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'Investment' Pays Off For Grammy-Winning Tovey And VSO

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  • 'Investment' Pays Off For Grammy-Winning Tovey And VSO

    'INVESTMENT' PAYS OFF FOR GRAMMY-WINNING TOVEY AND VSO
    Stuart Derdeyn, [email protected]

    The Province
    Wednesday, September 24, 2008
    Canada

    Vancouver Symphony Orchestra

    Where: Orpheum Theatre, corner of Seymour and Smythe streets

    When: Saturday and Monday nights at 8

    Tickets: 604-876-3434 and vancouversymphony.ca

    Bramwell Tovey was a busy man even before the Vancouver Symphony
    Orchestra's big Grammy and Juno award wins.

    The VSO's maestro is principal guest conductor for L.A.'s Philharmonic,
    hosts a composer festival series in New York and only just returned
    from conducting in Australia. On Monday the 73-piece orchestra was
    in Surrey's Bell Centre for a recording session of more than 100
    national anthems of countries competing at the 2010 Winter Games and
    Paralympic Winter Games for VANOC. And next month, the VSO embarks
    on its first Asian tour.

    "Winning the Grammy was like a gold medal because people know
    they don't just give them away," says Tovey, who caught up with The
    Province as he prepared to open the VSO's 2008/2009 season. "Given the
    competition we were up against -- Berlin, Paris and Moscow orchestras
    -- the win gave corporations' and individuals' faith in us a big boost
    and encouraged government agencies to reconsider their investments.

    "I use the word investment, not a subsidy, because it is an investment
    in quality of life in a city that has really paid off."

    The concert season ahead is certainly an exciting one, with the VSO
    presenting the brilliant Armenian-Canadian soprano Isabel Bayrakdarian,
    stunning violinist Hilary Hahn and violinist James Ehnes, who shared
    the Grammy with the orchestra, as well as the very popular Bugs Bunny
    On Broadway!

    "The music for those cartoons is not easy. It's very challenging for
    the musicians and for me. But it's great fun for the audience."

    Doubtless, Tovey hopes that the reception for his composition
    Urban Runway will be a lot of fun for the crowd at the season
    opener with acclaimed cellist Lynn Harrell tackling Schumann's Cello
    Concerto. Prokofiev's Romeo and Juliet: Suite rounds out the program
    for this concert.

    Inspired by the "gentle swagger" of all the fashionable shoppers
    on city streets of both New York and Los Angeles, Urban Runway was
    co-commissioned by the New York and Los Angeles Philharmonics. Tovey
    is extremely thrilled to have it played here.

    "It is funny that the performances of the work in both New York and
    Los Angeles were picked up by the local radio stations, but won't be
    [here]. What does that say about classical music broadcasting in the
    United States and Canada?"

    The VSO becomes the last game in town for symphonies with the coming
    demise of the CBC Radio Orchestra. Tovey is also critical of recent
    changes to the programming on CBC Radio 2 and the impact it will
    have on groups such as the VSO. The loss of a serious classical-music
    focus on the national broadcaster in favour of celebrity-hosted shows
    focussing on soft rock, pop, smooth jazz and so on with the requisite
    "DJ speak" doesn't wash with him.

    "It's a bit of an embarrassment, really, and rather like watching
    the difference between a TV advertisement compared to a scene from
    Shakespeare."
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