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Note: In the interest of honest disclosure all reviews are presented without omission of any relevant material.

Lauridsen's work proves popular

May 23, 2000
Melinda Bargreen Seattle Times music critic

The audience was already on its feet, with a standing ovation for the Seattle Choral Company's first Seattle performance of Morten Lauridsen's "Lux Aeterna." But when Lauridsen himself stepped onto the stage to acknowledge the applause, a football-stadium roar arose in the sedate confines of the First Presbyterian Church.

You don't hear that kind of roar very often in performances of new music; it's a response that indicates the audience has been moved, impressed and delighted by what it just heard.

Seattle Choral Company director Fred Coleman has performed a lot of Lauridsen this season, and no wonder: "Lux Aeterna" is rapturously beautiful, in the composer's distinctly tonal style with honest, heartfelt and often complicated close-harmony choral writing. Composed for chorus and orchestra, "Lux Aeterna" is a five-part work based on Latin sacred texts about light; it has the feeling of both a requiem and a benediction.

The heart of the score is the lovely central movement, "O Nata Lux," which is a cappella. Coleman drew out the music with obvious affection and care; the singers performed it well, though it would be nice to hear a little more heft in the basses and a better blend in the sopranos.

The church is not an ideal showcase for chorus. Long, narrow and high-roofed, it seems to contain and stifle the sound at the front of the hall; in the back balcony, just where the sound should be best, it feels distant and indistinct.

Placed in front of the chorus, the orchestra (free-lancers and members of several top local orchestras) sometimes overbalanced the singers. The program opened with the Faure Requiem, one of the great choral standards, in a strong performance with two very successful soloists: the warm-voiced baritone Glenn Guhr, and soprano Monica B. Harris (who sang the "Pie Jesu" with ethereal clarity).

Copyright © 2000 The Seattle Times Company