The Jerusalem Post

ABU GHOSH MUSIC FESTIVAL Jauna Musika Choir Kiryat Yearim Church May 20

- • By URY EPPSTEIN

Mostly Christian liturgical music, performed by mainly Israeli and some foreign guest musicians in a Catholic church of an Arab village – this is the Abu Ghosh Music Festival’s formula for peaceful collaborat­ion.

The present festival’s guest musicians were the Lithuanian Jauna Musika choir, conducted by Vaclova Augustinas. Local audiences seem, for some strange reason, to be more familiar with Western and Central European music ensembles than with those of the Baltic countries. The tremendous­ly high artistic level of this choir came, therefore, as quite a surprise to many.

Voices sounded as though picked for sheer beauty. Clear sopranos, soft, gentle, unstrained and never shrill, even on the highest notes, soared radiantly over the medium voices in Bach’s motet “Singet dem herrn ein neues Lied” (“Sing unto the Lord a new song”). The balance of voices was perfect. Articulati­on of phrases was clear-cut. Phrase endings were achieved by a gradual diminishin­g of volume until vanishing into thin air, and never abrupt. Intonation was accurate without sounding pedantic. In Mendelssoh­n’s motet “Nicht meinem

namen” (“Not Unto Me, Oh Lord, Give Honor”) the baritones had a welcome chance to display their sonorous voices. Coloratura­s were flexibly lubricated. It concluded with a contagious­ly jubilant “Hallelujah.”

Alessandro Scarlatti’s Stabat Mater dramatical­ly and with intense emotion revived the grieving Mother’s despair at being doomed to witness her son’s brutal execution. The final “Amen” was not an afterthoug­ht, as happens so often, but a majestic conclusion of human suffering as described in music. In terms of choral singing, this Lithuanian choir was a dream come true.

 ?? (Courtesy) ?? JAUNA MUSIKA CHOIR
(Courtesy) JAUNA MUSIKA CHOIR

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