A
Real Old Fashioned Christmas
Local
and international groups get in the spirit BY
BRETT CAMPBELL
There's so much worthy music playing at the UO over
the next couple weeks that you might as well just set up a sleeping
bag around Beall Concert Hall. The guards will likely mistake you
for a finals-cramming student or a student musician waiting for
a stairwell to open up for practice space. (The space crunch should
be alleviated in a year or so when the building expansion is done.)
Waverly
Consort
The major Beall ringing is the Waverly Consort's
Christmas Story at 3 pm Sunday, Nov. 25. More than concert, the
program features some theatrical gestures and other visual elements
(music manuscripts and other illuminated miniatures) to dramatize
the biblical nativity story from the perspective of the Middle Ages.
The celebrated New York-based period instrument quintet, augmented
by eight singers, uses costumes, music (much of it unfamiliar) and
authentic instruments of the time and place (medieval Italy, Britain,
Spain, France) to conjure a musical and visual spectacle appropriate
to the occasion. Whether you observe the Christian holiday or not,
if you're tired of endless Christmas cliches (Santa, reindeer, the
same half dozen carols), this musical and historical performance
should make a wonderful holiday event.
Speaking of sounds medieval, the UO's Collegium
Musicum will sing vocal music from the 13th and 14th centuries
in a free show at Central Lutheran Church (18th & Potter) Monday,
Nov. 26, including songs by Machaut and Landini and motets from
Paris' cathedral of Notre Dame. The next evening, one of the finest
vocal ensembles of our time, Norway's Trio Medieval (abetted
by a percussionist) sings Scandinavian traditional music in Portland
at St. Philip Neri Church. Back at Beall, the UO's holiday choral
concert on Thursday, Nov. 29, collects a trio of campus choirs
to sing seasonal music from the past four centuries, including spirituals
and contemporary works.
As always, the UO has plenty of music of our own
time. On Tuesday, Nov. 27, the estimable Eugene Contemporary
Chamber Ensemble plays music by Darius Milhaud and other works,
including a world premiere by UO graduate composer Jesse Jones.
On Friday, Nov. 30, at 4 pm in the Knight Library Browsing Room,
other student chamber ensembles will play intimate music
by Milhaud's Paris colleague Francis Poulenc, Ervin Schulhoff, the
great 20th century composer Gyorgy Ligeti, who died last year, and
others including an oldie but goodie: Schubert's Trout quintet.
On Sunday, Dec. 2, the UO Percussion Ensemble bangs out music
by Michael Colgrass, Anthony Cirone and — another oldie —
Telemann. And don't forget the brief Monday Sound-Bytes series
from 11:54 am-12:08 pm at the UO's Collier House, which on Dec.
3 features the debut performance of Beta Collide, a new music
group directed by the UO faculty trumpeter Brian McWhorter (nationally
known for his work in the New York based Meridian Ensemble) and
fab flutist Molly Barth (internationally acclaimed for her work
in Eighth Blackbird) in a trio by the much admired contemporary
Ukrainian composer Valentin Silvestrov. Admission is free to all
of these but the percussion concert.
We opened with a holiday concert, so let's close
with one. The Shedd is making its Christmas show an annual
tradition. Singer Shirley Andress and pianist Vicki Brabham, both
Shedd veterans, have invited various favorite musicians to accompany
them in classic Christmas fare, singalong carols, and more Friday,
Nov. 30, Thursday, Dec. 6, and Sunday, Dec. 9 (matinee) at the Shedd.