Joseph Francis Petric | |
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Background information | |
Born | Guelph, Ontario, Canada | October 8, 1952
Occupation(s) | Concert accordionist, musicologist, composer, author, teacher |
Instrument(s) | Accordion |
Years active | 1979–present |
Website | josephpetric |
Joseph Francis Petric (born October 8, 1952) is a Canadian concert accordionist, musicologist, composer, author, and pedagogue.
After beginning accordion lessons at the age of five, Petric began private studies at Toronto's Royal Conservatory when he was 17. He was then accepted to Queen's University where he studied accordion with Joseph Macerollo; this was followed by studies in musicology with Rika Maniates at the University of Toronto. Petric continued performance studies with various instructors including Hugo Noth at the Staatliche Hochschule für Musik Trossingen, Renaissance specialist Leslie Huggett (1992–8), harpsichordist Colin Tilney (1997–2010), and forte-pianist Boyd McDonald (2009–15). [1]
Petric is known for the impressive number of works he has introduced to the accordion repertoire. The performer's website presently states that he has commissioned over 360 pieces including 31 electroacoustic works and 21 concerti. [2]
Although the electroacoustic genre was initially most prevalent in avantgarde circles, these works were welcomed enthusiastically in programs Petric has presented to general audiences. [3] These compositions include digital and computer stochastic programming, live digital delay systems, electroacoustic CD playback, interactive software, sound processing, techno-chamber, live computer systems, and MAC patch software. Alexa Woloshyn's recent publication An Orchestra at My Fingertips: A History of the Canadian Electronic Ensemble mentions Petric multiple times for his involvement in the pioneering Canadian Ensemble, his collaborations with composer David Jaeger, and his recordings for the Canadian Music Centre’s record label Centrediscs. [4]
Petric has a concerto-led career that is sustained by commissioning new works from emerging and established composers. The 30 concerto performances Petric gave across North America and Europe between 1995 and 1997 speaks to the importance of these commissioned works in the musician's career. [5] These commissions include concerti by composers like Peter Paul Koprowski (1994), [6] Omar Daniel (1998), [7] Denis Gougeon (2004), [8] James Rolfe (2005), [9] and Brian Current (2008), [10] among many others. On 8 October 2010, Petric performed three concertos in one night in a concert featuring works by Gougeon, Current, and Piazzolla performed by the Victoria Symphony and Maestra Tania Miller. [11]
Petric's performance career began within the traditional conservatory contexts of the accordion, but by the early 1980s it was clear that his performances were becoming increasingly post-colonial. [12] [13] Petric expresses this post-colonial vision in the concert hall with performances that include free improvisation, comprovisation, electroacousticism, multi-media, theatrical performance, techno-chamber (with computer and software), Baroque- and Classical-era rhetoric, and the post-modern concerto. [14] This holistic approach to performance has been received well among audiences and critics; Peter Reed’s review of Die Winterreise with Pentaèdre and Prégardien at Wigmore Hall in 2019 praises Petric's "extraordinary grasp of [the accordion’s] ability to sound like 'breath from another planet'”. [15]
Petric has been represented by several international management agencies concurrently throughout his career, which has allowed him to develop a strong international touring presence. His appearances include return engagements with Musique Royale, [16] Debut Atlantic, [17] Debut Atlantic Encore, [18] Prairie Debut, [18] John Lewis Partnership (UK), [11] Jeunesses Musicales, Columbia Artists Community Concerts, and Sweden's Reikskonzerter. [19]
Petric's 1986 American debut at Washington's Kennedy Center included R. Murray Schafer's La Testa d’Ariadne and his European debut followed in 1992 at St. John's, Smiths Square (London). These performances generated strong interest in Petric leading to performances at venues like the Institut de recherche et coordination acoustique / musique (IRCAM), Tanglewood Music Festival, Kennedy Center, The Berlin Philharmonic Chamber Music Hall, Disney Centre, Israeli Opera at Tel Aviv, Jerusalem Festival, and Tokyo Spring. [1] In 2009 he began a series of intercontinental tours with the wind quintet Pentaèdre and tenor Christoph Prégardien in Norman Forget's chamber adaptation of Schubert's Die Winterreise. These performances brought the ensemble to Wigmore Hall, Tokyo Bunkai Kaikan, and The Berlin Philharmonic.
In Canada, Petric has performed at Roy Thomson Hall with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, The Music Gallery, [20] Nouvel Ensemble Moderne, [21] Ottawa Chamber Music Festival, [22] Winnipeg New Music Festival, [23] and Newfoundland Sound Symposium, [24] among many other venues and festivals. Engagements at international festivals include those with Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival, De Yjsbrekker, Vienna Haus der Musik, Siljan Festival, Hohenems Schubertiade, and Belfast Festival. Petric remains a sought-after guest for international masterclasses and lectures across North America, the United Kingdom, and Europe. [1]
For details on Petric's audio recordings, see Main Article: Joseph Petric Discography.
Petric is sought internationally for private mentoring and is Visiting Professor at the Université de Montréal, where he leads the graduate accordion performance program. [25] The academic dimension of his practice includes treatises such as Giuseppe Tartini's The Art of Ornamentation (1759) and Adolf Beyschlag's Die Ornamentik (1904), recent and historical scholarly publications, and Petric's own writing. Petric's 2017 monograph The Concert Accordion: Contemporary Perspectives, for example, combines musicological, historical, and interpretive approaches that are fundamental for developing “a living art”. [26] In this volume, Petric re-introduces Giovanni Gagliardi's treatise Le Petit Manual de L'Accordéoniste (Paris, 1911; reprint by Augemus, 2004) to a wider readership and notes Gagliardi's unique approach to fingering and ‘circular bowing’ on the accordion. [27] Petric also draws attention to the significance of instrument design by codifying 14 concert instrument patents filed by Italian builders near Milan, Catania, Croce St. Spirito, Paris, Geneva, Bolzano, Philadelphia, New York City, and Chicago between 1890 and 1930. [28]
Petric's accordion is a practical application of his interests in historical design and recent acoustic research, which were combined to create an instrument suited to performing in concert halls. This bespoke instrument was designed and built in collaboration with Canadian builder Leo Niemi and uses unique reed blocks that deliver heightened reed response and sound projection in symphonic concerti. The design also relies on violin-like sound posts for enhanced resonance and a silicone-shellac finish created after researching the shellacs used on Stradivarius’ violins. These features of Petric's accordion make it the ideal instrument for a career focused on concertizing. [5] [29]
Composers Andrew Paul MacDonald (Quebec), Adrian Williams (UK), Yannick Plammondon (Quebec), and Éric Morin (Quebec) have had works premiered by Petric in collaboration with the Vanbrugh (Ireland) and Penderecki (Canada) Quartets. These premieres include strictly acoustic, electroacoustic, and theatrical works. Petric has also given premieres of works by Marjan Mozetich and Raymond Luedeke with the Amadeus and Adaskin Trios. Petric's string ensemble collaborators include:
Petric's work has garnered support from Koussevitsky Foundation (New York City), [55] [56] Canada Council for the Arts, [57] [58] [59] Ontario Arts Council, [60] [61] [62] [6] [63] QALC (Quebec Society of Arts and Letters), [55] CBC Radio, [64] Reikskonzerter (Sweden), [56] Laidlaw Foundation (Toronto), [65] [6] [66] and John Lewis Partnership (UK). [11]
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Joseph Petric is a Canadian concert accordionist, musicologist, composer, author, and pedagogue. Petric's discography includes 59 titles on Naxos, Chandos Records, Musica Viva, CBC5000 Series, Analekta, Astrila, Centrediscs, and ConAccord labels. Many of Petric's albums are thematic; Euphonia (2002) features works by female composers Linda Catlin Smith, Jocelyn Morlock, and Janika Vandervelde, and Elektrologos (2010) consists only of electroacoustic works by Christos Hatzis, Bob Pritchard and Larry Lake. Other albums are devoted to arrangements of music by composers who predated the accordion's invention; these include Dialogues and Illuminations: Jean-Philippe Rameau 1683–1764 (2002),18 Sonatas by Domenico Scarlatti (2008), Petric – Forget Duo: J. S. Bach Complete Trio Sonatas (2009), and Heretic Threads: Works by Joseph Haydn (2023). The period-recording Victorian Romance (2009) includes works by Bernhard Molique and George Alexander McFarren performed by Streicher fortepianist Boyd McDonald. The select discography below includes 34 of Petric's audio recordings.
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