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5/23/2014 All Is Calm recalls the Might in 1914 when soldiers didn't fight at Christmas I Theater I Indy Week <br /> Them reflect that music—mere music—was one of the major things that <br /> made it come to pass. <br /> With the front lines so close to each other, soldiers on each side could hear <br /> their counterparts as they sang seasonal tunes to keep up morale. An odd <br /> sort of call and response developed in the days leading up to that <br /> Christmas; sides actually began trading renditions of holiday carols, <br /> lobbing songs instead of mortar fire across enemy lines. On the strength of <br /> that goodwill, a few brave soldiers followed, bearing humble gifts on <br /> Christmas Eve. When they survived, more came after. Soon, the fighting <br /> stopped. <br /> It's fitting, then, that a stage work commemorating this impromptu <br /> armistice focuses on the music that made it possible. In that sense, All Is <br /> Calm: The Christmas Truce of 1914 is clearly more of a costumed concert <br /> piece for men's chorus than an actual play. <br /> Writer Peter Rothstein crafts a thin but sturdy contextual setting for this <br /> hour-long collection of 26 popular period and battlefield songs, hymns arld <br /> carols. Between the numbers, chorus members unfold the developing story <br /> in spoken-word excerpts from interviews and war correspondence, radio <br /> transcripts and the published work of the period's "war poets," including <br /> Siegfried Sassoon, Wilfred Owen and Francis Ledwidge. <br /> But the music is clearly the centerpiece here. The prismatic emotions of <br /> this work repeatedly shift from the optimism and ribaldry of numbers like <br /> "It's a Long Way to Tipperary" and "Christmas in the Cookhouse" to the <br /> eerie starkness of "I Want To Go Home." Moods shift at times in mid-song, <br /> as a courting tune turns darker during "Will Ye Go Tae Flanders" and a <br /> satiric, battlefield gripe flattens into the elegy that ends "The Old Barbed <br /> Wire." <br /> It's understandable that music director Sue Klausmeyer and the member's <br /> of Cantari Men's Ensemble have resisted the urge to oversell the <br /> combustible passions found in much of the score. But during Friday night's <br /> performance, the emotional bandwidth seemed a bit too narrow in some <br /> spoken and sung sequences. <br /> Michael Shannon andJohn Paul Middlesworth most effectively embodied <br /> the spoken testimony of the veterans they quoted, and Graham White's <br /> luminous solo in "Minuit Chretiens (O Holy Night)" was a standout during <br /> the work's second part. But composer Erick Lichte's pensive, dark <br /> arrangement of "Silent Night" and Timothy Takach's setting for "Auld Lane <br /> Syne" gave the night its spiritual and musical center. <br /> Amid the fluff and empty calories of so much Yuletide entertainment, this <br /> muscular musical reminds us that a set of songs once stopped a war. Novi, <br /> that's power. May we see it utilized more in the days to come. <br /> This article appeared in print with the headline "Upon a midnight clearing." <br /> http://wAw.i ndyweekcorrVi ndyweek/al I-is-calm-recalls-the-nig ht-in-1 914-Men-soldiers-didrit-fig ht-at-christmas/Content?oi d=3215988&mode=print 2/3 <br />