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10th Anniversary Choral Celebration O’MALLEY SACRED MUSIC SERIES TEDDY EBERSOL PERFORMANCE SERIES The 10th Anniversary Choral Celebration was made possible by the Teddy Ebersol Endowment for Excellence in the Performing Arts. DEBARTOLO PERFORMING ARTS CENTER PRESENTING SERIES SAT, MAR 28 AT 7:30 P.M. LEIGHTON CONCERT HALL UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME NOTRE DAME, INDIANA Ticket Office: MON–FRI, NOON–6 P.M. | 574.631.2800 Composer Biographies BRAD BALLIETT New York City-based musician Brad Balliett is in high demand as a composer and bassoonist. In addition to fulfilling multiple commissions each year, Brad is an artistic director for the innovative and socially-conscious chamber music collective Decoda (Affiliate Ensemble of Carnegie Hall), and performs with the leading new music groups in New York, including Signal, Metropolis Ensemble, and Alarm Will Sound. Brad is principal bassoon of the Princeton Symphony, and has performed with the Houston Symphony, Metropolitan Opera Musicians, New York City Ballet, International Contemporary Ensemble, and Hartford Symphony Orchestra. Festival performances include Marlboro, Tanglewood, June in Buffalo, Newport Jazz Festival, Festspiele Mecklenburg-Vorpommen, and the Lucerne Festival. His creative collaboration with Elliot Cole and Doug Balliett as the band Oracle Hysterical has yielded a number of operatic works, including a spoken-word opera premiered at the Lucerne Festival as a Spotlight Artist in composition. With his twin brother, Doug, Brad hosts a weekly radio show on WQXR’s Q2 Music called The Brothers Balliett, curates a monthly concert series at Spectrum in the Lower East Side, and will begin teaching a course at the Juilliard School’s Evening Division in the fall. As a teaching artist, Brad regularly leads composition and song-writing workshops in schools, hospitals, prisons, and homeless shelters. Brad graduated summa cum laude from Harvard University in 2005, and holds a Master of Music from Rice University. His hobbies include writing sonnets, running, and blissing out to Shakespeare. JAMES BLACHLY Currently the Zander Fellow with the Boston Philharmonic, James Blachly is a conductor dedicated to passionate music making and the creation of rich musical experiences for audiences of all ages and backgrounds. He is the artistic director of the New York-based Sheep Island Ensemble, performing imaginative programs in unusual venues, and the co-founder of Make Music NOLA, an El Sistema-inspired program in New Orleans. This past summer, he conducted a large-scale benefit concert for six El Sistema-inspired programs in New York City hosted by Jamie Bernstein, joining with concertmaster Krista Bennion Feeney of the Orchestra of St. Luke’s to perform Bartok’s Concerto for Orchestra. Mr. Blachly made his Boston debut in 2014 with the Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra conducting Ravel’s Rapsodie espagnole, and this summer was assistant conductor to Gil Rose and chorus master for the critically acclaimed Odyssey Opera production of Verdi’s Un giorno di Regno. Equally at home with professional orchestras and amateurs, Mr. Blachly has worked with the Portsmouth Symphony (New Hampshire), Symphony Pro Musica (Massachussetts) and he will conduct the Spokane Symphony Orchestra (Washington) this coming season in three educational concerts. With the Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra, he has initiated the Young Composers Initiative, reading and recording the compositions of young composers from Harvard, NEC, Boston University, Berklee School of Music, and Boston Conservatory. As a composer, he studied with Robert Cuckson, as well as with Charles Wuorinen and John Corigliano. His compositions have been celebrated as “vigorous and assured” by Chamber Music America, and a “splendidly crafted tour de force” by the Miami Herald Tribune. His compositions have been performed at The Stone, Zankel Hall, and across the U.S., as well as for the Pope, and broadcast on the CBC. He studied conducting with Donald Schleicher at the University of Illinois, and composition with Robert Cuckson at Mannes College the New School for Music. He has worked privately with Larry Rachleff, Jeffrey Grogran, James Ross, and Michael Gilbert. Composer Biographies CARY BOYCE Cary Boyce is artistic co-director and composer-in-residence of the production group and new music ensemble, Aguavá New Music Studio, which specializes in projects involving contemporary music. His music has been heard around the world in concerts and festivals in more than 25 countries, on nationally syndicated public radio and television, and in two films by Prix-de-Rome-winning director Evelyne Clavaud, Aria ou les rumeurs de la Villa Medicís, and her artistic documentary Mandiargues: L’amateur d’imprudence. Boyce’s credits include original music for the soundtrack of the Public Broadcasting System (PBS) documentary American Horizons: The Photography of Art Sinsabaugh, also part of the Sinsabaugh exhibit currently touring museums in the United States, and music for Harp Dreams, the PBS documentary on the USA International Harp Competition which won three regional Emmy Awards in 2011, including one for original music. His oratorio, Dreams within a Dream, was the subject of a public radio special released in 2004. Boyce’s Ave Maria was featured on the Dale Warland Singers’ Cathedral Classics nationally syndicated radio special, as well as on their concerts in Minnesota. Boyce’s music, often performed by Aguavá New Music Studio, has also been featured on such syndicated shows as Harmonia, Center Stage from Wolftrap, CD-Tipp (Europe), and syndicated on Deutsche Welle. His cantata, Ave Maris Stella, was premiered by Aguavá at the International Festival Cervantino in Mexico, and subsequently broadcast throughout Latin America by the BBC. His Hodie Christus natus est premiered at Washington National Cathedral’s 50th anniversary holiday concert, winning the National Young Composers Award. His quartet, Nightshade, was recorded for Aguavá by the Corigliano String Quartet. Current projects include The Flower of Departure, a concerto for viola, chorus, and orchestra. Dr. Boyce is the recipient of numerous grants and awards, including awards from Arts International, National Endowment for the Arts, Pew Charitable Trusts, and Indiana Arts Commission. In 2006 he was awarded an ASCAP 2006 Rudolf Nissim Prize “Special Distinction” Award for his oratorio Dreams within a Dream, which was commissioned and premiere with the Bloomington Chamber Singers in 2003. Boyce frequently tours with Aguavá as a conductor, pianist, or singer. Cary also teaches “Choral Masterworks” and “Music in Culture,” the first interdisciplinary music course at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music. Born in Santa Rosa, California in 1955, Cary Boyce studied at California State University, Sacramento, took his Master of Music degree at University of North Texas while studying with Martin Mailman, and he earned a doctorate in composition at Indiana University Bloomington with teachers Eugene O’Brien and Claude Baker. He has been an active participant in diverse artistic and musical outreach endeavors of his community, not only as a composer, but also as a producer and music essayist with public radio, online journals, major orchestras, and community presses. The music of Cary Boyce is published by G. Schirmer, Boosey & Hawkes, and by Aguavá New Music Studio. He remains active as a tenor, pianist, and conductor. Photo by Sabina Frank GABRIELA LENA FRANK Identity has always been at the center of Gabriela Lena Frank’s music. Born in Berkeley, California, to a mother of mixed Peruvian/Chinese ancestry and a father of Lithuanian/Jewish descent, Frank explores her multicultural heritage most ardently through her compositions. Inspired by the works of Bela Bartók and Alberto Ginastera, Frank is something of a musical anthropologist. She has traveled extensively throughout South America and her pieces reflect and refract her studies of Latin American folklore, incorporating poetry, mythology, and native musical styles into a western classical framework that is uniquely her own. She writes challenging idiomatic parts for solo instrumentalists, vocalists, chamber ensembles, and orchestras. Moreover, she writes, “There’s usually a story line behind my music; a scenario or character.” While the enjoyment of her works can be obtained solely from her music, the composer’s program notes enhance the listener’s experience, for they describe how a piano part mimics a marimba or pan-pipes, or how a movement is based on a particular type of folk song, where the singer is mockingly crying. Even a brief glance at her titles evokes specific imagery: Leyendas: An Andean Walkabout; Cuatro Canciones Andinas; and La Llorona: Tone Poem for Viola and Orchestra. Frank’s compositions also reflect her virtuosity as a pianist—when not composing, she is a sought-after performer, specializing in contemporary repertoire. This season, Frank serves a composer-in-residence to both the Houston Symphony for who she wrote Karnavalingo to welcome incoming music director Andrés Orozco-Estrada and the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. A 2009 recipient of the prestigious John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship to assist in research and artistic creation, Frank’s recent premieres include Will-o’-the-Wisp for piccolo player Mary Kay Fink and the Cleveland Orchestra; Saints for The Berkeley Symphony, soprano Jessica Rivera and the San Francisco Girls Chorus; and Concertino Cusqueño for the Philadelphia Orchestra. A frequent collaborator with artists in other disciplines, Frank has developed a number of projects with the Pulitzer Prize-winning Cuban playwright Nilo Cruz, among them La Centinela y la Paloma (The Keeper and the Dove), a song cycle for Dawn Upshaw and the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra and Journey of the Shadow for the San Francisco Chamber Orchestra. Other recent premieres include Nocturno Nazqueño for the New York International Piano Competition; Hilos for the Alias Chamber Ensemble; Puntos Suspensivos for Ballet Hispanico; Inca Dances for guitarist Manuel Barrueco and Cuarteto Latinoamericano—which received a 2009 Latin Grammy for Best Classical Contemporary Composition; New Andean Songs for the Los Angeles Philharmonic’s Green Umbrella new music series; Peregrinos for the Indianapolis Symphony; and Two Mountain Songs for a consortium comprised of the Young People’s Chorus of New York, the San Francisco Girls Chorus, and Anima. Having collaborated with a broad range of artists, Frank’s other works include Quijotadas for the Brentano String Quartet; Jalapeño Blues for Chanticleer, based on the Spanglish poetry of renowned Chicano poet Trinidad Sanchez Jr.; Compadrazgo, a double concerto for David Finckel and Wu Han with the ProMusica Orchestra; La Llorona: Tone Poem for Viola and Orchestra for the Houston Symphony with principal Wayne Brooks under the baton of Hans Graf; Dos Canciones de Cifar for baritone and piano, commissioned by the Marilyn Horne Foundation with Carnegie Hall; ¡Chayraq! and Ritmos Anchinos for the Silk Road Project; Cinco Danzas de Chambi for viola and piano, commissioned by the Aspen Summer Music Festival; Canto de Harawi for the Da Camera Society of Houston; Manchay Tiempo for the Seattle Symphony under the baton of Jun Märkl; Inkarrí for the Kronos Quartet; Illapa: Tone Poem for Flute and Orchestra for flutist Leone Buyse and the Shepherd Symphony Orchestra; and Three Latin-American Dances for the Utah Symphony Orchestra under the baton of Keith Lockhart. Three Latin-American Dances was subsequently recorded by the Utah Symphony for the Reference Recording label and has been hailed as “dazzling” and exhibiting “wit, brilliance, atmosphere, and poetry” (Classics Today), and “a rare treasure of modern orchestral music” (Hong Kong/China Hi Fi Review). Leyendas: An Andean Walkabout, performed by its commissioner, the Chiara String Quartet, was released in early 2007 on the New Voice Singles label. In reference to this recording, the American Record Guide called Frank “a remarkable composer.” Recent recordings include an all-Frank disc on Naxos featuring Hilos, among other works, by the Alias Chamber Ensemble; Inca Dances with guitarist Manuel Barrueco and the Cuarteto Latinoamericano, released on the Tonar Music Label; and several chamber/orchestral works for the Filarmonika label as part of the groundbreaking “Caminos del Inka” project under the directorship of conductor Miguel Harth-Bedoya. Frank attended Rice University in Houston, Texas, where she earned both a B.A. (1994) and M.A. (1996). She studied composition with Paul Cooper, Ellsworth Milburn, and Sam Jones, and piano with Jeanne Kierman Fischer. Frank credits Fischer with introducing her to the music of Ginastera, Bartók, and other composers who utilized folk elements in their work. At the University of Michigan, where she received a D.M.A. in composition in 2001, Frank studied with William Albright, William Bolcom, Leslie Bassett, and Michael Daugherty, and piano with Logan Skelton. Gabriela Lena Frank’s music is published exclusively by G. Schirmer, Inc. Photo by Mats Bäcker SVEN-DAVID SANDSTRÖM No composer has made such an impression on contemporary Swedish musical life as Sven-David Sandström. His catalogue of works, which includes some 300 compositions, gives proof not only of an impressive productivity, but also contains an amazingly wide range: everything from magnificent operas and oratorios to intimate choral and chamber music. With his unlikely combination of creativity and diligence in the craft of composition, restless curiosity and firmly-rooted mastery of form, Sandström alternates, to all appearances unconcerned, between a sophisticated orchestral texture and musical melodies, film music and music for the church. In the 2000s he has focused especially on sacred choral music. Sven-David Sandström had his breakthrough in 1972 with Through and through, an orchestral work that was met with international response when two years later it was performed by the Concertgebouw Orchestra in Amsterdam. Sandström quickly established himself as a leading modernist in the younger generation of Scandinavian composers, not seldom with scores of a terrifying degree of difficulty. Pierre Boulez chose, for example, to conduct his piece Utmost with the BBC Symphony Orchestra. Around 1980 a decisive turning point occurred in Sven-David Sandström’s tone language. Without abandoning the high demands on his executants his musical form of address became simpler, more emotional. The epoch-making Requiem De ur alla minnen fallna, a mighty fresco over the infanticide of the Holocaust, stands out today as one of the most prominent works in 20th-century Swedish music. A number of choral works began to pour from Sandström’s pen, all of them eagerly sought after by Sweden’s many elite choirs. At the same time his interest in the stage was aroused and resulted in, among other works, six original ballet scores. High Mass (1994), a monumental work for five female vocal soloists, large choir and orchestra, modeled on J.S. Bach’s Mass in B minor, was received with high acclaim. With the Mass text laid out in 25 movements, just like the model, the tone language is nonetheless Sandström’s own throughout. This powerful Mass was also performed ten years later in Bach’s city of Leipzig with the Gewandhaus Orchestra under the baton of Herbert Blomstedt, and a recording was issued on Deutsche Grammophon. Already in the 1980s Sven-David Sandström had composed a couple motets for choir after baroque models: a kind of homage to Henry Purcell and Dietrich Buxtehude. After High Mass he started to feel an affinity with the old masters, especially Bach. Sandström has expressed the wish to link himself to the tradition. He has therefore given us Ordet (The Word) (2004), a large-scale “passion” with the evangelist part tailored for Anne Sofie von Otter. For the librettist he chose the poet Katarina Frostensson, with whom he had collaborated already in the successful opera Staden (The Town) (1996). Further, he composed a Christmas Oratorio (2004), the cantata Wachet auf (2008) and, commissioned by Helmuth Rilling’s Internationale Bachakademie Stuttgart, a Magnificat (2005) with an orchestral texture for baroque period instruments. Rilling and the Oregon Bach Festival are also behind the commission of the colossal Messiah (2009), set to the exact same text as Handel’s well-known version. The series of six motets after Bach’s originals occupies a special position. The initiative was taken by choir professor Stefan Parkman and resulted in Lobet den Herrn. This inspired Ingemar Månsson, who was once the conductor of the Hägersten Motet Choir where Sandström had sung with the tenors for many years, to place an order for Singet dem Herrn, a work for double choir. In 2008 Sandström was able to conclude this unique collection of motets, each one dedicated to a capable Swedish choir leader. Also in his occupational role Sven-David Sandström has been inspired by the great cantor of St. Thomas. In 2008, when his ten-year professorship in composition at the prestigious Indiana University Bloomington came to an end, he was able to realize a long-cherished dream: to compose, like Bach, for all the feast days of the ecclesiastical year. He has gladly taken upon himself to deliver music on a regular basis: one work every other week. The compositional process evolves in close cooperation with the musical ensembles at Stockholm Cathedral and Gustaf Sjökvist. But also with choir leader Mona Ehntorp in the Stockholm suburb of Hässelby’s congregation, and its more modest resources. This is a gift, as unique as it is generous, to the Swedish Church and its active musical life. Sven-David Sandström’s complete church-year cycle was finished in 2011 with 65 works to cover all the Sundays. The major part of these works is music of varying complexity for a cappella choir, but there are also cantatas for soloist and organ, as well as purely instrumental works. by Camilla Lundberg Photo by Jenn Cress TIMOTHY C. TAKACH Reviewed as “gorgeous” (Washington Post) and “stunning” (Lawrence Journal-World), the music of Timothy C. Takach is rapidly gaining momentum in the concert world. Applauded for his melodic lines and rich, intriguing harmonies, Takach is a full-time composer and has received a number of commissions from various organizations including VocalEssence, St. Olaf Band, Cantus, Pavia Winds, cellist Kirsten Whitson, The Singers–Minnesota Choral Artists, and University of Notre Dame’s DeBartolo Performing Arts Center. His compositions have been performed on A Prairie Home Companion, the Boston Pops holiday tour, multiple all-state and festival programs and at venues such as the Library of Congress, Kennedy Center, and Royal Opera House Muscat. Takach has been awarded grants from American Composers Forum, Metropolitan Regional Arts Council, Minnesota State Arts Board, Meet the Composer, and yearly ASCAP Plus awards since 2004. He received a B.A. in Music Theory and Composition at St. Olaf College, Northfield, Minnesota, where he graduated with honors. Takach lives in Minneapolis with his wife and two sons. Photo by Tony Rinaldo AUGUSTA READ THOMAS The music of Augusta Read Thomas is majestic, it is elegant, it is lyrical, it is “boldly considered music that celebrates the sound of the instruments and reaffirms the vitality of orchestral music” (Philadelphia Inquirer). Her deeply personal music is guided by her particular sense of musical form, rhythm, timbre, and harmony. But given this individuality, her music is affected by history—in Thomas’s words, “Old music deserves new music and new music needs old music.” For Thomas, this means cherishing her place within the musical tradition and giving credit to those who have forged the musical paths she follows and from which she innovates. “You can hear the perfumes of my metaphorical grandparents,” Thomas states. “There is a wonderful tradition that I adore, I understand, and care about, but I have my two feet facing forward.” Thomas’s vision toward the future, her understanding of the present, and her respect for the past is evident in her art. Most striking in her respect for the past is evident in her art. Most striking in her music, however, is its exquisite humanity and poetry of the soul. The notion that music takes over where words cease is hardly more true than in her musical voice. Born in Glen Cove, New York, Thomas was appointed University Professor of Composition at the University of Chicago in 2011. University Professors are selected for internationally recognized eminence in their fields as well as for their potential for high impact across the University. Thomas will become the 16th person ever to hold a University Professorship, and the fifth currently at the University. Additionally, she was the Mead Composer-in-Residence with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra (CSO) from May 1997 through June 2006, a residency that culminated in the premiere of Astral Canticle—one of two finalists for the 2007 Pulitzer Prize in Music. During her residency with the CSO, under the direction of Daniel Barenboim, Thomas not only premiered nine commissioned works, but also founded, along with Cliff Colnot, and curated the MusicNOW series. In addition to Barenboim, Thomas’s music has been championed by other leading conductors including Pierre Boulez, Esa-Pekka Salonen, Oliver Knussen, Seiji Ozawa, Mstislav Rostropovich, Leonard Slatkin, David Robertson, Christoph Eschenbach, Ludovic Morlot, and Xian Zhang. Her music has been commissioned by leading ensembles and organizations around the world including: Love Songs (Chanticleer); Chanting to Paradise (NDR [German Radio] Orchestra); Song in Sorrow (The Cleveland Orchestra); Orbital Beacons, Aurora, In My Sky at Twilight, Ceremonial, Carillon Sky, Words of the Sea, Trainwork, Tangle, and Astral Canticle (Chicago Symphony Orchestra); Prayer Bells (Pittsburgh Symphony); Bells Ring Summer (La Jolla Chamber Music Society); Galaxy Dances, and Cello Concerto (National Symphony); Violin Concerto (Radio France and the BBC Orchestra); Helios Choros I (Dallas Symphony); Helios Choros II (London and Boston Symphony Orchestras); Helios Choros III (Orchestre de Paris); Pulsar (BBC); Terpsichore’s Dream (Utah Symphony); Canticle Weaving (Los Angeles Philharmonic); and Cantos for Slava (ASCAP Foundation). From 1993 to 2001, Thomas was an assistant professor, then associate professor of composition at the Eastman School of Music, and from 2001 until 2006 she was the Wyatt Professor of Music at Northwestern University. In 2007-2008, Thomas was a Visiting Scholar in the Department of Music in the Division of the Humanities at the University of Chicago. Frequently, Thomas undertakes short-term residencies in colleges, universities, and festivals across the United States and in Europe. Thomas studied composition with Jacob Druckman at Yale University, with Alan Stout and Bill Karlins at Northwestern University, and at the Royal Academy of Music in London. She was a Junior Fellow in the Society of Fellows at Harvard University (1991–94) and a Bunting Fellow at Radcliffe College (1990–91), and often teaches composition at Tanglewood. Thomas has also been on the Board of Directors of the American Music Center since 2000, as well as on the boards and advisory boards of several chamber music groups. In addition to the numerous commercial recordings of her music available on major record labels, Thomas has released five of her own albums independently. Augusta Read Thomas’s music is published exclusively by G. Schirmer, Inc. Notre Dame Vocale Carmen-Helena Téllez, artistic and music director Three Motets from Notre Dame Our Father (2014) J.J. Wright (b. 1985) Come, You Blessed of Our Father (2014) Caleb Wenzel (b. 1988) Nunc dimittis (2013) Jamie Caporizo, mezzo-soprano Timothy L.R. Michuda, violin Natasha Stojanovska, piano Justin Appel (b. 1980) Kyrie (2014) Cary Boyce (b. 1955) Commissioned by the University of Notre Dame’s DeBartolo Performing Arts Center in celebration of the 10th Anniversary Season. World premiere Dijo Cifar: a los pescadores (2014) On texts from the “Songs of Cifar and the Sweet Sea” by Pablo Antonio Cuadra (1912-2002) Gabriela Lena Frank (b. 1972) Commissioned by the University of Notre Dame’s DeBartolo Performing Arts Center in celebration of the 10th Anniversary Season. World premiere Benjamin Liupaogo, tenor Commentary on the Program and Commissions The Doctoral Conducting Studio at Notre Dame examines not only the historical masterpieces of sacred music, but also the diverse ways to create sacred music for our time. As part of this comprehensive approach, all conductors engage with the art of composition, like the great sacred music directors of the past. This evening’s collection of independently composed motets showcases the variety of approaches by conductor-composers currently in the DMA program. Trained as a jazz pianist and improviser at the New School for Jazz in New York, J.J. Wright joined Notre Dame’s Conducting Studio as a Grammy-nominated artist and as the winner of a Latin Grammy. He recently recorded his debut album of original compositions and covers from Jon Brion, Sufjan Stevens, and Phil Collins to favorable press reviews that define his work as “uncommonly fresh and quietly inventive.” Also a composer of sacred music, J.J. seeks an original voice that pays homage to important influences, such as J.S. Bach, Steve Reich, Meredith Monk, and Cannonball Adderley. J.J.’s motet Our Father, a setting of the Lord’s Prayer, evokes the layering of multiple voices in prayer, to achieve subtle but unexpected vertical sonorities. This work is part of J.J.’s innovative Vespers for the Feast of the Immaculate Conception, in which he surrounded canonic Baroque compositions by Giacomo Carissimi (1605–1674) and Marc-Antoine Charpentier (1643–1704) with his own jazz-infused settings, to create a unique and contemporary Vespers liturgy. Commentary continued Caleb Wenzel’s work as a composer has garnered awards from numerous professional, amateur, and educational ensembles and organizations including American Choral Director’s Association, Texas Music Teacher’s Association, Arlington Music Teacher’s Association, and The International Foundation for Sacred Music Composers. An emerging authority on the role of music in worship, Caleb has composed extensively for liturgical praxis. In 2012, Caleb was selected to participate in an American choral composers seminar jointly hosted by ACDA and Library of Congress. As a result, his work, Ecce Agnus Dei, was premiered by Princeton Singers in Washington D.C. In 2011, Caleb was selected to address members of the Minnesota State Congress on the cultural significance of music in religious congregations. In 2012, he was invited to lecture at University of Notre Dame’s international sacred music conference, “James MacMillan and the Musical Modes of Mary and the Cross,” after which he joined Notre Dame’s doctoral program. In addition to his liturgical compositions, Caleb is currently preparing the first complete performance edition of the Latin Psalm motets of Sebastian Knüpfer, music director of the Thomaskirche in Leipzig, Germany from 1657 to 1676. Come, You Blessed of my Father was premiered at the Oregon Bach Festival Composers Symposium under the direction of Grammy-winning conductor, Craig Hella Johnson. It addresses its text simply and directly, but also with passionate fervor manifested in rich harmonies and choral textures. Justin Appel hails from Washington State. Through the experience of hearing organ and choral music in some of the great English, Dutch, and German chapels and cathedrals, Justin became an avid disciple of sacred music. Justin worked for nearly a decade as a choir director, pianist, and organist at Reformed and Episcopal churches before taking a master’s degree in Sacred Music with an emphasis in choral conducting from the University of Notre Dame, studying with Nancy Menk, also studying organ with Craig Cramer. An interest in daily worship took him to Solesmes to study Gregorian chant semiology. At present, Justin is a student in the Doctor of Musical Arts program in choral conducting at Notre Dame, working with Carmen-Helena Téllez. His current research interests revolve around the Anglican choral tradition and Eastern Orthodox repertoires, traditions that inform his compositional work. Nunc Dimittis combines the lush film-score idiom of Alex Baranaowski with the moto perpetuo minimalism of Philip Glass in a setting for liturgical choir. Throughout the work, the choir serves as a string-like foundation for a lyric violin solo while the piano rhythmically propels the music forward, grounding the whole structure with a harmonic pedal (a note that remains fixed while others move freely). Taken together, this music represents a possible approach to utilizing “popular” elements in sacred music, while also combining virtuosity for the instrumental players with uncomplicated musical participation for a traditional church choir. by Carmen-Helena Téllez The first part of the Ordinary of the Mass may take its Biblical origins from 1 Chronicles 16:34, “O give thanks unto the LORD; for he is good; for his mercy endureth for ever,” (KJV) and also Luke 18:13, “And the publican, standing afar off, would not lift up so much as his eyes unto heaven, but smote upon his breast, saying, God be merciful to me a sinner.” According to Fr. Pierre Loret, the Kyrie was a part of the mass of Pope Gregory (540–604 A.C.E.), “… a carry-over from the Greeks, doubtless from the time of Pope Gelasius.” (A.C.E. 492-496—p. 54, The Story of the Mass: From the Last Supper to the Present Day; 1982, Liguori Publications). The triple-ternary form (AAABBBAAA) is found prolifically in the Tridentine mass from the Renaissance forward, but suggestions of it are found much earlier, as in the ternary form of Machaut’s Messe di nostre dame (ca. 1400). Even the chants compiled in the Liber Usualis have recommendations for a similar triple-ternary performance (see article II, “Rubrics for the Chant of the Mass, Liber Usualis (p. xv, Desclee, 1959, ed. Benedictines of Solesmes). by Cary Boyce Songs of Cifar and the Sweet Sea, a work in progress, is an ongoing vocal cycle setting the poetry of Pablo Antonio Cuadra for various settings: as “art songs” for tenor/baritone and piano, as well as songs for SATB choir, baritone/ soprano soloists, and two pianos. While the songs are created to flow as a narrative set, certain songs can be performed as stand-alones or with a select number of others from the cycle at the discretion of the performers. Songs of Cifar and the Sweet Sea draws on poetry by the Nicaraguan poet, Pablo Antonio Cuadra (1912-2002). As a young man, Cuadra spent more than two decades sailing the waters of Lake Nicaragua, meeting peasants, fisherman, sailors, woodcutters, and timber merchants in his travels. From such encounters, he was inspired to construct a cycle of poems that recount the odyssey of a harp-playing mariner, Cifar, who likewise travels the waters of Lake Nicaragua. In my initial reading of the poems, I was struck by how Cuadra writes of commonplace objects and people but ties them to the undercurrents of his country’s past of indigenous folklore. Despite Cuadra’s plain vocabulary, ordinary things are thus rendered mythical, revealing Cifar’s capacity for wonder and passionate lyricism. The poems, which begin with Cifar’s birth and end with his death as an old man, still clinging to an oar some eighty-odd poems later, are rich material for a composer’s imagination, indeed. With this treasure trove to spark my imagination, poems are carefully cobbled together without changing Cuadra’s cadence or phrasing so that more than one poem may be featured in any given song. Characters come and go throughout, lending a truly operatic feel to the cycle. Dijo Cifar: A los Pescaderos (Said Cifar:To the Fishermen) is the latest addition to this cycle, commissioned by University of Notre Dame’s DeBartolo Performing Arts Center, and premiered by conductor Carmen-Helena Téllez for its 10th Anniversary Choral Celebration. Here, our protagonist Cifar pauses amidst the tumultuous events of his life to pay tribute to the mariners of Lake Nicaragua. by Gabriela Lena Frank Texts & Translations Kyrie Kyrie eleison Christe eleison Kyrie eleison Lord have mercy Christ have mercy Lord have mercy Commissioned by the University of Notre Dame’s DeBartolo Performing Arts Center in celebration of the 10th Anniversary Season. World premiere Dijo Cifar: A los Pescaderos (Said Cifar: To the Fishermen) Dijo Cifar Cifar said Cantare a los heroes Celebrare a los hombres cuya estatura supere la estatura de los demas mortales. I will sing to the heores I will celebrate the men whose stature surpasses that of the other mortals Pero conocf la tempestad la furia de los vientos la cefiuda impasividad de las aguas homicidas. But I met the tempest The fury of the winds the frowning impassiveness of the suicidal waters. Cantare – me dije entonces – a los hombres de! Lago, a los humildes pescadores. La pobreaza se empefia en rodearlas de silencio. I will sing – I told myself then – to the men of the Lake. to the humble fishermen. Poverty insists in surrounding them with silence Commissioned by the University of Notre Dame’s DeBartolo Performing Arts Center in celebration of the 10th Anniversary Season. World premiere text by Pablo Antonio Cuadra Notre Dame Chorale Alexander Blachly, director Eli, Eli (1928) György Déak-Bárdos (1905–1991) The Blue Bird (1910) Charles Villiers Stanford (1852–1924) Say Sad (2015) Brad Balliett (b. 1982) Commissioned by the University of Notre Dame’s DeBartolo Performing Arts Center in celebration of the 10th Anniversary Season. World premiere Sing Joyfully and Merrily James Blachly (b. 1980) Commissioned by the University of Notre Dame’s DeBartolo Performing Arts Center in celebration of the 10th Anniversary Season. World premiere Texts & Translations Eli! Eli! Et circa horam nonam clamavit Jesus voce magna, dicens, Eli! Eli! lamma sabacthani? And about the ninth hour, Jesus cried out saying, “My God! My God! Why have you abandoned me? The Blue Bird The lake lay blue below the hill, O’er it, as I looked, there flew Across the waters, cold and still, A bird whose wings were palest blue. The sky above was blue at last, The sky beneath me blue in blue, A moment ere the bird had passed, It caught his image as he flew. —Mary E. Coleridge Say Sad Say sad. Say sun’s a semblance of a bled blanched intransigence, collecting rue in ray-stains. Smirching pages. Takes its cue from sateless stamens, flanging. Florid head got no worries, waitress. Say you do. Say photosynthesis. Light, water, airy bread. What eats its source, its orbit? Something bad: some plural petal that will not root or ray. Sow stray. Salt night for saving, dreaming day for heap, for hefting. Originary ash for stall and stilling. Say it will, it said. Corolla corona, bliss-bane—delay surge and sediment. Say instrument and gash and ruminant remnant. Rex the ruse. Be dead. by Karen Volkman Sing Joyfully and Merrily Sing joyfully unto God our strength, sing we merrily unto God: sing loud, make a cheerful noise unto the God of Jacob! Take the song, take the shalme, bring hither the tablet, bring forth the timbrel, the pleasant harp and the viol, with the lute. Blow up the trumpet in the new moon, blow upon the trumpet in the new moone, ev’n at the time appointed and upon our solemn feast day: for this is a statute for Israel, and a law of Jacob. —Psalm 81: 1-4, Coverdale and Geneva translations Notre Dame Glee Club Daniel Stowe, director “Salve Regina” Lux aurumque Dappled Things Timothy Takach (b. 1978) Eric Whitacre (b. 1970) Augusta Read Thomas (b. 1964) Commissioned by the University of Notre Dame’s DeBartolo Performing Arts Center in celebration of the 10th Anniversary Season. World premiere Two Shanties Ambletown Johnny Come Down to Hilo arr. Timothy Takach Commissioned by the University of Notre Dame’s DeBartolo Performing Arts Center in celebration of the 10th Anniversary Season. World premiere Commentary on the Program and Commissions Dappled Things was commissioned by the DeBartolo Performing Arts Center in celebration of the 10th Anniversary Season. In it, Augusta Read Thomas sets Gerard Manley Hopkins’s poem Pied Beauty not in traditional linear fashion, but rather she takes the conceit of the poem—an effusive laundry list of things fractured and segmented in some fashion—and mirrors that “dappled-ness” in the musical style by breaking the text up into fragments and reassembling it as a somewhat jumbled mosaic. At times the texture suggests that of medieval hocket, memorably described as “moth-eaten” by music historian Joseph Kerman. All the while, though, the music proceeds in buoyant waltz time, mirroring the exuberant mood of the poem. Eric Whitacre’s Lux aurumque, very well-known as a mixed-chorus piece, is particularly effective in its men’s-voice version, with tonal clusters moving in and out of focus beneath a sustained tenor pedal note. In his Salve Regina (commissioned by the DeBartolo Performing Arts Center in 2013), Timothy Takach writes for a three-part semi-chorus and four-part full chorus in homage to Franz Biebl’s Ave Maria, but this inspired piece illustrates Takach’s own lyrical gift as well as his inventive harmonic and rhythmic sense. Texts & Translations “Salve Regina” Hail, Queen, Mother of mercy: our life, our sweetness, and our hope, hail. To you we cry, exiles; sons of Eve. To thee do we sigh, moaning and weeping in this valley of tears. Ah then, our Advocate, those merciful eyes of yours turn towards us; and Jesus, the blessed fruit of your womb, after this exile show unto us. O clement: O holy: O sweet Virgin Mary. Pray for us O holy Mother of God, as we are made worthy of the promises of Christ. Lux aurumque Light. Warm and heavy as pure gold and the angels sing softly to the new-born babe. (Edward Esch) Dappled Things GLORY be to God for dappled things— For skies of couple-colour as a brinded cow; For rose-moles all in stipple upon trout that swim; Fresh-firecoal chestnut-falls; finches’ wings; Landscape plotted and pieced—fold, fallow, and plough; And all trades, their gear and tackle and trim. All things counter, original, spare, strange; Whatever is fickle, freckled (who knows how?) With swift, slow; sweet, sour; adazzle, dim; He fathers-forth whose beauty is past change: Praise him. (Pied Beauty—Gerard Manley Hopkins, 1844–1889) Ambletown O Amble is a fine town with ships about the bay I’m wishing in my heart I was there today I’m wishing in my heart I was far away from here Sitting in my parlor and talking with my dear Chorus: And it’s home, dearie, home, and it’s home I want to be My topsails are hoisted and I am out to sea The oak and the ash and the bonnie birchen tree They’re all a-growing green in the North country And it’s home, dearie, home A letter came today, but somehow I cannot speak And the proud and happy tears are a-rolling down my checks There’s someone here, she siad, you’ve been waiting for to see With your merry hazel eyes, looking up from off my knee But the letter never said if we have a boy or girl Got me so confused that my heart is all a whirl So I’m going back to port, where I’ll quickly turn around And take the fastest ship, which to Ambletown is bound Well, if it be a girl, she shall wear a golden ring If it be a boy, you can name him after me. With his buckles and his boot and his little jacket blue He’ll walk the quarterdeck, like his daddy used to do When Johnny Comes Down to Hilo Traditional I’ve never seen the like since I’ve been born An Arkansas farmer with sea boots on I love a little gal across the sea, She’s a Bajan beauty and she says to me Chorus: When Johnny come down to Hilo, poor old man Oh, wake her! shake her! Shake that gal with the blue dress on. When Johnny come down to Hilo, poor old man Who’s been here since I’ve been gone Pretty little gal with the blue dress on Those Hilo gals they dress so fine They ain’t got Jesus on their mind Oh, my wife died in Tennessee And they sent her jaw bone back to me I hung her jaw bone on the fence I ain’t heard nothing but the jaw bone since Notre Dame Vocale, Chorale, and Glee Club Carmen-Helena Téllez, conductor Psalm 23 / Friede auf Erden (2014) for Three Choral Groups Sven-David Sandström (b. 1942) Commissioned by the University of Notre Dame’s DeBartolo Performing Arts Center in celebration of the 10th Anniversary Season. World premiere Texts & Translations PSALM 23 / Friede auf Erden for Three Choral Groups Sven-David Sandström Psalm 23 The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want. He maketh me to lie down in the green pastures: he leadeth me beside the still waters. He restoreth my soul: he leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for his name’s sake. Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me. Thou preparest a table before me in presence of mine enemies: thou anointest my head with oil; my cup runneth over. Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life: and I will dwell in the house of the Lord for ever. Friede auf Erden/Peace on Earth Da die Hirten ihre Herde Ließen und des Engles Worte Trugen durch die niedre Pforte Zu der Mutter mit dem Kind, Fuhr das himmlische Gesind Fort im Sternenraum zu singen, Fuhr der Himmel fort zu klingen: Friede! auf der Erde! There the shepherds their herds left and the angel’s words carried by the lowly gate to the mother with the child, led the heavenly followers away in the starry space to sing, continued the sky sounding: Peace! on the earth! Seit die Engel so geraten, O wie viele blut’ge Taten Hat der Streit auf wildem Pferde, Der geharnischte vollbracht! In wie mancher heiligen Nacht Sang der Chor der Geister zagend, Dringlich flehend, leis verklagend: Friede! auf der Erde! Since the angels thrive so, O like many bloody acts had the struggle on wild horses, the armor-clad fully-plowed! In like some holy night sang the Choir of Spirits fearing, urgently imploring, sofly accusing: Peace! on the earth! Doch es ist ein ew’ger Glaube, Dass der Schwache nicht zum Raube Jeder frechen Mordgebärde Werde fallen allezeit: Etwas wie Gerechtigkeit Webt und wirkt in Mord und Grauen Und ein Reich will sich erbauen, Das den Frieden sucht der Erde. But it is an eternal faith that the weaklings not to the robbers from each shameless murder-gesture will to-fall always: Something like justice wove and produced in murder and dread and a realm wants to be pleased, that the peace sought the earth. Mählich wird es sich gestalten, Seines heiligen Amtes walten, Waffen schmieden ohne Fährde, Flammenschwerter für das Recht, Und ein königlich Geschlecht Wird erblühn mit starken Söhnen, Dessen helle Tuben dröhnen: Friede! auf der Erde! Gradually will it be taken-shape, govern themselves its holy office, weapons to forge without danger, flame-swords for the right, and a royal species begins to blossom with strong sons, whose bright pipes roar: Peace! on the earth! English translation by Joe Monzo ENSEMBLES Notre Dame Vocale, Carmen-Helena Téllez, artistic director and conductor Notre Dame Vocale premieres tonight three works by composers Sven-David Sandström, Cary Boyce and Gabriela Lena Frank, commissioned for the celebration of the 10th anniversary of the DeBartolo Performing Arts Center. Recently created in 2013, Notre Dame Vocale is an advanced vocal ensemble intended as the performing arm of research and creative projects in sacred music composition and sacred music drama at Notre Dame. Its first performance was at the inaugural concert of the Sacred Music Festival of Quito, Ecuador, in March 2013, where it presented the Latin American premiere of James MacMillan’s Cum Vidisset Jesus, a work commissioned by Sacred Music at Notre Dame. Vocale collaborates with Notre Dame’s presenter, the DeBartolo Performing Arts Center in offering virtuosic vocal and choral works by living composers. Most recently it performed Morton Feldman’s iconic composition Rothko Chapel with ensembleND, and the virtuosic Proverb with Third Coast Percussion. Notre Dame Vocale is also the resident ensemble for Notre Dame’s sacred music conferences and the designated core ensemble for the program of sacred music dramas with funding from the Mellon Foundation. In that capacity it performed the chamber vocal ensembles in the recent performance at the DPAC of Mendelssohn’s Elijah with the celebrated opera baritone Nathan Gunn. Notre Dame Vocale will be also the featured ensemble in the third Mellon Interdisciplinary Sacred Music Drama focusing on Dante’s Divine Comedy, when it will premiere a new work by American composer Robert Kyr. Vocale is also planning its first CD recording of the compositions it has premiered. Composed of graduate students in conducting and voice, and frequently hosting guest artists from the region, Notre Dame Vocale is led by Professor of Conducting Carmen-Helena Téllez. Notre Dame Vocale works within a studio model of co-creative participation. The present program was prepared in consort with assistant conductors Michael Accurso, Justin Appel, Caleb Wenzel, J.J. Wright, Michael Duryea, Brendan Barker, Erin Donegan, Joshua Boggs, and Blake Bruchhaus. Venezuelan-American conductor, producer and scholar Carmen-Helena Téllez has been called “a quiet force behind contemporary music in the United States today” by the New York-based journal Sequenza21. A multifaceted artist, she takes a co-creative approach to new music performance, devoting special attention to vocal-instrumental and staged genres, involving interdisciplinary media and musical scholarship, in an approach that The Washington Post has called “immersing and thrilling.” Carmen-Helena Téllez has been responsible for the commission and world premiere of many staged and choral works that have garnered the highest critical praise, including the video-opera Unicamente la verdad, by Mexican composer Gabriela Ortiz and video artist Rubén Ortiz-Torres, the choral suite Sun-Dogs by James MacMillan, Mario Lavista’s Missa ad Consolationes Dominam Nostram, and Ingram Marshall’s Savage Altars, among many others. Carmen-Helena Téllez has also brought important operas and staged oratorios to audiences in the American Midwest for the first time, including Osvaldo Golijov’s opera Ainadamar, John Adams’s opera-oratorio El Niño, as well as the American premiere of Ralph Shapey’s oratorio Praise, originally composed for the celebrations of the 50th anniversary of the foundation of Israel. As part of her increasingly focused dedication to interdisciplinary presentation, she co-created an immersive theatre production of Don Freund’s Passion with Tropes, and designed and conducted for the University of Sao Paulo a multimedia performance of Orff’s Carmina Burana as a Faustian commentary on the artist and fascist society. In the Fall of 2012 she joined Notre Dame as Professor of Conducting for the Sacred Music Program, where she heads the series of projects in Interdisciplinary Sacred Music Drama with support from a major grant from the Mellon Foundation. She came to Notre Dame after 20 years as Professor of Choral Conducting, and Director of Graduate Choral Studies and the Director of the Latin American Music Center at the prestigious Jacobs School of Music of Indiana University, where she also directed their Contemporary Vocal Ensemble. She continues also as the Artistic Co-Director of Aguavá New Music Studio, a production group that also sponsors the interdisciplinary vocal project Kosmologia. She has been the Resident Conductor of CONTEMPO: The Chicago Contemporary Chamber Players, the Music Director of the National Chorus of Spain, Music Director of the Pocket Opera Players of New York, and a Visiting Professor at Dartmouth College and the University of Chicago. She is currently working on an art-video installation based on Pulitzer composer Shulamit Ran’s Credo/Ani Ma’Amin. Her art video The Bells of Leopardi, based on a staged performance of a composition by Yehuda Yannay, can be viewed in YouTube.com. As an outgrowth of these explorations, Carmen-Helena Téllez has returned to composition, and she included some of her own works in a production by NON:op open opera in Chicago in 2014. Notre Dame Chorale, Alexander Blachly, music director Under the leadership of Dr. Alexander Blachly, Chorale is the official concert choir of the University of Notre Dame. A mixed ensemble of voices specializing in choral works from the Renaissance to the present, it performs on campus a fall and spring concert in the Leighton Concert Hall of the Marie P. DeBartolo Center for the Performing Arts in November and April. In addition, the Chorale performs Handel’s Messiah with Chamber Orchestra in the Leighton Concert Hall in early December. Each year’s events include, besides the concerts on campus, a Winter Tour to cities around the U.S. in January, an evening concert on Friday of Commencement Weekend and participation in the Baccalaureate Mass the next day. The Chorale also takes an international tour every three or four years during the summer, which, in 1997, included cities in Italy (Rome, Orvieto, Spoleto, Assisi, Siena, Florence, Venice, Padua). In May 2000 the Chorale traveled to southern France (Nice, Arles, Aix-en-Provence), Switzerland (Geneva), southern Germany (Munich, Passau), Austria (Salzburg) and northern Italy (Venice). In May 2005 the Chorale toured New Zealand’s South Island, performing in Christchurch, Timaru, Dunedin, and Nelson. In May 2007 the Chorale returned to New Zealand, this time with concerts primarily in the North Island and sight-seeing in the South Island. In May 2011 the ensemble traveled to Rome for a week’s stay, with a side trip to Florence and Assisi; this tour included singing for the Pope at the General Audience, singing for Saturday Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica, and full concerts in the Basilica San Francesco in Assisi and in Sant’ Ignazio in Rome. In May 2014 the Chorale traveled to Prague, Vienna, and Salzburg, with concerts in the Old St. Nicholas Church on the Square in Prague and in the Imperial Chapel of the Schönbrunn Palace in Vienna. Alexander Blachly is Professor of Music and Director of the Notre Dame Chorale. He is also the founder-director of Pomerium, a professional a cappella ensemble based in New York that has been specializing in the sacred choral music of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries since 1972. Mr. Blachly is the 1992 recipient of the Noah Greenberg Award given by the American Musicological Society to stimulate historically aware performances and the study of historical aware performances and the study of historical performing practices. He earned his post-graduate degrees at Columbia University. Prior to coming to Notre Dame in 1993 Mr. Blachly taught courses and directed vocal groups at Sarah Lawrence College, Rutgers University, and the University of Pennsylvania, where for eight years he directed the ensemble Ancient Voices. He is the author of articles on tempo relationships in music of the Renaissance; on the transition ca. 1500 from beating time by tapping on a shoulder, hand, or book to indicating time by a baton waved in the air; on the so-called “German” dialect of Gregorian chant; on the origin and practice of notating and performing proportions in fourteenth- and fifteenth-century music; on the intended performance manner and hidden meaning of Baude Cordier’s famous “circle canon” ca. 1400; and on the origin and purpose of Thomas Tallis’s famous fortyvoice motet Spem in alium. Mr. Blachly is currently writing a book on “Pythagorean Music of the Middle Ages and Renaissance.” Notre Dame Glee Club Founded in 1915, the Notre Dame Glee Club celebrates its 100th season of continuous operation in 2014-15. The 70-voice chorus presents a wide-ranging repertory in several formal campus concerts as well as in dozens of informal performances at University events, with a membership drawn from all courses of study at the university. In recent years the Club has performed on tour in over 40 U.S. states and 20 countries. In the course of regular European tours (most recently in the spring of 2011, with another slated for the spring of 2015), the Club has performed in Ireland, England, France, Spain, Austria, Italy, Switzerland, Germany, and the Czech Republic. In 1997 the Glee Club appeared in Israel with the Jerusalem Symphony and in 2001 the Glee Club visited Asia, singing in Singapore, Bangkok, Beijing, Shanghai, Hong Kong (with the Hong Kong Sinfonietta), and Taipei. In 2005 they toured in Mexico and Central America, and returned to Guatemala in May and June of 2009 with the Notre Dame Symphony Orchestra. In May and June of 2013 the Club toured northern Spain, including a pilgrimage on foot along the Camino de Santiago and capacity-crowd concerts in Burgos, León, and Salamanca Cathedrals. The most recent of several Glee Club recordings is On the Rocky Road to Dublin, released in 2012; another recording is due for release in conjunction with the Centennial Alumni Reunion in October 2015. Daniel Stowe has been a member of the University of Notre Dame faculty since 1993. In addition to directing the Glee Club, he is also conductor of the Notre Dame Symphony Orchestra and the Notre Dame Collegium Musicum. Ensemble Rosters NOTRE DAME VOCALE NOTRE DAME CHORALE Carmen-Helena Téllez, artistic and music director Alexander Blachly, director Natasha Stojanovska, collaborative pianist Soprano Jessica Bush Michelle Bythrow Erin Donegan Samantha Dotterweich Sarah Noone Alto Joshua Boggs Jamie Caporizo Hillary Doerries Emma Kusters Suze Kim-Villano Tenor Brendan Barker Benjamin Liupaogo Sean Martin Caleb Wenzel Michael Duryea Bass Michael Accurso Justin Appel Blake Bruchhaus Stephen Drendall J.J. Wright Soprano Erin Bishop Meghan Cain Carmen Casillas Molly Knapp Katie Lee Sarah Martinez Natalie Mayer Mimi Michuda Maura Monahan Daniella Reboucas Jennifer Richardson Tierney Vrdolyak Michelle Williams Mara Wilson Alto Brendan Barker Julie Borzage Sophie Buono Melissa Cross Becca Fritz Madison Jaros Christen Leen Julia Oksasoglu Samantha Piekos Molly Porter Aniela Tyksinski Tenor Greg Demet Nicholas Herzog Christian Hokaj Eric Krebs Benjamin Liupaogo Corey Pennycuff Kody Stutzman Juan Velazquez Bass Justin Appel Brian Celeste Christopher Daniel Theodore Howe Edward Lim Paul Stevenson Ian Tembe Patrick Tingleff Lucas Unruh Yilong Yang Ensemble Rosters NOTRE DAME GLEE CLUB Daniel Stowe, director Tenor I Ricardo Castañeda Andrew Fritz Soren Kyhl Daniel Le Bruno Mediate Michael Prough Michael Shakour Hunbo Shim Andrew Spitzer Francesco Tassi Jamie Towey Tenor II James Argue Jack Brooks Maxwell Bullard Jimmy Capella Thomas Dean Matthew Donohue Patrick Fasano Nick Goldsmith Steve Jakubowski Paul Kearney Kieran Kelly Erik Klaus James O’Connor Michael O’Malley Zachary Osterholz Daniel Pedroza Rahul Ramani Tony Stedge Carlos Torres Christopher Torres Bass I Nick Barella Jonathan Bartolome Joseph Copp Nicolas Garcia Christian Gorski Jay Johnstone Hunter Kuffel John Linczer Ryan McMullen Joe Moran Steve Perry Brian Richman Joey Schachner Ben Swanson Merrick Topping Drew Turner Bass II Christianos Burlotos Gregory Corning Walker Embrey Brendan Evans Mark Gazda Michael Gregory Oliver Hanes Nicholas King Paul Kuczynski Patrick Lyon John McKeegan John McKune Michael Moss Anthony Murphy Nick Pennington Stuart Streit Chandler Swift Kevin Warten Matthew Williams WSBT–TV is the official media sponsor of the 2014–2015 Presenting Series. Visiting artist accommodations provided by the Morris Inn. Express Press Incorporated supports the Presenting Series by underwriting the printing of this program.