The Hamilton Spectator

Montreal pianist doesn’t need words to find a connection with listeners

- NICK KREWEN

A funny thing happened in 2018 when Montreal composer Alexandra Stréliski released “Inscape,” her instrument­al album of lush piano music.

It became not only a smash hit in her home province of Quebec and the rest of Canada, selling more than 160,000 copies of an album deemed “neo-classical” — a genre for which sales numbers aren’t usually strong — it also took off around the world, charting in 20 countries and registerin­g 300 million streams on global platforms like Spotify.

And that doesn’t include the haul of five Félix Awards (La Belle Province’s equivalent of the Juno Awards) and a Juno itself for Instrument­al Album of the Year.

Now that she’s back after a pandemic interim with a brand new album, “Neo-Romance” and she’s had a chance to reflect on her success, does Stréliski offer any theories as to why “Inscapes” struck such a chord with listeners?

“It’s a bit hard to tell, but I feel like people connected — especially here in Quebec — to the music and whenever I started to perform on television,” said Stréliski, 38, over the phone.

“I don’t understand it, but I’m definitely grateful for it.”

“Neo-Romance,” actually her third album following “Inscape” and 2010s “Pianoscape,” doesn’t fall far from the musical tree of its predecesso­rs: 14 wordless, melodic vistas both calming and passionate that the composer says is the most organic version of herself.

“For me, this is the most normal thing to be doing,” Stréliski said. “I’ve been improvisin­g on the piano and just kind of playing my moods since I can remember, and the biggest thing that changed was when I decided to dedicate my life to sharing this with people and not keeping it for myself.”

It’s also music — the universal language — with purpose.

“Music that expresses things that people connect with — and very different types of people connect with — and that’s what I’m really interested in: how you can build bridges between people. And if I can do it through art, that’s fantastic.”

After hearing the somewhat relaxed nuances of such “Neo-Romance” numbers as the poignant ballad “First Kiss” and the evocative waltz “The Hills,” it’s hard to imagine that Stréliski was once part of the ad agency business.

She was a composer/producer at Montreal’s Lamajeure Studio and part of CLIO Award-winning campaigns by agency DentsuBos a decade ago, creating scores for numerous clients, but somewhat suppressin­g her own internal compositio­nal desires due to the demanding nature of the ad industry.

“I was also managing the whole department, so I was talking to clients and pitching to other composers, and kind of translatin­g what the client needed in terms of music, and then talking to the artists and writing myself, of course,” said Stréliski. “I did that for a few years.

“I was putting my music to the service of products and stuff like that. It was a great school and, to this day, working as a composer in the ad industry is very good training because you deal with human beings, with hard deadlines and different genres of music.

“But, as an artist, deep down, the expression of your true self can sometimes be set aside and that, for me, led to a burnout.”

She was rescued somewhat when Canadian filmmaker Jean-Marc Vallée played her music at the 86th annual Academy Awards during the montage for his Oscar-winning “Dallas Buyers Club.” He also used her music as part of the score for 2015’s “Demolition.”

When he moved into television, Vallée, who died in 2021, used her music in the trailer for his Emmywinnin­g 2017 series “Big Little Lies” and as part of the soundtrack for his 2018 miniseries “Sharp Objects.”

Stréliski said it was a strong indication that a career change was in the offing.

“This was very early in my career when Jean-Marc Vallée used ‘Prelude’ in ‘Dallas Buyers Club’ and it had a huge impact. The fact that he would use my art in his art was a very big deal. It was a validation: that maybe what I’m doing is good, you know? Maybe I should pursue this avenue?”

Born in Montreal and raised in Paris, Stréliski caught the piano bug in Europe.

“I wanted to play an instrument,” she remembered. “I was five or six, and my parents had a friend who was a composer and they asked him, ‘Which instrument should we get her?’ He said the piano.

“I fell in love with it, I really did. It’s been part of my life forever.”

Stréliski is very happy with her career trajectory and will continue to make albums and tour.

But she’s also casting an eye on film scoring and hasn’t completely left the advertisin­g world behind.

“I actually became a partner in the studio I used to work in; I bought the studio with two of my great friends,” she said.

“I’m looking at film scores more. I do love to tour and I will continue making records, but I’m also looking forward to developing more of the film score side of my career.”

 ?? JOHANNA BERGHORN ?? Juno Award-winning pianist Alexandra Stréliski is back with a new neo-classical album of instrument­als called “NeoRomance.”
JOHANNA BERGHORN Juno Award-winning pianist Alexandra Stréliski is back with a new neo-classical album of instrument­als called “NeoRomance.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada