A
somber 'War Requiem' at PAC
by
Mary Schiller
Special to The Tribune
When Thomas Davies stepped up to the Performing Arts
Center podium Saturday evening to lead a performance of Benjamin Britten's
"War Requiem," he ran into a slight snag. The music stand was
empty.
"I don't have the piece memorized,"
the conductor explained with a smile to the audience of more than 600.
Understanding laughter rippled through the room, and when he returned
to the stage, score in hand, he received a standing ovation from the musicians
under his baton: soloists Cynthia Clayton, Jonathan Mack and Hector Vasquez;
the Cuesta Master Chorale; the Central Coast Children's Choir, Poly-Phonics;
and nearly 70 instrumentalists.
In an evening of dark atonal music that
underscores the futility of war, it was the one and only lighthearted
moment, but it was not to be the only standing ovation.
The origin of "War Requiem" dates
to 1940, when German bombs destroyed the 14th-century Cathedral Church
of St. Michael in Coventry, England. For two decades, the people of Coventry
worked to build a new cathedral. Britten (1913-1976) was commissioned
to compose a work commemorating the new church's consecration in 1962,
and "War Requiem" premiered that year.
Blending text from the Latin Mass with poetry
by World War I poet Wilfred Owen, "War Requiem" demands that
its performers sustain a mood of deep sorrow, broken only by the promise
of resurrection provided by the Latin text. From the opening ominous chord
until the final "Amen," the performers did not disappoint. All
navigated Britten's atonal landscape with confidence, exploiting every
dissonance to its fullest emotional advantage.
Soprano Cynthia Clayton gave resonant, beautiful
voice to the Latin passages, projecting contrition, grief and salvation
when each was called for.
Portraying both the poet Owens and a British
soldier, tenor Jonathan Mack made the words live, his voice reflecting
anger and despair mixed with a distant hope for peace. Baritone Hector
Vasquez had a particularly moving moment at the end of "War Requiem"
as a German soldier already killed, pleading for peace at least in death.
In the one minor distraction of the evening,
the Children's Choir's performance at first appeared to be recorded; their
voices emanated from speakers suspended above the stage. The audience
was, indeed, surprised to see them walk on-stage for a bow. It would have
been nice to have them sing on-stage, as the speakers made their clear,
pure voices sound somewhat tinny.
More than a backdrop for the soloists, the
choirs and instrumentalists served as the driving undercurrent that made
this performance of "War Requiem" deserving of the standing
ovation it received. Together, all of these musicians - singers and instrumentalists
alike - created one voice that, in these violent times, bravely delivered
Britten's anti-war message.
Printed in The Tribune,
Tuesday, May 21, 2002 |