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The program in Ashdod opened with a bold and jubilant
performance of the Hallelujah Chorus from Händel’s “Messiah”. In a setting
for voices only, the choir members’ stable, dynamic and brightly-timbred singing
held one’s attention in the absence of the composer’s festive brassy and
percussive orchestral backing. From the
initial works on the program, we were quickly to become aware of the skillful
representation of instrumental roles in the arrangements and performance of the
choir’s unique repertoire. These included sung versions of J.S.Bach’s Invention
in F-major - keyboard music sung with vibrancy and attention to contrapuntal
textures - and the precise and polished singing of the “Badinerie” from Bach’s Suite
no.2, its virtuosic flute solo presenting no stumbling block to the singers. Both these interpretations followed the
Swingle Singers concept of different sung syllables, producing a vivid “instrumental”
soundscape. For their choral version of the Bach/Gounod “Ave Maria”, some of
the women sang the melody, with other choir members evoking the sound of muted
bells in lush, velvety textures. In the Alleluia from Mozart’s “Exultate
Jubilate” K.165, soprano Serafima Kaniashna presented the solo in a sympathetic
and sincere manner, with the other singers performing the orchestral score in a
flexible mix of various different syllables, interspersed with some “alleluia”s.
Then, with delightful transparency and lyricism, Kontorovich and his singers
captured the richness of Romantic harmonies in one of Mendelssohn’s “Songs without
Words”. For a short visit to the world of opera, Serafima Kaniashna was the
soloist in Norma’s wistful plea to the moon goddess in “Casta diva” (Chaste
goddess) from Bellini’s “Norma”, the choir taking on the role of both orchestra
and opera chorus.
Then to the program’s Russian content, beginning with the
luxuriant singing of a hymn by prolific church music composer Pavel Chesnikov
(1877-1944), the bass singers’ substantial low register singing reminding the
listener from where these singers come. Tenor
Andrei Bashkov’s tender singing of “Evening Song” with an evocative backing of
bells and long drawn-out sounds all coming together in natural and gently
flexed performance displayed the kind of precision and collaboration of only very
seasoned artists. Following their rich, nostalgic and poignant singing of
“Moscow Nights” (1955, Vasily Solovyov-Sedoi – music, Mikhail Matusovsky – lyrics), the audience
relished every enticing, come-hither moment of “Kalinka”, with tenor soloist
Platon Greco enjoying it no less, its sweetly sentimental moments alternating
with wild, carefree and brilliantly presented dancelike rhythms:
‘Juniper, juniper, juniper, my juniper,
In the garden there’s the berry, my raspberry.
Under the pine, under the green pine,
Lay me down to sleep.
Oh you dear pine, you green pine,
Don’t you rustle so loudly over me
Beautiful maid, dear maid,
Please fall in love with me!’
Leaving Russia, Maestro Lev Kontorovich and his singers then
took the listener to the Americas – North and South. And what a treat it was to
hear soprano Olga Taran in a performance so stylistically correct and so
utterly engaging of George Gershwin’s “Summertime”. From there to Argentinean composer Ástor Piazzolla’s emotionally
charged and sophisticated tango rhapsody “Adiós Nonino” (composed in 1959,
following his father’s death) in singing that captured so well the piece’s Latin
American bitter-sweet warmth, its excitement, heartbreak and mystery. Following
the Colombian song “Prende la vela” (Light the Candle) by Eduardo Lucho Bermúdez
(1912-1994), actually a “cumbia” - a syncopated frenetic dance – in which tenor
soloist Wiachislav Verubiov and his fellow singers gave it their all, the Latin
American segment ended with a virtuosic performance of “Mambo” by Cuban
composer Guido López-Gavilán (b.1944), a piece bristling with complex
vocal-, speech- and percussive effects, a true tour-de-force.
Especially for its Israel visit, the ensemble prepared and sang
its own poignant version of “Kol Nidrei” (minus the verbal text), the sacred
Jewish prayer that opens the Day of Atonement service, then to sweep the
audience off its feet with a vocal version of Rimsky-Korsakov’s “Flight of the
Bumblebee”, the delicate but frenzied buzzing of the almost-visible bee moving around
the stage from group to group. For their two encores, Professor Kontorovich and
the Masters of Choral Singing gave a mellifluous and moving reading of Israeli
composer Naomi Shemer’s “Jerusalem of Gold”, sending the audience home with a
jaunty, upbeat rendering of the modern Israeli folk song “Hava nagila” (Let Us
Rejoice).
In performance abundant in interest, beauty, precision,
stylistic attention and superb teamwork, Maestro Kontorovich and the Academic Grand
Choir “Masters of Choral Singing” offered the audience an evening of choral
singing of the highest standard.
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