It took Eric Holtan and his True Concord Voices & Orchestra seven years before they were ready to mount Bachβs B Minor Mass.
Three years later, they did Bachβs even more ambitious St. John Passion in 2014.
At the time, Holtan, who founded the professional choir in 2004, said he was βworking up the courage to do the St. Matthew,β the final piece of the Bach masterworks trifecta.
Five years later, Holtan and the ensemble have found the courage. They will perform the work four times this week starting with a performance at the Arizona Bach Festival in Phoenix on Thursday, Feb. 21, followed with Tucson performances.
βNot to diminish the B Minor Mass or St. John Passion, which are both major works, but the St. Matthew Passion is in another league in size and scope and passion,β he said. βIt is a major work and we are finally ready to tackle it.β
This will be a first for Holtan, whose only brush with the St. Matthew was working the supertitles as a graduate student at the University of Arizona when Bruce Chamberlain led a cast of 150 β including the UA Symphony Orchestra, Arizona Choir, UA Collegium Musicum, Tucson Arizona Boys Chorus and the UA Symphonic Choir β in a UA Presents performance.
βIβd like to think that Iβve gotten a few more notches on my belt now and the biggest one was the Bernstein Massβ last season, he said. βPart of me thinks that after that, I can tackle anything.β
Bach penned the St. Matthew Passion in 1727 for double orchestra, double choir and solo voices. Itβs based on the gospel of Matthew, chapters 26 and 27, and was performed for the first time on Good Friday in Leipzig. In addition to the biblical text, it includes a libretto by German poet Picander (Christian Friedrich Henrici).
βItβs like an opera. Thereβs a libretto and there ... are arias with soloists commenting on what is happening and the chorus playing a role or commenting,β Holten said. βItβs very dramatic.β
Holton is using 32 True Concord vocalists and 24 members of the Tucson Arizona Boys Chorus that he is splitting into two choirs. The orchestra, comprised of 27 players, also will be split into two groups, performing separately and together.
Bach doesnβt get any bigger than this, said David Topping, an Arizona Bach Festival board member.
βItβs the pinnacle, the masterpiece,β he said. βEveryone considers it kind of Bachβs big monument to this kind of art.β
The work is rarely performed β aside from community and university choir performances. It has never been performed professionally in Tucson. It hasnβt been performed in Phoenix in about a decade, said Alex Kosiorek, president of the Phoenix Early Music Society.
The society, celebrating its 23rd year, teamed up with the Bach Festival to co-sponsor True Concord in Thursdayβs performance. The concert is the highlight and the finale of the Bach Festival, now in its 10th year. The four-concert festival kicked off last month.
βWhen we heard he was doing it, that was perfect,β Kosiorek said. βIf you are going to pick one of the masterworks of Bach, itβs the St. Matthew Passion, and you want to take time to hear it and see it.β
Holtan admits itβs a big ask; St. Matthew Passion runs three hours with one intermission. But itβs an exciting three hours.
βThere are no lulls in it. Itβs action packed. Itβs very dramatic,β he said. βAnd it is full of stunningly beautiful and memorable melodies. It boggles my mind.β
βI couldnβt have done it five years ago,β Holtan said. βArtistically we have grown each and every year, and as weβve tackled these various masterworks (Bachβs βMagnificat,β Vivaldiβs βGloria,β Mendelssohnβs βElijah,β Mozartβs C Minor Mass), itβs been a building-up point, building up our own cred and chops to be able to tackle this piece. I think weβve arrived as a group and I think Iβve arrived as a conductor.β
Contact reporter Cathalena E. Burch at cburch@tucson.com or 573-4642. On Twitter @Starburch