|   It 
              was simply dazzling! 
              By Smriti Daniel 
              There is a tremendous bustle that overflows out of the doors of 
              the building in Chitra Lane. Little children are everywhere – 
              talking, laughing and clutching hands. As one walks inside, it becomes 
              apparent that rehearsals are in full swing. Here, classical music 
              has a little girl twirling; there, another one grasps a walking 
              stick and imitating age, hobbles convincingly along. 
             
              The event is Razzle Dazzle, a performance that showcased the talented 
              students of the Varuni Jayasekera Academy of Speech, Drama and Communication. 
              “I always tell them that acting is a serious business,” 
              says Mrs. Jayasekara, smiling. The children under her guidance seem 
              to think so, and are spending this poya day, hard at work. Interestingly, 
              this does not exclude having a great deal of fun – all the 
              laughter is testament to it.  
              This was the first time the academy is putting on such a show, and 
              amidst all the bustle and excitement, Mrs. Jayasekara with the help 
              of her “wonderful staff,” was orchestrating the movements 
              of a number of tiny performers – no easy task when you consider 
              that there are nearly 400 of them. All the performers are drawn 
              from the younger generations, who attend the academy and so the 
              youngest actors and actresses, speakers and dancers are still at 
              the tender age of five, while the eldest are around 17 years old. 
               
            While 
              the show featured some of the more conventional fairy tale characters, 
              such as Cinderella, Little Red Riding Hood, and Goldilocks, the 
              unconventional too found their place. For instance, Professor Speghetti 
              Freakestein and his machine introduce the somewhat controversial 
              subject of cloning, Darrell Rivers and her friends from the Malory 
              Towers series make an appearance, and the audience witnessed. A 
              Morning at Pemberley (from Pride And Prejudice).  
              For Mrs. Jayasekara, simply preparing for the show has been wonderful. 
              “So many of the children have just bloomed,” she explains, 
              adding that normally the process of learning in order to pass an 
              examination may be stressful for a child, as compared to getting 
              ready for a show such as this. Such experiences are extremely beneficial 
              for a child, holds Mrs. Jayasekara, adding that “This provides 
              them the opportunity to sensitise themselves as a body, in a focused 
              manner to that beautiful aspect of the arts which we call drama.” 
              In a simple social sense as well the children benefit, having been 
              given the opportunity to associate with their peers. 
             Varuni 
              Jayasekara is an experienced teacher herself, having taught English, 
              Speech and other closely-related subjects for nearly 26 years. She 
              is the Chief Executive of the Varuni Jayasekara Academy of English 
              for Specific Purposes, the Principal of the Academy of Speech, Drama 
              and Communication, as well as an Executive Director and Member of 
              the Board of Examiners of the Colombo Academy of Language Skills 
              and Dramatic Art.  
            The 
              Academy of Speech, Drama and Communication, which is responsible 
              for Razzle Dazzle boasts 12 well-qualified teachers and approximately 
              700 students, who are trained and presented for examinations, conducted 
              by institutions such as the Trinity College, London and the Colombo 
              Academy of Language Skills and Dramatic Art. 
             Razzle 
              Dazzle went on the boards at the Lionel Wendt on March 16 and 17. 
               
             
            Even 
              Mozart would have been pleasantly surprised 
              By Satyajith Andradi  
              "Mozart knew Bach more by hearsay than from his works; at any 
              rate he was quite ignorant of his motets, which had never been printed. 
              Scarcely had the choir sung a few bars when he started up; a few 
              bars more, and he called out: 'What is that?' And now his whole 
              soul seemed to be in his ears. When the performance was over, he 
              called out joyfully, 'That is indeed something from which we can 
              learn!" wrote Friedrich Rochlitz reporting on an incident which 
              occurred in 1789 during Mozart's brief visit to the Thomasschule 
              in Leipzig, where Johann Sebastian Bach had been the cantor for 
              much of his creative life.  
            The 
              Bach composition which Mozart heard was the motel 'Singet dem Herrn 
              ein neues Lied' (Sing unto the Lord a new song) BWV 225. The delightful 
              performance by the Camerata Musica of Bach's great motet 'Jesu, 
              meine Freude' (Jesu, my joy), BWV 227, along with Mozart's own Mass 
              in C Major (Coronation Mass), K 317 in celebration of the latter's 
              250th birth anniversary (the anniversary fell on January 27 this 
              year) would have no doubt pleasantly surprised Mozart. The choral 
              concert was held in the evening of Saturday, March 4 at St. Michael's 
              Church, Colombo 3.  
            The 
              choir was conducted by the guest conductor Gregory Rose. The soloists 
              were Anagi Perera (Soprano), Peshali Yapa (Mezzo-Soprano), Asitha 
              Tennakoon (Tenor) and Laknath Seneviratne (Bass-Baritone). Kamalinie 
              Samarakoon played the organ.  
            The 
              concert commenced with Bach's 'Jesu, meine Freude' BWV 227, which 
              is certainly his most famous if not his greatest motet.. From a 
              structural point of view, this work is an architectural wonder - 
              an axial -symmetrical composition of eleven vocal movements centred 
              on a great fugue for five voices! The musical texture is densely 
              polyphonic. The text, which Albert Schweitzer described as Bach's 
              sermon upon life and death, consists of Johann Franck's six part 
              Lutheran hymn and five biblical verses from St. Paul's epistle to 
              the Romans. The hymn tune of the chorale 'Jesu, meine Freude', which 
              was also the basis of Bach's organ preludes BWV 610 and BWV 1105, 
              provides the unifying musical and emotional basis of the whole masterpiece. 
              The motet represents through and through the so-called 'learned' 
              style in music. Its serene beauty belongs essentially to the realm 
              of the spiritual and the cerebral.  
            The 
              Bach motet was followed by Mozart's Coronation mass after a brief 
              interval. This work, which belongs at least in spirit to the so-called 
              'gallant' style in music, stood in marked contrast to the Bach composition. 
              The music was distinctly light and entertaining, with occasional 
              strokes of grandeur and solemnity. The music of the 'Crucifixus' 
              of the Credo is intensely moving. The mass is full of sensuous song-like 
              melodies, of which the soprano solo of the Agnus Dei stands out 
              prominently.  
            The 
              Bach motet and the Mozart mass represent two diverse styles in western 
              classical music - the 'learned' and the 'gallant' respectively. 
              The Camerata Musica and their guest conductor Gregory Rose need 
              to be congratulated for successfully showcasing two major choral 
              works by two of the greatest composers of all time - Johann Sebastian 
              Bach and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.   |