
Music / Romance Sublime! Art Song Canberra, Lorina Gore, soprano and Anthony Smith, piano, at Wesley Music Centre, Forrest, March 29. Reviewed by LEN POWER.
It’s a great experience to see an artist performing at the top of their game. It’s even more thrilling when she’s one of ours.
Soprano Lorina Gore completed her postgraduate voice studies at the Australian National University and at the National Opera Studio in London. After winning numerous competitions nationally and internationally, she joined Opera Australia as a principal artist in 2008 and has since performed many roles for the company. She also enjoys a busy recording career as well.
Her accompanist on piano, Anthony Smith, is also a graduate of the ANU School of Music. He is a Canberra-based pianist, composer and musicologist. He has performed nationally as well as internationally and is currently repetiteur for three major Canberra choirs. This was his tenth appearance for Art Song Canberra.
The program started with 8 Gedichte aus Blätter (8 Poems From Last Leaves) by Richard Strauss. Set to the poems by Hermann von Gilm zu Rosenegg, Strauss composed the songs when he was only 21. Three of the songs have become classics in the Lied repertoire. It was a great opportunity to hear all eight songs performed together.
Gore gave fine performances of each of the songs. From the hymn-like melody of the first song, Dedication, through the haunting and ethereal, The Night, Gore impressed with her emotional readings of the songs. Other highlights included The Dahlia with its enchanting vocal melody, Autumn Crocus, with its undertones of death, and the beautiful All Souls Day, the final song.
The second half of the program consisted of songs in various genres that have been part of Gore’s life and career, starting with songs discovered in her student days. She began with the wistful Stephen Foster’s No-one to Love and followed it with Kashmiri Song by Amy Woodforde-Finden. This beautiful song full of longing was given a superb performance.
The program continued chronologically and included songs by Liza Lerhmann, Roger Quilter, Lerner and Loewe, Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim. The distinctive styles of these songs were all given excellent performances. So Pretty, a song for Peace by Bernstein was movingly sung as was Before I Gaze At You Again from the musical Camelot by Lerner and Loewe.
Gore also impressed with her down-to-earth and disarming commentaries about the songs. Her story about obtaining an audition for My Fair Lady in Sydney just so she could meet the director, Julie Andrews, was particularly amusing.
Her final song on the program, Sondheim’s Could I Leave You? was brilliantly sung and showed Gore’s skill as an actress. Throughout the program, Anthony Smith played the various music styles with consummate skill.
For an encore, Gore performed the Habanera from Bizet’s Carmen, inviting the audience to sing the repeated chorus response in the song. It was an exhilarating end to a memorable concert.
Leave a Reply