Thursday, March 3, 2011

Interview: Cantata Singers’ David Hoose On Bach’s Mass in B Minor

The venerable Cantata Singers and Ensemble obviously knows how to prep for a party. The group is revving up for its 50th anniversary celebration by taking on J. S. Bach’s monumental Mass in B Mass in B Minor, BWV 232.
By Susan Miron.
J. S. Bach — For Hoose, a living composer
David Hoose, Music Director of the Cantata Singers and Ensemble since 1984, is the man in charge of marshaling the musical and spiritual resources for the performances, which take place on March 18th at 8 p.m. and March 20th at 3 p.m. at Jordan Hall, Boston, MA. The Arts Fuse’s classical critic spoke to him about the wonders, challenges, terror, and tenderness of Bach and his music.
ArtsFuse: Was there a moment in your life when this love of Bach hit you?
David Hoose: Well, there was that moment in sophomore music theory at Oberlin when the teacher played a recording (Karl Richter?) of the Magnificat, and my hair stood on end at the “Omnes! Omnes!” interruption of the wistful soprano and oboe d’amore duet. Wow! The Bach Magnificat, so succinct, brilliant, full of character, and bold in its emotion, speaks very easily to someone that age. So that’s probably when I began to see Bach as a living composer.
ArtsFuse: As a horn player, did you find this passion in works involving playing the horn, or was it though something you heard? At what age did this happen? Do you hold a special place in your heart for Quoniam tu solus sanctus (the horn solo in the B minor Mass)?
DH: Bach capitalized on the horn’s sound to evoke the regal. Since that’s a character not often needed, the number of works that give the horn independent parts is small—the First Brandenburg, one of the six cantatas in the Christmas Oratorio, the F major Lutheran Mass, only about a dozen cantatas and the B minor Mass. All in all, not very many times. But when it does appear, the horn always plays a crucial role. In the B minor, the horn (along with the two bassoons and other earthy instruments) flips the switch to launch the “Cum santo spiritu,” and what could be more exciting—to hear or play? I have to say that, even after so many years away from the horn, I’m still not sure how much of my excitement is musical and how much of it is empathy for the hornist who must sit silently for 45 minutes before committing fearlessly to such an exalted exclamation!
Arts Fuse: When did you first hear/play/conduct the B minor Mass? What was your initial reaction?
DH: I probably heard it first as an undergrad at Oberlin—it’s interesting how little music I knew before I went to college—and I’m not sure what I thought. Years later, in Boston, I played the Quoniam many times—one year over a dozen times—and it was always thrilling and, well, terrifying. Then, when I began to study the Mass to conduct it with Cantata Singers (in 1988), it became clear that I knew the first half rather well, but the second half (after the horn player might have gone home) seemed rather vague!
Over the years and through four or five sets of performances that I’ve conducted, this luminous testament of a rich musical, intellectual, emotional, and spiritual life has become both more tangible and more mysterious. Like much of Bach’s music, the Mass in B minor knows no bounds, and that’s probably what captures all of us.
Arts Fuse: What did this piece mean to Ralph Vaughan Williams? Did he love Bach in general, and was that a lifetime love or something that happened after his deep acquaintance with Handel? What other composers did Vaughan Williams hold dear?
DH: That RVW conducted the Saint Matthew Passion 22 times (the last time only shortly before he died) and the B minor Mass nearly as many times, shows the reverence he had for this music. Wanting the communication unimpeded by the Latin or German, he lovingly prepared singing English translations of both works that he always used in performance. Though RVW probably didn’t know very many of the cantatas, the Mass and St. Matthew, along with a handful of other works, always played a guiding force in RVW’s performing and musical life. For him, too, Bach was a living composer.
Canata Singers' David Hoose — He thinks the Mass in B Minor knows no bounds. Photo: Michael Lutch
Like most composers, RVW held strong opinions about others’ music. Just read his incendiary prose about some of them! Though he had little patience for Schoenberg or even Stravinsky, and he didn’t even seem to appreciate Elgar, his tastes were generous. And for many lesser composers—Parry and Stanford (both were his teachers)—and for his closest friend, Holst, his heart opened. And how many of us would go to study with someone 10 years our junior, as RVW did with Maurice Ravel? That showed a remarkable openness—and courage.
Arts Fuse: Do you think the Bach choral works and chamber works like the Brandenberg Concerti somehow reach many people deeper than say, the many great works for keyboard, cello, and violin? (This is perhaps a dumb question, but one to ponder).
DH: Actually, a fabulous question, though not solvable in a couple of sentences. But, briefly, the greatest composers’ music often display two attitudes: a public face and a private face, though one never to the exclusion of the other. Haydn’s intimate string quartets delight in intricacies, but their invention also reaches up to their large designs. And the outgoing symphonies, richest in their amazing large shapes, are full of delicious details.
We hear the same duality in Bach’s music but less than you might expect. The B minor Mass and the Matthew Passion concede nothing to their being public works, and any movement from the Mass embraces as much, if not more, detail than the cantata movement from which it derives. Paradoxically, it’s often the overtly religious works that touch the broadest range of people, shooting right past everyone’s resistance, whatever they may be, finding everyone’s openings, wherever they are, and filling everyone with amazed joy.
As for the popularity of the Brandenburg Concerti (and the four orchestra suites), I really don’t know. Maybe listeners are just happy to find music that, on the one hand, is public (lots of musicians) and, on the other, doesn’t speak in the unswerving evangelical voice of the passions, cantatas, and masses. But it’s all an illusion since the one thing that’s common to all of Bach’s music is his unswerving spiritual belief. It’s odd: that voice is inescapable, and yet the music makes room for absolutely everyone.
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Classical Music Sampler: March 2011

March highlights include the American premiere of Boston Camerata’s homage to mystics of the Middle ages, innovative programming from the Chameleon Arts Ensemble, and appearances by heavyweights pianist Evgeny Kissin, paying homage to birthday boy Franz Liszt, and guitarist John Williams.


Eugene Kissin: Just the pianist to tackle the flamboyant music of Franz Liszt.
By Susan Miron
Wednesday Concert Series, held each Wednesday, 5:30 p.m. –  6:30 p.m. at Church of St. John Evangelist, 35 Bowdoin Street, Beacon Hill, Boston, MA. March 2: Emil Altschuler (violin) and Artem Belogurov (piano), March 9: Jeffrey Mills (organ), March 16: Jeanne Lucas (soprano) and James Busby (piano), March 23: Harrison Kelton (organ). March 30: Linda Kernohan (organ, piano).
Wednesday, March 2 @ 8.p.m. The Celebrity Series of Boston brings in the fabulous pianist Evgeny Kissin @ at Symphony Hall, Boston, MA. He will play an All Liszt program, no doubt in honor of the composer/performer’s 200th anniversary. Read Artsfuse feature with NEC’s Bruce Brubaker on Boston-area Lisztomania.

Sunday, March 6 @ 1:30 p.m. A Far Cry performs in the Gardner Museum Sunday Concert Series @MassArt Pozen Center (located directly behind the museum on Tetlow Street), Boston, MA. The conductor-free chamber ensemble of 17 young musicians is simply terrific. For this concert (they are in residence at the Gardner) A Far Cry is playing music by Handel, Golijov, Dvořák (Notturno, Op. 40) and Schoenberg (the late Romantic Verklärte Nacht)
Thursday, Friday, and Saturday March 10, 11, 12 @ 8 p.m. The Boston Symphony Orchestra @ Symphony Hall in Boston, MA. The great pianist Maurizio Pollini and James Levine, conductor, take on Schoenberg’s Variations for Orchestra and Piano Concerto and his Piano Concerto as well as Mozart’s popular Symphony No. 41, “Jupiter” and his sublime Piano Concerto No. 23 in A, K. 488.
Friday, March 11 @ 6 p.m. Last of 5 installments of Music for Food for Music. Violist Kim Kashkashion and others play Bach and Mozart to raise funds for The Greater Boston Food Bank. Please bring non-perishable food or a donation. This is a great series.
Friday, March 11 @ 8 p.m. Masterworks Chorale led by conductor Steven Koridoyanes performs at Sanders Theater, Cambridge, MA. Dvořák’s Stabat Mater is on the bill. This is a tribute concert to the Chorale’s past conductor, Allen Lannom, with welcome & opening remarks by Richard Dyer, former Senior Classical Music Critic of The Boston Globe.
Friday, March 18 @ 8 p.m. and Sunday, March 20 @ 3 p.m. The sublime B minor Mass by J.S. Bach performed at Jordan Hall, Boston, MA, by the wonderful Cantata Singers, led by David Hoose. Read Arts Fuse interview with Hoose.

Meister Eckhart -- his mystical writings inspired the Boston Camerata.
Saturday, March 19 @ 8 p.m. at the Old West Church, 131 Cambridge Street, Boston, MA. Boston Camerata‘s director Anne Azéma and Susanne Ansort, vielle,  explore German and French mysticism during the Middle Ages in a program “The Spark of the Soul,” built around the personality of the German mystic Meister Eckhard (c. 1260-c. 1327). Commissioned by festivals in France and Germany, this will be this production’s American premiere.
Sunday March 20 @ 8 p.m. at Seully Hall, Boston Conservatory, Boston, MA. Superb Violinst Carmirt Zori and pianist Pei-Yao Wang perform works by Dvořák, Prokofiev, and Schumann.
Friday, March 25 @ 8 p.m. The Celebrity Series of Boston presents guitarist John Williams at Jordan Hall, Boston, MA. The program will include Villa-Lobos and compositions of Williams himself.
Saturday, March 26 @ 8 p.m. and Sunday March 27 @ 3 p.m. The Goethe-Institut hosts Boston’s Chameleon Arts Ensemble, an excellent ensemble which offers innovative programming. These concerts will feature music of Schubert (the lovely Der Hirt auf dem Felsen for soprano, clarinet and piano) , the Hungarian composer György Kurtág, György Sándor Ligeti, and Robert Schumann’s wonderful Piano Quartet in E-Flat Major, Op. 47.
Sunday, March 27 @ 1:30. The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum presents The Nash Ensemble @MassArt Pozen Center (located directly behind the museum on Tetlow Street), Boston, MA. The group will be playing a great program of Takemitsu’s Entretemps, for oboe and string quartet, Poulenc’s Sonata for oboe and piano , the Franck Piano Quintet and this year’s most often programmed trio, the gorgeous Piano Trio in A minor by Ravel.

Monday, March 28 @ 7:30 p.m. Laurence Lesser, Walter W. Naumburg Chair in Music and faculty cellist at New England Conservatory, performs at Jordan Hall, Boston, MA. The teacher of countless great cellists and a great one himself, Lesser will play J.S. Bach’s Six Suites for Unaccompanied Cello.
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