| MUSIC
REVIEW Master
Chorale of South Florida Regales With Brahms' A German
Requiem
By Charles Greenfield
Coral Gables Gazette
April
26
, 2007
The
Master Chorale of South Florida led by Jo-Michael Scheibe
has regaled South Florida audiences in the past few years
with Mozart’s Mass in C minor, K 417a, Britten’s
War Requiem, Verdi’s Il Trovatore, Beethoven’s
9th, and Johannes Brahms’ (1833-97) Ein deutsches
Requiem (A German Requiem) April 15 in the felicitous
acoustics of Trinity Cathedral adjacent to the Carnival
Center. Each year Scheibe’s able and spirited conducting
has steadily transformed the former Florida Philharmonic
Chorus members into a tight crew of very competent singers.
With his departure for the University of Southern California
for fall 2008 the choral community loses a critical asset
to our cultural scene.
The
Master Chorale’s performance at Trinity started
with a commemoration to Jeffri Bantz, their late and highly
respected associate director, with a touching rendition
of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s (1756-91) Ave Verus
Corpus, K. 618. As the female chorus stood in the center
aisle of the nave the male singers responded on the right
in rounded counterpoint (without conductor) under the
handsome wooden barrel and mosaic ceiling.
To
lend a more profane side of Brahms the Boca Raton Philharmonic
Symphonia, composed of many former Florida Philharmonic
players, ended the first half with Variations on a theme
by Joseph Hayden for Orchestra in B flat major, op. 56a,
conducted by Matthew Ferrell, the interim associate conductor.
Its ‘Chorali St. Antoni’ main theme has a
bracing familiarity with light brass and winds followed
by eight variations and a finale. While a bit stiff with
the baton Ferrell managed to hold the piece together and
coaxed a journeyman’s performance. In the double
Vivace sections the segue was somewhat rough and the horns
had a bit of a ‘hunting’ blare. The languorous
Grazioso and Andante finale called for better definition
and contour.
After
intermission the audience was treated to one of the 19th
century’s masterful musical and spiritual experiences,
Brahms’ A German Requiem (1866). While Mozart was
steeped in the Catholic ‘mass’ tradition with
its strict liturgical structure, Brahms, the spiritual
‘son’ of Beethoven and Bach, followed a more
flexible Lutheran plan of biblical excerpts (Psalms, Isaiah,
Ecclesiastes, Revelation) melded to a rich, orchestral
intuition.
The
seven-section Requiem commences with these words from
Matthew: ‘Selig sind, die da Leid tagen, denn sie
sollen getröstet werden’ (Blessed are they
that mourn, for they shall have comfort). Instead of simply
mourning the dead, Brahms comforts the living, and the
music reflects this life-affirming choice in a succession
of swelling dynamics, gentle pianissimos, and triumphant
fugal passages.
Scheibe
drew an admirable arch of confidence and coherence in
the slow building pacing of the work. In the tricky and
shifting tone of the second movement ‘Denn alles
Fleisch es ist wie Gras’ (For all flesh is as grass’)
he consistently alternated between resignation and assertion
with a sure-footed use of crescendo. The interplay between
tutti and chorus tended to be more diffident in a work
that demands a certain bold resonance.
Baritone
Keith Spencer displayed fine enunciation in ‘Herr,
lehre doch mich’ (Lord, make me to know mine end)
but failed to completely round out the long, solo passage.
The fourth movement, the Requiem’s center, had lilting
beauty although the strings needed more texture. Soprano
Joyce Guyer’s vibrato in ‘Ihr habt nun Traurigkeit’
(And ye now therefore have sorrow) was solid in her high
B-flat but sometimes grating in tone. The sixth movement’s
famous line ‘Tod, wo ist dein Stachel’’
(Death, where is thy sting’) had sufficient bite
as baritone, orchestra and chorus converged in triumph.
Scheibe deftly lowered the overwhelming dynamics in ‘Selig
sind die Toten’ (Blessed are the Dead) and gracefully
drew out the hymnal praise of the gentler ending.
In
November the Master Chorale presents Gloria!Gloria!Gloria!
(Glorias by Rutter, Vivaldi and Poulenc) and in April
2008 they bring the pulsating rhythms and ribald lyrics
of Carmina Burana by Carl Orff. Choral music in South
Florida is definitely gaining momentum in its learning
curve!
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