'British Invasion' shows universality of music

By David Hawley, Special to the Pioneer Press
10/25/2009

   

 

VocalEssence promoted the appearance of choral-conducting star Simon Halsey as a "British Invasion," and the performance Saturday at the Basilica of Saint Mary in Minneapolis was that — of a sort. It was Halsey shaping the voices of local singers in a program of text-painted music by English composers.

The two centerpieces of the program included the American premiere of Julian Anderson's "Four American Choruses," commissioned about five years ago for performances by the City of Birmingham Symphony Chorus, which Halsey has led for the past 25 years. The other centerpiece was Michael Tippett's setting of five American spirituals from his World War II-era oratorio, "A Child of Our Time."

In some ways, you could call those two works a vision of America through British eyes, though the reality is more about the universality of music.

Anderson's work, for example, takes its texts from one of the volumes of gospel songs collected by Ira D. Sankey, a late 19th-century associate of evangelist Dwight L. Moody. But the music, which is mostly sensuous and shimmering, is entirely of Anderson's creation. The most intriguing section is the second song, "Beautiful Valley of Eden," which splits the singers into four groups and requires them to perform more or less independently, with specified entry cues holding the whole thing together. Surprisingly coherent, the section still has the quality of discovered chance music.

Tippett's choral arrangements of spirituals, on the other hand, would probably rankle those who dislike "artified" versions of music burnished in America's sad racial history. But the arrangements of familiar songs like "Deep River" and "Go Down Moses" were an effort by Tippett to find the modern equivalent of the Lutheran hymns that Bach used to anchor works like the St. Mark Passion. Taken out of that oratorio context, they sound a little odd — beautifully odd — to American ears.

As a whole, the performance demonstrated the peculiar chemistry that leading conductors always bring to a guest appearance. The VocalEssence choir and its smaller, professional 32-member Ensemble Singers performed with pleasing delicacy and detail and with a richness of vocal balance. In the end, the chorus applauded its conductor. Clearly, Halsey is inspiring to musicians.

The concert was bookended by two favorites of English choral literature — C. Hubert H. Parry's "Songs of Farewell," which was some of the last and greatest music Parry wrote shortly after the turn of the 20th century; and Charles V. Stanford's "Three Latin Motets," which still hold a central place among Anglican compositions.

If not a British invasion, the concert was certainly a British infusion.