the kind permission of Christine Pilgrim and
Vernon Morning Star