It was more than a concert. It was an artistic assault against war.
Performing Benjamin Britten's choral masterpiece War Requiem - with its contemporary music, Latin requiem, and harrowing poetry of World War I soldier/poet Wilfred Owen - the Quad City Symphony Orchestra and its performing partners from Minnesota, Germany, and our own community on March 3 exposed the crippling sadness, human devastation, and insanity of war and found in its darkness a timeless argument for peace.
It was a gutsy decision for the symphony to program a single, 90-minute composition with unfamiliar words and music exploring the grotesque realities of war. But Quad City Symphony Music Director and Conductor Mark Russell Smith accompanied that choice with education, altering the usual concert format by using the first 40 minutes to explain Britten's literary restructuring of the requiem, demonstrate its fresh sound, and show key guideposts in the dramatic flow of the piece.
And the coherent, compelling performance of Britten's epic work decisively outweighed any disruption of concert rituals.