Could this become repetitive? No, never. Perhaps the greatest excitement I have in music these days in a big orchestral choral concert. Doubly so in a good location. This was my second play of Carmina Burana, again with National Capital Orchestra and Canberra Choral Society and the Woden Valley Youth Choir and the soloists, again in Llewellyn, second choral concert in 2 weeks in this our major Canberra concert hall. What was different was the hall was very close to full with the upper balcony open, and the standing ovation. I've never had a full hall doing a standing ovation for any work before. This was something special. Carmina is like that, though: everyone knows it from Nescafe ad or film Excalibur, or Therion or Nas or Turn up the bass. There were times it took off in tempo but the restraint just heightened the changes so the excitement and tension. So the arrival after 60 minutes was ecstatic like much of the work. But first up was something very different, religious, much reduced in lyrics if again in Latin, Poulenc Gloria. This as choral, one choir and one soloist, soprano, modern. It didn't get the recognition, but the worth was there and the performance and musical discovery was satisfying. At least it had standard notation, unlike the strangely presented Carmina. But again some tricky pizz/arco changes on bass and plenty of odd and changing meters and rhythms. So, repeated but not at all monotonous. Loved it! Ciao to Jeremy who's off to NYC to study. And thanks to the NCO FB page for a few pics.
National Capital Orchestra, Canberra Choral Society and Woden Valley Youth Choir performed Orff and Poulenc under Louis Sharpe (conductor) with soloists Rachel Mink (soprano, Orff and Poulenc), Sitiveni Talei (baritone, Orff) and Dan Walker (tenor, Orff). The bottom enders were Jeremy Tsuei, Greg Perkins, Mel Fung, Juliet Flook and Eric Pozza (basses).










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