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Pops pack a punch with energetic military
salute
Monday, May 31, 2004
Donald Rosenberg
Plain Dealer Music Critic
The Cleveland Pops Orchestra certainly
knows how to celebrate life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
For their fourth annual "Salute to Our
Armed Forces" Friday at Severance Hall, the ensemble and music
director Carl Topilow extracted every ounce of character from the
music at hand, even as they squeezed a battalion of guests onto the
program.
The extravaganza included performances
by the United States Army Ground Forces Band and the Mutual Gifts
Gospel Choir, as well as appearances by members of the Tuskegee
Airmen, basketball legend Wayne Embry and Channel 8 weatherman Dick
Goddard
It was a stirring and entertaining
concert, crammed with invigorating music, touching tributes to every
branch of the armed forces and a stars-and-stripes finale replete with
a quintet of Sousa-savoring piccolo players and Topilow's
red-white-and-blue clarinet.
Oh, and, naturally, Tchaikovsky's
"1812" Overture. No one seems to mind that a Russian work depicting
Napoleon's army battling the czar's forces has become a symbol for
American patriotism and victory. Topilow led the Pops Orchestra in a
soulful, thrusting performance, with brasses from the Army Ground
Forces Band pealing forth magnificently from the balcony.
Topilow's programming went well beyond
direct references to war and freedom. A Glenn Miller medley, in a
superb arrangement by Pops trombonist Paul Ferguson, paid tribute to
the band leader whose irresistible dance music helped keep a nation's
morale high during some of the darkest hours of World War II.
The Army Ground Forces Band touched on
military matters in works by Aaron Copland and James Horner. But the
ensemble, led with minimal gestures and maximal musicality by Capt.
Dwayne Millburn (a former Topilow student at the Cleveland Institute
of Music), also saluted civilian achievements by two American icons,
Henry Fillmore and Leonard Bernstein. The crackerjack band played the
former's "Man of the Hour" march and the latter's suite from "Candide"
with enormous rhythmic vitality and charm.
Virtually everything on the program
pleased ears and lifted spirits: the U.S. Army Herald Trumpets in the
"Triumphal March" from Verdi's "Aida"; the Mutual Gifts Gospel Choir
(all women) in several rousing numbers; and the entire audience, in
excellent, exuberant voice, singing patriotic tunes and waving tiny
American flags.
This wasn't happiness pursued, but
happiness - however fleeting - achieved.
To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:
drosenberg@plaind.com 216-999-4269 |