8/24/81

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A Candid Interview With Pierre Rieu
August ~ 2009
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When he was nineteen Pierre Rieu (28) joined the music business of his father André. Now he is the head of a traveling, multi million dollar production company. 'Dad sometimes says, "I do not know what I would do without you". "Don't worry" I tell him then.

Not too long ago Pierre Rieu was at a U2 concert in the Amsterdam Arena. He enjoyed it, but did not understand anything about the ending. The band
members were not even out of sight yet and the hall lights went on already, those white work lights". Dozens of people with helmets and safety gear jumped on the stage to tear everything down. Then I thought, "Couldn't they just wait ten minutes? Sixty thousand people have been swept up in the music and then all at once their dream is shattered. We will not allow that."

'We', is the Johann Strauss Orchestra and violinist André Rieu, Pierre's father. Here the crew waits until the public has left the hall before they start to break down the stage. People who come to us are temporarily transported into a fairytale world." When the concert is over, there is often still some music. The soft lights come on, to make the atmosphere linger for a while."

Pierre Rieu (28) is largely responsible for that atmosphere. He was nineteen when he started as a technical production manager with André Rieu Productions, his parents' company, which consists of some 120 employees. During his father's concerts, he was responsible for light, sound, scenery and logistics, and all the employees who work in those departments. He also took on the planning and financial side of the business because "we had the accounts of a village grocer." In the meantime he has become Vice President.

Pierre Rieu's musical taste is diverse. In addition to the music of his father he also likes to listen to the violinist Itzhak Perlman and trumpet player Alison balsam. A quick look through his iTunes library reveals Abba, Acda and the Munnik, and Madonna. "I also like Italian songs and love the radio station 100% NL."

For the past two years the Rieu-family (staff also included) traveled the world with a replica of the Viennese Schloss Schönbrunn, better known as the palace where Empress Sissi once lived. During the summer of 2006, the orchestra gave a concert in front of the real castle in Vienna and father Rieu wanted to take that atmosphere with him wherever he went.

As a production manager, Pierre was responsible for the largest touring scenery in the world. “I thought, "Maybe we could at least sleep on it for a night or so. But my father had some good arguments. With the concert in Vienna, the whole entire atmosphere was just right, it was phenomenal. Within a week we were putting our heads together and made a first sketch with the engineer who builds all our stages."

Together with the TROS reality soap and the successful sale of CDs and DVD's, the World Stadium Tour with the Sissi-decor of Andre Rieu, who in 1994 broke through with the Second Waltz, became even more popular than it already was. In the meantime, the violinist can now be named as the best-selling male artist of 2009. Only female mega stars such as Madonna, Britney Spears and Tina Turner sold more concert tickets in the first half of 2009, than Maastricht's pride.
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During an interview with Pierre Rieu in his parents' Castle with a view across the river, the best selling artist himself comes by on the way to his private
Portuguese teacher. "Hi Dad," says Pierre, who still lives in the castle but will soon move to a house next to it. Dad squeezes the shoulders of his son, who currently is also studying Portuguese. When later on they go on a promotional tour to Brazil, it would be so very nice to be able to speak a few words in that national language.

You were nineteen when you started in your father's business. On your first day you were in charge of forty men. People who taught you the job.
"Yes, I was immediately their leader. The most difficult part was to prove that I could do it. If that was true, I needed to discover that too."
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How did the workers react to you?
"I had been around the technical aspect for a while, helped erect and break down during the performances. They really helped me a lot along the way.But I also received some rock hard lessons. When I look back, I was still just a greenhorn. You are gone a lot with a nice group and they give you a warm feeling. I thought, this is great, I only have friends here. Until the time I hear a colleague speak when he thought that I had hung up. "I heard something about a snotty nose...or 'son of'..... Like the friends you have at home, I just knew then, that they are just like family. I went to my parents. I thought, darn. See, "the son of.... ,' but I will always be that. But in the meantime I've proven that I can do the job. Ask my co-workers, and I think they are happy with the way I operate. .' We discuss everything; I am definitely not the commanding type. "

That working in harmony concept was part of his upbringing. Pi, as he is called by friends, hopes to give his children the same kind of upbringing as he and his two year older brother Marc received. "We always had fun together and were rarely punished. If something went amiss we were always asked: "What do you think of that?” Opa André was senior director, father André was attending the conservatory and played in the Limburg Symphony Orchestra.

Mother Marjorie was a German teacher. Today she plays a very important role in the André Rieu Productions. "She tends to all the concert programs, along with Dad. In addition she also writes all his lyrics for when he is on stage, he says. They review everything together."


The first violin Pierre ever received, he broke over the head of his brother. The trumpet, which came later, survived. "Recently when I was in Japan I played along with a show for the first time. True, but without a microphone, since I'm still not good enough. But I was extremely nervous. Even if I messed up, you would still hear it right through my neighbor’s microphone." Brother Marc enjoys coming to the concerts, but has "zero involvement with the company." He paints landscapes and according to Pierre is "a very sweet boy, floating a bit above the ground. "He would not want to work here for all the gold in the world. Just a little pressure makes him already nervous."

NORTH POLE The Johan Strauss Orchestra wants to travel in the future to the North Pole to conduct a concert for several different nationalities; "A couple of Chinese, Australians, Brazilians." Kind of a Noah's Ark? "No, rather to create a world idea. We first want to draw attention to the environment. Next we want to record pieces of music and show the beauty of the Arctic " But first we have to get all the environmental organizations to agree with the idea. Rieu: "If the North pole is not resigned to the fact that we come, then we won't.

He wanted to become a lawyer.
Yes, it seemed grateful work to ensure that right prevailed. My father had an impressive lawyer in his services for portrait copy rights and the likes. If he could not exchange a product in a store, he would call out and say: "I am going to close this place down." Later you find out that a statement like that is nonsense, but my interests were awakened. "

But you did break off your studies very soon.
"After five weeks. I had already been orienting myself in the business. My parents then asked me if I thought it would be a nice job if I directed the technical aspects. Well, yes, it seemed fantastic."

What was it like for you to have your father as a boss?
"In the beginning it was difficult. Suddenly you receive orders from your father. With the first concert with which I had assisted in erecting, he walked into the hall and he asked: why isn't this done yet? Why is that still there? Although we
still had two hours before the sound check. That went on like that for six weeks. So I made it clear to him that I would quit if he would continue like that. He could have come in with a "Hey, that looks good, nice, and that will be finished, correct? C'est le ton qui fait la musique. It's the tone that makes the music. He said: "You are absolutely right."
Your father is demanding.
"I would rather say: a perfectionist. That is something else. When you are asked to do something and you do it to the best of your ability, then it must be correct. Otherwise you're in the wrong place. "
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Did you always wanted to work in your parents' company?
"Yes, even when I wanted to become a lawyer. If you have ever before experienced a concert, you understand why. These people become happy, emotional, and are grateful. To be partially responsibility for that, makes me tremendously proud. What happens on stage is sincere. If you dare to bring your emotions along, you have a wonderful evening with us. "

Pierre's role as production manager was mainly to exclude as many problems as possible. He ponders a lot: it will remain dry during an outdoor concert? Are the technicians abiding by the safety rules? Is every one doing what they are supposed to do? During the kick-off of the World Stadium Tour at the end of 2007, he, together with about seven hundred men, took five days to do have everything build. Then, something went wrong. The organization that Pierre had hired for the power supply connected the backup power the wrong way. Twelve hours before the show - an audience of 35 thousand - all the power was lost.

"A human error. I thought, let them figure it out. But nothing happened.
Eventually we ourselves were able to obtain an emergency generator from the airport. Just twenty minutes before the show, the power came on again. "

What does something like this do to you?
It's not nice, not very nice at all. During the performance you are continually just looking at the lights: will they stay on?"

Once home, almost two years ago, when a weeks holiday awaited him, the incident seemed to have had a major effect on him because of his working too hard and too long. I was sitting on a bench and thought: pffrrt. I do not want to do anything anymore, there's just no sense in it. I'm not put together that way. I thought, whoa, something is very wrong here. "STRESS". "I had to accept that even with me something could be too much. I always said: "Everything goes, everything is possible, just let me do it. But it was just a little too much."

Did you learn anything from it?
"To delegate, that is one of the main things. When I came here as a nineteen year old, I did not dare to ask anyone anything. But with the world tour I just could not do everything myself any more. I learned also that it is not necessary to be there every day. And to let go. I've had good therapy. The first thing I said there was: "I hope that I'll soon be my own self again." My therapist said: "Well, I sure hope not." I can still go to him. In the beginning I was ashamed to go, it was just as if I had gone insane or something like that. But not at all, I just needed help. "

How did your parents react?
"They thought it was awful. My father of course felt responsible, he had the idea that he had asked too much of me. I talked him out of that idea. He did make use of the fact that I took on too much, but he did not abuse me. When he heard about it, he forbade everyone in the company to make contact with me. One time when I only saw the name of a supplier in my phone, all the activities connected with this gentleman flashed before me. Just like flywheel that has been cranked up high. It gave me heart palpitations."

Are you successful now in establishing your boundaries?
"I am aware of the alarm indicators: nightmares, not sleeping well. I still need to take that step in order to then take immediate action. "

The World Stadium Tour also had a positive impact on Pierre: after that immense project he finally had the feeling that he had proven himself, even to himself. Seven years after he had started.

COLLECTING TANKS Pierre Rieu grew up with war stories. "My mother's father was a German and Jewish. He fled Berlin to Maastricht and there met his wife." On his fifteenth birthday, Pierre became a guide for the former Belgian military defense fort Eben-Emael, south of Maastricht.
When he met a friend who taught him more about war vehicles, they together started a collection." Today they have over 45 vehicles standing in a warehouse. Tanks and trucks from the allies. And uniforms and radio equipment." Currently, the two are looking for a suitable location for a museum.

What sort of changes did you bring into the company?
"The company is one large family. I think that I have had an important share in that. Ever since I have been in the production department, Andre knows the entire crew by name. For him that is easier and the boys love it."

You seem to be good in creating atmosphere.
"You have to keep people interested. With us is all about unity, helping each other. Atmosphere is so important, especially when you are together on the road
a lot. I know that Mom and Dad are always happy when I join a discussion, because at times I do joke around. This past week we were watching the new DVD recordings made in Maastricht. Someone from the German TV broadcast station ZDF was also there. Dad had worked on it day and night. Somewhere in there he said: "This is a beautiful piece." So then I say with every one there: "Yes, but it is just too bad that a violin is in it." "That's my son again," says dad then. And that of course makes them laugh. They are silly jokes, but then again, no one else will say anything of the kind. That is the biggest advantage of us working together. We know one another well and I can say things to him that no one else does."

Does it place extra pressure upon you to work for your parents?
"It might perhaps be a bit closer than with any other company, even with mistakes. I remember one time I forgot to cancel a concert hall, that cost us 50 thousand Euros. I told my father: "For the next two years I'll work for nothing. I had to tell him what had happened. Very dumb, he thought so too. But I still received my salary."

On your wedding day last year your father was crying, was he afraid of losing you?
"Yes", that's what he said: "I have the feeling that I am losing you." I said: "Now, stop being foolish, after this I am again going on tour with you for five weeks. But I can well imagine that it feels like that, that it looks as if someone else will be taking care of your child."

It wasn't because he was afraid that maybe you would look for another job?
"No, certainly not. Sometimes he still asks: "Do you still enjoy it? That is a kind of politeness, because he knows that I still enjoy it. I tell him: "Yes", and he: "Good, because I would not know what I would do without you. "Don't be afraid", I say. That for me, does not add any additional stresses that he needs me. It is a form of appreciation. It makes you stronger."

In the meantime you have become Vice President. You are still responsible for the technical team, but you also have new duties.
"Yes, we have grown. On the production side we have very good people who regulate everything when on the road. Because of them and now that children are on the way (Pierre and his wife are expecting twins in November, ed), I can be more at home. I am now involved in tapping into new markets. Since recently, we are working together with travel agencies, who want to connect our name with travel packages. Last month a lot of people came to Maastricht. From places like Africa, Australia and Brazil."

You were also hired because your father had bad experiences with managers, who kept a large portion of the sales profits for themselves. A lot of money passes through your hands.
"Yes, I spend someone else's money, and that still makes me uncomfortable at times. But if necessary, I can always fall back on the executive office and my parents. Dad can throw his money around a lot better then I. It's his money, he worked for it."


How did you learn to manage such a lot of money? You have no economic training.
"No, I was always very bad in arithmetic. Mathematics was the worst. Luckily I do not have to use formulas at work, just simple math."

You mean there is a budget and that is as close as it gets.
"Well, actually we never work with budgets."


WHO IS PIERRE RIEU?
Born: 24-June-1981

Education: athenaeum, law, not completed Career: During the period that Andre Rieu breaks through with his Second Waltz, Pierre Rieu continues his schooling with an international school in Maastricht, where his father's reputation has less of an impact on him. In 2002 he joined the company. In the meantime he has become Vice President. Rieu is married. His wife is a production manager in the Efteling. The couple is expecting 'twins' in November.

This English translation is copyrighted © by John. No item in part or in it's entirety may be copied or redistributed without the express written authorization of the translator.

5/19/81

Cell Phone Photos As The Melbourne Concert Was in Progress From Jann and Murray
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8/4/80


"The Craziest Violinist in The World"
July 2009
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She is the best kept secret of André Rieu: his wife Marjorie. For the first time they talk together about their special bond and (work)relations. But only if Mrs. Rieu will not be photographed.

Tekst: Arno Gelder Photo: Joost Hoving

The day after his traditional home celebration in Limburg, his concert series on the Vrijthof in Maastricht, we find André Rieu in his garden at his conference table. He again did not go to bed tonight until 4 AM, but like always, the business in his castle at the foot of the St.Peterberg goes on. The agenda includes a meeting with a wealthy Australian businessman. The topic: a Johann Strauss Orchestra Concert on the North Pole.
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André Rieu, a tireless climber of exceeding challenges who wants to perform on the North Pole. But no one can earn a cent with it. Neither me, nor some rich dude.

Initially Rieu’s icy ambitions were dismissed as just another brainy idea of the violinist, a tireless climber of exceeding challenges. But André Rieu is dead serious. “I would have preferred to play on the moon, but there is no venue there. Although the first tourist trips into the universe are only a question of time. If this Australian gentleman and I have anything to say about it, we’ll be on the North Pole. A concert in a snowy landscape. What an atmosphere and scenery! To show the world that The North Pole belongs to everyone, we will invite two people from every country: Americans, Chinese, Kenyans, New Zealanders … About two hundred people, until the icebreaker is filled to capacity. A sort of a human Noah’s Ark, right? Of course it will be on the ice. Which is between one and four meters thick”. “I do have two demands”, he said. “No one may earn anything from it. Neither me, nor some rich dude. And the environmental movements who feel sorry for the North Pole will have to come to an agreement”. Contact has already been made and that is going in the right direction”.

André Manages To Make His Dreams Come True

Marjorie Rieu (61), wife and co-organizer on the business and artistic level of the multinational Rieu, has long given up hope to curb the borderless fantasies of her husband. “In the beginning I was trying to slow him down, but that is an impossible task”, she said sighing and smiling simultaneously. “Most important though is that André is able to make his dreams come true. Once we were admiring the Schönnbrunn Castle in Vienna. “I will copy that” he said. I told him he was crazy. He once had the same idea about the Royal Albert Hall in London. But he succeeded. After his last world tour we were deep in debt. “Sorry, it got a little out of hand,” he then says”.

Recently she was approached to check with André and see if he was interested in becoming a member on the advice committee of the Maastricht Operetta Organization. And whether she had an idea as to how her husband should be described in the brochure? I said; “Make him out to be the 'Craziest Violinist in The World', because that is what he really is”.

Marjorie Rieu might be André’s best kept secret. She very seldom gives interviews ~ photos are a no no. She does join us in a salon, a room that in Rieu’s house seems to date back to the days of the Viennese Empress Sissi. Compared to the tall stand alone violinist and husband, Marjorie Rieu is small in stature. A beautiful and charming figure who during the interview was indeed the thoughtful and sobering counterpart of the impulsive and extraverted André. They have been married for nearly 35 years, but their love dates back to long before their marriage. Marjorie: “I was in the same grade as Theresia, André’s sister. I saw him for the first time during a St.Nicholas evening with the Rieu family. Between his five brothers and sisters, I noticed him immediately . I found him to be different. But during that time then, I was not too much into boys yet. I attended a Catholic girl’s school. And the other sex, well, you barely knew they existed”. Marjorie’s father, being Jewish, had fled in 1933 from Nazi occupied Germany. “My grandfather knew in which direction that would go with Hitler. In Maastricht he had a hat lining business. When the Netherlands was occupied in 1940, my father went into hiding. One of his brothers died in a concentration camp, and the other one fled to England where he, ironically enough, as a German Jew, was with the British Military when they liberated the Netherlands”. She enjoyed a happy childhood, although it was tarnished by Prussian discipline.
A childhood that did not allow you to go through puberty. “My father was typical Prussian”. I was being drilled, order and discipline were defined. Saturday mornings up at six and on Sundays only to speak German. If I said something in the Maastricht dialect, I was totally ignored. I was raised Catholic, but due to the presence of my father and Grandmother, the Jewish faith was also practiced in our home. For a child it had its nice sides, my Jewish Grandmother would bake matzo with honey, and then there were also the Easter eggs on the Catholic side. But I noticed very vividly that in our house the two religions led to a continuing friction. Later on, primarily because of that, I said 'goodbye to religion'.
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Was it because of the oppressive, through discipline dictated childhood, that Marjorie and André were brought together? Even André does not look back on what was supposed to be the most beautiful and carefree time in someone’s life. “My father was a director”, he says. A profession he also practiced at home. I was brought up very strict. Going to a café and having a beer? Positively disgraceful. “With me too, religion played a huge role. In school above the blackboard hung a picture of the “All seeing Eye”, scared to death were my classmates. But not me, I fantasized about it. And then of course having to go to confession, even if you only pinched a sugar cube”.

Marjorie, “Then you had to say the act of contrition, a prayer”. André, “And if it was very severe, you would have to say ten Hail Mary’s. And having to memorize the catechism by heart. From such a thick book. I loathed it”.

They married when they were 25 and 27. André: “First we had to catch up on our puberty ~ something we had never experienced. In India-blouses, long hair and a Simca 1000 (old European car) the two of us crossed the border. “What would you ladies like”, said a shopkeeper along the way. During those days we also sought professional help. We carried a lot of grief and resentment with us”. Marjorie, “When as a child you were barely allowed to have feelings, you kept everything inside. That has to be released. We decided what we wanted to keep and what we wanted to discard.

With their children, André and Marjorie knew it would be different. Marc and Pierre enjoyed a freer upbringing with “respect for mankind”. The saying by the German writer Max Frisch, “You will not raise an image of yourself” is our motto. Have no prejudices against your fellow men. I know how hurtful it is when you are convicted and no one knows you. I made classical music popular ~ that was not allowed according to the elite. But who are they? Eight hundred people inside the Amsterdam canal district? But, now I totally belong. I am a guest with “The World Continues to Turn” with Pauw and Witteman. That is nice, but never made an effort. I always do my own thing, and if it necessary, against the flow.

Just like their parents, Marc (1978) artist and father of Ivan, and Pierre (1981) soon to be a father and manager of the Rieu Company, have very different characters. André, “Marc is a dreamer on a cloud. A beautiful individual, a free sprit who studied art history and as an artist produces beautiful works”. Dad shows very proudly several canvasses of landscapes with vibrant bright colors, and again melancholic and serene impressions. “Marc is a romantic. He inherited that from me. He is totally different than Pierre. Pierre is a real doer, a practical youth. When he was fourteen years old he was already loading stuff in a bus that had seen its better days, which I had bought. When Marjorie was pregnant with Pierre, the doctor already knew it. “He can’t sit still for a second”. Marc and Pierre respect each other tremendously. That is so very important.

André emphasizes on that loving respect and it has helped him and Marjorie to be strong through difficult times.”We have an unbelievable strong bond that has been unbroken through all these years”. That Marjorie does not want to go through life as “the wife of ……” is a choice which is said to be totally independent of their relationship.

“Once I bought something in a store”, she said. And when the saleslady saw the name Rieu on the credit card, she jumped through hoops for me”. I really hate that. “Of course we work very intensely together. Once I told André: “With that trick you can earn money”. We were then talking about a thousand guilders, now we talk about millions of Euros. I have always had my own life, and I cherish that”.

Marjorie Rieu: She studied German and Italian, film science, French literature and writes children’s books. Her newest book “A Dream Comes True ~ Twins Visit André Rieu”. Marjorie, Inspired by an existing set of twins, German girls, who always follow André. André, “Marjorie always takes her work serious. You can find her in the Berlin underground for a few days to study up on the jargon of the youngsters. Furthermore, she has a tremendous sense of humor. When in the evening and I am in bed reading another chapter, there is definitely a box of tissues next to me. Tears of laughter.

André Rieu: Born: October 1, 1949 in Maastricht
Career: André Rieu grows up in a musical family. From the age of 5 he plays the violin and receives lessons from amongst others, Herman Krebbers. After leaving the Limburg Salon Orchestra he establishes the Johann /Strauss Orchestra, with which he gives new life to the waltz music. That seems to be a thunderous success formula ~ Rieu, in the meantime is enjoying worldwide victories.
Private: Married to Marjorie and father of two sons, Pierre and Marc.

André Rieu will perform on 28, 29, 30 August in the Thiaff in Heereveen,
5 and 6 September in the ArenA in Amsterdam and 19 December in the Gelredome.
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(The photo of André is taken in the wheatfields right behind his castle.)
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Note: This English Translation is copyrighted ©by John and no item in part, or whole of this translation may be copied without express written authorization of the Translator.
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4/20/79



André Rieu in Ottawa April 18, 2009

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The Ottawa Concert was to be my 19th Andre Rieu and JSO concert. My friends and I scouted out the venue the previous evening as they had never been there and we wanted to make certain that we would have no problemparking. Good plan, because it took nearly an hour to get there from the house.
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As we entered the arena I spotted the souvenir kiosk. I bought a copy of the 30th Anniversary Tour program to add to my collection. It contains the usual photos of the large concerts that they have done in the past, but also included a lot of photos of Andre in his youth and early career, plus a timeline of his life.
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As always, the concert started on time as the sounds of 76 Trombones filled the arena. Andre and the orchestra and choir marched up the two aisles. climbed the steps to the stage and joined in with the music. And as always, the transition from recorded to live music was seamlessand undetectable.
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I was busy taking notes, sending messages via Twitter and taking photos, but I really didn't get into photographing the concert until shortly after the second half. When I decided to concentrate on the pictures. I left my seat to get into a better spot for photography. By the time the balloons were released during Radetzky March I was up front, and I pretty much had that area to myself.
Dan the Bannerman was there. I asked him how many concerts he'd attended and he told me "about 400"!
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You've seen my Twitter messages and observations so I won't duplicate them.
It was good to see Carla back touring with Andre. Andre was in good spirits as was the entire cast, and they were obviously enjoying themselves.
I was disappointed at the small crowd. The Ottawa Citizen columnist estimated the crowd to be about 2500. I would guess it was twice that size, but still not big enough. The audience was appreciative though.
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Kalke from the choir sang the third soprano part. I'd seen her do that in Edmonton once before. I was at the front during Libiamo and when she sang
her solo part it was apparent that she has a fine voice.
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Apparently this was the tenth time they had performed in Ottawa. I would guess that even though the audience was small, they will continue to perform here because logistically it is an easy drive from Toronto to Ottawa and then from Ottawa to Montreal.
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Now I'm looking forward to Maastricht. Can't get enough of this wonderful group of musicians. ~ Al Girard
Below are more of my Ottawa 2009 Photos



4/19/79