Pre-Concert Talk on Seymour & Smythe
Sunday, May 27, 2018
Leslie Dala, Rory Haye & Graham Walker |
My friend graphic designer Graham Walker and I were prepared
to attend a concert featuring a most interesting and difficult work by Steve
Reich at the Orpheum Annex on Seymour today. Alas! It was sold out. At the
queue before we turned away, we chatted with a tall freckled-faced Scotsman in town with his theater
troupe that is performing at Granville Island beginning tomorrow for the
Children’s Festival.
On Sunday, May 27th,
from 7 p.m - 10 p.m., at the Orpheum Annex Theatre, the Vancouver public will
have a chance to enjoy a special production that features music by the most
famous living Jewish-American composer Steve Reich, his celebrated composition
TEHILLIM, and also see for the first
time in Vancouver, the academic exhibition traveling especially for this
occasion from the Bulgarian Embassy in Ottawa - "The Power of Civic Society
- Fate of the Jews in Bulgaria during 1940-1944".
This marks the 75th
anniversary of an important historical event- the salvation of the Bulgarian
Jews during WWII. Twenty four big tableaux tell the story of what happened!
On the program: Srul
Irving Glick, Paul Ben-Haim, Ernst Bloch, Maurice Ravel, Steve Reich.
Conductor: Les Dala
Definitely disappointed the three of us walked down
Seymour to Smythe. It was there that we noticed a police woman in a big black
van stop a young woman (with N in her rear bumper) driving the wrong way on
Smythe. It was then that a handsome slim man, all in black, walked toward us. It
was Leslie Dala tonight's Musical Director of the evening’s performance at the
Orpheum Annex. I introduced him to Walker and our new friend Rory Haye.
Dala asked us if we could read music. Haye and Walker nodded
positively. Dala took out the music and started conducting what he called some
of the difficult parts of Tehillim. At one point he said something like, “If
you get distracted with this you can get fu….”
While we were disappointed at missing the concert we were most impressed with our personal pre-concert talk.
On why Rory Haye is here in Vancouver:
The work is called Poggle and that is a most intriguing name.
The work is called Poggle and that is a most intriguing name.