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| Maestro Andrew Parrott © Yoel Levy |
Each concert of the Jerusalem Baroque
Orchestra's 2025-2026 subscription concert season visited a different European
city, presenting works of its major composers. David's Lament, the final
concert of the JBO's 36th season, took the audience to London, but with a
different approach: the program consisted of works of Jeremiah Clarke and
William Boyce - two composers not necessarily familiar to members of the JBO's
listening public. The concert was conducted by the orchestra's honorary
conductor Maestro Andrew Parrott (UK). Soloists were Tatiana Levin (soprano),
Yonathan Suissa (haute-contra/tenor), Itamar Hildesheim (tenor) and Daniel
Ze'ev Ben Baruch (baritone), with Jerusalem Baroque Orchestra founder/music
director Prof. David Shemer at the harpsichord. This writer attended the event
at the Jerusalem International YMCA on June 7th, 2026.
Henry Purcell’s untimely death in November
1695 elicited many musical- and literary tributes. Several composers
wrote odes in his memory, one of the more elaborate being that of Jeremiah
Clarke (1674-1707), one of Purcell’s younger colleagues. Holding prominent
positions in turn at Winchester College, St. Paul’s Cathedral and the Chapel
Royal, Clarke's output was not limited to church music: he wrote songs,
incidental music for theatre, works for harpsichord, and, as mentioned, courtly
odes. Taking Clarke's Come, come along for a dance and a song, Ode on the
Death of Henry Purcell (1695), Maestro Parrott put together a suite of
instrumental pieces. Delightful items, they were given a colourful, zesty
reading, some suggesting just a few folksy elements, the pieces offering
vibrant roles for the JBO's impressive line-up of wind players. Included was a delicately ornamented harpsichord solo of "Mister Purcell's
Farewell" (Shemer), the suite signing out with Alon Melnik's hearty
trumpet solo in Jeremiah Clarke’s best-known composition - the Trumpet
Voluntary (originally called The Prince of Denmark’s March) - a
piece formerly attributed to Purcell.
David’s lament over Saul and Jonathan has inspired centuries of musical adaptations, one celebrated Renaissance setting of this passage (Samuel 1:19–27) being Josquin des Prez' Planxit autem David, other notable polyphonic settings including works of Nicolas Gombert and Orlando di Lasso. A later work, Thomas Weelkes' sublime When David Heard, explores the depths of David's grief and emotion. Moving into the 20th- and 21st centuries, one might mention Yehezkel Braun's extensive vocal work David's Lament over Saul and Jonathan (2009) Eric Whitacre's When David Heard (1999) and Canadian composer Kai Leung's When David Heard (2022). William Boyce (1711-1779) wrote David's Lamentation over Saul and Jonathan in 1736 at age 24, revising it for performances in Dublin during the mid-1740s. Maestro Parrott directed the JBO players and four singers in the earlier London version, (libretto: John Lockman, based on Samuel 1). This was the first performance of the elegiac work to be heard on Israeli concert platforms. Following the profoundly poignant two-movement Overture in G minor, each gesture addressed with punctilious shaping, we were transported to the melancholy, at times darkly intense character of the "dramatic scene" (This is not really an oratorio). As to the choral sections, the four fine young singers joined to produce a rich, consolidated, coherent vocal ensemble sound, their treatment of the texts indicative to the recountal. Boyce's work has no dramatis personae: the soloists undertake roles as narrator or protagonist as the drama progresses. Yonathan Suissa (in tenor voice) reads into the text via his direct, unmannered singing, his narration and presentation of dialogues transparent, convincing and engaging. Itamar Hildesheim's vivid story-telling and word painting highlight the work's dramatic aspects and contrasts. The two singers then join to deliver the musical and emotional crux of the work - "Sad Israel, thy beauty's pride" - a duet of sublime beauty, the solo violin (Noam Gal) delicately underscoring the duet's noble, intimate expressiveness. Baritone Daniel Ze'ev Ben Baruch's vibrant, buoyant singing and Tatiana Levin's well- anchored and full-bodied soprano made up the well-chosen vocal team. In this eloquent and insightful performance, indeed, a fine vehicle for the singers and JBO instrumentalists, Maestro Parrott sheds important light on a composer of an era traditionally dominated by the figure of Handel. The event brought the Jerusalem Baroque Orchestra's 2025-2026 concert season to an exhilarating and majestic end.












