Friday, July 22, 2011

The Heat Is On with Brott’s Organ Fireworks!

Organist Ken Cowan was spectacular
By Nonna Aroutiounian (NAO clarinet '11)
Playing an orchestral concert is tough enough as it is. The pressure to perform beautifully and musically while playing all the correct notes in time and in tune is no easy task.
But when forced to do so in a church with no ventilation and a temperature hovering around 40 degrees Celsius is a completely different story. I hope to tell you ours – from sweaty start to fabulous fini
While citizens of the GTA – including Hamilton and surrounding area -- will remember July 21 as the beginning of a sweltering heat wave, the musicians of the National Academy Orchestra of Canada who performed in the Organ Extravaganza concert that evening will remember it as possibly one of the hottest and most humid concerts ever to be played in the courses of their career

Nonna Aroutiounian (NAO clarinet '11)
The dress rehearsal that day was a challenge. Each musician packed at least two water bottles and towels to dry themselves off. We soon learned how hot it can get in Centenary Church. We quickly realized normal concert dress simply would not do. I could only imagine the anarchy if the men were forced to wear tuxedos.

As for proper concert attire, Boris Brott proudly announced, “Wear as little as possible! Well within reason, and keeping in sanctity of this church”. We all knew that with an audience, the stifling conditions of the church would rapidly worsen. Some in the orchestra were wondering if an audience would even show with a concert under such conditions. But the audience did show, and the concert, heated and sweaty as it was, went on.

I have to commend Ken Cowan, my fellow musicians and the conductors on playing a great concert under such brutal conditions. I don’t think anyone in the orchestra expected to be dripping sweat and panting quite so much while playing a concert. But I do have to say it was not in vain. Many in the audience came out in support of the NAO, and applauded everyone for playing a concert that would have normally been cancelled under such circumstances.

Organist Ken Cowan, a native of Thorold Ontario, has studied at Yale and works at Princeton. He completed his musical studies at The Curtis Institute of Music and Yale Institute of Sacred Music. He has done numerous recordings under the JAV Label and has toured throughout Canada, United States and Europe. While working with the orchestra all week he made do with a piano, but his technical skill and musical ability shined on Centenary’s restored five keyboard pipe organ. Nothing was more satisfying than when the first notes of the organ blossomed in the middle of Saint-Saens' Third Symphony.


I have to constantly remind myself, and I’m sure others do as well, it may have been hot and unpleasant, but it was and always is first and foremost about the music. As a musician, a standing ovation at the end of the concert was enough to make me feel the success of the night.