Music for Double Choir (2014)

Concert 3: Saturday 10 May at 5.30 pm
Xavier College Chapel, Barkers Rd, Kew

Subscription Concert 3

Music for double choir immediately conjures up Venice in many minds, but most of the famed Venetian repertoire involves instruments as well as voices. This program surveys double-choir music of various parts of Europe from the late Renaissance to the early twentieth century. The major work is the wonderful Frank Martin Mass, which returns to our repertoire a decade after our first performance of it.

 

Program
Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina Laudate Dominum omnes gentes
Orlande de Lassus Osculetur me
Tomás Luis de Victoria Regina caeli laetare
Michael Praetorius Gott der Vater wohn uns bei
Johann Sebastian Bach Singet dem Herrn ein neues Lied
Johannes Brahms Fest- und Gedenksprüche, Opus 109
William Henry Harris Faire is the heaven
Frank Martin Mass for Double Choir

 

SINGERS

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell
Carol Veldhoven
Katherine Norman
Katherine Lieschke
Maria Pisani
Claerwen Jones
Kathryn Pisani
Alto
Belinda Wong
Yi Wen Chin
Niki Ebacioni
Rebecca Collins
Tenor
Peter Campbell
Tim van Nooten
Vaughan McAlley
Stuart Tennant
Bass
Andrew Murray
Thomas Bland
Michael Strasser
Mike Ormerod

 


REVIEW

Tuesday, 13 May 2014, The Age [Melbourne], n.p.
Ensemble Gombert’s sumptuous singing spans centuries of change
Clive O’Connell

Music for Double Choir
Ensemble Gombert
Xavier College Chapel
May 10

In an often sumptuous exhibition, John O’Donnell and his Ensemble Gombert rang the cross-centuries changes on Western music for two choirs.  On Saturday, the singers began with Palestrina and his contemporaries: Lassus in suggestive form with a Song of Songs extract, Victoria in an opulent Regina caeli, and a brief litany by Praetorius –  bread-and-butter fare for these musicians.

Bach’s motet Singet dem Herrn emphasised the linear ferment that tests even experienced choirs.  Taking a measured pace, O’Donnell combined the whirring activity of the composer’s web with tensile strength, the result a lesson in discipline and perseverance. The Fest-und Gedenkspruche from Brahms’ later years presented the lower voices with carefully negotiated hurdles.

Still, the evening’s main work, Frank Martin’s Mass for Double Choir found the Gombert sopranos in excellent shape, even in the high B stress-points of the Kyrie and Hosanna, the many part sub-divisions handled with admirable smoothness.
Clive O’Connell/Courtesy of The Age

Five centuries of Austrian a cappella Sacred Music (2014)

Concert 2: Saturday 29 March at 8 pm
Xavier College Chapel, Barkers Rd, Kew

Subscription Concert 2

Some of the composers represented here were Austrian imports while others were home grown. But all works were composed in Austria, some for Catholic liturgical use, Brahms’s motets possibly for Lutheran use, Schubert’s Hebrew setting of the 92nd Psalm for the Jewish synagogue, while the Isaac, Vaet and Schoenberg works are non-liturgical. Of course Austria’s best-known sacred music consists of Masses for soloists, choir and orchestra, but this program shows that there was also a fine a cappella tradition spanning the centuries.

 

Program
Heinrich Isaac Virgo prudentissima
Jacobus Vaet Continuo lacrimas
Philippe de Monte Super flumina Babylonis
Johann Stadlmayr O magnum mysterium
Johann Fux Three Offertoria:
Ad te, Domine, levavi
Ave Maria, gratia plena
Tollite portas
Johann Ernst Eberlin Two Offertoria
Bonum est confiteri Domino
Improperium exspectavit cor meum
Arnold Schoenberg Friede auf Erden
Franz Schubert Der 92. Psalm
Johannes Brahms Drei Motetten, Opus 110

 

SINGERS

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell
Carol Veldhoven
Katherine Norman
Maria Pisani
Claerwen Jones
Kathryn Pisani
Alto
Belinda Wong
Yi Wen Chin
Niki Ebacioni
Rebecca Collins
Tenor
Peter Campbell
Tim van Nooten
Vaughan McAlley
Stuart Tennant
Bass
Andrew Murray
Thomas Bland
Michael Strasser
Mike Ormerod


REVIEW

Tuesday, 1 April 2014, The Age [Melbourne], n.p.
Singers traverse years in the Ensemble Gombert’s Five Centuries of Austrian a capella sacred music
Clive O’Connell

Five Centuries of Austrian A Cappella Sacred Music
Ensemble Gombert
Xavier College Chapel
March 29

John O’Donnell’s excellent choral group covered a vast field and unearthed some surprises. The Gomberts rarely disappoint, carrying along some stodgy material through a thorough professionalism and uniformity of timbre generally sustained for lengthy paragraphs, if not entire works.

O’Donnell began his cross-centuries journey with the motet Virgo prudentissima by Heinrich Isaac, a striking six-line structure that oscillates between duets for upper voices and massive complexes that manage to sound static on top and seething with action under the surface. This work set a high benchmark, sustained through a following clutch of briefer pieces.

A set of three offertoria by Johann Fux showed the teacher of counterpoint putting theory into heavy-handed practice. With a lurch into the 19th century, matters improved through Schubert’s venture into Hebrew, a setting of Psalm 92 distinguished for its robust reverence.

The Three Motets Op. 110 by Brahms are better known and combined melodic generosity with emotional compression. The most difficult music-making came in Schoenberg’s Friede auf Erden, packed with harmonic stumbling blocks and a linear mesh that never stops challenging its executants. These singers produced a fluent and level-headed reading, working through its uncompromising linear argument with exemplary dedication.
Clive O’Connell/Courtesy of The Age

Commemorating Anne of Brittany (2014)

Concert 1: Saturday 22 February 2014 at 8 pm
Xavier College Chapel, Barkers Rd, Kew

Subscription Concert 1

When Anne of Brittany, uniquely the wife of two successive French kings, as well as Duchess of Brittany in her own right, died on 9 January 1514, her funeral lasted for forty days. Such an extended ceremony must have involved a lot of music, though only the three motets presented here can be identified with certainty. Nevertheless it is generally accepted that Prioris’s fine Requiem was also written for the occasion.

 

 

Program
Jean Mouton
(c.1459-1522)
Quis dabit oculis nostris
Pierre Moulu
(1484?-c.1550)
Fière Attropos
Costanzo Festa
(c.1490-1543)
Quis dabit oculis nostris
Josquin Desprez
(c.1450-1521)
De profundis
Johannes Prioris
(c.1460-c.1514)
Requiem

Introitus: Requiem aeternam
Kyrie
Graduale: Si ambulum
Sequentia: Dies irae
(Gregorian chant)
Offertorium: Domine Jesu Christe
Sanctus
Agnus Dei
Communio: Lux aeterna

 

SINGERS

Soprano
Carol Veldhoven
Deborah Summerbell
Maria Pisani
Claerwen Jones
Kathryn Pisani
Alto
Belinda Wong
Yi Wen Chin
Niki Ebacioni
Miranda Gronow
Tenor
Peter Campbell
Tim van Nooten
Vaughan McAlley
Stuart Tennant
Bass
Andrew Murray
Thomas Bland
Chris Potter
Michael Strasser
Jerzy Kozlowski

 

REVIEW

Tuesday, 25 Febrary 2014, The Age [Melbourne], n.p.
Ensemble Gombert in fine renditions of funeral music for Anne of Brittany

Clive O’Connell

Commemorating Anne Of Brittany
Ensemble Gombert
Xavier College Chapel
February 22

When she died in 1514 aged 31, Duchess Anne of Brittany had been married to a German emperor and two French kings and had had 14 pregnancies. The last independent ruler of her state, she was a notable arts patron and her funeral rites lasted for 40 days, involving a good deal of music, although very few original compositions for these ceremonies have been documented.

For Saturday’s opening Ensemble Gombert series recital, artistic director John O’Donnell put together a program of works, both definites and maybes, connected with this remarkable woman’s extended obsequies, the most significant a Requiem by Johannes Prioris. This mass reveals an honest individuality and the choir gave it a finely-shaped performance with a satisfying balance between soprano and bass lines, notably in the rich Kyrie and a calmly celebratory Agnus Dei, although the well-worn plainchant Dies irae sequence seemed an odd if suitably sombre interpolation.

Two settings of the text Quis dabit oculis nostris, by Jean Mouton and Costanzo Festa, showed once again the Gomberts’ hallmarks of linear balance and controlled power. This was further substantiated by a glowing reading of Josquin’s late five-part De profundis with an interpretative depth that distinguishes this ensemble’s work at its best.
Clive O’Connell/Courtesy of The Age

Mozart Exultate Jubilate & Haydn Harmoniemesse (2014)

Sunday, 19 January 2014, 8 pm
St Patrick’s Cathedral, Ballarat

Organs of the Ballarat Goldfields Festival
Closing recital

PROGRAM

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Exultate Jubilate
Joseph Haydn Harmoniemesse

SOPRANO ALTO TENOR BASS
Deborah Summerbell Yi Wen Chin Peter Campbell Andrew Murray
Carol Veldhoven Kathryn Pisani Tim Van Nooten Thomas Bland
Katherine Norman Niki Ebacioni Vaughan McAlley Mike Ormerod
Maria Pisani Rachel Martin Stuart Tennant Tim Daly
Sarah Harris Thomas Bell
Claerwen Jones


Jacqueline Porter, soprano
Lotte Betts-Dean, alto
Daniel Thomson, tenor
Michael Leighton-Jones, bass

Accademia Arcadia – conducted by John O’Donnell.

Violin 1 Viola Oboe French Horn
Davide Monti John Quaine Michael Pisani Tom Campbell
Briar Goessi Heather Lloyd Adam Masters Tobin Frost
Simone Slattery Cello Clarinet Trumpet
Chris Ruiter Edwina Cordingley Ashley Sutherland Tristram Williams
Violin 2 Josephine Vains Jodie Upton Tristan Rebien
Lucinda Moon Violone Bassoon
Elizabeth Welsh Ruth Wilkinson Simon Rickard Timpani
Jen Kirsner Flute Brock Imison Organ
Felicite Heine Greg Dikmans Jacqueline Ogeil

 

 

REVIEW

Tuesday, 21 Januart 2014, The Age [Melbourne], n.p.
Music review: Organs of the Ballarat Goldfields Festival
Clive O’Connell

Mozart and Haydn
Organs of the Ballarat Goldfields Festival
St Patrick’s Cathedral
January 19

Held under more pleasant climatic conditions than the initial concert from Newman College’s Choir and La Compania, the Ballarat festival’s finale gained from its compact content – an early Mozart motet and Haydn’s last Mass – and the participation of several singers and instrumentalists of unquestionable talent.

John O’Donnell conducted both works, soprano Jacqueline Porter making inroads on the demands of Exsultate, jubilate, before heading a quartet of excellent soloists for the Harmoniemesse, O’Donnell’s Ensemble Gombert doing the work’s hard yards. For reasons of acoustic balance, I suppose, the orchestral forces were stationed well forward, all strings situated in front of the altar steps while the wind and brass choirs sat behind.

For the motet, Porter sang from the far side of the church from my seat so parts of her work were muffled. Porter made a more positive impact in the Mass, especially in partnership with alto Lotte Betts-Dean. One of the stars of the opening concert, Daniel Thomson brought his reliable tenor to the mix, bass Michael Leighton Jones a compelling presence as well. Sadly, the fine Gombert personnel were often eclipsed by the hefty wind corps in this work.
Clive O’Connell/Courtesy of The Age

Christmas to Candlemas: Old & New (2013)

Concert 5: Saturday 7 December at 8 pm
Xavier College Chapel, Barkers Rd, Kew

Subscription Concert 5

Due to illness, the planned concert of Jacobean music with viols and organ was postponed until 2014.

For their final concert for 2013, Ensemble Gombert’s Christmas to Candlemas concert also spans the centuries. Francis Poulenc completed his Four Motets for Christmas Time in 1952, and held them in very high regard amongst his choral pieces. They are also great favourites among choirs and audiences.

Ensemble Gombert, directed by John O’Donnell, presents each of Poulenc’s Christmas motets along with two Renaissance settings of the same text. Herbert Howells’ atmospheric Nunc dimittis also receives the same treatment. The Renaissance pieces include many perennial Ensemble Gombert favourites.

 

Program
Hodie Christus natus est Francis Poulenc (1899–1963)
Andrea Gabrieli (1532/3–1585)
Giovanni Bassano (1560/1–1617)
O magnum mysterium Francis Poulenc
Nicolas Gombert (c.1495-c.1560)
Clemens non Papa (1510/15–1555/6)
Quem vidistis, pastores? Francis Poulenc
Tomás Lis de Victoria (1548-1611)
Richard Dering (c.1580–1630)
Videntes stellam Francis Poulenc
Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina (1525–1594)
Orlande de Lassus (1532–1594)
Nunc dimittis Herbert Howells (1892–1983)
Costanzo Festa (c.1490–1545)
Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina

 

SINGERS

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell
Carol Veldhoven
Katherine Norman
Maria Pisani
Claerwen Jones
Kathryn Pisani
Alto
Belinda Wong
Yi Wen Chin
Niki Ebacioni
Rebecca Collins
Tenor
Peter Campbell
Tim van Nooten
Vaughan McAlley
Stuart Tennant
Bass
Andrew Murray
Thomas Bland
Thomas Baldwin
Mike Ormerod

REVIEW

Monday, 9 December 2013, The Age [Melbourne], n.p.
Brandenburg and Gombert ensembles serve very different Christmas fare
Clive O’Connell

Noel Noel: Christmas To Candlemas
Australian Brandenburg Orchestra and Choir
Melbourne Recital Centre, December 7;
Ensemble Gombert
Xavier College Chapel, December 7

Just like last year, these two ensembles presented contrasting programs on the same evening. For a full Murdoch Hall, Paul Dyer and his Sydney visitors went for a stroll around and beyond the Christmas repertoire, the Brandenburg Choir at its best in firmly drawn versions of two Anglican favourites in Hosanna to the Son of David and Farrant’s Lord, For Thy Tender Mercy’s Sake, later showing more well-balanced ensemble in Silent Night with verses sung in German, Gaelic, Welsh and a reassuring English to finish, followed by a gutsy O Come, All Ye Faithful.

Christine Leonard’s saxophone reappeared, as clear-cut as last time, complemented by Matthew Manchester expertly alternating between cornetto, tin whistle, border pipe and the drone-like Hummelchen. The rest of the ABO ensemble comprised five strings, Tommie Anderson’s guitars, a chamber organ and some percussion, with Dyer hamming it up at the harpsichord. The vocal soloist, countertenor Maximilian Riebl, was exercised throughout. With a well-projected voice that still has much to learn about breath control and phrasing, Riebl led the Wexford Carol and Rolf Lovland’s Raise Your Voices!

Some aberrations crept in, like a camped-up Santa Baby and a glee-club White Christmas. But the reception was consistently warm.

John O’Donnell and his formidable ensemble chose five seasonal texts, then illustrated their interpretations by various composers. Poulenc’s Quatre motets and Herbert Howells’ Nunc dimittis opened each segment, followed by settings from notable Renaissance masters – Clemens non Papa, Victoria, Palestrina, Lassus and Gombert (naturally).

The modern works came over with considerable flair, as did some of the earlier-composer pieces, like Clemens’ haunting O Magnum Mysterium and Richard Dering’s concise Quem vidistis setting.

But the group’s vocal mix is less coherent than in previous years, not as emotionally transporting. An over-prominent tenor, ragged high soprano entries and an underpowered bass line distracted from the occasional flashes of glowing choral meshes that used to be consistent fare at these recitals.
Clive O’Connell/Courtesy of The Age

Vespers for the Feast of St Andrew (2013)

Saturday, 30 November 2013, at 4.30pm
Newman College Chapel, 887 Swanston Street, Parkville

Newman College 2013 Advent Festival

Australia’s leading Renaissance choir, Ensemble Gombert, performs a Vespers service featuring polyphonic music from the cathedrals of Italy and Spain for the Feast of St Andrew.

Director, organ: John O’Donnell

Program
Organ Prelude:
Intonazione del settimo tono
Domine ad adjuvandum
Andrea Gabrieli (1532/3–1585)
Giovanni Giacomo Gastoldi (c.1554–1609)
Dixit Dominus septimi toni
Giovanni Giacomo Gastoldi (c.1554–1609)
Laudate pueri octavi toni Claudio Monteverdi (1567–1643)
Credidi octavi toni Vincenzo Ruffo (c.1508–1587)
In convertendo octavi toni Anonymous faux-bourdons adapted by John O’Donnell
Domine probasti me octavi toni Costanzo Porta (1528/9–1601)
Intonazione del quarto tono Andrea Gabrieli
Hymnus: Exsultet orbis Gregorian chant with even-numbered verses as organ improvisations
Intonazione del primo tono Andrea Gabrieli
Magnificat a 6 primi toni Claudio Monteverdi
Organ Postlude:
Andreas Christi famulus
 

Cristóbal de Morales ( c.1500–1553)
Organ intabulation by John O’Donnell with soprano ostinato “Sancte Andrea, ora pro nobis”

SINGERS

SOPRANO ALTO TENOR BASS
Deborah Summerbell Belinda Wong Peter Campbell Andrew Murray
Carol Veldhoven Yi Wen Chin Daniel Thomson Thomas Bland
Katherine Norman Niki Ebacioni Vaughan McAlley Thomas Baldwin
Kathryn Pisani Rebecca Collins Stuart Tennant Mike Ormerod
Claerwen Jones

REVIEW

Wednesday, 4 December 2013, The Age [Melbourne], n.p.
2013 Advent Festival, Newman College
Clive O’Connell

2013 Advent Festival
Consort Of Melbourne,
Ensemble Gombert, Early Voices
Newman College
November 20 – December 1

For this pre-Christmas musical feast, artistic director Gary Ekkel and his Melbourne University college hosted many of Melbourne’s early music ensembles specialising in liturgical choral music.

Over two days, participants were invited to take up roles as the program observed the monastic offices – matins, terce, sext, none, vespers – interspersed with lectures on Gregorian chant singing and religious art alongside interludes from violinist Rachael Beesley and guitarist Slava Grigoryan.

For Catholics, the weekend’s content provided much gratification, Proustian recollections sparked by polyphonic choral music and enough sung Latin to make the Second Vatican Council seem like a bad dream. Each day, the fulcrum event came in a Mass: Saturday’s Feast of St Andrew bringing the Consort of Melbourne to centre-altar for Marc-Antoine Charpentier’s Assumpta est Maria setting of the Common, while observation of the first Sunday in Advent found Vivien Hamilton’s Early Voices singing the luminous Palestrina’s Missa Papae Marcelli, the work that allegedly legitimised contrapuntal writing for church ceremonies.

Using spartan resources – six singers, a string quartet, an organ – Ekkel produced a lean-textured, accurate reading of the Charpentier work with well-honed upper voices although the bass line sounded strained, the Credo a congenial, if long-winded, episode in a sequence that included Gregorian chant and motets by the French composer.

Later, the Ensemble Gombert sang the vespers but, without a program, I was unable to work out which composers were involved, although the general character suggested a late-Renaissance/early Baroque provenance.

The Palestrina Mass was given a straightforward account, even in temper and metre, Hamilton’s forces well served by the two tenor lines the work asks for and exercises heftily throughout.

But the main delight came in the music’s fluent, innate mastery, a reflection of the transcendent in contrast to the prosaic stolidity of the modern-day ritual itself.
Clive O’Connell/Courtesy of The Age

Christmas to Candlemas: Iberia (2012)

Concert 5: Saturday 8 December at 8.00 pm
Xavier College Chapel, Barkers Rd, Kew

Subscription Concert 5

The Portuguese composer Duarte Lobo is a newcomer to Ensemble Gombert’s repertoire. His Christmas responsories were published in his Opuscula of 1602. The remainder of this program is Spanish, featuring two of the three greatest Spanish composers of the 16th century — the third, Victoria, having received a lot of our attention both before and during 2011, the quattrocentenary of his death. We first performed Morales’ Missa Quaeramus cum pastoribus in 2006. A remarkably felicitous work, it returns by popular request.

PROGRAM
Cristóbal de Morales Pastores, dicite, quidnam vidistis?
Cristóbal de Morales O magnum mysterium
Cristóbal de Morales Cum natus esset Jesus
Francisco Guerrero Pastores loquebantur
Duarte Lobo Natalitiae Noctis Responsoria
Duarte Lobo Hodie nobus caelorum rex
Duarte Lobo Hodie nobis de caelo
Duarte Lobo Quem vidistis pastores?
Duarte Lobo O magnum mysterium
Duarte Lobo Beata Dei genitrix
Duarte Lobo Sancta et immaculata
Duarte Lobo Beata viscera
Duarte Lobo Verbum caro factus est
Cristóbal de Morales Missa Quaeramus cum pastoribus

SINGERS

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell
Carol Veldhoven
Katherine Norman
Maria Pisani
Claerwen Jones
Kathryn Pisani
Alto
Belinda Wong
Yi Wen Chin
Niki Ebacioni
Rebecca Woods
Tenor
Peter Campbell
Tim van Nooten
Vaughan McAlley
Stuart Tennant
Bass
Kieran Rowe
Andrew Murray
Chris Potter
Mike Ormerod
REVIEW

Wednesday, 12 December 2012, The Age [Melbourne], n.p.
All-comers drawn to season celebrations with Iberian twist
Clive O’Connell

SOMETHING of a contrast in city styles, the Australian Brandenburg Choir and Orchestra from Sydney offered a program with something for everyone on Saturday evening, while Melbourne’s own Ensemble Gombert presented its annual Christmas recital with a focus on Renaissance Spain and Portugal.

For the first time, Paul Dyer brought his all-comers’ seasonal celebration here, using a small group of instrumentalists to support the 30-plus Brandenburg choir. The Brandenburgers centred on variety, their stream of vocal and instrumental groupings in constant flux with just enough solo exposure for Matthew Manchester’s subtle cornetto and the unexpectedly reticent saxophones of Christina Leonard, the complex supported by deft percussion from Jess Ciampa and the lutes of Tommie Andersson and Samantha Cohen.

Leading his singers in a focused 16th century Iberian retrospective, John O’Donnell began with music by Morales: the Mass Quaeramus cum pastoribus interleaved by three motets, including a lengthy retelling of the Magi’s journey to and from Bethlehem. The mass calls for two bass lines and on this night the dynamic output came across as uneven, one individual voice disturbingly prominent towards the end of the night in motets by Duarte Lobo and Guerrero.

The Brandenburgers enjoyed something like relieved acclaim in their later popular items – Hark! The Herald Angels Sing in a barbershop arrangement, the soggy sentiment of The Little Drummer Boy headed by a trio of fresh-voiced sopranos, and a rousingly rapid O Come all ye Faithful. But the most moving passage of play came in an Italian song based on La Carpinese, more suited to Good Friday than this time of year.

With the Gomberts’ Christmas observance, the more numerous the lines, the more satisfying the accomplishment, reaching a particularly high mark during those segments in the lush Lobo Responsories that call for all eight lines to operate simultaneously. This proved most compelling in the Portuguese composer’s setting of the opening to St John’s Gospel where the rich polyphonic texture and declamatory assurance stripped away the tawdry tat that clutters the astonishing lesson behind the Christmas miracle.
Clive O’Connell/Courtesy of The Age

J.S. Bach: St Matthew Passion (2011)

Sunday 17 April 2010, 2 pm
Melbourne Recital Centre, 31 Sturt Street. Southbank

Conducted by Jeremy Summerly (Royal Academy of Music, London) with a period instrument ensemble led by Rachel Beesley and featuring Ensemble Gombert, The Choir of Trinity College, Melbourne, The Consort of Melbourne, and outstanding vocalists. This landmark choral event is presented by the Melbourne Recital Centre.

PROGRAM

J.S. Bach St Matthew Passion (Matthäus-Passion)

SOPRANO ALTOS TENOR BASS
Deborah Summerbell Belinda Wong Peter Campbell Kieran Rowe
Carol Veldhoven Jennifer Mathers Tim van Nooten Alistair Clark
Fiona Seers Rebecca Woods Vaughan McAlley
Claerwen Jones Niki Ebacioni Stuart Tennant
Maria Pisani
Kathryn Pisani

The Consort of Melbourne
The Choir of Trinity College, Melbourne
Ensemble Gombert
Trebles of Melbourne Grammar School Chapel Choir
Ironwood Chamber Orchestra
Rachel Beesley – concertmaster
Julia Fredersdorff – concertmaster
Robert Macfarlane – Evangelist
Michael Leighton Jones – Christus
Siobhàn Stagg – soprano solo
Lynette Alcantara – alto solo
Paul Bentley – tenor solo
Peter Tregear – bass solo

REVIEWS

Tuesday, 19 April 2011, The Age [Melbourne], page 15.
A long afternoon with Bach’s Passion
Clive O’Connell

A mixture of Melbourne-based choirs proved the main attraction at Sunday’s performance of Bach’s St Matthew Passion. Without a program, I could identify only some participants, but members of the Ensemble Gombert, the Consort of Melbourne and Trinity College Choir featured among the personnel whose chorales made welcome hiatus points throughout the reading.

British conductor Jeremy Summerly directed a straightforward account of this Baroque masterwork, giving plenty of room to the music’s powerful drama by encouraging the vocal forces to produce full-blooded attacks. The double orchestra sounded uneven, one more careful with tuning and production than the other in a vibrato-free environment. When the oboists switched to caccia instruments, the duet timbres sounded unharnessed, their support tending to detract from the soloist.

As a central duo, Michael Leighton Jones’s Christus and Robert Macfarlane’s Evangelist made fine partners. Peter Tregear accounted for the bass arias with precise pitching and insistent accents, while the other three soloists enjoyed passages of fair quality. Unfailingly consistent accounts of the massive top-and-tail choral movements, reinforced by a laudably willing boys’ choir in part 1, raised the long afternoon’s achievement level considerably.

 

Tuesday, 19 April 2011, The Australian [Sydney], n.p.
Harmonic breakdowns overshadow and otherwise admirable venture
Chris Boyd

IN the margins of Puccini’s manuscript score for La Boheme, Mimi’s death is marked by a skull and crossbones.

Christ’s death in later versions of Bach’s St Matthew Passion is marked by nothing more than a gasp from the organ. In this performance, that mortal gasp was followed by a prolonged and perfect silence, mercifully unpunctuated by coughing or the rustling of librettos. That awe-inspiring silence was one of the more dramatic moments in an ambitious and risky venture that combined period and non-period instruments as well as period and non-period choirs.

Instead of a clash of thirds and sixths, as we might have expected, the meshing of the choirs was rarely less than felicitous. More often than not it was glorious. (One assumes that Ensemble Gombert has had more practice adapting to modern tunings and a variety of temperings than the other choirs have had.) Instrumentally, for the most part the lion and the lamb snuggled up together, too: the excellent viola da gamba sat well with the cellos, the violone with the double bass. Only the woodwinds sat in mutinous isolation.

Yet there were three clear instances when this performance came off the rails. The first was in the opening, when the massed orchestral forces generated a muddy and ugly sound. The second, just short of the climax of part one, was marked by some treacherous phrasing in the oboes. The third, near the end of the performance, was a tug of war between the bassoon-like fagotto and oboe da caccia on one side and the strings and voices on the other. Caught in the middle was singer Peter Tregear, whose light bass was pitched somewhere in between the competing armies. The timing and magnitude of these breakdowns in harmony overshadowed what was otherwise an admirable performance.

Robert Macfarlane as the Evangelist has the heroic tenor, agile and youthful, one would kill to hear in a performance of Beethoven’s Ninth. His singing was a delight. Lynette Alcantara brought genuine emotion to the alto solo. With great skill and tact, Siobhan Stagg began the soprano solo with a treble-like tone, then opened her voice to bring a more womanly presence, as required. Even Katherine Norman’s contribution – just a single sung line as the first maid – was bewitching.

On double bass, Kirsty McCahon was a vital presence. And Jeremy Summerly’s confidence-inspiring conducting was precise and economical. It was a shame he didn’t tune up one more time.

A Tudor Lent (2011)

Saturday 12 March at 8 pm
Xavier College Chapel Barkers Rd, Kew

Subscription Concert 1

The discovery, in 1571, of the Ridolfi plot to assassinate Queen Elizabeth and replace her with Mary, Queen of Scots, led to a royal determination to observe Lent in 1572 with the utmost piety. This program present the finest Lenten music of the period, all of which, on grounds of provenance and style, could have been composed specifically for this special Lenten observance.

PROGRAM

William Byrd Emendemus in melius
William Byrd Memento homo
Thomas Tallis Miserere nostri
Thomas Tallis In ieiunio et fletu
Thomas Tallis Derelinquat impius
Thomas Tallis Lamentations
Robert White Lamentations
Osbert Parsley Lamentations
William Byrd Lamentations
Robert White Miserere mei, Deus

SOPRANO ALTOS TENOR BASS
Deborah Summerbell Belinda Wong Peter Campbell Kieran Rowe
Carol Veldhoven Jenny Mathers Tim van Nooten Samuel Allchurch
Katherine Norman Yi Wen Chin Vaughan McAlley Alistair Clark
Kathryn Pisani Niki Ebacioni Stuart Tennant Jeremy Bottomley
Claerwen Jones Gowri Rajendran
Maria Pisani Rebecca Woods

REVIEW

Monday, 14 March 2011, The Age [Melbourne], page 21.
Pious evening of majestic control
Clive O’Connell

JOHN O’Donnell and the Ensemble Gombert gave a remarkable musical picture of what Lent might have been like at the court of Elizabeth I where the season was observed with thankful piety.

The Gomberts met the challenge of delivering some of the finest and emotionally charged Tudor works with customary control.

The 20-strong body began with five motets by Byrd and Tallis, three of them completely new to this listener’s live experience. Following this majestic sequence, O’Donnell took his forces through four Lamentations settings, none of which replicated the others in textual material but showed a collegiality of emotional and intellectual response.

The Tallis setting was the most well known, followed by others by Robert White, the obscure Norwich composer Osbert Parsley, and a youthful treatment by Byrd, with White’s setting of Psalm 50 rounding off the night as it does each Tenebrae service in Holy Week.

Expert as the singers’ sustained accomplishment was, the most memorable moments came in Tallis’s seven-voice Miserere nostri, a marvel of canonic construction and here splendidly carried off with an enviable plasticity of texture.
Clive O’Connell/Courtesy of The Age

Christmas to Candlemas (2010)

Saturday, 11 December 2010, 8pm
Xavier College, Barkers Road, Kew

Subscription Concert 5

Our annual Christmas to Candlemas takes various shapes, at times presenting a miscellany, at other times focussing on a single composer. To date Palestrina, Lassus and Monteverdi have been accorded single-composer status, and now, just before the quattro-centenary of his death, we devote a program to the great Spaniard Tomàs Luis de Victoria. His motet O magnum mysterium is perhaps the best-known setting of this text, and the major work of the program is the Mass based on this motet.

PROGRAM

Tomas Luis de Victoria (1548-1611) Christe, Redemptor omnium
Tomas Luis de Victoria O Regem caeli
Tomas Luis de Victoria Quem vidistis, pastores?
Tomas Luis de Victoria Salvete, flores Martyrum
Tomas Luis de Victoria O magnum mysterium
Tomas Luis de Victoria Hostis Herodes impie
Tomas Luis de Victoria Magi viderunt stellam
Tomas Luis de Victoria Senex puerum portabat
Tomas Luis de Victoria Missa O magnum mysterium
Kyrie – Gloria – Sanctus – Agnus Dei

 

SOPRANO ALTO TENOR BASS
Deborah Summerbell Jennifer Mathers Peter Campbell Steven Hodgson
Katherine Norman Rebecca Woods Tim Van Nooten Tim Daly
Carol Veldhoven Niki Ebacioni Daniel Thomson Jerzy Kozlowski
Kathryn Pisani Gowri Rajendran Stuart Tennant
Maria Pisani
Claerwen Jones

 

REVIEW

Monday, 13 December 2010, The Age [Melbourne], n.p.
Christmas to Candlemas
Clive O’Connell

IN AN all-too-brief concert, the excellent Ensemble Gombert presented its annual Christmas program on Saturday night, two days after the fine Consort of Melbourne gave its seasonal celebration.

While the Consort and instrumental partners La Compania revelled in the music of Palestrina and Praetorius, the Gombert singers under John O’Donnell centred on works by Tomas Luis de Victoria – with Palestrina, one of the major composers of Counter-Reformation art and a master of subtle verbal coloration.

Without taking a break, O’Donnell took his forces through three hymns, five motets and the terse Mass O magnum mysterium, based on the composer’s well-known setting. Impressive as always were the group’s four tenors, articulating the plainchant verses of each hymn with certainty and that uniformity of attack you find in the best prepared vocal bodies.

Still, much of this music’s effect depends on the sopranos who often find themselves in exposed situations above the altos and on this night seemingly miles above the rolling basses of Steven Hodgson, Tim Daly and Jerzy Kozlowski.

Even in this intense and sharply etched demonstration of vocal craft you could find moments of exceptional impact, such as the stately interweaving of parts in the O magnum mysterium motet or the gleaming subtleties of Quem vidistis, pastores?, which pictures the central Christmas tableau in music of striking emotional fervour.

When you hear music-making of this quality, the essence of this season’s spiritual significance comes to vivid life beyond tawdry presents and gimcrack decorations.

Once again, we are indebted to the Ensemble Gombert musicians for their inspiring display of choral accomplishment.
Clive O’Connell/Courtesy of The Age