SALT co-founder & School of Music professor Ajtony Csaba

The tenth SALT New Music Festival, founded in 2011 and organized by the Tsilumos Ensemble in collaboration with UVic’s School of Music, returns to Victoria for the first time live since 2019 with a compelling program featuring diverse and thought-provoking music from the 20th and 21st centuries—including concerts drawing attention to pressing global challenges, including social inequality and climate change.

“Like salt is essential to your food, the SALT Festival brings musical excitement to the Victoria audience,” says Ajtony Csaba, managing co-director of the SALT Festival and a School of Music professor of conducting. “This is a celebration of diverse new music performed by outstanding Canadian musicians, including premieres by contemporary composers and works by seminal ones.”

Beyond the traditional concert venue of UVic’s Phillip T. Young Recital Hall, SALT also offers the local premiere of the unique, immersive, under-the-stars performance of Stockhausen’s “Sternklang” in the serene setting of Finnerty Gardens.

The festival is thrilled to present fantastic performers with an array of exciting instrumental music by living Canadian composers and the seminal composer Stockhausen (called the “Beethoven of the 20th century”). In collaboration with UVic, the events take place in the breathtaking Finnerty Gardens and the exquisitely sounding Philip T. Young Recital Hall.

All concerts are free, with donations appreciated, but online booking is required at www.tsilumos.org/salt2024.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7 I 7:30pm
Earth Sounds
Phillip T. Young Recital Hall

The first night features the premiere of David A. Jaffe’s “Northwest Passages”, a mesmerizing musical soundscape reflecting the grandeur and fragility of our ecosystem, with the SALT Festival Orchestra.  A champion for music of our time, the Emily Carr String Quartet will present commissioned compositions by Canadian composers Jocelyn Morlock and Tobin Stokes, also a School of Music alumnus, including a vocal performance by soprano and UVic Music professor Marion Newman.

Emily Carr String Quartet

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 9 I 7:30pm
Diverse Sounds
Phillip T. Young Recital Hall

Tsilumos Ensemble and guests showcase diversity through remarkable contemporary solo and chamber works, featuring the premieres of two pieces by Canadian composers. School of Music alumna Aliayta Foon-Dancoes returns with a commissioned composition for instruments and digital media.

Canadian composers Peter Hatch and artist Matthew Talbot-Kelly present an audiovisual collaborative composition reflecting on our environment through a novel lens, and School of Music professor emeritus Andrew Schloss and clarinetist François Houle bring an improvisational electroacoustic duo for electronics and clarinet to stage.

Aliayta Foon-Dancoes

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14 I 5:30pm
Star Sound
UVic Finnerty Gardens

In a nighttime park, groups of musicians perform under the open sky, each at a distance from the others, drawing their music from the varying positions of the stars. This concept was envisioned by German composer Karlheinz Stockhausen in his seminal work, “Sternklang” and the SALT Festival Orchestra introduces this immersive experience to Victoria for the first time.

Music flows throughout the entire garden as “sound couriers” and “light bearers” carry the sounds from one location to another. The nature- and stargazing-audience is invited to inhabit this multidimensional space, whether by walking among the groups or sitting down to the lawn.

Karlheinz Stockenhausen

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 16 I 7:30pm
Sounds of the Zodiac
Phillip T. Young Recital Hall

Karlheinz Stockhausen’s “Tierkreis: 12 Melodien der Sternzeichen” meets four young Canadian composers who re-envision the seasons, climate change, astrology, and even Stockhausen himself through a uniquely 21st-century lens. Performed by British Columbian Duo Inquietum (Liam Hockley, clarinets, Mark Takeshi McGregor, flutes).

Duo Inquietum

The SALT New Music Festival closes with a unique workshop focused on narratives in music inspired by indigenous knowledge. Active composer and musician participants will engage in dialogue with invited storytellers and artistic knowledge keepers, initiating concepts for new works. Please join us for this at 5pm Friday, Sept 20 at the UVic School of Music. 

More info and free tickets: www.tsilumos.org/salt2024