Winter Sky
As we sing tonight, the low winter sun sets early. To the north, beneath the handle of the Little Dipper and riding the back of Taurus, shine the Pleiades, dozens of tiny gems surrounding the Seven Sisters. This brilliant cluster, pictured on our cover courtesy of a telescopic photograph, can still be viewed by eye wherever the screen of electric light has not smeared night's vivid darkness. In this season of natural darkness, human imagination and faith create festivals of light, such as Hanukkah -- a feast of miraculously burning oil lamps -- and Christmas, which anticipates both the return of the sun and the birth of a son. Like stargazing, so also poetry and music still conjure this sense of anticipation and hope. Tonight, Cantabile presents music and texts to evoke winter's dark and celebrate festivals of light.
Around 1680, in a papal protectorate near Avignon that paid duties to King Louis but remained a haven of tolerance outside the rule of France, a prosperous Jewish merchant, anticipating the birth of a son, commissioned a cantata (Canticum Hebraicum) for the circumcision ceremony. In his pride (or was this the composer's idea?) he chose a text praising the Almighty ('Nismecha yachad Eloheino echad eil chai olamim) and calling for the swift coming of the Tishbite [that is, Messiah] ('Shelach Tishbi maheir vehavi bizchut beritecha le'am amusecha.) Little is known of composer Louis Saladin. The scholarship of Israel Adler and Joshua Jacobson have resulted in a modern edition of this cantata, which is musically typical of the early French Baroque with its 'swing' triplet rhythms. A full scoring would have strings, winds, and percussion for the dance-like sections.
At the same time, the Restoration in England fostered more elaborate anthems, imitating the splendor of the French court with ever larger instrumental forces. Henry Purcell's Christmas Anthem for the Chapel Royal (1687) was thus essentially a cantata exploiting the spectacular low voice of a celebrated 'base', the Rev. John Gostling.
Praise Wet Snow Falling Early, like the Christmas Anthem, is a Gloria ('Praise the Lord'): the second movement of a complete Mass celebrating the Day of St. Thomas Didymus ('doubting Thomas'). This is praise with a sharp purpose, reminding us that peace is no free gift, but a struggle against bloody impulse. Poet, editor, and critic Denise Levertov, born in England, became an American citizen in 1956. Raised as Anglican, she undertook to write a Mass as a way to explore a text that had inspired music and poetry for centuries. As quoted by Kathleen Norris in Christian Century (Feb 17 1999), Levertov wrote that "writing this Mass -- the long swim through waters of unknown depth -- had also been a conversion process" toward Catholicism. Composer Elizabeth Alexander earned her doctorate in composition at Cornell in 1990. Her compositions have been performed by over a hundred American choirs ranging from the American Master Chorale and the Gregg Smith Singers to elementary school choirs. She has set texts by Sandburg, e. e. cummings, and others. "Praise Wet Snow" won Highest Honors at the 2002 Oregon Bach Festival's "Waging Peace through Singing" project.
All This Night begins with the shrill 'wake-up' call of a rooster, chanticler, singer of light. The Sun dispels dark and rescues the soul from darkness, as mortals gaze in awe and hail the Sun of Righteousness. This holy pun was committed by William Austin, a London barrister of the early 1600s, who turned from writing popular humorous verse in his youth to producing a series of devotional poems for the great church festivals. His posthumous book Haec Homo espoused the equality of women with men, declaring women to be the perfection of God's creation. Composer Gerald Finzi was deemed by Ralph Vaughan Williams to be his successor, but he died at age 55, in 1956. Finzi set many poems of Thomas Hardy, produced a setting of Wordsworth's Intimations of Mortality that is considered to be his masterpiece, and, with his wife, edited the works of poet and composer Ivor Gurney.
John Tavener calls for "extreme tenderness -- flexible-- always guided by the words" in performing his setting of the best-known of William Blake's Songs of Innocence, The Lamb. Yet the musical structure is rigorously symmetrical in time and in pitch. It is as if the freehand artistry of an engraver were reproduced fourfold mirrorwise on the page, so deftly that the symmetry itself disappeared. Blake's poems have inspired many composers -- Cantabile performed most recently two premieres of madrigal settings by American composer David Avshalomov. Tavener arrived on the British musical scene in 1968 with his composition The Whale, for orchestra and pre-recorded tape. He was soon invited by Benjamin Britten to create an opera. Later he found renewed compositional inspiration in the music of the Orthodox Church, and produced the Akathist of Thanksgiving (1988) to celebrate the millennium of Russian Orthodoxy. A vast public heard the "Song for Athene" (1998) at the funeral of Princess Diana.
The Frost settings come from Frostiana, a cycle commissioned by the Town of Amherst to commemorate the town's bicentennial (1955) and to honor the poet who taught for many years at Amherst College. For the premiere, Composer Randall Thompson conducted the community Bicentennial Chorus, with his friend Frost in the audience.
Both men are strongly associated with New England. Thompson began his teaching career at Wellesley and ended it at Harvard, after stints at Berkeley, Princeton and the Curtis Institute. Robert Frost is often considered the iconic New England poet, and some of his poems, such as Stopping by Woods, are so widely taught that they seem obvious or sentimental. That reaction is of course unfair to an artist who emphasized that poetry is a creation of intellect as well as feeling.
"Stopping by Woods" appeared in 1923 in the collection New Hampshire: a Poem with Grace Notes. Each short stanza comes almost to rest, but not quite, as one verse line, lacking its rhyme, anticipates the next stanza. The poem ends with a famous repetition -- or is this, too, an anticipation and a challenge? Composer Thompson likewise uses simple means but avoids the obvious. Hymn-like men's voices match tempo but not cadence with steadily falling snow, and each phrase detours for an extra measure before arriving at its goal. “Come In” appeared twenty years later during wartime, as title poem of a collection. Miles later, the woods, still dark, are no longer ‘lovely’, but a sad place where a thrush’s song is ‘almost like a call to come into the dark and lament.’ This time Frost’s choice is clear: “But no, I was out for stars.’ In Thompson’s setting, the piano’s trill accompanies women’s voices.
Last winter’s concert featured a premiere of “Winter Madrigals” by Bruce Lazarus. This year Cantabile presents a newly commissioned work, A Guide to the Winter Sky. Lazarus writes:
I've been fascinated by stars and galaxies as far back as I can remember. My youthful imagination was fed by a mixture of science fact and fiction: the early NASA program, "Lost in Space," my first good telescope, the Hayden Planetarium, "Star Trek," Arthur C. Clarke novels. To this day, I have a strong sense of connection to distant planets, stars, galaxies, and the universe - an ongoing spiritual experience.
My long-term romance with space has often sparked my music. My Alpha Centuri (2000) for harpsichord quartet and Ordinary Stars (2002) for solo piano were premiered at the Storm King Music Festival in Cornwall, New York, and last year I was privileged to compose a choral work for Rebecca Scott's Juilliard Pre-College Chamber Chorale - StarSongs - a 20-minute cantata on astronomical themes for youth chorus, flute, cello, and harp. Guide to the Winter Sky, for SATB adult voices and piano, looks upward to the stars while keeping its musical feet planted firmly on Planet Earth, and was designed to be performed preferably on an evening when there's a layer of frost underfoot and a nip of winter chill in the air.
We begin in the manner of an astronomy handbook (or planetarium show) by pointing out a few easy-to-see features of the 9 p.m. winter sky ("Ursa Minor hangs from the North Star, and Ursa Major sits on its tail near the horizon."), progress to discussions of the mythologies behind a few constellations and star groupings (Cassiopeia, Castor and Pollux, the Pleiades), describe the yearly shift of Cygnus's east-west orientation from an upside-down T-shaped winged Swan into an upright T-shaped Cross, and conclude with a meditation on space and time in general (".boundless space and time without end -- it never ends.").
We
close with a series of graceful settings of folk carols.
Troc-a-Tron echoes the clip-clop of donkey’s hooves on
the long journey to Bethlehem. Czech composer, organist,
and musicologist Petr Eben has produced many large-scale orchestral
works, and like Tavener often turns to plainchant. Here,
he shows his love of old folk melody, in what has been called
"styled archaism". Settings of Donkey Plod
and Mary Ride and How Soft, Upon the Ev'ning Air come
from Thomas Dunhill and Eric Thiman, both known for accessible
keyboard works, melodious songs and cantatas suitable for community
and school choruses, in conservative early 20th century ‘typically
English’ style. A much more opulent flowering of the folk-song
movement is the Fantasia on Christmas Carols by Ralph Vaughan
Williams. Describing a recent recording, reviewer Stephen
Schwartz notes that despite its loose form, this
is far from just a string of melodies -- it's the work of a considerable
symphonist. Finally, from John Rutter, editor of British
carol and chorus editions, composer of the Requiem (1985)
and Magnificat (1990), a colorful setting of The Twelve
Days of Christmas. May you all get the gift you most
desire this holiday season.
God is gone up with a triumphant shout:
The Lord with sounding Trumpets' melodies:
Sing Praise, sing Praise, sing Praise, sing Praises out,
Unto our King sing praise seraphicwise!
Lift up your Heads, ye lasting Doors, they sing,
And let the King of Glory enter in.Methinks I see Heaven's sparkling courtiers fly,
In flakes of Glory down him to attend,
And hear Heart-cramping notes of Melody
Surround his Chariot as it did ascend;
Mixing their Music, making ev'ry string
More to enravish as they this tune sing.
Schaffe in mir, Gott
by Johannes Brahms
Composed in 1860 as one of
three a cappella motets set
to Lutheran religious text,
Schaffe in mir, Gott is divided
into three short sections.
The first movement is a canon
in augmentation in G major
expressing repentance and
the desire for a pure heart.
The second movement is a chromatic
fugue in G minor asking for
grace and forgiveness. The
third movement ends with a
fugue based on the motet's
opening theme asking for the
joy of the Holy Spirit to
descend upon us.
Psalm 51 in the King James version:10: Create in me a clean heart, O God;
and renew a right spirit within me.
11: Cast me not away from thy presence;
and take not thy holy spirit from me.
12: Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation;
and uphold me with thy free spirit.
After a calm, hymn-like opening section, and the anxious plea “Verwirf mich nicht” (cast me not away) set as an extremely chromatic tonally wandering fugue, the motet returns to its home key with a sense of restoration -- “Tröste mich wieder” (comfort me once more). Now voices, rather than pulling in different directions, overlap in a simple dance-like melody. Brahms’ text here, “der freudige Geist erhalte mich” (may a joyful spirit uphold me), is rather sunnier than that of the Luther Bible: “mit einem willigen Geist rüste mich aus” (equip me with a willing spirit). --Bruce Bush
Whenever I hear the
song of a bird by Clara
McMaster
Sister Clara McMaster died
at the age of 93, having served
the Mormon Church her entire
life as a leader and teacher
in the Primary (children’s
organization). She composed
six songs in the children’s
singing book. This one reminds
us simply that we live in
a state of Grace and need
not be discouraged. We can
experience joy simply by looking
at and listening to nature.
Corn Song by Gustav
Holst
Gustav Holst suffered neglect
as a child resulting in a
lifetime of ill health. He
studied composition with Stanford
at the Royal College of Music
along with Ralph Vaughan Williams.
Then he took up the trombone
to support himself and learn
orchestration and even played
in the Brighton beach resorts.
He was shy and solitary, living
frugally as a strict vegetarian.
A fall off the stage precipitated
more long years of illness.
Nervousness and hard work
resulted in little support
or adulation. Finally he was
sent to a nursing home and
given the choice of living
impaired for the rest of his
life or having a difficult
operation. The operation was
a failure and he died tragically
at the early age of 59. Holst
hated conventionality and
enjoyed new and humorous ideas.
In spite of conservatory training,
he was basically self-taught
and believed that composition
should serve the situation.
During his lifetime, he had
little success as a composer.
His daughter, Imogen Holst,
an outstanding musician herself
and an assistant to Benjamin
Britten, was devoted to promoting
her father’s music.
The earthy and simplistic
poem is by John Greenleaf
Whittier (1807–1892)
the influential American Quaker
poet and abolitionist.
Through vales of grass and meads of flow’rs,
Our ploughs their furrows made,
While on the hills the sun and show’rs of changeful April play’d:
We dropp’d the seed o’er hill and plain beneath the sun of May,
And frighten’d from our sprouting grain the robber crows away. All through the long bright days of June its leaves grew green and fair,
And waved in hot midsummer’s noon its soft and yellow hair;
And now with autumn’s moonlit eves, its harvest time has come,
We pluck away the frosted leaves and bear the treasure home.Where’er the wide old kitchen hearth sends up its smoky curls,
Who will not thank the kindly earth and bless our farmer girls.
Then shame on all the proud and vain whose folly laughs to scorn,
The blessing of our hardy grain, our wealth of golden corn..
The Creation by
Joseph Haydn
Haydn composed the Creation
between 1796 and 1798 when
he was sixty-five years old.
He used words by Lidley after
Milton’s “Paradise
Lost.” It became an
immediate success and rivaled
that of Handel’s Messiah.
It is a programmatic work
full of colorful text “painting.”
Beginning with the overture
representing chaos before
the world was created the
music gradually becomes harmonious
representing the spirit of
God moving upon the face of
the water and suddenly the
orchestra and chorus burst
forth with light! Each new
day of creation is introduced
in recited song (recitative)
by one of the Archangels,
followed by a descriptive
chorus or solo song (aria).
We begin with the recitative
and aria of Gabriel announcing
the earth yielding seed and
the fields in full bloom.
Then we skip to a dramatic
tenor (Uriel) recitative representing
the creation of the heavens,
the sun and moon followed
by the famous chorus with
solo trio, The Heavens are
Telling. Moving to the end
of the second part, Raphael
introduces the fugal chorus
Achieved is the Glorious Work
which is then interrupted
by a soaring trio On Thee
each living Soul awaits, and
soon returns with even greater
power to complete the praise.
This is the work of a great
master of choral and orchestral
music that must be heard!
We hope that our selections
encourage you to listen to
the entire oratorio!
Give us this day
by Ward Swingle
Ward Swingle grew up in Mobile,
Alabama, listening to jazz
and playing in Big Bands during
High School. He graduated
Summa Cum Laude from the Cincinnati
Conservatory and then studied
piano with the celebrated
Walter Gieseking in postwar
France. In Paris in the 1960s
he was a founding member of
the Double Six of Paris, taking
the scat singing idea and
applying it to the works of
Bach. Thus he created The
Swingle Singers, whose early
recordings won five Grammies.
When the Paris group disbanded
in l973, Swingle moved to
London and formed an English
group, expanding the repertoire
to include classical and avant-garde
works along with the scat
and jazz vocal arrangements.
In 2005 Swingle was commissioned
to write Give us this Day
for England’s Vasari
Singers for their 25th anniversary.
“I was lucky to have
a poem written for the occasion
by Tony Vincent Isaacs”
who had written for the Swingle
Singers earlier. “I’ve
written a very simple four-part
setting so that the words
(and their important message)
are quickly understood.”
This song expresses exactly
the theme of our concert tonight.
1- Scudding clouds of crimson flush Refrain:
Skim the azure evening sky Give us this day
Boding well the morrows dawn That we may see
To a cloudless glowing morn The beauty before our eyes
Dragonfly Give us this day
Neon’s treasure That we may cherish
Strafes the pool in summer’s hush The earth before it dies.2- Curfew closing on the light 3- All along the trestle bough
Pungent wood smoke curling by In candescent to the touch
Autumn leaching summer cold Icy chandeliers ablaze
Breathing out in red and gold To the suns retreating rays
Flocking high o’er tall oak In the clutch, omnipresent
Storks migrating full in flight Of the north wind’s bitter vow
(Refrain) (Refrain)4- Morning creeps upon the day
Stars pay homage to the sun
Tumult in the swelling bud
Ripening with verdant blood
Surging through winter’s damage
Weaving tendrils on its way
(Refrain)
Blues Nocturne: Theme
and Variation for Clarinet
and Piano by Ruth Scott
Clark
Ruth Elizabeth Scott Clark’s
creative works of poetry,
music and fine art have received
many accolades. This piece
won first prize for chamber
music from the National League
of American Pen Women chapter
of which she was a member.
Works now available through
her website are: her poetry
book, Ruminations of Ruth,
two volumes of piano music,
an Advanced Volume including
this Blues Nocturne for Clarinet
and Piano and other incidental
instrumental pieces, a Student
Piano Volume, twenty-four
songs and several choral pieces
(performed by Cantabile Chamber
Chorale on several of their
CDs). Mrs. Clark is Rebecca
Scott’s mother and is
still writing poetry at the
age of 97 years young. www.ruthscottclark.com
As It Fell Upon a Day
by Aaron Copland
Copland’s parents were
Russian Jewish immigrants
who had little interest in
music. At the age of 20, he
was accepted as the first
American composer to study
with Nadia Boulanger. Many
followed in his footsteps.
This song was originally an
assignment by Boulanger for
a piece for flute and clarinet.
While working on this, he
came upon a poem “Philomel”
(“As It Fell upon a
Day”) by Richard Barnefield
(1574-1627) and decided to
add a voice part to the assignment,
having being affected by the
“simplicity and tenderness”
of the poem. Boulanger sent
a copy to Universal Editions
in Vienna for him, but they
never received it. Otto Luening
considered this one of Copland’s
best pieces.
Irish, Scottish, Welsh and
English Folksong arrangements
for piano, violin, cello with
various voice combinations
by Ludwig van Beethoven
There are nearly 200 of these
works. A 22-page manuscript
in Beethoven's own handwriting
shows five arrangements for
popular Scottish and Irish
folk songs commissioned by
Scottish publisher George
Thomson. Beethoven wrote 126
settings for Thomson who wanted
to popularize Scottish and
Irish folk songs in 19th century
drawing rooms. However, the
arrangements produced by Beethoven
were too complicated for drawing
room performers. Beethoven
and Thomson had disagreements
but Beethoven refused to simplify
the music and also argued
about his pay.
Lochnagar was composed in
Scottish Gaelic, Lachin Y
Gair in 1807 by George Gordon
Byron, Lord Byron, who lived
on a farm near the Cairngorm
mountains in Aberdeenshire
until the age of 10. Lochnagar
is a steep mountain ridge
with four distinct peaks about
a loch (lake) of the same
name.
Sunset (or The Dreary Change)
by Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832)
The ninth son of an Edinburgh
solicitor, he studied law
at 21, becoming Clerk of Session.
His literary efforts: historical
romances, poems, dramas, biographies,
essays, critical editions,
translations and almost every
form of literary product brought
him fame only surpassed by
Byron. He became rich, was
made a Baron by King George
IV and created an estate called
Abbotsford on the river Tweed
living the life of a county
magnate and powerful businessman
which ended sadly in financial
ruin, illness and death at
the age of 61. This poem,
also translated as The Dreary
Change was written as he,
old and ill, gazed upon his
beloved and familiar view
from the hill above Cauldshiels
Loch and without self-pity
mused that it was just as
wonderful as always, but that
he himself had changed.
I Dream'd I Lay Where Flowers
Were Springing was composed
in Scottish Dialect by Robert
Burns who stated that "These
two stanzas are among the
oldest of the printed pieces
I composed when I was seventeen."
”Drumlie” means
hitting like a drum or thundering;
“lang” is “long
about noon;” “A’”
is all; “mony”
is many.
To The Blackbird by Dafydd
ap Gwilym (c.1315/1320-c.1350/1370)
He is generally regarded as
the greatest Welsh poet of
all time and among the great
poets of Europe in the Middle
Ages. His main themes were
nature and love. Many of his
poems are addressed to women,
particularly to two, Morfudd
and Dyddgu, and about 170
of his poems have survived.
He was an innovative poet
but perhaps his greatest innovation
was to express his own personal
feelings and experiences,
often erotic and revealing,
which was something not done
at that time. Dafydd was responsible
for making popular the metre
known as the cywydd and the
first to use it for praise.
The cywydd consists of a series
of seven-syllable lines in
rhyming couplets, with all
lines written in cynghanedd.
One of the lines must finish
with a stressed syllable,
while the other must finish
with an unstressed syllable.
Cynghanedd (harmony), in Welsh
language poetry, is the basic
concept of sound-arrangement
within one line, using stress,
alliteration and rhyme. The
translation of this song from
the Welsh was done by a Clergyman
from Pentre, Wales, named
Reverend Roberts.
The Sailor's Song was composed
by Joanna Baillie (1762-1851)
for her drama Phantom. Her
poetry ranged from songs and
lyrical ballads to dramatic
monologues and realistic blank
verse poems relating to her
youth in the Scottish countryside,
as well as her life in London.
Sir Walter Scott supported
the production of her dramas
in London. Baillie's best
poetry has been considered
by some, the equal of and
the “formative link”
between Robert Burns' Scottish
poetry and William Wordsworth's
meditations on Nature. Glossary:
“bairnies” –
children; “Largo Bay”
- a wide bay of the southern
coastline of Fife, extending
from Buckhaven and Methil
in the west round to Kincraig
Point in the east and to the
south lies the Firth of Forth;
“cot”- a suspended
bed used by naval officers
which doubles as a coffin
if required; “eldritch”-
a weird or horrifying thing.
O swiftly glides the bonny
boat Just parted from the
shore,
And to the fisher's chorus
note Soft moves the dipping
oar.
His toils are borne with happy
cheer And ever may they speed,
That feeble age and helpmate
dear And tender bairnies*
feed.
Refrain
We cast our lines in Largo
Bay*, Our nets are floating
wide,
Our bonny boat with yielding
sway, Rocks lightly in the
tide.
And happy prove our daily
lot Upon the summer sea,
And blest on land our kindly
Cot* Where all our treasures
be.
The mermaid on her rock may
sing, The witch may weave
her charm.
Nor watersprite nor eldritch*
thing The bonny boat can harm.
It safely bears its scaly
store Thro many a storm gale,
While joyful shouts rise from
the shore. Its homeward prow
to hail.
Effervescence by Emma Lou Diemer, a native of Kansas City, MO, is a well established and esteemed American composer. She has written many works for orchestra, chamber ensemble, keyboard, voice, chorus (women's, men's) and electronic media. In 2006, Cantabile was fortunate to commission Ms. Diemer to compose a piece in memory of Cantabile Board member and alto Leila Eutermarks entitled In One of the Stars for SATB, guitar and piano. Effervescence was composed in 2007 to an excerpt from an essay by Flannery O’Connor (1925-1964) and is published by Kjos music.
Dodi li va’ani lo (My beloved is mine, and I am his) by Gerald Cohen was commissioned for Cantabile by Mitzi Lasky and Seth and Carolyn Rudnick in memory of their parents, Dr. Stanford and Lucille Batter Rudnick, and in celebration of Cantabile’s 20th anniversary season 2008-2009. It is the third piece that Dr. Cohen has written for us. Dr. Cohen writes, “The Song of Songs is a favorite text of both mine and Mitzy’s and is suitable as a tribute to the love of her parents for each other. I chose a selection of short texts from different parts of the poem, with the opening line as a refrain, and with each successive line becoming musically more and more caught up in the intoxication of love.”
Refrain: Refrain:
Dodi li, vaani lo, My beloved
is mine and I am his,
haroeh bashoshanim. He browses
among the lilies.
K’shoshana bein hachochim,
Like a lily among thorns,
kein rayati bein habanot.
So is my darling among the
maidens.
K’tapuach baatsei hayaar,
Like an apple tree among trees
of the forest,
kein dodi bein habanim. So
is my beloved among the youths.
(Refrain) (Refrain)
Hayoshevet baganim, O you
who linger in the garden,
chaverim makshivim, A lover
is listening,
l’koleich hashmiini!
Let me hear your voice!
(Refrain) (Refrain)
Ichlu reiim, sh’tu v’shichru
Eat, Lovers, drink, become
dodim! Intoxicated with love!
Saturday,
March 28, 2009, at 7:30 PM
Christ United Methodist Church,
485 Hoes Lane, Piscataway,
New Jersey
CANTABILE CHAMBER CHORALE
Rebecca Scott, Artistic Director
All in Green – Cherish
Our Earth
Songs to Celebrate Our Home
and Our Creator
Jeremiah Duarte Bills, flute
Vasko Dukovski, clarinet
Lynne Stallworth, piano Dennis
Dell, organ
and Cantabile Youth Singers
and Players
Elizabeth Verderosa, Director
God is Gone Up . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Gerald Finzi (1901-1956)
Schaffe in mir, Gott . .
. . . . . . . . . . . Johannes
Brahms (1833-1897)
Opus 29, no. 2
Whenever I hear the song
of a bird. . Clara McMaster
(1904-1997)
Duet: Sally and Jeff Duke
Jeremiah Duarte Bills, flute
The Corn Song. . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . Gustav
von Holst (1874-1934)
Cantabile and Cantabile Youth
Singers & Players
Creation (excerpts) . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . Joseph
Haydn (1732-1809)
And God Said, With Verdure
Clad
Sally Duke, soprano solo
And God Said, In Splendour
Bright
Jerry Phillips, tenor solo
The Heavens are telling
Chorale with Trio: Gabriel-Gail
Tilsner
Uriel-Michael Holloway Raphael-Ron
Baughman
And God saw everything that
He had made
Jeff Duke, bass solo
Achieved is the glorious work
Chorale
On thee each living soul awaits
Trio: Gabriel-Ruth Lanza Uriel-Larry
Cohen Raphael-Jeff Duke
Achieved is the glorious
work
Chorale
INTERMISSION (10 minutes)
Conversation between Two Drivers
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . ANON
Cantabile Tenors
Give us This Day. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ward Swingle (b.1927)
Blues Nocturne: Theme &
Variation. . . Ruth Scott
Clark (b.1912)
Vasko Dukovski, clarinet Lynne
Stallworth, piano
As it Fell Upon a Day . .
. . . . . . . . . . . Aaron
Copland (1900-1990)
Judith Johnston, soprano
Jeremiah Duarte Bills, flute
Vasko Dukovski, clarinet
Folksong arrangements . .
. . . Ludwig van Beethoven
(1770-1827)
Scottish: Lochnagar
Trio: Ruth Lanza, Jerry Phillips,
Jeff Cartwright-Smith
Scottish: Sunset
Duet: Tammy Guarderas, Michael
Holloway
Irish: I dream’d I lay
where flowers were
Duet: Gail Tilsner, Nancy
Engel
Welsh: To the Blackbird
Quartet: Nancy Engle, Tammy
Guarderas, Ruth Lanza
William Tinnel, Michael Holloway
Scottish: O swiftly glides
the bonny boat
Opus 108, No19, 1815
R. Lanza, T. Guarderas, G.
Tilsner, N. Engel, A. Gould,
M. Holloway
J. Phillips, L. Cohen, J.
Cartwright-Smith, J. Duke,
W. Tinnel, R. Baughman
Effervescence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Emma Lou Diemer (b.1927)
Dodi Li va’ani lo .
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . Gerald Cohen (b.1960)
Vasko Dukovski, Clarinet
World Première Commission
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