Argentina, Strathmore Style
By John Pitcher
The Washington Post
September 28, 2000
We don't hear enough of Argentine composer Alberto Ginastera in the concert
hall these days. Of his contemporary and countryman Carlos Guastavino
we hear almost nothing at all.
The Tasat-Kidder-Bloom Trio's concert Tuesday at Strathmore Hall in north
Bethesda featured works by both composers. The group's fine and eclectic
program, which repeats this evening, also included music from the Sephardic
Jewish tradition in honor of Rosh Hashanah.
Though Guastavino and Ginastera shared a common national heritage, their
musical styles were completely different. For Guastavino, melody was everything,
and he spent his life panning for musical gold in the rich stream of Argentine
folk music. Ginastera was the modernist who grafted complex New World
rhythms and harmonies onto even more complex Old World forms.
Guastavino's simple and romantic melodies suited tenor and guitarist Ramon
Tasat just fine. He brought an earthy quality to the songs "Bonita
rama de sauce" and "El Sampedrino" sounding at times more
like an Argentine cafe singer than a classical tenor.
At 15, pianist Jacob Wolfe Kidder is already a polished technician and
a mature interpreter. He approached Ginastera's fiendishly difficult "Danzas
Argentinas for Piano" with power, precision and a welcome degree
of abandon.
Apparently, percussionist Steve Bloom has never met a rhythm he couldn't
master. Throughout the evening he showcased a mind-boggling array of beats
from Argentina, Bulgaria, Cuba, Morocco, Spain and Turkey. The trio ended
the program with a sing-along to the Sephardic song "Mi El Kamokha",
which brought the concert to a festive close.
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