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NCMC Chamber Choir Takes Audience to Franceby Mary Nordstrom The North Carolina Master Chorale Chamber Choir presented "Celebration Française" in Jones Chapel, at Meredith College, on May 15. Alfred E. Sturgis conducted. Apropos of the theme, in opening remarks, Sturgis reminisced about touring two summers with Robert Shaw, in the South of France. He also marveled that, while in Tampa Bay, he regularly hosted a Thursday night radio show that used Fauré's "Pavanne" as its theme song, noting that, on this particular Thursday night (May 15), he had programmed that work to conclude the first half of the concert. This proved to be a stroke of genius that left the audience wanting more. The concert was a representation of fine French choral music selected from many periods whose composers dated from 1485 to 1992, not to mention three living American arrangers of French melodies: Alice Parker, Mack Wilberg, and Michel Legrand. Maestro Sturgis opened the program brilliantly with "Le Chant des Oyseaux," by Clement Janequin (1485-1558). Birdcalls vocally reproduced in bouncing staccato were more imaginative than the obvious "cuckoo" that appeared as part of the work. The new audience - many hands had been raised to indicate first-time attendance at this series - was captured, for keeps. Susan Lohr supported the motet from the pipe organ. Throughout the evening, she complemented the choral music with superior accompaniment technique when piano was indicated, as well. Her sensitive interpretations marked her as an outstanding accompanist. Then followed "Valse avec Choeur" by George Bizet (1838-75). This incorporated a simplistic verse that Sturgis presented in English, no less inconsequential than many an opera libretto, but nonetheless musically delightful. Lighter in tone than a Strauss waltz yet with dynamic contrasts that made it powerful, this work could be added to the annual New Year's Eve waltz fare of the NC Symphony. "Little Boy Lost (Pieces of Dreams)" by the popular Frenchman, Michel Legrand (b.1932), provided a distinctive finale. *Soloists not identified in the program itself were listed in the supplemental "texts and translations" materials. For the record, the soloist in "Quant j'ai ouy le tabourin" was Jennifer Seiger, and, as noted above, M. Angelyn Bethel sang in the Rameau motet excepts, replacing Erin O'Hara.
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