By Douglas Neslund
He stood as in prayer, for
a long half minute after the final tritone wafted out into Walt Disney Concert
Hall while over two thousand hearts beat as one, half afraid to breathe and
half not wanting to break the sacred stillness. Finally, James Conlon lowered
his baton to allow tumultuous release of the collective tension.
The vehicle for this
triumph was Benjamin Britten’s War Requiem, Opus 66, arguably the greatest
composition of the 20th century, but elevated by Maestro Conlon
pre-performance to one of the monuments of music of all time.
Benjamin Britten |
Britten’s 100th
centenary is drawing to a close, and his music has been heard by many
organizations throughout the year. The impact of this man’s creative genius has
been rightfully elevated to new heights.
The impressions left by
War Requiem are deeply felt through the perfect marriage of his music and the
poetry of Wilfred Owen, himself a victim of World War I, a poet who would
certainly have been Britain’s poet laureate of the time had he survived just
one more week, bits of Scripture, the Latin Mass for the Dead, and Britten’s
own pacifist convictions (reversing the Abrahamic story of the imminent sacrifice
of Isaac by slaying his son … “and half the seed of Europe, one by one” …
instead of the proffered Ram of Pride, and in so doing, pointing a dagger of
condemnation at the rulers of the countries involved in the “war to end all
wars.”)
This perfect amalgam of inspired
genius requires a large orchestra, a chamber orchestra, a large adult choir, a
children’s choir, and three soloists. The original cast was purposefully drawn
from enemy countries in World War II: the Soviet Union, Germany and the United
Kingdom; the intended soloists, Galina Vishnevskaya, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau
and Britten’s long-term partner, Peter Pears, with the premiere performance
taking place in a bombed-out Coventry Cathedral. Subsequent performances spread
throughout the world.
Wilfred Owen |
On this occasion, the
artists were: The Colburn Orchestra and members of the USC Thornton Symphony;
participating choirs included: USC Thornton Chamber Singers, USC Thornton
Concert Choir, Bob Cole Conservatory Chamber Choir, Cal State Long Beach, Cal
State Fullerton University Singers, Chapman University Singers, New Zealand
Youth Choir, and the Los Angeles Children’s Chorus. All singers were superbly
prepared by their own respective directors and assembled by LA Master Chorale’s
Grant Gershon, delivering a marvelous feast of often challenging music. The
instrumentalists were in as close to professional form as pre-professional
players could possibly be. To single out any individual or orchestral choir
would be unfair to the rest, but the brass and percussion were simply
marvelous, as was the chamber orchestra and leader Radu Paponiu. Bravi tutti !
Maestro Conlon |
Perhaps no trio of
soloists will be able to replicate the original trio, probably because so many
have heard the iconic recording produced in 1963 that left such an indelible
impression. But the three soloists at this event were of high quality. One
could quibble about tenor Joseph Kaiser’s quavery delivery of the final phrase
of Dona nobis pacem that Peter Pears
made forever the standard, but as drama, Mr. Kaiser achieved his own measure of
success. Baritone Phillip Addis displayed a voice rich in tone and textual
awareness; he and Mr. Kaiser bracketed the conductor’s podium, while soprano
Tamera Wilson was placed, as in the original, up in the front-center of the
chorus women. Such placement tends, even in acoustically excellent Walt Disney
Concert Hall, to dissolve low-tessitura passages into the multitudes around her
and the orchestra in front of her, so that her impact lay in the high-altitude
opportunities, such as the opening of the Sanctus. One would have liked to hear her down onstage with
the gentlemen.
Aside from one choral
entrance of the sopranos that appeared to be missed, the music making was
superb. For those whose choral “ears” are attuned to the Los Angeles Master
Chorale, one had to remind oneself that maturity adds weight to a voice, and
any comparison with these relative youth only demonstrates how great their
training has been; the future of choral music is bright.
Britten’s truly creepy
orchestra scoring of the duet “Strange Meeting” sets up a metaphorical
encounter of killer and killed in the afterlife. After a few exchanges, one
states, “I am the enemy you killed, my friend,” while the children’s chorus chants
In Paradisum. What a profound
cross-reference of text and music! It would be difficult to find in all serious
music the equal in context and drama.
For all the underlying
irony and bitterness of music and text, Britten interjects moments of pure, radiant
joy, as in the Hosanna of the
Sanctus, thus giving yet another dimension to the drama. Yet the first sound we
hear is also the last: that dreaded tritone, an augmented fourth interval: C to
F#, and with that, the War Requiem ends as it begins, steeped in fear of
futile, future wars.
Photos from Wikipedia from various sources
Photos from Wikipedia from various sources
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