Holy Ghost Church, Knoxville, TN Saturday, November 20, 2010
Pope Benedict XVI Schola Concert Mary Weaver, Director
• Schola Oremus Pro Pontifice (Prayer for the Pope) Anonymous
Dixit Maria Hans Leo Hassler, 1564-1612
Locus Iste Anton Bruckner, 1824-1896
Jesu Dulcis Memoria St. Bernard of Clairvaux, 1090-1153
O Bone Jesu Claudio Monteverdi, 1567-1643
Ubi Caritas Anonymous
• Charles Walden, Organist/Director of Music, Holy Ghost Parish Veni Redemptor Gentium Michael Praetorius, c1571–1621
Viens Sauveur des Paiens Marcel Paponaud, 1893-1988
Nun Komm, der Heiden Heiland Johann Heinrich Buttstedt, 1666-1727
Nun Komm, der Heiden Heiland J.S. Bach, 1685-1750
• Schola Thou Knowest, Lord Henry Purcell, 1659-1695
Magnificat Thomas Morley, c1557-1602
Lord, Hear My Prayer Instantly William Byrd, c1539-1623
Lord, for Thy Tender Mercy’s Sake Richard Farrant, 1530-1580
God So Loved the World (from The Crucifixion) John Stainer, 1840-1901
• Charles Walden, Organist Ave Maria Flor Peeters, 1903-1986
Communion Louis Vierne, 1870-1937
Gagliarda Bernhard Schmid, c16th-17th centuries
Festive Trumpet Tune David German, 1954-
• Schola Faithful Cross (English translation of Crux Fidelis) Venantius Fortunatus, c530-609
Ave Verum Corpus with Organ Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, 1756-1791
Jesu Rex Admirabilis Giovanni Perluigi da Palestrina, c1525-1594
Salve Regina (text) Hermann of Reichenau, 1013-1054
In Memoria Aeterna (from Beatus Vir) with Organ Antonio Vivaldi, 1678-1741
As a peripheral participant (and thrilled to be asked to be involved) I had the opportunity to attend some rehearsals and hear the Schola and also sit back and enjoy much of the concert.
10 singers form this group which has been together three years, singing a monthly Mass at the church where list member, Charles Walden is Director of Music/Organist. The parish to especially interesting as it is home to OF Masses, an EF Mass, an Easter Rite Mass and, I believe a Spanish language Mass.
This is the first concert by the group. The ambitious program may suggest that this is a group of semi-professional/professional singers who get together to sing repertoire. But that's not the case. From what I know, these are all very committed amateur singers who come from varied backgrounds, some with more musical training than others, but not just a "let's get together and sing" group, but rather one that has spent three years learning and growing together.
The first thing that people noticed and commented on at the concert was the ability of the schola to sing together in unison. You hear people talking about trying to sing "with one voice" and this group really does. It's not a natural thing and during rehearsals I watched as Mary Weaver pulled them together and got them ready to sing and what we heard was the product of her attention to detail and their desire to sing the best that they could.
During the Colloquium I spent time talking about the draw a schola concert and organ recitals can have with some musicians. Charles Walden's playing organ works in between the choral works was like being served a sorbet between courses to cleanse the palette. His choice of music and knowledge of the Schantz pipe organ, one of only two pipe organs in the entire diocese, combined to make the afternoon a multimedia event - choral music, the ringing of the tower bells on the quarter hour preceeded by a medieval thumping and grinding noise, the organ music and the stunning late afternoon light through the stained glass windows. And one of the schola members paints Icons, so we had the added beauty of candles and Icons around the sanctuary. It does not hurt that this is the most beautiful church in the diocese either!
10 singers on a football Saturday afternoon in Knoxville. Popular event? 89 in the audience, including I believe, a Monsignor and two priests. Great turnout!
Much of the program was unaccompanied - Mary Weaver has in iPhone with a very realistic pitch pipe application - and the group really came through as troupers singing some very challenging music with confidence and obvious joy. This program was proof that chant and polyphony can and are being mastered by people who love to sing, taking the polyphony off the concert stage and putting it back in the place where it originated.
There are singers around who are looking for a place to sing, Mary Weaver's worked hard to find them and I can tell you that they are grateful.
Thanks for the kind comments. I think most of us who were involved have come to the conclusion that the best way to spread better music, is to just do it. We may not be at the ideal yet, but perhaps it's better to focus on the progress we are making, rather than the ideal.
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