Nota Bene presents;
WONDER AND LIGHTÂ (How to get ahead of yourself while the light still shines)
Nota Bene Choir / Heather Easting (organ)
Shawn Michael Condon (music director)
BENJAMIN BRITTEN â Rejoice in the Lamb (Festival Cantata)
words by Christopher Smart
Jenny Gould (soprano), Viriginia Earle (alto), Patrick Geddes (tenor) Peter Barber (bass)
Nota Bene Choir
Heather Easting (organ)
MORTON LAURIDSEN â Lux Aeterna
Nota Bene Choir
Heather Easting (organ)
JOONAS KOKKONEN  – Lux Aeterna (Organ Solo)
Heather Easting (organ)
ERIC WHITACRE â Lux Aurumque (translated by Edward Esch)
Nota Bene Choir
RIHARDS DUBRA â Stetit Angelus
Nota Bene Choir
GRAHAM PARSONSÂ (words by Jenny Bornholdt)
Instructions For How to Get Ahead of Yourself While the Light Still Shines
Nota Bene Choir
Also, music by GRAHAM KEITCH, KATE RUSBY and ANDREW STEFFENS
St Mary of the Angels Church,
Boulcott St., Wellington
Sunday, 20th September, 2020
Surely the Church of St.Mary of the Angels in Wellingtonâs Boulcott St. is one of the cityâs most spectacularly beautiful places in which one can make music, in addition to its acoustics being particularly suited to certain kinds of music for the human voice. In terms of sheer amplitude of sound the venue is surpassed by Wellingtonâs Cathedral of St.Paul, but in some music itâs at the expense of clarity at the larger church â here one seems to get the best of both worlds, along with an impressive visual manifestation of aspects of divine worship, irrespective of oneâs own spiritual beliefs!
Nota Beneâs âWonder and Lightâ programme, under the direction of guest conductor Shawn Michel Condon (music director of the Bach Choir of Wellington), seemed tailor-made for such an environment, being âsupportedâ at almost every juncture of the presentation, the exceptions being items where the English-language texts needed more ambient clarity for their particular points to be conveyed âmeaning-wiseâ. The concert organisers went as far as providing a screen at the front on which were projected Latin texts and translations where applicable, but it was the English-text items that could have done with âhelpâ in this area â particularly those of the works by Britten and Graham Parsons. Brittenâs âRejoice in the Lambâ is sufficiently well-known for the idiosyncratic texts of poet Christopher Smart to be gleaned more-or-less satisfactorily without the help of surtitiles, but I was at a loss to make sense of a good deal of poet Jenny Bornholdtâs text for the Graham Parsons work, despite my deriving a good deal of pleasure from its title alone!
This caveat apart, I derived a good deal of pleasure from the programme, being particularly âtakenâ by the power and beauty of Morton Lauridsenâs âLux Aeternaâ which occupied most of the first half. Performed entirely in the choir-loft at the churchâs rear, the sounds seemed to indeed come from heaven, encouraging one to suspend oneâs âmortal coilâ for the duration and abandon oneâs senses to the musicâs âsoaringâ quality and be suitably transported by it all â in fact, I didnât even notice the aforementioned screen with its projected Latin words and translations until the concertâs opening item, English composer Graham Keitchâs brief but beautiful âO lux beatissimaâ , had nearly run its course!
Keitchâs work straightaway set the ambient tone for the concert, the opening bright and welcoming, and building to a glorious expansion of sound at the climax, Heather Eastingâs brilliant organ-playing adding to the panoply of sound â I was reminded of comedian Michael Flandersâ explanation concerning his and pianist Donald Swannâs very âassertiveâ opening number in the pairâs âAt the Drop of A Hatâ revue presentation, Flanders drolly remarking that the song âhelps us get the pitch of the hall!â. Morton Lauridsenâs more extended âLux Aeternaâ which followed began less assertively with a quiet organ solo, the figurations gradually opening up the vistas for the voices, a sound characterised by resonance and warmth, bringing comfort via the gentle tones of the âRequiemâ, and then resounding splendidly for âExaudi Orationam Meamâ (Hear my prayer), before coming back to earth.
The âMiserereâ of the next section alternated some beautifully âfloatedâ phrases in tandem with the organ, enlivening the discourse with the occasional angular note or phrase. The âO nata luxâ (O born of light) section began with the organ, then some tender harmonies from the choir, rising in fervour at âDignare clemens supplicumâ, and even more so at âNos membra confer efficiâ (We may become part). Joyous, celebratory strains filled the ambiences with âVeni Sanctus Spiritusâ, a sequence which featured the voices repeatedly ascending, flinging their voices aloft in exultation. The âAgnus Deiâ brought a more pensive mood became more pensive, Â with each of the three supplications adding to the intensities of the previous one, the third and last adding the word âsempiternamâ to the phrase, which prompted some extended upward-thrusting expressions of redemptive desire. With the return to the words of the opening, âRequiem aeternamâ, and âLux Aeternaâ the womenâs voices soared over the menâs, leading to the pieceâs final fervent âAlleluiasâ, introduced by the organ, but brought to fruition by the choir in splendid fashion, after which a quiet âAmenâ sequence brought the music to a close.
Benjamin Brittenâs piquantly delightful cantata âRejoice in the Lambâ began the concertâs second half, the singers remaining in the choir loft for the workâs performance, which surprised me, as I thought the texts, written by sixteenth-century poet Christopher Smart, would require the singers to be closer to their audience for the words to properly âtellâ. As it turned out, the diction and projection of all the singers, both solo and in ensemble, enabled more of the text to be heard and understood than I expected it would, apart from the most rapidly-delivered passages. Still, I thought it a pity that the words werenât projected on the screen as were those of the Lauridsen âLux Aeternaâ.
The lovely opening, like a dayâs awakening, was a kind of morning prayer, intoned by the menâs voices and accompanied with adroit timing and great whimsicality on the part of organist, Heather Easting. And while the more forthright choral passage âLet Nimrod the Mighty Hunterâ was noted more for its thrust and weight than its clarity, the musicâs dancing energies made a joyful, almost abandoned impression â and the succeeding âAlleluiasâ were so very beautiful and moving. The first vocal solo, that depicting the poetâs cat, Jeffrey, was delivered with beautiful vocal tones by soprano Jenny Gould and great dancing charm from the organ, even though the words from a distance were well-nigh unintelligible. Just as charming in a more forthright manner was the Mouse, sung by Virginia Earle with some spirit, the creatureâs âpersonal valourâ defying the catâs murderous intentions! A tenor solo elucidated the âgreat blessingsâ of flowers, quiet and dignified, but true toned, if showing a little strain in places; and supported sonorously by the organâs ability to âcolourâ its notes.
Words and music took a sudden detour into darkness for the next section, the poetâs equating his sufferings with those of his âSaviourâ, and describing his own fears and terrors, the choir and organist relishing the composerâs use of sharp, angular contrasts and chiaroscuro-like settings of light against darkness. The mood gradually lightene as the last soloist, bass Peter Barber proclaimed God in all things, putting across the words with increasing elan and conviction, and succeeding in rousing voices and organ to a dancing celebration of Godâs creation in rhyme and rhythm. At this point the choir, by way of a series of hushed, absolutely delicious chordings, registered that, the day being almost done, serenity and contentment were at hand â the Alleluias of the workâs first part returned, bringing with them a lump-in-the-throat-inducing feeling of empathy with and for the poet, a disturbed but intermittently happy soul.
An organ solo by Joons Kokkonen, almost epilogue-like in relation to the Britten work, built like a great âfloweringâ from its muted beginnings, strangely echoing the cries of âSilly fellow!â in the Britten, but with each step-like sequence, moving to a higher realm of radiance, the bass notes near the end taking on an almost Fafner-like aspect of menace and magnificence! The climax almost combatatively âclusteredâ the notes before the music eased into a resolution, withdrawing to a distant, muted standpoint of serene stasis â beautiful!
From the Kokkonen workâs relative severity we were taken to what appeared from its title to be a form of profound drollery, in the form of a work by Palmerston North composer Graham Parsons, âInstructions for How to Get Ahead of Yourself While the Light Still Shinesâ, the words by poet Jenny Bornholdt, many of which, alas, the ample acoustic annoyingly blurred (with no help forthcoming from the screen). Tracking down the poemâs words later made me regret all the more that the performance couldnât under such circumstances elucidate them more clearly â all delightfully childlike and sagacious at one and the same time! It seemed unfair that the Latin texts of the eveningâs performances were invariably supported by âthe word added to fleshâ, whereas the English-text works were left to keep themselves afloat as best they could without any such helpâŚ..thus it was that the Eric Whitacre work âLux Aurumqueâ which followed had the words and their translations on display, readily conveying a directness of focus for the piece in a certain way, aside from the mere visceral effect on the listener of voices beautifully teasing out the sound textures, creating luminous abstractions that could be relished as such on their own.
The remainder of the programme was âlighterâ fare, though every item got the sort of treatment whose sounds brought out the essential character of the music â a traditional Finnish song, âKaipaavaâ, for example (one comparing the beloved to fine grass, while the âselfâ remains as âlowly as the earthâ) had the altos beginning with the songâs minor-key melody beneath a descant from the sopranos, the men joining in the third verse, and a soprano solo adding to the colour and folksiness of the presentation. Rihards Dubraâs work âStetit Angelusâ (An angel stood near the sanctuary of the Temple) was actually more substantial than its companions, opening with a remarkably vibrant oscillating chord from the women, over the top of the menâs deeper tones, the effect one of ecstatic swaying figures â the whole was bound together in a hymn-like chant, the women holding a single line and the men interlacing its strands â a magical evocation. âUnderneath the Starsâ was a song by Kate Rusby, for SATB featuring a soprano solo with an echoed accompaniment, while the concertâs final item was âSpells of Herrickâ by Andrew Steffens, accompanied on the piano by Heather Easting, the first part an âIncantationâ, beautifully harmonised by menâs voices at the beginning (the words a mystery!), and the second, more assertive section âCharmsâ expressed an effect suggested by the eponymous title!
Altogether a feast for the senses, a concert well-named in its amalgam of mystery and illumination.