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Fiddling and fencing with Thirteen Strings

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  • Fiddling and fencing with Thirteen Strings

    Ottawa Citizen
    March 11, 2004 Thursday Final Edition

    Fiddling and fencing with Thirteen Strings

    by Steven Mazey


    How often do you get to see a prodigiously talented violin soloist
    and a fencing demonstration in period costume, all in one evening?

    That's what audiences will be treated to tomorrow night when
    violinist Jessica Linnebach joins chamber orchestra Thirteen Strings
    and conductor Jean-Francois Rivest for pieces by Tartini and Armenian
    composer Alexander Arutiunian.

    The orchestra will also perform 17th-century composer Heinrich
    Biber's Battalia, which was inspired by a swordfight. That's where
    the fencing comes in. Rivest will give a free pre-concert talk about
    the piece at 7 p.m., with demonstrations by members of the University
    of Ottawa Excalibur Fencing Club, in costume.

    Linnebach, a native of Edmonton, performed as a soloist with the
    National Arts Centre Orchestra when she was 17, on the tour of Israel
    and Europe in 2000. Tomorrow, she will perform Arutiunian's Concerto
    for Violin and String Orchestra and Tartini's Sonata in G minor for
    Violin and Strings, "Devil's Trill."

    It's Linnebach's first performance of the Arutunian piece, which she
    describes as "very melodious and rich."

    She first performed the Tartini when she was 11, and says "it is very
    exciting and dramatic, and it really is like a Devil's Trill. The
    most difficult aspect of the piece is endurance and being able to
    keep the energy all the way through. I'm excited to have the
    opportunity to play it again."

    Linnebach was accepted to the Curtis Institute of Music in
    Philadelphia at the age of 10, and is one of the youngest bachelor of
    music graduates in the 75-year history of the school. Last September,
    the Canada Council for the Arts' Instrument Bank awarded her a
    three-year loan of a Bell Giovanni Tononi violin from about 1700.

    "I have fallen in love with it. It has a rich and full sound and it
    has been an absolute joy for me to play," says Linnebach, who has
    been performing as a member of the NACO this season.

    The concert starts at 8 p.m. at St. Andrew's Church, Kent Street at
    Wellington. Tickets, at $25 general, $20 seniors, and $5 for
    students, will be at the door.

    Thirteen Strings will also perform Sunday as part of the Concerts
    Cumberland series, joined by two talented Ottawa students.

    Violinist Yolanda Bruno, 14, and pianist Nina He, 16, won the fourth
    annual Capital Concerto Competition, organized by Concerts Cumberland
    to give students the chance to work with a professional orchestra.

    At Orleans United Church, 1111 Orleans Blvd., Bruno will perform an
    excerpt from a Locatelli concerto and Nina He will perform an excerpt
    from Bach's Concerto in F minor. The students receive prizes of $500
    and $300 from sponsor RBC Investments.

    The concert includes music by Haydn and a repeat of the Biber piece.
    The talk and the fencing demonstration start at 7:10 p.m., followed
    by the concert at 7:30 p.m. Tickets, $20 for adults, $16 for seniors,
    $5 for students, will be at the door.
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