Outstanding performances by female members on the cast contributed, in large measure, to the musical excellence delivered at Classical Jewels X-The Legacy, staged by the Neal and Massy Trinidad All Stars Steel Orchestra at the National Academy for the Performing Arts (NAPA) in Port-of-Spain on Saturday night.
Dedicated to the legacy of the 77-year-old orchestra's watchwords-discipline, dedication and magnificence-the tenth edition programme's pieces were selected to pay tribute to its former musical directors. In addition, the occasion was used to recognise the rise of one of its musicians, Deryck Nurse, from pannist to orchestra conductor.
It was midway on the playbill's first half when adoration and appreciation for the cast's fairer sex was generated.
Tenor pannist Mia Gormandy, now into her second year at Florida State University in Tallahassee where she is pursuing a master's degree in ethnomusicology, teamed up with acclaimed vocalist, pianist, pannist and percussionist Michaela Tamika Ward-Lewis on the marimba (a type of xylophone, but with a broader and lower tonal range) to perform Astor Piazzolla's History of the Tango.
The result was a heady musical conversation between pan and percussion that left the audience stunned. Before there was time to recover, however, guest conductor June Nathaniel was taking the orchestra's all-female ensemble, featuring Keisha Baisden on violin, through the intricate passages of Concerto No 1 in E major, Op 8, La Primavera by Antonio Vivaldi. Baisden is a graduate of the University of Miami where she completed her BSc in music therapy and psychology.
The sheer exuberance and dramatic energy the combination demonstrated in delivering the work was widely applauded. Nathaniel, who has enjoyed a long relationship with Trinidad All Stars, used her vast expertise as a music conductor to guide the full orchestra through a robust, swaggering interpretation of Franz Von Suppe's Morning, Noon and Night in Vienna to bring the curtain down on a first segment of awesome musical proportions.
After the interval, the string ensemble joined the orchestra.
Made up of nine members, of which eight were female, the ensemble, despite the dominance of the tenors, still managed to elicit a clarity of harmonic expression in the grouping's presentation of the Ballet Switch in which the music of Tchaikovsky, Verdi, Leo Delibes and Khachaturian featured in selections which included Swan Lake, Waltz of the Flowers, Children's March, Czardas, Dance of the Moorish Slave Boys and Sabre Dance.
The ensemble's appearance with the band was facilitated through discussion with the management of the National Sinfonia Orchestra.
The segment included, as well, presentations by the Trinidad All Stars Septet (a seven-member configuration) doing Water Music Suite in D Major; vocalist J Errol Lewis, who suffered from the auditorium's less-than-perfect sound system for vocal microphones in his showcase of I Shall Not Want, as did Jacqueline Smith in her appearance; and Dane Gulston on tenor pan and Satnarine Baboolar on sitar performing Gulston's composition titled A Different Shade of Silver.
Following a medley of Christmas music, the programme ended with a triumphant rendering of Panorama Classics, in which the Stars flawlessly recreated two of its finer moments in that competition-Curry Tabanca that managed to earn it a disappointing fourth place in 1987, and Woman on the Bass that won the championship title in 1980.