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Arts & Entertainment Preview | February 2001 | Sponsored by Chrysler

by Austin Baer
One for All and All for One

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Manfred Honeck
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At any given moment, in towns and cities throughout the civilized world, amateur musicians are participating as key players in the grandest masterpieces of the literature: Bach's Passions, masses by Mozart, Berlioz, Brahms, or Verdi, symphonies of Beethoven and Mahler. Who are these pillars of our musical life? Why, choristers, of course! And yet, as we are all too apt to forget, a crack chorus (whether composed of Sunday drivers or lifers) is a virtuoso instrument in its own right, the individual singers as interdependent as the strings of a Steinway. Among the very greatest at large today is the Swedish Radio Choir—so stellar that the exacting Riccardo Muti once flew the ensemble to Italy for a festival performance of Mozart's Requiem, and quite a picture they made, all those blondes, among the mosaics of Ravenna. This month, on tour in North America with the comparably eminent Eric Ericson Chamber Choir and the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra, these remarkable artists put themselves to the test in two wildly contrasting programs. The first—offered in Toronto and Ann Arbor—is a mixed bill including discoveries by Strauss, Lidholm, and Schnittke (his Concerto for Mixed Chorus), as well as Ligeti's eerily disembodied contemporary classic Lux Aeterna. The second—at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., and in South Bend, Indiana—features Verdi's heaven-storming Requiem, conducted by Manfred Honeck, whose stock is rising fast. Courtesy of Lincoln Center's "Great Performers" series, New Yorkers get to hear both bills. (February 9, 11; 212-721-6500.)

Before and After Psycho

Movie fans know Bernard Herrmann (1911-1975) as the composer of the scores for Citizen Kane and Psycho. On February 15, we have a chance to get to know him better, thanks to Jonathan Sheffer, the conductor and artistic director of the