In the final concert of the 2021 Music in the Mountains Festival, the orchestra made good on its theme: Triumphant and Resilient. Conductor Guillermo Figueroa led the 47-strong ensemble in three works: Beethoven’s “Egmont Overture,” Brahms’ Symphony No. 1 in C minor and the world premiere of “Tone Poem of Triumph,” by American composer Nan Schwartz.
The program concluded the festival’s 35th anniversary season and lifted concertgoers out of a 15-month-long pandemic cave to exhilarating emotional heights.
Opening with Beethoven’s dramatic overture to a martyred hero from a long-forgotten European war, the orchestra performed with nuanced precision. Figueroa conducted without a score, something no audience should ignore, and brought out the muscular nature of the work as well as its intense delicacy. Filled with surges, reverses and breathtaking full stops, the overture unspooled in only 9 minutes, paving the way for a new work on the musically dramatic spectrum.
“Tone Poem of Triumph,” Schwartz’s 13-minute orchestral suite, echoed the rise-and-fall narrative story lines of 19th century tone poems but had enough modern elements, jazz syncopations and percussive structures, to place it in our century.
At the beginning, one voice, (flutist Jean Larson Garver) introduced a section shimmering with the feeling of daybreak. Then the musical journey began, encountering obstacles, struggles, menace and moments of short-lived triumph.
At least eight discernable sections marked changes in texture or tempo, and more solo voices entered briefly piercing the shifting moods. Bold sections marked by rhythmic pizzicato or a brass choir plateau contrasted with quiet moments of respite. Throughout, a distinct, rising-line motif could be heard, a gesture that was voiced by various solos and strings. Three forceful brass fanfares supported by a persistent pulse in the timpani (John Pennington) surged toward a sustained, climactic chord.
No wonder the audience erupted in enthusiastic applause. Figueroa acknowledged the composer in the audience.
Schwartz’s suite carried Beethoven’s drama forward and also paved the way musically for Brahms big, unquestionably stirring symphony that completed the program.
After intermission, Figueroa briefly told the story of Brahms’ multidecade struggle with his first symphony and prepared the audience for a 46-minute marathon. Again, conducting from memory, Figueroa took hold of the massive work and led the orchestra with clarity and control.
The heroic, fourth-movement theme is familiar to many, and early on, the festival’s four-man trombone battery introduced it in a big chorale. Other voices echoed its stately pronouncement later, especially the strings, led by concertmaster Emmanuelle Boisvert.
At the end, the audience outburst was spontaneous and strong, a vivid example of what is called “collective effervescence.” That sociological term, coined by sociologist Emile Durkheim in 1912, has found new life with the COVID-19 pandemic. A moment of communal fulfillment has been a long time coming. Festival concertgoers seemed to express it Sunday.
Judith Reynolds is an arts journalist and member of the American Theatre Critics Association.
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