[Scott
Joplin Treemonisha;
The Paragon
Ragtime Orchestra and Singers; Rick Benjamin, conductor; New World
Records 80720 (2011)]
ScottJoplin (c.1867-1917) is featured at AfriClassical.com. On Dec. 2, 2011 we wrote of the
release of Scott
Joplin Treemonisha,
recorded
by The Paragon
Ragtime Orchestra and Singers under the direction of Rick Benjamin,
conductor, on a New
World Records 2-CD set:
Classical917.org
KUHA-FM,
Houston Public Radio Classical
January
2, 2012
by: Chris Hathaway
“SCOTT
JOPLIN: Treemonisha,
in a reconstruction by Rick Benjamin.
Rick Benjamin conducting The Paragon Ragtime Orchestra and Singers,
with Anita Johnson, soprano
(Treemonisha); AnnMarie Sandy, mezzo-soprano
(Monisha); Frank Ward, Jr., bass-baritone
(Ned); Chauncey Packer, tenor
(Remus); and others. New
World 80720: 2 CDs, with 100+-page booklet including extensive notes,
illustrations and complete libretto bound into the album.”
“The
vocal soloists are excellent, musical and with better than good
diction. Soprano Anita Johnson, who sings the title role, is
particularly noteworthy, as is mezzo AnnMarie Sandy, who plays her
adoptive mother Monisha. Bass Frederick Jackson (Luddud) is another
standout; but, really, all the singers are standouts. The chorus is
one of probably slightly more than a dozen singers. Dialect is not
adopted wholesale, but rather as a coloring like vibrato, half-voice,
falsetto or anything else that lends expressivity to singing. It
never sounds affected. The instrumental playing is also first-rate.
“A
brief, delightful balletic moment occurs in the second act, with the
mostly minor-key Frolic
of the Bears,
for wordless chorus of about eight men and the "eleven &
pno." This was published separately as a piano piece during
Joplin's lifetime. The ensuing scene, in which Treemonisha is
rescued from the conjurers by Remus (tenor Chauncey Packer) is almost
a mini-Freischütz
scene (American-style, of course) in which Remus defeats them by
donning a disguise: "I know", he says, "the conjurors
are superstitious, and afraid of anything that looks strange".
The second act concludes with the chorus "Aunt Dinah Has Blowed
de Horn", which has a wonderful transparency and a new vitality
in Benjamin's orchestration.
“The
prelude to the third act is slow and wistful, leading without
interruption into a joyous ragtime (as only Joplin could write it)
reunion with Treemonisha and her adoptive parents, Monisha and Ned
(the excellent baritone Frank Ward, Jr.). It is here that the
orchestra really enters into the role of narrator for the first time.
In the duet between Ned and Monisha, there seems to be a
crystallization of Joplin's own operatic style. It isn't a copy of
anything European, although he had exposure to that tradition through
his European-born teachers. It is noteworthy, and even praiseworthy,
that at least two of these men—a German and an Italian—did not
try to make their protégé into something he was not, and recognized
his innate gifts and the originality of his own musical language.
“For
Rick Benjamin, this recording might be described as the culmination
of a lifelong passion. It is a must-have for anyone interested in
American music.”
No comments:
Post a Comment