Photo of a young girl playing the piano at home.

Youth Showcase Concert – February 1, 2015

Photo of a young girl playing the piano at home.YOUTH SHOWCASE CONCERT
Sunday February 1, 2015

We are excited to announce an upcoming concert to showcase local talented youth.

At its Annual General Meeting on June 1, 2014 NOCCA, (North Okanagan Community Concert Association) approved the presentation of a youth showcase of musical excellence to be held at the Performing Arts Centre in Vernon, Sunday February 1, 2015.

The program format will consist of up to eight performances by either solo or ensemble participants with each performance to be eight to ten minutes in length to demonstrate the performer’s virtuosity. A brief interview with each artist(s) will follow his/her/their performance.

Scholarships will be provided for each participant.

NOCCA’s wish is to present as varied a program as possible, with as high a level of youth talent as possible.

Sadly we have had to cancel this event. But we are hoping to put on a youth showcase concert in February 2016.

If you have any questions please contact Paul Maynes at 250-260-8288.

montreal guitar trio

Concert Review: Montréal Musketeers Have Spirit

G3 - Montreal Guitare Trio
Glenn Lévesque (left), Marc Morin and Sébastien Dufour relax before their concert at the Vernon Performing Arts Centre.
— image credit: Christine Pilgrim

by  Christine Pilgrim – Vernon Morning Star
Published: April 30, 2014

A common spirit connects three French Canadian musical musketeers known on their six CDs as the Montréal Guitare Trio.

The sum of their 30 fingers plucking, strumming, drumming and stroking their guitars, created by luthier Bruno Boutin, amounted to a triumphant close of the North Okanagan Community Concert Association’s diamond jubilee déjà vu series. Their individual names are Sébastien Dufour, Marc Morin and Glenn Lévesque, but they play as one … all for one; one for all!

I confess to a bias in favour of anyone who hails from Montréal. So the mere name, Montréal Guitare Trio (MG3), would swathe these musicians in accolades whether they were brilliant or not.

But brilliant they were; and Friday’s two-hour performance flew as fast as their fingers over the strings and frets. They had the audience on friendly first name terms as soon as they’d ended their perfectly synchronised opening arrangement of Ennio Morricone’s El Paso.

The atmosphere was jovial and the pace upbeat, even when Sébastien (Séb) took time out to untangle Glenn’s mandolin strap from the lead of his new ear pieces which replace regular feedback monitors.

MG3 learned of them from the California Guitar Trio on their recent tour together. These devices, along with touring microphones and their “fourth musketeer,” technician Ian Vadnais, meant that the sound, also enhanced by the Performing Arts Centre’s new system, was superb.

The packed house, apparently NOCCA’s biggest and certainly its broadest for some time, bears witness to MG3’s popularity. Audience and performers fed on each other’s energy and enjoyment until the feast ended in the trio’s spectacular encore arrangement of Morricone’s The Good, the Bad and the Ugly – with Marc on accordion traditionnel, Séb on charango and Glenn on guitar while whistling without moving his lips as everyone followed the passage of an imaginary fly.

The program was perfectly balanced and the program notes provided an amusing opportunity to scan the play list for the running order and find who had written and arranged each item. All three musicians trained in classical music at the Université de Montréal and are as adept at composing and arranging as at performing. Meanwhile, their spontaneous wit knitted the program into an eclectic whole.

Their exquisite new arrangement of George Harrison’s While My Guitar Gently Weeps and their moving tribute to their late friend Nick Naffin, in a lyrical, full-bodied arrangement of his Le Renard, contrasted their passionate, flamboyant flamenco treatment of Luiz Bonfá’s Manha de Carnaval.

Original compositions by Lévesque and Dufour also graced the bill, most dramatically with Breizh Tango and Garam Marsala respectively. In the former, the raw earthiness of Brittany’s gypsies was visceral, as was the sense of the heat, the colours, and taste of the spices of India in the latter; especially when Séb flipped his guitar, laid it horizontally on his knees and drummed it like a tabla while Glenn tightened and loosened a tuning peg on his to make it whine like a sitar.

MG3 is not merely a guitar trio; it is an ensemble of first-rate performers.

These three Montréal musketeers communicate through the pores of their skin, with honesty, humour, integrity and energy from the moment they strut on stage to when they march off, tous pour un; un pour tous.

Christine Pilgrim is a freelance writer who reviews the NOCCA season for The Morning Star.

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

 

MG3 - Montreal Guitar Trio

MONTREAL GUITAR TRIO – Friday, April 25th 2014

MG3 - Montreal Guitar Trio
MG3 – Montreal Guitar Trio

MONTREAL GUITAR TRIO
Friday April 25, 2014 7:30 pm

BUY TICKETS

“Back by popular demand” – without question! In January 2012, these three guitarists – Marc Morin, Sébastien Dufour and Glenn Lévesque, melted ice and won hearts in Vernon. Bubbling with unbridled energy and humour, they plucked, strummed and syncopated their way from jazz to classics, taking a delighted audience with them on their whirlwind trip. Like their music, their performance record is eclectic. They’ve appeared at BB King’s famous Blues Club at one end of the scale – and at the legendary Concertgebouw in Amsterdam at the other, winning awards all along the way. They may be the called the hottest jazz trio in Canada, but they play music of the world – around the world. http://mg3.ca

Concert Program:

MG3 will play a selection from the following pieces:

E. Morricone / S. Dufour /
G. Lévesque / F. Leclerc
El Paso
G. Lévesqe Breizh Tango
S. Dufour / L. Bonfá Tarantos /Manhã de Carnaval
G. Lévesque Raggytown
Rush Tom Sawyer
N. Naffin Le Renard
E. Morriconne Cinema Paradiso
S. Dufour Samba Pipoca
G. Lévesque Les Perles de Verre
G. Harrison While My Guitar Gently Weeps
S. Dufour Querido Moraito
G. Lévesque The Pit And The Pendulum
S.Dufour / G. Lévesque Le Peuple Des Glaces
S. Dufour Garam Masala

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.

Van Dhjango

Concert Review: Van Django Concert Adds Some Heat

Van Dhjango
Members of Van Django take to the stage at the Vernon Performing Arts Centre as part of the North Okanagan Community Concert Association’s current season.
— image credit: Christine Pilgrim

by  Christine Pilgrim – Vernon Morning Star
Published: March 26, 2014

Vancouver-based acoustic string quartet Van Django breathed fire into gypsy jazz and left the audience smokin’ at the North Okanagan Community Concert at the Performing Arts Centre.

Named in tribute to guitarist Django Reinhardt, Van Django is Vancouver’s answer to Paris’s Quintette du Hot Club de France, founded by Reinhardt and his equally inspiring violinist partner Stephane Grappelli in the 1930s.  Yet the backgrounds of the two ensembles are very different.

Grappelli spent his early years starving in an orphanage and took his first lessons from street musicians, while Van Django’s violinist Cameron Wilson was classically trained and works as much with symphonic music as with jazz.

Django Reinhardt only used his first two fingers to play because his left hand was crippled as a result of the burns he sustained when his gypsy caravan caught fire.  The tragic accident that cost him the use of his third and fourth fingers gave birth to a style now emulated by countless guitarists.  Yet Van Django’s Budge Schachte’s four fingers danced along the neck of his expressive guitar like a dandy spider on steroids.  “I’ve got them, so I might as well use them,” he smiled.

The quartet’s rhythm guitarist Finn Manniche is as accomplished as his counterpart, Reinhardt’s brother Joseph, who would step in for Django when he sometimes didn’t turn up for a gig.  But Joseph Reinhardt didn’t compose whimsical waltzes like Finn Manniche’s Waltz in the Shape of a Tree, a tune that could charm the birds off that, or indeed any tree.

The Quintette du Hot Club de France boasted a second rhythm guitarist because Django felt the need for two guitars to back him when he played solo. But Cameron Wilson’s understated, sensitive rhythm accompaniment on violin worked just as well, if not better, for Van Django.

Bassist Brent Gubbels, a younger, leaner counterpart to the Hot Club’s Louis Vola, was the only Van Django member not to have his composition included in Friday’s program. Cameron Wilson’s Tea for Three cheekily juxtaposed the notes of its namesake Tea for Two to witty effect, while Schachte named his snappy Estaban for a man in a black hat selling guitars in a TV commercial.

Speaking of television, Van Django’s arrangement of TV themes such as Spiderman and the Flintstones, interspersed with glimpses of Take Five and I’ve Got Rhythm, tickled our toes and our funny bones. And when they invited us to hum Ode to Joy in their happy jazz tribute to Beethoven, we needed no second asking.  We were at our most ecstatic when Van Django played, in every sense, with Beethoven’s 5th and 9th symphonies, along with such classics as Dvorak’s Humoresque, and their encore: Reinhardt’s arrangement of Grieg’s Norwegian Dance No. 2.

Lennon and McCartney would have revelled in their rendition of Norwegian Wood. At moments, the fab four seemed to slip into the skins and spirit of that other Fab Four.

In her review of the group’s 2007 appearance at the PAC, Lisa Talesnick quoted Vernon’s guitar maestro Neil Fraser, whom the North Okanagan Community Concert Association invited, along with several of his students, to sit in the front row once more.

So it seemed appropriate to leave the last word to him.

“I love it,” he said, “The gypsy rhythm is so infectious and direct that it gets to you right away.”  I agree.  Here’s to Van Django getting to us again and again!

The next NOCCA concert is with the Montreal Guitar Trio, Friday April 25th at 7:30pm. 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

 

Van Django

VAN DJANGO – Friday March 21, 2014

Van Django
VAN DJANGO

Friday March 21, 2014 7:30 pm

BUY TICKETS

Van Django is an acoustic string ensemble made up of four of Canada’s most talented and eclectic musicians; violinist Cameron Wilson, guitarist Budge Schachte, guitarist/cellist Finn Manniche and bassist Brent Gubbels. Their music is punchy, driving and rhythmically inventive, combining a wealth of musical influences while maintaining their roots in the gypsy jazz made famous by the 1930’s Quintet of the Hot Club of France.

They were such a hit in NOCCA’s 2007 season, last year’s audience survey securely placed them on the “back by popular demand” list. While versatility and variety makes  them stand out from their European counterparts, they still cling to their gypsy jazz roots – music inspired by Django Reinhardt and Stephane Grappelli. They are regulars at Canadian jazz festivals, and have also accompanied the Quiring Chamber Players, been guests of the Electra Women’s Choir, and appeared with the Vancouver Bach Choir. www.vandjango.com

Concert Program:

McHugh/ Fields Exactly Like You
Cameron Wilson Tea For Three
Birelli Lagrene Made In France
Lulu Reinhardt Lulu’s Swing
Antonin Dvořák Humoresque
De Sylva/ Rose/ Jolson Avalon
Lennon/ McCartney Norwegian Wood
Arr. Van Django Django TV
Lockhart/ Seitz The World Is Waiting For The Sunrise
– Intermission –
Django Reinhardt Vette
FInn Manniche Waltz In The Shape Of A Tree
Bruce/ Brown/arr. Van Django White Room
Mack/ Brown/ Dabney Shine
Budge Schachte Esteban
Beethoven/arr. Van Django A Fist Of Beethoven
Django Reinhardt Heavy Artillery
Django Reinhardt Impromptu

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.