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The Star-Ledger
Composer conducts a musical
journey
Ars Musica Chorale - Saturday at the
Guardian Angel Church, Allendale
By Ken Smith
FOR THE STAR-LEDGER
Monday, March 8, 1999 – Perhaps the
stars are in musical alignment this month, but for
whatever reason, one week after Bloomfield's two-day
festival honoring the composer-businessman Charles
Ives, audiences in Allendale got to see a modern-day
incarnation in composer Stephen Perillo.
Take Ives, replace his
teacher Horacio Parker with David Del Tredici,
Protestantism with Catholicism, insurance with
tourism, and church choir work with commercial
sound-tracks and you're well on your way to Perillo
(he's the president of his family's high-profile
travel agency). The concert works of both composers
quote freely from the pop culture of their day.
There, however, the
similarities stop. Where Ives embodied rugged
American individualism, imploring audiences (in a
famous, if dubious, gender reference) to "take their
dissonances like a man," Perillo seems all too
willing to please.
His Magnificat, which
the Ars Musica Chorale premiered last Saturday night
at the Guardian Angel Church in Allendale, is a
pleasant piece that managers to match the emotive
strengths of choral singing with the instrumental
possibilities of the orchestra. In the program, Perillo asks what a composer in 1999 can bring to an
occasion already marked by the likes of Monteverdi,
Vivaldi and Bach. The answer of course, is
"himself." Stylistically, the piece is as diverse as
Perillo's own musical background.
Each of the text's 12
lines essentially sets a different mood. A
conventional bit of choral writing is flavored with
one oboe line that seems to have wandered in from a
Broadway score. Dynamics are used to great effect,
and Perillo also engages in some clever word
planting, such as the line "He magnifies me by His
power" when the chorus breaks off into a four-part
fugue.
But too much of the
piece seems content with illuminating the surface,
rather than shining a light on the word's rich
subtext. Perillo seems immune to the "Saturday Night
and Sunday Morning" syndrome, where a person who
parties like mad the night before can throw himself
at the alter with the same conviction the next day.
Verdi and Rossini, commercial theater composers of
their own day, never quite got the stage makeup
wiped off their religious works, yet their places
still retain an undeniable dramatic power.
Perillo was much
sturdier on secular ground with "Napoli!", a
thoroughly charming tone poem for orchestra
evocatively spun from Neapolitan-style songs. Early
on, the harp and mallet percussion mimicked the
sound of a music box; later as the winds began to
capture the effect of a carousel slowly whirling out
of control, the rest of the orchestra held their
horses firmly till the musical ride came to an end.
The instrumentalists
fared much less well in Mozart's Requiem in the
second half of the evening, where the church's
bright acoustics were none too forgiving to the
brass. In the chorus, too, the same strengths and
weaknesses from the Perillo performances were again
on display.
Mozart was a composer
for the theater who did manager to clean himself up
for church, but in this chorus only the men were
ready to join him. Unlike most a vocational vocal
groups, the men of Ars Musica were considerably more
consistent than the women, with better vocal
placement, more accurate entrances and a more
precise sense of pitch. Despite the natural
advantage higher voices have in being heard, the men
were able to dominate the evening.
The solo vocal quartet
of soprano Clare Mueller, Mezzo-soprano Daria Dragan,
tenor John Bigham and bass Glenn Boothby was mostly
well-balanced, through Boothby's part tended to fade
in his lower register. |