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Austin360 blogs > Austin Arts: Seeing Things > Archives > 2008 > December > 09
Tuesday, December 9, 2008
Review: Conspirare’s ‘Christmas at the Carillon’
It’s time to declare it: Conspirare is Austin’s most original classical music group.
And if you want to dispense with misleading, and empty, descriptors, let’s just drop “classical.” Conspirare is one of Austin’s most original musical treasures.
Monday night, Conspirare artistic director and founder Craig Hella Johnson and his Grammy-nominated choir made their primacy on Austin’s cultural landscape abundantly clear. With singer-songwriter Eliza Gilkyson as a special guest, Conspirare brought its beloved annual “Christmas at the Carillon” concert to the Long Center for the first time. Though the holiday concert was originally conceived in the mid-1990s to fit the intimate Carillon chapel, Johnson and the singers perfectly transported an abundance of warmth and soul to the 2,400-seat Long Center.
Part of the reason Conspirare brought its holiday concert to the Long Center was to test the waters with a wider — and more affordable — range of ticket prices than is available at the Carillon. The experiment paid off. Monday night’s concert was virtually sold-out. (Maybe that was also due to the excitement generated by last week’s announcement that Conspirare is up for two Grammy Awards this year for its latest CD ‘Threshold of Night.’)
Against a backdrop of towering potted oak trees, decorated with strands of white lights, Johnson, Gilkyson and the 22-member choir thrilled with a 100-minute concert that seamlessly blended everything from plainsong chants to gospel hymns to traditional carols to Bach motets.
In lesser hands that collaging of different musical styles can come off as forced and usually treacly. But Johnson’s touch is supremely artful. A combination of surprising arrangements and masterful direction — coupled with an unerring instinct never to overdo it — makes Johnson’s always collaging glorious, fresh and full of sincerity. A blending of Madonna’s “Deeper and Deeper,” Bach’s “Alles was Odem hat” and the freshly minimal work of Eric Whitacre? Sure, it’s all sounds good and glorious in Johnson’s hands.
With only Johnson accompanying on piano (Thomas Burritt provided light percussion) and Gilkyson occasionally on guitar, Conspirare kept the audience captivated. These are singers so dedicated and in love with what they do their devotion spills from the stage. Powerful solos came from Kathlene Ritch, Lauren Snouffer and David Farwig. And Gilkyson mesmerized with her haunting song “Beautiful World” and delighted with the upbeat “Day of Jubilo,” by her father, noted songwriter Terry Gilksyon.
But soprano Nina Revering (who also directs Conspirare’s youth choir) brought the audience to tears with her achingly beautiful treatment of the folk pop song “Child in Me Again.”
Indeed there’s a depth of emotion — a sense of occasion — to Conspirare’s concerts that’s missing from just about most other classical music event in Austin. Through talent, creativity, dedication and accessibility, Conspirare makes a diverse range of music absolutely vital.




