2007-2008 Season

This sensational season, the Choir presented an Ottawa debut performance of the Levin version of Mozart’s Requiem in We Will Remember Them on Remembrance Day, a performance of Baroque music and seasonal favourites at the Museum of Civilization, and a new recording, Jesu, meine Freude, of Bach cantatas BWV 4, 78 and the motet, Jesu, meine Freude, with Agnes Zsigovics, Daniel Taylor, Benjamin Butterfield, Daniel Lichti and baroque orchestra playing on period instruments. The choir also travelled to Almonte for a Christmas Potpourri, to Southern Ontario for concerts and workshops in Toronto and finished the season with masterclasses and a performance at Podium 2008 in Sackville, New Brunswick.

2006-2007 Season

The choir’s fifth season treated audiences to inspired performances of some of the most beautiful and moving choral music. Our subscription series included A Taste of the Italian Baroque, a Canadian premiere of Roxanna Panufnik’s Westminster Mass with the Montreal ensemble Musica Orbium, and a European Extravaganza to celebrate the choir’s second European tour returning to sing at the Thomaskirche in Leipzig (Bach’s church), as well as in Bayreuth, Vienna, Salzburg and Munich.

2005-2006 Season

This season brought inspired performances of Bach Cantatas, the St. John Passion and works by French composers, Charpentier and Martin, plus a special Christmas concert to celebrate the launch A Christmas Story. In addition to the main subscription series, the choir was invited to perform in the prestigious Choir and Organ Series at Toronto’s Roy Thompson Hall, the Montreal Bach Festival and travelled to Nova Scotia for performances in Halifax, Wolfville and at the festival Musique St-Bernard.

2004-2005 Season

This season, the Ottawa Bach Choir expanded its repertoire of Bach’s greatest works with a glorious performance of the Mass in B minor, performing with some of the the best voices and instrumentalists in the world. The culmination of the work the Choir achieved thus far was highlighted with the release of its first CD, Festival Baroque, and its first tour to Europe with performances in Prague, Stuttgart and in the Motette series at the Thomaskirche in Leipzig, Germany, the home of J.S. Bach for 27 years.

2003-2004 Season

Highlights of the Ottawa Bach Choir’s second season included a well received performance of Bach’s Weihnachts-Oratorium(Christmas Oratorio), a trip to Mexico City to perform Handel’s Messiah with the Orquesta del Nuevo Mundo and concerts of 20th century French repertoire and early German baroque works in Ottawa and Montreal.

2002-2003 Season

The Ottawa Bach Choir’s first season included some of the top works by baroque composers, including the St. Matthew Passion, Six Motets, Magnificat in D and Missa in G minor by Bach, as well as Handel’s Dixit Dominus and the Musikalische Exequien by Schütz.

OBC on CBC Radio 2 – Concerts on Demand

Listen to our concerts Baroque Masters and Monteverdi – Sacred and Profane recorded by CBC Radio 2 on Concerts on Demand.

Ottawa Bach Choir “A Sunday with Bach” Fall Garden Party 2016

A Sunday with Bach 
FALL GARDEN PARTY 2016
Sunday, October 2, 2016 at 2:00 PM
Hosted by Ambassador Mr. Werner Wnendt, and his wife, Dr. Eleonore Wnendt-Juber, at the residence of the Ambassador of the Federal Republic of G

You are cordially invited to join us for a delightful Fall Garden Party, A Sunday with Bach, in a captivating setting in Rockcliffe Park with beautiful music performed by the Ottawa Bach Choir, authentic German cuisine, wine, sparkling wine and beer, and the good company of Ottawa’s cultural, business, and diplomatic community. You will enjoy a charming afternoon, which will include:

  • 2-3 pm: Optional Church service
  • 3-4 pm: Coffee and German home-style cakes served in the garden
  • 3-7pm: Elegant Silent Auction
  • 4-5 pm: Performances by the Ottawa Bach Choir and organist Matthew Larkin
  • 5-7 pm: Authentic food, wine and beer of Germany

A Sunday with Bach is part of the Embassy’s Cultural Week and is the largest fundraising event for the Ottawa Bach Choir (OBC). The OBC, Ottawa’s own professional choir, has just returned from China where it was invited to perform as Canada’s choral representative in the prestigious festival, Meet in Beijing 2016. In 2014, the OBC was the first Canadian choir to perform at the prestigious annual Bach festival in Leipzig, Germany, Bachfest Leipzig 2014. Proceeds from this fundraising event will help support the great work of this world class choir.

Tickets: $100.00 
(a $75 tax receipt is available upon request)

Purchase Tickets

Please RSVP by purchasing tickets online or by calling 613.270.1015 or 613.884.4412. Confirmation will be sent by e-mail and, in lieu of a paper ticket, the names of you and your guest(s) will be added to a guest list.

The OBC A Sunday with Bach 2016 is a feature of KulturGarten, an exciting week of celebrating all things German.

For more information contact us at info@ottawabachchoir.ca or by telephone at 613.270.1015.

Help the Ottawa Bach Choir win $10,000 by donating to The Great Canadian GIVING CHALLENGE

DONATE BETWEEN JUNE 1 AND JUNE 30, 2016

The Great Canadian Giving Challenge is a contest sponsored by CanadaHelps that will give the Ottawa Bach Choir a chance to win a $10,000 prize! Every dollar donated between June 1 and June 30 gives the choir another chance at winning the grand prize. All donations will receive a tax receipt issued by CanadaHelps on behalf of the Ottawa Bach Choir.

Please consider giving through this wonderful opportunity so that the OBC can share with you a special 15th anniversary season in 2016-2017. Sponsor Ottawa’s professional choir in one of the following suggested categories, or with another amount that is meaningful for you:

 

  • Student Chorister: $250 
  • Community & Educational Outreach: $500 
  • Professional Chorister: 1,000
  • Soloist: $1,500
  • Canadian Composer: $2,500
  • A Cappella Concert: $5,000
  • Sponsor our upcoming 6th CD: $7,500
  • Concert with Orchestra: $10,000

Thank you for making us a part of your musical life!

Participate by clicking the image above, or by visiting https://www.canadahelps.org/en/charities/the-ottawa-bach-choir/#donate_now

The Ottawa Bach Choir to showcase at prestigious Meet in Beijing Festival

The Ottawa Bach Choir (OBC), along with organist Matthew Larkin and Ensemble Caprice Baroque Orchestra, will be taking its music to China with an invitation to perform at the prestigious Meet in Beijing festival in April 2016. The OBC will be performing several concerts, including masterclasses led by artistic director Dr. Lisette Canton, in Beijing and Shanghai. This will include performing in the Opening Ceremonies of the festival with the Symphony Orchestra of the National Opera of China. Performance venues will comprise the National Centre for the Performing Arts, the Concert Hall at the Shanghai Oriental Arts Centre, and the Beijing Concert Hall.

The OBC will be performing the works of several Baroque masters, including J.S. Bach, and Canadian works by Healey Willan, Rupert Lang, Leonard Enns, Diane Loomer and Harry Somers, among others. The members of the OBC will also be polishing their Mandarin as they present the Chinese folksong Mo Li Hua.

The OBC is very excited to be invited to China after its recent invitation to perform at the Bachfest Leipzig 2014 at the Thomaskirche, in Leipzig, Germany, as the first Canadian choir ever to be invited. The OBC is happy to include the tour in its season along with its subscription series, intimate concerts, community outreach, and a CD recording planned in this season of choral wonders.

The Ottawa Bach Choir was founded in 2002 by Dr. Lisette Canton and offers a wide range of choral music from all historical periods, featuring some of Canada’s top choristers. With the combination of a scholarly and emotional approach, the OBC provides an unforgettable experience of choral music at its best. The OBC has toured extensively in Canada, the United States, and Europe. The OBC has also been invited to perform in many other festivals in Ottawa, Quebec City, and most recently in Toronto at the Luminato Festival performing in the much-anticipated Apocalypsis by Canada’s own R. Murray Schafer.

Touring information:
Ottawa Bach Choir
with Matthew Larkin, Organist
Ensemble Caprice Baroque Orchestra
Dr. Lisette Canton, Conductor       
                                                    
Monday, April 25, 2016
Meet in Beijing Opening Ceremonies
National Centre for the Performing Arts, Beijing
Wednesday, April 27, 2016
Concert Hall, Shanghai Oriental Arts Centre
Thursday, April 28, 2016
Beijing Concert Hall

The Ottawa Bach Choir presents Charpentier: Messe à quatre chœurs; Langlais: Messe solennelle

The Ottawa Bach Choir (OBC) presents its final subscription concert in this season of magnificent choral works: Charpentier: Messe à quatre chœurs; Langlais: Messe solennelleSaturday, May 7, 2016, 8PM, at Christ Church Cathedral, 439 Queen Street, Ottawa. This concert also features organist Matthew Larkin in this grand setting in Ottawa’s Anglican cathedral.

Marc-Antoine Charpentier’s rarely performed Mass for Four Choirs is stylistic of the 17th century Italian polychoral form, typical of Gabrieli, which Charpentier was most-likely exposed to during a brief period of study in Rome. The second half of the concert is a modern juxtaposition of the first with Jean Langlais’ Solemn Mass (written in 1949), composed for four-part choir, completing this sublime concert.

The Ottawa Bach Choir was founded in 2002 by Dr. Lisette Canton and offers a wide range of choral music from all historical periods, featuring some of Canada’s top choristers. With the combination of a scholarly and emotional approach, the OBC provides an unforgettable experience of choral music at its best.

The OBC has toured extensively in Canada, the United States, and Europe, and has been invited to perform as Canada’s choral representative in the prestigious Meet in Beijing arts festival in Beijing, China, in April 2016. In 2014, the choir completed a two-week tour of Venice, Leipzig, Lübeck, Groningen, and Amsterdam, and had the honour of being the first Canadian choir ever to be among the performers in the world’s most prestigious international Bach festival, the Bachfest Leipzig 2014. The OBC also recently performed in the much-anticipated Apocalypsis by Canada’s own R. Murray Schafer at the Luminato Festival in Toronto, in June 2015.

Ottawa Bach Choir

with Matthew Larkin, Organ

Dr. Lisette Canton, Conductor                                                                                         

Charpentier: Messe à quatre chœurs; Langlais: Messe solennelle

Saturday, May 7, 2016, 8PM

Christ Church Cathedral, 439 Queen Street, Ottawa

Tickets: Reserved $50, Adult $40, Senior $35, Student $15

Tickets are available online: www.ottawabachchoir.ca, by phone: 613-270-1015, or at the following outlets:

The Leading Note, 370 Elgin Street, Ottawa; Compact Music, 206 & 785 1/2 Bank Street, Ottawa

Information: info@ottawabachchoir.ca or 613-270-1015

Songs for Chamber Ensemble

The Ottawa Bach Choir (OBC) presents its second subscription concert in this season of magnificent choral works: Songs for Chamber EnsembleSaturday, January 30, 2016, 8:00PM, at Southminster United Church, 15 Aylmer Avenue, Ottawa. A small ensemble of solo singers from the OBC will perform with pianist Frédéric Lacroix in an intimate setting. The concert will feature Brahms’ Zigeunerlieder, Debussy’s Trois chansons de Charles d’Orléans, Poulenc’s Un soir de neige, as well as works by Fanny Mendelssohn, Ottawa’s own Nicholas Piper, Schütz, Monteverdi, Pearsall, and more.

One of the main features of the evening will be Brahms’ Zigeunerlieder (“Gypsy Songs”). First performed in Berlin in 1898, the piece is a song cycle with texts based on Hungarian folk songs and originally written for solo singers. Although the origin of these songs is Hungarian, the entire cycle is sung in German; the original Hungarian text having been translated into German before the composition by Brahms. Another work of note is Poulenc’s Un soir de neige (“An evening of snow”). The work is another short cycle of sung poems describing the beauty and solitude of winter. This concert also features Deux chansons de la Belle Cordière by Ottawa’s very own Nicholas Piper. 

The Ottawa Bach Choir was founded in 2002 by Dr. Lisette Canton and offers a wide range of choral music from all historical periods, featuring some of Canada’s top choristers. With the combination of a scholarly and emotional approach, the OBC provides an unforgettable experience of choral music at its best.

The OBC has toured extensively in Canada, the United States, and Europe; most recently returning from a two-week tour of Venice, Leipzig, Lübeck, Groningen, and Amsterdam. The choir had the honour of being the first Canadian choir ever to be among the performers in the world’s most prestigious international Bach festival, the Bachfest Leipzig 2014. The OBC also recently performed in the much-anticipated Apocalypsis by Canada’s own R. Murray Schafer at the Luminato Festival, Toronto in June 2015.

Ottawa Bach Choir

with pianist Frédéric Lacroix
Dr. Lisette Canton, Conductor                                                            

SONGS FOR CHAMBER ENSEMBLE

Saturday, January 30, 2016, 8:00PM

Southminster United Church, 15 Aylmer Avenue, Ottawa

Tickets: Reserved $50, Adult $40, Senior $35, Student $15

Tickets are available online: www.ottawabachchoir.ca, by phone: 613-270-1015, or at the following outlets: The Leading Note, 370 Elgin Street, Ottawa; Compact Music, 206 & 785 1/2 Bank Street, Ottawa

Information: info@ottawabachchoir.ca or 613-270-1015

The Ottawa Bach Choir presents J.S. Bach: Mass in B Minor, BWV 232

The Ottawa Bach Choir (OBC) presents its opening subscription concerts in this season of magnificent choral works: J.S. Bach: Mass in B Minor, BWV 232Saturday, November 14, 2015, 7:30PM, at Grace Church on-the-Hill, 300 Lonsdale Road, Toronto; and Sunday, November 15, 2015, 7:30PM, at Dominion-Chalmers United Church, 355 Cooper Street, Ottawa. This concert features the full setting of one of Bach’s last and greatest compositions, completed in 1749, but only first performed in its entirety in 1859. Today it is considered one of the greatest pieces of choral music ever written. The choir is joined by the Baroque orchestra, Ensemble Caprice, Matthias Maute, artistic director; and world-class soloists, including Daniel Taylor, Agnes Zsigovics, Jacques-Olivier Chartier, Geoffrey Sirett, Daniel Lichti, and more.

Join the OBC and a spectacular cast of instrumentalists and soloists in performances of ‘the greatest musical work of art of all times and people’—Bach’s Mass in B Minor,” says Founder and Artistic Director, Lisette Canton. “It represents a timeless, crowning achievement of Bach’s musical and spiritual profundity, and continues to move listeners, placing it far above any work composed in Western history. We invite you to join us in this incredible musical experience.”

The Ottawa Bach Choir was founded in 2002 by Dr. Lisette Canton and offers a wide range of choral music from all historical periods, featuring some of Canada’s top choristers. With the combination of a scholarly and emotional approach, the OBC provides an unforgettable experience of choral music at its best.

The OBC has toured extensively in Canada, the United States, and Europe; most recently returning from a two-week tour of Venice, Leipzig, Lübeck, Groningen, and Amsterdam. The choir had the honour of being the first Canadian choir ever to be among the performers in the world’s most prestigious international Bach festival, the Bachfest Leipzig 2014. The OBC also recently performed in the much-anticipated Apocalypsis by Canada’s own R. Murray Schafer at the Luminato Festival, Toronto in June 2015.

Ottawa Bach Choir

with Ensemble Caprice baroque orchestra, Matthias Maute, artistic director
Soloists: Daniel Taylor, Agnes Zsigovics, Rebecca Claborn, Jacques-Olivier Chartier, Geoffrey Sirett, Daniel Lichti
and the York University Chamber Choir
Dr. Lisette Canton, Conductor                                                           

J.S. Bach: Mass in B Minor, BWV 232

Saturday, November 14, 2015, 7:30PM

Grace Church on-the-Hill, 300 Lonsdale Road, Toronto

Sunday, November 15, 2015, 7:30PM

Dominion-Chalmers United Church, 355 Cooper Street, Ottawa

Tickets: Reserved $50, Adult $40, Senior $35, Student $15

Tickets are available online: www.ottawabachchoir.ca, by phone: 613-270-1015 (Ottawa) or 416-736-2100 x70191 (Toronto), or at the following outlets: The Leading Note, 370 Elgin Street, Ottawa; Compact Music, 206 & 785 1/2 Bank Street, Ottawa

Information: info@ottawabachchoir.ca or 613-270-1015 (Ottawa) or 416-736-2100 x70191 (Toronto)

Ottawa Bach Choir presents Now is the Month of Maying

Join the OBC for a concert celebrating the coming of spring with some of the best madrigals and chansons of the Renaissance period paired with Haydn’s rarely heard part-songs,” says Founder and Artistic Director, Lisette Canton. “We invite you to immerse yourself in the beauty of the season with this magnificent music.”

The Ottawa Bach Choir was founded in 2002 by Dr. Lisette Canton and offers a wide range of choral music from all historical periods, featuring some of Canada’s top choristers. With the combination of a scholarly and emotional approach, the OBC provides an unforgettable experience of choral music at its best. 

The Ottawa Bach Choir has toured extensively in Canada, the United States, and Europe. The OBC recently returned from a two-week tour of Venice, Leipzig, Lübeck, Groningen, and Amsterdam. The OBC had the honour of being the first Canadian choir ever to be among the performers in the world’s most prestigious international Bach festival, the Bachfest Leipzig. The choir will participate this June in a performance of Schafer’s Apocalypsis in the Luminato Festival in Toronto.

For interviews and information, please contact:

Nicholas Simpson Read, Administrative Manager, 604 722-2320, nicholas.read@ottawabachchoir.ca 

Dr. Lisette Canton, Founder & Artistic Director, 613 222-1882, lisette.canton@ottawabachchoir.ca

Listing information:

Ottawa Bach Choir

Lisette Canton, Conductor

Now is the Month of Maying 

featuring Morley’s Now is the Month of Maying, Janequin’s Le chant des oiseaux, Weelkes’ As Vesta was from Latmos Hill, Passereau’s Il est bel et bon,Monteverdi’s Ecco Mormorar l’onde, Lassus’ Matona mia cara, Haydn’s 13 Part-Songs, and many more.

Saturday, May 2, 2015, 8PM

St. Matthew’s Anglican Church, 130 Glebe Avenue, Ottawa

Tickets: Reserved $50, Adult $40, Senior $35, Student & Youth $15

Tickets are available online: www.ottawabachchoir.ca, by phone: 613-270-1015, or at the following outlets:

The Leading Note, 370 Elgin Street, Ottawa

Compact Music, 206 & 785 1/2 Bank Street, Ottawa

Information: www.ottawabachchoir.ca or 613-270-1015

Brahms Ein deutsches Requiem in Quebec City

Who: Ottawa Bach Choir, Lisette Canton, conductor, Mélisande Sinsoulier, Frédéric Lacroix, piano
Soloists: Ellen McAteer, soprano; Geoffrey Sirett, baritone
Where: International des musiques sacrées de Québec, Église Saint-Dominique, Quebec City
Reviewed on: Sunday, September 7 – 4:00 PM


On the road again …

A typical Ottawa music season finds the Ottawa Bach Choir and its founder/conductor Lisette Canton giving three major concerts and occasionally participating in sundry events. Some summers they perform in Chamberfest and/or Music and Beyond. But these facts don’t tell the whole story. In June of this year they did a five-city European tour during which they were received with enthusiasm everywhere they went: Venice, Leipzig, Lubeck, Groningen and Amsterdam.

I was privileged to go along with them in Europe and last weekend I confirmed my status as a faithful groupie by accompanying them to Québec where they participated in the International des musiques sacrées de Québec. Their contribution was a fine, engrossing account of the Brahms German Requiem. It was given in the beautiful Église Saint-Dominique, situated on the Grand Allée near the Musée des beaux-arts.

(This might be the best place to disclose that I am friends with Lisette Canton and a few members of the choir. I don’t believe this compromises my objectivity, but what do I know?)

The original setting of this Requiem requires a large orchestra, but Brahms also arranged the accompaniment for two pianos to make performance accessible to groups of more modest resources. Similar in spirit, the piano-four-hands arrangement that the Bach Choir performed works well when it’s played well. In the hands of pianists Mélisande Sinsoulier and Frédéric Lacroix it worked very well.

The Bach Choir was at the top of its form, singing with understanding and conviction, not to mention great beauty. I attended parts of two rehearsals and, as in Europe, it was clear where the singers’ edge of greatness comes from. Conductor Canton leads rehearsals of intense efficiency, constantly demanding the very best. Of special note were the two fugues and the second movement that begins with a funeral march and ends in triumph.

Baritone Geoffrey Sirett’s dark, powerful voice was perfect for the two movements in which he had solos. Soprano Ellen McAteer had a little trouble initially focussing her sound in the central fourth movement, and perhaps could have sounded a little more ethereal as befits the text, but all in all it was a satisfying renditon.

Standing ovations don’t mean so very much these days, but the one the OBC received seemed particularly warm and spontaneous.

 

European Tour 2014

OTTAWA — Coming to Leipzig to hear Bach is a pilgrimage, especially during the annual Bachfest in June. And singing in the Thomaskirche, the church from which Bach performed his functions as the city’s music director, is clearly an experience like no other especially for the Ottawa Bach Choir and its founder, Lisette Canon.

The intensity of their rehearsing over the last couple of days has been exhausting for this observer, and I can’t begin to imagine what it must be like for those actually doing it. “You didn’t come all this way to do it almost right” was the leitmotif of Canton’s every-note-counts direction.

The choir came here by way of Venice where they sang Mass in the San Marco Cathedral on Sunday and gave a Monday concert in the San Polo Church. The following day a water taxi, two Air Berlin flights and a two-hour bus ride brought them to a hotel just a few blocks from the Thomaskirche.

The choir had been here before and knew what to expect of the performing space, so the initial rehearsals, energetic though they were, could take place in a hotel conference room. Rehearsals in the church were further inspired by its splendid acoustics.

There are about 35 people on the tour, the musicians and about a dozen groupies. Some of the latter attended other events like one by the resident Thomaschor or the Capella Cracoviensis from Poland. There was even Haydn’s Creation in the Gewandhaus, with its famous orchestra, conducted by Masaaki Suzuki. Some of the OBC singers also attended events like these while others relaxed and enjoyed some of the very numerous galleries, shops and restaurants in the vicinity.

The music the choir sang on Friday was all familiar to Ottawa audiences. It included Gabrieli’s Jubilate Deo, Bach’s motet Singet dem Herrn ein neues Lied and works by Schuetz and Buxtehude. They were accompanied by the Leipzig Baroque Consort and Ottawa’s Jennifer Loveless played the continuo organ, all under Canton’s direction. The singing was book-ended by two large-organ performances, a Bach Prelude and a Toccata by Buxtehude.

I wouldn’t want to sugxgest that the OBC does anything less than its very best for the folks back home, not at all. And yet they sounded special indeed on Friday, in a way that one seldom hears in Ottawa or anywhere else.

On Saturday a four-hour bus ride will take the choir and company to Lubeck where they will sing in Buxtehude’s church, thence to Groningen and Amsterdam in the Netherlands and finally home.

Ottawa Bach Choir Sings at Leipzig Bachfest – in Bach’s Church

Ottawa Bach Choir, Lisette Canton, conductor; Jennifer Loveless, continuo organ

With Organists Martin Petzoldt ans Stefan Kiessling and the Leipzig Baroque Consort

Friday in the Thomaskirche, Leipzig

PRÉLUDE-EUROPE 2014

Who: Ottawa Bach Choir, Lisette Canton, conductor, Jennifer Loveless, organ
Where: St. Matthew’s Church
Reviewed on: Saturday, May 10, 2014 – 8 PM


OTTAWA — Lisette Canton and her Ottawa Bach Choir concluded their 12th season Saturday evening with an eclectic program that will form the backbone of their five-city European tour in June. There was only one work by Bach, but a feast of music from every century from the 16th through the 20th was presented. And a couple of modern folk song arrangements were thrown in as a kind of dessert.

The program’s centrepiece was the Bach Motet, Singet dem Herrn ein neues Lied, BWV 225 a work that the choir will sing in Leipzich’s Thomaskirche, the very church where the great composer spent more than half of his career. Although the performance was good, conductor Lisette Canton will probably want to polish up the melisma, and even the intonation in one or two spots in the first movement. The melisma in the Alleluja was excellent

Also on the program were works by Giovanni and Andrea Gabrielli, the latter composer’s Missa Brevis in F being especially beautiful and, like virtually every item on the program, sung to best effect. Palestrina’s Ave Maria for Five Voices was another fine listening experience.

Heinrich Hassler’s Tibi laus, Tibi gloria ushered in a series of German works, two of them by Buxtehude. (The choir will also be performing in Lübeck, where Buxtehude spent most of his working life.) The first of them was a two-movement Missa Brevis, which has a sunny sound for Lutheran church music of the time.

The next was the Toccata in D minor, an organ piece played nicely by Jennifer Loveless who will be accompanying the choir on the tour – accompanying in both senses of the word.

The pearl of the first half of the program was the Deutsches Magnificat by Heinrich Schutz. Schutz was one of the greatest composers of the first decades of the 17th century, and certainly the greatest of the Germans. The Magnificat is a work of the greatest depth and beauty, and Canton and her choir rendered it just so.

Organist Loveless introduced the 19th-century segment with a sonata movement by Mendelssohn, then Canton led the choir in Calmes des nuits by Saint-Saëns.

A selection of works by living composers Rupert Lang, Eric Whitacre and Nicholas Piper followed and were followed in their turn by folk song arrangements by Diane Loomer and Moses Hogan, all of them lovely and even haunting.

By the way, the soloists were all drawn from the choir and were all terrific.

THE TUDORS: HIDDEN ECSTASIES

Who: Ottawa Bach Choir, Lisette Canton, conductor
Where: Knox Presbyterian Church
Reviewed on: Saturday, March 8, 2014 – 8 PM


OTTAWA — The music of the cultural movement of the English Renaissance, more or less contemporary with the Tudor era, reached some of the greatest heights of its time. At its best, it bears comparison with the work of De Lassus, Victoria and the other major continental polyphonists. English music would not be so distinguished again until the 20th century.

The Ottawa Bach Choir offered a program of music from the 16th and early 17th centuries Saturday evening at Knox Presbyterian Church. There was considerable variety in it, consisting largely of sacred music of various stripes, but with a few secular works. The composers represented included familiar names like William Byrd, Thomas Tallis and Orlando Gibbons, along with lesser-known musicians.

 

The first offering was If You Love Me, an anthem by Thomas Tallis, who is probably the best-known of the lot. Conductor Lisette Canton led a reading typical of much of what was to follow; there were a few minor flaws of intonation in an otherwise impressive performance.

 

Robert Parsons’ Ave Maria was beautiful without qualification as were the subtly nuanced Laudibus in Sanctis by William Byrd and Orlando Gibbons’ Lullaby My Sweet Little Baby. The last of these had quite a sensuous feeling about it, a little curious perhaps but beautiful just the same.

 

There were three secular songs too, which provided a bit of contrast to the high seriousness of most of the repertoire. Gibbons’ The Silver Swan was perhaps the most satisfying of them.

 

The major work on the program was Byrd’s Mass for Four Voices, a masterwork of the first order. Not only was it the most substantial item on the program, it received the most accomplished and satisfying performance. It was solid throughout, but with no shortage of great moments, especially in the Credo. The Sanctus and Agnus Dei were uncommonly beautiful as well.

 

Altogether it was an entirely lovely evening of a cappella singing

THE GLORY OF THE BAROQUE

Who: Ottawa Bach Choir, Lisette Canton, conductor, with Ensemble Caprice
Where: St. Matthew’s Church
Reviewed on: Saturday, November 30, 2013 – 8 PM


OTTAWA — For its season opener, the Ottawa Bach Choir presented an evening of music by four major Baroque composers and one minor one. The minor one, though, bore the name of Bach. That’s no small distinction and there’s no denying that he had a share if the family talent.

The first offering was by Georg Philipp Telemann, who was one of the composers to whom the authorities in Leipzig would offer the job that J. S. Bach eventually got. In fact, Bach was their reluctant third choice.

Telemann’s Motet Saget der ruft Tochter Zion is a nicely centred work with a mature and confident musical language, and conductor Lisette Canton led a vigorous and persuasive account of it.

Johann Friedrich Christophe Bach was Johann Sebastian’s ninth son. His Wachet auf, ruft uns die Stimme quotes briefly from his father’s cantata of the same name and indeed one can hear the older man’s musical idiom, slightly modern and slightly less genius-laden. It’s still a solid piece. Canton led the choir and members of Ensemble Caprice gave a rendition that brought out the very best in the score, even if the melisma in the first movement was a little unfocused, not sparkling quite as it should have.

Listeners who sometimes find the church music of J.S. Bach a bit dour and difficult generally like that of Dietrich Buxtehude. He was almost 60 years Bach’s senior and wrote in a less-evolved Baroque style which, for some listeners, is more approachable. Canto and company delivered a joyful account of his Alles, was ihr tut. This was the first opportunity the Ensemble Caprice members had to be heard apart from the choir. The second half of the program opened with a Magnificat by Marc-Antoine Charpentier, another pre-Bach composer. Being music written for Catholic France it is different in sound from the German Lutheran repertoire that made up the rest of the evening. As usual the performance was marvellous.

The concert concluded with a cantata by the man himself, J. S. Bach. Generally good solo work and a firm sense of direction made this a fine conclusion to a fine evening.

 

© Copyright (c) The Ottawa Citizen

American Record Guide Review

Ottawa Bach Choir & Baroque Orchestra / Lisette Canton
Canto 2011—55 minutes

This program is in honor of the Ottawa Bach Choir’s 10th anniversary. It’s a well constructed program that begins and ends with JS Bach, with the pieces arranged chronologically in between and encompassing modern times, the most recent composer being Eric Whitacre, who was born in 1970.

The first Bach piece is a wedding cantata from the young Bach, BWV 196. Two Monteverdi words are included: the title piece, ‘Cantate Domino’, and a longer ‘Beatus vir’. Following is ‘Hear my Prayer, O Lord’, by Henry Purcell, and a short piece each from Buxtehude and Saint-Saens. Four modern composers are represented: Olivier Messiaen, with his ‘O Sacrum Convivium!’; Rupert Lang, with an Agnus Dei in French; Eric Whitacre, ‘Lux Aurumque’; and, finally, from Knut Nystedt a work called ‘Immortal Bach’. The final Bach piece is a motet and chorale, ‘The Spirit Doth our Weakness Help’. All song lyrics are printed in the notes.

These works are all beautifully sung; I have enjoyed listening to this several times. The sound is excellent.

CRAWFORD

 

© American Music Guide 2012

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