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Hilaritas Review
Variety and contrast in 'Hilaritas' show up early
By Eugene Dobson
Tuscaloosa News
Sunday, December 3, 2000
The message of hope and love that is ubiquitous this time of year
seems out of place in our cynical, tasteless world. How do we find
the true spirit of these holidays when we are surrounded by self-seeking
people who will use whatever means are available to promote themselves,
hawk their wares, rasp everything in sight and fight everyone else
and each other?
Music is a possible way. In December we come to the winter solstice,
the death of nature, literally the darkest time of year and heavy
with human stain. Yet this also is the time when we slay the evil
boar, cut off his head and parade him around the banquet table
following the Light Elf, who shows us the way. And we are accompanied
in this by the music of the ages.
Friday evening's Hilaritas found some of us doing just that, in
our own ways enjoying the triumph over evil for Hilaritas means
joy. From the very beginning with "Christmas Is Here" and "Let
It Snow!" Tom Wolfe was the dominant figure. Who could doubt
his originality of arrangement when you hear in "Santa Claus
Is Coming To Town" a Latin beat? The variety and contrast
in the program shows up as early as the second section, performed
brightly by the Univer-sity Singers with the crisp, tradi-tional "Deck
The Halls," the quiet confidence of "Wonderful Peace" and
the raucous and quite funny "Christmas Gift," the verses
sung clearly by Alan Henderson, Ben Killen and Mark Tucker.
Hilaritas has always offered something special, something origi-nal,
and it does not fail this year with the soprano saxophone of Dr.
Jonathan Noffsinger. It is impossible to describe how Noffsinger "messes
around" with his notes, slipping up on them and always eventually
hitting them solid. It would never occur to anyone that "Bring
A Torch, Isabella" could actually be a torch song. And Old
Bing never sang "White Christmas" like this. In these
pieces it was not only Wolfe's arranging that was so clever, it
was also his jazz guitar with that silver sax that made these pieces,
including "0 Come, 0 Come Emmanuel," so vivid.
Then we were all encouraged, in lieu of an intermission, to stand
and sing "0 Come All Ye Faithful." This brought a tear
to my eye, because I sang in the very first Hilaritas, which was
directed by Fred Prentice, who did this very stirring arrangement.
Prentice, who was the choral director at the university for many
years, was the keen spirit who founded the Tuscaloosa Community
Singers and all in all over the years made Tuscaloosa a better
place to live.
The section entitled "Christmas in TV Land" I could
have done without, but Wolfe's inventive arrangements made it amusing.
The mournful, blasting trombone solo of Bryan Lokey in "Blue
Christmas" (as a picture of Elvis was flashed on the screen)
was funny and appropriate somehow. And the saxophone solo of Celia
Whiren in "Charlie Brown's Skat-ing," as well as Rob
Alley's trumpet part in "Rudolph the Rednose Reindeer," were
both well executed.
And now it is time to say a word about the University Singers
under the direction of Sandra Willetts. The first piece, "What
Strangers Are These," had both the fine and true mezzo voice
of Andrea Dis-mukes, who sang to us from the heart but with intelligence,
as well as the clear, young baritone of Juan Martinez.
The second piece "Betelehumu" was a marvel of percussion
per-formed by Aaron Paul Brown using only one hand. "This
Endris Night," from a poem in Middle English and composed
by Lana Walters, was not the best performance they might have given
nor yet the best that they will give, but it is a beautiful poem
in a lovely setting.
All three pieces expressed Wil-letts' attention to accuracy and
articulation. (An English lady was recently heard to remark to
her, "Your choruses don't sing Ameri-can, they sing English"-
a compli-ment indeed.) It is unfortunate for all of us with the
exception perhaps of Willetts that she will take early retirement
after 12 years of excel-lent work with the university choruses,
the Tuscaloosa Community Singers and her undergraduate and graduate
students.
"I'm Gettin' Nuttin' For Christ-mas" featured Kevin
Cowart on saxophone and Ian Connell on drums. It was a marvel of
arrange-ment again by Wolfe, who took "nuttin'" and made "sump'n" out
of it. Then Joel Gregory on the mighty Holtkamp organ accompa-nied
the singers and audience in John Rutter's arrangement of "Joy
to the World," a veritable frenzy of notes and chords, which
I risk to describe as "Handelized."
The program ended with a medley of old and new Christmas favorites
including "Christmas Song" - perhaps the best of more
recent popular holiday music - in a rich jazz arrangement by Steve
Sample, who with Prentice was a cofounder of Hilaritas.
You have one last chance, if you have not already done so, this
after-noon to sweep away regret, dark-ness, despair and evil for
a little while and join the forces of light, joy, hope and love
- that is, unless the house is sold out, as it was Friday evening.
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