Public Notices/Announcements - Kingston - Bath Artisans Spring Show, April 29 and May 1, 202
Bath Artisans Spring Show, April 29 and May 1, 2022, St. John's Hall, 212 Church Street, Bath. Original art by local artisans.
visit www.bathartisans.info
Bath Artisans Spring Show, April 29 and May 1, 2022, St. John's Hall, 212 Church Street, Bath. Original art by local artisans.
visit www.bathartisans.info
The Windsor Coin Club will be holding its annual Spring Coin Show at the Caboto Club, 2175 Parent Avenue on Sunday, May 1, 2022 from 9 a.m. to 3 pm. Dealers from Southwestern Ontario will be there to buy, trade and sell Canadian and World Coins, Paper Money, Tokens and more. Free admission, free parking and free hourly door prizes.
For more information contact Margaret Clarke at 519-735-0727/mtclarke@mnsi.net
Saturday, May 21st, 2022 between 9 am - 12 noon. in the Christ Church Memorial Hall, 4750 Zimmerman Ave. Niagara Falls.. Plants, Baby Quilts and Pillows, Crafts, Treasures, Books and Puzzles. All are Welcome Wheelchair Accessible. PLEASE WEAR A MASK. Thank you.
Trenton Seniors Club 105 - 70th Anniversary Celebration and Open House.
Sunday, April 24, 2022 from 1 pm to 4 pm at 61 Bay St, Trenton.
Everyone welcome, drop in and see all the Club has to offer.
For more info call 613 392 5400 Monday to Friday 9 am to 1 pm
About the Event
Join us for this virtual event as Dr. Pat Armstrong will discuss promising practices to reimagine long-term care, including lessons learned through the pandemic regarding what is needed for the flourishing and dignity of residents, staff and families; how to bring joy to everyday life; and what we as citizens across ages can do to make an impact. This event is open to everyone.
About the Speaker
Pat Armstrong is Distinguished Research Professor Emeritus at York University, Canada and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. Focusing on women, work and the health and social services, she has published such books as Wash, Wear and Care; Clothes and Laundry in Long-term Care; Critical to Care: The Invisible Women in Health Services; Wasting Away; The Undermining of Canadian Health Care as well as many book chapters, journal articles and reports intended for public audiences. She been an expert witness before Tribunals and Commissions and led multiple research projects, including the 10-year “Re-imagining Long-Term Residential Care: An International Study of Promising Practices” and “COVID-19, families and long-term residential care”.
Guest Soloist: Ms Carina Canonico in Mozart’s “luscious” Concerto for
Clarinet.
Also live and onstage for the first time this year, hear the excitement of excerpts
from: Grieg’s Peer Gynt; the jubilant Brahms’ Serenade No. 1; plus the classical
romance of Schubert’s B minor Symphony No. 8
Student Special: FREE admission followed by FREE clarinet Workshop with
Carina Canonico, when you bring your instrument with you.
Tickets: $25 (adult), $20 (senior & student), Free (under 16) available in person
from Novel Idea Bookstore 156 Princess Street Kingston, from orchestra
members or online at www.orchestrakingston.ca
Please check Health Ministry guidelines for any restrictions on ticket sales at the
door or on Workshops, intermissions, food, or drinks. Please wear your mask.
_____
Carina Canonico
“The clarinet’s sound can be luscious or bright but I prefer its dark chocolate
tones the best,” says Orchestra Kingston’s Guest Soloist, Carina Canonico. She
explains how much she looks forward to performing Mozart’s masterpiece for
her chosen instrument, live and onstage at The Spire. “Mozart was right,” she
says about the clarinet, “when he said, ‘nobody with a heart could resist it.”
Principal Clarinetist with The Kingston Symphony, Canonico is also music
director, choir master and pianist at St. Mark’s as well as teacher of piano and
clarinet in her own Kingston studio. Ms Canonico has generously offered a free
Workshop after her concert to all clarinet students who bring their instruments
to the concert. “This is a great concert to show off what the instrument can do.
So, we’re inviting clarinet students at all levels in for free, followed by our free
workshop to get together and learn more about it.”
“And,” Canonico points out, “it’s not just about symphonic music. Whether it’s
jazz, funk, klezmer, or classical, the clarinet is very versatile … and that’s the key
to finding one’s style. Trying out all these styles keeps my music fresh.”
Originally from Courtice, east of Toronto, Canonico joined the KSO in 2018 and
performed this Mozart Concerto with them during a recent online concert.
“If you know music,” remarks John Palmer, Orchestra Kingston’s music director/
conductor, “you can never get enough of this Concerto and this will be
Kingston’s first chance this year to hear and watch Ms Canonico perform it live.”
It is in live performance that audiences may hear, see and feel the impact of this
music.
Composer, musician, and Orchestra Kingston’s president, Daniel McConnachie,
agrees. “This Concerto is the jewel in every clarinetist’s crown. It’s very moving,”
he laughs, “because whether a musician or audience member, you will find it
impossible not to move your body while it’s being performed. Our soloist
succeeds in making this difficult piece look easy.”
“Well,” comments Canonico, “it’s all about preparation. I can feel how the
orchestra grows and progresses in rehearsals in order to play convincingly in
concert. We really come to appreciate each other. Music brings people together
in an emotional experience. And then, in concert … being in the middle of it with
musicians all around,” Canonico pauses, “I think it is just an incomparable
experience.”
Orchestra Kingston’s May 8 concert also includes two evocative movements
from Grieg’s Peer Gynt Suite, moving from the melancholy of “The Death of
Aase” to the exciting fireworks of “Hall of the Mountain King”. The jubilant first
movement of the Brahms Serenade No.1 will follow Intermission. Brahms is a
musical treat of which John Palmer remarks, “It gets the adrenalin working. But,
that’s Brahms.” The concert finale features Schubert’s B minor (The Unfinished)
Symphony, among the first to help bridge classical and romantic music: “You
feel it as much as you hear it,” Palmer concludes.
____________
Backgrounder
John Palmer, Conductor/Music Director.
Orchestra Kingston is a community orchestra based in Kingston, Ontario. Since
2008, we have presented concerts that feature a wide range of musical genres
with a particular emphasis on Canadian composers. Many of our concerts are
also presented in collaboration with other community ensembles and feature
professional soloists. We provide an opportunity for amateur musicians in the
Kingston area to play orchestral repertoire under the baton of a professional
music director in a relaxed but dedicated environment.
Join us for the musical featuring the music of Abba! May 5, 6, 7, 12, 13, 14, 2022 at 7 pm; May 8 matinee at 2 pm; Tickets $15 Adults, $12 Students/Seniors available at laurasecord.org or call 905-934-8501 ext. 63550
Volunteers will do your taxes free if income is 35k singles, 45k couples at the Library 345 Aylmer St N on Apr 22 from 9:00-3:30 on a first come first served basis Masks must be worn
Volunteers will do your taxes free if income is 35k singles, 45k couples at One Roof 99 Brock St on Apr 19 & 26 from 9:00-3:30 on a first come, first served basis. Masks must be worn
Haddock & Fries & Coleslaw. Baked Fish & Baked Potato also available. 2 piece dinner $15. 1 piece dinner $11. Eat In or Take-Out. Legion opens @ 3pm.