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“Sköna toner från New Jersey”: Cantabile
Chamber Chorale wins hearts in Sweden
“Beautiful tunes from New Jersey” was the headline
below a color photo of us in the regional Swedish newspaper (Nya
Wermlands Tidnung, 29 Juni 2005, page 22), during our recent tour
of Sweden (June 24-July 5, 2005). Choral singing is so popular
in Sweden that 1 in 8 people rehearse in a choir every week—and
everyone else seems to go to the concerts! Throughout our three-concert
tour, audiences were larger than we or our hosts had expected,
and they were wonderfully responsive—smiling and nodding
during the singing, and giving us generous applause. How did we
get those audiences? We had contacted our host choirs a year in
advance, and before our concerts we sent them a short press release
in Swedish, color posters, and photographs of the choir. Our hosts
gave us enthusiastic support—they not only booked the concerts
but also sent our publicity to the appropriate local newspapers
and got our concert announced in tourist and church calendars.
To build the audiences more, we identified other choirs in the
neighborhood of our three concert locations and emailed them our
press release in Swedish. Collaboration and advance planning won
us an audience of 90 for our first concert, 160 for our second
concert, and 180 for our third concert.
The Swedish audiences appreciated the American program, selected
by our director, Rebecca Scott. We sang music of North and South
American composers from the 20th and 21st centuries, including
two major pieces that our choir had commissioned and premiered
in the USA in our 2004-2005 season. We gave our Swedish audiences
premieres of these new choral works: “And the Night Shall
Be Filled with Music,” by Eric Ewazen (b. 1954) and “Lakol
z’man--For Everything a Season,” by Gerald Cohen (b.
1960). Also on our program were: “I Sing,” by Emma
Lou Diemer (b. 1927); “Sure on This Shining Night,”
by Samuel Barber (1910-1981); “Serenity” and “At
the River,” by Charles Ives (1874-1954); “Balia de
Sehù,” by Edouard Toppenberg; “Lua, Lua, Lua,”
by Ester Scliar (1926-1978); “Caña Dulce,”
by José Daniel-Zuñiga; “Noche de Lluvia”
by Sid Robinovitch (b. 1952); “Ezekiel Saw the Wheel”;
“Swing Low, Swing Down”; and “Fascinatin’
Rhythm” by George Gershwin (1898-1937)—followed by
the virtuosic fireworks of Gershwin’s piano solo performed
by our pianist Lloyd Arriola.
We gave our first concert Sunday, 26 June, in the Silbodal Church
in Årjäng in western Sweden, near the border with Norway.
Our host, Carina Sonesson-Olsson, church choir director and a
teacher in the local music school, welcomed us with coffee and
cakes, brought members of her choir to rehearse with us three
pieces: “Amazing Grace,” “Shall We Gather at
the River,” and the Tallis canon. We surprised them by having
learned the traditional and much beloved song of the region, “Ack
Värmland du sköna”—in Swedish. After the
concert, they welcomed us in the church house with a home-cooked
dinner and summer wildflowers on every table.
The regional Värmland newspaper took our photo at Swecamp
Sommarvik in Årjäng, just before we sang American popular
music informally in the pub there. This Swedish resort, like Interlochen,
has hosted hundreds of student bands and choirs for musical weeks.
Thanks to Sommarvik’s manager, Christer Fransson, we had
a wonderful, relaxing three days at Sommarvik (www.sommarvik.se),
enjoying the swimming, canoeing, hiking, and just breathing the
fresh, clean air.
In Karlstad, at the Cathedral, we gave our second formal concert,
on Wednesday, 29 June, attracting an audience unexpectedly large,
according to our host, Hans Nordenborg, organist and music director.
During this concert, we invited the entire audience to sing “Ack
Värmland du sköna” with us—and they did,
from memory! We were especially glad to sing in Karlstad, where
one of Cantabile’s former members, Michael Wherrity, has
moved to teach at Karlstad University. Michael and the cathedral
choir hosted a Swedish dinner for us after the concert. He helped
us book the concerts in Karlstad and in Årjäng.
In Stockholm, we gave our third concert, on Sunday, 3 July, at
Sofia Church, high on a hill, and visible from many locations
in Stockholm.. Our host choir, the Sofia Vocal Ensemble, sang
with us “Amazing Grace,” “Shall We Gather at
the River,” the Tallis canon, and we sang two pieces in
Swedish with them: “Uti vår hage” (about the
beautiful flowers in the meadow) in an arrangement by Hugo Alfvén
(1872-1960) and “Kung Liljekonvalje” (King Lily of
the Valley) by David Wikander (1884-1955). After the concert,
they had a reception for us, and then we all walked to a vegetarian
restaurant for dinner.
A month after our return, Per Åsberg, President of the
Sofia Vocal Ensemble in Stockholm wrote: “We are all very
pleased with your visit and glad over the great concert. Thank
you so much for all the letters I received from your choir. I
read them all to the choir and they appreciated them a lot.”
As Cantabile members waited in the Stockholm airport for the flight
home, we handed to them addresses for three of our local hosts,
so that they could write thank-you notes—and most of us
did! We won each others’ hearts, and we hope to host these
Swedish choirs in the USA in the future.
Judith Johnston, member of Cantabile Chamber
Chorale
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