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An Evening of American
Song:
“And If the Song Be Worth a Smile”
Lisa Delan,
soprano
Kristin Pankonin, piano
Matt Haimovitz, cello
The Allen Room, Frederick P.
Rose Hall, Jazz at Lincoln Center
May 21, 2010
This concert
of songs by six living American composers was presented by
PentaTone Classics to celebrate its release of Lisa Delan’s
recording of the program, also entitled “And if the Song be
Worth a Smile.” Four of the composers - Gordon Getty, David
Garner, John Corigliano and Luna Pearl Woolf – were present;
Corigliano’s and Woolf’s cycles were written for Ms. Delan and
her pianist, Kristin Pankonin, whose empathetic support
contributed greatly to the evening’s success.
Of the Three
Folk Songs arranged by Jake Heggie (b. 1961), two were
plaintive, one was cheeky and chattering. The accompaniments
underlined the melodies’ mood and character, but were often too
elaborate. “Cabaret Songs” by William Bolcom (b. 1938), on texts
by Arnold Weinstein, evoked sensuousness, inebriation, and
yearning.
“Odas de Todo
Mundo” (“Odes for Everyone”) by Luna Pearl Woolf (1973), to
poems by Pablo Neruda and sung in Spanish, were commissioned by
Ms. Delan. The music mirrored the mercurial changes of the
poetry - Latin dance rhythms, descriptions of nature and the
human condition - and ended in a blaze of exuberance. The
performers were joined by the composer’s husband, cellist Matt
Haimovitz, renowned for his masterful playing and his
multi-faceted career. Once a famously talented prodigy, he is
now a versatile, communicative artist; in a demanding part
tailored to his virtuosity and beautiful tone, he added intense,
compelling power to the performance.
Three
Cabaret Songs by Corigliano (b. 1938) to poems by Mark Adamo
poked fun at various aspects of the musical experience, punning
on the atonalists’ tone-rows, parodying the latest electronic
recording device, lampooning the transformation of the friendly
neighborhood record store into an impersonal coffee-bar. The
songs sounded less “cabaret”-influenced than Bolcom’s, but, like
much of Corigliano’s music, bore traces of many other styles.
Though Mss. Delan and Pankonin had performed the songs
separately, this was the complete set’s premiere.
Getty (b.
1933) wrote his own poetry for his three-song cycle, “Poor
Peter:” a pensive love song, a rollicking dance with surprising,
quirky rhythms, and a mournful, pleading ballad sung by an old
beggar (recalling the blind “Harpist” of Goethe and Schubert).
Words and music mimicked the style of Merrie Olde England, with
words like “easterly” and “southerly.” The program’s title is
taken from the third song.
The seven-song
cycle “Phenomenal Woman” by Garner (1954) incorporated jazz,
blues, rock and cabaret styles. The proudly feminist poems by
Maya Angelou ranged from defiance, protest, and tongue-in-cheek
self-promotion to religious fervor and resignation.
Lisa Delan has
made these songs entirely her own, textually and musically. Her
voice encompasses a wide range and she can color and inflect it
for mood and expression. Her excellent diction was especially
important in the humorous songs. She used “light” amplification
to reflect the sound back to the performers; this made it
difficult to fully judge the quality of her voice, and probably
caused some shrillness in the topmost register and some
imbalance with the instruments. She was most persuasive in the
slow, lyrical, pensive songs; the fast, skittish ones seemed
least suited to her voice and stage presence.
The audience’s
warm response proved that all the songs were worth a smile, so
Mr. Haimovitz returned for an encore: Ms. Woolf’s trio
arrangement of Getty’s “The Going from a World We Know.”
-Edith Eisler
for New York
Concert Review; New York, NY
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