Praise for AMOC’s performance of John Adams’s reimagined “El Niño: Nativity Reconsidered”, arranged and conducted by Christian Reif

Christian Reif leading Julia Bullock, Rachael Marie Wilson, Anthony Roth Costanzo, Davóne Tines, the Choir of Trinity Wall Street and the American Modern Opera Company at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine on December 21, 2022 (Photo credit: Nina Westervelt)

Concert Review (NYC): John Adams’ “El Niño: Nativity Reconsidered” from American Modern Opera Company
By Jon Sobel
BG Blog Critics
December 24, 2022

The resounding echo chamber of the Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine would be a death knell for a lot of music. Not to El Niño: Nativity Reconsidered. In the run-up to Christmas 2022, the American Modern Opera Company presented an abridged chamber adaptation by Julia Bullock of John Adams’ opera-oratorio. The drama was pungent as the vaulted space billowed the sound into thunderings and whisperings. The large crowd seemed captivated by John Adams’ (Nixon in China, The Death of Kinghoffer) compelling, mostly dark score, as arranged by Christian Reif leading the Choir of Trinity Wall Street, for stellar soloists and a tight chamber orchestra.

El Niño in the Dark

First performed in 2018 at the Met Cloisters, Bullock’s version sharply reduces the work’s length but retains its multicultural reach. Dramatic lighting enhanced the mood of awe appropriate for the nativity story. Leaving the audience mostly in the dark did not permit following along with the libretto, however. It would have been nice to be able to more consciously associate the music with the words.

On the other hand, there’s a lot to be said for losing yourself in the music with no distractions.

The libretto, compiled by the great eccentric, Peter Sellars, comes from the Bible, the Apocrypha, and various (mostly female) poets of the Hispanic world. The music comes from the extraordinary composite musical mind of John Adams, who can effortlessly mingle several strains of modernism to create music both challenging and accessible.

A Manger-ful of Top-tier Talent

Coppery-voiced countertenor Anthony Roth Costanzo seemed to surpass himself every time I hear him. On this occasion he was featured in the “Los Tres Reyes Magos” movement where he displayed his vast range and skill at leaping wild intervals. Bullock’s soprano shone in the “Magnificat” and throughout. Glorious-voiced baritone Davóne Tines, who stunned the arches above with “Shake the Heavens,” and the compelling mezzo-soprano Rachael Wilson, who wrapped a kind of cloaked majesty around “Pues mi Dios ha Nacido a Penar,” rounded out the soloists.

Christian Reif, Rachael Wilson and Julia Bullock (Photo credit: Nina Westervelt)

All the while, despite its very small size — which puts extra pressure on each singer — the choir skillfully projected rich color, whether rumbling counterpoint or stabbing an entrance out of the blue in a different key from what had ended just a second before.

Kudos go to Mark Grey for sound design, surely a challenge in such a cavernous space, and to John Torres’ lighting, which added drama and a cinematic fade-in-fade-out effect.

Even as a straightforward concert presentation, this version of El Niño: Nativity Reconsidered was a thrill. It’s music that deserves to be heard more often, and to be presented by top-tier talent as it was here. I hope it does indeed return to St. John the Divine for future Christmases.

Read the full review here.

American Modern Opera Company Orchestra and the Choir of Trinity Wall Street (Photo credit: Nina Westervelt)