Concert review: NOCCA season ends in a melding of cultures

nOCCAChoirs-review
Members of Kokopelli, University of Pretoria Youth Choir and Okanagan Indian Band Cultural Immersion School Choir mingle in the Marie Fleming Room at the Performing Arts Centre before their concert — image credit: Christine Pilgrim

Below is a review of the fabulous final concert of NOCCA’s 2015/16 season. Don’t forget you can now reserve your seats and subscribe to the upcoming 2016/17 season “A Grand Year to Hear” at ticketseller.ca

Review published on April 29th, 2016 by  Christine Pilgrim – Vernon Morning Star

There aren’t enough superlatives in English to describe the North Okanagan Community Concert Association’s offering of African music. So, in Zulu: hle kakhulu!

Three youth choirs, numbering almost 150 members in total, graced the Performing Arts Centre stage and, as one audience member observed, “Every face was beautiful,” in creating a rainbowed feast of united energy, rhythm and song.

It’s rare to see a standing ovation halfway through a program but that’s what we saw when the University of Pretoria Youth Choir  (UPYC) performed We Dance from the musical Once on This Island.

The song tells of the conflict between landowners and peasants who come together through dance because “if the gods move our feet, we dance.”

The gods surely moved UPYC’s feet, and their voices, regardless of which language they used.

It’s also rare to hear applause for an introduction. That, too, was the case when visionary UPYC choir director, Lhente-Mari Pitout, spoke of her South African “born free generation,” choir members who are “at peace with each other in the realization that we are all connected with the same spirit.”

Pitout went on to state what is possible if we forgive.

She rehearses with students from 36 different South African high schools for several hours once a week. The result was an ocean of music and movement that gratified the soul.

We tasted Africa’s sunshine and smelled its warm rain, while Pitout spoke of the choir’s wonder at the still lingering snow at Silver Star.

She thanked Kokopelli Youth Choir’s founder and artistic director, Scott Leithead, for sponsoring UPYC and countless other African choirs over the past 20 years.

Among those choirs was one from Namibia. Its soloist, Nelson Nagenda, was featured in Kokopelli’s outstanding opening segment.

His voice blended sublimely with the young man’s mature interpretation in both the Zulu gospel prayer, Phind’ukhulume, and the North American hit, It’s Almost Like Being in Love, sung back in the 1940s by Frank Sinatra, Nat King Cole, Judy Garland and, later, Gene Kelly in the filmBrigadoon.

But none touched Nagenda’s style nor that of the 11 Kokopelli members who accompanied him, vocally creating musical instruments, percussion and harmonies.

Perhaps it’s unjust to single out favourites. The whole was equal to the sum of its parts, and that sum was beyond measure.

It included pint-sized members of the Okanagan Indian Band Cultural Immersion School’s choir, who gave a prayer and welcome song in the Syilx language. And they observed elder Madeline Gregoire’s instruction before the show, to remember they were not there for themselves.

All three choirs performed “off book.” The resulting freedom of movement and expression paid huge dividends, particularly for UPYC and Kokopelli. Simple but effective choreography, steeped in the essence of Africa, prompted another audience member to say, “It makes you want to go there.”

If unable to do so, we were at least blessed to experience some of the finest choral music produced anywhere.

– Christine Pilgrim is a freelance writer who reviews the North Okanagan Community Concert Association series for The Morning Star.

Reserve your seats and subscribe to the upcoming 2016/17 season “A Grand Year to Hear” at ticketseller.ca

Kokopelli Choir

Kokopelli & The University Of Pretoria Youth Choirs

Kokopelli Bio Photo 2012Kokopelli & The University Of Pretoria Youth Choirs
Monday April 25, 2016 7:00 pm
BUY TICKETS

From two countries, two choirs with over 100 youthful voices interweave, creating musical magic. Award winning Kokopelli Youth Choir from Edmonton, Alberta plus internationally acclaimed University of Pretoria Youth Choir (UPYC) from South Africa are coming to Vernon to present a vibrant musical experience with over 100 voices on stage for this special Monday evening NOCCA concert on April 25th at 7:00 pm.

Kokopelli is celebrating its 20th season this year and brings the UPYC to showcase African music and share a vocal extravaganza of interwoven melodies and cultural understanding that will entertain and delight all those lucky enough to have a ticket to this performance.

Composed of singers aged 16 to 23 years, Kokopelli is often considered the ambassador for the six-choir association and has received several awards for its work with youth, music education and the African Projects Fund. In 2015, Kokopelli won both the National Music Festival and the Canadian Competition for amateur Choirs (Mixed Youth Choir Category).

Kokopelli is directed by Scott Leithead, founder and artistic director of the Kokopelli Choir Association, and also serves as the Vice Chairman of the Choral/Vocal Division for MusicFest Canada and longtime member of the advisory committee for the Canadian Rocky Mountain Music Festival. Leithead sits on numerous national boards and conducts and adjudicates internationally. He will be conducting the festival mass choir of 1000 at the 2016 International Kathaumixw Festival in Powell River, BC in July. www.kokopellichoirs.com

University of Pretoria Youth Choir’s April tour in Canada will showcase African music and inspire three international festivals as the feature choir. Established in January 2001 and conducted by Lhente-Mari Pitout since 2005, this choir forms part of the multi-choir model of the University of Pretoria, achieving many accolades locally and internationally over the years. They represent the full diversity of South Africa, and embracing this diversity gives this wonderful youth choir their unforgettable passionate sound and musicality. The concept Ubuntu, the Nguni term that means: ‘human kindness’ that in the philosophical sense translates to ‘the universal bond of sharing that connects all humanity’, is part of the fabric of this unique choir from South Africa. www.upyouthchoir.co.za

Opening for the choirs, students of the Okanagan Indian Band Cultural Immersion School will be offering a greeting, a prayer and a song.

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.