2020/2021 roster
Where do I get started with classical music? That was the question I asked myself four years ago. There are of course many ways to go about answering that question. In my case I cared more about the emotional power and historical context of the music, than theoretical formulations and the adulation of purely technical prowess. I found my answer, organically, via dusty dollar-bin dives through the classical-vinyl collections of various record shops in the city: Kops Records, Sonic Boom, BMV Books (lowkey one of the largest classical collections in the city), Seekers, Tonality, Rotate This, Shortstack, Cosmos, Paradise (the biggest collection in the city), and the occasional Discogs purchase. I wanted something tangible, musical material, to let music take up space in the space I inhabit, and in that sense is this blog the house that music built. So I started a musical calendar of sorts, beginning in August, 52 weeks to digest 52 fifty recordings .
At first I thought it would be impossible to maintain this schedule alongside the demands of being twenty-something in Toronto—but, looking back on the last four years, I simply can’t imagine getting through it in one piece without this constant regimen. Not to mention the whole host of truly amazing people that I’ve met, and organizations I’ve been introduced to, thanks to this blog. Although this blog has grown much over the years, the purpose of the journal that started it remains the same: as a record of the musical education that I didn’t have access to growing up in a ‘developing’ country (along with anything else on my mind that week).
Looking ahead to this next year, and to the roster below, I wanted to expand that education to find more of what I like, and more new things like it. I didn’t want the list below to read like another musical-obituary of dead-white-men—a difficult feat in this genre—so I sought out to find more works by female and minority composers. You wouldn’t believe how hard it is to find such works on vinyl, the format is a literal record of exclusion. While the list below is still far from what I would describe as truly diverse catalogue of composers—I remain committed to getting there—it is a reminder to the occasional visitor of the important contributions made by classical music’s ‘others’. Another guiding principle for this roster is an emphasis on chamber music: even before the pandemic, and since the 2019 Toronto Summer Music Festival, I’ve had it in mind to move towards music on a less symphonic scale. It’s feels especially appropriate now that much of the musical performances in the near future will be happening at the scale of quartets, chamber orchestras, trios, solo recitals, and the like.
For the seasoned collectors out there, I include all the deets you’ll need to find yourself a copy; and for those who don’t share the vinyl obsession, I try and include video recordings of each composition (but I encourage you to shop around for a recording you will like). And! It’s not all classical: each week features a ‘song of the week’ segment, usually a ‘folk’ song I’ve just added to my musical library—good music is good music, who gives a damn about genre. So I hope you will accept my invitation to join me for another year of musicking. Stop by here occasionally for a great recording of an old favourite, who knows, you might find something new.
august 2020
W1) Frederic Chopin - Waltzes No.1-18
W2) Frederic Chopin - 24 Preludes
W3) Frederic Chopin - Piano Sonata No.2
W4) Frederic Chopin - Piano Sonata No.3
W5) Frederic Chopin - Piano Concerto No.1
SEPTEMBER 2020
W6) Edward Elgar - Cello Concerto
W7) Aram Khachaturian - Violin Concerto in D Minor
W8) Cecile Chaminade - Trio For Piano, Violin & Cello No. 1 In G Minor,
W9) Clara Schumann - Trio For Piano, Violin & Cello In G Minor, Op. 17
OCTOBER 2020
W10) Jean Sibelius - Symphony No.3
W11) Jean Sibelius - Symphony No.6
W12) Jean Sibelius - Tempest Suites No.1&2
W13) Jean Sibelius - Violin Concerto in D Minor
NOVEMBER 2020
W14) Dmitri Shostakovich - Cello Concerto No.1
W15) Robert Schumann - Cello Concerto
W16) Igor Stravinsky - The Rites of Spring
W17) Sergei Rachmaninoff - Sonata in G minor for Cello and Piano
W18) Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky - Violin Concerto
DECEMBER 2020
W19) Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky - Piano Concerto No.1
W20) Johann Hummel - Trumpet Concerto
W21) Frank Martin - Harpsichord Concerto
W22) George Frederic Handel - Watermusic & Music for the Royal Fireworks
january 2021
W23) Richard Strauss - Thus Spoke Zarathustra
W24) Amy Beach - Trio For Piano, Violin & Cello, Op. 150
W25) Germaine Tailleferre - Sonata For Violin & Piano In C-Sharp Minor
W26) Fanny Mendelssohn - Trio For Piano, Violin & Cello - D Minor, Op. 1
FEBRUARY 2021
W27) Teresa Careño - String Quartet In B Minor
W28) Caroline Shaw - Orange
W29) Franz Schubert - Quartet No.15
W30) Samuel Coleridge Taylor - Selected Works
MARCH 2021
W31) Johann Sebastian Bach/ Glenn Gould - Goldberg Variations
W32) Edward MacDowell - Piano Sonata No.4
W33) Ludwig van Beethoven - Piano Sonata No.21 (Waldstein)
W34) Ludwig van Beethoven - String Trio No.1 Op.9
W35) Ludwig van Beethoven - Symphony No.6
APRIL 2021
W36) Antonín Dvorak - Symphony No.9
W37) Antonín Dvorak - String Quartet No.12 in F Major, Op.96, (American)
W38) William McCauley - Concerto Grosso
W39) Benjamin Britten - String Quartet No.1
MAY 2021
W40) Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - String Quartet No.14
W41) Modest Mussorgsky: Pictures at an Exhibition
W42) Johannes Brahms - Cello Sonata No.2
W43) Maurice Ravel - String Quartet in F Major
W44) Gioacchino Rossini - Sonatas for Strings No.1&2
JUNE 2021
W45) Alexis Contant - Trio For Violin, Cello, and Piano
W46) Alexis Emmanuel Chabrier - Piano Works
W47) Alexis Ffrench - TBD
W48) Vaughan Williams - Tuba Concerto
JULY 2021
W49) Erik Satie - Chansons
W50) Karlheinz Stockhausen - Momente
W51) Franz Schubert - Lieder
W52) Giacomo Puccini - Tosca