Marylou Dawes

Marylou Dawes
Born (1933-06-14)June 14, 1933
Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Died October 22, 2013(2013-10-22) (aged 80)
Unity, Saskatchewan, Canada
Genres Classical
Occupation(s)
  • musician
  • music teacher
  • lecturist
Instruments Piano, harpsichord

Marylou Dawes (June 14, 1933 – October 22, 2013) was a Canadian concert pianist. She was one of Canada's leading accompanists, chamber musicians and soloists. Trained in Calgary and Austria and winner of the ARD International Music Competition for duo[1] with her brother Andrew Dawes in 1962. Marylou and Andrew played a concert for Queen Elizabeth II and The Duke of Edinburgh during their Royal visit to Regina in July 1973. She has toured across Canada, Europe, Mexico and the United States.

Her interpretation of contemporary music has won her acclaim from such composers as John Weinzweig, Clermont Pépin, and Murray Adaskin. She has premiered works by Oskar Morawetz, Talivaldis Kenins, Richard Payne, and Victor Davies.[2] After many years of studying and performing the chamber works of Beethoven written for piano and various instruments she had time to explore his vast repertouire for solo piano.

Biography

Marylou Dawes was born in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, She was a pianist, harpsichordist, chamber musician, soloist,[3] teacher,[4] adjudicator and examiner[5] studied under Dorothy Hare, Terrance Fullerton and Joan Shaw in Calgary,[6] Prof. John Wustman of the University of Illinois, Prof. Lorand Fenyves of the University of Toronto and graduated with distinction from the Vienna Academy of Music in Vienna, Austria.

She was a faculty member of the University of Saskatchewan both in Saskatoon and Regina, she was co-founder of the Saskatoon Chamber Orchestra and "music at the Mendel" Marylou was a regular performer on CBC radio, her performances have been described as "Sterling" by Deryk Barker of the Victoria Times Colonist, "An accomplished pianist—Mozart playing of the highest level." Calgary Herald, "Tone production crisp and vigorous without ever becoming hard or rough—tremendous verver and controlled energy." Toronto Globe and Mail, "Effortless technique, graceful phrasing and subtle varied tone—projects musical ideas with power and eloquence." Montreal Star. And The Saskatoon Star Phoneix interviewed and photographed Miss Dawes on several occasions.[7] As well, Chatelaine Magazine did a feature on Marylou during their "Women of Canada" centennial series in 1967. She represented Saskatchewan in that feature.

Personal life

She was married from 1960 to 1974, and had three children. Although she had several relationships, her music career made it difficult to maintain them. She had a close friendship with artist Lorraine Malach and the two urged each other on in their perspective artistic careers. In later life Marylou spent time travelling around the world, enjoyed camping and outdoors right up to her death. She had warm relationships with her children, had many close friends and was an intrigal force in music and arts in the province she called home, Saskatchewan.

Recordings

References

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