Joe Trio

JOE TRIO – Saturday March 21, 2015 7:30 pm

JOE TRIO – piano, violin and cello
Saturday March 21, 2015 7:30 pm
BUY TICKETS

Joe Trio
Joe Trio

These classically-trained musicians fit perfectly into the Kaleidoscope theme. They won’t to be neatly categorized! Instead, JOE TRIO strives for diversity, versatility, more than a little humour and unpredictability.

Their repertoire consists of the classics – from Papa Haydn to Uncle Shostakovich – new works by contemporary composers, and their own arrangements of popular, jazz and rock tunes. More than virtuosi, the Trio’s members are fantastic performers who engage the audience in a way few classical musicians can. Witty, charming, and tremendously musical, Joe Trio leaves audiences with a new appreciation for classical music. www.joetrio.com

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.

Virtuoso horn player Louis-Philippe Marsolais (left) and North Okanagan Community Concert Association president Paul Maynes

Concert Review: Les Violons Du Roy Play Music Fit For A King

Virtuoso horn player Louis-Philippe Marsolais (left) and North Okanagan Community Concert Association president Paul Maynes
Virtuoso horn player Louis-Philippe Marsolais (left) and North Okanagan Community Concert Association president Paul Maynes.

By CHRISTINE PILGRIM for The Vernon Morning Star.

Les Violons du Roy, its name adapted from that of the string orchestra that played for a 17th century French king, awed Tuesday’s North Okanagan Community Concert Association’s gala audience with music fit for any king, or queen for that matter.

One young man said afterwards, “This review should be easy to write. One word: wow!” That sentiment was confirmed by NOCCA president Paul Maynes, who overheard the same expletive countless times during intermission.

There was no opportunity to speak with OSO conductor Rosemary Thomson or the horn players who had flocked specifically to hear Haydn’s glorious Horn Concerto No 2 in D Major, played mellifluously by Louis-Philippe Marsolais, but judging by their faces after the show, they felt the same way.

The energy of this supremely accomplished ensemble of French Canadian musicians infected the Performing Arts Centre like a fever – a fever that acted as a tonic. Music coursed through every vein, from stage to auditorium. There were even enthusiastic bouts of applause between movements from some who were too carried away to check their program notes.

Conductor Mathieu Lussier’s body language was reminiscent of that of a Martha Graham trained dancer. He was engaged in music-making from the top of his head to the tip of his toes, and the orchestra responded as one body.   We could well have been witnessing a ballet. The atmosphere was electric.

The program opened with Haydn’s Horn Concerto. Although this piece was originally written for “natural horn” virtuosos, Marsolais played it on the more modern French horn, which, incidentally, originated in Germany and is not to be confused with the English horn, which is French (loosely quoting the hilarious soprano Anna Russell).

When asked why he didn’t play his baroque horn, Monsieur Marsolais said it was too difficult and dangerous to transport two precious, cumbersome instruments on the company’s current exhaustive tour of Western Canada.

No matter. The notes he produced flowed like chocolate from a fountain and captivated the audience entirely. They say a horn player needs a five-litre lung capacity.  Marsolais’s might well have exceeded that!

He also charmed the audience with a second appearance in Schumann’s Adagio and Allegro, Opus 70, which he orchestrated.

Then there was Felix Mendelssohn’s String Symphony No 10 in B Minor. The child prodigy wrote it in May, 1823 when he was 14 and performed its premiere with a string quintet at his parents’ opulent Berlin home.

The energy and precision with which Les Violons du Roy interpreted their arrangement of its only surviving movement, which  begins mournfully, continues with a recurring theme and ends in a vibrant climax, wrought spontaneous applause and added to the wonder that a 14 year old could achieve such a degree of excellence.

Franz Schubert’s String Quartet No 14 in D Minor, known as Death and the Maiden, brought the concert to a rapturous close. Violin soloist Pascale Giguere particularly shone, as did leading players on second violin, viola and cello. Arranged by Lussier, who recently took over the reins from ensemble founder and former director Bernard Labadie while he battles ill health, was a coup de gras.

A standing ovation was rewarded by J.S. Bach’s Air on G String, which evoked sighs of recognition from the packed rows of happy music lovers.

Those unfortunate enough to miss the concert might console themselves with one of the 29 CDs made by this fantastic chamber orchestra from Montreal.

– Reproduced by kind permission of Christine Pilgrim and The Vernon Morning Star.

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.

BRASS ON THE GRASS – Friday September 12th, 2014

Fish on Five
Fish on Five

BRASS ON THE GRASS – with Fish on Five – returns to Mackie Lake House.
Friday September 12th, 2014 6:00 pm
BUY TICKETS

What is Fish on Five?  It’s the wacky name for five friends who share two great loves – fishing and  music!  They are all brass players with the Okanagan Symphony Orchestra. The quintet (Dennis Colpitts, Edmund House, Wade Dorsey, Jim Howie and Reynold Epp) will serve up a musical menu of toe-tappers, singalong songs, classics and jazz.

Pack up your favourite picnic and enjoy great music, while you dine “al fresco” on the lawns overlooking Kalamalka Lake at historic Mackie Lake House. If you prefer, add a picnic supper by Vernon’s famous Gumtree Catering with your concert ticket, $40 advance purchase by September 6th.

Tickets – $15.00 each for concert or $40 each for concert and picnic supper

Ticket Seller, 2800 – 33rd Street, Vernon 250-549-7469
or at Mackie Lake House, 7804 Kidston Road, Coldstream
Purchase on-line at ticketseller.ca

This unique, delightful musical evening is co-sponsored by Mackie Lake House and the North Okanagan Community Concert Association.

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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