CBC: Camerata Nova Wows Audience with Winnipeg Jets Chant

Read the CBC blog: http://music.cbc.ca/#/genres/Classical/blogs/2012/4/Camerata-Nova-wows-audience-with-Winnipeg-Jets-chant

This Sunday on Choral Concert the program is entirely dedicated to chant in all its forms, from early Gregorian chant right up to the here and now. The featured concert is fromCamerata Nova presenting a program called Chant! It’s a concert of vocal chants rooted in Corsica, Norway, Italy, France and Ukraine, to name just a few.

Andrew Balfour is founder and Artistic Director of Camerata Nova. For Camerata Nova’s encore, Andrew wrote a chant about the Winnipeg Jets that is a combination of two passions. He had no idea it would be this popular.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bQXXhmLmGrY

CBC Music spoke to Balfour about his Jets chant.

“I have always loved hockey, the game, the iconic Canadian story and legend that captivates so many minds and hearts. As a Winnipegger I have followed the Jets, even though ‘my’ team has always been the Montreal (Canadians). Growing up here and loving hockey, I have a special place in my hockey heart for our beloved Jets. True civic pride!!

“This last April was a watershed for our city with the return of the Jets, and I have never seen the city so full of joy for a sporting team.

“At the same time, I have always loved chant. When I was nine, I started to sing in the Men & Boys choir at All Saints Anglican Church in Winnipeg, and a large part of that musical commitment was chanting psalms, every Sunday.

“When we went to England on summer choir tours, chanting psalms was one of the musical highlights, and I shall never forget the feeling of starting a chant in a beautiful cathedral.

“This chant, written for and performed by Camerata Nova is a celebration of the return of a team that has captured the hearts and minds of hockey fans everywhere.”

Go Jets Go!!!!

Related links:

Camerata Nova performs in Ottawa

Winnipeg Free Press – If Camerata Nova says Chant!, you’d better listen

http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/arts-and-life/entertainment/music/if-camerata-nova-says-chant-youd-better-listen-141875833.html

If Camerata Nova says Chant!, you’d better listen

By: Gwenda Nemerofsky

Posted: 03/8/2012 1:00 AMhttp://media.winnipegfreepress.com/images/648*380/3884681.jpg&#8221; alt=”KARINE BEAUDETTE PHOTO<br />
Camerata Nova will present work by composers Amir Amiri (from left), Jim Hiscott and Andrew Balfour on Saturday and Sunday.” width=”648″ height=”380″ border=”0″ />KARINE BEAUDETTE PHOTO

Camerata Nova will present work by composers Amir Amiri (from left), Jim Hiscott and Andrew Balfour on Saturday and Sunday.

When you think about chant, what comes to mind? Likely a vision of Gregorian monks in ankle-length robes, walking through monastery hallways, deep in musical meditation. That’s the common perception, but there is much more to chant than found in religiously-based music.

See for yourself this Saturday (8 p.m.) and Sunday (2 p.m.) when Camerata Nova presents Chant! an exploration of chant from around the world, including some composed right here in our city.

It was a stroke of collaborative genius that devised this innovative program and if you follow Camerata Nova, you know that this is true to form. This 14-voice a capella singing group is not afraid to take risks. Packed houses indicate that their audiences love to take up the challenge, so it’s a win-win situation for all.

“We always had chant elements in our concerts,” said Mel Braun, the conductor of both performances. “We thought: why not do a whole program of it?”

Many of the singers, as well as artistic director Andrew Balfour, conductors Braun and Ross Brownlee, and board chairwoman Sandi Mielitz selected the repertoire and it is literally all over the map. Listeners will be taken on a musical travelogue through Greece, Italy, Ukraine, Tibet, Persia, Norway, France and more.

“We are singing in seven different languages, we counted,” said Braun, laughing.

Three new works will be debuted: Dies Eerie: Judgment Day Ride by Balfour, Pater Noster by Winnipeg composer Jim Hiscott, and Nafas (Breath) by Iranian-born Amir Amiri. A host of musicians will play various traditional and unusual instruments, including santur (72-string hammer dulcimer), electronic didgeridoo, marimba, and Taiko drums. There are even two Inuit throat singers, Melinda Tautu and Zeann Manernaluk, performing in Pérotin’s Viderunt Omnes, which dates back to the 13th century.

‘Different colours’

A program of this magnitude is a test. “The biggest challenge has been finding different colours,” said Braun, associate professor of voice and vocal department co-ordinator at the University of Manitoba faculty of music. “This is a great group to work with — they allow you to explore all kinds of stuff. They are adept at pure choral singing and have done a lot of Andrew’s (Balfour) music. His piece (Dies Eerie) evokes lots of scary images. In honouring his text and to make it come to life, we have been experimenting with different colours.”

The piece is written for choir, three percussionists and eight metronomes to be placed down the middle aisle of the hall. “We aren’t always singing ‘beautifully’. I hope that people will, in the best way, be frightened by Andrew’s work.”

Hiscott’s piece is inspired by Corsican chant. “We use more of a raw sound when singing it,” said Braun, “with ornamentation using quarter tones like in Middle Eastern singing.”

Amiri’s 13-minute Nafas was commissioned by Camerata Nova and is scored for choir, santur (Amiri is an accomplished player and will be the soloist) viola (Nancy Enns), marimba and other percussion (Alain Guilmette). It is based on Persian chant and, through a 100-year-old story of Iranian hero Rostam, explores the origins of hope. “There are sections in it where you sing the same phrase over and over,” said Braun, who then breaks into a demonstration by singing over the phone, “with only one small change — one different note.”

There a few nods to chant history, including the Kyrie from Palestrina’s Assumpta Est Maria, El Can de las Sybil — a ninth-century Sephardic chant and two Ukrainian songs. Popular Winnipeg composer Sid Robinovitch provides more local content with his robust and lively Adon Olam, written for the choir at the Shaarey Zedek Synagogue and which Braun says has “crazy exotic rhythms.”

Enns will also play young Norwegian composer Gjermund Larsen’s Polonese for fiddle and Taiko drummer and singer Phoebe Man will be featured in a Tibetan chant. “The choir improvises around Phoebe singing,” explained Braun.

“This concert is full of adventurous sounds that the choir is making and trying to communicate. Some of the themes are very interesting and we explore some profound subject matter,” said Braun.

Both performances are at Église Precieux-Sang, Manitoba architect Étienne Gaboury’s masterpiece at 200 Kenny St. Tickets are $25/adults, $20/seniors, $10/students and available at McNally Robinson Booksellers, at the door, by calling 918-4547 or at http://www.cameratanova.com

gwenda.nemerofsky@shaw.ca

CBC Manitoba Scene – Camerata Nova Presents the Power of Chant!

“Chant to me is a very ancient, primal form of music. I feel it is one of humanity’s oldest and most revered forms of expression, whether it is for worshipping gods or worshipping nature and the elements.”

—Andrew Balfour, composer and founder of Camerata Nova

Composers Amir Amiri, Jim Hiscott, Andrew Balfour (Karine Beaudette)

Posted by Sandra Thacker, SCENE Producer | Thursday March 8, 2012

Close your eyes and think about the word “chant”. 
(Now, open them and read this blog).

There is a very unique concert coming up.  Camerata Nova‘s concert March 10 and 11 features an amazing array of vocal chant from Persian, Tibetan, Hebrew, Inuit, Italian, French, Sephardic, Corsican, Norwegian and Ukrainian traditions.

Three new works will be premiered:  Nafas (Breath) by Amir Amiri for choir, santur, viola and percussion; Pater Noster by Jim Hiscott for choir; and Dies Eerie: The Judgement Day Ride by Andrew Balfour.

We asked some of the participants to tell us how Chant inspires them:

Amir Amiri
The literal meaning of chant – Zekr -  is remembrance, specifically remembrance of the Beloved, God. Zekr harmonizes the human instrument to the tune of God’s remembrance.  If done correctly, Zekr frees the seeker from daily distractions, thoughts, fears and worries by uniting every aspect of his/her being. This practice activates the energy centers in the body, beginning the process of purification of the heart.

While composing Nafas (Breath) I was constantly reminded of the delicate relationship between the idea of breath and the sound of breathing.  I wanted to use breathing as a moment in music and to do it in a way that stayed true to the zekr practice of the Sufi tradition.

Camerata Nova (Dan Menheer)

Andrew Balfour
Chant to me is a very ancient, primal form of music.   I feel it is one of humanity’s oldest and most revered forms of expression, whether it is for worshipping gods or worshipping nature and the elements.  Every culture seems to have developed some type of chant.  I am absorbed by all forms of it.


Mel Braun

The power of chant is its ability to build intensity through repetition and variance. Chant connects to breath, heartbeat and intent.  When a group of people chant together, they tap into a power that can change the world.

Jim Hiscott
What has most impressed me about Corsican polyphonic chant is the profound human and social aspect of it.  Singing together, responding to the resonance of sound and the expression of the voices of others, is a metaphor for deep interpersonal relations in this culture.  This has also made me think back to the wonderful recordings of Gregorian chant I heard back in the 70s, by communities of monks or nuns.  Chant can produce a psychological and emotional experience that touches on the deepest human values.

Alexis Kochan 

‘Chant’ for me means long-lined, elegant (sometimes interweaving) melodies from an ancient culture (my own Ukrainian culture) sung by a group (preferably of village women) with incredible power, balance of voices, and perfect taste, with an intensity that brings tears to your eyes….
Phoebe Man
Mantras (chants) are powerful sounds and when chanted with devotion produce enormous effects. As the mind concentrates more and more on the mantra and its meaning, it conditions the mind, taking it to higher states, forming the path to salvation – the eternal bliss.
Chanting bestows blessings and nourishes the seeds of enlightenment that are within oneself.  These virtuous seeds help one to develop love, kindness, compassion and wisdom which eventually lead to enlightenment or Buddhahood.

Angela Neufeld

Growing up Mennonite, 4-part harmony was all-important, a tradition we still take great pride in.  However, as an adult, I had the opportunity to travel to other parts of the world and hear how others expressed their lives and faith through song – some through harmony, but many with single, powerful lines.
I have come to appreciate the surprising complexity of the chant, the comfort in repetition and the transcendent power of the mantra. What I love about our Chant! concert is that it takes some of the best the world has to offer, brings it all together, and blends it into a creation that becomes uniquely all of ours.

Watch this preview of Chant!:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OBEeSBLlm4Q&context=C4b799a6ADvjVQa1PpcFNYDcI1p9Pu2zFs9mlOZkCQfLKLoVr-6bc=
Camerata Nova Chant! preview (Conrad Sweatman)

CHANT! SILENT AUCTION – 8pm Saturday, March 10 & 2pm Sunday, March 11 at Église Précieux-Sang (200 Kenny Street)

CHANT! SILENT AUCTION
8pm Saturday, March 10 & 2pm Sunday, March 11
Église Précieux-Sang (200 Kenny Street)

During the Chant!’s concert intermissions, come and bid on a wonderful selection of prizes: 

1. Print by artist Audla Pudlat and art book

2. Basket of French goodies and French/English translation services

3. Five hours of the services of a skilled handyman

4. Two hours of gardening consultation and gear for the garden

5. Gift basket from the Assiniboine Credit Union featuring fair trade 
coffee and tea

6. Great stuff from Camerata Nova – subscription/CD/t- 
shirt/poster/digeridoo lesson

7. $100 gift certificate from WildWoodRose Vintage clothing

8. Passes/tickets/books/CD/fun stuff from the Children’s
Museum/Winnipeg Writers’ Festival/Dry Cold Productions/Prairie
Voices

9. Earrings from artist Sophie Katz; books from Turnstone Press and
subscription to Prairie Fire

10. Original framed artwork “Works in Birchbark” by Garry Dreger 
(sealed bid).

Bidding will close just before end of intermission. No bids will be accepted during the actual performance. All packages will be awarded to the highest bidder.

Camerata Nova presents Chant! Saturday, March 10 at 8 pm and Sunday, March 11 at 2 pm Église Précieux-Sang (200 Kenny Street)

Saturday, March 10 at 8 pm and Sunday, March 11 at 2 pm
Église Précieux-Sang (200 Kenny Street)

Camerata Nova presents Chant!, one of the most unusual and innovative concerts of the Winnipeg season! Conducted by Mel Braun and conceived by Andrew Balfour, Chant! offers an amazing array of vocal chant from Persian, Tibetan, Hebrew, Inuit, Italian, French,Sephardic, Corsican, Norwegian and Ukrainian traditions.

A mix of pure chant and music based on chant, the concert features three strong new premieres: Nafas (Inhale, Exhale) by Amir Amiri for choir, santur, viola and percussion – inspired by Persian chant; Pater Noster by Jim Hiscott for choir – inspired by Corsican chant; and Dies Eerie: The Judgement Day Ride by Andrew Balfour for choir, three percussionists and 8 metronomes – inspired by medieval, Renaissance and Aboriginal chant. There will also be opportunities for audience participation during the Tibetan chant led by Chinese drummer/singer Phoebe Man.

There will be a 30-minute pre-concert talk at 7:00 pm on Saturday and a post-concert talk on Sunday afternoon. Andrew Balfour will lead a discussion about chant and its force as an inspiration in the creation of new music with artists/composers Amir Amiri, Phoebe Man and Jim Hiscott.

Please note: Please enter through the Précieux-Sang Parish Hall doors.

Camerata Nova Concert Preview – Chant! 
http://www.youtube.com/watchv=OBEeSBLlm4Q&context=C3cfadebADOEgsToPDskK_XmjEO90EvgzGVc-NaC7i
Purchase Camerata Nova subscriptions ($23 – $48), or casual tickets ($5 – $30).Call 204-918-4547 or visit www.cameratanova.com
Casual tickets are also available at McNally Robinson.

CBC Manitoba Scene: Camerata Nova serves up some traditional English carolling

http://www.cbc.ca/manitoba/scene/music/2011/11/26/sir-christemas/

Posted by Ross Brownlee, Conductor

“I now conduct one of my favourite pieces, “Lullay My Liking” by Gustav Holst. I’ll never forget singing one of its soaring soprano solos back in All Saints!” – Ross Brownlee

CamerataNovaSIDEBAR.jpg
Camerata Nova (Dan Menheer)
Imagine you’re in a great English cathedral at Christmas time, the glorious sounds of traditional English carols reverberating up to the rafters. That’s the idea of Camerata Nova’s next offering, Sir Christemas.Ross Brownlee conducts the performances. And English music is definitely in his blood. Many, many years ago I spent my Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday nights, plus Saturday and Sunday mornings down at All Saints Church. I was a choirboy in their Men and Boys Choir. It was serious business! We worked and played hard and, in retrospect, made quite amazing music. A favourite time was Christmas.It started with an Advent Procession Service. The church was always packed. There were candles, it was dark, we had enormous anticipation and we sang fabulous music from the King’s College tradition. It was nothing short of magic for us awkward little boys who happened to be quite good at singing.

Now, fast forward… I’ve been to England four times singing this wonderful music in the great Cathedrals of that country. I learned to conduct, and now have the great privilege of standing in front of Camerata Nova and directing this fearless choir. Each Christmas, we choose a style of music for our annual performance; this year it’s the music of the English Cathedrals!

Ross shorter 200.jpg

In many ways, my experience has come full circle. I now conduct one of my favourite pieces, “Lullay My Liking” by Gustav Holst, with Camerata Nova, the Winnipeg Boys Choir and Mike McKay on the Organ. I’ll never forget singing one of its soaring soprano solos back in All Saints! With luck, our next set of young choristers will find some of the magic we found in years past.

Ross Brownlee conducts Camerata Nova’s presentation of Sir Christemas Saturday, Nov. 26 at 8:00 p.am. and Sunday, Nov. 27 at 2:00 p.m. at Crescent Fort Rouge United Church.  They’ll be joined by the Winnipeg Boys Choir. Admission is free.
Ross Brownlee (Dan Menheer)

This content is provided by Ross Brownlee. The views expressed do not express the views of CBC. CBC is not responsible for this content.

http://www.youtube.com/user/CamerataNovaPodcasts#p/a/u/0/-eGV-hJ9H40

CAMERATA NOVA Manitoba Hydro Presents: Sir Christemas @8pm on Nov. 26 & @2pm on Nov. 27 (FREE!) Crescent Ft. Rouge Church, corner of Nassau/Wardlaw

Manitoba Hydro Presents: Sir Christemas, Camerata Nova’s annual FREE concert, is happening this Saturday November 26th at 8:00 pm and Sunday November 27th at 2:00 pm. Visit www.cameratanova.com , the 11/12 Season page of our WordPress site, or our Facebook page for more details.

Admission is FREE; however, donations are gratefully accepted. Please bring a non-perishable food item for Winnipeg Harvest.

_________________________
Le concert GRATUIT annuel de Camerata Nova, intitulé Sir Christemas, a lieu ce samedi 26 novembre à 20 h et ce dimanche 27 novembre à 14 h. Rendez-vous àwww.cameratanova.com ou sur notre page Facebook pour obtenir plus de détails.

L’entrée est GRATUITE, mais nous acceptons gracieusement les dons. Veuillez apporter un article de nourriture non périssable pour Winnipeg Harvest.