• My Account
  • Cart
  • About
    • Who is Early Music Vancouver
    • What is Early Music?
    • OUR INSTRUMENT COLLECTION
    • Employment Opportunities
    • Annual General Meeting 2025
    • 2024/25 Annual Report
  • Pacific Baroque Orchestra
    • Goldberg Variations Tour 2025
  • EVENTS
    • Summer Festival 2026: The Power of Music
    • EMV’s 2026-2027 Main Season
    • Digital Concert Hall
    • Free Events
    • Past Events
  • Learn
    • PROGRAMMES
    • Artist Interviews
    • Instrument Videos
  • Support Us
    • Donate Now
    • Corporate Opportunities
    • Volunteer
    • Host an EMV Musician
  • Ticketing Info
    • BOX OFFICE
    • Gift Vouchers
    • Venues
  • Press Centre
    • Media Releases
    • EMV PRESS KIT
    • EMV in the News
Early Music Vancouver
  • My Account
  • Cart
  • Donate
  • Buy Tickets
  • Gift Vouchers
  • Get our newsletter
Toggle Menu
  • About
    • Who is Early Music Vancouver
    • What is Early Music?
    • OUR INSTRUMENT COLLECTION
    • Employment Opportunities
    • Annual General Meeting 2025
    • 2024/25 Annual Report
  • Pacific Baroque Orchestra
    • Goldberg Variations Tour 2025
  • EVENTS
    • Summer Festival 2026: The Power of Music
    • EMV’s 2026-2027 Main Season
    • Digital Concert Hall
    • Free Events
    • Past Events
  • Learn
    • PROGRAMMES
    • Artist Interviews
    • Instrument Videos
  • Support Us
    • Donate Now
    • Corporate Opportunities
    • Volunteer
    • Host an EMV Musician
  • Ticketing Info
    • BOX OFFICE
    • Gift Vouchers
    • Venues
  • Press Centre
    • Media Releases
    • EMV PRESS KIT
    • EMV in the News
Home  >  Early Music Vancouver Past Events  >  Live Concert – Kalhor & Tabassian in Dialogue

Live Concert – Kalhor & Tabassian in Dialogue

Kayhan Kalhor, Setar & Kiya Tabassian, Setar | Friday, June 3, 2022 7:30 p.m. at The Kay Meek Centre for the Performing Arts I Saturday, June 4, 2022 7:30 p.m. at the The Roundhouse This concert will be live streamed on June 3, 2022 at 7:30 p.m. and will be available to watch after 48 hours for two days.


THESE CONCERTS ARE SOLD OUT

From dawn to dusk, music reigns among the stars of Persian civilization. The traditional music of Iran, unique to the Orient, is the fruit of a mystical heritage with a fascinating capacity for constant regeneration. For this unique concert, Kayhan Kalhor, an uncontested master of this tradition, joins Kiya Tabassian on a journey through an immense musical universe. Carrying on tradition while uncovering the future, they make poetry that sings of times both old and new, and contribute to a culture that is in full swing.

The intensely spiritual and emotional improvisations of Kalhor and Tabassian, steeped in the traditional music of Iran, are said to bring listeners to a trance-like state. The ancestry of the setar can be traced to the ancient tanbur of pre-Islamic Persia. It is made from thin mulberry wood and its fingerboard has more than 20 moveable frets. Setar is literally translated as “three strings”; in its present form, however, it has four strings. Because of its delicacy and intimate sonority, the setar is the preferred instrument of Sufi mystics.

” Rather than a duel, the two setarists’ ninety or so uninterrupted minutes onstage turned out to be a clinic in how to build something transcendent.” New York Music Daily 

This concert is generously supported by Agnes Hohn.


Programme

This concert is an improvisation, the musicians will introduce their programme from the stage.


About the Setar

Considered the supreme instrument for performing Persian classical music, the setar has a long and rich history.

The instrument can be traced back to the Middle Ages, though it might have even older origins. It is a descendent of the ancient Iranian ‘tambur’, which is credited with being the ancestral form of nearly all lutes now known in the East. The setar underwent many transformations throughout the evolution of Persian music, especially with regard to the instrument’s shape, the number and placement of the frets, and the number of strings. The name setar means ‘three strings’, though a fourth drone string was added in the 18th century by the mystic Moshtaq Ali Shah.

The setar can be tuned in different ways, depending on the mode in which the musician plays. It has between 25 and 29 moveable gut frets that are organized according to the Persian musical scales using microtones. The setar is played with the index finger of the right hand in a back-and-forth movement that allows the musician a variety of combinations as well as ornamentation played by both hands. As the setar is primarily a monodic instrument, the musician usually plays one string at a time.


ONLINE VERSION – PURCHASE TICKETS AND HOW TO WATCH:

Online: Live Streaming by Fee on June 3 at 7:30 p.m. and will be available to watch after 48 hours for two days.

Click here to purchase tickets for the online concert.

Kiya Tabassian, setar

In 1990, at age 14, Kiya Tabassian emigrated with his family to Quebec from his native Iran, bringing with him some initial musical training in Persian music. Determined to become a musician and composer, he continued his education in Persian music, studying with Reza Gassemi and Kayhan Kalhor. At the same time, he studied composition at the Conservatoire de musique de Montréal with Gilles Tremblay. In 1998, he co-founded Constantinople with the idea of developing an ensemble for musical creation that draws from the heritage of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, of Europe, and of the Mediterranean and the Middle East. Serving as its artistic director, Kiya has developed close to 40 programs with Constantinople. Numerous musical groups and institutions have called upon his talents as a composer, including the Orchestre symphonique de Montréal, the Nouvel Ensemble Moderne and the European Broadcasting Union. He has also composed music for documentary and feature films, including Jabaroot and Voices of the Unheard. Since the summer of 2017, he has held the post of Associate Artist at Rencontres musicales de Conques festival in France. In 2017 he co-founded the Centre des musiciens du monde in Montreal. Kiya also sits on the Board of Conseil des arts et des lettres du Québec.

Kayhan Kalhor, setar

Five-time GRAMMY nominee and a Grammy winner (2017), Kayhan Kalhor is an
internationally acclaimed virtuoso on the kamancheh, who through his many musical
collaborations has been instrumental in popularizing Persian music in the West and is a
creative force in today’s music scene. His performances of traditional Persian music and
multiple collaborations have attracted audiences around the globe. He has studied the
music of Iran’s many regions, in particular those of Khorason and Kordestan, and has
toured the world as a soloist with various ensembles and orchestras including the New
York Philharmonic and the Orchestre National de Lyon.  He is co-founder of the
renowned ensembles Dastan, Ghazal: Persian & Indian Improvisations and Masters of
Persian Music.

Kayhan Kalhor has composed works for Iran’s most renowned vocalists Mohammad
Reza Shajarian and Shahram Nazeri and has also performed and recorded with Iran’s
greatest instrumentalists. He has composed music for television and film and was most
recently featured on the soundtrack of Francis Ford Copolla’s Youth Without Youth in a
score that he collaborated on with Osvaldo Golijov. In 2004, Kayhan was invited by
American composer John Adams to give a solo recital at Carnegie Hall as part of his
Perspectives Series and in the same year he appeared on a double bill at Lincoln Center’s
Mostly Mozart Festival, sharing the program with the Festival Orchestra performing the
Mozart Requiem. Kayhan is a founding member of Yo-Yo Ma’s Silk Road Ensemble and
his compositions appear on several of the Ensemble’s albums.


Media

1254 W 7TH AVE
VANCOUVER, BC, V6H 1B6

(604) 732-1610
staff@earlymusic.bc.ca

  • About EMV
    • What is Early Music?
    • Staff
    • Partners
    • Board of Directors
    • Venues
  • Education & Community
    • BC Scholarship Programme – 2026/2027
    • OUR INSTRUMENT COLLECTION
  • Press Centre
  • Join Our Mailing List
Facebook URLTwitter URLYoutube URLInstagram URL

Copyright © 2026 EARLY MUSIC VANCOUVER | EMV | PHOTOS BY JESS MACALEESE, MARK MUSHET AND JAN GATES.
CONTACT EMV FOR INDIVIDUAL CREDITS. | site by DFS Digital Fusion Studios web designAND MEDIUM RARE Medium Rare Interactive

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.)