It was a difficult evening
for a critic to remain untouched by the waves of love for composer Morten
Lauridsen showered from the rafters in a full house Walt Disney Concert Hall. Where
a review is normally expected to produce a reportage cum opinion of the works performed, normal
critical diffidence to extracurricular factors is expected to prevail.
On another level, the
event might well have qualified as a celebration of the University of Southern
California, its professorial excellence and a triumph of its graduates and
postgraduates. The tribute itself was bestowed upon Professor Morten Lauridsen
from a Master Chorale well-populated with USC grads and students, conducted by
Grant Gershon, who as a student sang the premiere performance of Lauridsen’s
“Mid-Winter Songs” as a member of the
famous USC Chamber Choir, and who graduated from USC cum
laude in 1985.
Lots of Trojans of all
ages, including your friendly critic, peopled the audience as well. The
University’s Judge Widney Professor of Poetry and Public Culture, Dana Gioia,
was honored, too, by a heartfelt composition by Lauridsen, a wonderful setting
of Professor Gioia’s “Prayer,” a father’s request to a generic deity to watch
over his first-born son, who died after only four months of life:
Professor Dana Gioia |
Echo
of the clock tower, footstep
in the alleyway, sweep
of the wind sifting the
leaves.
Jeweller
of the spiderweb, connoisseur
of autumn’s opulence, blade of
lightning
harvesting the sky.
Keeper
of the small gate, choreographer
of entrances and exits, midnight
whisper
travelling the wires.
Seducer,
healer, deity or thief, I will see you soon enough—
in the shadow of the
rainfall, in the brief violet darkening at sunset—
but until then I pray watch
over him
as a mountain guards its covert ore
and
the harsh falcon its flightless young.
The framework for the
evening is the music of Professor Lauridsen, who also teaches a class in
composition at USC, having attended such a class by his predecessor in office, the
esteemed Halsey Stevens, with whom this writer also studied. So, how to remain
objective?
A sometimes jarring piece,
“Lament for PasiphaĆ«,” the first of five “Mid-Winter Songs on Poems by Robert
Graves,” (premiered by the USC Chamber Singers) featured jagged pianistic stabbings, albeit via superb
piano solo work by Lisa Edwards. The five movements varied, with “She Tells Her
Love While Half Asleep” and “Mid-Winter Waking” the most attractive and
well-matched with the poetry. The Master Chorale’s brilliant enunciation, even
at pianissimo, was exemplary,
and phrase shaping was unmatched. This Chorale understands this composer and
their conductor at the DNA level.
The gentlemen of the
Master Chorale, featuring brief solos by tenors Shawn Kirchner and Matthew
Brown, together with baritone Scott Graff and the redoubtable Theresa Dimond on
the finger cymbals, performed “Ave Dulcissima Maria” which awakened faint reminders
of Biber and Tavener (minus the Russian basses) in evoking an Orthodox
chant-like theme.
Lauridsen dipped his pen into
the bitter cup of grief at the death of Professor Stevens through the medium of
a solo clarinet and chimes (“Canticle”), with brief words of condolence (“O Vos
Omnes”) by the women of the Master Chorale. The soloist, Gary Bovyer, deployed
his instrument in all possible ways, including several instances in which two
notes (a fundament sounding simultaneously with its harmonic), created an other-worldly
sound that tended to divert attention away from grief toward a sense of shuddering repulsion.
The pain was visceral. The primary
content sounded like a chain of tone rows, with nothing resembling a melody. As
an expression of grief, it works, dramatically.
“Nocturnes,” a suite of
four movements putting music to the poetry of Rainer Maria Rilke, Pablo Neruda
and James Agee, was premiered in 2005 by yet another member of the USC Trojan
Family, Don Brinegar and his Don Brinegar Singers. On this occasion, the
composer accompanied the Master Chorale at the keyboard on all but “Soneto de
la Noche” (Neruda) where a keyboard would have intruded upon Neruda’s highly
personal and delicate poetry of passion. The third item, “Sure On This Shining
Night” (Agee) has been recorded and performed by the Master Chorale in previous
seasons and is worthy of a return hearing.
The post-intermission
selections were a little less daring in their sonic construction, but gained an
equal portion in harmonies and melodies. “Madrigale: Six “Fire Songs” on
Italian Renaissance Poems” (texts drawn from disparate sources) contain a wide
range of emotions, including wit difficult to find elsewhere. As a leading
element to the second half, the Madrigals were a pleasant palate freshener.
Here the Master Chorale had to be pinpoint perfect in creating an ensemble that
held together during Italian phrases sung at lightning speed. The reference to
“Fire Songs” refers to Lauridsen’s use, in each of the six madrigals, of a
chord that is not only special to him, but that has become his inspiration and
“watermark.”
When casually tuning into
KUSC-FM, and a Lauridsen composition happens to be playing, one recognizes
almost instantly who the composer is, as the “fire chord” will likely be heard often.
It’s his inspiration, his launching pad. A gadget, some would say. But
“watermark” defines it better, as it may be reasoned that fellow musicians, in
particular, would be able to catch the passing “fire chords.” If there is a downside to this
persistent use in a full concert is something of a familiar annoyance to the ear.
One
other less significant watermark of a Lauridsen composition is reliance on
basically harmonic chord structure relying on a lot of second and third inversions.
After long minutes, one begins to yearn for a tonic in the bass, especially at
cadences. Not that there aren’t any. Of course there are. But an entire evening
of second and third inversions tends to want to make weary the friendliest ear.
The penultimate offering was
the beautiful “Les Chansons des Roses” cycle, set to “Les Roses,” a cycle of
poetry by Rilke, with the composer at the piano. The “hit tune” of the five
songs is “Dirait-on,” revealing a beautiful melody that is a haunting earworm.
The ease at which
Lauridsen writes in French and Italian is remarkable. In the preconcert
“ListenUp!” talk with KUSC’s Alan Chapman and Maestro Gershon, the composer
admitted that he speaks neither language. Maybe somewhere in the very distant
past …
Perhaps lost in the
details is the fact that an entire evening of lengthy pianissimos and delicate phrase-shaping can take its toll on the
conductor, who never has a moment to relax and relish, but is challenged to
make every moment of every phrase the living, breathing art that it is. Grant
Gershon managed to do that, and brought his 48-member Master Chorale with him.
Music Director Emeritus
Paul Salamunovich, who is still in a lengthy recovery from having contracted
West Nile Virus last fall, was remembered with another performance of
Lauridsen’s “O Magnum Mysterium,” commissioned twenty years ago by Terry
Knowles and Marshall Rutter. The work has been sung often in the intervening
decades, and is performed by choirs far and wide.
The notable thing is how
Maestro Gershon can make the piece sound like one is hearing it for the very first
time, finding new micro-elements within the well-worn phrases to reveal a new
facet here, and new inspiration there.
Fight on!
“Prayer” is reproduced by kind
permission of the author.
Photographs copyrighted by Steve Cohn, Michael Stillwater, Russell Scoffin, or exist in the public domain.
2 comments:
minor correction - it's the USC Chamber Singers, who premiered both the Mid-Winter Songs and the Madrigali
Thank you, Paul.
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