NOCCA is excited to support North Okanagan’s incredible young talent with our inaugural North Okanagan Youth Showcase of Excellence (NOYSE) concert.
Thirteen young performing artists from Lake Country to Salmon Arm auditioned in November 2015 to participate in this NOYSE concert, and their levels of talent bode well for an extremely bright future! Two musical theatre dancers, two ballet dancers, two accompanied cellists, a classical guitarist, a self-accompanied vocalist, piano trio, slide piano player and a classical pianist will be introduced at our 2016 NOYSE concert by renowned Canadian pianist Ian Parker, our guest Master of Ceremonies.
Don’t miss this opportunity to hear and see how bright the future is for the performing arts in the North Okanagan!
The 2016 NOYSE Concert Presents:
3tissimo (piano trio) featuring Alyshia Black – violin, Mark Casson – cello and Melanie Shum – piano
Anastasia Martens – cello
Aria Izik-Dzurko – ballet
Brandon Schmor – slide piano
Brent Matterson – guitar
Hana Friedman – dance
Holly McCallum – cello
Jaeden Izik-Dzurko – piano
Jonathan Fraser-Munroe – dance
Kendra Jones-Munk – ballet
Megan Van Den Maagdenberg – piano, guitar and vocal
Honoraria will be awarded to all participants. All proceeds from the concert will go to an education fund to provide ongoing scholarships for music students in the North Okanagan as they continue their musical careers.
This is an extra concert in our series, not part of the regular NOCCA series. Admission price is $18 for adults, $15 for NOCCA subscribers and $10 for ages 18 and under.
Christine Tassan et les Imposteures
Sunday November 1, 2015 7:30 pm BUY TICKETS
The rollicking rhythms of gypsy jazz are back! Four harmonious voices are an extra bonus! In a genre usually dominated by men, Christine Tassan et les Imposteures are re-inventing and rejuvenating this timeless form of music. The friends playing two guitars, violin and bass, integrate new ideas with originality and flair. They frequently perform at highly respected jazz and guitar celebrations across Canada and in 2014 they were the only female group invited to the prestigious Django Reinhardt Festival in France. They wowed the crowd with their finesse and “joie de vivre”. www.christinetassanetlesimposteures.com
Our pre-concert “Rising Star” performances continue with Jenae Van Gameren, a 21 year old vocalist from Vernon, British Columbia who is working towards completing her degree in Vocal Performance with the Royal Conservatory of Toronto in 2016. She has been studying with Terry Logan for 13 years and teaching voice for five years. Active in musical theatre with Lights of Broadway for 14 years, Jenae has sung the role of Leisl in The Sound of Music, the lead role in Thoroughly Modern Millie , Scarecrow in the Wizard of Oz and Amber Von Tussle in Hairspray.
Christine Tassan et les Imposteures Concert Program:
Délit de fuite
Les chemins de traverse
Puttin
Chic Rumba
La maison sous les arbres
Le Bal/Montagne Ste-Genevièven
Fragile
Minor swing/Mattawa
C’est l’heure de l’apéro
– Intermission –
La Mauresque
It don’t mean a thing
Un Rom à Cuba
Et que ca saute
Vuelvo al sur
Dingo de Django
I got rythm/Daphné
Les nuits de Montréal
Tzigane/Gypsy Medley
SINGLE CONCERT TICKETS
Adults – $35 Under 18 – $17.50
Students on the eyeGo program – $5
Borealis String Quartet members Nikita Pogrebnoy (left), Patricia Shih, Yuel Yawney and Sungyong Lim celebrate with Coldstream composer Imant Raminsh (centre) after their world premiere performance of Raminsh’s Quartet No 3 at NOCCA’s gala opening of its 2015/16 season Thursday.— image credit: Christine Pilgrim
Review by Christine Pilgrim – Vernon Morning Star
Borealis String Quartet has played prestigious venues in New York, Rome, Beijing and Toronto, but it chose Vernon’s Performing Arts Centre to premiere the work specifically written for it by Coldstream’s Imant Raminsh, at the North Okanagan Community Concert Association (NOCCA) gala opening of its 2015/16 season Thursday, Sept. 24.
When the very first performance of his Quartet No 3 ended, to thunderous applause and a standing ovation, Raminsh quipped with his characteristic twinkle, “I’ve never heard it played so well.”
And indeed Patricia Shih on first violin, Yuel Yawney on second violin, Nikita Pogrebnoy on viola and Sungyong Lim on cello performed with unsurpassed clarity, integrity and artistry; energy too, particularly in Shih’s case.
They enthused about Raminsh’s Quartet No 3 and plan to include it in their regular programming.
“They’re wondering when I’ll come up with Quartet No 4,” said Raminsh. “I’m wondering too. Quartets are hard to write.”
Effusive epithets regarding Borealis’ immaculate precision and musicianship also applied to the other works on the program, Beethoven’s Quartet No 4 in C Minor and Dvorak’s Quartet No 12 in F Major (subtitled the American). Unlike the American, Raminsh’s Quartet No 3 is not yet subtitled. And instead of an all-encompassing key signature, each of his quartet’s four movements has a kind of tonal centre as a point of departure and return.
Although cellist Sungyong Lim only recently replaced long-time Borealis member Bo Peng, he shone in exquisite solo interludes in the American. In fact, every member shone individually at varying intervals. Their music sounded like a distinguished, mellifluous conversation. When one instrument soared above the rest, the others made room for it.
If only parliamentary debates could be conducted with such delicacy and deftness.
But Borealis members weren’t the only virtuosos on stage. Seventeen-year-old violinist Julien Haynes, accompanied on piano by Lauren Dvorak, opened the concert with Vittorio Monti’s version of the Hungarian traditional dance Czáardás (pronounced shardash), with a maturity beyond his years.
Liszt, Brahms, Delibes and Tchaikovsky have also written versions of Czárdás, which derives from the word czárda, meaning tavern, and, according to some, was used by the Hungarians to inspire their youth to join the military.
However, the audience loved Monti’s version, perhaps because of its familiarity. And everyone loved Haynes’s rendition of it, disregarding the mistake he masked with panache when enthusiasm overtook accuracy towards the end.
One minor disappointment: the audience didn’t “rise to the occasion” to invite the final encore Borealis so richly deserved. Perhaps they found the program choices too unfamiliar or a tad long. And, despite the elegant stage dressing, flamboyant foyer display and innovative fundraiser, selling piano keys for NOCCA’s replacement Steinway grand, those present didn’t quite embrace the gala spirit that volunteers worked so painstakingly to create.
But they will get another chance to enjoy NOCCA’s diverse programming on November 1 when Christine Tassen et Les Imposteurs perform gypsy jazz with a different flavour, but with the same flair as Borealis.
– Christine Pilgrim is a freelance writer who reviews the NOCCA season for The Morning Star.
Did you know the grand piano used at the Vernon And District Performing Arts Centre is owned by the North Okanagan Community Concert Association (NOCCA)? The current nine foot Steinway concert grand was manufactured in 1887, reconditioned in the 1950’s and subsequently purchased by NOCCA from the Steinway factory in Hamburg, Germany in 1954.
The piano has served us well for many years. It has been well maintained, rebuilt and refurbished several times but it is no longer suitable for a concert hall such as the Vernon And District Performing Arts Centre. Therefore NOCCA is purchasing and rebuilding a new Hamburg Steinway concert grand piano which will be delivered in 2016.
New Piano:
Our “new” nine foot Hamburg Steinway was originally built in 1978 and purchased by the Kultur Casino Saal in Berne, Switzerland. During its time as a concert piano its keys were caressed by pianists such as Maurizio Pollini, Martha Argerich, Edith Wiens, Elizabeth Leonskaya and Tatiyana Nikolayeva.
In 1988 the piano was purchased by concert pianist Thierry Gudel, who brought the piano with him to Canada when he moved here in 1995. Mr. Gudel now lives and works in Vancouver and after making a personal decision to downsize his residence, requested Verhnjak Pianos in White Rock to find a buyer. After several technicians’ reports, as well as gracious playing by Ian Parker and Sarah Hagen, NOCCA made the decision to purchase the piano and to proceed with the necessary refurbishment.
Rebuild – May 2015Rebuild – May 2015Rebuild – June 2015Rebuild – June 2015Rebuild – Sep 2015
Rebuild – Sep 2015
The cost of the new piano is $86,000 including a complete rebuild, refinishing, delivery and voicing. Most of this is being covered by NOCCA’s piano fund – a result of many years savings. However, we are short by $10,000.
To help raise the needed funds we are “selling” piano keys to music lovers in the community. For $100 you can sponsor one of the 88 keys… Or why not buy an octave (12 keys)? A large graphic piano keyboard will be on display in the Performing Arts Centre during the 2015/16 season. It will show the name of each donor who supports the piano fund on the key(s) they have sponsored and selected.
To sponsor a key please contact Cathie Stewart at 250-546-9160 (Armstrong) or email cathstew@telus.net
One of the most dynamic and exciting world-class ensembles of its generation, Borealis String Quartet has received international critical acclaim as an ensemble praised for its fiery performances, passionate style, and refined, musical interpretation. Founded in Vancouver in the fall of 2000, Borealis String Quartet has toured extensively in North America, Europe and Asia, performing to enthusiastic sold-out audiences in major cities, including New York, Washington D.C., Los Angeles, San Francisco, Rome, Shanghai, Beijing, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa and Vancouver.
Borealis actively seeks to promote new works and are strong supporters of Canadian music… So much so that the North Okanagan’s own internationally known composer, Imant Raminsh, has written music especially for them. Borealis will have the honour of playing Raminsh’s brand new string quartet for the very first time. Giving its world premiere performance right here in Vernon! www.borealisstringquartet.com
Not only will the audience be thrilled with Borealis, but NOCCA will be continuing the “Rising Star” performances initiated earlier this year. In September we welcome 17 year-old award-winning violinist, Julien Haynes, to warm up the audience prior to the ensemble’s highly anticipated program. A student of Bev Martens at the Vernon Community Music School since he could hold a violin, Julien Haynes has completed his Grade 10 RCM examinations in violin, as well as his Grade 6 RCM in piano. Julien will be accompanied on the piano by Lauren Dvorak.
Gala concert: this is our annual gala (bling) night, where we encourage those of you who like an occasion to dress up to wear your most elegant outfits!
Borealis String Quartet Concert Program:
Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827)
String Quartet No. 4 in C Minor, Opus 18
Imant Raminsh (1943 – )
Quartet No. 3 – WORLD PREMIERE
Intermission
Antonin Dvorak (1841-1904)
Quartet No. 12 in F major “The American”
SINGLE CONCERT TICKETS
Adults – $35 Under 18 – $17.50
Students on the eyeGo program – $5