Alchemy Lives in The Canton Symphony Orchestra
By Tom Wachunas
Alchemy: (from Miriam-Webster Dictionary)
1 : a medieval
chemical science and speculative philosophy aiming to achieve the transmutation
of the base metals into gold, the discovery of a universal cure for disease,
and the discovery of a means of indefinitely prolonging life
2 : a power or
process that changes or transforms something in a mysterious or impressive way
3 : an inexplicable
or mysterious transmuting
After hearing the very eclectic program
offered by the Canton Symphony Orchestra at Umstattdt Performing Arts Hall on
October 27, I was finally convinced of something I had suspected on numerous
previous occasions: Every member of this ensemble, including Maestro Gerhardt
Zimmermann, is an alchemist. What else could explain the transmutation of the
instruments they play and the scores they read into vessels of such profound
spirituality? Alchemy.
This uncanny
phenomenon was wondrously evident in the evening’s first selection, Cantos in Memory of Benjamin Britten, composed
for string orchestra by Arvo Pärt in
1977 as a memorial to the leading British composer of the mid-20th
century who died in 1976. Pärt was greatly moved by what he called the “unusual
purity” of Britten’s music.
This work is so stunning in its hypnotic
simplicity that the players themselves seemed mesmerized as they articulated an
utterly ethereal reality. At the beginning, a solitary tubular bell rang out
three times, followed by the whispered entry of very high violins that
introduced the haunting melodic idea. Like a rolling mist, that single motif
descended progressively into lower registers from violins to violas, then to
cellos, then to the basses, and all against the ceaseless tolling of the bell.
Most intriguing is how gradually through time the tempo slowed while the volume
of sound increased to a roar until, at its loudest point, it suddenly stopped.
We were left with just the sound of one more bell softly ringing and fading
away into breathtaking, mystical quiet. It was silence with a pulse - an
achingly poignant arrival at reverential, even tearful introspection.
That was the calm
before the stormy opening of the next work on the program, Benjamin Britten’s Sinfonia Da Requiem, composed in 1940. Britten,
an avowed pacifist, was commissioned by the Japanese government (at that time
engaged in war with China) to write a work commemorating 2,600 years of Japan’s
ruling Mikado dynasty. Perhaps the Japanese didn’t fully comprehend the
implications of the work when they initially approved the title. After it was
played through during a rehearsal in Tokyo, the score was rejected. The angry Japanese
foreign ministry found the work’s Christian liturgical references disturbing
and otherwise culturally inappropriate. The work has no references to the
Japanese dynastic anniversary, and the titles of its three movements have no
liturgical specificity as such, but rather speak to the intense emotional
trajectory of the work – Britten’s feelings about war.
It is a trajectory
replete with alternately thunderous, writhing, and lush melodies voiced in
layers by every section of the orchestra, all executed here with electrifying
aplomb. The first movement, “Lacrymosa,” began with the startling ferocity of timpani
blows, sounding like cannon fire, followed by a slow lament from the brooding
cellos. The frenzied second movement, “Dies Irae,” ranks among Britten’s
greatest feats of orchestral writing. With remarkable fervor, the orchestra
conjured the full outbreak of war, symbolized by piercing flutes, snarling
rapid-fire triplet figures from the trumpets, and explosive syncopations from
the brass. In the third movement, “Requiem Aeternam,” all that grim tumult was
left behind to impart a spirit of peace that concluded with a sustained,
consoling note from the clarinet.
For the next two
program selections, the world-class artistry of the CSO was all the more
augmented by guest soloist Mark Kosower, principal cellist of The Cleveland
Orchestra. His performance here of Victor Herbert’s Cello Concert No.2 was a
transcendent musical magnet, riveting in how it gripped and drew us progressively
deeper into the work’s dramatic mood shifts. From the plaintive opening melody
of the first movement, seeming to leap from the churning textures crisply described
by the ensemble, then into the wistful, heartrending melodic journey of the
second movement, and throughout the lyrical aggressiveness of the final movement
with all its daunting passages of rapid sixteenth notes, Kosower’s mellow
tonality was a constant, clearly sensual presence, and always in perfect aural
balance with the ensemble.
The soloist’s virtuosity
was equally compelling throughout Dvořák’s Rondo for Cello and Orchestra.
Kosower is an artist whose prowess rests not only in his dazzling, unfaltering
technical precision, but more importantly, in giving palpable form to
unmitigated passion. He transforms the cello into a sublimely emotive force.
Speaking of emotive
forces, the evening ended with a titillating rendition of George Enescu’s
Romanian Rhapsody No.1, composed in 1901. Rhapsodic indeed, this vivacious
medley of Romanian- flavored folk songs and dances was delivered with
infectious abandon. While medieval alchemists failed in their attempts to
concoct a universal potion to cure all disease, the CSO alchemists were
eminently successful in brewing up a delicious elixir of pure jubilation.
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