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This years Guitar Foundation of
Americas festival attracted several
hundred people and offered numerous
concerts by players from all
over the world, masterclasses, lectures,
guitar maker and dealer
exhibitions and, of course, the
always much awaited players competition.
The week-long event, from
October 18 to 25, was held at the
University of Quebec in Montreal.
The event was kicked off with a
concert by Uruguayan guitarist
Alvaro Pierri, and it was a kicker,
certainly one of the best recitals of
the week. Pierri has taught at The
University of Quebec for some years
and has won prizes in South and
North America as well as in Europe.
His artistry was in evidence as he
played solo pieces by Agustín Barrios
and Egberto Gismonti and
chamber works with I Musici de
Montreal, including a gorgeous concerto
by Canadian composer
Jacques Hétu.
The other great concert of the
festival was given at the end of the
week by the always astonishing
Assad Duo. Brazilian brothers
Odair and Sergio Assad kept the
biggest audience of the event
enthralled by their renditions of
Moreno Torrobas 'Estampas,' Milhauds
'Scaramouche,' two sonatas
by Scarlatti, Leo Brouwers 'Tres
Danzas Concertantes,' Astor
Piazzollas 'Tango Suite,' and
Ginasteras 'Sonata No.1.' Their
performance was impeccable and
powerful, ranging from the most
delicate guitaristic effects to wild
flights of virtuosity, all carried off
with the nonchalant mastery which
is their trademark. The packed hall
called for and got two delightfully
entertaining encores from them.
On the second evening of the festival
David Russell performed a
rather dry and academic program of
music by Giuliani, Frank Martin,
Miguel Llobet, Antonio Jose and
David Russell. It was pleasant and
instructive to hear nine of the
sixteen Catalan folksong settings
done by Llobet (the by now tired
old warhorse 'El Noi de la mare'
not among them) and very seldom
played. Perhaps it was to balance
the British against the Catalonians
that Russell gave his renditions of
six Celtic ditties followed by
encores of a lot more. As pleasing
as these might sound next to a peat
fire with plenty of Guiness stout on
hand, in a concert hall they become
dull quite quickly. But David shook
out his blond locks and persisted to
the bitter end.
The L.A. Guitar Quartet gave their
obligatory nod in the direction of
classical repertoire by opening their
Wednesday evening recital with the
overture to Rossinis 'Il Barbiere di
Seviglia' and then launched into
the hot 'world music' stuff they
have become famous for, imitating
exotic instruments by the use of
gadgets dangling from their strings.
Three examples of Andrew Yorks
guitar compositions were played
faultlessly in all their repetiveness
and lack of musical imagination.
York explained each of his works at
length, describing his piece 'Pacific
Coast Highway' as based on jazz
harmonies when there wasnt a flatted
fifth along the entire road, not to
speak of a trace of jazz rhythm.
(Perhaps he was thinking of a flat
tire.) William Kanengisers
arrangement of Manuel de Fallas
'El Amor Brujo' was a massive display
of guitar aritstry which three
or even two guitars would have
made much clearer and thus far
more thrilling.
Finalists in the players competition
were Patrick Kearney, who
played a delightful recital for us in
1997, Denis Azabagic, Ioana Ganbrabur,
a young blind woman of
amazing skill, and Alieksey Vianna
from Brazil. All were extremely
impressive. First place was won
by Azabagic who hails from Bosnia
and, besides a recording contract
with Naxos, will be given a
concert tour of the USA in the
upcoming year.
The other major concerts were performed
by the young Australian
virtuoso Karin Schaupp sinuously
running the gamut from Dowland
to Koshkin, including a stellar
rendering of Sainz de la Mazas
brilliant 'Zapateado,' and
Paul ODette who tiptoed between
two antique composers, Dowland
and de Murcia, trying hard to get
the most out of his little lutes, not
at all easy to hear in a large
concert hall.
Minor concerts provided two
amazing afternoons with the German
ensemble Trio Con Brio which
blended perfectly the guitar with
viola and cello in works by Sergio
Assad, Brouwer and Stepan Rak;
and French guitarist and composer,
Arnaud Dumond who
offered a lyrical program including
three introspective original pieces.
The grand old man of South American
guitar music, Abel Carlevaro
appeared at the very end with a
selection of his compositions
topped off with the world premiere
of his 'Estampas Concertantes' for
guitar with guitar quartet. Yes, a
week supercharged with guitar
music concluded with the throbbing
sounds of FIVE guitars, a
crescendo of plucked strings not
soon to be forgotten.
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