Great Composer, Great Performance

Georg Philipp Telemann is too often slighted in concerts of German Baroque music.  Christine Gevert’s Crescendo musicians and singers set out last weekend to show what a great, and greatly varied composer he was.  

   They succeeded brilliantly in two nearly sold out concerts in Great Barrington, MA, and here in Lime Rock.

   What Gevert has accomplished with her dedicated band of choristers and orchestra players in fewer than four years is amazing.  The orchestra, many of the musicians playing period instruments, and the choir are semi-professional in sound, totally professional in energy, dedication and attention.  They give Gevert what she asks for and often more.

   The Telemann program was cleverly chosen to show the composer’s equal strengths: instrumental, religious and secular.  

   A crisp performance of a concerto in E major — unusual because of its use of solo transverse flute and recorder, quite rare in baroque music — opened the concert. The period instruments sounded exactly right in Lime Rock’s Trinity Church.

    Next came a cantata based on Psalm 96, famous for having inspired countless composers, which begins “Sing unto the Lord a new song.â€�  Chorus, orchestra and soloists alternated in the nine sections.

The soloists were excellent, especially counter tenor Martin Near with his wonderful coloratura; rich baritone John Arthur Miller, and booming bass Steven Fasano.  Soprano Julianne Baird was indisposed, and her parts were distributed among the other soloists.

  The final work, “Kapitansmusik 1730,â€� was written to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Hamburg citizen militia.  This is festive music including an oratorio featuring allegorical characters — joy, truth, sadness, gratitude. The mayor and captains of the militia are praised. The sections often are based on folk and court dance forms and rhythms. And the oratorio in Crescendo’s version begins and ends with a joyful serenade that includes a marching snare drummer. 

   Before the concert, Salisbury’s Juliet Mattila spoke about Telemann, his music and his place among Baroque composers.  She also provided the splendid English translation of  Kapitansmusik.

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