Classical Music Buzz > The Australian Chamber Orchestra... > Bach and Beyond Review: Macarthu...
Although we are so often saturated with Bach in the aftermath of Easter, it is a great joy to bask in a musical offering this beautifully constructed.

In one of their more intriguing concert programm in recent memory, the Australian Chamber Orchestra under Richard Tognetti enrich and juxtapose their selection of Bach sacred vocal works with 20th century compositions laid at the altar of the master.

These were structured as an imaginary conversation between old and new expressions of spirituality through music, boldly interspersing movements of Bach’s Missa Brevis with pieces of striking contrast.

The densely complex G minor Gloria dissolves into the transcendent stillness of Arvo Part’s Summa in the same key, the latter played with the luminous calm so captivating in the Estonian composer’s style.

British composer Diana Burrell surely ought to be silenced in a conversation presided over by Bach. The prelude and fugue structure of Das Meer (The Sea) was lost in an indistinct mass of sound, while her gestural, aggressive string writing sounded little more than an oft-exploited bag of tricks.

Schoenbergs lush Litany, arranged for soprano and string orchestra, revealed Sara Macliver to be hair-raisingly good in expressionist repertoire, where her signature sparkling tone, so suited to early music, took on darker hues and even greater dramatic intensity.

As part of the concert’s vocal quartet, Macliver soared over the ACO in the compelling cantus firmus movement of the early cantata Wo gehest du hin?

The intimacy of Bach’s choral music performed with one singer per part (as some musicological research suggests is the approach Bach may have taken) provides an achingly beautiful counterpoint to the ACO’s intonation, playing as pristinely as if they were one instrument per part.

I always enjoy hearing Fiona Campbell and Sara Macliver together in Pinchgut Opera productions; here Campbell’s precision, flexibility and elegance shines throughout the cantata’s alto aria, in which singer and players laugh together in buoyant semiquaver passages. Visiting English tenor and baritone Andrew Staples and Matthew Brook complete a well-balanced ensemble.

This laughter lightened the largely somber sacred tone of the program, as did the Shostakovich Polka, the ACO’s pizzicato spring-loaded with wickedly sharp bite.

Melissa Lesnie | Macarthur Chronicle | 21 Apr 2010
3 years ago |
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