City Opera names Gordon Gerrard as new artistic director
Former VSO assistant and associate conductor to replace retiring founder Charles Barber

Gordon Gerrard has been a familiar presence on the VSO podium. Photo by Chris Graham
GORDON GERRARD, music director at the Regina Symphony Orchestra and a former assistant and associate conductor at the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra, is set to take the helm of City Opera.
The conductor has been named artistic director of the professional chamber-opera organization after the retirement of founding artistic director Charles Barber in January.
Gerrard has lengthy experience as an opera and orchestra conductor, making a name for supporting innovative and inclusive programming, and exploring social change and community engagement. Gerrard worked from 2012 to 2016 at the VSO under the mentorship of Maestro Bramwell Tovey, and continues to take the podium there as a guest conductor. He has also had a long association with Vancouver Opera and UBC Opera, as well as working at Calgary Opera, Opera Nuova and the Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity.
“Gordon’s impressive background as a conductor, opera specialist and educator, coupled with his imaginative programming and community engagement experience, bring a dynamic perspective to this pivotal leadership role,” City Opera board president Janet Lea said in the announcement. “His commitment to cultivating community and telling compelling stories that illuminate contemporary challenges resonates strongly with City Opera’s values, as does his passion for making music accessible to everyone. It’s an exciting new chapter in City Opera’s history.”
Gerrard takes his new role with City Opera in September 2023, while maintaining leadership of the Regina symphony.
City Opera is 16 years old, presenting repertoire that spans classical works to new compositions, and focusing on giving voice to stories and music from marginalized communities. It recently presented tenor Isaiah Bell's solo show My Book of Shames; previous presentations include Pauline, Margaret Atwood and Tobin Stokes’ chamber opera about Pauline Johnson, the mixed-race poet of Mohawk and European descent at the York Theatre in 2014; the 2017 premiere of Missing, set in Vancouver and along the Highway of Tears, about Canada’s missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls, by playwright Marie Clements and composer Brian Current; and Madeleine Thien and Alice Ping Yee Ho's new opera Chinatown, in 2022 at the Vancouver Playhouse, about the Head Tax, the Exclusion Act, and the building of the CPR.
Janet Smith is cofounder and editorial director of Stir. She is an award-winning arts journalist who has spent more than two decades immersed in Vancouver’s dance, screen, design, theatre, music, opera, and gallery scenes. She sits on the Vancouver Film Critics’ Circle.
Related Articles
Gryphon Trio and Marion Newman lead a powerful performance that confronts historical trauma through poetry, music, and film
Plenty is in store, from Portuguese fado singer Carminho to cooking star Yotam Ottolenghi, culture-fusing songstress Arooj Aftab, and beyond
Singer-songwriter journeys through heartbreak and joy in North Shore Jazz concert as part of the Vancouver International Jazz Festival
Dutch accordionist Erica Roozendaal explores themes of abuse and childhood instability in her heartfelt solo performance
Performance stars creator Rick Maddocks alongside flamenco dancer Maria Avila, soprano vocalist Dory Hayley, and talented musicians
Astrolabe Musik Theatre presents Farshid Samandari’s The Greater Sea and Gheorghi Arnaoudov’s Notes of the Phantom Woman
Fuelled by curiosity and spontaneity, the acclaimed performer looks beyond the Chopin repertoire that made his name
A guest of the Vancouver Chopin Society, the veteran musician risked it all to stand up against tyranny
Alt-rock band Meltt, D.O.A. frontman Joe Keithley, and singer-songwriter Ché Aimee Dorval are among the Burrard Stage highlights
Stellar local musicians play seminal, sassy funk in North Shore Jazz presentation as part of Vancouver International Jazz Festival
In renowned one-man show I Wish I Was a Mountain, the award-winning British poet leans on rhythm of deep musical influences
Wurlitzer organ, Azerbaijani folk music, rousing chorales, and more culminate in a Vancouver Symphony Orchestra performance at the Orpheum
Newest production to feature Sound the Alarm’s lineup of seasoned singers mines soundtracks of Disney and Hollywood classics
Three concerts at RockRidge Canyon resort in Princeton highlight chamber works prepared by the artists during a week-long intensive
In Western Gold Theatre’s spare staging of Caryl Churchill’s taut, wry work, roles rotate across performances with some astonishing results
The violinist’s Fantasy Vignettes interweaves Baroque music, costume changes, and sewing machines
All-Canadian program Legacy celebrates spring and rebirth as Cassie Luftspring prepares to take the baton
The Zawose Queens, The Milk Cartons Kids, and more to hit the Main Stage at ʔəy̓alməxʷ Jericho Beach Park
Program also features North American premiere of Danish composer Thomas Agerfeldt Olesen’s Violin Concerto with violinist Simone Lamsma
Season-closing concert features guest artist Christopher Gaze and a world premiere by composer Thuthuka Sibisi
Now based in the U.S., artist brings more than 60 years of performance experience and award wins to the stage
Beatles songs and Broadway hits are on the program featuring performers of all ages
In the latest installment of the VSO at the Annex series, the conductor and pianist hopes the eclectic program will take some of the intimidation factor out of new music
Paris-born, Montreal-raised pianist won the 2021 International Chopin Piano Competition in Warsaw
At Vancouver New Music, Cheldon Paterson’s uncategorizable music fuses his love for nature with his taste for obscure sound
Compelling young artist has performed worldwide and won prizes at the National Chopin Piano Competition
Genre-spanning international and local talents take to North Shore venues in BlueShore at CapU and Vancouver International Jazz Festival presentation
Program includes an Emily Carr–inspired piece by Tawnie Olson, a composition about a satellite falling out of orbit by Chris Sivak, and more
In Have You Heard Judi Singh?, Vancouver director interweaves archival footage, re-created moments, and mesmerizing music in tribute to late Punjabi-Black artist
Set in the aftermath of World War II, updated production adds depth and nuance to the iconic work