Dominion Carillonneur ready to play one last chime before Peace Tower renovation – CBC.ca

Posted: February 19, 2022 at 9:51 pm

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Update, Feb. 18, 2022: On Friday morning, as police began making arrests in downtown Ottawa, Speaker Anthony Rota tweeted that the planned Peace Tower recital has been cancelled. The original story follows below.

The honking hornscoming fromthe truckers' convoy in downtown Ottawa have made life a little challenging for Dr. Andrea McCrady. But she said the loud noise is something she's used to.

"My life as Dominion Carillonneur has been accompanied by lots of noise on [Parliament Hill] over the last 13 years, whether it's protests or celebrations or lots of construction noise," she told CBC Radio. "SoI deal with it."

Since 2008, McCrady has been the creative mind behind the music emanating from the Peace Tower. From her workspace in the tower, she's played everything from O Canada to Puff the Magic Dragon on the carillon's 53 bells.

But Fridaywill be her last performance for the next few years, as the carillon goes dormantdue to construction, both on the Peace Tower and on the carillon itself.

"Carillon is turning 95 this year, and like any 95-year-old, it needs some upkeep," McCradysaid. "Some of the bells, the smallest bells, are going to be taken out because their clappers need to be replaced.

"All of this work, we sincerely hope, will be finished well before the Peace Tower and its carillon turn 100, which will be July 1, 2027."

Ottawa Morning9:39The Hill is alive with the sound of the carillon - until Friday

Originally from Pittsburgh, McCradyfirst began playing the carillon in 1971, as an undergraduate at Trinity College in Hartford, Conn.

"That instrument, which you could hear all over campus, was played by a student club."

She said she "went up the tower and was just completely captivated by the beautiful sound of the bells."

That initial captivation led her to study the carillon in Europe while on a fellowship in 1975-76.

McCrady then came to Canada in 1976to study medicineat McGill University in Montreal, where she wascarillonneur at Saint Joseph's Oratory of Mount Royal. Her passion for the instrument continued during her residency in Toronto. While training in family practice at St. Michael's Hospital, sheplayed at the University of Toronto and the Canadian National Exhibition.

Back in the United States to practise family medicine,McCradyco-ordinated the carillon program from 1990-2008 at the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist in Spokane, Wash.

But it was upon her retirement in 2006 that McCradytook her playing to the next level, graduating magna cum laude with a bachelor of music degree from the University of Denver in 2008.

That same year, Gordon Slater, the Peace Tower's previous Dominion Carillonneur, retired. An international competition was announced soon after to find his replacement, and sheentered.

"I said, 'Geez, this isn't going to come up as an opportunity again in my lifetime.' And lo and behold, I won the competition," said McCrady, who is an instructor in the first carillon studies program in Canada, at Carleton University in Ottawa.

As Dominion Carillonneur, McCrady saysthat one of the biggest parts of her job was designing daily programs that were not only interestingbut reflected the tone of the country on a particular occasion, such as Remembrance Day and the National Day of Truth and Reconciliation.

"That is a great responsibility, to try to represent in music what Canada may be trying to express as well," she said.

McCrady says she also takes great pride in playing music that represents all Canadians, with the national anthem ranking at the top.

"People often ask me, 'What's your favourite piece to play?' And I'm not being flippant when I say O Canada,' she said. "It is such a privilege to play O Canadaand open every recital with it."

In a statement obtained by theCBC, the Speaker of the House of Commons, Anthony Rota, called McCrady's music "transcendent" and reflective of the vision that architect John Andrew Pearson had for the Peace Tower.

"During the happiest and most painful times of our nation, Dr. McCrady gave voice to our emotions," the statement said. "Through her artistic talents, her compassion and her love of music, she has not only marked our history, but also told our stories, no matter where we come from."

Although she had lived and studied in Canada for many years, McCrady wasn't actually a Canadian citizen when she took on the role of Dominion Carillonneur. But she was determined to get it.

"It was my dream that on some Canada Day, I would play O Canada on the Peace Towerand then come down on the ground and swear in as a Canadian citizen," she said.

That dream came true on July 1, 2017, Canada's 150th birthday. After playing O Canada on the carillon, she marched down the steps of the Peace Tower and took her citizenship oath on Parliament Hill during a special afternoon ceremony.

It was a "fabulous" experience, she said. "I always had considered Canada my second home, and once I landed in Ottawa, I said, 'It's now my first home.'"

McCrady will not retire when the carillon goes on hiatus. Instead, she'll be working with a practice keyboard from a second office which is not in the tower to maintain her skillsand a "huge library of carillon music."

"We're going to be digitizing these ... and uploading them on our website to share the carillon while the Peace Tower's not being heard," she said.

In the meantime, McCradysays she hopes listeners will enjoy the program she has prepared for Friday'ssend-off, which will include music representing all Canadians and a personal retrospective.

"What I'm trying to do is engage in a positive way, in a peaceful way," she said. "I'm hoping people on the ground will stop, listen, smile, think about it and just enjoy."

Written by Mouhamad Rachini, with files from Ottawa Morning. Produced by Kate Cornick.

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Dominion Carillonneur ready to play one last chime before Peace Tower renovation - CBC.ca

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