Young People's Chorus Premieres Ellen Reid
Joined by Shallaway Choir and Mantra Percussion
By: Susan Hall - May 23, 2019
Ellen Reid, Pulitzer-Prize Winner 2019, Premieres a New Work
Gerald Lynch Theater
May 19, 2019
Shallaway Youth Choir
Folk Song arrranged by Moira Smiley: Wayfaring Stranger
Craig Hella Johnson: Will There Really Be a Morning
Newfoundland Folk Song: Sing You Home
Miklos Koscar: Salve Regina
Newfoundland Folk Song: I’se Bye
Mantra Percussion
Ellen Reid: Fear/Release
Young People’s Chorus
Bernat Vivandos: Bubbles (with Mantra Percussion)
Jaako Manti Jarvi: Pseudo-Yoik
Dominik Argento: Orpheus
Stephen Sondheim: Another Hundred People
Ellen Reid: Take Time, Tutti, So Much on My Soul
Shallaway Choir, Kellie Walsh (Conductor)
Young People’s Chorus of New York, Francisco J. Núñez (Conductor)
The Young People’s Chorus of New York performed their annual Vocal Resolutions concert on May 19th at the Gerald Lynch Theater in New York. They were joined by the Shallaway Choir of Newfoundland, a group that has won as many awards as the YPC. Mantra Percussion made an unusual appearance, YPC being the only singing group they work with. (Shallaway added to the mix this year.) Mantra is particularly suited to the music of this year’s Pulitzer Prize winner for music, Ellen Reid. Her music mixes a bell-like quality with percussive drive. Mantra performs on marimba, xylophone and triangles with their assembled feet driving bass drums beats incessantly.
This concert had Mantra performing Reid’s Fear/Release without voices so that the audience could both appreciate her instrumental qualities and theirs.
Shallaway Choir from Newfoundland opened the program with folk songs and also a piece with religious overtones. The purity of the combined Shallaway voices, sounding as one lovely bell, was striking. They added a moving beat to their performance, swaying as one foot was placed behind the other and then tapped. At one point, they swooped to the knee in a bend, which the singers described as an extremely difficult move reminiscent of Motown. Yet one felt that the fun feelings of movement freed to singers to perform at an even higher level.
Núñez, the founder of YPC and its conductor, worked with the group from its start three decades ago. He unleashes the true voices of often twitchy and fearful teens. He never thought that a chorus should stand still, like a choir. He looked to body motions to liberate the musicality of the singers and to more deeply engage an audience. In Bubbles,the concert hall was not only filled with sounds, but also with thousands of rainbow bubbles blown to fill the stage. In another song, balloons were intermittently blown up and released. Batted out to the audience, they were smashed back to the stage. Not distracting at all, but rather more fully engaging everyone in the concert hall.
Reid’s music is richly resonant. The overarching theme of this concert was ‘balance.” When Reid accepted her assignment from Núñez, (prior to her Pulitzer) she talked with the choristers and soon knew their words would be interspersed with her music. She wanted to express “the many chaotic, and often conflicting pressures in their lives.”
Her Take Time from The Books, was performed with Mantra. “The man which is to be has already been, the man which is now hath already been...take time, take time.” This echoes the ages of man from Shakespeare. Reid's new So Much on My Soul,” with Shallaway, YPC and Mantra all performing. Reid succeeded in creating cycles, and repeating gestures.It was a journey to self-acceptance in which balance is both cyclical and endless.
This ambitious mission was realized by the musicians in a concert of profound delight.