Wednesday, October 5, 2011

TWO THUMBS UP FOR CANADIAN PIANIST CHRISTINA PETROWSKA QUILICO - WHOLENOTE MAGAZINE


Busily Weaving a Musical Life:

Christina Petrowska Quilico

(article courtesy of the WholeNote Magazine, Oct. 2011 issue)

When we contacted Christina Petrowska Quilico early this past summer, she was, no surprise, busy on more than one front. For one thing, she was busy writing program notes for her 26th CD. The CD features two piano concerti written for her, by Heather Schmidt (Piano Concerto No.2) and by George Fiala (Concerto Cantata for piano, opera chorus and chimes). “I gave the world premieres for both pieces” she explained. “And I am stuck on finding a good title so that was what I was working on right now.”

“For another thing,” she said, “I am looking forward to taking one of my daughters to see Alice in Wonderland with the National Ballet of Canada. My daughters and I love the ballet and we have all taken lessons.”

“So no slacking off during the summer?” we asked.

“I am looking forward to working with Christopher House of the Toronto Dance Theatre on a new major project for next April,” she replied. “Rehearsals begin in September but the works starts now. I’m also working with dancer Terrill Maguire from York University on a dance/piano concert for September.”

And that wasn’t all, “This July I’m recording new works by Constantine Caravassilis (the first CD of a 2 CD set). I am practising the Grieg piano concerto to perform with the Kindred Spirits Orchestra November 5 at the Markham Theatre. I will be learning more music by Constantine Caravassilis to record the second CD of his music. I am reviewing my Ann Southam repertoire for several tribute concerts and working on the rest of the Glass Houses and other pieces she wanted me to record.”

And then there is her teaching: “I am a Full Professor at York so my work begins there very soon. I’m Director of Classical Piano and there are a lot of piano students which is extremely encouraging. I have to plan my courses and course kits, audition and do quite a bit of paperwork so that everything runs smoothly.”

Well, the saying goes that if you want something done well, you should always give it to a busy person! So, fast forward three months, and, no surprise, everything on Petrowska Quilico’s list is three months further ahead. As she said, she prefers things to run smoothly.

The dance/concert with Terrill Maguire has been and gone (September 15 to 18). The 26th CD’s program notes are complete, it has a name — Tapestries — and Centrediscs will be launching it in early November. As for the first Constantine Caravassilis CD she was working on, it’s “in the can” and the second is under way.

Caravassilis is a young composer who won the 2009 Karen Kieser Prize in Canadian Music for his work Sappho de Mytilène for mezzo-soprano, flute and piano and subsequently was awarded the first Harry Freeman Prize for young composers, along with Petrowska Quilico, towards this recording project.

Fact is, that in terms of new commissions and performances of contemporary music, there is no greater champion than Petrowska Quilico. This is her fifth CD of Canadian piano concerti (and third concerto CD on Centrediscs) — for a total of eight recorded Canadian piano concerti, two of which had Juno nominations for best composition (Glenn Buhr and Larysa Kuzmenko) and two of which have been, quite literally, “out of this world” — astronaut Steve MacLean took her recording of David Mott’s Eclipse on the space shuttle Atlantis, and her recording of Alexina Louie’s Star-Filled Night on his first mission on the space shuttle Columbia in 1992.

For almost her entire performing career, Petrowska Quilico has championed the music of her time. So it was less of a surprise to find out there are more projects of this type in the wings, including a CD of piano music by Canadians Kati Agocs, Abigail Richardson, and Ana Sokolovic, than it was to hear of the upcoming performance of the Grieg piano concerto with Kindred Spirits in Markham.

It shouldn’t be so surprising, though, if one thinks back on her concert tours, as a soloist and as partner to her late husband, the legendary Metropolitan Opera baritone Louis Quilico. She has toured four continents — been to Taiwan, the Middle East, France, Germany, Greece, Ukraine, throughout the United States and Canada. On the recital stage, she has appeared at such prestigious New York venues as Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall, and Merkin Concert Hall.

She is at home with many other musical periods — particularly the romantics and early 20th century composers. Among her over two dozen recordings are Romantic Gems, which includes works by Clara Schumann, Fanny Mendelssohn, Amy Beach, Granados, Janacek and Rachmaninoff; a Chopin and Liszt CD, and another of Debussy. And with Louis Quilico, she recorded four CDs — of French and Russian songs, and of recitals of arias, art songs and show tunes.

In a nice turn of phrase the Toronto Star’s William Littler called her an “astonishing pianist … particularly gifted as an interpreter of the language of the moderns like Stockhausen and Messiaen ... who can [also] control the Niagara of sound in a great Chopin Polonaise.”

When it comes to breadth of repertoire, technical facility and interpretive prowess, few pianists can match her. Trained from an early age in the demanding Russian tradition, she can wrap herself around repertoire from Bach to Boulez and beyond. Composer Gyorgy Ligeti called her “one of the absolutely best young pianists” when he first heard her, and in 2002, when Pierre Boulez was in Toronto to receive the Glenn Gould Prize, he coached Petrowska Quilico only hours before she was to perform his Première Sonate on a live national broadcast. As the story goes, even though she had meticulously followed his own metronome markings, he exhorted her to “Play faster, play faster” — so she did, to his great satisfaction. That energetic performance is preserved on her Ings CD.

Of all the performing and recording that she is doing, though, one still senses that her dedication to the work of composer Ann Southam, who died last year, remains central, and there is no doubt that the admiration was reciprocal.

“I didn’t think anyone would play this piece,” Southam once remarked of her work ‘Rivers’ “but when Christina performed it, I loved the sound and what was happening as the hands interacted. And I loved the little tunes and motifs that could be heard in the interaction between the hands. It takes a whiz-bang pianist to make those heard. I don’t know how she does it!”

And Petrowska Quilico wrote a piece for The WholeNote after Southam’s passing in which she quoted Schoenberg’s comment “that there was still great music to be written in C” and that Ann Southam proved him right, “cheerfully hunting for Middle C — and in doing so [having] a disconcerting way of reinterpreting familiar forms and techniques.” And of Southam’s “continuing to use a 12 tone row and spin it out, one note at a time for 20 years,” Petrowska Quilico observed: “Ann hoped she could bring some tonal sense to the serial technique. It may be called “minimal,” but her works embroider the layers of tonal fabric created through the serial row — weaving, in fact, in a manner that reflects traditional women’s work.”

Interestingly, Petrowska Quilico sees in Southam something of the tradition of Chopin and Liszt. “Her pieces are characterized by a flow and energy produced by rhythmic cycles that repeat within interchanging melodic motifs. Her slow music suspends our sense of time, while the fast pieces, with their undercurrent of recklessness, become hypnotic and surprisingly tranquil and reflective. Although maintaining an angular tone row, both extremes reveal a serene lyricism that is a common thread in her music.”

Petrowska Quilico’s performances of Ann Southam’s music continue. In October, she is performing Southam’s “Rivers” in three concerts — first in early October at the 2011 Contemporary Music Festival at James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Virginia, followed by excerpts as part of an Arraymusic tribute to Southam on October 14 at Gallery 345, and, again excerpts, in a Celebration of Women Composers at the Heliconian Hall on October 28.

Not only a versatile performer, Petrowska Quilico is also a valued teacher. At 20 years old, she began teaching at the Paris American Academy, focusing on the music of the 20th century Viennese school of Schoenberg, Webern and Berg. Since that early start, she has been on the faculty of the Royal Conservatory in Toronto, and both Carleton and Ottawa Universities. While in Ottawa, she was director of the new music group Espace Musique for five years and music director of Opera Lyra for its first year.

If teachers are shaped by their own teachers, then Petrowska Quilico had a head start. One of her first teachers was the “revered but exacting” Russian-born pedagogue Boris Berlin at the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto. Besides demanding equal technical facility with both hands, Berlin opened Petrowska Quilico’s ears to new music, refusing to let her study a Chopin concerto unless she learned a new Canadian work as well. Through hours of practice and her mother’s encouragement, she grew attached to the piece. When she received her ARCT at the Conservatory, Berlin recommended her for a scholarship to Juilliard. (She also managed to emerge from Juilliard with a degree in science as well as music, but that is a story for another day.)

In 1987, Petrowska Quilico joined the faculty in the Music Department at York University in Toronto, where she remains to this day, a tenured Full Professor of Piano and Musicology. She is also Director of Classical Piano and a member of the Graduate Faculty, in which she continues to teach and supervise Masters and PhD students. As her curriculum vitae puts it, “primarily an exponent of the Russian tradition — with training in baroque, classical, romantic and contemporary, and experience as a soloist, chamber musician and accompanist — she adds her vast knowledge gleaned from working with diverse composers, and her personal insights from years of study and extra-musical pursuits.”

Another story goes that just as she was entering university, Petrowska Quilico had a poem printed in the New York Times, published an entire book of poetry, and seriously considered writing as a career. As she asserts, “I didn’t want to be just a pianist, or to give up the writing.” She has continued writing over the years, as well as painting. And if there is anything such a “just a pianist” Christina Petrowska Quilico is certainly not it.

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Dear friends, 

This is an open invitation to a free concert featuring my chamber music, presented by the University of Toronto 's Faculty of Music. 

A number of Toronto 's brightest stars are getting together on May 28th, 2011 to perform my latest creations and some favorites. There are 3 world premieres and some award-winning pieces! 


details:

THE CHAMBER MUSIC of CONSTANTINE CARAVASSILIS

SATURDAY, MAY 28TH at 7:30 pm

WALTER HALL - 80 QUEEN'S PARK CRES.,

UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO 

Featuring performances by:
Christina Petrowska Quilico - piano
Susan Hoeppner - flutes
Joseph Macerollo - accordion
Beverley Johston - mallets
Ariana Chris - mezzo soprano
Lynn Kuo - violin
Zhenya Yesmanovich - piano
Julian Knight - viola
Andras Weber - 'cello
Jennifer Burford - violin


Reception to follow at the foyer of Walter Hall.



Sunday, December 5, 2010

REMEMBERING ANN SOUTHAM


Dear friends,

It is with deep sadness and a heavy heart that I announce to you the passing of Toronto composer Ann Southam, Thursday afternoon (Nov. 25th). Undoubtedly one of the most unique compositional voices in Canada, Ann was a graduate of the University of Toronto (Lic.Dip., 1963) where she studied with Professor emeritus Gustav Ciamaga. She was also a student of the late Samuel Dolin at the Royal Conservatory of Music (Toronto), a master teacher credited for nurturing the talents of a remarkable number of Canadian composers, many of which went on to having illustrious careers both as composers and educators.

Ann worked in a wide range of styles and enjoyed success early in her career as a composer of electronic music: she wrote countless pieces for tape (literally, cutting tape) in collaboration with a number of renowned modern dance companies and artists. Her early instrumental music was rooted in the tradition of the great romantics. She later adopted the 12-tone system, employed jazz elements to some of her work, experimented with form and eventually settled to writing in a minimalist style, progressively graduating from complex structures to music made of the simplest (albeit not simplistic) materials.

Her artistic merits aside, Ann was also a philanthropist, a solid supporter of Canadian New Music and a strong advocate of Canadian women artists at large. In recognition to all of the above, Ann was earlier this year appointed to the Order of Canada. She was appreciated and will be remembered by those who had the privilege of knowing her for her kindness, humbleness and the humorous and witty ways in which she approached all things in life.

For any and all of you interested, a large body of Ann's work (scores and recordings) is available for viewing and/or purchasing through the Canadian Music Center.

Click here to hear pianist Christina Petrowska-Quilico perfoming Southam's Glass Houses

- Constantine Caravassilis

Monday, October 11, 2010

2010 RBC EMERGING ARTIST AWARD | TORONTO ARTS FOUNDATION | MAYOR'S AWARDS LUNCH

CONSTANTINE CARAVASSILIS NAMED FINALIST FOR THE 2010 RBC EMERGING ARTIST AWARD


(left-to-right) Jamie Travis, Michael Wheeler, Constantine Caravassilis

Sincere congratulations to all finalists for the Mayor 's (TAF) awards this year, and especially to the two counterparts in my category (2010 RBC Emerging Artist Award), Michael Wheeler and Jamie Travis. It was a great honor to be nominated alongside both these incredible young artists.

Many thanks go to the Canadian Music Center for the nomination.

Thumbs up to this year 's winner of this prestigious award, Toronto-based emerging filmmaker Jamie Travis.

Other finalists from Toronto's extraordinarily vibrant musical community this year included conductor Lydia Adams (Finalist for the 2010 Roy Thomson Hall Award of Recognition) and pianist Andrew Burashko and the Art of Time Ensemble (also a finalist for the 2010 Roy Thomson Hall Award of Recognition). Hats off to both!

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

ARTS NEWS - TUESDAY MAY 11, 2010 - UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO BULLETIN






U of T music student wins first Harry Freedman Recording Award
BY JENNIFER LANTHIER


Growing up on the Greek island of Samos in a family of amateur musicians, Constantine Caravassilis learned to play the piano before he could talk.

Today, his contemporary classical music speaks to musicians and audiences all over the world.

“In recent years we have had quite a few of our doctoral students who are already making their mark in the professional world in a rather significant way,” said Professor Christos Hatzis of the Faculty of Music. “But I would say even by those standards Constantine is fairly exceptional.”

Caravassilis, 30, and pianist Christina Petrowska-Quilico received the inaugural Harry Freedman Recording Award April 27 for a planned recording of a double CD of Caravassilis’ music for solo piano, Book of Fantasias and Book of Rhapsodies.

Caravassilis, who is pursuing a doctor of musical arts in composition and conducting at the university, said the money from the award will be combined with an Ontario Arts Council award to fund the project.

“The award itself is a national award and brand new,” said Hatzis, Caravassilis’s adviser. “It’s amazing that a student still at university would win it but to be given the very first one is also quite significant as well.”



"Faculty of Music doctoral student Constantine Caravassilis can compose music for all kinds
of ensembles and soloists, a rare talent in a composition student."


The recipient of many awards — including the 2009 Karen Kieser Prize in Canadian Music — Caravassilis has, in a sense, been composing all his life. As a child he entertained guests at the small hotel his parents built by playing on the 110-year-old piano in the reception area.

Caravassilis remembers pianist Maria Garzón attempting to give him lessons while vacationing on the island. “She would make me play Mozart and then every 20 bars, Mozart would become Constantine and I just kept going in my own style,” said Caravassilis.


Constantine's hometown: Pythagorion, Samos Island, Greece


But major breakthroughs in composing came only after years of study and sacrifice. Realizing he needed to leave the island to pursue his studies, Caravassilis left home at 17 for Toronto, where he taught himself English by reading the paper, memorizing a pocket dictionary and making friends.

“Within two weeks I had a job playing the piano in a Greek restaurant and I had a piano and theory teacher at the conservatory — it became home for me right away,” he said.

After spending a year at York University, Caravassilis transferred to the University of Toronto. “My undergrad education was very difficult,” he said. “Although I could do amazing things by ear,this was just a total different universe and I needed a bit of a transition period to get used to the western system.”

While completing his master’s degree at the University of Manitoba —where he studied simultaneously with professors Gordon Fitzell, Michael Matthews and Örjan Sandred— Caravassilis worked intensively on composing.

A synesthete who senses colours and taste when he hears “low or mid to low strings,” Caravassilis has trained himself to compose while in a semi-dreaming state. First, he records himself playing “a musical idea” of between six and 30 seconds and listens to it over and over.

“Then I enter the alpha state by closing my eyes and relaxing, like meditating, and I start to have lucid dreams,” Caravassilis said, “but because I’m not asleep, I’m the director of my dreams so I can invite an entire symphony orchestra to play, I can invite Valery Gergiev to conduct and what I hear is the continuation of this piece.”

It’s an approach many would consider far-fetched, Caravassilis said. But the results are impressive. He has served as composer-inresidence for Denmark’s Open Strings Festival and the U.K.’s London Song Festival, as well as Toronto’s Cantabile Chamber Singers.

His combination of work ethic and talent is reflected in the number of awards he has won, said Hatzis. “He writes pieces for small numbers of instruments, orchestra, choral music and recently he has created some really beautiful pieces in electro acoustic music, which is music that is basically created by the computer alone,” Hatzis said. “It is rather unusual to have a student who does so well in all of these areas.”

For his part, Caravassilis relishes working with Hatzis. “When it comes to U of T it’s not just that it has this special program or that this is the most important place in the country to study composition,” Caravassilis said, “it’s also that the person I’m studying with is a perfect match for me.

Friday, April 30, 2010

COMPOSITION FELLOWSHIP @ the NATIONAL ARTS CENTRE IN OTTAWA

Constantine is one of the five selected composers to participate at the NATIONAL ARTS CENTER YOUNG COMPOSERS' PROGRAM, June 22 – 28, 2010, working with Gary Kulesha, George Tsontakis, and l’Orchestre de la Francophonie Canadienne led by its Music Director and Conductor Jean Philippe Tremblay.



The wold premiere of Constantine's latest composition QUANTUM JUMPING (written especially for he occasion and scored for large chamber ensemble) will take place at the Southam Hall in Ottawa, June 28

CONFOUNDING EXPECTATIONS - INSPIRING MINDS CONFERENCE AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CALGARY

Constantine's latest article titled "Ann of a Kind: The Fusion of Minimalism and Dodecaphony in Ann Southam's Figures" is the culmination of a year-long research project on the music of the renowned Canadian composer. A portion of the research will be presented at the CONFOUNDING EXPECTATIONS - INSPIRING MINDS CONFERENCE - UNIVERSITY OF CALGARY. The conference will take place Monday May 3rd to Wednesday May 5th, 2010, at the Rozsa Centre (University of Calgary).



About Figures:
Figures, a one-movement concerto-like work scored for piano and string orchestra is perhaps one of Southam's most important works of the past decade. It was given its world première at the Massey Hall New Music Festival (Toronto, Nov.2001) with Gary Kulesha conducting the string section of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra and Canadian pianist Eve Egoyan as soloist.

This particular work is one that fuses two trends, both of which are known as technical and stylistic developments of the twentieth century (albeit they occurred in different parts of the century). The first is the twelve-tone system, and the second is minimalism. For the purpose of assessing how such stylistic
fusion has emerged, examples of earlier piano works by the same composer are discussed while illustrating how Southam's style has continuously evolved through the years. To show the continuity of this evolution, there are also references and examples of work finished after Figures.

Further to the above correlation and contextualization, a thorough analysis of the composition brings to light all elements that make up the entire piece: The examination and commentary on the harmony and counterpoint resulting from the use of the 12-tone row as well as overall form, reflects the sonic character of the piece as an experimental work of art. A brief comparison to the traditional concerto outlines several
similarities and differences, one of them being the relation to the cadenza principle of the traditional concerto and how it is manifested in Figures.

Ann Southam

Additionally, an exposé of the work, one that particularly showcases the different ways in which Southam freely and fearlessly crosses the boundaries between the two genres -often escaping the limitations found within each- presents minimalistic elements as found in certain key sections, offsetting the peak of my argument as to how 12-tone technique and minimalism are fused together to create Figures.

This is supported by outlining the continuous merge of the above, and how this is sustained through the use of several technical (often problem-solving) devices, resulting in the creation of a stylistically unique musical language. Finally, the summary of all elements found within the piece is discussed so to portray how style itself is challenged in Figures, culminating in the categorization of the work within a genre of its very own.
Constantine Caravassilis, Jan 2010