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Apollo's Fire at First Congregational Church, November 13, 2014

CalPerformances presents Apollo's Fire
2014-11-13
First Congregational Church
2345 Channing Way, Berkeley, CA
8:00 PM, Thursday, November 13, 2014

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Today's Program

Claudio Monteverdi (1567-1643): Vespers for the Blessed Virgin (1610)

Set One

[7:50 PM, the band begins to take the stage. Tuning, practicing, and otherwise making a happy but chaotic noise.]
[8:05 PM lights down, brief announcements from Matías Tarnopolsky]

  1. [8:m PM] Versicle & Response: Deus in adjutorium
  2. [8:m PM] Antiphon: Læva ejus sub capite meo
  3. [8:m PM] Psalm 109: Dixit Dominus
  4. [8:m PM] Motet: Nigra sum, featuring Oliver Mercer
  5. [8:m PM] Antiphon: Nigra sum sed formosa
  6. [8:m PM] Psalm 112: Laudate pueri
  7. [8:m PM] Motet: Pulchra es, featuring Molly Quinn & Nell Snaidas
  8. [8:m PM] Antiphon: Pulchra es et decora
  9. [8:m PM] Psalm 121: Lætatus sum
  10. [8:m PM] Motet: Duo Seraphim, featuring Karim Sulayman, Oliver Mercer & Owen McIntosh
  11. [8:m PM] Antiphon: Iam hiems transit
  12. [8:m PM] Psalm 126: Nisi Dominus
    [set ends 8:58 PM]

Set Two

[9:13 PM lights down]

  1. [9:17 PM] Motet: Audi Coelum, featuring Karim Sulayman & Oliver Mercer
  2. [9:19 PM] Antiphon: Virgo prudentissima
  3. [9:29 PM] Psalm 147: Lauda, Jerusalem
  4. [9:30 PM] Sonata sopra Santa Maria, featuring Madeline Healey
  5. [9:35 PM] Hymn: Ave maris stella, featuring Kristen Dubenion-Smith & Jesse Blumberg
     
    Magnificat
  6. [9:43 PM] Antiphon: Sancta Maria succure miseris
  7. [9:52 PM] Magnificat anima mea
  8. [9:53 PM] Et exultavit
  9. [9:54 PM] Quia respexit humilitatem
  10. [9:56 PM] Quia fecit mihi magna
  11. [9:57 PM] Et misericordia
  12. [9:58 PM] Fecit potentiam
  13. [10:00 PM] Deposuit potentes
  14. [10:02 PM] Esurientes
  15. [10:04 PM] Suscepit Israel
  16. [10:05 PM] Sicut locutus est
  17. [10:06 PM] Gloria Patri
  18. [10:07 PM] Sicut erat in principio
    [set ends 10:10 PM; standing ovation; mutiple bows and curtain-less calls; no encore; all off by 10:14 PM]

Performers

Apollo's Fire

The Cleveland Baroque Orchestra

Apollo's Singers

Guest soloists

Notes

Wow, what an amazing, moving, powerful, uplifting experience! At the end I looked around and noticed more than one audience member crying with joy. Wow!

Forgive me for not beginning at the start, but I wanted to establish right up front that this show was one of the best I've seen all year; Apollo's Fire has now been inscribed as the latest entry on my “must see” list of performers.

After a few opening remarks from Matias Tarnopolsky (sp?), the show began with the sound of a processional drum from the church lobby as the majority of the group sat silently on stage. As the beat of the drum continued, about a dozen of the singers – the soloists? – marched slowly and solemnly up the aisle and took their places with the rest of the chorus. And so with that semi-staged theatrical flourish, the performance began!

As might be obvious from the setlist, the various motets were vehicles for spotlighting the talents of one or more soloists who embellished their singing roles by gesturing or walking or otherwise acting in a manner consonant with the lyrics of the song. While not as dramatic as a semi-staged work (such as a Handel oratorio), the acting seemed appropriate to conveying the meaning of the tunes without overstepping what boundaries might exist to differentiate this as a religious work rather than a secular one. Sitting up front, this kept me quite engaged!

Another thing that kept me engaged was trying to follow the singing (in Latin) via the tiny print in the program. Struggling at that task convinced me that it's probably time to get some half-readers (so I can make out the letters without squinting while still being able to look up and follow the action onstage). Sigh; the vicissitudes of age are slicing me with a thousand tiny cuts!

The task of following the progress of the piece was aided somewhat by the repetition of the minor doxology: Gloria patri et Filio… at the conclusion of each Psalm, with a final repetition at the conclusion of the Magnificat. Interestingly, Monteverdi seemed to me to have developed ever more complicated variations for that section, so that while each return was clearly recognizable, it was also grander and more ornate, finishing with the most amazing bit at the end, the emotional intensity of which is what I presume caught myself and many other audience members in a sort of shared auditory ecstasy. Way to go Claudio! And three cheers for Jeannette Sorrell at conjuring this performance from her merry band!

Look's like Amazon is offering a studio recording of this work from a few years ago (with different soloists) – and HDtracks has a 24-bit version available to download (albeit from another group) for even less. An embarrassment of riches! I think that one of those choices is going to be in my collection pretty darn soon!

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