“Golden Bells” - music and tours in Jerusalem, May 16th to 18th 2019 -
offered local Jerusalemites and guests from outside the capital city three
days packed with guided walking tours through many quarters of Jerusalem as
well as a host of varied musical events.
The Jerusalem Street Orchestra (courtesy Jerusalem Street Orchestra) |
The festive closing event, an afternoon concert taking place at the Jerusalem International YMCA on May 8th featured two
choral works, the first of which was J.S.Bach’s Cantata No.131. “Aus der Tiefen
rufe ich, Herr, zu Dir”, BWV 131 (Out of the depths have I cried unto Thee).
The Jerusalem Street Orchestra, the Gary Bertini Israeli Choir and soloists -
tenor Eitan Drori and baritone Yair Polishook - were conducted by Ronen
Borshevsky, the Bertini Choir’s musical director. An apotheosis of 17th-century German sacred
music, Cantata 131, a very early Bach cantata (composed 1707 or 1708) is scored
for strings with oboe and bassoon and consists of an unbroken succession of
choruses and arias on texts drawn from biblical passages and hymns. Its text
and the large number of slow tempi indicate that it was probably performed for
an event of mourning. The Bertini Choir produced’ polished, informed
singing as they addressed the text, its mood changes and its potential for
dynamic variety. The Jerusalem Street Orchestra, a chamber orchestra of mostly
quite young players (musical director: Ido Shpitalnik) shone in its dedicated
performance, well-shaped phrasing and timbral warmth, with outstanding solo
playing by oboist Lior Michel Virot and Azure Kline’s splendid ‘cello
obligato. The second movement, sung by Yair Polishook, with its pleading,
anxious agenda, rhythmic variety, wide range and ornaments, emerged richly
expressive, as he gave attention to each gesture, with the soprano section’s
calm, slow-moving haunting chorale line providing a stark contrast to the solo.
In the tenor aria, this also appended with a chorale, Eitan Drori kept the
focus on “meine Seele” (my soul) and the theme of yearning, reserving the use
of vibrato for ornamentation of its arioso style.
For the performance of Gabriel Fauré’s Requiem in D minor Op. 48, the
Bertini Choir and the Jerusalem Street Orchestra were joined by the Chamber
Choir of the Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance, soprano Daniela Skorka and
baritone Yair Polishook. Conducting the work, Shpitalnik created a fine balance
between voices and instruments, allowing for the powerful surges that
accurately depict the drama of the text, yet still addressing the work’s
remarkable modesty, unusual tenderness (there is no Dies Irae) and “a
very human feeling of faith in eternal rest”, in the composer’s own words. The
combined choirs excelled in vocal control, creating the transparent timbre
required for its performance. The instrumentalists gave eloquent expression and
a sense of illumination to the score; kudos to the three horn players, to
harpist Hila Ofek and to organist Tal Igal. With the quality of a performance
of the Fauré Requiem hinging on an excellent organist (and organ), Igal
managed to create some magical tone colourings on an electronic instrument, a
far cry from the Aristide Cavaillé-Coll pipe organ on which Fauré played for
funerals at the Église de la Madeleine in Paris. In the
“Pie Jesu”, Daniela Skorka’s shimmering, gossamer lightness of voice, free
of artifice and affectation, was beautifully stable, indeed, a satisfying
substitute for the role often performed by a boy soprano. Yair Polishook’s
reading of the “Hostias et preces tibi Domine” (We offer unto Thee this
sacrifice of prayer) was focused and spiritual, his upper register ample and
bright. Pleading deliverance in the “Libera me” (with the chorus quaking in
fear) and supported by strong brass utterance, Polishook endorsed the boldest
movement of Fauré’s Requiem with gripping assertion and emotion.
The Gary Bertini Israeli Chamber Choir was founded in order to provide a
professional ensemble for oratorio- and opera performances with Israel’s leading
orchestras. The choir operates a chamber ensemble of 25 professional singers
for a-cappella concerts in Israel and abroad. The Jerusalem Academy Chamber
Choir (director: Prof. Stanley Sperber) composed of 30 singers, was founded in
1969 by Avner Itai. The choir has achieved a reputation as one of the finest in
Israel and has performed with the country’s leading orchestras. Established in
2013 by Ido Shpitalnik, the Jerusalem Street Orchestra is a classic chamber
orchestra comprised of graduates of Jerusalem’s Music Academy. What makes it
different to other orchestras is that it performs in open-air public spaces, presenting concerts
that combine classical music with orchestral arrangements of popular music,
with the objective of .making classical music accessible to new audiences.
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