Maruša Brezavšček (Yoel Levy) |
As to be expected, "A Christmas
Concert'', event No.2 of the Jerusalem Baroque Orchestra's 34th
season, took place in the festive season. It was also affiliated with the Hallelujah
Festival of the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra. This writer attended the concert
at the Jerusalem International YMCA on December 27th 2022. Soloists were
soprano Daniela Skorka, mezzo-soprano Hagar Sharvit, tenor Itamar Hildesheim
and baritone Guy Pelc; also, Bar Zimmerman-oboe and recorder player Maruša Brezavšček (Slovenia). JBO founder and music
director David Shemer was to have conducted from the keyboard, but the corona
virus had caught up with him and, at less than 24 hours' notice, Aviad Stier
stepped in to play the organ and harpsichord parts in most of the works
performed.
Opening the evening was
J.S.Bach's church cantata "Ich bin vergnügt mit meinem Glücke" (I am
content with my good fortune) BWV 84, composed in Leipzig in 1727. The work is
scored for soprano soloist, SATB voices (for the chorale) and a small instrumental
ensemble of oboe, two violins, viola and basso continuo. Consisting of a
sequence of alternating arias and recitatives, with a concluding chorale, the
effect was delightful as competent young oboist Bar Zimmerman gave expression
to the lavish oboe obbligato role. Following each shape and nuance of the vocal
line, soprano Daniela Skorka, mirroring the oboe trill for trill (first
aria), reinforced the text's message of joy and contentment. In the second
aria, Zimmerman and Skorka were joined by 1st violinist Noam Schuss and
Roni Bracha ('cello) to celebrate the merits of a "heart ever thankful,
exalting with phrase"; the singers performed the beautifully crafted
unaccompanied chorale with meticulous coordination.
Commissioned by
Cardinal Pietro Ottoboni, Arcangelo Corelli's Concerto grosso in G minor, Op.
6, No. 8 (1690), known as the Christmas Concerto, bears the inscription
"Fatto per la notte di Natale" (Made for the night of Christmas).
Scored for two concertino violins and ‘cello, ripieno strings and continuo, the
work is a concerto da chiesa, but expanded from the typical four-movement
structure to six. At the JBO concert, the concertino section consisted of
violinists Noam Schuss and Dafna Ravid and 'cellist Marina Katz. Led
masterfully by Schuss, the performance was quintessential Corelli - abounding
in beauty,
nuanced, dramatic and lyrical, spiced with dissonances and with some fine
ornamentation on repeats. As to the pastoral (final) movement setting the scene for
Christmas, it emerged at a relaxed pace, creating the nativity scene with
tender, radiant warmth and sensitive shaping.
Antonio Vivaldi’s
contribution to the flute and recorder repertoire is well known and shows that
he had far more than a passing interest in these instruments. Of the more than
500 concertos Vivaldi wrote for orchestra and solo instruments, his Recorder
Concerto in C minor RV 441 is known as the most technically demanding of the
recorder concertos and as one of the most virtuosic recorder compositions in
the entire Baroque recorder repertoire. It is considered a jewel among
Vivaldi’s mature style concertos. 1st prize winner of the 2020 Tel Aviv
International Recorder Festival Maruša Brezavšček was the soloist for this
concerto. A skilful and creative player, Brezavšček performed
the exotically chromatic first movement with some imaginative ornamenting, here
and there, allowing phrase endings a little more time to sign out with a “sigh”. She
engaged in dialogue with Schuss and violinist Yasuko Hirata in the poetic Largo
movement, moving from its mysterious soundscape into the harmonic antics of the
effervescent Allegro movement with impressive ease and engaging in the latter's virtuosic passagework. Maruša Brezavšček's playing was tasteful rather than a
show of muscular bravado, as she gave the stage to the music, her tone on the
alto recorder mellow, centred and full-bodied.
And to a work atypical
of a Baroque music concert - Avner Hanani's “Concerto alla moda”. This was the
world premiere of a piece that was commissioned by the Jerusalem Baroque
Orchestra and Maestro David Shemer and enlisted as a new Israeli work for 2022
by the Ministry of Culture and Sport. In an interview with Barry Davis
of the Jerusalem Post, Jerusalem-born Hanani (b.1974) spoke of "Concerto alla moda" as "not really a baroque work…but there is a sort of
baroque sound to it, with the harpsichord and other instruments, and the
‘extras’ – the texture, the laconic element, and there are lots canons in the
piece, imitations…but it is more in the rock vein.” (Jerusalem Post, December
22, 2022.) Imitative and of polyphonic texture, monothematic for the most part,
of varying rhythms and meter and somewhat modal, the appealing tripartite piece
had listeners at the edges of their seats. With the composer at the
harpsichord, his buoyant, streamlined piece zipped along with definite logic,
its more relaxed middle section a short hiatus prior to inviting all back into
the breezy, toe-tapping pace with which the work had begun. With all the
Concerto alla moda's buzzing energy, its textures were fine-spun, elegant and
precisely balanced, enhanced by a few solos and, indeed, graced by the
glistening sounds of the harpsichord. And, together with the audience, the JBO
players seemed to be enjoying it to the full!
The concert ended on a
pensive note with J.S.Bach's funeral cantata "Gottes Zeit ist die
allerbeste Zeit" (God's time is the very best time) BWV 106, the work also
bearing the title of "Actus Tragicus". It is one of the composer's
first forays into the cantata genre (Bach wrote it at age 22). From the very
first notes of the poignant instrumental opening sonatina, one is aware of
how the mellow, introspective substance and underlying drama are skillfully
interwoven through the music, also due to the fact that (having no violins) it is scored for two
recorders, two viols and continuo. The cantata calls for SATB vocal soloists
and choir, with the possibility of the choir being formed by the four soloists,
as was the case at this performance. The cantata's text and sentiments meditate
on death, the continuity between life and death and finding peace, not a
subject really suited to the mindset of the young, but the four young singers
engaged in it convincingly and with empathy: Daniela Skorka's heart-rending
singing of the haunting soprano solo, Hagar Sharvit's round,
richly-coloured voice giving expression to the plaintive alto aria, Itamar
Hildesheim's sensitive, tastefully ornamented singing of the contemplative
tenor aria and Guy Pelc's bright baritone voice sounding resolute and joyful in
the bass solos, as he rendered some suavely-shaped melismatic passages. Here,
Pelc's conducting skills were also enlisted. All singers displayed good German
diction. I personally would have enjoyed the incorporating of another
four singers in the choruses to add more weight and prominence to their
message. The musical presence of recorder players Maruša Brezavšček and Adi
Berkowski and gamba players Myrna Herzog and Tal Arbel throughout the cantata was
affecting, supplying Bach’s non-verbal dimension of meaning to the work's
introspective nature.
Kudos to Noam Schuss on her articulate leading, to Guy Pelc for some choral direction and to Aviad Stier
on his very fine keyboard playing..
Soprano Daniela Skorka (Yoel Levy)
Dear Pamela
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for writing about this beautiful concert/
Goes so much with my thinking and feeling about the playing, singing and the new piece by Avner Hanani.
beautiful concert.
Tsipi