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Home  >  Early Music Vancouver Past Events  >  J.S. Bachwards – Early music from the future for solo violin

J.S. Bachwards – Early music from the future for solo violin

May 5, 2015 | 8:00pm | The Fox Cabaret | Map

Jaron Freeman-Fox, violin; Marc Destrubé, violin


“While some musicians pigeonhole themselves into tiny sub-genres, Freeman-Fox blows away all walls.”  Now Magazine

“Marc Destrubé bared his soul without reserve, yet displaying gentlemanliness and humility”. Early Music News, Australia

Renowned baroque violin specialist Marc Destrubé and his former student, genre-breaking fiddler Jaron Freeman-Fox, share the stage, exploring beautiful variation-based compositions for solo violin by Bach, Biber and Baltzar, along with Jaron’s variations and improvisations and electro-acoustic re-imaginings of these.

PROGRAMME

Thomas Baltzar (c1630-1663)
A Prelude for the violin, in G major
from The Division Violin (London, 1680)

Heinrich Ignaz Franz von Biber (1644-1704)
Passacaglia
from Mystery (or Rosary) Sonatas (Salzburg, c1676)

Intermission

Johann Sebastian Bach
Partia for solo violin No. 1 in B minor, BWV 1002
from Sei solo a violino senza basso accompagnato (Cöthen, 1720)
• Allemande
• Double

• Corrente
• Double

• Sarabande
• Double

• Tempo di Borea
• Double

PROGRAMME NOTES

This program is based on three early works for unaccompanied violin, all of which reflect the idea of variation or improvisation in some form. Baltzar’s ‘Prelude’ was published in an early work of ‘division’ violin music, divisions being the art of taking a simple melody and ‘dividing’ or embellishing it with faster rhythms based on the same melody. Biber’s Passacaglia, the last work in his cycle of ‘Rosary’ Sonatas, is based on a repeating four note line which is the same bass pattern as that of the first line of a hymn to the Guardian Angel. Bach’s b minor partita comprises four dance movements, each of which is followed by a ‘double’. ‘Double’ was a  French term used during the 17th and early 18th centuries for a technique of variation in which more or less elaborate ornamentation was added to the original melody, while the supporting harmonies remained the same (the unadorned version of the melody being called the ‘simple’). The term double is thus equivalent to diminution (or division).

Some years ago I was asked by a friend, the composer Peter Hannan, if I would be willing to give lessons to a young violinist who had enrolled at Vancouver Community College. Jaron had never had formal violin lessons from what I could tell, but had grown up, home-schooled, travelling from one fiddle camp to the next. I agreed to meet with him to see if I might be able to help him. When we met and I heard him play, I quickly realized that I would be the one learning from him, but of course I didn’t tell him that, and enthusiastically agreed to take him on. He arrived every week bursting with questions, about music, about left-hand technique, about sub-harmonics, about tuning and temperament, and shared with me his latest discoveries, not to mention his phenomenal violin technique and fertile imagination. He then went off to India to study Indian violin, and later landed in Toronto to take on the mantle of his mentor, the great fiddler and inspiration to a generation Oliver Schroer. Ever since then I looked for an opportunity to share a stage with him. I also looked for an opportunity to perform some solo Bach in a situation that was a little less intimidating that the ‘normal’ concert platform; with many thanks to Matt White and Dave Pay, these two wishes have come together in this project, and the hope is that Jaron’s ‘re-imaginings’ of the music of these three composers will make us aware that the apparent gulf between musical genres is really only a tiny stream (in German: Bach).

– Marc Destrubé

It has been a huge honour and wonderful challenge working on these pieces.

I have always been fascinated with the traditions of solo violin music from around the world. Over the last several years I have gradually developed a new system of expanding the range of my violin to include lower registers, without compromising the freedom of improvising on the instrument acoustically. In this concert I have been able to combine these various pursuits.

However, it is in the re-imaginings of Bach’s music where the real challenge has been, as his music is so bullet-proof, that it has felt neigh impossible to think of any reason to adjust a single note. Therefore, my process has been to memorize his music one small fragment at a time, as if I was trying to trick my ears into thinking I was actually writing the music as I learned it. Once the pieces were memorized, I repeated them extensively, until small improvisations began to peek out from within these bullet-proof constructs that JSB so cunningly designed.
The things I learned working under Marc are still the cornerstones of what I consider playing the violin to be all about.   Beyond his inspiring technique and facility of expression on the instrument, he is one of the only violinists I’ve met who is so acutely aware of the why and how of the instrument. For example, how the string plays the bow as much as the bow plays the string, and how the bow relates to our breath. It’s a great privilege to share the stage with him, and a gift to continue learning about my instrument from this mentor 10 years after my first lesson him.

– Jaron Freeman-Fox

Presented in cooperation with Music on Main. Generously sponsored by Ingrid Söchting. 

Jaron Freeman-Fox, violin

Scampering about the islands and mountains of northwest BC, Jaron’s early life was nomadically spent moving from festival to festival, busking, house-sitting, harvesting, home schooling, and the occasional van ride across the continent. At age 14 Jaron began a close apprenticeship with the fiddler/composer Oliver Schroer, which lasted until Schroer’s death from Leukemia in 2008.

At age 17, Jaron went on to music school in Vancouver where he studied jazz, composition, as well as classical performance under the renowned classical violinist Marc Destrube. Soon after migrating to the city, Jaron was touring with artists such as The Paperboys, Shane Koyczan, and Tambura Rasa.

In 2007, Jaron began a long-term study in India to pursue his love of Indian classical music. While studying with India’s top violinists (A. Kanyakumeri, Dr. Narmadha, Dr. Balaji) Jaron was soon also performing alongside great artists themselves such as T.V. Gopalakrishnan (well known for his workwith George Harrison and Pandit Ravi Shankar), and John Anthony (the original guitarist for L. Shankar).

After moving to Toronto, Jaron was soon performing with all forms of artists from The Good Lovelies, to Autorickshaw, to Peter Katz and is incessantly working as a session musician, composer, producer and collaborator, providing the music for dance with  HYPERLINK “http://www.catalysttcm.com/jameskudelka.html” \t “_blank” James Kudelka, multimedia theatre by Heather Hermant (aka Rotery Poet), storytelling by Dan Yashinsky, film soundtracks by Rich Pell  and even a Canadian Tire Commercial and iphone video game by Click Gamer.

Jaron enjoys long stumbles on the beach, early-morning bedtimes, and unrehearsed fire juggling. Jaron cannot tell his left from right except when airborne, and is incapable of walking past shoes left out on the street without at least trying them on.

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Marc Destrubé, violin

Canadian violinist Marc Destrubé is equally at home as a soloist, chamber musician, concertmaster or director/conductor of orchestras and divides his time between performances of standard repertoire on modern instruments and performing baroque and classical music on period instruments.

As a concertmaster, he has played under Sir Simon Rattle, Kent Nagano, Helmuth Rilling, Christopher Hogwood, Philippe Herreweghe, Gustav Leonhardt and Frans Brüggen. He is co-concertmaster of the Orchestra of the 18th Century with which he has toured the major concert halls and festivals of the world. He was concertmaster of the CBC Radio Orchestra from 1996 to 2002, concertmaster of the Oregon Bach Festival Orchestra, and founding director of the Pacific Baroque Orchestra.

He is first violinist with the Axelrod String Quartet, quartet-in-residence at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington D.C., where the quartet plays on the museum’s exceptional collection of Stradivari and Amati instruments. He has also performed and recorded with L’Archibudelli and is a member of the Turning Point and la Modestine ensembles and Microcosmos string quartet in Vancouver.

He has appeared as soloist and guest director with symphony orchestras in Victoria, Windsor, Edmonton and Halifax as well as with the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra, Portland Baroque Orchestra and Lyra Baroque Orchestra. A founding member of Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra, he has appeared with many of the leading period-instrument orchestras in North America and Europe including as guest concertmaster of the Academy of Ancient Music and of the Hanover Band.

Marc has recorded for Sony, EMI, Teldec, Channel Classics, Hänssler, Globe and CBC Records.

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Een Romantische Johannes Passion

Historical Performance has been steadily looking toward the nineteenth-century as a source of inspiration, and Orchestra Lagrandt wants to lead the charge into Romantic orchestral performance practice. As an orchestra of ambitious musicians in their twenties from 25 different nations, we aspire to represent the voice of the new generation in Historical Performance.

Een Romantische Johannes Passion is an ongoing project to reimagine the Johannes Passion of J. S. Bach in a late nineteenth century style. The first Passion revivals in the Netherlands took place in Rotterdam in 1870, featuring large symphonic orchestrations, and a radically different musical language than that of the HP and modern classical worlds. In our initial performance with the Tangram Chamber Choir, we pushed the boundaries of what Romantic Bach might have sounded like: exploring changes in orchestration, stoic tempi, rubato, phrasing, nineteenth- century bowing practices, and even portamento. We plan to establish this project as an annual tradition every Easter season, reworking the arrangement each time in the spirit of Romantic spontaneity.


One of the wonderful things about the Historical Performance movement is that we are able to use forgotten practices, this time hailing from the nineteenth century, to present such a beloved and well known-work in a new light.

The world is familiar with stories of clever forgers whose life’s mission is to cunningly reproduce the light and shadows of historical masterworks, from Vermeer’s brushstrokes to Da Vinci’s proportional precision… but what if these crimes of craftsmanship were to extend beyond the visual arts? What if the pieces we know to be by Palestrina, Monteverdi or even Johann Sebastian Bach were in fact stylistic copies, artfully composed by a secret circle of music forgers and passed off as the work of the greats? What if those music forgers are at work as we speak? 

This premise inspires our original program The Music Forgery Workshop. Our early music comedy imagines the lives of such a circle of musical criminals, offering a fresh and lively presentation of historical compositions, not as museum artifacts but as living works in progress. The workshop itself is set up on the stage and its members carry forth the plot in music and words. A narrator in the role of a suspicious inspector lends the performance a theatrical flow. The listener is invited into a satire on high society’s art commerce, while the performers make fun of themselves for having devoted their lives to the niche subject of historical music performance. 

Violinist Elizabeth Sommers combines her skills and experience in traditional music with expertise in the performance and improvisation of medieval and Renaissance repertoires. Multi-instrumentalist Eliot X. Dios (keyboards, bagpipes and flutes) works wholeheartedly to employ storytelling techniques developed through the history of literature and cinema in his early music concerts. Composer Gunnar Haraldsson (violin, guitar) seeks to translate the forms and intentions of early composition for a modern audience. Halldór B. Arnarson (keyboards, voice) has devoted his career to bringing musical craftsmanship from the era of counterpoint to the attention of the public and comedy to the early music scene. Singer and storyteller Ásta S. Arnardóttir brings the storyline to the public with personal immediacy, and through her character work defines the different veins of the show, sometimes hilarious and sometimes serious. 

The story is narrated by the character of the Inspector, acted out by the members of the MFW, and told in rhyming Icelandic verse in one musical pillar of the show, a madrigal composed by our very own 

Halldór in the style of Monteverdi. The show has an entertaining educational dimension. The audience is exposed to a broad sweep of historical and musical information in a condensed form, necessary to understand the musical humour, while dramatic rhythm and scenographic effects prevent overwhelm. We also place particular emphasis on theatrical illusion and synchronisation. One example appears in the opening scene, in which the inspector is seen watching television. On stage, this becomes a complex exercise in coordination: each time the inspector presses a button on the remote control, the musicians instantly switch pieces, creating the impression of rapidly changing television channels. 

This opening scene establishes the tone of the entire show, comical and satirical in its storytelling and diverse in its musical language. It not only introduces the wide range of musical styles that appear throughout the performance, but also functions as the plot’s inciting incident, as the inspector hears a news report about the discovery of a previously unknown concerto by Vivaldi. 

Another important scene takes place when one forger is alone on stage in low light, perusing books on medieval music, while the musicians perform and sing offstage, sounding his audiation as he reads. This intimate moment evokes the sleepless nights spent studying facsimiles and learning historical compositional techniques, by which the forger acquires the inspiration and the expertise necessary to his art, and reveals a hidden side of musical performance: the immense amount of study and preparation that precedes the moment on stage. This setting also creates space for visual and musical comedy, as seen in the trailer video, where a 14th-century melody is played backwards because Halldór is unknowingly reading the facsimile upside-down, only realising the mistake when the music begins to sound absurd. 

Fun and friendship are at the heart of the whole project, though the link between music and crime is an important historical consideration. Classical music was often used as the demonstration of a monarch’s power, music teaching as a cover up for secret affairs, and pieces were published under another’s name for profit. Such examples of “inappropriate practices” carry an exciting and attractive element for the audience which the MFW seeks to exploit. Under this light-hearted surface lies a more serious layer of questions concerning our present-day existence, such as excessive materialism in high society and the threat posed on human craftsmanship and skill by the rise of artificial intelligence. 

Please Note:

The main applicant and creative/intellectual driver of the project must be 30 or under (on May 15th).

The average age of all musicians must not be older than 32, and the maximum age of supporting musicians must be no more than 35 (on May 15th.)