Apollo’s
Fire Falters
by Emma Lundgren
Finney
Chapel was practically filled last Saturday for the final concert
of this season’s Artist Recital Series. The opening chords
of Mozart’s Magic Flute Overture were a joyous introduction
for his Requiem which served as the primary work of the evening.
After the last couple of more or less romantically inspired Artist
Recital concerts, it was refreshing to hear Apollo’s Fire’s
baroque interpretation as the Overture’s Allegro took shape.
The ensemble performed on period instruments from the 17th and 18th
centuries and played in a finely articulated style. At first they
seemed to succeed in bringing out the diverse flow of flourishing
chords common in Baroque music. But later the music sounded like
a monotonous stream of chords, especially during Mozart’s Piano
concerto in D minor, with John Gibbons on the pianoforte. Gibbons
performed as Mozart would have, playing the bass line and improvising
chords above it during the orchestral tuttis where no piano part
is indicated.
But because the dynamics in a pianoforte are several levels lower
than on an ordinary grand piano, it was hard to hear Gibbons’
solo parts. As a result, the dynamics of his playing and the nuances
of his phrasing were lost.
After this fine but dreary first half of the program, the orchestra
perfomed Mozart’s epic, the Requiem. The composer never finished
the work, which ends with the Lacrimosa section. Music Director
Jeannette Sorell, though, chose a written completion by Apollo’s
Fire cellist and composer René Schiffer.
A sacred psalm-tone lingers in the opening of the Introitus and
suggests the anguish of Mozart’s music. The choir matches the
orchestra fairly well in the major fugue of the Kyrie. The soloists
introduced in the Tuba mirum movement gave lackluster performances
with an especially unacceptable performance being given by the soprano
epitomized by her bad intonation in the trombone section. While
the other singers at least made a fair attempt to match the 17th
century style, Elizabeth Weigle’s solos stood out as exceptionally
tasteless interpretations.
Overall, the performance suffered from a lack of attention to detail.
The members of Apollo’s Fire, though competent in their interpretation
of Mozart’s religious text, failed to do much more then play
in tune. The depth of Mozart’s plea for mercy in his Requiem
failed to come across without the nuances of a more historically-focused
performance.
|