Canadian Art Song Project

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Canadian Art Song Project
AbbreviationCASP
Established2011
FoundersLawrence Wiliford, Steven Philcox
Registration no.837426089RR0001
Legal statusRegistered charity
Location
  • Toronto, Canada
FieldsMusic commissioning, music performance, music production
Key people
Linda Hutcheon
FundingCanada Council for the Arts, Ontario Arts Council, Jackman Humanities Institute Program for the Arts, Roger D. Moore
Websitecanadianartsongproject.ca

The Canadian Art Song Project (CASP) is a group that performs, records, promotes, and commissions the composition of Canadian vocal music in the tradition of art song and song cycles. The contemporary classical music group is based in Toronto and was founded by Lawrence Wiliford and Steven Philcox in 2011.[1][2][3] [4][5][6]

History[edit]

In 2007, after the sudden death of the General Director of the Canadian Opera Company (COC), Richard Bradshaw, Wiliford and Liz Upchurch, Music Director of the COC Ensemble Studio, organized a commission in Bradshaw's honour from British-Canadian composer Derek Holman. The resulting work was a song cycle, Four Seasons, which premiered at the new Four Seasons Centre in the spring of 2009.[7][5] Philcox was in the audience, and described the experience as having had "a profound impact" on him. Wiliford subsequently approached Philcox with a proposal for an organization to promote Canadian art song, leading to the founding of CASP in 2011.[5]

Activity[edit]

CASP has commissioned Canadian composers including James Rolfe, Christos Hatzis, Ana Sokolović, and Cecilia Livingston, Canadian poets including Anne Michaels, André Alexis, and Christian Bök, and performed and recorded with Canadian classical singers including Measha Brueggergosman, Brett Polegato, Krisztina Szabó, and Emily D'Angelo.[6][8] Since 2022, CASP has also begun producing short film projects based on their commissions and prior Canadian art song repertoire.[9]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Terauds, John (20 January 2014). "Canadian Art Song Project takes aim at Canada's 150th birthday". Music Toronto.
  2. ^ de Groot, Hans (26 February 2014). "The Canadian Art Song Project". The Whole Note.
  3. ^ Cooke, Mervyn; Wilson, Christopher R., eds. (2022). The Oxford Handbook of Shakespeare and Music. Oxford University Press. p. xxiv. ISBN 9780190945145. he [Lawrence Wiliford] is co-founder and co-artistic director of the Canadian Art Song Project with pianist Steven Philcox.
  4. ^ "About CASP". Retrieved 4 March 2024. In an effort to revive the existing art song repertoire and to develop new vocal works for Canadian professional artists, tenor Lawrence Wiliford joined with pianist Steven Philcox and together founded the Canadian Art Song Project (CASP) in 2011.
  5. ^ a b c Crory, Neil (2014). "'Of Music and Sweet Poetry: The Canadian Art Song Project Wants to Put a New Focus on an Unsung Genre of Our Vocal Arts'". Opera Canada. Vol. 55, no. 4. pp. 28–31.
  6. ^ a b Kustanczy, Catherine (1 March 2024). "Rev. of Known to Dreamers: Black Voices in Canadian Art Song from the Canadian Art Song Project/Centrediscs". Opera Canada. Formed in 2011 by tenor Lawrence Wiliford and pianist Steven Philcox, CASP has a mandate to promote existing Canadian art song repertoire while developing new works. The organization has 18 commissions and seven recordings to their credit...
  7. ^ Leibel, Jane (November 2014). "Rev. of Ash Roses – Music of Derek Holman, Canadian Art Song Project/Centrediscs". CAML Review. 42 (3): 27–28.
  8. ^ "Canadian Art Song Project: Commissions". Retrieved 4 March 2024.
  9. ^ "Canadian Art Song Project: Filmed Projects". Retrieved 4 March 2024.