Calgary Herald

CONDUCTOR FULFILS A DREAM WITH CPO DEBUT

Calgary native and former teacher Daniel Bartholome­w-Poyser discusses his journey

- ERIC VOLMERS

Daniel Bartholome­w-Poyser imagines the audience at Saturday’s Calgary Philharmon­ic Orchestra event, Soul Legends: From Isaac Hayes to Marvin Gaye, will be full of familiar faces. It is, after all, a homecoming show for the conductor, who will be making his debut with the CPO.

The Calgary native hopes they will be entertaine­d, but he’s also quite certain that many of them will be ... relieved.

“Not only is it an orchestra of my colleagues and my peers and my teachers, but the audience is full of my friends and people who have, for decades, been listening to me complain about wanting to conduct the Calgary Philharmon­ic Orchestra,” says Bartholome­w-Poyser, in an interview from his home in Kitchener-Waterloo, Ont. “They’ll be like ‘Finally! You can do it and we won’t have to hear you talking about you wanting to do it anymore.’ ”

Granted, he has conducted orchestras all over North America. But being before the CPO has been a dream ever since he first immersed himself in music as a student at William Aberhart high school in the 1990s.

“If it wasn’t for William Aberhart I wouldn’t be in music right now, that’s for sure,” Bartholome­w-Poyser says. “There are specific conversati­ons with the music teacher that I remember. I can take you to where I was standing where we had the conversati­on that put me on the path to being a profession­al conductor.”

In fact, his trip back to Calgary is a full-circle affair. On Friday, Bartholome­w-Poyser was scheduled to return to his old high school for early-morning rehearsals with music students.

Soul Legends, which will be presented in recognitio­n of Black History Month, will also feature vocalist and fellow William Aberhart grad Gavin Hope.

Still, the path wasn’t immediate. Bartholome­w-Poyser followed his Aberhart mentors into music education before turning his attention to conducting full time. He taught for nine years at Calgary’s Glenmore Christian Academy. Near the end of his time at Glenmore, he began thinking about fulfilling his lifelong dream of becoming a profession­al conductor. It was an ambition he harboured since the second grade when he was first taught conducting patterns.

“I just always conducted,” he says. “I would just be conducting in my head. Which is actually not the best way to learn. When I was 13 years old I wanted to be a conductor, I’d watch movies about conducting. When I was in university I wanted to be a conductor. I was always talking to conductors. Some of them would say ‘Don’t be a conductor, it’s really hard.’ And it is, they were right. But it’s worth it. So it has always been in the back of my head. But the actual decision came in my eighth year of teaching. I realized if I didn’t try to become a profession­al conductor I would regret it on my deathbed.”

So he left teaching and made his way to Thunder Bay, where he would eventually serve as associate conductor of the Thunder Bay Symphony Orchestra. He later became assistant conductor of the Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony and currently serves as the artist-in-residence for Symphony Nova Scotia.

It has allowed Bartholome­w-Poyser to conduct a broad variety of styles over the years. So Saturday’s focus on half a century of R&B, Motown, funk, disco, and pop — much of which the conductor grew up listening to in Calgary — will not be that much of a stretch.

“Orchestras play in styles that range over 400 years,” Bartholome­w-Poyser says. “They can play in Baroque style, they can play in Renaissanc­e style, they can play jazz style, hip-hop style, soul, Romantic style. It’s really the CPO musicians on stage that are able to switch gears so fast that allow orchestras to do what they do, because they play in so many styles. Where do I fit in that mix? I’m kind of the bridge between audiences and all different types of music. So whether it’s a pops concert or whether it’s a concert of modern music, whether it’s Led Zeppelin, whether it’s Brahms or Beethoven, my goal is to always link up audiences and help them to leave enjoying more than they would have if I had not spoken or conducted and connected them.”

Connecting with audiences, including audiences that aren’t usually familiar with classical music, is a passion for Bartholome­w-Poyser. His unique journey in the world of classical music as a gay, black conductor will be covered in an upcoming documentar­y, as will his work to bring orchestral music to a wide array of audiences: to young people, children on the spectrum, the LGBTQ community, people of colour and prison population­s.

“It’s work I’ve been doing all along,” Bartholome­w-Poyser says. “They thought it was interestin­g enough to do a documentar­y about it. That’s what it’s all about, the journey going from being a teacher to a profession­al conductor.”

It will also explore parts of his personal life. Growing up as a person of colour in Alberta was, for the most part, positive he says.

“That’s how I feel about the race thing,” he says. “They are going to get a little bit in the documentar­y about the whole story of coming out. That was a big, very, very long journey and extremely difficult journey for me that took years and is still a process of understand­ing and learning, such that it gives me great empathy for people who are struggling with issues of orientatio­n, particular­ly issues of orientatio­n in the context of faith communitie­s. Just understand­ing how people (flourishin­g) in that context can be a challenge but one I’ve undertaken.”

 ??  ?? Daniel Bartholome­w-Poyser.
Daniel Bartholome­w-Poyser.

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