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Choral and Vocal
MASTERFUL GOOD FRIDAY CONCERT
by Terry McNeill
Friday, March 29, 2013
 Good Friday concerts are always spiritual but often can be monotonous and overly long. Cantiamo and the St. Cecelia Choir’s exceptional program March 29 in Santa Rosa’s packed Church of the Incarnation was anything but mundane, and perhaps too short.
Conductor Carol Menke fashioned a balanced eve...
Choral and Vocal
JAN. 13 OCCIDENTAL AND GUERNEVILLE PROGRAMS OPEN RIVER CONCERT SEASON
by Terry McNeill
Sunday, January 13, 2013
 Russian River’s winter concert season began Jan. 13 with two events at nearly the same location and time, both programs packed with abundant vocal qualities.
Sonia Tubridy’s River Choir performed their annual Winterfest concert in the Guerneville Community Church before 30 ardent listeners. The 12...
Choral and Vocal
A POPULAR INAUGURATION; THE DELIGHTFUL SUNRISE CONCERT AT WEILL HALL
by Phillip Beard
Sunday, September 30, 2012
 It’s hard to imagine a more fitting setting than the Sept. 30 Sunrise Concert for the popular – as opposed to “elite” – inauguration of the palatial, pre-legendary Weill Hall in the Green Music Center at Sonoma State University. You know something special is going on when you fill a 1,400-seat hall...
Choral and Vocal
TWICE IS THE CHARM AT RIVER CHOIR'S BACH CANTATA PERFORMANCE
by Terry McNeill
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
 It’s pretty rare that an entire classical music program contains just one work, and just 22 minutes at that. Sonia Tubridy’s River Choir thought so much of Bach’s Cantata No. 4, Christ lag in Todesbanden, that they sang it twice in a program April 19, and repeated the Cantata April 26. And ...
Choral and Vocal
TUBRIDY LEADS RIVER CHOIR IN FESTIVE HOLIDAY GUERNEVILLE CONCERT
by Terry McNeill
Sunday, December 19, 2010
 Sonia Tubridy, along with Carol Menke the late Nina Shuman, must be noted as Sonoma County’s most multi-tasking musician. In addition the playing the piano for chamber groups and in shows, singing, playing the accordion and leading Klezmer groups, Ms. Tubridy has found time to lead a first-rate cho...
Choral and Vocal
CIRCA 1600 CHORUS SINGS MAGNIFICENT SCHÜTZ WORKS AT HOLY FAMILY CHURCH
by Joanna Bramel Young
Saturday, November 13, 2010
 A small but appreciative audience enjoyed a concert of vocal works by the great early Baroque master Heinrich Schütz Nov. 13 at the Holy Family Episcopal Church in Rohnert Park. Accompanying the fourteen singers, skillfully directed by Robert Worth, were John Dornenburg on the G violone and Susan Ha...
Choral and Vocal
MARY WILSON'S VIRTUOSITY SHINES IN AMERICAN BACH SOLOISTS' MARIN CONCERT
by Joanna Bramel Young
Friday, April 16, 2010
 The American Bach Soloists performed their final concert in the current series April 16 at St. Stephen’s Church in Belvedere, and the large audience was treated to glorious works by Bach, Handel and Vivaldi. Each piece showcased a soloist who performed with members of the ABS orchestra. Rather than ...
Choral and Vocal
LARGE MUSICAL FORCES CELEBRATE CHRISTMAS SEASON AT FAITH LUTHERAN CHURCH
by Jim Harrod
Sunday, December 06, 2009
 Redwood Empire American Guild of Organists joined other musicians for “An Afternoon of Carols, Noels and Variations” Dec. 6 at Santa Rosa’s Faith Lutheran Church. Participating were the choirs of three local churches, the Plein Aire Recorder Consort, and organists Evelyn Schlager, Leyton Heckman, H...
Choral and Vocal
GOOD FRIDAY GETS BETTER WITH HAYDN MASS
by Steve Osborn
Friday, April 10, 2009
 Franz Joseph Haydn was not quite as prolific with masses as with symphonies, but he did he write 14 of the former nonetheless. For their annual Good Friday concert on April 10, the St. Cecilia Choir joined forces with Cantiamo, the Incarnation Orchestra, four soloists and conductor J. Karla Lemon to...
Choral and Vocal
MOSTLY MOTETS SINGS AT VESPERS
by Joanna Bramel Young
Sunday, January 25, 2009
 Mostly Motets, a North Bay a capella vocal ensemble, presented a Vespers concert January 25 in Petaluma’s First Presbyterian Church. Director Steve Moore conducted the well-rehearsed ensemble, consisting of twelve singers, in sacred works by Byrd, Dufay, Josquin, Tallis and Victoria – all leading c...
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 Heinrich Schütz |
CIRCA 1600 CHORUS SINGS MAGNIFICENT SCHÜTZ WORKS AT HOLY FAMILY CHURCH
by Joanna Bramel Young
Saturday, November 13, 2010
A small but appreciative audience enjoyed a concert of vocal works by the great early Baroque master Heinrich Schütz Nov. 13 at the Holy Family Episcopal Church in Rohnert Park. Accompanying the fourteen singers, skillfully directed by Robert Worth, were John Dornenburg on the G violone and Susan Harvey on the positiv organ.
Robert Worth is well known to Sonoma County audiences as a Music Department Professor at Sonoma State and director of several of the area’s finest choral ensembles. A recent retiree from the University, Mr. Worth in September formed the chamber chorus Circa 1600, focusing on the rich repertoire that spanned the late Renaissance and the early Baroque periods (the 16th and 17th centuries). The Chorus also occasionally moves backward to the 15th and forward to the 18th centuries, and they are often joined by members of the Live Oak Baroque Orchestra.
Heinrich Schütz was a perfect choice for the ensemble, in that his life spanned the Renaissance and Baroque periods. Schütz (1585-1672) was born in Germany one hundred years before Bach. When he was twenty-four he spent years in Italy studying with the great Venetian master Giovanni Gabrieli, and in 1611 he wrote a group of Italian madrigals dedicated to his renowned teacher, ultimately bringing the “new” Italian style of playing to Germany. The program Saturday evening opened with some of Schütz’s later religious motets called Geistliche Chormusik (Spiritual Choral Music), which showed off the choral ensemble’s considerable abilities. Although composed in German contrapuntal style the music also reflected some of the newer elements of the rising Italian forms. The music mirrored texts beautifully: in the motet So fahr ich hin zu Jesu Christ (Thus I go hence to Jesus Christ) there are moving, overlapping ascending and descending phrases that capture the great humanity of the music. At the words So schlaf ich ein und ruh fein (Then I fall asleep and rest soundly) one can feel the music following the meaning of the words. The vocal ensemble was uniformly solid and very expressive in these magnificent motets. Endings of each work were carefully tuned and often tapered down to a pianissimo.
This reviewer especially enjoyed Selig sind die Toten (Blessed are the dead). The violone doubled the strong bass voices, and the soft deep sonority of the Baroque chamber organ added to the tapestry of textures. The violone in G is a magnificent looking instrument, slightly larger and “fatter” than the better known viola da gamba. Mr. Worth, besides conducting, also added his fine bass voice to the ensemble.
The second set of works on the program were a group of five-voice madrigals, written while the youthful Schütz was in Italy. Madrigals were meant to be sung a capella – without instrumental accompaniment. He composed only one book of madrigals, but his substantial talents for musical variety and his knowledge of the Italian language make these secular works delightful. These madrigals, with their sudden change of mood and treacherously fast notes require an extremely facile group of singers. Sometimes the clarity of the parts was lost in the complex counterpoint and cascades of notes, but they still maintained their great variety of colors and emotion.
This reviewer’s favorite piece on the program was the last one, from Schütz’s own final work, the Schwanensang (Swan Song) for eight voices in two antiphonal choirs. The joyous triple rhythm with its many hemiolas (two against three rhythms) brought the evening to a jubilant close.
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