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Weyburn Concert Series to feature classical sounds of the Prairie Sons

The classical stylings of the Prairie Sons will grace the Cugnet Centre stage on Wednesday, Nov. 27, starting at 7:30 p.m.
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The classical stylings of the Prairie Sons will grace the Cugnet Centre stage on Wednesday, Nov. 27, for the next performance of the Weyburn Concert Series, starting at 7:30 p.m.

WEYBURN - The classical stylings of the Prairie Sons will grace the Cugnet Centre stage on Wednesday, Nov. 27, for the next performance of the Weyburn Concert Series, starting at 7:30 p.m.

The Weyburn Comp’s RISE choir will be performing from 6:45 to 7:15 p.m., prior to the “Prairie Sons” concert.

Patrons are asked to come early to enjoy the show and consider making a donation to help cover travel costs for the school’s Spring Music Trip.  

Special Olympics will be on hand with water and baking at intermission. Donations will be gratefully accepted.

As the Prairie Sons, cellist David Liam Roberts and pianist Godwin Friesen embody the expansive, nuanced perspective of their home landscape in their concert program. The two award-winning musicians met at the Royal Conservatory’s Glenn Gould School of Music, and recognized a kindred spirit in each other.

Both hail from the Prairies, began performing alongside other members of their families, and have been named to CBC’s list of Hot 30 Classical Musicians Under 30.

The energy and innovation of the Prairie Sons invites you to take a fresh look at a familiar landscape, and to witness the miracle in the everyday.

Both Roberts and Friesen first experienced the thrill of performance as part of a musical family. Friesen grew up in Edmonton and Saskatoon, while Roberts grew up in Winnipeg. As the Prairie Sons, the two are dedicated to innovative programming and unforgettably engaging performances.

Described as a “deeply thoughtful and soft-spoken artist” by the Winnipeg Free Press, Roberts is an award-winning cellist, an athlete, and a passionate music educator with a bent toward philosophy.

Originally from Winnipeg, he began his musical career at age five busking with his older siblings. Great-grandson to an amateur Métis fiddle player on his father’s side and descended from a long line of German Lutheran church organists on his mother’s, he is increasingly interested in exploring his family’s roots and Métis heritage.

With a sensitive, soulful performance style, David Liam has garnered considerable recognition in the Canadian music world. Along with being named to CBC Radio’s list of top young musicians, he was awarded First Prize at the 2022 biennial WMC McLellan Competition, won the prestigious Canada Council for the Arts’ Michael Measures First Prize, and was the 2021-22 recipient of the Hnatyshyn Foundation’s Developing Artist Grant for Canadian instrumentalists.

For many years, Roberts led the Back to Bach Project, a global non-profit organization which instills a love of music in children around the world. He continues to support this endeavour as a Back to Bach soloist.

Roberts is currently pursuing an Artist Diploma as a student of Hans Jørgen Jensen and Andrés Díaz at Toronto’s Glenn Gould School of the Royal Conservatory of Music, where he holds the prestigious Temerty Fellowship. His studies have taken to him to Poland, Slovenia and Italy, and some of his most formative mentors have been Yuri Hooker, Bryan Epperson and Joseph Johnson.

An impassioned pianist who infuses his performances with emotion, Godwin seems to embody every note he plays, and his sentiment resonates in his listeners. In 2022, he took first place at the OSM Competition (and received the prize for best interpretation of the imposed Canadian work). He also placed first in piano at the National Music Festival (2015), won the Glenn Gould School Concert Competition (2019), and took second place at the Piano Arts North American Competition in Milwaukee (2022).

Godwin frequently returns to play with the very first ensemble to which he belonged – he grew up touring music with his parents and five siblings in the Friesen Family Band. The musical development he experienced during several Canadian tours and three album recordings was profound, and he began formal piano studies around age seven.

In an age of artificial intelligence, Godwin speaks of what makes live music enthralling – embodying the emotion of the music, communicating with and without words, and the dedicated years of effort it takes to entice a range of sounds from an instrument. He has made a promising start as a composer, and toured a narrated concert called “Songs of the Settlers” which told the history of Milwaukee through music in an artist residency with PianoArts.

Godwin holds a bachelor’s degree and an Artist Diploma from The Glenn Gould School, where he studied with John O’Conor from 2016 to 2022. He is now pursuing a master’s degree at the Université de Montréal as a student of Jean Saulnier and Henry Kramer.

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