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The American Classical Orchestra presents Healing Bach

The American Classical Orchestra presents Healing Bach at the Church of Saint Vincent Ferrer. Photo by Edward Kliszus
The American Classical Orchestra presents Healing Bach at the Church of Saint Vincent Ferrer. Photo by Edward Kliszus
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Rating
4.7/5

The American Classical Orchestra’s erudite Artistic Director Thomas Crawford began the evening’s festivities with an informative motivational pre-concert talk. Crawford is renowned for his informed, richly endowed descriptions of the provenance of the music performed by the ACO.

Tonight the New York audience was treated to a program expressing an exquisite musical theme entitled Healing Bach. The cathedral was filled with enthusiastic viewers. The ensemble with guest artists performed at New York City’s magnificent Gothic Revival Church of Saint Vincent Ferrer designed by architect Jeremiah O’Rourke. The beauty, awe, and grandeur of the cathedral provided a splendid venue for three of J. S. Bach’s magnificent cantatas with its prominent spire, intricate stonework, beautiful stained-glass windows, ornate wood carvings, and the superb mural above the high altar. The cathedral’s stone and wood interior provided reverberation that created a rich and complex sound perfect for skilled executants of choral and orchestral music.

The magnificent Church of Saint Vincent Ferrer hosts the American Classical Orchestra in Healing Bach. Photo by Edward Kliszus
The magnificent Church of Saint Vincent Ferrer hosts the American Classical Orchestra in Healing Bach. Photo by Edward Kliszus

The concert began with J.S. Bach’s Schwingt freudig euch empor, BWV 36, composed for the first Sunday of Advent and first performed on December 2, 1731, in Leipzig, where Bach was the Thomaskantor. The text of the cantata is based on a hymn by Philipp Nicolai, Wachet auf, ruft uns die Stimme (Wake up, the voice calls us), which is often associated with Advent and the second coming of Christ. With the work’s opening and closing choruses, recitatives, arias, and a duet the orchestra, choir, and soloists joyfully characterized the music’s festive character, reflecting the anticipation and hope of the Advent season. The opening chorus, Schwingt freudig euch empor (sway joyfully upward), captured the work’s lively rhythms and jubilant melodies.

Tonight’s second cantata was J.S. Bach’s Gleichwie der Regen und Schnee vom Himmel fällt, BWV 18, composed for the 11th Sunday after Trinity. It was first performed on August 8, 1713, in Weimar, where Bach was the court organist and chamber musician. The text of the cantata is based on Isaiah 55:10-12, which compares the word of God to the rain and snow that fall from heaven and nourish the earth. The ensemble’s performance of the music’s lyrical melodies, intricate counterpoint, and rich harmonies contributed to the expressive and contemplative mood of the piece.

The program concluded with J.S. Bach’s Am Abend aber desselbigen Sabbats, BWV 42, a cantata composed for the first Sunday after Easter, also known as Quasimodogenit (second Sunday of Easter).It was first performed on April 8, 1725, in Leipzig, where Bach was the Thomaskantor. The text of the cantata is based on the Gospel of John, chapter 20, verses 19-31, which recounts the story of Jesus appearing to his disciples on the evening of his resurrection. The ensemble’s effective execution of the work’s intricate counterpoint, expressive melodies, and rich harmonies ensured the dramatic telling of the Gospel story.

Thomas Crawford’s masterful, precise conducting and performance interpretation honored the spirit and meaning of J. S. Bach’s music. The rich sounds of the orchestra’s oboe d’amore, continuo, strings, choir, and soloists maintained the apposite Affektenlehre (doctrine of affections) of the period. That is, the music expressed and evoked specific emotions or affects in the listeners. The audience bathed in their unique reflections of spirituality, warmth, piety, joy, and hope. As Crawford et al intended, the evening was Healing Bach indeed.

L-R Sherezade Panthaki © David Fung, Daniel Moody © Courtesy of the artist, Brian Giebler © J. Demetrie Photography, Joseph Parrish © Courtesy of YCA
L-R Sherezade Panthaki © David Fung, Daniel Moody © Courtesy of the artist, Brian Giebler © J. Demetrie Photography, Joseph Parrish © Courtesy of YCA

The concert featured sopranos Sherezade Panthaki and Corrine Byrne, mezzo-soprano Sylvia Leith, countertenor Daniel Moody, tenors Brian Giebler and Lawrence Jones, and bass-baritones Edmund Milly and Joseph Parrish. This astounding coterie of gifted musicians presented continuously breathtakingly beautiful and inspired performances. We shall be hearing much from these incredible, young artists.

The ACO season closes with an evening of Romantic music by Schumann, Sarasate, and Grieg on May 18 at Alice Tully Hall. It features baritone William Meinert, praised for his “rich vibrant bass” (Opera Today), and award-winning violinist Rachell Ellen Wong.

Runtime 105 minutes with intermission.

American Classical Orchestra

Thomas Crawford, conductor

Healing Bach

Church of St. Vincent Ferrer
Lexington Avenue at 66th Street

New York NY 10065
For tickets and information go to aconyc.org or call ACO at 212.362.2727, ext. 4.

Readers may also enjoy our review of the Park Avenue Chamber Symphony, Organ and Orchestra by the American Symphony Orchestra, and Washington Square at the Axis Theatre.  

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The American Classical Orchestra presents Healing Bach

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