Review: Santa Barbara Chamber Orchestra at Hahn Hall

Maestro Ohyama Conducts Mozart, Schubert, and Rutter on December 10

Wed Dec 18, 2013 | 06:00am

Three string works spanning two centuries and written in distinct musical languages gave this performance a fresh vista at every turn. SBCO’s move to Hahn Hall at the Music Academy of the West is proving a delicious acoustic fit, and Tuesday night’s ample audience was evidence that the idea is catching on.

The good will and innocence of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s third so-called “Salzburg Symphony” set the evening off in crystalline eloquence. The 16-year-old boy wonder had already churned out reams of compositions by 1772, when he occupied the post of Court Concertmaster to Hieronymus Colloredo, Prince-Archbishop of Salzburg, and SBCO played this one with abundant clarity, delicacy, and panache.

<b>HEAD OF THE CLASS:</b> Maestro Heiichiro Ohyama and the Santa Barbara Chamber Orchestra are proving to be a delicious acoustic fit for the Music Academy’s Hahn Hall. The orchestra performed a series of string works there on Tuesday, December 10.
Courtesy Photo

Suite for Strings, by contemporary English choral composer John Rutter, revels in lush harmonic textures and is based, not surprisingly, on song. The SBCO strings showed just how much power they can deliver in the jaunty opening movement based on the English folk song “A-Roving.” The third movement, beautifully built upon “O Waly Waly (The Water Is Wide),” was extremely touching, with its undulating sub-textures.

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