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Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 6 Jun 2001, p. 28

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01 Passat GLS 1.87 Sedan Bright green peorl. 6000 km. 01 Passat GLS 1.87 Sedan Grey/Block velour, sunroof . . 01 Passat GLS 1.8T Sedan â€" Blue/Black leather. 800 km . ... $30,995 *Applicable fees and taxes are extra SUPER VALUE PRICING ON REMAINING 2001 NEW PASSAT and COMPANY VEHICLES 550 Weber St. N., Waterioo 884â€"7470 The New 2001.5 PASSAT Volkswagen Waterloo Distinctively more Laâ€"deeâ€"da. Please visit out website for more details on all our new and preâ€"owned cars. www.vwwaterloo.com GOOD SELECTION IN STOCK NOW! TEST DRIVE ONE TODAY y Flamborough FACtOry G \ag C3 1g e atlo brurnitur? Â¥ VAE $27,695 $29,695 0o0.com Drivers wanted: Tt En WindFest builds another classical music dream team magine for a moment Ithat you‘re an athletics coach, suddenly called to assemble an entire team from a slate of players who scarcely know each other. On top of that, you learn that they‘ll have to be ready for two backâ€"toâ€"back dates for three weekends running and the first doubleâ€"header will give them less than five days of preparation. Okay, that‘s about all the time they‘ll allow me in the sports department, but the comparison is pretty close when you consider the pace of those passionate musical workaholics who organize and participate in Wilfrid Laurier University‘s annual WindFest workshops. Last Friday‘s opening concert in the Waterloo "Button Factory" Commâ€" unity Arts Centre featured ensembles from the seventh annual edition (May 28 through June 17) that foundâ€" ing director Nina Brickman has mothered into existence. The theme was "Harmonie By PavuNe Fincn For The Chronicle Musik" for mixed winds â€" brilliant, yet gracious park and patio selections origiâ€" nally intended to accompaâ€" ny the hunting or partying of the 18thâ€"century‘s rich and famous. But no matter how they may have tried, Beethoven and Mozart simply couldn‘t write mere musical wallpaâ€" per; they were just too good to recede into the backâ€" ground and it showed gloriâ€" ously in every artfully turned phrase from two accomâ€" plished octets that enterâ€" tained several dozen listenâ€" ers on a gray and muggy evening. Hailing from universities and hometowns across sevâ€" eral provinces and half a dozen American states, and ranging in experience from high school to decades of performing, â€" the current WindFest roster is another bona fide allâ€"star team, whose â€" members â€" create amazing cooperative synerâ€" gy without the security of a freestanding conductor. The young Beethoven‘s fourâ€"movement Octet, Op.103 featured. oboists Leanne _ McMurray _ and Daniel Waldron, clarinetists Nadeen Fankhauser and Kate Stewart, bassoonists Maya Stone and James Woods, and French horns (yes, here they are essential "winds") Veronika Radomski and Gilles Thibodeau. A brisk, robust opening and a similarly active finale contained a delightful pair of inner movements. The andante showcased magical sustained oboe lyricism from Waldron, followed by a perky _ minuetâ€"trio _ that tossed clumps of notes around the way fleetâ€"footed parking lot kids zing hackyâ€" sacks back and forth. Mozart‘s mature Sereâ€" nade in Eâ€"flat (No.11, K.375), also an octet, is one of the three major wind pieces considered his finest work in the Harmonie Musik style. More concentrated, comâ€" plex and sophisticated in texture, the five movements radiated a lively enjoyment and wit in a variety of instruâ€" mental dialogues, thematic contrasts â€" and . dynamic shifts. Performers for this chalâ€" lenging _ and _ polished secondâ€"half were oboists Brian Seaton and Graham St.â€"Laurent, clarinetists Christian Perry and Joseph Rosen, bassoonists Marybeth Garofalo and Danielle Ohsiek and French horas Elise Taillonâ€"Martel and (bravely doing double duty) Gilles Thibodeau. A little different every year, _ but _ consistently accomplished and enerâ€" getic, WindFest offers a unique array of music rarely heard live in such a congeâ€" nial context. This Friday, they‘re at The Cedars (8 p.m.) and Saturday, they play the Kâ€"W Chamber Music Society music room {also 8 p.m.). these and upcoming conâ€" certs later in the month, check out the Chronicle arts calendar. Don‘t let another June go by without hearing some genuine "Harmonie Musik" â€"you‘ll wonder how your ears could have lived so long without it. Pauline Finch is a Kâ€"W area writer, amateur musiâ€" cian and student at Waterloo Lutheran Seminary. For more _more information on and upcoming conâ€" later in the month, out the Chronicle arts

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