|
Classic NJ Magazine
Ars Musica Chorale
and Orchestra, Italo Marchini, conductor, Rachel
Rosales, soprano Bernstein: Chichester Psalms;
Milhaud: Suite Provencale; Messiaen: Chant des
déportés; Perillo: Crushed Tomatoes; Poulenc: Gloria
St. Luke's Church,
Ho-Ho-Kus, NJ
– Saturday, November 15, 1997 –
"And now, the featured attraction: Crushed Tomatoes!
Before you think you've inadvertently opened the
pages of a punk-rock magazine, Crushed Tomatoes is
not the name of a band. It is a tone poem composed
by Saddle River resident Stephen Perillo. Its world
premiere was the centerpiece work in this concert of
works by twentieth-century French and American
composers, a concert superbly performed by the
musicians and singers of Ars Musica, expressively
directed by Maestro Marchini.
While the title and the
composers explanation don't quite contain the same
sort of epic imagery imagined by Liszt and Berlioz
when they promoted programmatic orchestral
composition, Crushed Tomatoes did successfully
conjure rich imagery of boiling vegetables and
bubbling sauces. Overheard expectations ranged from
humorous P.D.Q. Bach-like music to light-hearted
Leroy Anderson confections.
But Perillo's work is
far from a joke, even if frequently fun, and far
from mere entertainment. The fact that it does carry
the ponderous weight of so much modern music more
interested in theoretical potentialities than in
direct musical communication in no way lessens the
seriousness of its content.
This is a fascinating
piece that is also entertaining that is also
imaginatively developed that is also likeable that
is also contemporary. Quite a combination of
positive attributes, a combination that made the
work immensely well received by musicians and
audience.
Catchy themes permeated
the score. Momentum-building rhythms kept a steady,
invigorating pace. Solo instruments carried melodies
above a solid by never thick orchestral texture. In
short, this was a tone poem with all the
characteristics of the great tone poems that have
become part of standard orchestral performances.
Though one hesitates to
predict future musical circumstances, this is one
piece that sounded like a good candidate for
acceptance in a wider body of performed works, a
rare event for works created in the past fifty
years."
WRITTEN
BY ROBERT BUTTS, CLASSIC NJ MAGAZINE |