concert review
Jun. 1st, 2014 11:15 amB. and I meandered down to the Santa Clara Mission for a concert by the Symphony Silicon Valley Chorale (with
vgqn in it). This was just the chorale, not SSV itself, though the accompanying pick-up orchestra had a lot of SSV members in it; just don't hold the group to the same standards overall. The conductor was Barbara Day Turner, whose military precision is perhaps better suited to short choruses than longer, more elaborate pieces.
The theme of the concert was "From the Met to Broadway," which was slightly misleading. The first half did feature choruses from a selection of standard repertory operas, of which the Chorus of the Hebrew Slaves from Verdi's Nabucco was the finest in letting the full-bodied sound of the choir, well-balanced between the sections, out above the orchestra. A choral reprise of the final lines of Puccini's "Nessun dorma" (solo by Christopher Bengochea, shorter-breathed than Pavarotti but adequately impassoned) was likewise fine, and made good punctuation to end the half.
Of the six vocal numbers performed in the "Broadway" half, only one actually premiered on Broadway - "To Life" from Fiddler on the Roof. One was from Les Miz (Paris by way of London), three were from movies, and one was from some home-grown musical about John Muir. This song, "Climb the Mountains", featured a surging melody that kept sounding as if it were about to turn into "Climb Ev'ry Mountain."
"To Life" came out energetic and fun, with a clever reappearance by Bengochea in the church's high pulpit as the Russian who interrupts the festivities, as did "It's a Grand Night for Singing" from State Fair, Rodgers and Hammerstein's movie musical, and you-can-guess-what from Les Miz was all right, though it could have used more oomph. The problem came with the two songs from Disney Renaissance movies, and the problem was with the orchestration, which was too strong and blaring. "Be Our Guest" from Beauty and the Beast was blown up to twice life size, which wasn't good for what should be a crackerjack fast-humor number, and if there was a song buried under the noise which marked "Circle of Life" from The Lion King, I couldn't make it out. It's not much of a song at the best of times.
B. always wants more singing, and this time I agree. I'd have liked to hear more of the chorus, since it's good when it's allowed to be heard. I wish the concert had been a bit longer, and with more singing and fewer instrumental pieces. The Intermezzo from Cavalleria rusticana was not the orchestra's finest moment, and the Grand March from Aida arranged for a church organ was just weird.
The theme of the concert was "From the Met to Broadway," which was slightly misleading. The first half did feature choruses from a selection of standard repertory operas, of which the Chorus of the Hebrew Slaves from Verdi's Nabucco was the finest in letting the full-bodied sound of the choir, well-balanced between the sections, out above the orchestra. A choral reprise of the final lines of Puccini's "Nessun dorma" (solo by Christopher Bengochea, shorter-breathed than Pavarotti but adequately impassoned) was likewise fine, and made good punctuation to end the half.
Of the six vocal numbers performed in the "Broadway" half, only one actually premiered on Broadway - "To Life" from Fiddler on the Roof. One was from Les Miz (Paris by way of London), three were from movies, and one was from some home-grown musical about John Muir. This song, "Climb the Mountains", featured a surging melody that kept sounding as if it were about to turn into "Climb Ev'ry Mountain."
"To Life" came out energetic and fun, with a clever reappearance by Bengochea in the church's high pulpit as the Russian who interrupts the festivities, as did "It's a Grand Night for Singing" from State Fair, Rodgers and Hammerstein's movie musical, and you-can-guess-what from Les Miz was all right, though it could have used more oomph. The problem came with the two songs from Disney Renaissance movies, and the problem was with the orchestration, which was too strong and blaring. "Be Our Guest" from Beauty and the Beast was blown up to twice life size, which wasn't good for what should be a crackerjack fast-humor number, and if there was a song buried under the noise which marked "Circle of Life" from The Lion King, I couldn't make it out. It's not much of a song at the best of times.
B. always wants more singing, and this time I agree. I'd have liked to hear more of the chorus, since it's good when it's allowed to be heard. I wish the concert had been a bit longer, and with more singing and fewer instrumental pieces. The Intermezzo from Cavalleria rusticana was not the orchestra's finest moment, and the Grand March from Aida arranged for a church organ was just weird.