| MUSIC
REVIEW Boca
Philharmonic, Master Chorale give magnificent rendition
of Brahms
By David Fleshler
Sun-Sentinel.com
April
16 , 2007
A
setting of Biblical verses by a religious agnostic, Brahms'
German Requiem offers consolation rather than triumph.
Imbued with the glowing harmonies of the mid-19th century
and grounded in the religious music of the past, the work
received a magnificent performance Friday in Fort Lauderdale
by the Master Chorale of South Florida and the Boca Raton
Philharmonic Symphonia.
Led
by artistic director Jo-Michael Scheibe, the chorus sang
with clear articulation, unity and power. The orchestra,
uneven in an earlier work on the program, performed with
a full sound that balanced well with the chorus. The performance
at Second Presbyterian Church captured the work's rugged
intensity - the fearful awareness of the approach of death,
the comfort for the living left behind and the promise
of ultimate peace and joy.
The
work contains two big examples of the fugue, an old-fashioned
form even by Brahms' day, in which each voice enters separately
on the same theme and proceeds independently to weave
one great fabric of sound. In these sections, the performance
avoided the twin danger of muddiness and monotony, building
each fugue to triumphant climaxes that expressed hard-won
victories over death.
In
the solemn chorus Behold, all flesh is as the grass, Scheibe
drew greater intensity to each repetition of the theme
in the violins, over the ominous beating of the timpani.
Baritone Keith Spencer brought a dark, expressive tone
to Lord, Make Me to Know The Measure of My Days on Earth.
Soprano Joyce Guyer sang her verses of maternal warmth
with a sweet manner.
The
concert opened with Mozart's Ave Verum Corpus, in memory
of Jeffri Bantz, the chorale's associate director, who
died last year at 52. A cleanly sung, clearly heartfelt
performance, it was marred after the final notes - when
there should have been a moment of silence - by one of
the most ill-timed cell phone rings in recent concert
history.
In
the next work, Matthew Ferrell, the chorale's interim
associate conductor, led the orchestra in Brahms' Haydn
Variations. It was an energetic performance, skillfully
building to a climactic ending. But the orchestra's weakness
in strings was apparent. The violins don't blend well,
largely due to poor intonation by some of the players.
In the Requiem, the orchestra sounded much better, with
a far more focused sound in the strings.
David
Fleshler can be reached at dfleshler@sun-sentinel.com
or 954-356-4535.
Copyright © 2007, South
Florida Sun-Sentinel
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