Times Colonist

VCM series opens doors for faculty

- IN CONCERT MIKE DEVLIN

The first instalment in a new chamber music series by the Victoria Conservato­ry of Music is designed to showcase the work of rising Canadian ensembles and artists. But the three-part series also gives the progressiv­e music school the opportunit­y to showcase the oftenoverl­ooked skills of its faculty, many of whom will appear on stage before the series wraps on April 4.

“People don’t always know that many of us are active performers, and this is a way for us to put on concerts that we believe people will like,” said pianist Robert Holliston, head of the conservato­ry’s keyboard department. “But it also gives us a chance to perform outside of our everyday roles.”

Entries in the series include Musical Treats and Poetry on Feb. 10, a poetry-flavoured event featuring selections by Mozart, Poulenc and Shostakovi­c, and an April 4 performanc­e by the Juno Award-winning New Orford String Quartet, one of the best string quartets in Canada. The quartet features the Toronto Symphony Orchestra’s star concertmas­ter, Jonathan Crow, who studied at the Victoria Conservato­ry of Music before joining the Montreal Symphony as the youngestev­er concertmas­ter of a major North American orchestra.

Holliston will appear Sunday afternoon at the conservato­ry’s recently renovated Wood Hall in Masters, Friends and Mentors, the official kick-off to the series. The collaborat­ive outing joins Holliston with fellow conservato­ry faculty member Simon MacDonald on violin. MacDonald, who is the artistic director of the Young Artists Collegium Program, was recently appointed as the school’s head of strings, and will join Holliston for a performanc­e of 19th Century master works from Mozart and César Franck. The pair will also perform four pieces of early 20th Century modernism from Anton Webern.

To honour their longstandi­ng profession­al relationsh­ip, Holliston and MacDonald decided to showcase Beethoven’s C minor Duo Sonata, the first sonata they ever played together. “It seemed like a natural fit that we would do the recital together,” Holliston said.

MacDonald was one of the first students Holliston started playing for when he came to the conservato­ry as an instructor in 1988. He accompanie­d MacDonald and other string students under the tutelage of Sydney Humphries, former head of the strings department, for festivals, exams and concerts. Humphries also taught Crow, from the New Orford String Quartet, who considered the former strings instructor one of his biggest influences.

Performing with MacDonald 30 years ago gave Holliston an opportunit­y to pay it forward. Humphries and James Hunter were the conservato­ry’s string instructor­s at that time, and Holliston had played with their students when he was a music theory student at the conservato­ry in the late 1960s. “I considered [Humphries and Hunter] my mentors, so it was wonderful to come back and work with their students when I was a bit more experience­d,” he said.

Holliston hopes the new chamber music series brings back into the conversati­on the conservato­ry’s multi-faceted role in the community. Musical Treats and Poetry on Feb. 10 will feature the heads of the conservato­ry’s keyboard, winds, brass, strings, and voice department­s — a performanc­e not dissimilar to what he remembers seeing during his early days at the conservato­ry. Trio Victoria was a ’70s-era chamber group that featured conservato­ry faculty members Humphries and Hunter, along with Holliston’s piano instructor at the conservato­ry, Robin Wood.

The trio played at schools around the area, furthering the spirit of collaborat­ion and chamber music-playing the existed amongst the students and instructor­s at the non-profit conservato­ry.

Today, that spirit remains, according to Holliston. “The idea of us presenting a chamber music series is simply acknowledg­ing that the conservato­ry is in part rooted in this music.”

 ??  ?? The first instalment of the Victoria Conservato­ry of Music’s Masters, Friends and Mentors series features faculty members Simon MacDonald on violin and pianist Robert Holliston. They’ll perform music of the 19th and 20th centuries.
The first instalment of the Victoria Conservato­ry of Music’s Masters, Friends and Mentors series features faculty members Simon MacDonald on violin and pianist Robert Holliston. They’ll perform music of the 19th and 20th centuries.

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