Reviewer: Elizabeth Bouman

The Dunedin Town Hall was an acoustically ideal venue for yesterday’s performance of Requiem For The Fallen – a profound musical commemoration of World War 1, which claimed the lives of more than 18,000 New Zealanders.

Requiem for the Fallen

Dunedin Town Hall

Sunday, October 19

This uniquely New Zealand requiem by composer Ross Harris and poet Vincent O’Sullivan, with Maori instrumental input from Horomona Horo, was performed by New Zealand String Quartet, Voices New Zealand Chamber Choir and tenor soloist Richard Greager, conducted by Karen Grylls and directed by Jonathan Alver.

Before the requiem, several short works by both the choir and quartet prepared an ambience and atmosphere receptive to the totally thought-provoking yet emotionally uplifting experience to follow.

A darkened hall, with extended platform into the body of downstairs, enabled simple choreographic enhancement as musicians processed slowly to form changing groups and formations. Subtle lighting added to the ethereal atmosphere, and poignant koauau and putorino highlights came from a slow-moving lone Maori figure.

The language combination of Latin and poetic English, plus projected subtitles and photographs from the book Images of War, advanced the text with perfection, with sections similar to a traditional Mass but entirely thematically of war, particularly the horror and futility of WW1 and the trenches.

Libera nos, where the singers moved to form a ”protective circle” around the quartet, became Save us from the hurl of grenade and impending wrath, and Dies Irae described terror and apprehension of men at war rather than the biblical fear of Judgement Day.

Those who give life that others live highlighted Sanctus text. Imagery of the noise of the battlefield reached a frightening climax with bass-drum (Georgie Watt) cannon fire rumbling distantly or fatally close, and string soundscapes accompanied throughout.

A desolate figure (Greager), portraying a returned soldier, finally walked through the hall to the musicians, delivering powerful words of being forever haunted by memories.

This was indeed a never-to-be-forgotten experience for all who attended.

St Paul’s, Melbourne15 November
Reviewed by: Peter Williams, classicmelbourne.com.au on 16 November

 

Magnificat!

The audience in St Paul’s Cathedral was treated to a wonderful night of choral music inspired by the idea of the Magnificat. Polyphonic Voices and visitors Voices New Zealand Chamber Choir. The choirs performed separately and together and, for the second half, were joined by the Australian Baroque Brass and the Polyphonic Players for a striking performance of Bach’s Magnificat.  It was a night where the pieces chosen celebrated and honoured the Virgin Mary.  Each choir exploited versatile groupings to good effect in the spacious volume that the Cathedral provides.

Voices NZ, under the close direction of Dr Karen Grylls, opened the night with a cappella pieces ranging from Rachmaninoff to contemporary composers of the late 20th century.  They began with Salve Regina by New Zealander, David Childs,  which was a perfect showcase for all sections of the choir.  The strength of the tenor line and the bright, clear soprano section were an immediate attraction.  They captured the imposing opening of “Hail Mary” and later the emotion of “this valley of tears”, ending with extremely moving hypnotic repetitions of the word “Maria”.

Over the five pieces the singing was always clear, capturing well the variety of emotions, dynamics and rhythms.  Impressive building of crescendo and great accentuation were features of the Magnificat by Cesar Alejandro Carillo with some almost jazz rhythms.  This contrasted with the delivery of softer, more flowing lines and sustained block sound of Andrew Baldwin’s Magnificat.

After a tender and quite romantic Bogoroditse of Rachmaninoff, the choir continued with Three Sacred Hymns composed by Russian Alfred Schnittke in 1986.  The three pieces were sung with dramatic force and a good solid underpinning of the low bass line.  It again enabled the choir to show its strengths in each part – lovely flowing lines and the excitement of close harmony and texture.  The final force of the Amen brought their part to a stunning conclusion.  The only drawback here was the shuffling into different formations for each of the three hymns; it was distraction in such a short piece.

Polyphonic Voices followed with works by Thomas Tomkins and Tomas Luis de Victoria representing the Renaissance, and the more contemporary John Taverner and Pawel Lukaszewski.  This too is a very professional and accomplished choir directed by Michael Fulcher. Whilst there were a couple of hesitant entries and the tenor line was a little exposed, they easily handled the complexities of the pieces – for SATB, 10 parts and the three choirs needed for Victoria’s  Magnificat.   Tomkin’s Magnificat contrasted appealing solo voices with tightly interweaving lines for the double choirs, coming together with clear forcefulness by the full choir.

Lukaszewski’s Ave Maria (1992) used the double choir structure to great effect to give added depth to the emotion of the piece dedicated to his mother as it allowed the sound to expand out in the space of the Cathedral.  The last parts were almost “ground bass” in effect where repetition added to the devotional feel of the piece.  In the Taverner “Mother of God, here I stand”, the choir excelled with pianissimo volume and clear lines moving though dissonances to harmony giving a sense of transfiguration, awe and reverence.  Much of this section was accompanied by Christopher Cook on the Chamber Organ.

A very moving conclusion to the first half was the wonder-filled “Det ar en ros utsprungen” using both choirs.  The held humming or ‘ng’ sound surrounded the words sung by smaller groups like petals surrounding the heart.

After interval, Bach’s Magnificat burst forth with thrilling trumpet, timpani and strings leading to the bright entrance of the combined choirs.  They used the E-flat edition which has four interpolations to expand the Christmas message.

Throughout the work, the playing of Australian Baroque Brass and Polyphonic Players was robust and supportive, especially the recorders in “Esurientes”.  The choir was superb, and of great presence with warm moments, as well as decisiveness, control and strength in the more complex contrapuntal parts.  There was a welcome transparency from both the choir and the orchestra in this large Cathedral setting.

Outstanding amongst the soloists was Siobhan Stagg who gave a performance of simplicity and ease with the style. This was through beautifully nuanced singing through all registers.  It was delightful for its clarity, openness of tone and well-articulated runs.  She teamed with the solid performance of the bass, Michael Leighton Jones, for a moving Virga Jesse floruit which was a celebration by Mary and Joseph of the birth of Jesus.  Alto Emma Muir-Smith was slightly overshadowed by the strength of Michael Petruccelli’ s tenor in the “Et misericordia”.  Muir-Smith’s voice is clear and precise, and hopefully she will develop even further as the lack of vibrato was most engaging.  Petruccelli’s time came with the well-sustained bite and attack of “Deposuit potentes”.

Michael Fulcher’s conducting of Virga Jesse floruit maintained a sense of the Bach line where the music flowed articulately, grandly and full of dignity.  This was a moment where in the words of the Dean of the Cathedral, “voices, instruments, music and scripture come together in spirituality”.

Hildegard von BINGEN (1098-1179)
O Viridissima Virga [4:12]

David CHILDS (b.1969)
Salve Regina [4:16]
Pukaea [0:40]

Morten LAURIDSEN (b.1943)
Six Fire Madrigals [20:15]
Purerehua [0:37]

Helen FISHER (b.1942)
Pounamu [8:20]
Poiawhiowhio, karanga manu

Christopher MARSHALL (b.1956)
Horizon 1 (Sea and Sky) [2:00]

Benjamin BRITTEN (1913-1975)
Five Flower Songs [11.30]

David HAMILTON (b.1955)
Karakia of the Stars [6:34]
Purerehua [1:05]

Pepe Becker (soprano), Amanda Barclay (soprano), Victoria Chammanee (soprano), Jeffrey Chang (tenor), Horomona Horo (taonga pūoro)
Voices 16 from New Zealand Chamber Choir/Karen Grylls
rec. 24-28 Jan. 2013, Kenneth Myer’s Centre, Auckland University New Zealand.
ATOLL ACD 213 [61:00]
 
‘Taonga pūoro’ is a phrase describing traditional Māori musical instruments, played here by Horomona Horo on this unusual CD. The instruments alternate and sometimes combine with the singers, who are Voices 16, a detachment of the New Zealand Chamber Choir, under their conductor Karen Grylls. The instruments heard include the Hue, made from a gourd; the Kōauau, a flute made from bone; the Pūtōrino, a wooden trumpet; and the Pūtātara, a wind instrument made from the highly prized Titan shell – quite a rarity, I’m told.

The first thing we hear is the strange sound of the Pūtōrino, leading us straight into the first composed piece, Hildegard of Bingen’s song ‘O Viridissima Virga’ (‘Hail greenest branch’). This begins in the solo voice of Pepe Becker, and is then treated freely, with staggered entries cleverly creating an echo effect. Together with more sounds from the folk instruments, this creates a timeless impression, and leads us into the choir’s programme in an intriguing way. In her — somewhat flowery — notes, the conductor Karen Grylls likens the disc to a gallery, with musical instead of visual exhibits.

Be that as it may, it is a beautiful sequence of numbers; David Childs’ ‘Salve Regina’ which follows, gives us our first opportunity to hear this choir singing a ‘conventional’ piece, which they do with great accomplishment. Childs’ treatment is, in its word-setting, highly reminiscent of Poulenc in, for example, the ‘Litanies to the Black Virgin’.

I don’t know how conscious was Childs’ tribute to Poulenc; but Morten Lauridsen’s ‘Six Fire Madrigals’ to Italian texts are explicitly inspired by the vocal works of Monteverdi. Those who know Lauridsen’s sacred works, such as the famous ‘O Magnum Mysterium’ will be familiar with the technique used here. He takes a single chord – described by him as the ‘Fire Chord’ and heard at the very beginning – and explores it throughout the six compositions. The shifting harmonies often produce ear-bending effects such that I wondered if I was hearing microtones at some points – which is not to say that this choir sings out of tune. Indeed, their technical assurance is impressive, if unobtrusive. Sometimes though, both in the Lauridsen and later in the Britten ‘Flower Songs’, I wanted a greater sense of involvement, and a wider palette of vocal colours. In compensation, their ensemble, intonation, breath control and blend are exceptionally fine; they sing as one, a tribute to the clarity and musicianship of their conductor.

Two pieces in a more contemporary style follow; Pounamu by Helen Fisher, based on a Māori proverb, and the evocative ‘Horizon (Sea and Sky)’ by Christopher Marshall. Then comes a more established item of the choral repertoire, Britten’s ‘Flower Songs’. These are, as hinted above, lacking a little bit in character and projection. That said, their sensitive delivery of ‘The Evening Primrose’ is truly affecting, and the final song, ‘Green Broom’, if a little stolid at first, does rise to an appropriately unbuttoned conclusion.

For me, the most interesting musical experience was waiting for me on the wonderful final track, David Hamilton’s ‘Karakia of the Stars’. This is based on a short text – another Maōri one – which is a Springtime invocation to the stars. The voices are joined by traditional percussion instruments, high and low, and the voices cluster and improvise magically. The whole thing is hypnotically beautiful; there is a central section for male voices which the notes describe as a haka. — Perhaps the All Blacks will perform it at the Rugby World Cup this year? Vain hope, methinks.

There are so many wonderful young chamber choirs the world over now, many of them appearing on CD, so that it is very hard for any one of them to make an impact. However, this is a fascinating and lovingly prepared programme which made a strong and delightful impression on me.

Gwyn Parry-Jones

 Click here to view the original review

Voices New Zealand Chamber Choir was formed in 1998 with Dr Karen Grylls as its Music Director www.choirsnz.co.nz/voices/members . As a nationally selected choir of the highest calibre, Voices NZ is a chamber choir that is flexible in size and capable of performing a wide repertoire. Many of the singers are alumni of the New Zealand Youth Choir.

The choir made its début at the 1998 New Zealand International Arts Festival in a recital with the New Zealand Chamber Orchestra and Keith Lewis. Later that year it won gold and silver awards at the Tolosa International Choral Competition in the Basque region of Spain.

Since then the choir have collaborated with the prestigious Aradia Ensemble from Canada, resulting in the completion of a world premiere recording of the Vanhal Masses for Naxos, participated in the Otago Festival of the Arts, and concluded the year by recording a CD which features New Zealand repertoire and composers, winning the Best Classical Album at the 2006 NZ Music Awards and represented New Zealand at the 9th International Chamber Choir Competition in Marktoberdorf, Germany.

In 2010 Voices NZ joined several other choirs and the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra in a performance of Mahler’s Symphony No 8, conducted by Vladimir Ashkenazy. In August 2011 Voices NZ was one of the 24 international choirs appearing at the 9th World Symposium on Choral Music in Puerto Madryn in Argentina.  In 2013 Voices NZ joined the NZ Youth Choir for acclaimed performances in the Auckland Arts Festival for concerts celebrating the centenary of Benjamin Britten.

 

The Voices New Zealand Chamber Choir has recently released a recording for Atoll www.atollcd.com  entitled Voice of the Soul. As a flexible choir of between 16 and 32 voices, on this new recording they are shown as Voices 16 from the Voices New Zealand Chamber Choir.

This new disc features Taonga pūoro, traditional Māori instruments, alongside the choir in a repertoire that ranges from Hildegard von Bingen to contemporary works as well as traditional Māori instrumental interludes that are intended to act as a kind of promenade for the listener walking around a gallery of musical sensations.

Hildegard von Bingen’s O Viridissima Virga opens with the striking, deep hollow sound of the Pukaea, a type of wooden trumpet, resonating as the voices enter with Hildegard’s timeless choral sound floating above the background of the instrument. Soon the choral part fills out as the male voices add Maori texts and the sound of the Putorino, a Māori instrument that can act as a trumpet or flute, joins creating a strange and lovely texture. Beautifully done.

David Childs’ (b. 1969) www.sbmp.com/ComposerPage.php?ComposerNum=57 Salve Regina (1998) rises up with this choir providing a lovely blend of voices, pure yet with a robustness. There are some fine, accurate staccato phrases as well as contrasting textures between different sections of the choir to lovely effect. This is beautifully written and sung.

The first interlude features the traditional Maori Pukaea again providing some earthy sonorities that are so evocative.

Morten Lauridsen’s (b.1943) http://mortenlauridsen.net Six Fire Madrigals opens with Oc’e, Lass’ll Bel Viso presented in a slightly declamatory style before a flow is developed, these singers fully able to move naturally from the intense to flowing character of the music with some inspired static moments. Quando Son Piu Lontan has a gentler nature, an exquisite setting of a madrigal text with this choir weaving a superb tapestry. The upbeat Amor, Lo Sento L’alma shows this choir’s terrific vocal agility, terrific accuracy whereas Io Piango reveals some fine harmonies, superbly done by Voices 16, rising in drama before falling back to a gentler nature with some fine vocal control and sensitivity. Lui Serene E Chiare brings more fine harmonies with a theme that would test any choir with its wide intervals, very finely sung here. The more reflective Se Per Havervi Oime has some lovely little decorations beautifully and subtly done.

The second interlude brings the strange wind sounds of the Purerehua, a bullroarer, to which a plaintive wind melody is added leading into the next work, Helen Fisher’s (b.1942) http://sounz.org.nz/contributor/composer/1041  Pounamu. The choir enter over the Maori Kōauau tia, a small flute, bringing a lovely texture that slowly opens out with some beautiful sounds. There is some lovely use of voices and instruments as this composer develops different blends and harmonies. Another terrific piece.

The third interlude features the Poiawhiowhio, a musical instrument made by hollowing a gourd, drilling holes on either side and attaching a cord by which it can be swung around the head creating a whistling, chattering voice and a Karanga Manu that enables the player to mimic several kinds of bird calls. These two instruments bring the sounds of nature in this lovely link between works.

Christopher Marshall’s (b.1956) www.vaiaata.com  Horizon I (Sea and Sky) rises out of the preceding instrumental interlude beautifully, with a gentle sway over which the text is sung is given.

Benjamin Britten’s (1913-1976) www.brittenpears.org Five Flower Songs, Op.47 sit remarkably well along the other works on this disc. To Daffodils brings a lovely freshness of voice before they build some beautiful harmonies in The Succession of the Four Sweet Months, a lovely layering of voices. There is a buoyant Marsh Flowers with Voices 16 showing complete mastery of Britten’s difficult harmonies and intervals and The Evening Primrose where this choir brings a wonderful quality, perfectly blended, subtle harmonies, beautifully controlled. They bring superb accuracy and ensemble in the light hearted yet fiendishly difficult Ballad of Green Broom.

David Hamilton’s (b.1955) www.dbhmusic.co.nz Karakia of the Stars opens with bell like timbres of the Tumutumu, a percussion instrument which can be made from various types of stone and other materials such as wood and bone. The voices gently enter with a fine sonority before a very fine solo soprano voice comes in over the choir.  Another soloist appears whilst, throughout, these two evocative instruments add to the texture. There is very fine singing from the choir in the unusual harmonies evoking the New Zealand landscape, rising centrally to a rich, powerful peak before falling when the Kōauau porutu, a long Koauau with finger holes near the bottom end giving it the ability to jump between two octaves, enters.

The choir rejoins with the Tumutumu reappearing with whispered voices as the music fades into the elements. The Purerehua returns with its whirling sounds making an evocative conclusion.

This terrific choir show a tremendous versatility in this varied yet totally cohesive concert that creates some especially fine atmospheric moments.

They receive an excellent recording made at the Kenneth Myer’s Centre, Auckland University, New Zealand. There are informative notes though some more information about the traditional Maori instruments would have been welcome, though some of instruments used are illustrated.

 

 Click here to view the original review

In a nutshell, as the Festival brochure put it, Ata Reira promised an evening of award-winning choirs, majestic voices and Te Reo Maori in song.

Both separately and together, Voices New Zealand Chamber Choir and the New Zealand Youth Choir delivered all this in a choral celebration of light … and much more. From the start, Paul Lim’s imaginative lighting added so much, with shifting colours and intensities complementing the singers’ groupings and re-groupings for a selection of music spanning 14 centuries.

The dramatic launch involved a medieval chant from the processing choristers gradually diffusing and clustering around a karanga sung by Natasha Wilson; yes, we were definitely in Aotearoa New Zealand in 2015.

A generous booklet offered printed lyrics and background information, as well as making important connections, such as the various settings that shared the same text.

The opening, Stars by Latvian Eriks Esenvalds, was introduced with the unworldly sound of vibrating wine glasses, an ethereal soundcloud floating above the rich sonorities of the Voices NZ singers, conducted by Karen Grylls.

Other musical responses to light included Eric Whitacre’s Lux Aurumque, in which resonant harmonies frayed into shimmering haze, and the almost pointillistic scat textures of Mason Bates’ Observer in the Magellanic Cloud.

More conservative music would come later, with Bob Chilcott’s Canticles of Light stunningly delivered but a banal piece of writing, its laboriously paced three movements separated by sententious chimes.

At the end of the concert, the singers enjoyed David Hamilton’s Ecce Beatam Lucem, a hearty extrovert piece in a genre that this New Zealand composer does so well.

A highlight for me was Murray Schafer’s 1969 Epitaph for Moonlight, a freeform colouristic adventure, responding to onomatopoeic words for moonlight (my favourites were “malooma” and “sheelesk”).

For five enchanted minutes, conductor David Squire seemed to be a painter in sound, his gestures bringing forth luscious sweeps, cries and sighs.

The other high point was specially commissioned Waerenga-a-Hika by Tuirina Wehi, effortlessly combining the jive of kapa haka with a stirring melody that Puccini would have been proud to have written.

What: Ata Reira

Where and when: Auckland Town Hall, Wednesday

Reviewer: William Dart

German conductor Eckehard Stier guided the APO and two choirs through the expressive textures of Michael Tippett’s A Child of Our Time .

With inspired singing from Voices New Zealand Chamber Choir and the New Zealand Youth Choir, Stier presented Tippett’s testament of hope. Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra’s presentation of Michael Tippett’s A Child of Our Time was the homegrown highlight of our 2015 Auckland Arts Festival.

We were welcomed first with Arvo Part’s Silouan’s Song, its austerely tonal chorale illuminated by sonorous strings.

The full orchestra then dispensed Messiaen’s Hymne au Saint-Sacrement, a vivid compendium of the Frenchman’s compositional ploys. Conductor Eckehard Stier effortlessly moved from dreamscapes to marches, with their brilliant splashes of saturated colour.

Tippett’s 1944 oratorio is made of sterner stuff. For the composer it was a Passion in the Bach mould , “not of a god-man, but of man whose god has left the light of the heavens for the dark of the collective unconscious”.

One of the great humanistic statements of its century, its plea for peace and tolerance is even more potent today, in a world plagued by violence and genocide.

With inspired singing from Voices New Zealand Chamber Choir and the New Zealand Youth Choir, Stier presented Tippett’s testament of hope.

The young choristers were admirably lithe in flying contrapuntal flurries, and richly expressive in the punctuating spirituals. One felt the intended anger of Go Down, Moses, even through an exquisite pianissimo.

The orchestra clearly enjoyed the combat of gnarly textures, some with those rhythms Aaron Copland playfully claimed as American. Details entranced, too, as when two intertwining flutes introduced the Interludum.

A quartet of fine soloists was dominated by charismatic soprano Indra Thomas and tenor Nicky Spence. Thomas was a force of nature, holding her score out of sight for one thrilling phrase and adding the glow of exhilaration to spirituals.

Spence similarly engaged us, poignantly relating the frustration of being between hammer and anvil over subtle Latin-tinged rhythms.

Victoria Simmonds’ sense of style ensured phrasing of distinction in lines that did not always escape the orchestral surround.

Derek Welton brought a relaxed gravitas as the Narrator but was slightly wanting in dramatic focus towards the end.

These are minor quibbles, however, and if you missed this inspirational concert live, do tune in to Radio New Zealand Concert tonight to hear it.

What: A Child of Our Time
Where and when: Auckland Town Hall, Saturday

Originally aired on Upbeat, Monday 23 March 2015

Peter reviews the Auckland Festival production of Tippet’s Child of Our Time performed by the Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra, Voices NZ and the NZ Youth Choir.

Click to the link below to find the Radio New Zealand Concert podcast.

http://www.radionz.co.nz/concert/programmes/upbeat/audio/20172003/peter-hoar-apo-child-of-our-time-review

Michael Fowler Centre, March 13.

Dame Kiri is now over 70 years of age, and there have been ‘farewell’ concerts all over the world for some years now, but this tour through her home country must be nearly the last. Not that she looks anywhere near the end of anything and, with a carefully constructed program, she sounded just fine. Not that she now sings the wide-ranging coloratura of yesteryear, and she marshalls her resources to suit the state of the voice, but what she did sing here brought back memory after memory of the Kiri Te Kanawa of her prime. With the Voices New Zealand Chamber Choir breaking up the concert Dame Kiri showed no evidence of fatigue at concert’s end.

And the programme was not especially downmarket, as some might have expected, with a number of items that would have been new to the adoring audience. In 2014 the American composer Jake Heggie composed a song cycle for her to poems by Emily Dickinson, and ‘Newer every Day’, a cycle of five songs suited Dame Kiri down to the ground. And they are lovely songs, here done superbly aided by the stylish piano accompaniments of Terence Dennis (he played wonderfully all evening). The monologue from Jack Heggie’s musical setting of the final monologue from Terence McNally’s play ‘Masterclass’ was almost as good.

With the choir Dame Kiri sang Mozart’s Laudate Dominum’ – lacking a little in vocal power but fine nonetheless – and Schubert’s ‘Standchen’ in an arrangement for soprano and female voices, and although I much prefer the version for mezzo and male voices, this was well done. So, too, was the ‘Nun’s Chorus, from ‘Casanova’ and, of course, ‘Hine E Hine’ which was given again as an encore along with ‘O My Beloved, Daddy’ from ‘Gianni Schicchi’.

The concert also featured the choir on its own with brief works by Grylls/Wiremu, Hamilton, Faure and Brahms. Lovely singing but Dame Kiri was the reason the huge, enthusiastic audience was in the house.

Dame Kiri Te Kanawa, Voices New Zealand, Terence Dennis (pianist) and conductor Karen Grylls
A New Day – a choral improvisation (Voices New Zealand
 David Hamilton:  Un noche de Verano (Voices)
 Jake Heggie:  Newer Every Day – Emily Dickinson poems (Kiri)
 Fauré:  Cantique de Jean Racine (Voices)
 Mozart:  Laudate Domium from Solemn Vespers, K 339 (Kiri and Voices)
 Heggie:  Monologue from Masterclass (Kiri)
 Brahms:  Four Quartets, Op 92 (Voices)
 Schubert:  Ständchen, D 920 (Kiri and Voices)
 Johann Strauss II – Benatzky:  Nuns’ Chorus from Casanova (Kiri and Voices)
 Te Rangi Pai:  Hine e hine (Kiri)

Lindis Taylor, Middle C

Michael Fowler Centre, Sunday 13 March, 6 pm

 

The Michael Fowler Centre was full for the Sunday early evening concert. A song recital with a few contributions from a local choir would not ordinarily have filled St Andrew’s on The Terrace; the name Kiri Te Kanawa changed everything.

Very few singers are still in business over 70 years of age (Joan Sutherland stopped in 1990, aged 64, and I suspect that even if age was starting to tell in the voice or the appearance (which really it is not) this remarkable singer would still pull them in. It’s a combination of a singularly beautiful voice, a charming and outwardly modest personality and an instinct for presenting a programme with conviction, even though on paper it looked interesting rather than compelling.

For indeed, the programme was hardly orthodox. If you expected, from one of the world’s great opera singers a handful of popular arias plus a couple of unfamiliar though worthwhile items, some well-loved choruses and ensembles from opera or oratorio, making use of the choir; then a couple of groups of German lieder and French songs by famous composers, you’d be disappointed.

But the applause, even between the short songs in a cycle, and the standing ovation at the end, probably showed that most of the audience was there for the name rather than their musical knowledge; it would have been the same whatever she sang.

On the other hand, the programme showed much thought and considerable pains had been taken with the stage presentation, especially the opening where the auditorium was plunged into darkness as choir members murmuring very quietly, crept down the aisles; secretively, they began to sing ‘a choral improvisation’ devised by conductor Grylls and the choir’s vocal coach Robert Wiremu, quoting phrases from ‘All through the Night’ and ‘Early one Morning just as the Sun was Rising’ and others. As lights rose the choir’s singing turned into David Hamilton’s a cappella setting of ‘Una noche de verano’ by Spanish poet Antonio Machado. Its haunting quality was enhanced by the sounding of a singing bowl, akin to such instruments as the glass harmonica.

The more conventional part of the concert began with a cycle of songs commissioned from composer Jake Heggie: set to poems of Kiri’s choice; she chose Emily Dickinson, and she spoke naturally about her affection for Dickinson’s poetry. (Heggie’s operas include Dead Man Walking, The End of the Affair and Moby Dick). The settings were engaging, sometimes droll, witty, touching, and Kiri’s performances with Terence Dennis’s exact reflections at the piano, caught their intimacy and disarming character, accompanied with appropriate, natural gestures. The last song, ‘Goodnight’, sort of mocking the convention of the endless reiteration in many an opera aria, very keen-eyed.

The choir sang Fauré’s much-loved Cantique de Jean Racine, in gentle, slightly uninteresting tones. Here, the absence of an orchestra mattered somewhat, even though Dennis’s accompaniment was as sensitive as possible.

The first half ended with the ‘Laudate Dominum’ from Mozart’s Solemn Vespers, for choir and soprano, a favourite that age (of neither the music nor the singer) does not dim. If the absence of opera arias (apart from the encore) was conspicuous, this wonderful sacred solo offered evidence of the still beautiful voice, smaller and less voluptuous perhaps, but still capable of touching the emotions. Her dress too gave little hint of passing years: white blouse with summery, striped skirt, perfectly suiting a singer who, from mid stalls at least, might have been approaching her fifties: she was animated, looking almost youthful.

Another of Heggie’s notable compositions began the second half: the Monologue from Terence McNally’s play, Masterclass, inspired by Maria Callas’s famous 1972 masterclasses in New York. It’s a moving little masterpiece, richly reflecting the lessons of age that might perhaps apply as well to Dame Kiri as they had to Callas. Expressed and dramatized by this evening’s diva with quiet humour and belief; one line stuck in my mind: ‘The older I get the less I know’. Like much else in the concert, a great deal resonated with the experience of aging which would have touched a lot of the audience, including your reviewer. She spoke too about the work of her foundation, which provides valued guidance and tutoring to many young New Zealand singers.

Then the choir returned to sing Four Quartets for four voices, Op 92 to Brahms. It was an opus of songs written at different times, to poems by different poets, which Brahms collected and published in 1884. The first is by Georg Friedrich Daumer, the poet of the Liebeslieder waltzes; and the others by Hermann Allmers, Hebbel and Goethe. All use imagery of the night to conjure feelings of fragility and the passing of time. The acoustic of the auditorium, perhaps dampened by the curtain behind, tended to reduce the impact of the occasional rises in the emotion expressed by the choir, which were singing with great sensibility and insight, and there was the subtle, illuminating piano accompaniment.

Schubert wrote several Ständchen (serenades). This was not the most famous one, much arranged for all manner of voices and instruments. Opus D 920, set to a poem by Grillparzer, as beautiful, if not of similar, anthologising quality, was written originally for baritone and men’s chorus; but Schubert also scored it for soprano and women’s chorus, which is how it was sung. I was a little surprised that Kiri sang this reasonably familiar piece using the score. And again, my attention was particularly caught by Terence Dennis’s sparkling and thoughtful playing the of colourful piano part.

Kiri has made something of a signature piece of the Nuns’ Chorus (‘Nun’s’ in the programme! I noticed more than one nun singing in the chorus), almost from the beginning of her career. The melody by Johann Strauss II was not from a waltz or an operetta, but written some 20 years before his venture into the theatre in 1871. It was spotted about 80 years later by Ralph Benatzky (most famous for his Im weissen Rössl – At the Whitehorse Inn) and included, along with other music by Strauss, in the pasticcio operetta, Casanova, which went down well in the Berlin of the Weimar Republic. It was given imaginative theatrical treatment, though it didn’t quite conjure the atmosphere of Viennese (or here, Berlin) operetta.

The concert ended with the predicable Hine e hine; repeated as a second encore after the first encore, the only operatic offering of the evening: ‘O mio babbino caro’ from Gianni Schicchi. And there was long applause, with most of the audience eventually standing.

I should have commented earlier on the excellence of the programme book, which sets a good example with intelligent biographies of Te Kanawa, Dennis, Grylls, as well as interesting musicological and other details about the pieces. The nature and origin of the Fauré chorus and the ‘Laudate Dominum’ were simply described; Jake Heggie’s two pieces were placed in context; the pithy note on Schubert’s Ständchen might have commented on his settings of the other songs with that name; the provenance of the Nuns’ Chorus was clearly attributed; and dates were employed usefully throughout: not a strong point among many annotators.

But you have to go elsewhere (Wikipedia the most accessible) to refresh your memory about Dame Kiri’s origin. Typically, the biography is coy about her birth: born in Gisborne, Claire Mary Teresa Rawstron, on 6 March 1944. (after all, the note on Newer every day disclosed that it had been commissioned for her 70th birthday in 2014). Why doesn’t the feminist movement insist that birth dates of female personalities are routinely published in the same way as men’s are?

In all a splendid recognition of one of New Zealand’s true international celebrities.

The full immersive festival experience… for 75 minutes, we were almost part of one of the greatest stories ever told” New Zealand Herald
Passio exerts its own mystical power” New Zealand Herald
Passio was an uplifting and memorable musical experience” National Business Review
“The soloists, Lachlan Craig as St Mathew, Joel Amosa as Christ and Madeleine Pierard as the holy spirit were a trio of exceptional voices” National Business Review

At this epic staging of Jack Body’s PASSIO, audiences were invited to meander between orchestra, choir and soloists, creating a surround sound experience. Initially this generated amused and shy grins, at the end nearly everyone embarked on their own musical pilgrimage through the Town Hall stalls and when the concert finished the applause didn’t seem to end. Audiences left enthralled and engaged. A complete recording of the concert will be published by Radio New Zealand Concert and a video will be available through SOUNZ at a later stage.

Great concert snippets and critical commentary from RNZ Concert‘s review of PASSIO. The conversation continues….

What would Jack do? – A review of PASSIO; by Alex Taylor, Pantograph Punch