Originally posted by Lordgeous
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Coronation Music in the Morning Concert
Three Bach pieces
Virtuosic and thrilling performances by Sir John Eliot Gardiner and his Baroque forces.
John and Co. were majestic in Bruckner’s vivid motet ‘Ecce Sacerdos Magnus’.
Judith Weir ‘Brighter Visions Shine Afar’:
A very short, busy overture that wended its unremarkable way in a cheerful fashion. Very much an occasional piece, a chip off the old block served in a sauce blended by Michael Torke.
Pappano and his Coronation Overture piloted Holst’s ‘Jupiter’ with verve and chirpy rhythms and the big tune was played in a robust, business-like fashion.
Karl Jenkins trivial ‘Crossing the Stone’ featured the Royal Harpist, Alis Huws, accompanied by strings. It was strophic arrangement of a Welsh Song and its soupy scoring was grey & unimaginative.
Sarah Class is a young composer and artist. Her song ‘Sacred Fire’ was commissioned by the King for his Coronation and was inspired by the singer, Pretty Yende. The piece aspired to recreate the beauty of Dvorak’s ‘Song of the Moon’. Pretty Yende sang with great enunciation, commitment and an understanding of the arc of its ‘anthemic’ tune. Sarah Class has yet to find her own voice.
Why did William Walton’s ‘Crown Imperial’ March need a helping hand from John Rutter? I liked Pappano’s bustling, brisk pace, jaunty rhythms and swaggering lines.
RVW’s Fantasia on Greensleeves may owe much to a second Ralph (Greaves). He was a pupil of the Great Man and extracted and arranged the fantasia from Ralph’s Opera ‘Sir John in Love’. Whatever, the short piece never outstays its welcome, ‘works’, and is a popular example of the British pastoral / cowpat musical genre. Pappano conducted it with courtly decorum but without self-indulgence.
Shirley Thompson, of Jamaican descent, Nigel Hess, the great nephew of Dame Myra, and Roderick Williams, the wonderful Welsh / Jamaican baritone combined to produce a Coronation Triptych, three panels exploring ‘Be Thou My Vision’ i.e. the Irish folksong ‘Slane’. Its middle movement owed a debt to Joseph Canteloube’s orchestrated Auvergne folksongs. The finale was brash and cheap.
Iain Farringdon’s virtuosic organ piece ‘Voices of the World’ continued the brash mood, initially tricked out with Jazz elements but then lapsing into a quodlibet of snatches from a Music Halls of the World. I found it banal.
Patrick Doyle Overture King Charles III’s Coronation March for Orchestra - shades of Willy Walton? Obvious and weak progressions plus a trio of overworked scraps rather than a fully-fledged tune. I sensed that Patrick Doyle was good at musical mimicry.
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