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Back Bay Chorale looks small, plays big
MUSIC REVIEW (excerpts)
By Richard Dyer, Globe Staff | May 25, 2006
CAMBRIDGE -- Now in his second season as music director of the Back Bay Chorale,
Scott Allen Jarrett seems determined to reposition his ensemble in the shifting
hierarchy of area choruses, presumably in a place near the summit, if not on
it.
He -- and they -- are on the way. Technically the standard of Friday night's
performance of Beethoven's challenging ``Missa Solemnis" was high. The chorus
ran the hurdles accurately, with quality sound from soprano to bass. Nobody
screamed, and there were many nuances of color and dynamics. The singers were
secure enough to go for broke, which is essential in this work, yet they could
also pull back for quietly intense delivery of the less turbulent sections.
The orchestra of Emmanuel Music was smaller than what one usually hears in
this work, but one never felt the absence of sheer numbers, and the group played
with chamber-music virtues of individuality and ensemble. Concertmaster Danielle
Maddon played the long solo in the Benedictus with a sweet, consoling timbre.
....
The ``Missa Solemnis" was previously heard this season in performances by the
Boston Symphony Orchestra and the Tanglewood Festival Chorus under James Levine
. The Back Bay Chorale's was more modest, but not less ambitious.
This story ran on page F6 of the Boston Globe on 5/25/06.
© Copyright 2006
The New York Times Company.
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