An Enthralling
side-by-side with the Pros
In rehearsal - photo Canton Repository/Scott Heckel |
By
Tom Wachunas
“Education in music is most sovereign
because more than anything else, rhythm and harmony find their way to the
innermost soul and take the strongest hold upon it.” - Plato
Unlike some other
MasterWorks concerts by the Canton Symphony Orchestra (CSO), there was no
single, dominant musical theme or concept
uniting the selections on its February 16 program. There certainly was,
however, a unifying energy working from the podium - CSO Assistant Conductor Matthew
Jenkins Jaroszewicz.
His zestful
attentiveness to the most subtle details of orchestral tone, texture, and tempo
was riveting throughout the entire evening, beginning with a vivacious
rendering of The Merry Wives of Windsor:
Overture, by German composer Otto Nicolai. Much of the overture’s melodic
content was taken from Act III of Nicolai’s 1849 opera based on the Shakespeare
comedy, Falstaff. Merriment indeed,
the orchestra was a rollicking embodiment of magic and mischief in a forest at
moonrise, fully capturing the elfin sparkle, galloping pace, and intricate
harmonic twists of the music.
For the
following two works – Finlandia, by
Jean Sibelius, and Crown Imperial
(Coronation March), by William Walton - the orchestra was joined by 34
members of the Canton Youth Symphony Advanced Orchestra (CYSAO), which
Jaroszewicz has directed since 2017. This remarkably gifted group is comprised
primarily of high school students from six counties, including Stark County.
Throughout the brilliant lyricism and dramatic solemnity of Finlandia, and into the swelling
grandiosity of Crown Imperial, both
ensembles were bright, alert, and seamlessly blended to put forth a magnificent
sonority. Excellence side-by-side with excellence. It was highly gratifying to see and hear
Jaroszewicz’s passionate commitment to the CYSAO. These young artists are
compelling evidence that the future of classical music, at least in these
parts, is in good hands.
Interestingly, after all the aural power and
pomp articulated by those two works, the evening concluded with a decidedly
more introspective, though no less inspiring work. In the CSO’s performance of
Beethoven’s Symphony No. 6, the “Pastorale,”
the ensemble played as if immersed in an aura of contemplation, or singing
a hymn of praise. Even in the brief thunderstorm sequence, there was the
palpable sensation of serene reverence for the rhythms and textures of nature. Beethoven
called his symphony “…an expression of feelings rather than a painting in
sound.” Accordingly, the masterful performance here was imbued with a gentle
urgency as conductor and players united in a mutual probing of the music’s
emotional identity. Not melodrama, but beautifully mellow.
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