Thursday, December 12, 2024

French concert sets "joyeux" season off to a good start

Joyeux Noël!, 6 December 2024. Photo: Ian Thomson
Joyeux Noël! French Music for Christmas
Friday 6 December 2024
Knox Church

The very best concerts are those when you can’t decide afterwards which item you liked most and so it was with ‘‘Joyeux Noël!’’ on Friday. Knox Church was well-filled for City Choir Dunedin’s presentation of French music for Christmas. 

Musical director and conductor David Burchell’s selection ensured a varied programme that showcased not only the choir and Dunedin Symphony Orchestra but also the soloists. Soprano Cathy Highton-Sim, mezzo-sopranos Tessa Romano and Claire Barton, tenor Alexander McAdam and baritone Robert Tucker all impressed, as did Micah Xiang on the organ. 

The first three items, Patapan, Hodie Christus natus est and O magnum mysterium, introduced the well-rehearsed choir. Francis Poulenc’s O magnum mysterium is a less familiar version of this Christmas Day text, with challenging very high notes that were handled with aplomb. 

DSO strings accompanied the choir for the exquisite Christe Redemptor Omnium, with Highton-Sim and Tucker’s duet a delight before the other three soloists joined them. In this piece, the violin solo by concertmaster Tessa Petersen was lovely, as was the work of principal cellist Heleen du Plessis. 

In a change of pace, Burchell moved to the organ for Noël X, giving the instrument a lively workout, at times sounding almost harpsichord-like as it danced through the 18th century melody. 

Highton-Sim was at her best in Camille Saint-Saens’ Oratorio, an audience favourite, with the addition of Romano, wind players from the DSO and Xiang on the organ, adding to the choir’s impressive harmony. 

The second half of the programme was dominated by part of Hector Berlioz’s L’Enfance de Christ, a complex and beautiful piece that was an absolute pleasure to listen to. Then came what Burchell called a mystery piece, as it had been omitted from the printed programme. Sung in English, it was the familiar O Holy Night (Cantique de Noël), with music by Adolphe Adam. Again, Romano and Tucker excelled.

Three French traditional pieces wrapped up the programme, then Burchell said to the satisfied audience: ‘‘I hope it gets your Christmas off to a good start’’. 

It definitely did.

Review by Gillian Vine, The Star, 12 December 2024