By Douglas Neslund
An ambitious and
well-attended performance – the first-ever on the West Coast – of “Ecce Cor Meum” by ex-Beatle Paul
McCartney was undertaken by the spirited Angeles Chorale in the large space
provided by Pasadena’s United Methodist Church. The 100-voiced chorus, under
the baton of John Sutton, was augmented by the Concert Choir of Pasadena’s Los
Angeles Children’s Chorus, well-prepared as always by their Artistic Director,
Anne Tomlinson.
A 30-member Sinfonia did
their collective best, but in the end, only added confusion to chaos: without a
reference score, one would never know whether the musicians were playing the
“right” notes … or not. And the
uncredited and excellent “Bach trumpeter” was allowed far too much volume in
much of his work.
“We may find a trace
Of a state of grace
In the saddest face
Something is there.
How the rivers flow
We may never know
But it goes to show
Something is there.”
The work, ostentatiously
called an “oratorio” was written and revised over a period of eight years, and declared
finished by the composer in 2001. There is a reason why the West Coast Premiere
didn’t find a home until 2013. Melodies, as such, were hard to detect; any
sense of musical structure impossible to sort out. “Through-composed” comes
closest to the meandering framework, but after 45 minutes of “through-composed”
one longed for a bit of form. It’s weak tea.
But one must applaud the
Angeles Chorale and associated personnel for their bravery. One of the
highlights were the children, who added gravitas
to notes above the treble staff - and there were lots of stratospheric notes -
giving the women of the Chorus a chance to save their voices for more exposed
portions.
Another highlight was
soprano soloist Virenia Lind, whose duties were brief and difficult to hear
over an orchestral accompaniment allowed to play too loudly. But what one could
hear was a pure, floating sound that grew rich in lower tessitura.
Throughout, Dr. Sutton
kept all in order, except for the clap-happy crowd, which ignored his
movement-ending gesture requesting silence.
After intermission, a rock
band replaced the Sinfonia, the children were relinquished to their parents,
and the audience thinned. What followed was a trip through the 1960s phenomenon
called the Beatles. It was a time when Mr. McCartney and fellow bandsmen wrote
melodies, yes … melodies! And they were very good at it, the proof being the
fact we remember those tunes even today.
Dr. Sutton invited all to
join a sing-along on “When I’m Sixty-Four” (a look in the rear view mirror for
a lot of attendees) and “Yellow Submarine.” The remaining dozen tunes were all
familiar and enthusiastically performed. Many of the songs were incorrectly attributed
in the concert program to McCartney, but only “Lady Madonna” and a portion of
“Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” were claimed on his own website.
2 comments:
Thanks for taking on this review and giving it an honest assessment. Sir Paul made an unassailable contribution to the history of rock music. Let's let it rest at that.
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