Noam Schuss (violin),David Shemer(harpsichord) (Yinon Fuchs) |
Maestro Matthias Maute (Yoel Levy |
The Jerusalem Baroque Orchestra's 2021-2022 season opened with a flourish! The plan to perform "Te Deum" together with Ensemble Caprice (Canada) had finally become a reality, having twice been shelved due to Covid-19 restrictions. The auditorium of the Jerusalem International YMCA was alive with excitement and anticipation on October 14th 2021, with members of both ensembles seated together on the stage. Joining them for two of the works was the Shahar Choir (music director Gila Brill). Soloists were sopranos Daniela Skorka and Tal Ganor, mezzo-soprano Maya Amir, tenor Yonatan Suissa, bass Yair Polishook, Noam Schuss-violin, Andrea Stewart-'cello and Alexis Basque (trumpet). Maestros Matthias Maute (Caprice) and David Shemer (JBO) each conducted works.
No less festive was the line-up of
works on the program. As in most concerts of works by great Baroque composers,
Georg Philipp.Telemann was well represented here. First up was Telemann's prestigious Latin setting of Psalm 72 "Deus
judicium tuum" TWV 7:7 (Give your judgement, O God, to the king) a work
associated with the composer's sojourn in Paris in 1737, during which time he
celebrated musical triumphs in the French metropolis. Among the finest vocal
works in Telemann’s oeuvre, the motet is written in a French-influenced style
(hence the text here sung in the French pronunciation of Latin) with a highly varied
mixture of full instrumental accompaniments and graceful smaller instrumental
complements, the latter catering to the vocal solos. Conducted by Maute, the
three resplendent choral movements frame a richly-coloured succession of
demanding solo movements, the latter performed with insight, fine detail and
distinctive expression by Skorka, Ganor, Suissa and Polishook, the Shahar
Choir's mellow signature sound and blend subtle and agreeable. A
rarely-performed work, possibly never performed before on these shores, is
Telemann's Concerto for trumpet, violin, 'cello and strings TWV 53:D5. Strange
bedfellows? Indeed, Telemann does not claim that the solos in a triple concerto
are necessarily equal in timbre or volume, let alone similar in character. Some
authorities today regard the work, probably composed before 1715, as really a
violin concerto, with trumpet and 'cello obligato parts. In fact, the 'cello
(Andrea Stewart) has only two solo passages. In keeping with the fact that the
valve trumpet was only invented in 1813, it was a real treat hearing and seeing
Basque performing the role on a natural trumpet with ease and good intonation,
indeed, creating the illusion that playing this instrument is a breeze!
As to the highly challenging violin part, abounding in double stops,
high-passage-work and fast, long passages, JBO leader Noam Schuss handled it
with good judgement and aplomb, its unrelenting virtuosity stemming from the
fact that much of the work was strongly influenced (or perhaps written!) by
Johann Georg Pisendel, the leading German violinist of his day and
concertmaster of the Dresden Hofkapelle.
With David Shemer
conducting from the harpsichord, the Caprice-JBO instrumentalists performed the
Chaconne for orchestra which concludes Jean Philippe Rameau's opera "Les
Indes galantes" (The Amorous Indies). Festive, varied and grand, the
piece showcased the rich timbres of the ensemble, including its fine
assembly of winds, as Maestro Shemer's direction called attention to the fact
that Rameau was a revolutionary in dance, not just in music.
This concert was also the setting for a unique world premiere - three songs from Jaap Nico Hamburger's "Songs in Times of Honour" to poems of Else Lasker-Schüler. In the past, Hamburger has written works for Caprice, but for this commission, he was requested to compose the work to a Jewish text. Having perused many texts, from ancient to modern, Hamburger chose those of German-Jewish poet Lasker-Schüler. Lasker-Schüler moved to Jerusalem in 1940, where she became a prominent figure on the local cultural scene. The three songs we heard are scored for soprano and Baroque instruments. (Some of the remaining four of the cycle call for symphony orchestra.) Soprano Daniela Skorka and the instrumentalists displayed close teamwork in presenting these three thought-provoking-, indeed, disquieting mood pieces. Opening with the eerie sounds of violin and percussion, "Meine Mutter" (My Mother) reflects the poet's pain and longing for her mother, "the great angel who walked at my side". In "Abschied" (Leave-taking), a woman awaits her lover, her anguish intertwining with the rhythms of a dance that will not be danced, an effective and sinister collage of sound, with Skorka adding a few touches of tambourine sound to the effect. "Ich Weiss" (I Know), coloured in tranquil, veiled dissonances, shows Lasker-Schüler ruminating on her own death, the death of a poet. She died in Jerusalem in 1940.
"Pale and paler my dreams grow
In the volumes
of my rhymes" (English translation: Robert P. Newton).
In this third haunting
and powerful piece, Hamburger gives its final say to a solo viola. A fine
choice of texts, Lasker-Schüler's poems speak in a direct and articulate voice.
No less articulate, Hamburger's music, modal in language, is not overloaded,
not opaque, as he paints with delicate brush strokes. Skorka addresses each
notion with finely-shaped gestures and sensitivity, her outstanding performance
reflecting deep enquiry into each of the poems. Born in Holland, Jaap Nico
Hamburger today lives in Canada. After spending many years working as a
cardiologist, he now devotes his time to writing music. In attendance at the
premiere, the composer, it seems, still addresses matters of the heart.
Concluding the event
was Marc-Antoine Charpentier's "Te Deum" in D major H146, c.1692. The
"Te Deum" (We praise thee, O God) text was usually enlisted for works
written to celebrate some military victory. In fact, Charpentier set the text
six times. The H146 “Te Deum” is unquestionably Charpentier's best known work,
especially since its “Prélude en rondeau” was made the Eurovision signature
tune. The grand motet proved highly suitable for the combined forces offered by
the Caprice-JBO ensemble: Charpentier here uses a much larger instrumental band
than had any previous French composer of church music, this being his only
setting employing a “military band”, i.e trumpets and kettledrums. Maestro
Maute took fullest advantage of the work's contrasting of ceremonial
brilliance of full orchestral and choral forces with the pleasing blend of the
solo voices accompanied by just a few instruments, integrating the work's
daring harmonies and conflicting dramatic elements with its devotional
dimension. The audience delighted in the performance's moments of delicately
restrained lyricism, both in vocal sections and in instrumental duetting. It
also delighted in the joyous extravaganza of first-class brass playing.
Born in Ebingen,
Germany, Matthias Maute has carved out an impressive international
reputation only as one of the great recorder and baroque flute virtuosos
of his generation but also as a composer and conductor.
Jaap Nico Hamburger (Brent Calis) |
1 comment:
DEAREST PAMELA
WHAT A PLEASURE TO READ WHAT YOU WROTE ABOUT THIS EXTREMELY GOOD AND TOCHING CONCERT.
IT`S SO ENJOYABLE TO READ WHAT AND HOW YOU WRITE.
(AS USUAL)
YES FOR ME TOO THE MUSIC BY MR. HAMBURGER WAS A VERY SPECIAL MOMENT.(I WAS IN TEARS...)
AND HE SEEMS SUCH A FINE MAN TOO. AND THE SINGING AND PLAYING WERE SO WANDERFUL.
YES IT WAS A MOST SPECIAL FANTASTIC CONCERT. THANKS EVERYONE YOU MENTIONED.
THANK YOU AGAING FOR WRITING SUCH A SPECIAL ARTICLE.
THEY ALL DESERVE IT.
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