The Jeffery Concerts continue the 2025-26 season with a program of Baroque and Early Classical music, October 19, at the Metropolitan Church.

Sensibilité: C. P. E. Bach and Vivaldi in the Age of “Emotional Hyperreactivity”
presented by Accademia de’ Dissonanti
Elinor Frey, cello and direction
Joseph Lanza, violin
Jessy Dubé, violin
Olivier Brault, viola
Eliana Zimmerman, cello
Joseph Phillips, contrabass
Mélisande McNabney, harpsichord

The royal courts of mid-eighteenth-century Berlin were lively crossroads for some of the greatest musicians of the time. The three cello concertos of C. P. E. Bach were composed in the early 1750s, likely for performance at one of the private academies or music societies that were popular in Berlin at the time. These tempestuous and dramatic concertos, replete with fragmented and blustery exchanges, bear witness to Bach’s vigorous imagination. A generation earlier, Antonio Vivaldi wrote highly imaginative concertos for strings at the Le Pietà conservatory in Venice. These surprising works are full of in-jokes and amusements to entertain his talented young students. In Vivaldi and Bach’s music, emotions are fleeting and instantaneous, and above all, the beauty of melody is emphasized.

The Accademia de’ Dissonanti, led by renowned cellist Elinor Frey, is an ensemble dedicated to exploring Baroque and early Classical repertoire. Under Frey’s leadership, they will bring an expressive and historically informed approach to their performance of the music of Vivaldi and C.P.E. Bach.

(Pictured: Elinor Frey, artistic director, cello, viola da gamba, viola d’arco)

PROGRAM
Antonio Vivaldi
 (1678 – 1741) – Concerto for Strings in G Minor, RV 152
Allegro molto – Andante molto e sempre pianissimo tutti – Allegro molto
J. S. Bach (1685 – 1750) – Harpsichord Toccata in D Major, BWV 912 
C. P. E. Bach (1714 – 1788) – Cello Concerto in B-flat Major, Wq 171
Allegretto – Adagio (Cadenza) – Allegro assai
Intermission 
Antonio Vivaldi – Concerto for Strings in D Minor, RV 127
Allegro – Largo – Allegro
C. P. E. Bach – Cello Concerto in A Minor, Wq 170
Allegro assai (cadenza) – Andante (cadenza) – Allegro assai

If You Go:

What: The Jeffery Concerts presents Sensibilité: C. P. E. Bach and Vivaldi in the Age of “Emotional Hyperreactivity”

Who: Accademia de’ Dissonanti

When: Sunday, October 19, 2025, at 3:00 pm.

Where: Metropolitan United Church, 468 Wellington Street, London, ON

Tickets: To purchase tickets for this concert, please contact the Grand Theatre online at https://tickets.grandtheatre.com/11649, by phone at 519-672-8800, or in person at 471 Richmond Street. Single tickets are also available at the door.

Students with a valid ID are welcome free of charge.

For more information about The Jeffery Concerts, visit https://www.jefferyconcerts.com/season2526/index.html

Follow The Jeffery Concerts on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/thejefferyconcerts

To learn more about Accademia de’ Dissonanti, visit https://www.accademiadedissonanti.com/

Tapping into a Triple Treat at TAP Centre for Creativity

Reviewed by Beth Stewart

While the main event for me was Brian Lambert’s “Songs for the Chameleon”, I happened on so much more during an evening out at the TAP Centre for Creativity.

“Songs for the Chameleon”, which was advertised as a symphony in 16 or 17 parts, featured Brian and Peter Lambert, A.K.A. “The Fabulous Lambert Bros.” Presented by Nach Dem Tode Studios, it offered a spectacle of storytelling and film set to live and recorded music.

The October 10 event was mesmerizing and deliciously surreal. It culminated in Brian Lambert’s stop-motion animation film, Forbidden Planet, about the Lambert Bros.’ great aunt, a bona fide Catholic nun, taking a stroll through hell.

(Oliver Page’s “The Crow”, Cone 6 Ceramic. Photo: Beth Stewart)

The same night offered the opening reception for Oliver Page’s “Raw Release” and the opportunity to see “Upstairs Downstairs”, TAP’s 2025 resident artist exhibition featuring Eric Drummond, Jason Gillis, Craig Guthrie, Anne Hamilton, Ian Indiano, Cecil Klassen, and Jessica Kliza.

“Raw Release”, mounted in LAB-203, featured installation work with related ceramics and paintings. It offered a bold display that invited introspection. Of note are several eye-catching ceramic birds uncomfortably caught in yarn (or entrails).

(Jason Gillis, “Watership Downtown” (detail), acrylic yarn. Photo: Beth Stewart)

“Upstairs Downstairs” graced the main gallery with work by the seven artists in a variety of media. Of note were works by Jason Gillis whose artist statement says his is exploring the brutality of human-animal relations, and Cecil Klassen, whose artist statement says he has been exploring the idea of symbiosis.

(Cecil Klassen’s “Everything Eats and is Eaten”, acrylic paint, drywall compound, MDF, 28 x 30 inches. Photo: Beth Stewart)

“Raw Release” runs to November 1; Upstairs Downstairs ended October 11; “Songs for the Chameleon” was but a two-night affair, but I suspect it will carry on, as it was too good not to.

For more information about the TAP Centre for Creativity, visit https://www.tapcreativity.org/

Reviewed by Beth Stewart

For information about Beth Stewart’s art, visit https://bethstewart.ca/

Nature Nurtures and Teaches: The Root of Wisdom at Westland Gallery.

by Beth Stewart, The Beat Magazine 2025

The Root of Wisdom at Westland Gallery marries the work of two disparate yet ultimately complementary artists. Ottawa artist Clara Kim’s work with its frenetic brush work reveals recognizable forms, whereas Guelph artist Christopher Cape’s work is understated and ethereal. Together, they offer a respite from the day-to-day with a giant serving of the natural world.

According to Kim, the title of this joint exhibition is a nod to poet William Wordsworth. She is likely alluding to his piece “The Tables Turned” as, in it, he advises “Let Nature be your teacher/ She has a world of … Spontaneous wisdom”. Nature as teacher is certainly seen in the work of both artists.

Kim’s work with its colourful birds, bears and other beasts is contained in the front gallery. Most of the pieces are quite large. She depicts her animals in a style that she says is influenced by both ancient Korean arts and contemporary western sensibilities.

Through the ages, Korean art has been naturalistic, favouring the beauty of raw materials and natural patterns. Kim takes these traditional values and extends them with modern materials and approaches.

To this end, Kim employs a variety of tools and materials in her oil and acrylic paintings including knife scratching, and ink crayon, and pastel drawing. This is clearly seen in her abstract backgrounds and in what Westland Marketing Coordinator Anna Wilson calls the “evolution” of Kim’s mark making.

(Clara Kim’s oil and acrylic piece on canvas, “My World”. Image courtesy of Westland Gallery.)

In Kim’s “My World”, the bear stands firmly on calligraphic shapes and is backed by abstract forms. In her “Rainbow Raven #2”, colourful lines meander playfully as flecks of similar hues dance across the blackness of the bird’s plumage.

(Clara Kim’s oil and acrylic on canvas piece “Rainbow Raven #2” Image courtesy of Westland Gallery.)

Christopher Cape’s plein air landscapes occupy the upper gallery. Bold and mysterious, these works shun detail in favour of colour, reductionist form and evocative titles. They avoid obvious telling and beg for individual interpretation.

(Christopher Cape’s oil on cradled birch “Before the End”. Image courtesy of Westland Gallery.)

On the other hand, his “Take Flight”, with its stacked birds, bucks the non-representational trend while still embracing its pastel colouration and a limited depth of field.

(Christopher Cape’s oil and acrylic on cradled birch, “Take Flight”. Image courtesy of Westland Gallery.)

Titles stand out as integral to Cape’s art. His are evocative. To what end does “Before the End” refer? What happened “Moments Before”? What does “You Remember More than You Know” mean?

Happily, for the artists, there are lots of red dots to be seen; a few pieces have already gone to their forever homes.

“The Root of Wisdom” continues to October 25, 2025, at Westland Gallery, 156 Wortley Road. For more information, visit https://westlandgallery.ca/

Reviewed by Beth Stewart

For information about Beth Stewart’s art, visit https://bethstewart.ca/

Lambeth Art Association hosts Joanne Poluch, Art Coach and owner of Remarque Art Consulting, October 18th

On Saturday, October 18th, the Lambeth Art Association is hosting a special event open to the London area artist community.  Joanne Poluch, acclaimed Art Coach and owner of Remarque Art Consulting, will lead a lecture entitled How to Define Artistic Success and How to Approach and Nurture Buyers.

About Joanne Poluch:

Joanne Poluch is the owner of Remarque Art Consulting in Guelph, Ontario.  Joanne holds an Honours Degree in Art History from the University of Guelph and an Art Marketing Diploma from Sotheby’s Institute of Fine Art in New York.   Establishing her business in 2010, Joanne has enjoyed a solid reputation in art consulting ever since. Her business model is versatile and has been based on exceptional customer service, a relaxed and professional relationship with corporate/ private clients, and assisting artists at ALL levels of their art practice. Joanne’s deep passion for art, flair for creativity, and compassionate style have allowed her to enjoy a thriving and successful business. 

Joanne is frequently called upon to be a guest speaker for numerous art groups, locally and at the national level. As a popular and introspective juror, Joanne remains a quintessential player on the art scene. 

Enjoying a very active art coaching/mentorship practice with artists across Canada, her philosophy is simple – build up artists through positive energy and deep-seated support. 

Joanne holds the position of Manager of the Art Sales &  Rental program at the Art Gallery of Guelph. 

She is also a registered current member of CARFAC.

This special event takes place from  1:00 to 3:15 pm at Riverside United Church in London.  Tickets to this event are $10. To reserve your spot, email the Lambeth Art Association at lambethartassociation@gmail.com

To learn more about Joanne Poluch, visit https://remarqueartconsulting.ca/

To learn more about the Lambeth Art Association, visit https://www.lambethart.com/

Mavis Productions returns with London’s favorite annual Rocky Horror Show tradition. 

The Rocky Horror Show LIVE musical returns to London to celebrate 50 years of the film you love, THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW.

The show opens on Thursday, October 9, and runs through October 18 at the Wolf Performance Hall.

For four incredible years, Mavis Productions has made this moment an October tradition — a night when audiences throw the rules out the window, shout every line, and become part of something bigger than a show.

It’s not just a performance — it’s a celebration.

The music. The madness. The magic.

Every beat, every laugh, every sparkle of glitter is pure Rocky Horror energy. This is your call to let go, dress up, and feel alive.

Because this isn’t just theatre… this is Rocky Horror. Don’t dream it — BE IT.

In this cult classic, sweethearts Brad and Janet, stuck with a flat tire during a storm, discover the eerie mansion of Dr. Frank-N-Furter. As their innocence is lost, Brad and Janet meet a houseful of wild characters, including a rocking biker and a creepy butler. Through elaborate dances and rock songs, Frank-N-Furter unveils his latest creation: a muscular man named “Rocky.”

Filled with all the classic songs and audience participation that made the film so much fun for over 50 years, all of it comes to life on the stage. So bring your costumes and all your scripts and be ready for a night of absolute pleasure. Whether you come out for our new 2 pm afternoon shows, our classic 7 pm shows, or midnight shows, we know you will shiver with antici…pation!!

If You Go:

What: Mavis Productions presents The Rocky Horror Show 50th Anniversary

When: October 9 – October 18.

Where: Wolf Performance Hall, 251 Dundas St., London, ON

Tickets: Start at $20. https://mavisproductions.ticketspice.com/rockyhorrorlondon

To learn more about Mavis Productions and its other shows, visit The Beat Magazine 2025 Q&A Profile https://thebeatmagazine2025.ca/2025/09/22/introducing-mavis-productions-an-interview-with-chase-montgomery/

ITOPA kicks off its 2025/2026 season with Michael G. Wilmot’s 7-10 Split. 

by Emily Stewart / Woodstock Ingersoll Echo

(Go to ITOPA’s Facebook Page to take advantage of this offer https://www.facebook.com/ingersolltheatre)

After putting 7-10 Split and bowling paraphernalia on the back burner for half a decade, the Ingersoll Theatre of Performing Arts (ITOPA) is finally ready to bring the comedy to the stage. 

The Canadian comedy will run from Oct. 10 to 19. The play focuses on Earl, a former professional bowler constantly in get-rich-quick schemes, and the shenanigans that follow with one particular Internet offer from a wealthy prince claiming he can save Earl’s fortune.

(Pictured: Earl – Adam Tanton. Photo Credit: Brian Tanton)

“If you need a night of absolute laughter and hilarity, this is the show to see,” said director Rebecca McNall. “We are running it in the style of trailer-trash, and it’s just going to be non-stop gags, non-stop hilarious lines. And the cast, you couldn’t ask for a better cast of characters to fill the roles. They just fall into the roles just like it was them. It’s just so good, I love it.” 

The cast includes husband and wife Adam and Becky Tanton, longtime ITOPA performer Crystal Paul, and newcomer Nick Shua. The performance takes place inside the living room of a trailer, and the set dimensions are the same as a house trailer’s living room.

“It’s even more of a challenge, which is fun, to get the blocking and to get them so they’re not just sitting still for the whole thing, so it’s going to be a ball. It’s going to be so much fun,” said McNall, who is thrilled to finally bring the play to the stage. 

ITOPA was to present the play in 2020, but it was cancelled due to COVID-19 Pandemic restrictions.

“We’ve had bowling balls and bowling trophies hidden around the theatre for five years because we didn’t want to throw them out because we knew that eventually, 7-10 Split would go on stage, so it feels so great to start bringing everything out,” she said. “It’s awesome.” 

The curtain rises at 7:30 p.m. for evening performances and 2 p.m. for matinee performances. Tickets are $26 for adults, $24 for seniors, $22 for students 12 years old and older, and $10 for students under 12 years old. Every Thursday performance for the 2025/2026 season will have $10 tickets for all seats. 

To purchase tickets, either visit the box office on 88 Thames St., call 519-485-3070, or visit online via www.itopa.ca.

Note: This Review first appeared in the Ingersoll Woodstock Echo, and it is reprinted with the permission of the author and the newspaper. https://www.granthaven.com/woodstock-ingersoll-echo

Check out the Q&A Profile of the Ingersoll Theatre of Performing Arts (ITOPA) elsewhere on The Beat Magazine 2025 website https://thebeatmagazine2025.ca/2025/09/15/introducing-ingersoll-theatre-of-performing-arts-itopa/

The Play That Goes Wrong opens 2025/26 Season at the Grand Theatre

Media Release, October 7, 2025

The hilarious smash-hit on Broadway and in the UK, The Play That Goes Wrong, arrives with a bang at the Grand Theatre and is already extended due to popular demand before even hitting the stage.

Dennis Garnhum, former Grand Theatre Artistic Director, is set to direct the production with a crack-up company of actors and artists that have already packed theatres throughout Western Canada. The red-carpet opening night of The Play That Goes Wrong on Friday, October 17th, officially marks the beginning of the Grand Theatre’s 2025/26 Season: You Are Here, the highly anticipated second season in the hands of Grand Theatre Artistic Director Rachel Peake. 

“Whether it’s the magical kingdom of Arendelle, magic realism, or the magical power of community, so much of our 2025/26 season at the Grand is about the magic of theatre. The Play That Goes Wrong is a love letter to just that,” shares Peake. “This show has more tricks in it than any other show. And yet, what makes it so funny and delicious and appealing is not so much those outstanding effects, but instead the very human drive to go on with the show.”

(Pictured: The Grand Theatre’s Artistic Director, Rachel Peake)

The Play is a play about a play – and that play within the play goes terribly, horribly, hysterically wrong every single night, live on stage. If you work in the theatre, it’s your nightmare on repeat. If you’re in the audience, you’re in for the laugh of a lifetime. 

“If the cast and crew let the problems stop the show and sent us all home, it would be a tragedy. But they don’t. The show goes on, and they make it through. When I first read this play, I cheered for these characters from beginning to end,” shares Garnhum. “I know these people. I love these people. They are my hard-working colleagues, whom I’ve been around my entire life. Their passion is contagious, and the play within the play, The Murder at Haversham Manor, goes down as a triumph simply because they saw it through and never give up despite the world figuratively – perhaps literally, definitely hilariously – tumbling down around them.”

Director Dennis Garnhum talks about The Play That Goes Wrong at the Grand Theatre in this video clip. https://youtu.be/Swo0-W53lCI?si=ly9PzOQh5ZbbzdKw

Even as audience members are finding their seats, the cast is already in character and buzzing throughout the theatre, frantic about the opening night of Murder at Haversham Manor. It’s 1922, and the very fictional Cornley Polytechnic Drama Society is everything except prepared.

(Pictured: Photo by Nanc Price for The Citadel Theatre’s production of The Play That Goes
Wrong (2024), in partnership with Theatre Calgary and Royal Manitoba Theatre Centre,
featuring Vanessa Leticia Jetté and Honey Pha)

Alexander Ariate plays Jonathan (who plays Charles Haversham), Izad Etemadi and Emily Meadows play Stage Crew (who play Stage Crew), Vanessa Leticia Jetté plays Sandra (who plays ‘Florence Colleymoore’), Andrew MacDonald-Smith plays Max (who plays ‘Cecil Haversham’ as well as ‘Arthur’), Jawon Mapp plays Robert (who plays ‘Thomas Colleymoore’), Bernardo Pacheco plays Trevor (Cornley Polytechnic’s lighting and sound operator), Honey Pham plays Annie (Cornley’s stage manager but also sometimes plays ‘Florence Colleymoore’ whether Sandra likes it or not), John Ullyatt plays Dennis (who plays ‘Perkins’), and Daniela Vlaskalic plays Krista (who directs the play within the play, and also plays ‘Inspector Carter’). Got that? Good! 

(Pictured: Photo by Nanc Price for The Citadel Theatre’s production of The Play That Goes
Wrong (2024), in partnership with Theatre Calgary and Royal Manitoba Theatre Centre,
featuring Andrew MacDonald-Smith, Joel Schaefer, Vanessa Leticia Jetté, and Daniela
Vlaskalic)

This Olivier Award-winning comedy offers a hilarious glimpse into the absolute worst-case scenarios that can unfold in the world of theatre. Premiering in 2012 in the UK, it went on to run over 745 performances on Broadway. Garnhum has helmed the production at the Citadel Theatre (Edmonton), Theatre Calgary, and the Royal Manitoba Theatre Centre (Winnipeg), and now plans to unleash its chaos in London at the Grand.

Garnhum is joined by Fight & Movement Director Morgan Yamada, Set Designer Beyata Hackborn, Costume Designer Joseph Abetria, Lighting Designer Kimberly Purtell, Sound Designer Dave Pierce, with Donovan Siedle, and Stage Manager Jordan Guetter.

If You Go:

What: The Play That Goes Wrong

Where: On the Spriet Stage, The Grand Theatre, 471 Richmond Street, London, ON

When: October 14 to November 2

Tickets: Single tickets range from $25 to $97 and are available at grandtheatre.com, by phone at 519.672.8800, or at the Box Office, 471 Richmond Street. 

For more information about The Grand Theatre’s 2025/26 Season, visit https://www.grandtheatre.com/

This Week in London and Area Arts & Culture, October 6 – 12.

Mavis Productions presents the rocky horror show, oct. 9-18.

Mavis Productions does the time warp again into their 4TH ANNUAL TRADITION!

The Rocky Horror Show returns to London to celebrate 50 years of the film you love, THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW!

In this cult classic, sweethearts Brad and Janet, stuck with a flat tire during a storm, discover the eerie mansion of Dr. Frank-N-Furter. As their innocence is lost, Brad and Janet meet a houseful of wild characters, including a rocking biker and a creepy butler. Through elaborate dances and rock songs, Frank-N-Furter unveils his latest creation: a muscular man named “Rocky.”

Filled with all the classic songs and audience participation that made the film so much fun for over 50 years, all of it comes to life on the stage. So bring your costumes and all your scripts and be ready for a night of absolute pleasure. Whether you come out for our 2 pm afternoon shows, our classic 7 pm shows, or our returning MIDNIGHT PERFORMANCES, we know you will shiver with antici…pation!!

For more information, visit https://mavisproductions.ca/

Ingersoll theatre of Performing Arts presents 7-10 Split, oct. 10 – 19.

Strike up some laughs with 7-10 Split by Michael G. Wilmot!

When wild ideas, big personalities, and a few gutter balls collide, you’ve got a comedy that’s guaranteed to keep you laughing from the first frame to the last. Don’t miss this community theatre gem that’s all about friendship, fun, and the unexpected turns life throws our way.

Show Dates: October 10, 11, 12, 16, 17, 18 & 19, 2025.

For more information and tickets, visit https://www.itopa.ca/

shut the door improv presents the wurst brats, oct. 7.

Join us Tuesday, October 7th, for the debut of The Wurst Brats, the newest STFD Masterclass graduates hitting the stage for the very first time! 🌭💥

These fresh improv talents are bringing the heat with an hour of juicy, short-form comedy that’s guaranteed to have you rolling.

From the Shut The Front Door Improv Masterclass Program, this is your chance to catch the next generation of performers serving up live, unscripted hilarity right before your eyes.

Don’t miss it, come out for live laughs and support local improv!

Get tickets https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/1754223582959?aff=oddtdtcreator

this week at the eastside bar & grill.

october events at the dawghouse.

monday night trivia at the morrissey house, oct. 6.

westland gallery, the roots of wisdom, continues until oct. 25.

This exhibition is a must-see in person. New landscapes and wildlife paintings by these two incredible artists will be on display until October 25th! Preview the full exhibition today at www.westlandgallery.ca.

this week at the london public library.

scoring the silence: composing a new score for a silent thriller, oct. 8 at the palace theatre.

Presented by the YAPCA (Young Artists Pre-College Academy)

Scoring the Silence: Composing a New Score for a Silent Thriller

Experience the art of silent cinema re-imagined through powerful new music.

Join acclaimed composer and conductor Scott Good as he shares the creative process behind his two-hour original score for the 1924 silent horror classic The Hands of Orlac (to be performed in full on October 31 at 8:30 PM at Metropolitan United).

Featuring recorded film excerpts on the big screen and live performances by YAPCA faculty and students, this engaging session offers a rare glimpse into the intersection of film, music, and imagination.

The event also includes the world premiere of The Somnambulist (The Sleepwalker) — a haunting new work composed especially for this occasion.

Perfect for music lovers, film fans and the culturally curious alike.

This public event will run from 6:00-7:00 – doors 5:50 

For more information, visit https://palacetheatre.ca/shows-events-listing/

this week at the aeolian

https://aeolianhall.ca/

Daina Janitis Reflects On London Symphonia’s Opening Night: Mozart, Ravel, and Beyond.

by Daina Janitis

So, I warned you in my Bio, didn’t I – I’m not an academic musician – English Lang and Lit graduate – and I’m doddering past 80 years of age. And reviews of concerts seem sort of pointless to me. If you were there, you know what it sounded like- and if you weren’t, you don’t need any shade of schadenfreude thrown at you for having missed a unique experience (although I have high praise for the crew that videotapes the London Symphonia concerts-the experience is worth trying). So, “The Husband” and I huffed up the stairs to the balcony and positioned ourselves where we could see David Jalbert’s hands on the keyboard – all of us “Displaced Persons” kids took piano lessons when our families were let into Canada… we know where to sit.

Yes, the music was spectacular – but it was only part of the experience. With London Symphonia concerts at “The Met,” you get something unique on the concert evening- something that deserves thanks and acknowledgement, while empathy, respect for diversity, and liberal education are becoming crimes and vices in the elephantine country south of us.

You know those rooms set aside for “Big Givers” in theatres and performance halls where they can get a free glass of musty Chardonnay and schmooze with others of that generosity level? AT OUR Met, the London Symphonia musicians, guest artists, and the conductor are ready to chat with you and to answer any dumb question you might have.

After Saturday night’s concert, I was able to hug Ted and Renee of Serenata Music and thank them for their generosity in helping the Symphonia bring to London someone like Jalbert. I walked over to a gaggle of Western Music students who were still jumping up and down with the excitement of the music. I cornered two of them – a toque and hockey shirt on one, a BIG waxed mustache and sleeveless tee (no sombrero) on the other – to thank them for making the concert even better with their presence. I also told them I was grateful for being in Canada together- were we in Chicago or Memphis, ICE agents might have seized them both at the exit. I could tell Ben the Cello that, should I ever become deaf, I could enjoy concerts fully just by watching his face. And I could hug Cosette the Conductor, telling her how much I loved Kooba (I know, after showing the other half of my Spanish- “Ola!”). “The Husband” had to get all expert, shaking her hand and thanking her for “a wonderful master class in orchestral conducting.”

(Pictured: Cosette Justo Valdés. Photo Credit: Lia Crowe)

And the music – a totally shared experience, no matter what your level of “expertise.” Cosette the Conductor, dressed in traditional black, led the audience in singing along with “O Canada.” She had brought to the program two pieces by Cuban composers – and in the second, after she explained its inspiration – the double-bench horse-drawn carts in Cuba that haul farmers, water, crops, and appliances – every clack of Tim Fancom’s percussion brought that musical scene to life. And although Cosette said that “Canada is my home” after six years, those unmistakable Cuan dance moves enhanced her conducting of the piece.

(Pictured: David Jalbert. Photo Credit: Julien Faugère)

And David Jalbert’s performance of Ravel’s Concerto in G major? It left the audience breathless – not only for Jalbert’s genius and technical skill, but through, I believe, the musical “community” Ravel’s writing for orchestra and piano creates in the three-movement piece. The first begins with Jalbert’s hands posed in a criss-cross on the keys while a jazzy chorus of clarinet, trumpet, bassoon, and trombone joins him in some sensuous music- and that harp suddenly adds brushstrokes of mystery. Don’t even ASK about how perfect his rapid trills were! The second movement assured us that Jalbert can handle anything – a solo piano beginning that eventually is joined by the English horn and the other instruments in rising tension. And the final presto movement did what a French composer, Louis Fleury, said it should do: be “an unstoppable onslaught, spurred on by the shrieks of the clarinet and the piccolo, the donkey brays of the trombone and occasional fanfare flourishes in the brass.” How that wonderful Canadian pianist had the energy to play a Prokofiev rumble of pure delight as an encore – we OWE him!

(Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, 27 January 1756 – 5 December 1791)

Do you want to know about the Mozart Symphony #39 in E-flat Major? Brace yourself for more stories of musical heroes. Wolfgang died at the age of 35, and within two months of his final years, composed THREE symphonies- 39, 40, and 41. Number 39 was the introduction, so to speak, that culminates in his “Jupiter” (#41). But Wolfie- no oboes??? The London Symphonia clarinets took the limelight in the bold and heroic first movement. In the second, third, and fourth movements, the 18th-century composition took us through dialogues of instruments in our city’s brilliant small orchestra, ending in something that’s been called “the 18th-century equivalent of a hoedown”.

If you couldn’t make it- and are curious about how all of that anticipation and joy can be in one symphony – DO invest in the London Symphony “Video on Demand” concert purchase on their website. If you’re as cheap as I am, here’s a freebie from Frankfurt:

Okay for now, but don’t you dare miss the full experience of “Payadora” on November 15, 2025, in the London Symphonia 2025-2026 series.

For more information about London Symphonia and the 2025-2026 Season, visit https://www.londonsymphonia.ca/

Reviewed by Daina Janitis, The Beat Magazine 2025 Classical Music Writer

Thanks to London and Area Theatre Companies and Groups for participating in our Q&A Profiles!

In mid-August, The Beat Magazine 2025 invited all known active London and area theatre companies – community and professional – to participate in a Feature Story profiling them and their 2025-2026 seasons. Each company/group was sent a generic Questionnaire of eight Guide Questions designed to enable us to gather the necessary information. Twenty-three groups responded.

Responses were organized in a Q&A format and included images of 2025-2026 Season posters and company founders. Posts appeared alphabetically, beginning with London’s AlvegoRoot Theatre and ending with Theatre Tillsonburg.

All Q&A Profiles are now available for viewing at https://thebeatmagazine2025.ca/

THANKS TO ALL RESPONDENTS AND BREAK LEGS THIS YEAR!