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You are here: Home / Community / Chattanooga Bach Choir Opens Season

Chattanooga Bach Choir Opens Season

October 5, 2017 By Dick Cook 0 Comments

The Chattanooga Bach Choir, David Long, artistic director, presents Sergei Rachmaninoff’s AllNight Vigil for unaccompanied mixed choir, Op. 37, on Sunday, October 8 at 7:00 p.m., at theBasilica of Saints Peter & Paul, 214 East 8th Street, Chattanooga. Admission is $20; students are free. 

For this concert, the Chattanooga Bach Choir is collaborating with Voci Virili Men’s Consort and Voice of Reason Women’s Ensemble, Harv Wileman, artistic director. Featuring soloists Rosella Ewing, mezzo-soprano; Blaine Tooley, tenor; and Theodore Tsaltas, basso profundo, the ensemble will be conducted by David Long with associate conductors Laurie Redmer Minner and Jeff Parker. This performance of Rachmaninoff’s All-Night Vigil will be sung in the original Russian.

David Long, the Bach Choir’s artistic director, comments, “We are thrilled to perform Rachmaninoff’s monumental All-Night Vigil, considered a crowning achievement of Russian Orthodox choral music, at the acoustically sumptuous Basilica of Saints Peter & Paul. Regarded as one of the most challenging works in the a cappella choral repertory, it makes technical demands on singers’ intonation and breath control and requires a complete engagement with the language and the texts. Since its first performance in 1915, audiences have been enthralled by the sheer beauty and sonic range of this work from unique sound of the low bass voices to the softest singing exploding into the magnificent power of massed voices. The texts are taken from the Russian Orthodox all-night vigil ceremony celebrated on the eve of great feasts and lasting from Vespers at dusk through midnight Matins until Prime at dawn. Nine of its fifteen sections are based on traditional Orthodox chants from various traditions – the ancient Russian Známenny chant, a more recitational ‘Greek’ style, and ‘Kiev’ chant from the 16th and 17th centuries. After the opening call to worship, the unfolding movements portray the mystery of the Creation, the Incarnation of Christ, and the Salvation of the Resurrection, along with sections praising the Virgin, the Trinity, and Christ triumphant.  Rachmaninoff’s intense melodic richness expresses the depth of human spiritual desires: praise, meditation, penitence and, proclamation. Among the composer’s own compositions, the All-Night Vigil was one of his favorites (along with The Bells); one hundred years later, this reflective and deeply moving work is beloved by choirs worldwide and remains a masterpiece of Russian choral music.”

For this performance, our soloists include Chattanooga favorites: mezzo Rosella Ewing, a frequent Chattanooga Symphony/Opera, Chattanooga Bach Choir soloist and professor at the University of Arkansas-Little Rock, and tenor Blaine Tooley, who has been a frequent soloist with Voci Virili as well as the former Music Director at Hixson UMC, now residing in Memphis.”

Established in 1985 by conductor James Greasby, the Chattanooga Bach Choir focuses on performing the choral works of Johann Sebastian Bach, in addition to choral-orchestral masterworks of all periods. David Long was appointed artistic director and conductor of the Chattanooga Bach Choir in 2005. During his tenure, he has expanded the programs and repertoire to include a yearly series featuring Bach cantatas and performances of a wide range of music from the past to the present. Over its three decades-long history, the Bach Choir has performed the works of more than sixty composers from the Renaissance to the present, including Josquin, Telemann, Handel, Haydn, Mozart, Fauré, Duruflé, Lauridsen, and Gjeilo.

The Chattanooga Bach Choir’s performance of Rachmaninoff’s All-Night Vigil is made possible in part with funds from the Tennessee Arts Commission and ArtsBuild. The Chattanooga Times Free Press is the Bach Choir’s exclusive print media sponsor. For more information, visit  ww.chattanoogabachchoir.org.

Filed Under: Community, FEATURED POSTS, News

About Dick Cook

Dick Cook has lived in East Ridge since the Kennedy Administration when his parents bought a house on Marietta Street. Dick graduated from ERHS in 1976 before going on to the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga where he studied Political Science. Dick worked for the Chattanooga Free-Press and the Chattanooga Times Free Press for 22 years. Free-Press Sports Editor Roy Exum plucked him out of production in 1989 and gave him a job as a sports reporter. Dick covered everything from prep sports to the whitewater events on the Ocoee River for the 1996 Olympics. When Chattanooga's two paper's merged, he became the Crime Reporter covering both the Chattanooga Police and Fire Departments. He was among reporters who were honored by the Associated Press for the TFP's coverage of the 2002 fog-shrouded crash on I-75 in Catoosa County, Dick and his wife, Cathy, live on Marlboro Avenue where they are seen frequently chasing around their three grandsons.


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