Chorus's Handel is Superb
MUSIC REVIEW
By Richard Dyer, Globe Staff | May 17, 2004
CAMBRIDGE -- Scott Allen Jarrett went into the Back Bay Chorale's preparations
for its 30th anniversary concert as a guest conductor and emerged as the
organization's choice for its fifth music director.
Jarrett is only 28, and he has served as assistant to Ann Howard Jones
at Boston University. He has sung with the Boston Bach Ensemble and the
Schola Cantorum of Boston, and serves as music director of the Brookline
Chorus and as director of choral music at the Walnut Hill School. He succeeded
Julian Wachner as organist and choirmaster at Marsh Chapel at Boston University,
and he has helped prepare concerts for prominent local choruses, including
the Back Bay Chorale.
Saturday night's performance of Handel's oratorio "Judas Maccabaeus" was
a great success, and Jarrett established himself as the most promising
young figure to emerge on the local choral scene since Wachner. Jarrett,
who hails from Virginia, has a pleasantly courtly platform manner; he seemed
to know every word and note of Handel's 2 1/2 hour score; he understands
Handel's gestures and structures. The chorus sounded terrific, well balanced,
disciplined, in tune, and responsive to text. If Jarrett was intimidated
by the expert and vastly experienced team of soloists and the orchestra
of Emmanuel Music, he didn't show it; in a very unassuming way he was clearly
in charge.
"Judas Maccabaeus," written in a burst of nationalistic fervor
after the rout of Bonnie Prince Charlie, has always been one of the composer's
greatest hits. It is not one of his more profound scores; there is no soul-searching
and very little drama. It is mostly flag-waving patriotism, but the music
is stirring. There are some exciting touches of orchestral color -- trumpets
in the tenor aria, horns in the chorus, but perhaps the most beautiful
section of the score is the depiction of the Feast of Lights, or Hanukkah.
Soprano Kendra Colton and mezzo-soprano Pamela Dellal had the roles of
commentators; both sang with lovely tone and high technical accomplishment.
Frank Kelley resourcefully adapted his light tenor to the heroic demands
of the title role with vigorous, even explosive accents; musical intelligence
carried him over the rough spots. Bass Mark Andrew Cleveland and mezzo-soprano
Lynn Torgove were eloquent in smaller roles, and Kathryn Low and James
C. Liu stepped out of the chorus for effective solos. The superb continuo
team was Michael Beattie (organ and harpsichord) and Shannon Snapp (cello);
Jeffrey Work was elegant in the trumpet solo. But this was Jarrett's night
-- he's tasteful and talented, someone to keep our eyes and ears on.
This story ran on page F6 of the Boston Globe on 5/17/04.
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