Tag: Choral Music

  • Alice Parker Celebrated Choral Composer Dies

    Alice Parker Celebrated Choral Composer Dies

    In eulogizing composer Ron Nelson and hornist Hermann Baumann earlier today, I failed to notice Alice Parker has also died. Parker, the eminent choral composer, director, and teacher, wrote more than 500 arrangements and original compositions. With her music in the repertoire of churches and choral societies everywhere, she was one of the most frequently performed and heard of contemporary composers, with weekly auditors in the thousands.

    A native New Englander, Parker largely ignored contemporary trends in composition, instead often drawing inspiration from folk music and hymn tunes. As a composer for voice, she was also attracted to poetry. Her musical output was enormous. Among her original works were 11 song-cycles, 11 works for chorus and orchestra, 33 cantatas, 47 choral suites, and more than 40 hymns. She also composed four operas and authored at least five books.

    Parker saw music as a unifying force. Her final work, “On the Common Ground,” completed in 2020, was an appeal to a country deeply divided by politics and values.

    “Beauty awakens the sense, in us, of our vulnerability as human beings,” she commented in 2017. “It’s why you feel like crying when you see a gorgeous sunset, or hear a Bach solo cello suite, or a gorgeous melody, or a little kid singing.”

    “When we sing something perfectly lovely together… and it really clicks, you have this marvelous feeling of brotherhood in the room,” she stated elsewhere. “We are all human beings. We are all feeling this emotion together at the same time. And this is uniting us. We are not separate.”

    Parker died on Christmas Eve. She was 98 years-old.

    I borrowed some of this information from an appreciation in today’s Washington Post.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/obituaries/2023/12/29/alice-parker-composer-choral-dies/

  • Home Sounds American Composers

    Home Sounds American Composers

    With the lingering evidence of Thanksgiving both in our refrigerators and around our waistlines, it’s hardly surprising that our thoughts and memories would be full of home. Perhaps you still are “home,” with family and a full day of travel ahead of you, or you can’t wait to get home (your own).

    Whatever the case may be, this Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” we’ll have music by American composers inspired by the idea of home.

    Our featured work will be “Magna Mysteria,” by John Fitz Rogers, from 2010. Rogers weaves together Latin biblical texts and poetic verse of the 6th century philosopher Boethius, to elevate the idea of home – and the seeking of home – to a metaphorical or spiritual realm. If you have a fondness for the choral music of Morten Lauridsen or Stephen Paulus, I think you’ll really enjoy this, though Rogers is very much his own man. The music is tonal, melodic, and quite lovely.

    Also on the program will be Aaron Copland’s “Letter from Home,” from 1943-44. The work was commissioned by Paul Whiteman for his Radio Hall of Fame Orchestra, and suggests the emotions of an American soldier, as he experiences a bittersweet reprieve, if only for a few moments, while savoring a letter from his family.

    There’s no place like home for the holidays. I hope you’ll join me for “Homebodies,” this Sunday night at 10:00 EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Happy 75th Birthday John Rutter

    Happy 75th Birthday John Rutter

    Oh, where do the years go? Today is the 75th birthday of John Rutter.

    Rutter, of course, is one of England’s most successful choral composers and conductors. It’s impossible to get through the Christmas season without hearing oodles of his work. The bigger pieces can be a little hit and miss (the “Gloria” gets a little too close to Walton at times, and “big” is not really Rutter’s forte), but when he hits, as in the lovely “Requiem,” he is well-nigh irresistible – at least for someone with a cotton candy soul like myself.

    Perhaps his music is not your cup of tea, but the choir he built, the Cambridge Singers (founded in 1981), sounds like nobody else. For better or worse, like Ormandy’s Philadelphians, they bring their distinctive sound to everything they touch. The soft glow inspires contentment.

    As a young man, Rutter collaborated with the legendary Sir David Willcocks on four volumes of the extraordinarily successful “Carols for Choirs” anthology series, now the most widely used source of carols in the British Anglican tradition, and very popular among choral societies. Willcocks went so far as to describe Rutter as the most gifted composer of his generation. Certainly, his gift for melody has proven inexhaustible.

    Happy birthday, John Rutter, and many happy returns.


    Rutter’s “Requiem” (1985), the perfect music for autumn, with the Cambridge Singers. Accept no substitutes.

    “Candlelight Carol” (1984):

    The composer offering insights into his “Requiem,” in 11 segments:

  • Remembering Sir David Willcocks at 100

    Remembering Sir David Willcocks at 100

    Today would have been the 100th birthday of Sir David Willcocks.

    Willcocks, one of Britain’s premiere choral directors, died in 2015 at the age of 95. He is especially identified with his tenure as director of music at King’s College, Cambridge, where he served from 1957 to 1974. He was also director of the Royal College of Music.

    Willcocks conducted the Choir of King’s College on its annual Christmas Eve broadcasts of Nine Lessons and Carols and made countless records. His recording of Allegri’s “Miserere” is a notable landmark. He was also renowned for his performances of Bach masterworks. His interpretation of Fauré’s Requiem is regarded by some as definitive.

    In 1981, he presided over the music at the wedding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana. The event was observed by a global television audience of 750 million. Earlier, in 1968, he achieved notoriety when he led the London Bach Choir on the Rolling Stones’ “You Can’t Always Get What You Want.”

    Join me this afternoon as we sample the artistry of Sir David Willcocks. Of course, this guarantees music by Ralph Vaughan Williams (if not the Stones). We’ll also remember composers Josef Bohuslav Foerster and Dmitri Kabalevsky on the anniversary of their births.

    It turns out you really can get what you want. Lift up your voices, from 4 to 7 p.m. EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Sir Stephen Cleobury King’s College Director Dies

    Sir Stephen Cleobury King’s College Director Dies

    The famed choral conductor Sir Stephen Cleobury has died.

    Cleobury was celebrated internationally as director of one of England’s most accomplished choirs, that of King’s College, Cambridge. In particular, he was associated with the Christmas Eve broadcasts of “A Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols,” which are heard all over the world. Cleobury presided over these for the past four decades. In that capacity, he was also responsible for commissioning new carols from many of the day’s leading composers.

    The Choir of King’s College, founded in 1441, is world-renowned for its excellence. The ensemble’s first Christmas Eve concert took place in 1918. “A Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols” has been broadcast every year since 1928.

    Cleobury was knighted earlier this year for his services to choral music. He retired as director of music at King’s College only two months ago. He died yesterday, St. Cecilia’s Day, at the age of 70.

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