An Intimate Baroque Concert & Waiting for the Drugs to Take Hold
Saturday, January 11, 2025
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Majka Demcack
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Erin Dorfer
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At what point does an aside become a tangent, a tangent a
digression, a digression a meander, a meander a reamble, a reamble a
circumlocution, a circumlocution an excursus and an excursus a cul-de-sac?
Dwight Garner – NYTimes
All the way to the bottom of this blog I will explain the
significance of this almost unknown Vancouver punk composition. I have the
record!
Waiting for the Drugs to Take Hold
That quote from today’s NY Times Sunday Book Review came to
my mind.
When my granddaughter Rebecca (now 27) was 7 she and her
sister Lauren would spend Saturdays with us in our Kerrisdale home. On one
Saturday evening while having dinner I asked Rebecca what day of the week it
was. She answered that it was Saturday. I showed her my thick copy of next day’s
Sunday NY Times (to this day I get it on Saturday night). She was confused!
Today I went to a lovely baroque concert at St. Anselm’s
Church on the way to UBC. The concert featured composers I had never heard of
like J.J. Walther, Nicola Matteis, and Orlando Gibbons. Then harpsichordist Christina
Hutten told us she was going to play a contemporary piece by a Canadian
composer Grégoire Jeay.
When you have never heard of a composer and you hear
something of theirs for the first time I categorize it as “new music”.
What is New Music?
To make me more aware of the importance of these St.Anselm’s
concerts, when the trio played Dietrich Becker’s (en su casa lo conocen, my
grandmother would quote this to me and it translates as “they know who he is at
his home”) Sonata in A major I can attest it is one of the happiest compositions
I have ever heard. It should be played for Christmas.
The playing of so much unknown music (unknown to me)
immediately made me think of the Secret Vs and their inimitable composition
Waiting for the Drugs to Take Hold. It is one of my favourite Vancouver
compositions from the 80s.
An Intimate Baroque Concert This Saturday - St. Anselm's Anglican Church
Thursday, January 09, 2025
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Majka Demcack at St. Augustine's 26 October 2024
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Baroque for the Soul
Bach - Buxtehude & Infinity
Ignatz's Scordatura at St. Anselm's with Marc Destrubé
El Concierto Barroco at St. Anselm's
An Intimate Concert at St. Anselm's Anglican Church
Before my Rosemary died on December 9 2020 we would go to just about any
Early Music Vancouver concert at the Chan. We frequented the Orpheum and the
Turning Point Ensemble’s concerts at the downtown campus of Simon Fraser
University.
My choice
has now changed. I want to go to smaller venues like Pyatt Hall and the Orpheum
Annex. I would never return to anything in that huge white elephant that is the
Queen Elizabeth Theatre.
Of late I
have been following a young violinist (graduate of Julliard) called Majka
Demcack. I went to a couple of her concerts. One at St. Agustine’s Church in
Kitsilano was an extraordinary combination of baroque music with the concept of
infinity.
This
Saturday there will be a concert, with Demcack at the intimate St. Anselm’s
Church on the way to UBC that begins at 3pm. Amazingly the suggested $20 ticket
includes lovely food and drinks. On the harpsichord is my longtime friend Christina Hutten.
But best
of all is to be in a small space and to recognize people from past concerts.
Face to face combination in this 21st century is a rarity.
It was at St.Anselm's that in 2023 and 2024 I was present at Marc Destrubé's performances of Bach's 6 suites for unaccompanied violin. To witness this sort of concert is an extreme rarity and there are few performers who can play them.
Of Orient Are
Monday, January 06, 2025
A combination of dark rainy days, and constantly remembering
the death of my Rosemary on 9 December 2020 have left me with little desire to
do anything. The loving and constant
attention of my two cats, Niño and Niña have lessened the melancholy but not
enough to stop my bed rotting and crossing the little walk to my oficina.
Bed Rotting
But finally a while ago I decided I had to start.
When I sit for my supper at the dining room table this
particular lithograph by John Snow stares at me. It is called Window and it
features the Three Wise men in the manger.
I bought the lithograph for little money many years ago and
it wasn’t until today that I found out that John Snow was a famous artist:
John Harold Thomas
Snow, born in Vancouver (1911-2004) was renowned for his lithographs. A WWII
veteran, he created 410 lithographs, earning the Alberta Order of Excellence. John
Snow died peacefully on August 23, 2004 at the age of ninety-two, after several
years of failing health.
I went to a Roman Catholic boarding school, St. Edward’s in
Austin from 1958 to 196. I received a fantastic education from my teachers who
were Brothers of the Congregation of
Holy Cross (the same as in Indiana’s University of Notre Dame.
The man who taught us theology was my long-time friend (he
even met my Rosemary before he died some years ago) Brother Edwin Reggio, C.S.C.
I will not reveal my very private religious views here. But
it is sufficient to state that my knowledge of the Roman Catholic Doctrine is
most detailed. It was Brother Edwin who told us that the second sacrament after
the better known Baptism is Confirmation. It makes the person who receives it “a
soldier of Christ”. Brother Edwin stressed that it had nothing to do with
wielding swords but being able to explain one’s beliefs to curious strangers.
I have an Argentine relative who is an
extreme-right-wing-Catholic. For him the world is made up of white heterosexual
males and females, all Roman Catholics. His idea of a good politician (not
important if the politician is a thief or a rapist) is one who does not condone
abortion.
My relative knows enough not to discuss Roman Catholic
Doctrine with me because I can talk circles around him.
Now what is the significance of the Epiphany (Tres Reyes or
Three Wise Kings Day)? Catholic missals of the last century had a numerology dictation
the importance of the feast days. We would all suspect that Christmas and
Easter were important. The latter specifically if Christ had not risen His
whole doctrine would have been a sham.
The Epiphany is as important. Why?
I have yet to meet a person who will tell you what I will
write below. And remember that my religious views are personal and what I will
state is an objective explanation as given to me by Brother Edwin.
In the Old Testament, God made a pact with the Israelites
that if they obeyed the Ten Commandments and behaved they would ascend to paradisiacal
heaven. The rest of mankind, not being Israelites would go to a place called
limbo.
When the three wise men came to the manger (and were
accepted) they represented that other humanity, the limbo humanity. They were
now able to be part of the fold. Why?
Here is Brother Edwin’s clincher of an explanation.
Gaspar, Balthazar en Melchior were that other humanity. They were “unclean”
heathens.
What was unclean heather?
Why an uncircumcised one!
And that ushered in the New Testament.
And today I specially celebrate the feast day as I am suput
(or supot) which is Tagalog for uncircumcised.