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Village Squire, 1981-04, Page 19UPDATE Music, music, music Music lovers beware! This year the Guelph Spring Festival is offering six premieres of new works, several concerts by internationally -known musicians and a rare Canadian appearance by opera singer Teresa Stratas. The festival, which opens in Guelph, April 30. offers not only music. but also art and films in a variety of locations around the city. as well as concerts by the Canadian Brass, the Toronto Symphony Youth Orchestra and Woody Herman, with his "big band" sound. One of the more interesting premieres at the festival is the opera Postcard from Morocco, which will be sung by seven quelph SprbigFestzva/ outstanding Canadian singers including mezzo-soprano Janet Stubbs, soprano Roxolana Roslak and baritone Mark Pedrotti. The opera opens somewhat like an Agatha Christie mystery, with seven characters, all strangers, in the waiting room of a North African railway station. This is the first time the opera has ever been performed in Canada. Another highlight of the festival will be a visit by Teresa Stratas, the Canadian opera singer who is known around the world for her performances of Salome and Lulu• • Another Canadian first will be a performance by the Scottish Baroque Ensemble, a string orchestra of 13 superb PG. 18 VILLAGE SQUIRE/APRIL 1981 musicians who will perform Malcolm Williamson's Ode For Queen Elizabeth, which was dedicated to the Queen Mother on her 80th birthday. On May 5 and 6, children will have their turn as the festival presents two award-winning children's films. Other presentations during the festival include an exhibition of work by 20 Canadian artists titled "Realism: Struct- ure and Illusion", three performances by Les Grands Ballets Canadiens and the North American premiere of Nuova Cojpagnia di Canto Popolare di Napoli, six musicians performing some of the traditional music from Southern Italy. Heritage agreement Perth County now has its second historical easement agreement, aimed at preserving the Arthur Meighen birth- place, north of the small community of Anderson. Mr. Meighen was prime minister of Canada in 1920, the nation's youngest prime minister at 46 years of age, until Joe Clark held the office recently. A heritage easement agreement be- tween the Ontario Heritage Foundation and the property's owner, Brian Williams, means both current and future owners of the property must obtain approval from the foundation before making any changes to the home's exterior. The only other building with a similar heritage easement in the county is Stratford's Festival Square, the former Gordon block. Architectural conservation officer Dan Schneider also noted the owner of property for which an easement has been granted is entitled to the advice and expertise of the foundation should he wish to carry out repair or restoration work. Michael Meighen, the prime minister's grandson, said the family is "extremely pleased" with the heritage agreement. The Harbour Park Inn The Ontario Municipal Board (OMB) has given approval for the expansion of Goderich's oldest building, the historic Harbour Park Inn on West Street. The inn has been a non -conforming use as a tavern -hotel since 1879. The building once known as Park House, was the home of Thomas Mercer Jones, the notorious Canada Company land agent and one of the company officials whose unfair practices led many local pioneers to support McKenzie in the 1837 Rebellion. Owner Mike Mallough applied for permission to build an addition to expand the kitchen and washrooms, create a partially -enclosed outdoor patio and restore the 19th century building to its original appearance. Until a 1945 fire, the house had a distinctive French -style roof which was replaced with a third storey. Mallough also plans to expand parking behind the inn from 13 to 32 parking spaces. The town approved a restricted area bylaw to permit the expansion, but after five residents objected, an OMB hearing had to be held. The neighbouring residents argued expansion of the inn would increase noise, rowdiness and traffic problems in the area. The inn, in a mainly residential area, also fronts on the arterial road which leads to the Goderich harbour's commercial area. OMB chairman W.E. Eyer ruled the town could control noise in the area by zoning and the development agreement. He added, "This inn is surely an integral part of this harbour area and no one disputes it s historical value." Captures nature's fury While the Group of Seven artists were intent on capturing Canada's north on canvas, Hanover artist Carl Schaefer was painting the rural landscapes of the farming community where he v‘ as raised. Recently the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto recognized the special contribu- tion of the Bruce County artist. whose watercolour landscapes from 1934 to 1942 captured Ontario farmhouses, weather- ing the real and symbolic storms of the Depression, to the fields of corn battered by the elements and man's drive towards destruction. It's fitting Carl Schaefer and the painting of Dutch artist Vincent Van Gogh should be on exhibit at the AGO at the same time. since although their mediums are different, both use broad. flowing brushstrokes and brilliant colours to capture nature's fury. Schaefer, who taught art for several years, often told his students, "If you've got a subject, make sure it's a good one. And if it's a good one, it'll last you all