Profeti della Quinta (Yoel Levy) |
Concert No.4 of the
Jerusalem Baroque Orchestra’s 31st season hosted the Profeti della Quinta
ensemble No new faces to Israeli audiences or to JBO concerts, the
Basel-based male vocal quintet - countertenors Doron Schleifer and Roman
Melish, tenors Lior Leibovici and Jacob Lawrence and director Elam Rotem, with
the group’s lutenist Ori Harmelin - performed together with members of the JBO, with Jerusalem. Baroque
Orchestra founder and director David Shemer on the organ. This writer attended
the concert at the Jerusalem International YMCA on February 23rd, 2020.
“Prophets,
Scriptures” was a program of music
of Claudio Monteverdi and Salomone Rossi, but also of works by harpsichordist,
bass, researcher and composer Elam Rotem (b.Israel,1984). Of Monteverdi, a
pivotal transitional figure in Venice between the Renaissance and Baroque periods,
we heard works from his 1641 “Selva morale e spirituale” (Moral and Spiritual Forest) - the
composer’s sacred anthology, one of startling stylistic range and variety. In
the setting of “Laudate Dominum” (Praise the Lord), Psalm 116, the
shortest of all 150 Psalms, the singers called attention to the concise but
vivid work’s “split personality” - its dancelike first section (interrupted by
the curious descending chromatics colouring the word “misericordia”), as
contrasted with the more formal, “Gloria Patri”, moving into homophony... very
challenging vocal material, its instrumental score also offering plenty of
interest. Written for six-part chorus (managed here by five) and soloists, with
organ, basso continuo and two obbligato violin parts, in “Beatus vir” (Happy is
the man), with its pairs or small groups of voices contrasting with the weight
of the full chorus, the artists gave expression to the motet’s sheer joy, its
lilting rhythms, solo moments and melismas, its recurring refrain exhilarating
as it delivered its message over a sweeping ground bass. Not ignored was
the composer’s portrayal of the wicked man, “his desires thwarted, gnashing his
teeth in angry envy” as compared to the blessed.
The largest-scale
work on the program was Monteverdi’s 1624 “Il Combattimento di Tancredi e
Clorinda” (Battle of Tancredi and Clorinda), set to a passage of Torquato
Tasso’s epic poem “Gerusalemme liberata” (Jerusalem Delivered). This work – with its mix of love and violence, assimilation and
confrontation, personal identity and agency, conflict of winner and victim,
vocal and instrumental sections, a narrator occupying most of the composition
(and two other characters who sing brief sections) - defies genre definition.
With its vivid musical description of battle effects, as in the rapid
repetition of sixteenth-notes, for example, it is considered to be the first
instance of the “stile concitato”. The Jerusalem audience moved to the edge of
its seats as tenor Jacob Lawrence (Australia) wielded its melodic and dramatic
agenda with gripping, confrontational mastery. Engaging his well-anchored,
substantial voice, given of easeful, natural sound production and flexibility,
he set before the audience the piece’s many emotional aspects - its powerful
dramatic urgency, its tenderness and pathos - as he narrated the
many-faceted story word by word, gesture by gesture. The smaller vocal roles
were handled well by soprano Liron Givoni and Lior Leibovici. A relatively new
member of the Profeti ensemble, Jacob Lawrence has garnered experience in
performance of opera and oratorio repertoire. Now based in Basel, he performs
with leading European instrumental vocal and instrumental ensembles, singing
music of the late medieval- to early Baroque periods.
“Come with me from Lebanon, my spouse,
with me from Lebanon: look from the top of Amana, from the top of Shenir and
Hermon, from the lions' dens, from the mountains of the leopards. How fair is
thy love, my sister, my spouse!
how much better is thy love than wine! and the smell of thine ointments than
all spices! Thy lips, O my spouse,
drop as the
honeycomb: honey and milk are under
thy tongue; and the smell of thy garments is like the smell of Lebanon.”
Rotem’s
motet “The Lamentations of David” (Samuel II,1:17-27) was premiered at this
concert. Different from Monteverdi’s “Battle of Tancredi and Clorinda”, whose
sonority endeavours to conjure up the actual battle scene, Rotem’s work evokes
the emotional pain arising from the tragedy of war. With tenor (Jacob
Lawrence) as narrator, it moved between the sentiments of official grieving and
those of personal loss, subtly interweaving drama, anger, noble expression,
tenderness and intensely sad, heartfelt gestures into the canvas. The singers’
profound enquiry into the work’s subject matter and elaborate musical fabric
was direct, convincing and moving.
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