• en_US
  • es_MX
  • About Us
Sunday, December 14, 2025
No Result
View All Result

  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Publications
  • Business Directory
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Staff Writers
  • Subscriptions/Support
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Business Directory
  • Expert Advice
  • Real Estate
  • Report News
SDNews.com
Home Arts & Entertainment

Jacobs’ Masterwork Series Helps SD Symphony to Shine

Tech by Tech
November 28, 2009
in Arts & Entertainment, News, Uptown News
Reading Time: 4 mins read
0 0
A A
0
Jacobs’ Masterwork Series Helps SD Symphony to Shine
0
SHARES
11
VIEWS
Jacobs’ Masterwork Series Helps SD Symphony to Shine

Jacobs’ Masterwork Series Helps SD Symphony to Shine
By Jeff Britton

symphony If you haven’t been to one of the San Diego Symphony’s Jacobs’ Masterwork concerts lately, you are not only missing some splendid music but a free education to boot.

Prior to each of the three weekend concerts Friday and Saturday evenings and the Sunday matinee, the affable and articulate Nuvi Mehta gives a free lecture to prepare concertgoers for the music to follow. Mehta clearly has both the gift of gab and an abiding love for classical music, which is reflected in the down-to-earth vignettes he relates about the various composers and what inspired a particular composition.

If you miss the lecture, Mehta will give an abbreviated, pithy introduction just after intermission for the second half of the concert. Most recently, that was about Mahler’s “Das Lied von der Erde,” a work written a few years before the composer’s death of pneumonia at the age of 49.

“Das Lied” was the centerpiece of the concert, a work of considerable harmonic and tonal complexity that show Mahler’s preoccupation with death. Based on a German poem, it also reflects his interest in oriental philosophy since the six parts are all based on German translations of ancient Chinese poems.

As part of Mehta’s primer, conductor Jahja Ling, an Indonesian of Chinese descent, stepped to the podium to read the poems in Chinese, while the characters were flashed above the stage and Mehta translated.

It has often been said that Mahler’s nine symphonies are songlike and that his six song cycles like “Das Lied” are symphonic. Both reflect his personal feelings and his later compositions were moody — full of longing, desolation and loneliness. Like Beethoven and Mozart, Mahler yearned for a peaceful brotherhood of man, but the world never seemed to oblige.

Emotions dominate in “Das Lied” as it was written during a tragic time in Mahler’s life. His 5-year-old daughter died of scarlet fever, he resigned his post as director of the Vienna Opera and he was diagnosed with heart disease.

Written for mezzo-soprano and tenor with orchestra, the Nov. 20-22 concerts were blessed with two extraordinary vocalists: Jane Irwin and Anthony Dean Griffey.

In the opening “Drinking Song of Earth’s Misery,” Griffey at first had to compete with the orchestral bombast as he sang this sad summary of life and death’s overall darkness. One hears Mahler’s anger as he faces his own mortality.

Irwin, who is beloved in her native England, stolidly sang in a voice redolent with chromatic richness the wistful “Lonely One in Autumn.” Most intriguing was her handling of the song which mused about youth. Her suavity contrasted nicely with the orchestra’s rambunctious theme, which gradually dissipates into one of delicate beauty.

Griffey returned with a steadfast defense of drunkenness as the best state to cope with life’s pain in a voice both lithe and sarcastic. But it was the final “The Parting” that gave “Das Lied” its portent. Irwin milked its haunting theme for all its pathos, and made us aware of Mahler’s brilliant interplay of singer and orchestration. Appropriately, the harp plucked out a Chinese melody.

The concert opened with a fine reading of Samuel Barber’s Violin Concerto by Karen Gomyo. The Canadian spun out the impossibly romantic theme as it builds to a grand climax for the strings section. A few piano bass chords introduce the violin and later Gomyo made merry with the woodwinds in a mix of sultry legato strokes and high soft treble notes.

In the pensive middle movement, she elicited a meandering but equally romantic melody through a series of bold dramatic strokes designed to tug at the heartstrings. But it was in the manic finale where Gomyo’s virtuosity was brought full bore. Nonstop, rapid-fire passages were marked by driving triplets, racing sixteenths and some challenging work at the top of the violin’s range. She carried it off like a champ.

Next up in the Jacobs’ Masterworks series Dec. 4-6 is another grand amalgam of orchestral and vocal music: Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony, the Ode to Joy. It features the San Diego Master Chorale in one of the most thrilling choral symphonies ever composed. They are helmed by a quartet of soloists: soprano Erin Wall, mezzo Kelley O’Connor, tenor Robert Breault and baritone Nathaniel Webster.

Inspired by the spirit of the French Revolution and his belief that man’s birthright is to be free, Beethoven took Schiller’s “Ode to Joy” with its thrilling refrain, “All mankind are brothers,” and used it as the concluding movement of his last symphony.

To proclaim it, he added voices to a very sophisticated symphony because he felt that only through the human voice could he evoke the deepest feelings of mankind. Not only is its message apropos to the holiday season, but it promises to be one of the highlights of the impressive Jacobs’ series.

If lighter fare appeals more, the Holiday Pops concerts Dec. 16-20 features “Movin’ Out” star Michael Cavanaugh with the orchestra in a salute to the season. Also giving the concert some Latin flair is the Mariachi Champaña Nevin.

For information on future symphony concerts, visit www.sandiegosymphony.com or call (619) 235-0804.

Previous Post

San Diego Rep’s Seafarer: Even Fallen Angels Need Love

Next Post

Grand Orchids and Sweet Onions

Tech

Tech

Related Posts

north park music fest 2022
Arts & Entertainment

North Park Music Fest this weekend

by SDNEWS Staff
May 23, 2023
matt morrow photo credit simpatika 3
Arts & Entertainment

Executive artistic director Matt Morrow leaves Diversionary Theatre

by Drew Sitton
May 11, 2023
img 4581
SDNews - Features

Girl Scouts, volunteers refresh Mission Hills mural

by SDNEWS Staff
May 9, 2023
6 models
Arts & Entertainment

‘80s celebrated at San Diego History Center fashion showcase

by Diana Cavagnaro
May 9, 2023
A red wood gavel
News

Murder trial for North Park stabbing moves forward

by Neal Putnam
May 7, 2023
north park 1
Neighborhood Spotlight

Mental Health Month underway in North Park

by Mark West
May 6, 2023
1 nam una postcard 3
Arts & Entertainment

New Americans Museum highlights the country’s immigrants

by Dave Schwab
May 5, 2023
monarch cover
Arts & Entertainment

Art exhibition fundraiser to benefit Monarch School’s unhoused students

by Juri Kim
May 4, 2023
Next Post
Jacobs’ Masterwork Series Helps SD Symphony to Shine

Grand Orchids and Sweet Onions

[adinserter block="1"]
  • Business Directory
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Staff Writers
  • Subscriptions/Support
  • Publications
  • Report News

CONNECT + SHARE

© Copyright 2023 SDNews.com Privacy Policy

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • en_US
  • es_MX
  • Report News

© Copyright 2023 SDNews.com Privacy Policy