GLORIA!
NAFA
Orchestra & Chorus
Victoria
Concert Hall
Tuesday
(19 April 2016 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 21 April 2016 with the title "A moving evening of Poulenc".
An all-French programme was the
culmination of an academic year's work for the School of Music at the Nanyang Academy
of Fine Arts. Conducted by British conductor Nicholas Cleobury, presently Head
of Opera at Brisbane 's Queensland
Conservatorium, there was a striking synergy and symmetry that united all three
works in the concert.
Beginning with Maurice Ravel's ballet Mother
Goose, the young orchestra crafted a very strong narrative thread through
its movements (each retelling a tale from Charles Perrault's collection) and
intervening intermezzos. The playing was sensitive and evocative, with
excellent solos from woodwinds, particularly oboe, flutes and piccolo which
conjured an imaginatively fabled atmosphere.
Strings were well disciplined and
homogeneous in texture. The opening of The Fairy's Garden was
beautifully played, and concertmaster Guo Xingchen's violin solos confident and
impressive. In the pentatonic paradise that was Laideronette, Empress of the
Pagodas, harp, celesta and assorted percussion helped paint an indelible
portrait of the Orient, filled with dizzying gamelan sonorities.
That was the vital link to the next work,
Francis Poulenc's popular Concerto for Two Pianos, where he used
keyboards to simulate the tintinnabuli and clangour of the gamelan orchestra.
Soloists Lena Ching and Nicholas Ong, both of the piano faculty, navigated
their tricky and intricate parts with razor-sharp reflexes and witty aplomb.
Its aromatic blend of orientalism,
neoclassicism (the slow movement was pure Mozartean charm) and popular
dancehall tunes wafted with the pungently intoxicating and hypnotic qualities
of incense, a true riot for the senses. There was even a curious episode for
two pianos and solo cello playing a melody in harmonics. Was this Poulenc's
salute to the Javanese spiked fiddle?
After the frolicsome finale which closed
with a brilliant show of pianistic hi-jinks, the second half comprised just
Poulenc's Gloria for soprano, choir and orchestra. One of the most
appealing and often-performed 20th century choral works, it revealed
diametrically opposite aspects of the composer – the sacred and profane, from
saint and sinner.
The opening Gloria In Excelsis Deo,
executed by excellent brass and percussion with righteous grandeur and pomp,
also had an air of flippancy. The 86-strong chorus, meticulously drilled by Lim
Yau, responded with corporate drollery, soon breaking out into an enthusiastic
and sincerely felt Laudamus Te which made the proceedings all the more
light and cheerful.
Cheerful would be an unusual adjective
for a sacred work, but Poulenc did not hide behind feigned piety and
supplication. Central to his exposition was Indonesian soprano Isyana
Sarasvati, NAFA alumnus and now a media sensation of sorts, whose sweet yet
unwavering delivery of Dominus Deus was an epitome of purity and
poignancy.
The chorus' unison proclamation of Qui
Sedes Ad Dexteram Patris was strong and fervent, setting into motion a
truly moving finale. How often does one hear a Miserere Nobis (Have
Mercy) sound this joyous? Sarasvati's sonorous Amen was a ringing
declaration from high, an affirmation of answered prayers to which both chorus
and orchestra concluded on a serene and sublime high.
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