Nov 2, 7:30 pm
Join us at the Canadian Music Centre on Nov. 2nd with “piano virtuoso and avant-garde muse” Rachel Kiyo Iwaasa as she performs in recital, celebrating her recent CD, Known and Unknown: Solo piano works by Rodney Sharman. This is the first monograph recording to feature Sharman, described by Louis Andriessen as “the most distinguished Canadian composer of his generation.” The concert programme will include Sharman’s elegant Opera Transcriptions and trademark works for speaking pianist, including an uncensored rendition of his notorious collaboration with playwright Peter Eliot Weiss, The Garden, described as “a perfect combination of lust, innocence, tenderness, and yearning.” Iwaasa performs Sharman in context with work by compositional colleagues Linda Catlin Smith and Jocelyn Morlock. Download cards of Known and Unknown, released on Redshift Records, included in the ticket price.
ABOUT THE ARTISTS
Rachel Kiyo Iwaasa is among Canada’s foremost contemporary music pianists, hailed as a “keyboard virtuoso and avant-garde muse” (Georgia Straight) whose “emotional intensity” transforms music “from notes on a page to a stunning work of art” (Victoria Times Colonist). Iwaasa’s reputation has drawn many notable Canadian composers to write for her, including Hildegard Westerkamp, Nicole Lizée, Farshid Samandari, Emily Doolittle, Jeffrey Ryan, Leslie Uyeda, Jordan Nobles, and the late Jocelyn Morlock. The Canadian League of Composers recently commissioned Cris Derksen to compose a piece for her, which was chosen as the Offcial Canadian Selection for ISCM World New Music Days 2023 in Johannesburg. Iwaasa has performed with the likes of Yannick Nézet-Séguin, Mark Takeshi McGregor, Judith Forst, Quatuor Bozzini, Heather Pawsey, Gabriel Kahane, Caroline Shaw, and Richard Reed Parry. Rachel’s interdisciplinary adventures include work with visual artists SD Holman, Nettie Wild, Tania Willard, and Camille Georgeson-Usher; playwright/director David Bloom; choreographers Idan Cohen, Jennifer Mascall and Tara Cheyenne Friedenberg; and multi-media provocateur Paul Wong. Iwaasa has performed in the Netherlands, Germany, US and across Canada, with engagements that include the ISCM World New Music Days, Muziekweek Gaudeamus, Music on Main, Vancouver New Music, Western Front, Vancouver Symphony, Victoria Symphony, Aventa Ensemble (Victoria), CONTACT Contemporary Music (Toronto), New Works Calgary, Groundswell New Music (Winnipeg), and more. She holds a Doctor of Musical Arts from the University of British Columbia, a Master of Music from Indiana University Bloomington, and a Bachelor of Music from the University of Victoria, where she earned the Victoria Medal as the top graduating student in Fine Arts.
Rodney Sharman lives on traditional Musqueam territory in Vancouver, Canada. He teaches composition at the Vancouver Symphony School of Music, and is the Victoria Symphony’s Mentor-Composer. He has been Composer-in-Residence of Early Music Vancouver’s “New Music for Old Instruments”, the Victoria Symphony, National Youth Orchestra of Canada, Vancouver Symphony Orchestra, and Composer-Host of the Calgary Philharmonic’s New Music Festival, “Hear and Now”. In addition to concert music, Sharman writes music for cabaret, opera and dance. He sings, conducts, plays recorders and flutes. He works regularly with choreographer James Kudelka, for whom he has written scores for Oregon Ballet Theatre, San Francisco Ballet and Citadel & Compagnie (Toronto). His chamber opera, Elsewhereless, with text and direction by Atom Egoyan, was staged in Toronto, Vancouver, and Ottawa, and performed in concert excerpts in Amsterdam, New York City, Montreal, Victoria, and Rome. Sharman was awarded First Prize in the 1984 CBC Competition for Young Composers, the 1990 Kranichsteiner Prize in Music (Darmstadt, Germany), the 2013 Dora Mavor Moore Award for outstanding sound design/composition (Toronto), and is the recipient of the 2017 Walter Carsen Prize for Excellence in the Performing Arts. Website: www.rodneysharman.com