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Music

Symphonic-Choreographic Spectacular at Santa Barbara’s Granada

The Santa Barbara Symphony, collaborating with State Street Ballet, went big again with ‘Carmina Burana,’ at the Granada.

Symphonic-Choreographic Spectacular at Santa Barbara’s Granada

In a sense, last weekend's multisensory, multi-organizational spectacular version of Carl Orff’s Carmina Burana, at The Granada Theatre, had a certain déjà vu ripple effect. Back in 2015, the Santa Barbara Symphony (SBS) joined forces with the State Street Ballet and the Santa Barbara Choral Society to take on this ambitious package of sight-sound-symphonic-choral dimensions.

Seven years later — a time period turned rubbery by the pandemic — the local production of Bavarian composer Orff’s strange modernist-medieval masterwork came across with even greater impact. With the orchestral and choral forces perched on risers at the rear of the set, surrendering most of the stage real estate to dancers, the sum effect felt bigger, bolder, and more generally bodacious than the last time around. Of course, we have to allow for the possibility that our pent-up hunger for live culture makes discernment receptors more generous than usual.

Overall, the cast of 170 performers, skillfully guided by SBS maestro Nir Kabaretti and inspired choreographer William Soleau, rose mightily to the occasion. Special notice goes to the vocal soloist finery of soprano Jana McIntyre (soon to appear in Opera Santa Barbara’s La scala di seta), baritone Valdis Jansons, and countertenor Randall Scotting.