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The biggest hand and a standing ovation went to conductor Stephen Lord. This is his last BLO performance after 17 years as music director. His Donizetti could hardly be more stylish, effervescent, and pointed. His contribution to the company has been incalculable.

The ante-penultimate program of the Cantata Singers’ extraordinary Kurt Weill season was one of music director David Hoose’s most inspired. It was illuminating to compare and contrast three very different works: Weill’s atonal Concerto for Violin and Winds (with the dazzling Jennifer Koh); the mysteriously insinuating lullaby of Ferruccio Busoni (he was Weill’s teacher) for his late mother, Berceuse élégiaque; and Brahms’s consoling, insistently non-dogmatic Ein deutsches Requiem. In 1924, Weill was resisting the kind of music that would soon make him famous, but the Violin Concerto also anticipates his familiar mixture of the spiky and the rhapsodic. Hoose and the marvelous players revealed the rarely heard 1911 Busoni to be a neglected landmark of rhythm, harmony, and color.

The Brahms, completed after the death of his mother, was deeply moving, especially in its quietest moments, the opening and closing “Selig sind” (“Blessed are they that mourn”; “Blessed are the dead”). Baritone Dana Whiteside was exemplary, but soprano Jennifer Foster seemed cast against ideal type — delivering overripe, not entirely pitch-perfect singing where you’d expect sublime tonal and vocal purity. Chorus and orchestra were radiant. (Special bravos to oboist Peggy Pearson, trumpeter Fred Holmgren, and timpanist John Grimes.) Hoose sometimes pushed them (albeit excitingly) beyond the comfort zone, but the way he got each passage to well up made you feel why Brahms chose these Biblical texts and, more important, what wisdom and emotion they offer.

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[ 12/06 ]   New England Conservatory Opera  @ Cutler Majestic Theatre
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ARTICLES BY LLOYD SCHWARTZ
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  •   OPEN SPACES  |  December 02, 2009
    In my review of the memorable Brahms performances Sir Simon Rattle led with the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra for the Celebrity Series of Boston last month, I should have mentioned that one decision responsible for the beauty and spaciousness of the orchestral sound was the placement of the first and second violin sections on opposite sides of the stage.
  •   CREATIONISTS  |  November 18, 2009
    Simon Rattle and the BPO, Fabio Luisi and the BSO, John Harbison and Emmanuel Music
  •   ALMOST  |  November 12, 2009
    The Boston Lyric Opera comes maddeningly close to having a good Carmen . (The production continues at the Shubert Theatre through November 17.) Keith Lockhart leads a superb orchestra and chorus and a cast of plausible singers/actors in a compelling if not spine-tingling performance.
  •   BLESSINGS: MIXED AND OTHERWISE  |  October 28, 2009
    By odd coincidence, in recent weeks we’ve had performances of two important operatic rarities, landmark early works a century apart: 30-year-old Handel’s Amadigi (1715) and 20-year-old Rossini’s Tancredi (1813, his 10th opera!).
  •   IN THE SWIM  |  October 14, 2009
    My head’s swimming.

 See all articles by: LLOYD SCHWARTZ

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