88th Annual Bach Festival Program Book

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88 TH ANNUAL BACH FESTIVAL

FEBRUARY 3 –26, 2023

PRESENTED BY THE BACH FESTIVAL SOCIETY OF WINTER PARK

AT ROLLINS COLLEGE SINCE 1935

JOHN V. SINCLAIR, ARTISTIC DIRECTOR & CONDUCTOR

OFFICERS

Dr. Jack Schott, Chair

Richard Russell, President

Dr. Bill Oelfke, Vice President

Michael Kakos, Treasurer

Beverly J. Slaughter, Secretary

TRUSTEES

Dr. Grant H. Cornwell

Betsy Gardner Eckbert

Dr. Jeff Flowers

Dr. Grant Hayes

Hon. Cynthia Mackinnon

Sam Stark

Alex Tiedtke

TRUSTEES EMERITI

M. Elizabeth Brothers

ARTISTIC STAFF

Dr. John V. Sinclair, Artistic Director and Conductor

Rhonda Burnham, Artistic Manager

Sondra Jones, Education Manager

Sherry Orr, Assistant to John Sinclair

Regunia Griggs, Choir Liaison

Jodi Tassos, Young at Heart Chorale Director

Lynn Peghiny, Accompanist

ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF

Kathy Johnson Berlinsky, Executive Director

Logan Landry-Jennings, Operations Manager

Nicole Fournier, accountant

Jane Secrist Newnum, Marketing & Development Consultant

Ruby Abreu, Marketing Manager

Harry Otero-Rivera, Box Office Assistant

MAJOR SUPPORT PROVIDED BY

ANNUAL BACH FESTIVAL SPECIAL EVENTS

Pre-concert talks, masterclasses, and more!

Visit BachFestivalFlorida.org/special-events for a complete schedule and details.

All special events are free and open to the public.

Park’s Community Redevelopment Agency; and Rollins College.
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88 TH
Photo by Scott Cook

Greetings and welcome!

We are all here for the same reason! Whether you are in the audience, the Choir, the Orchestra, or one of our world-class guest soloists, I believe we all are here to celebrate and to be inspired by the beauty and power of great music.

The music for this, our 88th Festival, was carefully curated in the effort of offering you, our loyal patrons, music that will speak to both the soul and intellect.

We are grateful that you have chosen to join us for Central Florida’s grandest musical tradition and we hope to see you often throughout the Festival.

Warmest regards,

ABOUT THE BACH FESTIVAL SOCIETY OF WINTER PARK

The Bach Festival Society of Winter Park’s mission is to inspire the human spirit through extraordinary music, featuring powerful choral performances and innovative programming that celebrates the legacy of J.S. Bach. The 88th Season offers a dynamic array of world-class musicians and vocalists performing classical masterworks and contemporary compositions that will delight, challenge, and inspire listeners. Founded in 1935 at Rollins College, the Bach Festival Society continues to secure critical acclaim for its artistic excellence and its commitment to elevating new music while celebrating traditional composers.

ARTISTIC DIRECTOR AND CONDUCTOR

John V. Sinclair enjoys a national reputation as a conductor of choral masterworks while locally being known as one of the hardest-working and in demand artists of the Central Florida cultural community. In his 33rd season as Artistic Director and Conductor of the Bach Festival Society, he continues his imaginative programming, creative interpretations, and expressive conducting.

Dr. Sinclair, known as a master teacher, is Director of Music at Rollins College and holds the John M. Tiedtke Endowed Chair. As a career educator, Sinclair keeps the Society’s educational focus vital by providing a broad range of musical programs and experiences for individuals of all ages. As a conductor who is equally adept at directing choral and orchestral music, he has been referred to as Central Florida’s “resident conductor.” He has appeared as conductor for more than a thousand performances in addition to his work as clinician and lecturer throughout the United States and other countries. The Bach Festival, under his leadership, has achieved international recognition by touring in Europe, producing nationally released CDs and broadcasts, and performing with the London Symphony Orchestra and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.

Dr. Sinclair holds a masters and doctoral degree from the University of Missouri-Kansas City’s Conservatory of Music. His undergraduate school, William Jewell College honored him with its most prestigious Citation for Achievement. In addition to editing and interpreting historical choral works through the Moravian Music Foundation, he has authored an anecdotal book entitled Falling Off the Podium, and Other Life Lessons. The late Wall Street Journal’s arts critic, Terry Teachout wrote, “John is a gifted conductor, a great educator, and the best of all possible colleagues.” For more than three decades, John Sinclair has shared his talent and dedication to musical excellence with the Central Florida community and beyond.

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JOHN V. SINCLAIR
Photo by Mike Thomas Imagery

PAUL JACOBS, ORGAN

PAUL JACOBS, ORGAN

Friday, February 3, 2023 | 7:30 pm

Knowles Memorial Chapel

PROGRAM

Fantasia for Organ (10’)

Trio Sonata in E minor, BWV 528 (11’)

I. Adagio-Vivace

II. Andante

III. Un Poco Allegro

Prelude, Fugue, and Variation, Opus 18 (11’)

Concert Variations on The Star-Spangled Banner, Opus 23 (9’)

INTERMISSION

Sonata No. 1 in D minor, Opus 42 (29’)

I. Introduction and Allegro

II. Pastorale

III. Finale

John Weaver (1937-2021)

Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)

Cesar Franck (1822-1890)

Dudley Buck (1839-1909)

Heralded as “one of the major musicians of our time” by Alex Ross of The New Yorker and as “America’s leading organ performer” by The Economist, the internationally celebrated organist Paul Jacobs combines a probing intellect and extraordinary technical mastery with an unusually large repertoire, both old and new. He has performed to great critical acclaim on five continents and in each of the fifty United States. The only organist ever to have won a Grammy Award—in 2011 for Messiaen’s towering “Livre du Saint-Sacrément,”—Mr. Jacobs is an eloquent champion of his instrument both in the United States and abroad.

Alexander Guilmant (1837-1911)

Mr. Jacobs has transfixed audiences, colleagues, and critics alike with landmark performances of the complete works for solo organ by J.S. Bach and Messiaen. He made musical history at age 23 when he gave an 18-hour marathon performance of Bach’s complete organ works on the 250th anniversary of the composer’s death. As a teacher he has been a vocal proponent of the redeeming nature of traditional and contemporary classical music.

As a pioneer for the revival of symphonic music featuring the organ, Mr. Jacobs regularly appears with the Chicago Symphony, Cincinnati Symphony, Cleveland Orchestra, Edmonton Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Minnesota Orchestra, Montreal Symphony, Nashville Symphony, National Symphony Orchestra, Philadelphia Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony, and Utah Symphony, among others.

This recital is made possible by Rollins College through the Faith Emeny Conger ‘54 Visiting Organist Concert Series in Honor of John Oliver Rich ‘38.

During the 2020-21 season Mr. Jacobs performed with the Philadelphia Orchestra led by Yannick Nezet-Seguin for their digital streaming series including the Poulenc Organ Concerto, as well as chamber versions of Mahler’s Symphony No. 4 and Das Lied von der Erde and with the Cleveland Orchestra conducted by Franz Welser-Most for the Poulenc Concerto.

Please turn off cell phone and electronic devices prior to the start of this performance. The Bach Festival Society’s policies strictly prohibit photography, filming, or recording of any kind during performances without the express written permission of the Society.

Mr. Jacobs studied at the Curtis Institute of Music, double majoring with John Weaver for organ and Lionel Party for harpsichord, and at Yale University with Thomas Murray. He joined the faculty of The Juilliard School in 2003 and was named chairman of the organ department in 2004, one of the youngest faculty appointees in the school’s history. He received Juilliard’s prestigious William Schuman Scholar’s Chair in 2007. In addition to his concert and teaching appearances, Mr. Jacobs is a frequent performer at festivals across the world, and has appeared on American Public Media’s Performance Today, Pipedreams, and Saint Paul Sunday, as well as NPR’s Morning Edition, ABC TV’s World News Tonight, and BBC Radio 3. In 2017 he received an honorary doctorate from Washington and Jefferson College.

Bach Festival Society of Winter Park Presents
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Photo by Claudio Papapietro

Bach Festival Society of Winter Park Presents

SPIRITUAL SPACES

Members of the Bach Festival Choir and Orchestra

John V. Sinclair, Artistic Director and Conductor

Saturday, February 4, 2023 |3:00 pm and 5:00 pm

Knowles Memorial Chapel

PROGRAM

Wachet Auf from Cantata #140

Villanella from Antique Danzie ed Arie, Suite 1

Våren (Letzter Frühling)

Adagio in g minor

Joni Roos, violin and Adam Brakel, organ

Adagietto from Suite in E Major

Munera Pacis from Illuminaire

Adagio from Clarinet Concerto

SPIRITUAL SPACES

O Salutaris Hostia

Jessica Speak, clarinet

Johann Sebastian Bach

Ottorino Respighi

Edvard Grieg

Tomaso Albinoni

Flow, My Tears

Arthur Foote

Elaine Hagenberg

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Caitlin Mohr and Maya Claussen, sopranos

Eriks Estenvalds

Lullaby George Gershwin

Lascia ch’io pianga from Rinaldo

Morceau de Concours

George Frideric Handel

Caitlin Mohr, soprano

Nora Lee Garcia, flute

John Dowland

Vocalise Sergei Rachmaninoff

Caitlin Mohr, soprano

Gabriel Faure

Agnus Dei from Mass in Bb Major

Johann N. Hummel

Noël from Symphonic Sketches George Chadwick

John Maclane Schirard, tenor

Caitlin Mohr, soprano

Please turn off cell phone and electronic devices prior to the start of this performance. The Bach Festival Society’s policies strictly prohibit photography, filming, or recording of any kind during performances without the express written permission of the Society.

FEATURED ARTIST

CAITLIN MOHR , soprano

Caitlin Mohr is in demand as a performer, vocal technician, and teacher of singing. Mohr has been featured in Faure’s Requiem, Vivaldi’s Judith Triumphans, Graupner’s Magnificat, and Handel’s Messiah. Mohr’s vocal, artistic, and theatrical versatility allow her to flourish in many musical genres and is an alumna of Amalfi Coast Music & Arts Festival, New York Musical Festival, Cambridge Summer Opera, Manhattan School of Music Summer Vocal Institute, and Boston Conservatory Vocal Institute. As part of a ten-day cultural exchange, Mohr performed with the State Symphony Orchestra of Turkmenistan and conducted outreach workshops for the American Embassy. Promoting female composers, she created a Ladies of Note recital, showcased highlights at the Celebrating Women of 2018 event in Orlando, Florida, developed a college course called Women in Music, and curated a lecture recital of Art Songs and Spirituals of African American Women (Margaret Bonds, Florence Price, Undine Smith Moore). Dr. Mohr earned her BA at Davidson College, her MM at Longy School of Music of Bard College, and her DMA at the University of North Texas. She currently teaches at Rollins College in Winter Park, Florida as an Assistant Professor of Music.

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Time in a Bottle arr. John Maclane Schirard Dona Nobis Pacem (Prayer for Peace) Guilio Caccini

Bach Festival Society of Winter Park Presents

BACH VOCAL ARTISTS

ODES AND A HYMN FOR ST. CECILIA BY PURCELL, HANDEL, AND BRITTEN

Members of the Bach Festival Orchestra

John V. Sinclair, Artistic Director and Conductor

John Grau, Co-Artistic Director

Sunday, February 5, 2023 |3:00 pm

Knowles Memorial Chapel

PROGRAM

Hail! Bright Cecilia: Ode to St. Cecilia 1692, Z. 328 (60’)

I. Symphony/Canzona

II. Hail! Bright Cecilia

Anna Eschbach, soprano; Morgan Peckels, alto;

John Grau, tenor; Stephen Mumbert, bass

ODES AND A HYMN FOR ST. CECILIA

Hymn to St. Cecilia, Opus 27 (12’)

I. In a Garden Shady

II. I Cannot Grow

III. O Ear Whose Creatures Cannot Wish to Fall

INTERMISSION

Ode for St. Cecilia’s Day, HWV 76 (50’)

I. Overture

II. Recitative and Aria: From Harmony; When Nature

Brad Diamond, tenor

III. Chorus: From Harmony, from Heavenly Harmony

IV. Aria: What Passion cannot Music Raise and Quell

Rebecca Myers, soprano

Benjamin Britten (1913-1976)

III. Hark! Each Tree

Gabriela Estephanie Solís, alto; Thaddeaus Bourne, bass

IV. Thou tun’st this World

V. Wondrous Machine!

VI. The Airy Violin

Jessica Beebe, soprano

Brian Ming Chu, bass

Angela Young Smucker, mezzo-soprano

VII. In vain the Am’rous Flute

Mary Jane Knight, alto; Jacob Perry, tenor

VIII. The Fife and all the Harmony of War

Patricia Thompson, alto

IX. Hail! Bright Cecilia, Hail to thee!

Henry Purcell (1659-1695)

V. Aria and Chorus: The Trumpet’s Loud Clangour

Kyle Stegall, tenor

George Frideric Handel (1685-1759)

VI. La Marcha

VII. Aria: The Soft Complaining Flute

Meg Dudley, soprano

VIII. Aria: Sharp Violins Proclaim their Jealous Pangs

Stephen Soph, tenor

IX. Aria: But Oh! What Art can Teach

Jessica Beebe, soprano

X. Aria: Orpheus could Lead the Savage Race

Meg Dudley, soprano

XI. Recitative: But Bright Cecilia Raised the Wonder Higher

Catherine Psarakis, soprano

XII. Solo and Chorus: As from the Power of Sacred Lays

Catherine Psarakis, soprano

Please turn off cell phone and electronic devices prior to the start of this performance. The Bach Festival Society’s policies strictly prohibit photography, filming, or recording of any kind during performances without the express written permission of the Society.

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BACH VOCAL ARTISTS

Melissa Attebury

Jessica Beebe*

Thaddaeus Bourne*

Brian Ming Chu*

Amanda Crider

Dann Coakwell

Brad Diamond*

Meg Dudley*

Anna Eschbach*

Brian Giebler

Jos Milton

John Grau*

Brandon Hendrickson*

Mary Jane Knight*

Stephen Mumbert*

Rebecca Myers*

Morgan Davis Peckels*

Jacob Perry*

Catherine Psarakis*

Margot Rood

Clara Rottsolk

Kunya Rowley

Angela Young Smucker*

Gabriela Estephanie Solís*

Steven Soph*

Kyle Stegall*

Laura Choi Stuart

Patricia Thompson*

Joseph Trumbo*

*Artists for this concert

Hail! Bright Cecilia: Ode to St. Cecilia

HENRY PURCELL

I. Overture

II. Hail! Bright Cecilia, Hail! fill ev'ry Heart! With Love of thee and thy Celestial Art; That thine and Musick's Sacred Love May make the British Forest prove As Famous as Dodona's Vocal Grove.

III. Hark! hark! each Tree its silence breaks, The Box and Fir to talk begin! This is the sprightly Violin That in the Flute distinctly speaks! ‘Twas Sympathy their list'ning Brethren drew, When to the Thracian Lyre with leafy Wings they flew.

IV. 'Tis Nature's Voice; thro' all the moving Wood Of Creatures understood: The Universal Tongue to none Of all her num'rous Race unknown. From her it learnt the mighty Art To court the Ear or strike the Heart; At once the Passions to express and move; We hear, and stright we grieve or hate, rejoice or love; In unseen Chains it does the Fancy bind; At once it charms the Sense and capivates the Mind.

V. Soul of the World! Inspir'd by thee, The jarring Seeds of Matter did agree, Thou didst the scatter'd Atoms bind, Which, by thy Laws of true proportion join'd, Made up of various Parts one perfect Harmony.

VI. Thou tun'st this World below, the Spheres above, Who in the Heavenly Round to their own Music move.

VII. With that sublime Celestial Lay Can any Earthly Sounds compare?

If any Earthly Music dare, The noble Organ may.

From Heav'n its wondrous Notes were giv'n, (Cecilia oft convers'd with Heaven,) Some Angel of the Sacred Choire Did with his Breath the Pipes inspire; And of their Notes above the just Resemblance gav Brisk without Lightness, without Dulness Grave.

VIII. Wondrous Machine!

To thee the Warbling Lute, Though us'd to Conquest, must be forc'd to yield: With thee unable to dispute.

IX. The airy Violin And lofty Viol quit the Field; In vain they tune their speaking Strings To court the cruel Fair, or praise Victorious Kings. Whilst all thy consecrated Lays Are to more noble Uses bent; And every grateful Note to Heav'n repays The Melody it lent.

X. In vain the am'rous flute and soft guitar Jointly labour to inspire Wanton heat and loose desire, Whilst those chaste airs do gently move Seraphic flames and heav'nly love.

XI. The Fife and all the Harmony of War, In vain attempt the Passions to alarm, Which thy commanding Sounds compose and charm.

XII. Let these amongst themselves contest, Which can discharge its single Duty best. Thou summ'st their diff'ring Graces up in One, And art a Consort of them All within thy Self alone.

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XII. Hail! Bright Cecilia, Hail to thee!

Great Patroness of Us and Harmony! Who, whilst among the Choir above Thou dost thy former Skill improve, With Rapture of Delight dost see

Hymn to St. Cecilia BENJAMIN

Thy Favourite Art Make up a Part Of infinite Felicity.

Hail! Bright Cecilia, Hail to thee! Great Patroness of Us and Harmony!

Ode for St. Cecilia’s Day, HWV 76 G.F.

I. Overture

II. Recitative

From harmony, from heav’nly harmony, This universal frame began.

III. Accompagnato

I. In a garden shady this holy lady with reverent cadence and subtle psalm, like a black swan as death came on poured forth her song in perfect calm: and by ocean’s margin this innocent virgin constructed an organ to enlarge her prayer, and notes tremendous from her great engine thundered out on the Roman air.

Blonde Aphrodite rose up excited, moved to delight by the melody, white as an orchid she rode quite naked in an oyster shell on top of the sea; at sounds so entrancing the angels dancing came out of their trance into time again, and around the wicked in Hell’s abysses the huge flame flickered and eased their pain.

Blessed Cecilia, appear in visions to all musicians, appear and inspire: translated Daughter, come down and startle composing mortals with immortal fire.

II. I cannot grow; I have no shadow to run away from, I only play. I cannot err; there is no creature whom I belong to, whom I could wrong. I am defeat when it knows it can now do nothing by suffering. All you lived through, dancing because you no longer need it for any deed. I shall never be different. Love me.

Blessed Cecilia, appear in visions to all musicians, appear and inspire: translated Daughter, come down and startle composing mortals with immortal fire.

III. O ear whose creatures cannot wish to all, O calm of spaces unafraid of weight, where Sorrow is herself, forgetting all the gaucheness of her adolescent state. Where Hope within the altogether strange from every outworn image is released, and Dread born whole and normal like a beast into a world of truths that never change: restore our fallen day:

O re-arrange.

O dear white children casual as birds, playing among the ruined languages, so small beside their large confusing words, so gay against the greater silences of dreadful things you did:

O hang the head, impetuous child with the tremendous brain, O weep, child, weep, O weep away the stain, lost innocence who wished your lover dead, weep for the lives your wishes never led.

A cry created as the bow of sin is drawn across our trembling violin. O weep, child, weep away the stain. O law drummed out by hearts against the still long winter of our intellectual will. That what has been may never be again. O flute that throbs with the thanksgiving breath of convalescents on the shores of death. O bless the freedom that you never chose.

O trumpets that unguarded children blow about the fortress of their inner foe. O wear your tribulation like a rose.

Blessed Cecilia, appear in visions to all musicians, appear and inspire: translated Daughter, come down and startle composing mortals with immortal fire.

When nature underneath a heap Of jarring atoms lay, And could not heave her head, The tuneful voice was heard from high: “Arise! Ye more than dead.” Then cold, and hot, and moist and dry, In order to their stations leap, And music’s pow’r obey.

IV. Chorus

From harmony, from heav’nly harmony, This universal frame began, From harmony to harmony, Through all the compass of the notes it ran, The diapason closing full in man.

V. Air

What passion cannot music raise and quell! When Jubal struck the chorded shell, His list’ning brethren stood around, And wond’ring, on their faces fell, To worship that celestial sound. Less than a god they thought there could not dwell

Within the hollow of that shell, That spoke so sweetly and so well. What passion cannot music raise and quell!

VI. Air and Chorus

The trumpet’s loud clangor Excites us to arms, With shrill notes of anger, And mortal alarms. The double, double, double beat Of the thund’ring drum Cries: “Hark! the foes come; Charge, charge! ‘Tis too late to retreat.”

VII. March

VIII. Air

The soft complaining flute In dying notes discovers The woes of hopeless lovers, Whose dirge is whisper’d by the warbling lute.

IX. Air

Sharp violins proclaim Their jealous pangs, and desperation, Fury, frantic indignation, Depths of pain, and height of passion, For the fair disdainful dame.

X. Air

But oh, what art can teach, What human voice can reach The sacred organ’s praise? Notes inspiring holy love, Notes that wing their heav’nly ways To join the choirs above.

XI. Air

Orpheus could lead the savage race, And trees, unrooted, left their place, Sequacious of the lyre.

XII. Accompagnato

But bright Cecilia raised the wonder high’r: When to her organ, vocal breath was giv’n, An angel heard, and straight appear’d, Mistaking earth for Heav’n.

XIII. Solo and Chorus

As from the pow’r of sacred lays The spheres began to move, And sung the great Creator’s praise To all the bless’d above;

So when the last and dreadful hour This crumbling pageant shall devour, The trumpet shall be heard on high, The dead shall live, the living die, And music shall untune the sky.

TEXT
HANDEL
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BRITTEN

Ode to St. Cecilia (Hail! Bright Cecilia)

HENRY

By

Purcell had been the first composer commissioned to write an Ode to celebrate St. Cecilia’s Day by the newly formed ‘Musical Society’. Nine years later the Society was flourishing and the ‘Gentleman Lovers of Musick’ once again turned to Purcell to ‘propagate the advancement of that divine Science’. As Motteux wrote, ‘A splendid entertainment is provided, and before it is always a performance of Music by the best voices and hands in town’. With Hail! Bright Cecilia Purcell excelled himself and was the first to call for obligato instruments and the first to suggest that Cecilia invented, rather than simply played, the organ. The text by the Anglo-Irish Anglican cleric and poet, Nicholas Brady, was derived directly from John Dryden’s 1687 A Song for St. Cecilia. Most of Purcell’s Odes were written for the relatively small forces available at Court, but on this occasion, he was given the opportunity to write for a large group of performance [employing his choir at Westminster Abbey]. Purcell chose to mix large, contrapuntal choruses with a sequence of airs for soloists and obligato instruments. With a text full of references to music and musical instruments . . . everywhere we find writing of great originality, word-setting of the highest calibre, and music of startling individuality.

Hymn to St. Cecilia

BENJAMIN BRITTEN

In 1942 after three years of living in New York where he composed, among other things, his first opera (Paul Bunyan) and a choral work (Ballad of Heroes), Benjamin Britten boarded a Swedish cargo ship, returning to his home in England in the midst of World War II. The U boat threat was very real at the time and yet while sailing across the Atlantic ocean Britten composed two of his most joyful choral works, Hymn to St. Cecilia and 7 Christmas Carols which became A Ceremony of Carols.

Upon boarding the ship Britten’s draft for the first section of Hymn to St. Cecilia was confiscated by customs officials thinking it might be coded information!) but Britten simply wrote out the words and what he had already composed from memory and proceeded with the work – a piece in honor of St. Cecilia (the patron saint of music), whose birthday (November 22) is the same as Britten’s. As there is a long tradition in England of writing odes and songs to St.Cecilia he wished to do the same. Poet W.H. Auden had supplied the composer with the text for the hymn in 1940.

In the opening section Auden’s text celebrates an aesthetic and spiritual appeal as well as an erotic one, moving in the second section (“I cannot grow”) to words spoken by music itself. The third section begins by praising music for its power to express all emotion innocently (“O dear white children, casual as birds”) but then moves to an admonition of failure. Auden concludes by asking the reader to accept one’s loss of innocence and celebrate it (“O wear your tribulation like a rose”).

Musically, Britten opens the Hymn with a spacious, graceful lilt – the women’s voices in triplets floating on simple triads while the men in duple time descend in fourths, coming together at each cadence. The first section, as is true of all three sections, concludes with an invocation (“Blessed Cecilia, appear in visions to all musicians”), the first being soft and in unison. The second section is a scherzo, light and fast, playful and childlike, with the sopranos and tenors tossing the words

to each other while altos and basses offer us a quasi-cantus firmus on the same text. Once again this section concludes with the invocation, harmonized this time. The final section is more instrumental in feeling (St. Cecilia odes traditionally describe different instruments), beginning with a ground which comments on Auden’s reference urging us (with solo voices) to end the struggle and concluding with the solo tenor’s trumpet call, which brings us back to the tonality of the opening of the work. The final invocation comes to a sublime, peaceful cadence in E major.

And so Britten arrived back in England with a work of great joy and beauty, having completed it on 2 April 1942. It was first performed that year on St. Cecilia’s Dau, one of the marvelous choral treasures of our time.

-Philip Brunelle

Ode for St. Cecilia’s Day

GEORGE FRIDERIC HANDEL

George Frideric Handel composed his Ode for St. Cecilia’s Day (HWV 76) in September 1739. It received its first performance on Cecilia’s Day, on 22 November of the same year in the London theatre of Lincoln’s Inn Field. At the end of the 17th century English musicians celebrated this day with concerts dedicated to St. Cecilia, who is the patron saint of music. With his setting of John Dryden’s Song for Saint Cecilia’s Day Handel began to revive this tradition dating from the time of the Restoration.

The eight strophes Dryden’s Ode sings the praises of the power of music: in accordance with the idea of “musica speculative,” creation is born out of chaos through the harmony of the spheres and it dies again with the inaudible sounds of the music of the heavens on the Day of the Last Judgement.

After the model of earlier Cecilian odes, Handel employs the charming practice of assigning individual tone colors to specific passions in that an instrument is introduced for each aria and is given a lengthy prelude. In the interpretation of the text, Handel’s music portrays the ‘vagueness of chaos, disorder of the elements, harmony and order, and the creation of man as the choir ascends to the perfect interval of the octave.” The closing chorus begins as a solemn anthem, which is a genre in English church music related to the cantata. The final choral fugue passes through all the harmonies of the music of the spheres.

Handel’s Cecilian Ode came at a turning point: following the financial ruin of his opera company in 1736, Handel distanced himself from Italian opera and transferred his vivid musical pictorial skills and their dramatic power to the English oratorio and to its related ode compositions. It was not in vain that the Ode for St. Cecilia’s Day has proven to be a lasting inspiration even for Mozart’s Requiem and Haydn’s The Creation

PROGRAM NOTES
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BACH VOCAL ARTISTS

MELLISSA ATTEBURY, alto

Praised by the New York Times as a “rich-toned alto who brought a measure of depth to her performance,” Melissa Attebury appears regularly in oratorio concerts where her skill in music of the Baroque is in particular demand. Recent appearances include Messiah, Christmas Oratorio, the St. St. John Passions, and Elijah. Venues where she has recently appeared include Carnegie Hall with conductor Alan Gilbert and the New York Philharmonic, The Washington Chorus and The Choir of Trinity Wall Street. Ms. Attebury is featured on the Grammy-nominated Israel in Egypt with the Choir of Trinity Wall Street and as a skilled ensemble musician, appears on Julia Wolfe’s 2015 Pulitzer Prize-winning work Anthracite Fields, recorded with Bang on a Can All-Stars. Melissa is the Associate Director of Music at Trinity Wall Street, is on the faculty of the Berkshire Choral Festival, and manages Trinity’s music outreach program in the public schools.

JESSICA BEEBE , soprano

Jessica Beebe interprets repertoire spanning four centuries from the Renaissance to the contemporary and has a voice that “bounced like a beam of light throughout the sanctuary” (Broad Street Review). She has performed with New York City Chamber Orchestra, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, and Utah Symphony. Jessica’s concert and oratorio repertoire includes major works by Monteverdi, Bach, Mozart, Haydn, Brahms, and Orff. She also performs modern works such as John Adam's El Niño, Rutter's Requiem, and Richard Einhorn's Voices of Light. She is a member of many Grammy-nominated and winning vocal ensembles, such as Clarion Society, Seraphic Fire, The Crossing, Lorelei Ensemble, and Choral Arts Society of Philadelphia. Earning her BM from the University of Delaware, her MM in Early Music from Indiana University, and a Performance Certificate from London's Royal College of Music she currently serves on the faculty at both Muhlenberg and Franklin & Marshall Colleges.

THADDAEUS BOURNE , baritone

Thaddaeus Bourne currently maintains an active performing schedule, having sung over forty roles in the US and abroad. Praised for his rich baritone, appearances include Fauré’s Requiem, Bach’s Cantata BWV 86, Mozart’s Requiem, Beethoven’s Choral Fantasy, and Mahler’s Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen, as well as recitals and masterclasses with the Longy School of Music at Bard College, the Crane School of Music at SUNY Potsdam, and EIU Concert Series at the National Opera Center. An accomplished flutist, Dr. Bourne completed undergraduate and graduate degrees in flute performance embarking on his DMA in voice after training as a singer to improve his breath support. His dissertation focused on Zwischen voices and vocal faults that impact voice classification and was presented this summer at the National Association of Teachers of Singing. Dr. Bourne is on the faculty of the University of Florida.

BACH VOCAL ARTISTS

BRIAN MING CHU, baritone

Hailed by the Washington Post for his “rich, authoritative tone” and “range, agility, and expressive storytelling ability”(Monterey Herald), Brian Ming Chu has established himself onstage and in recital as a dynamic interpreter of music of the Baroque to the 21st century. An oratorio soloist with the Bethlehem Bach Choir, Brandywine Baroque, the Dryden Ensemble, The King’s Noyse, Piffaro, Portland Baroque, and the Washington Bach Consort, he has performed the title role of Mendelssohn’s Elijah, the Bach Passions, Haydn’s Creation, the Brahms, Mozart and Verdi Requiems, and Handel’s Messiah on three continents. Additional credits include Orff’s Carmina Burana, Finzi’s In terra pax, Vaughan Williams’ Dona nobis pacem, and Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony. On the operatic stage, he has performed with opera companies around the country, in signature roles including Marcello (La Bohème), the Count in Le nozze di Figaro, and Figaro (The Barber of Seville). Recent engagements include the title role of Anton Rubinstein's opera, The Demon, Mahler’s songs from Des Knaben Wunderhorn, and Monteverdi’s Vespers of 1610 with the Choral Arts Society of Washington at the Kennedy Center. A dedicated teacher and advocate for contemporary art song, Mr. Chu has been cited for “vocal and interpretive confidence” (Philadelphia Inquirer) with the ensemble Network for New Music, collaborating with composers such as Aaron Jay Kernis, Lori Laitman, Daniel Asia, and Steven Stucky. He has appeared in recital at Carnegie’s Weill and Merkin Halls in New York, Washington's Phillips Collection, and as a US Embassy Cultural Mr. Chu did his graduate studies at the Peabody Conservatory, and has a bachelor’s in architecture from Cornell University. He has served on the voice faculty of Muhlenberg College (PA) for 18 years.

DANN COAKWELL , tenor

Dann Coakwell has been praised as a “clear-voiced and eloquent … vivid storyteller” (The New York Times) and frequently performs the Bach’s major oratorios, including St. Matthew Passion, St. John Passion, Christmas Oratorio, and Mass in B minor. He can be heard on numerous Grammy-nominated and-winning recordings, such as Conspirare: A Company of Voices. Internationally, he has performed under Helmuth Rilling, Masaaki Suzuki, Nicholas McGegan, and Matthew Halls. His repertoire includes prominent works by Rameau, Handel, Haydn, Mozart, Mendelssohn, and Beethoven. Dr. Coakwell holds an Artist Diploma from the Yale School of Music/Institute of Sacred Music, a Bachelor of Music degree from the University of Texas at Austin, and masters and doctorate degrees from Texas Tech University. Dr. Coakwell serves on the Ithaca College voice faculty.

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AMANDA CRIDER , mezzo-soprano

Amanda Crider has been recognized for her “superbly clear diction and warmly burnished timbre” (South Florida Classical Review). As a busy soloist and recitalist, Crider has appeared regularly with Seraphic Fire, Apollo’s Fire, the Bach Festival Society of Winter Park, the International Contemporary Ensemble, and the Cooperstown Chamber Music Festival. She made her Carnegie Hall debut in the fall of 2007 in Handel’s Messiah and returned the following season for Haydn’s Lord Nelson Mass. She has performed in Beethoven’s 9th Symphony, Bach’s B minor Mass, Monteverdi’s L’Orfeo, Mozart’s Requiem and Mass in C minor, Britten’s Phaedra, Bach’s St. John Passion, Bernstein’s Jeremiah Symphony, and Ravel’s Chansons Madécasses, and has been a featured recitalist on the Trinity Church Concerts at One Series and with Five Boroughs Music Festival. Ms. Crider is a grant recipient from the Pittsburgh Concert Society and the Oratorio Society of New York Vocal Competition. Crider is the Founder and Artistic Director of Miami’s Art Song concert series, IlluminArts.

BRAD DIAMOND , tenor

Brad Diamond, known for his musicianship and style, has an active professional career in the United States and Canada, appearing regularly with Seraphic Fire and the Santa Fe Chorale. A specialist in oratorio repertoire, he has sung the Evangelist role in Bach’s St. John Passion and St. Matthew Passion with the Bach Festival Society of Winter Park and Trinity Wall Street. Dr. Diamond completed his Bachelor of Music degree from Westminster Choir College and received his master’s and doctorate degrees from the University of Cincinnati’s College Conservatory of Music. While attending Westminster, he soloed under the baton of the late Leonard Bernstein. Dr. Diamond, whose recording discography includes multiple Grammy nominations, is a Professor of Voice and Vocal Pedagogy at Samford University.

MEG DUDLEY, soprano

Hailed for her “full-toned soprano,” Meg Dudley has established herself as a versatile vocal artist in a variety of genres. She is a featured soloist with Trinity Wall Street, the Berkshire Bach Society, Paul Taylor Dance Company, Manhattan Concert, St. George Choral Society, and the renowned Bach Vespers series at Holy Trinity. Ms. Dudley’s recent solo appearances include Debussy’s Nocturnes with the Boston Symphony Orchestra; Haydn’s Lord Nelson Mass with the New York City Chamber Orchestra in Carnegie Hall; Poulenc’s Gloria with the Orchestra of St. Luke’s; Bach’s St. Matthew Passion with the Hudson Valley Singers; and Barber’s Knoxville: Summer of 1915 with the Lamont Symphony Orchestra. Ms. Dudley sings regularly with renowned vocal ensembles, including the Lorelei Ensemble, the Santa Fe Desert Chorale, New York Polyphony, the Choir of Trinity Wall Street, Oregon Bach Festival, New York Virtuoso Singers, New York Choral Artists, Bard Festival Singers, Manhattan Chorale, and the Collegiate Chorale.

ANNA ESCHBACH , soprano

Highly sought-after as a performer and private voice instructor in Central Florida, Anna Eschbach earned her bachelor’s degree in vocal performance from Appalachian State University and a master’s degree in vocal performance from the University of Tennessee. Born and raised in Orlando, Ms. Eschbach has performed with numerous companies throughout Florida, including the Bach Festival Society of Winter Park, Opera Orlando, the Brevard Symphony Orchestra, and the Orlando Philharmonic. Known for her performance in oratorio, guest solo appearances include Saint-Saens’ Oratorio de Noel, Mozart’s Vesperae Solennes, Poulenc’s Gloria, Rutter’s Gloria and Magnificat, and Vaughan Williams’ A Sea Symphony, as well as Orff’s Carmina Burana. Ms. Eschbach has toured internationally in Switzerland, the UK, and Kenya. Since moving back to Orlando in 2013, Ms. Eschbach has maintained a thriving private voice studio in the Orlando area, serves on the voice faculty at Rollins College, and performs full time with the Basilica Choir of Mary, Queen of the Universe.

BRIAN GIEBLER , tenor

Praised for his “lovely tone and deep expressivity” (New York Times)

Brian earned his first Grammy Award nomination for Best Classical Solo Vocal with his debut album a lad’s love in 2020. He has appeared with Music at Trinity Wall Street (Bach’s St. Mathew Passion), Apollo’s Fire, Santa Fe Pro Musica (Haydn’s Creation), and the Oratorio Society of NY (Bach’s Mass in B minor) at Carnegie Hall. He has performed Stravinsky with the Cleveland Orchestra under Franz Welser-Möst; Mozart at Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center; Bach cantatas with the Handel & Haydn Society; Musica Sacra (Handel’s Messiah); and made his debut with Boston Early Music Festival in Germany singing in Charpentier’s and de Lalande’s Les Fontaines.

JOHN GRAU , tenor

John Grau, a specialist of oratorio and opera from the Baroque to 20th-century music, has performed at the Boston Early Music Festival, the Ravinia Music Festival, the Bach Festival Society of Winter Park, the Boulder Bach Festival, the Colorado Bach Ensemble and Oratory Bach in Minneapolis, Minnesota. John, a strong advocate for contemporary music, received his BA from St. Olaf College, a master’s degree from Northern Arizona University, and his doctorate degree from the University of Minnesota. Having taught at the University of ColoradoBoulder and the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, Dr. Grau is currently head of the voice division at Rollins College in Winter Park, Florida, and appears with many professional vocal ensembles.

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BRANDON HENDRICKSON , baritone

As a performer on the concert stage, Brandon is hailed for his “mellifluous,” and “beautiful baritone.” His credits include performances at Carnegie Hall, the Piccolo Spoleto Music Festival, the Canterbury Choral Society, the Bach Festival Society of Winter Park, and the American Festival Chorus. Recently he has performed Carl Orff’s Carmina Burana, Mozart’s Requiem, Brahms’ Ein Deutsches Requiem, Duruflé’s Requiem, and Mahler’s 8th Symphony. An active recitalist, Hendrickson has been invited to perform in Italy, Malaysia, Canada, Ireland, the United Kingdom, and throughout the United States. Hendrickson was in the Emmy Award Winning Production of Benjamin Britten’s Billy Budd and the American Prize in Musical Theater First Place Prize Winning production of Titanic: The Musical. Dr. Hendrickson was the recipient of an SEC Travel Grant for master classes and a recital titled “I Was There,” at the University of South Carolina. Currently, Dr. Hendrickson is an Assistant Professor of Voice at Louisiana State University.

MARY JANE KNIGHT, mezzo-soprano

Considered a “renaissance woman of music,” Mary Jane Knight is noted for her warm, rich vocal tone, versatile style, soulful connection, and magnetic stage presence. As a concert soloist, she has sung with the Memphis Symphony in Bach’s B Minor Mass as well as Jennifer Higdon’s Ruminations, featured on a PBS special Articulate, and a live film score showing of Joan of Arc with the composer George Sarah. Other major works include Bach’s Ein feste Burg ist unser Gott, Britten’s Ceremony of Carols, Handel’s Messiah, and a performance of Haydn’s Harmonie Messe at Carnegie Hall. A talented and diverse musician, Mary Jane is an opera and musical theater performer, director, choral conductor, pianist, organist, and a graduate of Simpson College (BM) and the University of Nebraska (MM). She currently teaches voice at Kirkwood College and maintains a private voice studio in her historic home in Iowa City. ,

tenor

Jos Milton’s vigorous schedule includes a vast array of diverse programs with the Carmel Bach Festival Chorale, and he is a professional chorister with the Grammy Award-winning ensemble, Conspirare. Milton’s debut solo album, Southerly - Art Songs of the American South has garnered critical acclaim “…one of the most enthralling art song releases of the last twenty years” (Journal of Singing). A graduate of Trinity University (BM), the University of Massachusetts (MM), and the Peabody Institute of the John Hopkins University (DMA), he is a respected pedagogue who gives master classes at many universities, has presented his research to College Music Society conferences, and has been published in The journal. He currently serves as Associate Professor of Music at the University of Mississippi, where he teaches studio voice as well as various courses in vocal literature.

STEPHEN MUMBERT, baritone

Quickly gaining attention on the concert and opera stage throughout the United States and England, Stephen was recently praised for being vocally the most promising singer and for possessing an assured and stylish technique at the Aldeburgh Festival in England. Recent performances have included Amahl and the Night Visitors and Mozart’s Requiem with the Dakota Valley Symphony (which was broadcast on Twin Cities Public Television) and several appearances in Handel’s Messiah, including the Oratorio Society of Minneapolis. Mr. Mumbert is active in the Central Florida area as a voice adjunct professor for the Rollins College Department of Music and is a frequent guest soloist with the Messiah Choral Society of Orlando and the Bach Festival Society of Winter Park. Stephen earned his BA from Stetson University, his MM degree at Boston Conservatory at Berklee, and is currently working toward a doctorate at the University of Minnesota.

REBECCA MYERS , soprano

Rebecca Myers, soloist, vocal chamber singer and recording artist specializes in vocal repertoire from the Medieval to scores written especially for her and has gained a reputation for her “timbral clarity and flawless pitch.” This season includes her New World Symphony debut in Carmina Burana, performances with Apollo’s Fire Baroque Orchestra in Monteverdi’s Vespers of 1610, the Enlightenment Festival with Seraphic Fire, and performances with Lorelei Ensemble and the Boston Ballet. Rebecca is a core member of the Crossing, the country’s premiere chamber choir dedicated to new music that include world premieres, commercial recordings, a Grammy-winning award (best choral performance 2018), and many Grammy nominations. Rebecca is co-artistic director and founding member of the genrebending, cutting-edge vocal ensemble, Variant 6, and will join Filament Baroque in a program of recently discovered French Baroque Music from a Ursuline Manuscript in a Louisiana abbey.

MORGAN DAVIS PECKELS , mezzo-soprano

Residing in Florida, Morgan is an educator and concert soloist and is active in many ensembles in Central Florida including the Bach Festival Society of Winter Park, the Messiah Chorale Society, the Orlando Philharmonic, the Space Coast Symphony Orchestra, and Opera Orlando. Most recently she was seen with the Bach Festival Society of Winter Park in Vivaldi’s Juditha Triumphans and Richard Einhorn’s Voices of Light where she was praised for her “hauntingly lamenting tones” and was a soloist in Bach’s B Minor Mass. On the opera stage she was most recently seen in Amahl and the Night Visitors with Opera Orlando and has an extensive background in musical theatre. Morgan earned her bachelor’s degree from Elon University and her MM from the Boston Conservatory at Berklee. She is currently on the voice faculty at Rollins College in Winter Park, FL and runs a thriving private studio out of her home in Winter Springs, FL.

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JACOB PERRY, tenor

Praised for his “gorgeous and stylish” interpretations of Renaissance and Baroque repertoire, Jacob Perry is a tenor based in the Washington metro area. He has been featured as a soloist with Apollo’s Fire, Les Délices, Portland Baroque Orchestra, Tempesta di Mare, Washington Bach Consort, and the Washington National Cathedral. Deeply immersed in vocal chamber music, Mr. Perry enjoys playing with Les Canards Chantants, a soloist-ensemble based in Philadelphia of which he is the core tenor, as well as engagements with ensembles such as the Art of Early Keyboard, Cathedra, New Consort, Seraphic Fire, and TENET Vocal Artists. As Co-Artistic Director of Bridge, a genre-defying vocal collective based in Washington, he draws on his instincts for theatricality and story-telling, as the group explores the connections between early masterpieces and ground-breaking new works. Jacob was the tenor Virginia Best Adams fellow at the 2022 Carmel Bach Festival.

CATHERINE PSARAKIS , soprano

Noted for her “precise and focused coloratura”, Catherine Psarakis has appeared with the Chicago Summer Opera and the New England Conservatory production of Bernstein’s Candide. As an advocate of intimate performance through art song and chamber music, Catherine has performed in NEC’s Liederabend Series and the Boston Art Song Society. Catherine made her oratorio debut in Handel’s Messiah with the Messiah Choral Society in Orlando, FL, conducted by Dr. John Sinclair. She recently performed with the European Orchestral and Choral Association in Rossini’s Petite Messe Solennelle. She is a recipient of the Presser Award, and she was a first place winner of the Medici International Music Competition, the Toronto Mozart Vocal Competition, the London Classical Music Competition, and the Constantine the Great International Solo Singing Competition. She was a finalist in the Vienna Summer Music Festival Competition and the International Brahms Competition. Catherine received her BA from Rollins College on a full merit scholarship and her MM from the New England Conservatory of Music.

MARGOT ROOD , soprano

Margot Rood performs a wide range of repertoire that includes return appearances with Washington Bach Consort, Handel & Haydn Society, Seraphic Fire, True Concord, and Kinnara Ensemble. Solo appearances include Handel’s Messiah with Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra and Bach Collegium San Diego. Margot has been featured in Bach’s St. Matthew Passion with Edinburgh’s Dunedin Consort, Bach’s Mass in B minor with the Handel and Haydn Society, and Vivaldi’s Gloria with Seraphic Fire. She has recorded with Boston Early Music and Blue Heron, whose recording of Music from the Peterhouse Partbooks Vol. 5 won the Gramophone Award for Early Music. She is a recent recipient of the St. Botolph Club Foundation's Emerging Artist Award for her work in new music as a core member of Boston’s Lorelei Ensemble, an all-female vocal ensemble dedicated to the performance of new music. She made her Carnegie Hall debut in the world premiere of Shawn Jaeger’s Letters Made with Gold Margot holds performance degrees from the University of Michigan and McGill University.

CLARA ROTTSOLK , soprano

Clara Rottsolk has been lauded by The New York Times for her “clear, appealing voice and expressive conviction.” With repertoire ranging from the Renaissance to the contemporary, her appearances have taken her across the United States, the Middle East, Japan, and South America. She specializes in historically informed performance practice, singing with ensembles that include American Bach Soloists, Santa Fe Pro Musica, Colorado Bach Ensemble, Trinity Wall Street Choir, and Seraphic Fire. Clara’s Bach repertoire includes his Mass in B minor, St. Matthew Passion, St. John Passion, and the Easter, Ascension, and Christmas Oratorios along with Mozart’s Grand Mass and Requiem, Handel’s Messiah, Vaughan Williams’ Dona nobis pacem, and Richard Einhorn’s Voices of Light She has performed at the Carmel Bach Festival, Philadelphia Bach Festival, Whidbey Island Music Festival, and Boston Early Music Festival. A native of Seattle, Ms. Rottsolk earned music degrees at Rice University and Westminster Choir College and was awarded recognition for musical excellence by the Metropolitan Opera National Council. Currently she is based in Philadelphia and teaches voice at Swarthmore, Haverford, and Bryn Mawr Colleges.

KUNYA ROWLEY, tenor

Director of Music Access, Arts, and Culture at The Miami Foundation, Kunya Rowley leads focused efforts on bringing access to music for all youth in Miami. Kunya holds a Bachelor of Music from The University of Florida and is an alum of the New World School of the Arts. A 2017 recipient of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation’s Knight Arts Challenge Grant for his performance series Hued Songs, which explores and celebrates black history through the lens of black music and artists, he serves on the National YoungArts Foundation’s voice program. Prior to joining the Miami Foundation, his experience in overseeing key strategic technologies and marketing and sales initiatives helped develop the skills needed to successfully increase access to the arts.

ANGELA YOUNG SMUCKER , mezzo-soprano

Bringing her “robust, burnished timbre” (Chicago Classical Revue) to the stage, arts administration, and education, Angela has appeared on A Prairie Home Companion and Chicago’s WFMT and WTTW. As a classical singer, Angela has soloed with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Oregon Bach Festival, Bach Collegium San Diego, Carmel Bach Festival, Newberry Consort, and Haymarket Opera Company as well as professional vocal ensembles such as Santa Fe Desert Chorale, Conspirare, Seraphic Fire, and VocalEssence Ensemble Singers. Angela serves as executive director at Chicago’s Third Coast Baroque, and along with her co-founders uses 17th- and 18th-century repertoire as a tool to explore 21st-century lives. Angela received her BM from Valparaiso University and MM from the University of Minnesota. At Stetson University and Valparaiso University, she mentors students in developing their vocal technique and the skills needed to be an entrepreneurial artist. Angela is pursuing her doctorate at Northwestern University where she is currently working on a lecturerecital on Vivaldi’s rarely heard opera Orlando furioso.

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GABRIELA ESTEPHANIE SOL Í S , mezzo-soprano

Noted for her “rich tone” and “seemingly effortless melismatic San Francisco Classical Voice), Gabriela Solís enjoys a varied performance career throughout the US. A committed ensemble musician and concert soloist, she has performed with Seraphic Fire, Border CrosSing, the American Bach Soloists, JSB Ensemble Stuttgart, and the Weimar Bach Cantata Academy. Concert highlights include Bach’s B Minor Mass, In the Beginning, Brahms’ Alto Rhapsody, and Buxtehude’s Membra Jesu Nostri. She is a frequent soloist with the California Bach Society and Chora Nova in the San Francisco Bay area and has been featured at the Boston Early Music Festival Young Artist Training Program and the Amherst Early Music Festival. Gabriela received her BA from Santa Clara University, magna cum laude, and was recognized by the university for artistic growth and dedication. As a graduate of the Sacred Music Program at the University of Notre Dame, she received the program’s vocal performance award.

STEVEN SOPH , tenor

A “superb vocal soloist” (The Washington Post) with “impressive clarity and color” (The New York Times), tenor Steven Soph performs concert repertoire spanning the Renaissance to modern day. In 2022, Steven debuts with the Seattle, Fort Worth, and Aiken Symphony Orchestras in Handel’s Messiah, with the South Dakota Symphony Orchestra in Bach’s St. Matthew Passion, in the Baldwin Wallace University Bach Festival as Evangelist in Bach’s Christmas Oratorio, and as a member of Vancouver, B.C.’s The Leonids and Louisville’s Artefact. Steven returns to the Charlotte Bach Festival as Evangelist in Bach’s St. John Passion, to Baltimore Choral Arts to perform and record Anthony Blake Clark’s completion of Mozart’s , to Providence’s Ensemble Altera for their debut recording, to the Oregon Bach Festival St. Matthew Passion Evangelists, and to the Santa Fe Desert Chorale’s Summer Festival. Steven holds degrees from the University of North Texas and Yale School of Music where he studied at Yale’s Institute of Sacred Music with renowned tenor James Taylor.

KYLE STEGALL , tenor

Kyle Stegall has garnered praise around the world for his “lovely tone and ardent expression” (The New York Times). A specialist in music of the baroque, Kyle’s interpretations of Bach, Handel, and Charpentier are characterized by an unfailing attention to style and detail. He made his Lincoln Center debut in Bach's St. John Passion under the direction of the Bach Collegium Japan’s artistic director, Masaaki Suzuki. In demand as a symphonic soloist, his seasons often include the great masses of Mozart and Beethoven. Holding a special relationship with the music of Benjamin Britten, Kyle has twice participated as a fellow at the Aldeburgh Music Festival in Suffolk, England, and each season he curates recitals which reveal vast colors and emotional range. Mr. Stegall is a dedicated teacher of singing and maintains a private studio year-round.

LAURA CHOI STUART, soprano

Hailed as “a lyric soprano of ravishing quality” by the Boston Globe, Laura Choi Stuart appears regularly with the Washington Bach Consort and the Washington Master Chorale in addition to solo appearances with many area ensembles. She was honored for art song performances at the National Association of Teachers Singing Artist Awards and as one of the Art Song Discovery Series winners for the Vocal Arts Society. Solo highlights include Messiah and St. Matthew Passion at the Washington National Cathedral, and Bachianas Brasileiras No. with the New Orchestra of Washington. Laura has appeared with Boston Lyric Opera, Opera Boston, and Annapolis Opera. She received her training at The New England Conservatory and Dartmouth College as well as the Santa Fe Opera Apprentice Program for Singers. Laura is Head of Vocal Studies at the Washington National Cathedral, maintains a private teaching studio, and shares resources for adult recreational choral singers at The Weekly Warm-Up.

PATRICIA THOMPSON , mezzo-soprano

Patricia Thompson is a much sought-after adjudicator and is active as an oratorio specialist, appearing with the Indianapolis Baroque Orchestra, the Louisville Choral Arts Society, the Masterworks Chorale of New Jersey, the Hale Library Concert Series, and the Bloomington Early Music Festival. A dedicated professional choral artist and a member of the international Carmel Bach Festival and the Spire Chamber Ensemble of Kansas City, she is a founding member of the award-winning Luminous Voices in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. With a special interest in jazz and cabaret singing, she performs regularly with the Thundering Cats Big Band in Manhattan, KS, and in solo cabaret shows at the Manhattan Arts Center. It’s Only Natural, is available on iTunes, Spotify, and other music platforms. Dr. Thompson holds degrees from the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music (DM and MM) and St. Olaf College (BM) and is currently an Associate Professor of Music at Kansas State University.

JOSEPH TRUMBO , bass

Joseph Trumbo is a young, upcoming singer hailed for his “smooth, deep voice.” Recent and notable choral work has included performances with the Rockford Music Collaborative, the Illinois Bach Academy as a Young Artist under Dr. Andrew Megill, and as a former member of San Francisco’s elite new music ensemble, Volti. Trumbo received both a BA and BM from Oberlin College & Conservatory and an MM from the University of Illinois, where he was a recipient of the Howard A. Stotler Voice Fellowship. Joseph has been featured in the Mars Symphonic Men’s Choir as part of the Soundiron Olympus Symphonic Choral Collection and has just completed a festival in New York with dell’Arte Opera Ensemble.

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Bach Festival Society of Winter Park Presents

THE KING’S SINGERS

Friday, February 10, 2023 | 7:30 pm

Knowles Memorial Chapel

LEGACIES

PROGRAM

Celebrating 100 years since the birth of Philip Larkin

Bob Chilcott Days (from Even such is time)

Marking 400 years since the deaths of Thomas Weelkes and William Byrd

O salutaris hostia á6

Hosanna to the son of Davis

Death hath deprived me

Praise the Lord, all ye gentiles

Celebrating 100 years since the birth of György Ligeti

The Lobster Quadrille (from Nonsense Madrigals)

Celebrating 50 years since the birth of Gabriela Lena Frank

THE KING’S SINGERS

A long, sad tale (from Nonsense Madrigals)

Celebrating 150 years since the births of Ralph Vaughan Williams and Hugo Alfvèn

Over hill, over dale

Bushes and briars

William Byrd

Thomas Weelkes

T. Weelkes

W. Byrd

György Ligeti

Gabriela Lena Frank Hechicera

Celebrating 5 years of The King’s Singers Global Foundation

New Commission

The cuckoo in the pear tree (from Nonsense Madrigals)

100 Years of Disney

A selection of much-loved songs from Disney over the last 100 years featuring arrangements by Professor Jamey Ray of the Rollins College Department of Music

Francesca

Amewudah-Rivers

G. Ligeti

G. Ligeti

Ralph Vaughan Williams

R. Vaughan Williams

Uti vâr hage (In our meadow) Hugo Alfvén

Och jungfrun hon gâr I ringen (And the maiden joins the ring) H. Alfvén

Celebrating Joe Hisaishi’s 50 years of composing

New Commission

Celebrating 55 years of The King’s Singers

Songs in close-harmony

A selection of audience favourites and new surprises from the treasure trove of pop, jazz, folk and spiritual arrangements that The King’s Singers have built up over their 55-year history.

Joe Hisaishi

Please turn off cell phone and electronic devices prior to the start of this performance. The Bach Festival Society’s policies strictly prohibit photography, filming, or recording of any kind during performances without the express written permission of the Society.

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THE KING’S SINGERS

Edward Button, countertenor

Julian Gregory, tenor

Christopher Bruerton, baritone

Nick Ashby, baritone

Jonathan Howard, bass

The King’s Singers have represented the gold standard in a cappella singing on the world’s greatest stages for over fifty years. They are renowned for their connection and engagement with their audiences, their unrivalled technique, versatility, and skill in performance, and for their consummate musicianship, drawing both on the group’s rich heritage and pioneering spirit to create an extraordinary wealth of original works and unique collaborations. What has always distinguished the group is their comfort in an unprecedented range of styles and genres, pushing the boundaries of their repertoire, while at the same time honoring their origins in the British choral tradition. They are known and loved around the world, appearing regularly in major cities, festivals and venues across Europe, North America, Asia and Australasia, including Carnegie Hall, Elbphilharmonie Hamburg, Leipzig Gewandhaus, Mozarteum Salzburg, Tonhalle Zurich, Concertgebouw Amsterdam, Helsinki Music Centre, Sydney Opera House, Tokyo Opera City and the National Centre for the Performing Arts, Beijing. They also work with orchestras, recently including a specially commissioned work by Sir James MacMillan with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra at the Edinburgh International Festival.

The King’s Singers’ extensive discography has led to numerous awards including two Grammy Awards, an Emmy Award, and a place in Gramophone magazine’s inaugural Hall of Fame. As part of their 50th anniversary celebrations in 2018, the group undertook a series of major tours worldwide, supporting the release of a Grammy Award nominated anniversary album GOLD, which featured important works in the group’s history and new commissions by Bob Chilcott, John Rutter and Nico Muhly. This commitment to creating new repertoire has always been central to the group, with over 200 commissioned works by many leading composers of the 20th and 21st

THE KING’S SINGERS

Centuries, including John Tavener, Judith Bingham, Eric Whitacre, György Ligeti, Luciano Berio, Krzysztof Penderecki and Toru Takemitsu. These join a unique body of close-harmony and a cappella arrangements, including those by King’s Singers past and present. Many of their commissioned works and arrangements are available in their own signature series with Hal Leonard, selling over two million copies worldwide. Early collaborations with brass bands helped to inform the distinct ‘King’s Singers sound’ and key to the group’s success has been their ability to evolve and innovate over many years—and through 28 individual members—while always retaining this special sound and musical integrity.

They also lead educational workshops and residential courses across the world and online, working with groups and individuals on their techniques and approaches to ensemble singing. In 2018 they founded The King’s Singers Global Foundation to provide a platform for the creation of new music across multiple disciplines, coach a new generation of performers and provide musical opportunities to people of all backgrounds.

The King’s Singers were formed in 1968, when six recent choral scholars from King’s College, Cambridge gave a concert at London’s Queen Elizabeth Hall. By chance, the group consisted of two countertenors, a tenor, two baritones and a bass, and the group has maintained this formation ever since that debut.

PROGRAM NOTES

LEGACIES is a recital programme like no other, celebrating monumental contributions to the world of music over the past 500 years.

On one hand, we’re remembering the remarkable catalogue of choral works by two of England’s foremost Renaissance composers, 400 years after their deaths: Thomas Weelkes and William Byrd. We’re also giving thanks for the music of two Romantic powerhouses, Ralph Vaughan Williams and Hugo Alfvén, both born 150 years ago and drawing inspiration from their countries’ folk music traditions. Then there’s the extraordinary mind of György Ligeti, born in 1923, whose provocative avant-garde writing redefined contemporary composition. The Nonsense Madrigals he wrote for the King’s Singers – setting children’s poetry and extracts from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland—exemplify his unique humour, energy, and harmonic genius.

Ligeti isn’t the only contemporary composer to feature. We’re honoured to be premiering a brand-new work by the incomparable Japanese composer Joe Hisaishi in this programme. His brand-new work for The King’s Singers is about our emerging new world, as he celebrates fifty years of composing. What’s more, we’ve commissioned another new work from the exceptional young British composer Francesca Amewudah-Rivers, as part of our commitment to keep growing our global choral canon, as well as to mark the fifth anniversary of The King’s Singers’ Global Foundation. It sits alongside music written for us in 2010 by the American composer Gabriela Lena Frank that provides a window into her own Latin American heritage.

Finally, we’ve included a love letter to the magic brought to us over 100 years by Walt Disney. Since the founding of The Disney Corporation in 1923, its films have provided the soundtracks to the lives of millions of children and adults alike all over the world.

This is a programme designed to be full of joyful discovery, as we give thanks for each of these rich, diverse legacies. It’s also our promise to help build even more legacies in the future.

Patrick Dunachie, countertenor
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Photo by Rebecca Reid

Bach Festival Society of Winter Park Presents

VENUS ASCENDING!

WOMEN OF NOTE

Bach Festival Choir and Orchestra

John V. Sinclair, Artistic Director and Conductor

Clara Rottsolk, soprano; Melissa Attebury, mezzo-soprano; Thomas Cooley, tenor; Brandon Hendrickson, bass

Saturday, February 11, 2023 at 7:30 pm | Sunday, February 12, 2023 at 3:00 pm

Knowles Memorial Chapel

Sinfonia in C Major (Overture) (5’)

Concertino for Flute, Opus 107 (8’)

Pie Jesu (5’)

Illuminaire (12’)

1. Splendor

2. Caritas

Daybreak (4’)

PROGRAM

Nora Lee Garcia, flute

Clara Rottsolk, soprano

Melissa Attebury, mezzo-soprano

After Sunset from Three Moods of the Sea (4’)

Brandon Hendrickson, bass-baritone

INTERMISSION

Marianna Martines (1744-1812)

Cécile Chaminade (1857-1944)

Lili Boulanger (1893-1918)

Elaine Hagenberg (b. 1979)

Rebecca Clarke (1886-1979)

Dame Ethel Smyth (1858-1944)

Pie Jesu

LILI BOULANGER

Pie Jesu Domine, dona eis requiem Dona eis requiem sempiternam

Blessed Lord Jesus, grant them rest. Give them eternal rest.

Illuminare

ELAINE HAGENBERG

1. Splendor Saint Ambrose (340-397)

Seven O’clock Shout (6’)

The Canticle of the Sun, Opus 123 (25’)

Clara Rottsolk, soprano; Melissa Attebury, mezzo-soprano; Thomas Cooley, tenor; Brandon Hendrickson, bass-baritone

Vieille priére bouddhique (9’)

Valerie Coleman (b. 1970)

Amy Beach (1867-1944)

L. Boulanger

Thomas Cooley, tenor

Please turn off cell phone and electronic devices prior to the start of this performance. The Bach Festival Society’s policies strictly prohibit photography, filming, or recording of any kind during performances without the express written permission of the Society.

Splendor paternae gloriae, De luce lucem proferens, Lux lucis et fons luminis, Diem dies illuminans. Caritas abundant in omnia, de imis excellentissima super sidera, atque amantissima in omnia, Quia summon regi osculum pacis dedit.

Splendor of God’s glory, brings forth light from light, light of light, light’s living spring, Day, all days illuminates.

2. Caritas Hildegard von Bingen (1098-1179)

Love abounds in all, from the depths most excellent to beyond the stars, and loving toward all, She has given the highest king the kiss of peace.

After Sunset from Three Moods of the Sea

ETHEL SMYTH

The sea lies quieted beneath The after-sunset flush

That leaves upon the heap’d grey clouds The grapes faint purple blush. Pale, from a little space in heaven Of delicate ivory.

The sickle moon and one gold star

Look down upon the sea.

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TEXT AND TRANSLATION

TEXT AND TRANSLATION

The Canticle of the Sun AMY BEACH

Canticle of the Creatures, St. Francis of Assissi

Most high, all powerful, all good Lord! All praise is yours, all glory, all honor, and all blessing. To you, alone, Most High, do they belong. No mortal lips are worthy to pronounce your name.

Be praised, my Lord, through all your creatures, especially through my lord Brother Sun, who brings the day; and you give light through him. And he is beautiful and radiant in all his splendor! Of you, Most High, he bears the likeness.

Be praised, my Lord, through Sister Moon and the stars; in the heavens you have made them, precious and beautiful.

Be praised, my Lord, through Brothers Wind and Air, and clouds and storms, and all the weather, through which you give your creatures sustenance.

Be praised, My Lord, through Sister Water; she is very useful, and humble, and precious, and pure.

Be praised, my Lord, through Brother Fire, through whom you brighten the night. He is beautiful and cheerful, and powerful and strong.

Be praised, my Lord, through our sister Mother Earth, who feeds us and rules us, and produces various fruits with colored flowers and herbs.

Be praised, my Lord, through those who forgive for love of you; through those who endure sickness and trial. Happy those who endure in peace, for by you, Most High, they will be crowned.

Be praised, my Lord, through our Sister Bodily Death, from whose embrace no living person can escape. Woe to those who die in mortal sin! Happy those she finds doing your most holy will. The second death can do no harm to them.

Praise and bless my Lord, and give thanks, and serve him with great humility.

PROGRAM NOTES

Concertino for Flute in D Major, Opus 107 CÉCILE CHAMINADE

Cécile was born in Paris in 1857 to avid musicians who encouraged her talent from an early age. Their neighbor, Georges Bizet, visited the household when Cécile was 8, and “made me play all the pieces I knew,” she later recalled. Her first composition was published at age 12, and after a successful Paris debut in 1877 she became very active as a pianist, chamber musician and conductor throughout Europe as well as in the USA and Canada. Her reputation as a composer grew with the bulk of her 400 pieces being devoted to piano works and mélodies (art songs). She was very much admired in the United States, where Chaminade Clubs of amateur women musicians developed in many cities, and where she earned a substantial income from brisk sales of her printed music. French composer Ambroise Thomas said of Chaminade: “This is not a woman who composes, but a composer who is a woman.” In 1913 she was awarded the Légion d'Honneur – the first for a female composer. She stopped composing after World War I and retired to Monte Carlo where she died in 1944.

The Flute Concertino was commissioned by the Paris Conservatory in 1902 and composed originally for flute with piano accompaniment and was orchestrated two years later for a London concert. With this composition Cécile entered the ranks of many esteemed (male) composers who wrote concours solo for the end-of-year competitions, which included Fauré and Messiaen. The piece is one movement and begins with a broad shapely melody that features clear textures, turns into a highly decorative solo part which is regarded as quite demanding for the flautist, and then, after a cadenza, ends with an exciting coda. Always, the orchestra is scored with delicacy and restraint, an ideal backdrop to the flute’s agility and tonal variety. The concertino remains a standard and popular part of the flute repertoire and is the only work of hers that is performed regularly.

Pie Jesu

LILI BOULANGER

Lili Boulanger (1893-1918) was a tragic figure indeed among composers, plagued with chronic ill-health and prevented by her early death from fulfilling the outstanding promise revealed in just a handful of compositions. The Pie Jesu was her last work, dictated on her deathbed to her sister Nadia; its haunting beauty seems to speak of another world. It was originally a soprano solo with string quartet, harp, and organ.

Illuminare

ELAINE HAGENBERG

llluminare is Elaine’s first extended work, consisting of five-movements for SATB chorus and chamber orchestra. Using lesser-known sacred Latin texts, the piece takes us through a season of beauty and goodness that has been disrupted by darkness and confusion. But as Light gradually returns, hope is restored, illuminating our future and guiding us in peace. With a majestic and bright opening in D major, Illuminare begins with a radiant flurry of 16th notes representing the entrance of Light. Then the voices enter in powerful unison, and the Ambrosian hymn text bursts into a punctuated and joyful “Gloriae” section. As the music turns to a softer legato passage, part of a “peace” theme is revealed in the cello— then returns to the joyful rhythmic momentum of the beginning. The second movement features the women’s voices and

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PROGRAM NOTES

portrays a tender season of beauty. The elegant words of Hildegard von Bingen hearken back to an image of Eden—a time of goodness and purity. After a slow and gradual ascent to the word “pacis” (peace), a brief moment of the peace theme gracefully reappears in the cello, concluding with serene, sustained tones.

Daybreak

REBECCA CLARKE

Long renowned for her chamber music and songs as well as for being on of the great viola players of her time, Rebecca Clark was also a brilliant composer of songs with string accompaniment, including two sets of folk-song arrangements. Clarke composed Daybreak around 1940 – she herself was not quite sure of the date, and there is no known external documentation for the piece – picking up two important strands in her oeuvre: the deep current of erotic longing that runs through so many of her vocal and choral pieces, and her use of composition models drawn from earlier English vocal music. In setting Donne’s yearning aubade, Clarke makes explicit reference to the Elizabethan consort song, both in her limpid, quietly aching vocal writing, and in her use of a strings (quartet) to evoke a consort of viols. In every other way, however, Daybreak is modern and unambivalent in expression, pointing towards Clarke’s wartime Chorus from Shelley’s ‘Hellas’ (1943), with its spectacular outcried and passionate intensity…this is not so much a morning-song as a morning-after song.

Seven O’Clock Shout VALERIE COLEMAN

Seven O'Clock Shout is an anthem inspired by the tireless frontline workers during the Covid-19 pandemic, and the heartwarming ritual of evening serenades that brings people together amidst isolation to celebrate life and the sacrifices of heroes. The work begins with a distant and solitary solo between two trumpets in fanfare fashion to commemorate the isolation forced upon humankind, and the need to reach out to one another. The fanfare blossoms into a lushly dense landscape of nature, symbolizing both the caregiving acts of nurses and doctors as they try to save lives, while nature is transforming and healing herself during a time of self-isolation.

When a composer has the rare opportunity to create for musicians they have gotten to know, the act of composing becomes an embrace tailored to the personality and capabilities of the musicians with elements of both challenge and appreciation. One such moment is dedicated to humanity and grace, as a clarinet solo written for Ricardo Morales, followed by a flute solo with both Jeffrey Khaner and Patrick Williams in mind, providing a transition into a new upbeat segment. Later, to continue tradition from the first commission the composer received from the orchestra, a piccolo solo dedicated to Erica Peel dances with joy.

After Sunset, from Three Moods of the Sea ETHEL SMYTH

Ethel Smyth was a twentieth-century British composer and a champion of women’s rights and female musicians. During her lifetime, she composed symphonies, choral works, and operas, and is most well-known for The March of Women, an anthem for women’s suffrage movement.

The fourth of eight children, Ethel showed a keen interest in music as a career. Her father, a major general in the Royal Artillery, was not supportive but Smyth studied privately and then attended the Leipzig Conservatory in Germany beginning in 1877. In 1889 she returned to London and continued to develop her talents in many different areas of composition, earning several distinguished awards and recognitions. Despite her talent and success, she struggled to find musicians to perform her works and to get her music published. Due to increasing hearing loss, Ethel gave up her music career, ultimately writing several biographies. Smyth died in England in 1944 at the age of 86. She was a strong political voice of the early twentieth century and remains a highly regarded female composer.

Three Moods of the Seas is written for solo voice, based on poems by Arthur Symons and demonstrates Smyth’s skill in setting poems to music. In the first movement, Requies, the accompaniment gives a lulling movement while the vocal line sits calmy above it. There is a slightly more tumultuous mood that soon returns to the original calm. The second movement, Before the Squall, depicts the rising wind. The final movement, After Sunset, is peaceful and calming.

It was suggested that a short work for a debut by multi-track recording could account for the ensemble performing together as if they were in the same room. One of the devices used to address this is the usage of Ostinato, which is a rhythmic motif that repeats itself to generate forward motion and in this case, groove. The ostinato patterns here are laid down by the bass section, allowing the English horn and strings to float over it, gradually building up to that moment at 7pm, when cheers, claps, clanging of pots and pans, and shouts ring through the air of cities around the world! The trumpets drive an infectious rhythm, layered with a traditional Son clave rhythm, while solo trombone boldly rings out an anthem within a traditional African call and response style. The entire orchestra ‘shouts’ back in response and the entire ensemble rallies Into an anthem that embodies the struggles and triumph of humanity. The work ends in a proud anthem moment where we all come together with grateful hearts to acknowledge that we have survived yet another day.

The Canticle of the Sun , Opus 123 AMY BEACH

Amy Beach was born to write music, began doing so when she was 4 years old and managed to win a substantial national reputation in her twenties, although women at that time were not really supposed to be composers. She composed, in a well-developed, largely selftaught late romantic style, in nearly all the standard classical forms, opera being the primary exception. Her work fell into neglect after her death but has been regaining the attention it deserves in the last quarter-century. She was a member first of Emmanuel Episcopal Church in Boston and later of St. Bartholomew’s Episcopal Church in New York. Early in the century, a movement had begun in Oxford to renew in the Anglican church the Catholic traditions of the ancient past. The Church restored the ancient practice of singing the liturgy for the services and designed the rituals of worship to express the awe and mystery of the Christian faith. Choirs proliferated and there was a great demand for new liturgical music and anthems. During the

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PROGRAM NOTES

years of Beach’s marriage to Dr. Henry Harris Aubrey Beach, her publisher issued 14 separate pieces. The origin of The Canticle of the Sun is interesting. In 1924, she went to the MacDowell Colony. Here, she came across the text of St. Francis of Assissi’s Canticle of the Sun. In a 1943 interview published in The Etude, she told this story.

“I took it up and read it over – and the only way I can describe what happened is that it jumped at me and struck me, most forcibly! As if from dictation, I jotted down the notes of my Canticle. In less than five days the entire work was done.”

The first performance of the work with organ accompaniment took place on December 8, 1928, at St. Bartholomew’s in New York. The Toledo Choral Society, performing with the Chicago Symphony, gave the premiere of The Canticle with Orchestra on May 13, 1930.

“The Canticle of the Sun by Mrs. H.H.A. Beach proved the sensation of the evening. This biblical hymn of praise and jubilation, set in a glorious musical expression of majestic melody… literally brought the audience to its feet in a desire to honor the composer.”

Vieille Priére Bouddhique LILI BOULANGER

Marie-Juliette Olga “Lili” Boulanger was a French composer, and the younger sister of the famed composition teacher/composer Nadia Boulanger. Born in Paris, Lili Boulanger was a child prodigy; at the age of two, it was discovered that she had perfect pitch. Her parents, both musicians, encouraged her musical education, and she would accompany her sister Nadia to classes at the Paris Conservatory, studying music theory and organ. Her sister Nadia was one of her teachers, and later studied with Paul Vidal, George Caussade, and Gabriel Faure, who was particularly impressed by her abilities. Lili would go on to win the Prix de Rome at the age of 19; she was the first woman to ever win the composition prize. Tragically, she died at the young age of 24.

Vieille Prière Bouddhique, written for orchestra, choir, and tenor soloist, was one of Boulanger’s last works. Drafted in 1914 and finished in 1917, the text of this work is from a Buddhist daily prayer for the universe, calling all people to attain peace and joy. Like much of her writing, this work is rich and luscious, and shows what an incredibly mature composer she was. Several melodies throughout are centered on the whole tone scale, giving it a sublimely hypnotic feel.

FEATURED ARTISTS

CLARA ROTTSOLK , soprano

Clara Rottsolk has been lauded by The New York Times for her “clear, appealing voice and expressive conviction.” With repertoire ranging from the Renaissance to the contemporary, her appearances have taken her across the United States, the Middle East, Japan, and South America. She specializes in historically informed performance practice, singing with ensembles that include American Bach Soloists, Santa Fe Pro Musica, Colorado Bach Ensemble, Trinity Wall Street Choir, and Seraphic Fire. Clara’s Bach repertoire includes his Mass in B minor, St. Matthew Passion, St. John Passion, and the Easter, Ascension, and Christmas Oratorios along with Mozart’s Grand Mass and Requiem, Handel’s Messiah, Vaughan Williams’ Dona nobis pacem, and Richard Einhorn’s Voices of Light She has performed at the Carmel Bach Festival, Philadelphia Bach Festival, Whidbey Island Music Festival, and Boston Early Music Festival. A native of Seattle, Ms. Rottsolk earned music degrees at Rice University and Westminster Choir College and was awarded recognition for musical excellence by the Metropolitan Opera National Council. Currently she is based in Philadelphia and teaches voice at Swarthmore, Haverford, and Bryn Mawr Colleges.

MELLISSA ATTEBURY, alto

Praised by the New York Times as a “rich-toned alto who brought a measure of depth to her performance,” Melissa Attebury appears regularly in oratorio concerts where her skill in music of the Baroque is in particular demand. Recent appearances include Messiah, Christmas Oratorio, the St. St. John Passions, and Elijah. Venues where she has recently appeared include Carnegie Hall with conductor Alan Gilbert and the New York Philharmonic, The Washington Chorus and The Choir of Trinity Wall Street. Ms. Attebury is featured on the Grammy-nominated Israel in Egypt with the Choir of Trinity Wall Street and as a skilled ensemble musician, appears on Julia Wolfe’s 2015 Pulitzer Prize-winning work Anthracite Fields, recorded with Bang on a Can All-Stars. Melissa is the Associate Director of Music at Trinity Wall Street, is on the faculty of the Berkshire Choral Festival, and manages Trinity’s music outreach program in the public schools.

THOMAS COOLEY, tenor

Praised by the New York Times for his “sweet, penetrating lyric tenor with aching sensitivity,” and by San Francisco Classical Voice as “an indomitable musical force,” Thomas Cooley is a singer of great versatility, expressiveness, and virtuosity. Internationally in demand for a wide range of repertoire in concert, opera, and chamber music, Cooley performs regularly with major orchestras such as the Atlanta and National Symphonies; the Minnesota Orchestra and St. Paul Chamber Orchestra; Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, Copenhagen Philharmonic; the Gewandhaus Orchestra Leipzig, and the Osaka Philharmonic. His repertoire on the symphonic stage includes works such as Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis; Berlioz’s Requiem; Haydn’s Creation; Mendelssohn’s Elijah; and Elgar’s Dream of Gerontius. Renowned for his agility and skill in Baroque music, Mr. Cooley is in demand, particularly as an interpreter of the works of Bach and Handel. This year, he returns for his 10th season as the tenor soloist at the Carmel Bach Festival. He appears regularly with such groups Boston Baroque,

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- Albany Records, Amy Beach: Canticle of the Sun

FEATURED ARTISTS

Handel and Haydn, and Akadamie für Alte Musik Berlin. Important recent engagements include the Evangelist in St. John Passion on tour in Italy with the Munich Bach Choir, Evangelist in Bach’s St. Matthew Passion with the Seattle Symphony, and Handel’s Joshua with Philharmonia Baroque. On the operatic stage he has performed at the Bavarian State Opera, the Krakow State Opera, and the Cincinnati Opera. Highlights this season include Rodelinda in a stage/television production at the Göttingen Handel Festival, Handel’s Ode to St. Cecilia at the Carmel Bach Festival, Messiah with Nicholas McGegan in Cleveland, the Evangelist in St. Matthew Passion with St. Thomas and Trinity Wall Street in New York City, and the St. John Passion arias with the Columbus Symphony.

BRANDON HENDRICKSON , baritone

As a performer on the concert stage, Brandon is hailed for his “mellifluous,” and “beautiful baritone.” His credits include performances at Carnegie Hall, the Piccolo Spoleto Music Festival, the Canterbury Choral Society, the Bach Festival Society of Winter Park, and the American Festival Chorus. Recently he has performed Carl Orff’s Carmina Burana, Mozart’s Requiem, Brahms’ Ein Deutsches Requiem, Duruflé’s Requiem, and Mahler’s 8th Symphony. An active recitalist, Hendrickson has been invited to perform in Italy, Malaysia, Canada, Ireland, the United Kingdom, and throughout the United States. Hendrickson was in the Emmy Award Winning Production of Benjamin Britten’s Billy Budd and the American Prize in Musical Theater First Place Prize Winning production of Titanic: The Musical. Dr. Hendrickson was the recipient of an SEC Travel Grant for master classes and a recital titled “I Was There,” at the University of South Carolina. Currently, Dr. Hendrickson is an Assistant Professor of Voice at Louisiana State University.

NORA LEE GARCIA , flute

As a Powell Flutes Artist Nora Lee Garcia has performed throughout Europe, Asia, North America, South America, Central America, and the Caribbean as solo recitalist, chamber musician and soloist with orchestra. She has been featured as a guest artist in Carnegie Hall, Heinz Hall, Steinmetz Hall and at flute festivals such as the French Flute Convention, III Convención AFE Sevilla, Festival Internacional de Flauta Monterrey, as well as numerous National Flute Association conventions. As an orchestral and chamber musician, Nora Lee has performed under the baton of Michael Tilson Thomas, Krystof Penderecki, and Karl Sollak, and with ensembles such as the Casals Festival, the Chautauqua Symphony, and the Puerto Rico Symphony Orchestra. She currently holds the position of principal flute with the Bach Festival Orchestra of Winter Park. An active recording artist, she recently won the Global Music Awards two Silver Medals for Outstanding Achievement Category: Duo and Instrumentalist for her (CRC 3937), October 2022. She can be heard on the soundtrack

The End of the Spear. A native from San Juan Puerto Rico, Nora Lee graduated from the Conservatorio de Música de Puerto Rico. In the United States, she earned a Master of Music from Brooklyn College Conservatory of Music in New York and her Doctorate from the Frost School of Music, University of Miami, Florida, and is currently Professor of Flute at the University of Central Florida in Orlando.

VIOLIN I

Routa Kroumovitch Gomez*

Alvaro Gomez*

Shelley Bareham Matthews

Mary Bergulund Bos

Olga Ferroni

Julia Gessinger

Renata Arado

Kathleen Beard

VIOLIN II

Joni Roos

Rhonda Burnham

Victor Ferroni

Dina Fedosenko

Christina Gant

Jennie Rudberg

Olivia Skaja

Thomas Todia

VIOLA

Susan Christian

Daniel Flick

Jesus Alfonzo

CELLO

Brenda Higgins

Shona McFadyen-Mungall

Maureen May

Amie Tishkoff

BACH FESTIVAL ORCHESTRA

STRING BASS

Tye Van Buren

Lee Eubank

Michael Hill

FLUTE

Nora Lee Garcia

Katie Mess

Nola Knouse

Amie Tishkoff

OBOE

Sherwood Hawkins

Lora MacPherson

Lane Lederer

CLARINET

Jessica Speak

Hannah Faircloth

BASSOON

Ashley Heintzen

Rich Ervin HORN

Kathy Thomas

Ben Lieser

Pam Titus

TRUMPET

Teresa Linn

John Copella

Fred Green

TROMBONE

Jeff Thomas

Aaron Lefkowitz

Alex Regazzi

TUBA

Robin Sisk

TIMPANI

Kirk Gay

PERCUSSION

Thad Anderson

Jeremy Katalenic

HARP

Dawn Edwards

HARPSICHORD

Joanne Kong

Kristine Griffin

VIOLA DA GAMBA

Lisa Terry * co-concertmasters

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BACH FESTIVAL CHOIR

Isabel Acuna, 3

Bryan Adames, 1*

Kristin Adames, 2*

Kristen Algero, 6

Hallie Allen, 1

Katie Anderson

Morgan Anderson, 1*

Erika Anglin

Sue Antonition, 1

Catalina Arias, 4

Liz Ausburn, 2

Meg Baldwin, 3

Barby Barbara, 3

Will Barbara, 3

Samantha Basso

Jim Beck, 10

Frederick Blanchard*

John Boulden, 10

Michael Bouschet, 1*

Italo Brett, 4*

Richard Bump, 1

Michael Burridge, 23

Gayle Burton

Laurie Calhoun, 3

Sofia Cardi, 1

Julia Carpenter, 11

Christine Carter, 12

Tripp Carter, 1*

Ellen Huey Cassel, 11

George Chandler, 5

Paul W. Chilcote, 4

Anne Claiborne, 1

Maya Clausen, 2

Emily Cole

Tom Cook, 34

Vivian Cook, 3

Athalia Cope, 60

Bob Cope, 51

Michael Creighton, 1

Solmarie Cruz, 2

Carl Davis, 20

Tim Delcavo, 6

Kerren Dieuveille, 1*

Mirjana Dimitrovska, 3

Jodi DiPiazza, 1*

Frank DiPietro, 4

Theresa Dulong, 13

Karen Dunscomb

Dante Duphorne, 14

Ashley Duvé, 7

Cynthia Dybas, 7

Tabitha Dybas, 3

Dana Eagles, 11

Jolie Eichler, 14

Mary Francis Emmons, 1

Jonathan Erick, 26

Bob Fields, 3

Jay Forsythe, 1*

Alice Fortunato, 2

Larry Fortunato, 7

Brad Gant, 1

Elicia Garcia, 4

Alexander Goity, 3

Minet Gregory, 8

Regunia Griggs, 22

Gregg Gronlund, 24

James Guild

Jeanné Hall, 2

Jennifer Hallenbeck, 6

Rebecca Hammac

Diane Hansen, 8

Brooke Hayes*

Grant Hayes, 3

Pia Hernandez*

Richard Horn

Ariel Hudak, 5

Rebecca Hull, 12

Silvia Ibañez, 6

Howard Jaffe, 3

Elisabeth Johar

Heather John, 6

Charlotte Johnson

Eltavious Johnson*

Andrea Jones, 15

Sondra Jones, 11

Beth Kassander, 6

Amanda Kinder, 5

James T. Kitchens, 3

Yen-Yen Kressel, 15

Rob Landry, 2

Wendy Landry, 2

Rachel LaQuea, 5

Arabella Lilleslatten, 1*

Juliana Lind, 1*

Kathleen LoPresti, 20

Leyse Lowry, 7

Julie Mathews

Nicholas Matthews, 1*

Carolyn Maue, 1

Elizabeth Maupin, 4

Justin McGill, 5

Margaret McMillen, 29

Rita Merlot, 13

Luiz Mestrinho, 4

Janice Meyer, 6

Diego Mihelic, 1

Susan Miller, 1

Stella Monner, 1*

Aleitha Morgan, 10

Natalie Morgan, 1

Beth Nagle, 13

Jack Nagle, 13

Donald Nash, 43

Linda Naughtin, 15

John Niss, 27

Luke Noles, 6

Bill Oelfke, 32

Harry Otero-Rivera, 2*

Betsy Owens, 10

Hannah Pacchioli, 1

BACH FESTIVAL CHOIR

Jesus Pacheco*

Liana Pacilli, 11

William Parrish-Talk

Kirsten Paulson, 2

Isabella Perez

Ashley Peters, 5

Cara Pfost Brown

Kurt Plotts, 16

Dan Preslar, 10

Veronica Prevost, 1*

Bj Price, 17

Gabriel Quijano, 4

Beverly Rich, 9

Angelina Richardson, 1*

Edwin Ricke

Matt Ricke, 3

David Romaine, 3

Mikaella Romero*

Andrew Rueda, 1*

Sebastian Sanchez*

Jane Scamehorn, 7

John Maclane Schirard, 7

Russell Scott, 8

Edward Searl

Daniel Sharp, 2

Karyll Shaw, 7

Taylor Sinclair, 7

Diana Sisley, 15

Beverly Slaughter, 47

Brandi Small

Jodi Tassos, 47

Charles Thatcher, 1

Jennifer Thibodeau, 3

Jordan Thomas

Samantha Torres, 1*

Carlos Velazquez

Jeanine Viau, 6

Cezarina Vintilla, 18

Matt Walker, 5

Gayle Warren, 34

Diana Webb, 8

Margaret Elise

Wendelburg, 2*

Jane White, 40

Patty White, 5

Susan Whritenour, 12

Wave Wildman*

Elizabeth Wright

Jack Wright, 1

Mary Lou Zobel, 5

Number denotes years of service

*Rollins College Student

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Bach Festival Society of Winter Park Presents

CONCERTOS BY CANDLELIGHT

Bach Festival Choir and Orchestra

John V. Sinclair, Artistic Director and Conductor

Itamar Zorman, violin

Adam Golka, piano

Friday, February 17, 2023 and Saturday, February 18, 2023 | 7:30 pm

Knowles Memorial Chapel

PROGRAM

Splendor Fountain: Fanfare for Orchestra (6’)

Violin Concerto No. 1 in G minor, Opus 26 (25’)

I. Vorspiel. Allegro moderato

II. Adagio

III. Finale. Allegro energico

Daniel Crozier

Max Bruch (1838-1920)

Itamar Zorman, violin

INTERMISSION

The Final Judgement from The Book of Revelation (6.5’)

Piano Concerto No. 3 in C minor, Opus 37 (35’)

I. Allegro con brio

II. Largo

III. Rondo

Adam Golka, piano

Eric Heumann (1992 - )

Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827)

ADAM GOLKA , piano

Polish-American pianist Adam Golka has been on the concert stage since the age of sixteen, when he won first prize at the 2nd China Shanghai International Piano Competition. He has also received the Gilmore Young Artist Award and the Max I. Allen Classical Fellowship Award from the American Pianists Association.

Adam Golka begins 22/23 with recitals for Philip Lorenz International Keyboard Concerts and Mesa Arts Center, performing a program that bridges two long-term repertoire interests; Beethoven Sonatas, which he has explored and performed through his gripping 32@32 series (in which he paired each sonata with a short film that explored perspectives on the Sonatas, and an amalgam of distinguished guests, from astrophysicists to Alfred Brendel) and Brahms, whose complete piano works he will perform and record over the next few years.

This season’s repertoire includes Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto No. 1 and Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue with the Orquesta Ciudad de Granada (Spain), and tour a duo recital program with violinist Itamar Zorman with performances at Wigmore Hall, the Bach Festival Society of Winter Park,

As public events in the United States have re-opened, Adam was engaged by the Buffalo Philharmonic and Asheville Symphonies to film concertos by Bach, Mozart, Clara Schumann, Saint-Saëns, Brahms, Rachmaninoff, and Shostakovich for online release. He has also recorded a recital for the Chelsea Music Festival at High Line Nine and performed for live audiences at

In 2020-2021, Adam performed the eleven-hour cycle of Beethoven’s Sonatas five times in its entirety, (three times for socially distanced audiences) with the premiere at the Bach Festival Society of Winter Park (Florida), once at the Archway Gallery in Houston, with a live-streamed cycle at the Saint Thomas Church Fifth Avenue (NYC). Adam’s performances were complemented by 32 short films he created with Zac Nicholson, known as 32@32 (available on YouTube). “Adam Golka plays [Sonatas op. 10] with a certain brio, fiery, very free. After all, Beethoven dares in them fantasies, embellishments, cadenzas that the pianist seizes with a sense of improvisation, variations of mood, which never make you forget the simple beauty of his touch, the obviousness of his speech.”

Artamag (France)

Adam Golka is deeply indebted to his two main teachers, José Feghali and Leon Fleisher. Since finishing his formal studies, Adam has continued to develop his artistry through private mentorship from his favorite artists: Alfred Brendel, Richard Goode, Murray Perahia, Ferenc Rados, and András Schiff, who invited Adam to give recitals at the Klavier-Festival Ruhr and Tonhalle Zürich for the “Sir András Schiff Selects” concert series.

As a concerto soloist, he has appeared with dozens of orchestras, including the BBC Scottish Symphony, NACO (Ottawa), Warsaw Philharmonic, Shanghai Philharmonic, as well as the San Francisco, Atlanta, Houston, Dallas, Milwaukee, Indianapolis, New Jersey, and San Diego symphonies. Adam has collaborated with conductors such as Donald Runnicles, Pinchas Zukerman, Mark Wigglesworth, and Joseph Swensen; he has made countless concerto appearances with his brother, conductor Tomasz Golka. Adam gave his Carnegie Stern Auditorium début in 2010 with the New York Youth Symphony and his New York recital début at Alice Tully Hall, presented by the Musicians Emergency Fund.

Please turn off cell phone and electronic devices prior to the start of this performance. The Bach Festival Society’s policies strictly prohibit photography, filming, or recording of any kind during performances without the express written permission of the Society.

BachFestivalFlorida.org

Adam was an Artist-in-Residence for six years at the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts. He has recorded works by Beethoven, Schumann, and Brahms and has premiered works composed for him by Richard Danielpour, Michael Brown, and Jarosław Gołębiowski.

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Photo by Juergen Frank

ITAMAR ZORMAN

ITAMAR ZORMAN , violin

Itamar Zorman is one of the most soulful, evocative artists of his generation, distinguished by his emotionally gripping performances and gift for musical storytelling. Since his emergence with the top prize at the 2011 International Tchaikovsky Competition, he has wowed audiences all over the world with breathtaking style. His “youthful intensity” and “achingly beautiful” sound shine through in every performance, earning him the title of the “virtuoso of emotions. Awarded the Borletti-Buitoni Trust Award for 2014, violinist Itamar Zorman is the winner of the 2013 Avery Fisher Career Grant.

Mr. Zorman has performed as a soloist with such orchestras as the Israel Philharmonic, New World Symphony, Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra, KBS Symphony Seoul, Frankfurt Radio Symphony, German Radio Philharmonic, and the Orchestre National du Capitole de Toulouse. He has worked with conductors such as Zubin Mehta, Michael Tilson-Thomas, James DePreist, Yuri Bashmet, and Michael Stern. As a recitalist he performed at Carnegie Hall’s Distinctive Debut series, People’s Symphony Concerts, the Louvre Museum, Suntory Hall Laeiszhalle Hamburg and HR-Sendesaal Frankfurt. He has also collaborated with legendary artists such as Richard Goode (including performances at Carnegie Hall and Library of Congress), Mitsuko Uchida, Steven Isserlis and Jörg Widmann.

As part of an ongoing exploration of the music of Paul Ben-Haim, Mr. Zorman released a CD of his works for violin and orchestra with BBC National Orchestra of Wales and Philippe Bach for BIS Records, in April 2019, entitled “Evocation.”

Described as a “poet of the violin”, Itamar Zorman is also a committed chamber player. He is a founding member of the Israeli Chamber Project and a member of the Lysander Piano Trio, with which he won the 2012 Concert Artists Guild Competition, the Grand Prize in the 2011 Coleman Chamber Music Competition, 1st prize in the 2011 Arriaga Competition, and a bronze medal in the 2010 Fischoff National Chamber Music Competition.

Born in Tel-Aviv in 1985 to a family of musicians, Itamar began his violin studies at the age of six at the Israeli Conservatory of Music in Tel-Aviv. He received his Bachelor of Music from the Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance, his Master of Music from The Juilliard School in 2009, and then received an Artist Diploma from Manhattan School of Music in 2010 and an Artist Diploma from Julliard in 2012 under the tutelage of Sylvia Rosenberg. He is an alumnus of the Kronberg Academy where he studied with Christian Tetzlaff and Mauricio Fuks. He is also the recipient of scholarships from the America-Israel Cultural Foundation and has worked with Itzhak Perlman, Pinchas Zukerman, Shlomo Mintz, Ida Haendel, and Ivry Gitlis.

Mr. Zorman is currently on faculty at the Eastman School of Music. He plays on a 1734 Guarneri del Gesù, from the collection of Yehuda Zisapel.

PROGRAM NOTES

Splendor Fountain: Fanfare for Orchestra

DANIEL CROZIER

Splendor Fountain: Fanfare for Orchestra was originally completed in 2018 on a co-commission from the Florida Orchestra and Rollins College to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Florida Orchestra. For the present performances by the Bach Festival Society, the work was largely re-written, to the extent that I considered adopting a new title for the piece, but rejected that idea in favor of the original, which still seemed most fitting. As its title suggests, the piece is largely festive. It is a narrative, a story in music, whose two main characters are presented at the outset. These characters consist of two fanfares, one grand and slow, followed by another fast and athletic. These two extroverted ideas are intruded upon by more inward, pensive, even threatening aspects of their own natures, but their inner struggle results in eventual resolution and a triumphant return. In this revision, in addition to being a fanfare this piece is also a tiny, quasi-concerto for the Bach Festival Orchestra itself. Above all, it is meant to be fun to play. As I worked, I tried to feature each section of the orchestra, along with the individual players who have been my colleagues and friends over many years.

Violin Concerto No. 1 in G minor, Opus 26 MAX BRUCH

No one could accuse Bruch of not being a hard worker. In addition to composing three operas, three symphonies, more than 40 pieces for chorus and numerous pieces in other forms, he worked extensively as a teacher and conductor, including a three-year stint as music director of the Liverpool Philharmonic Society.

Much of his creative efforts have gone for nothing, however, since not one of the above-mentioned pieces has gained a foothold in the standard repertoire. The sifting process of time has left just a trio of Bruch’s works to warm themselves in the sun. Fashions in music come and go, but the first of his three violin concertos, the Kol Nidrei for cello, and the Scottish Fantasy for violin and orchestra retain the popularity that greeted them from day one.

As with such contemporaries as Camille Saint-Saëns, Bruch never abandoned the style he adopted in his youth. In his case, it was the warm, expressive Romantic German school of Mendelssohn and Schumann.

Although his first violin concerto sounds smooth and effortless, it followed a difficult course to its final form. It won a favorable reception at its first public performance, on April 24, 1866, in Coblenz, Germany, but it still left Bruch unsatisfied. Seeking advice on how to improve it, he consulted with the widely-respected Hungarian violinist, Joseph Joachim. Joachim gave him a long, detailed evaluation. Relieved by this expert counsel, Bruch dedicated the concerto to Joachim. The debut of the final, revised edition, in Bremen, Germany, on January 7, 1868, with Joachim as soloist, drew a warm response from audience and composer alike.

Bruch entitled the concerto’s opening section prelude, implying that it serves primarily as an introduction to the more important second movement, the adagio. The prelude opens in an air of quiet, brooding melancholy before breaking out into a full-blown and impassioned allegro. It builds up to two major climaxes before dying away in emotional exhaustion. Bruch segues

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Photo by Jamie Jung

PROGRAM NOTES

without pause into the heartfelt central adagio. This begins in a prayer-like atmosphere, then gradually gains both in activity and expressiveness. It features some of the most beautiful writing in the entire literature for violin.

Bruch concludes the concerto with a propulsive, Romani-flavored finale. It anticipates the last movement of the concerto that Johannes Brahms wrote 10 years later, a work also dedicated to, and premiered by, Joseph Joachim. It’s definitely a dance, but in keeping with the concerto’s overall character, it’s still a rather serious one. The second theme has a noble contour, more elevated than heroic.

The Final Judgement from The Book of Relevation

ERIC HEUMANN

A glossy, luminescent introduction sets the heavenly atmosphere for “The Final Judgment,” which is a movement excerpted from the oratorio, The Book of Revelation. The short, stringheavy introduction is followed by the “Throne in Heaven Theme,” which is presented by warm brassy chorale phrases with glassy woodwind and percussion interjections. However, following these pure and majestic images, the mood turns darker and the drama of “The Final Judgment” as described in Revelation chapter 20 begins to unfold.

In this chapter, two distinct scenes are described. First, an angel of Heaven binds up “the dragon” (Satan). Satan is locked in the abyss, where he will dwell for one thousand years. Musically, this section is characterized by jagged rhythms and chromatic melodies - “Satan’s Theme” and the “Theme of the Abyss.” After this, a second scene depicts a flash back to the throne in Heaven. Here, a shift back to the luminescent material of the introduction is heard. However, it is very brief and bombastically interrupted by Satan’s release from the abyss. War breaks out and Satan wreaks havoc on Earth. “Satan’s Theme” and the “Theme of the Abyss,” as heard earlier, dominate this war-like section of the piece. Eventually, fires come down from Heaven and consume Satan and his armies. This dramatic conclusion of the war sets the stage for the final scene presented before God’s throne. The “Throne in Heaven Theme” is presented in all its glory, commencing the final judgment of all people and bringing the movement to an exciting close.

Piano Concerto No. 3 in C minor, Opus 37

LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN

The composer introduced his Concerto in C minor at one of those massive all-Beethoven benefits – with Beethoven as beneficiary – which continues to boggle the mind more than two centuries after the fact. The date was April 5, 1803, in the Theater an der Wien, the program offering three premieres: the present work, the Second Symphony, and the oratorio Christ on the Mount of Olives, as well as a reprise of the First Symphony, first heard a year earlier.

According to Beethoven’s pupil Ferdinand Ries, the rehearsal, the only rehearsal for the entire concert, began at 8am and was a shambles. The orchestra was the Viennese second string, the city’s best players having been hired by a competing presenter for a performance of Haydn’s The Creation that same evening. “[It] was frightful,” Ries recalled. “At half past two everyone

was exhausted and dissatisfied. Prince Karl Lichnowsky [one of Beethoven’s patrons], who was at the rehearsal from its beginning, sent out for large baskets of buttered bread, cold meats, and wine. He invited all the musicians to help themselves, and a collegial atmosphere was restored.”

The score of the Concerto was not finished by the time of the rehearsal and indeed it remained a work in progress during the performance, as was noted by another Beethoven pupil, Ignaz von Seyfried, who considered himself fortunate to have been chosen by Beethoven as his page-turner. “I saw empty pages with here and there what looked like Egyptian hieroglyphs, unintelligible to me, scribbled to serve as clues for him. He played most of his part from memory, since, obviously, he had put so little on paper. So, whenever he reached the end of some invisible passage, he gave me a surreptitious nod and I turned the page. My anxiety not to miss such a nod amused him greatly and the recollection of it at our convivial dinner after the concert sent him into gales of laughter.”

The Concerto bridges the divide between Beethoven’s two earlier, more clearly Mozart-derived concertos and a more personal style, while simultaneously showing a keen awareness of Mozart's most Beethoven-like concerto, K. 491, in the same key of C minor. Both open with the strings softly playing an ascending figure, the winds joining in for the first climax. A thematic fragment – C–E-flat–A-flat – of the theme of the Mozart K. 491 first movement is stated by the low strings in the ninth measure of the Beethoven. Most strikingly, as the late Charles Rosen noted, Beethoven’s solo arpeggios in the coda recall portions of Mozart’s in his work. But here, the ferocious C-minor runs with which the piano subsequently enters are purest, most Beethovenian drama.

The slow movement is an oasis of calm amid the agitated outer movements, with the songful expanse of piano melody accompanied by muted strings, after which the piano arpeggios curl around the theme, now stated by strings and woodwinds. There follows a magical passage where piano arpeggios accompany a duet for bassoon and flute.

The rondo finale, C minor again, has plenty of spirit but also a good deal of tension and the full bag of Beethoven tricks: a second theme, announced by the clarinet, whereupon the principal theme is transformed into a fugue whose conclusion would seem to signal the return of C minor. But no, it ascends a semitone to A-flat (an old Haydn trick), and then the piano wanders to E major, which may be far from A-flat but not from the slow movement of this very Concerto.

PROGRAM NOTES
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PROGRAM NOTES

ITAMAR ZORMAN, VIOLIN ADAM GOLKA, PIANO

Sunday, February 19, 2023 | 3:00 pm

Tiedtke Concert Hall

PROGRAM

Violin Sonata in G minor, D.408 (17’)

I. Allegro giusto

II. Andante

III. Menuetto – Trio

IV. Allegro moderato

Sonata No. 1 for Violin and Piano (33’)

I. Allegro appassionato

II. Adagio

III. Allegro

INTERMISSION

Sonata No. 3 in D minor, Opus 108 (22’)

I. Allegro

II. Adagio

III. Un poco presto e con sentiment

IV. Presto agitato

Rondo Brilliant in B minor, D.895 (16’)

Andante - Allegro

Violin Sonata in G minor, D. 408 FRANZ SCHUBERT

The Sonata in G minor—a key with inevitable Mozartian associations—shares many traits with the A minor: a first movement whose exposition embraces three rather than two key centres (here G minor, B flat and E flat); a shapely, songful Andante that pays overt homage to Mozart (the main theme virtually quotes the Romanze of the Third Horn Concerto), a fast Menuetto with a relaxed Ländler trio, and a contredanse finale.

Franz Schubert (1797-1828)

In the Allegro giusto Schubert progressively transforms the brusque unison opening, first into a pensive cantabile for piano alone, and then into a suave rococo minuet. The delightful trio of the Menuetto seems like a (doubtless subconscious) recollection of the bucolic trio from Mozart’s Symphony No 39, with the melody underscored by a gurgling accompaniment from the piano-as-clarinet. The finale opens in wistful mood but quickly brightens for a popular-style tune with more than a whiff of comic opera.

- from notes by Richard Wigmore

Sonata for Violin and Piano No. 1, Sz. 75

Béla Bartók (1881-1945)

Johannes Brahms (1833-1897)

In the 1920s Bartók’s music reached a peak of modernity and dissonance from which he retreated in his later years and which bestowed on him, in the years between the wars, a reputation for aggressive ugliness that neither Schoenberg nor Stravinsky ever matched. With hindsight we can understand that the horrified critics of the time were faced with sounds they had never expected to hear in their lives, but also that this music is far from ugly or formless. It may not display the beautiful lines we love in Mozart and Schubert, but it is full of lyrical feeling, of youthful energy, of highly inventive rhythms and harmonies, and it has a shapeliness that can quite reasonably be seen to be a legacy of the classical masters.

F. Schubert

Both of Bartók’s two violin sonatas were composed for the Hungarian violinist Jelly d’Arányi, Joachim’s great-niece, and it was she who gave the first performances of both works in London in, respectively, 1922 and 1923, with the composer at the piano. Both players are required to display extraordinary agility, leaping from one end of the range to the other, and the pianist is given an unending series of wide, dissonant chords. Neither player ever shares the other’s material (this is not Mozart) or even seems to react to it; they often appear to be inhabiting different musical worlds only to come together at crucial moments and to enjoy each other’s rhapsodizing in a thoroughly spontaneous and uninhibited fashion. Bartók’s extensive work collecting Hungarian folksong had a great deal to do with the rhythmic intricacies of this music, as well as its modal inflections and improvisatory feeling. The composers he most admired at that time were Debussy, Stravinsky, and Schoenberg, all of whom left their mark on this music. Yet it has much more of Bartók’s personal stamp, as if he were testing his own intuition and carving out the style that he perfected in his later works.

Please turn off cell phone and electronic devices prior to the start of this performance. The Bach Festival Society’s policies strictly prohibit photography, filming, or recording of any kind during performances without the express written permission of the Society.

Bach Festival Society of Winter Park Presents
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BÉLA BARTÓK

PROGRAM NOTES PROGRAM NOTES

In none of the three movements does the tempo stay in place for long, but the first and last are generally energetic and lively, the middle movement much more tranquil. What could be more classical than that? The first movement’s sonata form can be felt when the violinist returns to the cantilena of the opening, with long notes held against a wash of piano sound. Agitation alternates with repose and major clashes with minor.

The central movement gives more space to the violin to explore some graceful melodic shapes, while the finale recalls the tireless strumming of folk music with a display of whirlwind energy from both partners.

Sonata No. 3 in D minor, Opus 108

JOHANNES BRAHMS

The key of D minor was one that Brahms rarely used in his large-scale instrumental works, and one is left to wonder whether the towering shadow of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony—in D minor—had anything to do with his caution in settling into that tonality. Clearly the tonality aroused Brahms’ most dramatic instincts, yielding music of great urgency, strength, and emotional intensity.

The D-minor Sonata (1888), Brahms’ last of three works for the violin-piano duo and the most muscular of the set, represents the composer at the height of his powers. With all his symphonies and concertos behind him, and with only a relatively small number of compositions yet to come from his serious and still careful pen, Brahms shows himself to be a master intellect and craftsman, here in complete control of his distinctive materials. Indeed, in the first movement, the composer’s methods become an object lesson in Classic-Romantic procedures.

The dominant elements of the movement are very nearly all contained within the first four measures: three ideas in the violin and, the fourth, the piano’s accompanying line in staggered (thus restless) single notes an octave apart. It is these highly concentrated motifs, so mysterious in their first appearances, which are put through a huge variety of compositional and emotional transformations. The Adagio second movement, a place of tenderness (and only momentary passion) gives appropriate respite from the strenuous activity of the preceding movement. The Scherzo movement appears with no little wit and élan from inside its minor-keyed façade (F-sharp minor), like a provocative child making all manner of expressions out of its exceedingly simple thematic physiognomy. The finale is kaleidoscopic in its changing moods, which range from impetuosity to Hungarian pensiveness to chorale-like calm. Through it all, we have Brahms at his most impressive, at his most compelling.

- excerpted from a note by Orrin Howard

Rondeau Brilliant in B minor, D. 895 FRANZ SCHUBERT

While the four violin sonatas are essentially intimate works, the B minor Rondo (or Rondeau brillant, as it was dubbed by the publisher Artaria), and the C major Fantasy by Franz Schubert are rare display pieces from this least showy of composers. Both were inspired by the young violin virtuoso Josef Slavík (or Slawjk), who in 1826 left his native Bohemia to make a career in Vienna. A few years later Chopin admiringly dubbed him ‘a second Paganini’. Dating from October 1826, the Rondeau brillant was first performed by Slavík and Karl Maria von Bocklet in a concert organized by Artaria early in 1827.

Cast in two lengthy sections—an Andante introduction and an Allegro in sonata-rondo form— the Rondo in B minor is Schubert at his most extrovert and rhetorically forceful. Its technical demands are of a different order from the works of 1816–17, with the piano sometimes treated as a surrogate orchestra. The introduction begins imposingly with echoes of a French Baroque overture, before softening into a long-spun, Italianate cantilena. The question posed by its final two notes is resolved by the rondo Allegro, music of unflagging rhythmic energy, by turns skittish and strenuous, leavened by moments of stillness and harmonic poetry. The second theme, introduced by the piano against hyperactive violin figuration, could have strutted straight out of a Schubert Marche militaire. After a reminiscence of the introduction’s cantilena and a reprise of the rondo theme comes a central episode in G major whose affable tune is truculently developed through a daring spectrum of keys. The rondo theme makes a final appearance before the march kick-starts the barnstorming Più mosso coda.

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LISA TERRY, VIOLA DA GAMBA JOANNE KONG, HARPSICHORD

Saturday, February 25, 2023 | 3:00 pm Knowles Memorial Chapel

PROGRAM

Sonata in D major for viola da gamba and harpsichord, BWV 102

I. Adagio

II. Allegro moderato

III. Andante

IV. Allegro

Selections from 27 Pieces for the Viola da Gamba, Drexel 5871

Sonata in G major for Obligato Harpsichord and Viola da Gamba, CSWV:F:31

I. Allegro

II. Largo

III. Allegro

Selections from 27 Pieces for the Viola da Gamba, Drexel 5871

Introduction and Variations on “Was soll ich in der Fremde thun” for viola da gamba and piano

Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)

LISA TERRY AND JOANNE KONG

LISA TERRY,

viola da gamba

Lisa Terry is an avid chamber music performer and soloist on viola da gamba and violoncello. She has spent her career as a long-term member of many of the best-known chamber ensembles in the early music scene of the Northeast. From her home base in New York City, where she is a member of the viol quartet, Parthenia, Lisa works regularly with the Lyra Consort (NYC) and Pegasus Early Music (Rochester). She is a long-time member of Princeton’s Dryden Ensemble, and is principal cellist and viol soloist with Tempesta di Mare, Philadelphia’s baroque orchestra. Lisa was a founding member of ARTEK, and has performed with the New York Philharmonic, New York City Opera, Juilliard Opera Orchestra, Opera Lafayette, Orchestra of St. Luke’s and Concert Royal. She is often heard playing for English Country Dance in New York City and at Pinewoods Camp in Massachusetts.

Lisa earned her degree in cello performance from Memphis State University and continued her studies in New York with Richard Taruskin, viol, and Harry Wimmer, cello. She has appeared to great acclaim as soloist in the Passions of J.S. Bach, notably under the batons of Robert Shaw, Richard Westenburg, Kent Tritle and Lyndon Woodside in Carnegie Hall, in the Jonathan Miller staged performances at the Brooklyn Academy of Music conducted by Paul Goodwin, and at the Winter Park Bach Festival, conducted by John Sinclair. With Sinclair, she has also performed the viola da gamba solo in Richard Einhorn’s “Voices of Light.”

Karl Friedrich Abel (1723-1787)

Christoph Schaffrath (1709-1763)

Karl Friedrich Abel (1723-1787)

Franz Xaver Chwatal (1808 – 1879)

With Parthenia, she records for MSR Classics. With Tempesta di Mare, she records for Chandos. Lisa serves the Viola da Gamba Society of America as Past-President.

JOANNE KONG, harpsichord

A recognized Bach specialist, Joanne Kong has performed as solo and chamber harpsichordist in the Los Angeles Bach Festival, Oregon Bach Festival, Abbey Bach Festival, Bach Aria Festival and Institute, Long Beach Bach Festival, Houston Harpsichord Society Recital Series, Texas Bach Collegium, and is regular guest harpsichordist with the Bach Festival Society of Winter Park. She has collaborated with some of the world’s finest musicians including the Shanghai String Quartet, flutist Eugenia Zukerman, cellists James Wilson and Christoph Wagner, violinists Karen Johnson and Daisuke Yamamoto, viola da gambist Lisa Terry, baritone Zheng Zhou, 4-time Grammy Award–winning ensemble Eighth Blackbird, and members of the Bach Aria Group.

Equally at home on the harpsichord and piano, she gave the World Premiere of Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Michael Colgrass’s Side by Side (2007), the first concerto to be written that features a soloist in a dual role as both pianist and harpsichordist. The work was premiered by Toronto’s Esprit Orchestra, the Boston Modern Orchestra Project, and the Richmond Symphony.

Please turn off cell phone and electronic devices prior to the start of this performance. The Bach Festival Society’s policies strictly prohibit photography, filming, or recording of any kind during performances without the express written permission of the Society.

Dr. Kong has been a guest teacher at Yale University, New England Conservatory, Brigham Young University, New York University, Global Summer Institute of Music, the Colburn School, and many others. Currently she is the Director of Accompaniment and Coordinator of Chamber Ensembles at the University of Richmond.

Bach Festival Society of Winter Park Presents
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Photo courtesy of artist Photo courtesy of artist

Bach Festival Society of Winter Park Presents

ST . MATTHEW PASSION, BWV 244

J ohann S eba ST ian b ach

Bach Festival Choir and Orchestra

John V. Sinclair, Artistic Director and Conductor

Sunday, February 26, 2023 | 3:00 pm

Knowles Memorial Chapel

JOHN GRAU, Evangelist

STEPHEN MUMBERT, Jesus

MARY WILSON, Soprano

MEG BRAGLE, Mezzo-soprano

ROBERT BRACEY, Tenor

MICHAEL DEAN, Bass

LISA TERRY, Viola da gamba

JOANNE KONG, Harpsichord

BRENDA HIGGINS, Continuo

MICHAEL GING, Organ PROGRAM

St. Matthew Passion, BWV 244 (131’)

Part I

INTERMISSION

Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)

ST . MATTHEW PASSION, BWV 244

JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH

PART I

Chorus

PROLOGUE

Chorus

Come, ye daughters, share my wailing, see ye! The Bridegroom see! See Him!

A lamb is He. See it! His patience mild. Look, Ah where? Upon our guilt. Look on Him for love untold He Himself the cross is bearing. Come, ye daughters, share my wailing, See ye! The Bridegroom see!

See Him! A lamb is He.

Chorale

O Lamb of God, most holy, the bitter cross Thou hast taken. At all times meek and lowly, Though by Thy children forsaken. The sins of man Thou’rt bearing. Else were we left despairing. Have mercy upon us, O Jesu.

THE ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE PASSION

Evangelist

When Jesus then had finished all these sayings, He said to his disciples:

Jesus

Ye know that after two days is the Passover, and the Son of Man shall then be delivered up that He be crucified.

Chorale

Not upon the feast, lest from it an uproar riseth. Not upon the feast, lest riseth an uproar among the people.

JESUS IS ANOINTED BY THE WOMAN

Evangelist

Now when Jesus was in Bethany, in the house of Simon the Leper, there came unto him a woman; and bearing a box of precious ointment, she poured it on his head as he sat at meat. But when his disciples saw it, they had indignation and said:

Chorus

To what purpose is this wasted? For this ointment might have better far been sold and the poor and the needy nourished.

Evangelist

When Jesus had understood, He said unto them:

Jesus

Part II

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Please turn off cell phone and electronic devices prior to the start of this performance. The Bach Festival Society’s policies strictly prohibit photography, filming, or recording of any kind during performances without the express written permission of the Society.

Ah, dearest Jesu, How has Thou offended, That such a bitter judgement has been handed? Where is Thy guilt, in what the great transgression for Thy confession?

THE RULERS CONSPIRE

CHRIST

Evangelist

AGAINST

Then assembled all the chief priests and the scribes together, with the elders of the people, in the court of the chief priest, whose name was Caiaphas; and counselled there by what craft to lay hold on Jesus and kill Him. But thus they said:

Why trouble ye the woman? It is a good work that she hath done. For ye have always the poor with you, but Me ye shall not always have. For in that she hath poured this ointment on My body, this she hath done, she hath done it for My burial. Verily I say to you, wheresoever hereafter the gospel shall be preached throughout all the world, there also shall this that this woman hath done, in her remembrance.

Recitative - Alto

O dearest Savior, thou! While thy disciples foolish quarrel that this good woman sought Thy body to anoint for burial to prepare Thee; So, let me, too, attend Thee now. See in my eyes full tearful flowing an anointment on Thy head bestowing.

Aria - Alto

Grief and pain, grief and pain, rend my sinful heart in twain. Softly dropping, may my weeping bear an incense, sweet and rare, Dearest Jesu, for Thy keeping.

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THE TREASON OF JUDAS

Evangelist

Then one of the twelve disciples, he knew as Judas Iscariot, went unto the chief priests, and said:

Judas

Now what will ye give me if I to you betray him?

Evangelist

And they promised him thirty silver pieces. And from that time sought he opportunity, that he might betray him.

Aria - Soprano

Bleed and break, thou loving heart!

Ah, a child whom Thou didst cherish, on Thy breast so fondly nourish’d Hastes with evil to betray Thee, Ah, comes like a snake to slay Thee.

THE PREPERATION OF THE PASSION

Evangelist

Now on the first day of the feast of unleavened bread came the disciples to Jesus, and said unto him:

Chorus

Where? Where? Where wilt thou, Master, that the feast of the Passover be prepared Thee?

Evangelist

He said:

Jesus

Go into the city to such a man and say to him: The Master saith: My time is at hand; I will keep the Passover here with My disciples.

Evangelist

The disciples hearken’d and did as Jesus had appointed and made ready there the Passover. And when even came He sat at the table with the twelve. And as they did eat, He saieth:

Jesus

Verily I say unto you, it is one of you who shall betray Me.

Evangelist

Then were they exceeding sorrowful, and began everyone of them to question and say unto Him:

Chorus

Lord, is it I?

Chorale

‘Tis I, my sin repenting, my hands and feet consenting, should take the bonds of Hell. The scourge and thongs which bound Thee, and all the wrongs around Thee, are merit of my sinful soul.

THE LAST SUPPER

Evangelist

He answered to them and said:

Jesus

Who dippeth his hand with Me in the dish, shall the same betray Me. The Son of Man goeth on his way as of Him it has been written: but woe unto that man by whom the Son of Man shall be betrayed! For him it were better if he had not been born.

Evangelist

Then came unto Him Judas, he which betrayed Him, and said:

Judas

Lord, is it I?

Evangelist

He said to him:

Jesus Thou sayest.

Evangelist

And as they were eating, he took of the bread; blessing it, He brake it, and gave the disciples, and said:

Jesus

Take ye, eat ye, this is My Body.

Evangelist

And he took the cup, and blessing it, He gave it to them and said:

Jesus

Drink ye all of it: this is My blood of the New Testament. Know ye, this blood is shed for many for remission of sins. I say to you, that from this day henceforth no more will I drink the fruit of the vine, until that day when I drink it anew with you within My Father’s kingdom.

Recitative - Soprano

Although my heart with tears o’rflow that Jesus from us now must go, yuet doth His testament my soul rejoice. His flesh and blood, O sacrifice! A treasure giv’n into my hands. As He to us on earth was loving ever, or harm or pain dids’t never, so loves He still His own, unending.

Aria - Soprano

Lord, to Thee my heart is given: sink therein, dwell Thou in me, so will I in Thee find haven, though to Thee this world be small Thou shalt be my all in all, more then earth and heaven be. heart to thee; Sink thyself in it, my Salvation. I will submerge myself in thee.

AT THE MOUNT OF OLIVES

Evangelist

And when they had sung a hymn of praise together, they went out into the Mount of Olives. Then Jesus said to them:

Jesus

This very night all ye shall be offended because of Me; for it is written: Yea, lo, I will smite the Shepherd, and the sheep of the flock shall be scattered abroad. But after I am arisen, then I will go before you to Galilee.

Chorale

Remember me, my Savior, my Shepherd, lead me home. Thou fount of every goodness from which my good has come. Thy mouth has oft refreshed me with milk and honey’s food. I rest me in Thy spirit. And joy in Heaven’s good.

PETER’S DENIAL FORETOLD BY CHRIST

Evangelist

Peter then gave Him answer, and said to Him:

Peter

Though all men shall be offended because of Thee, yet will I, Lord, be never offended.

Evangelist

Jesus said to him:

Jesus

Verily I say to you, this very night, ere yet the cock croweth, ev’n thou wilt thrice deny Me.

Evangelist

Peter said to him:

Peter

Lord, e’en though I should die with Thee, yet will I never deny Thee

Evangelist

And likewise also said all the others.

Chorale

I’ll stand here close beside Thee, do not Thou me forsake. Nor will I ever leave Thee, ev’n when Thy heart shall break. And when Thy lingering paleness by thorns of death is pressed into my arms, I’ll take Thee and hold Thee to my breast.

THE AGONY IN THE GARDEN

Evangelist

Then came Jesus with them unto a garden called Gethsemane, and said to his disciples:

Jesus

Sit ye here, while I go yonder and pray.

Evangelist

He took with Him Peter and both the sons of Zebediah and began to be sorrowful and heavy. Then said Jesus to them:

Jesus

Ah, my soul is full of sorrow, e’en unto death. Tarry here and watch with me.

Recitative – Tenor and Chorus

Ah, woe! What trembling fills His tortured breast! How sinks His heart! How pale His face oppress’d! Ah, what has brought on Thee this tribulation? Before the judge He must appear, there is no help, no comfort near. ‘Tis my own sinning, naught of Thy transgression! Such agonies doth Hell awaken: He must for others’ guilt be take.

‘Tis I, Lord, Jesus, all the anguish own which You atone here. Ah, if my love Thy stay could be, My Savior, could calm the fear or share it, could make it less, or help to bear it, how gladly would I watch with Thee!

Aria – Tenor and Chorus

I would be with my Jesu watching, so slumber, all my sins, and stay! Ev’n my

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death ransom finds in His last breath, His sorrow maketh sure my gladness. The griefs that He for us endureth. How bitter, yet how sweet are they. I would be with my Jesu watching so slumber, all my sins, and stay!

CHRIST’S PRAYER IN THE GARDEN

Evangelist

And he went a little farther, and falling upon His face, He prayed, and said:

Jesus

My Father, if possible, wilt Thou let pass this cup from me: yet not as I will but as Thou wilt.

Recitative – Bass

The Savior low before Hi Father bended; whereby sustained am I and all, yea, before our Falling. And up to God’s great love ascended. He is prepared the cup of death’s dark bitterness to savor. Wherein the sins of all the world their odours pour in better flavor. If thus it be so, God hath willed.

Aria – Bass

Gladly will I take my portion: cross and cup in sure devotion drink I with my Savkor here. For His mouth, as with milk and honey flowing, first hath blest it, redeeming shame and fear, sweetness as His hips restoring.

Evangelist

And he came to His disciples, and found them sleeping, and said to Peter:

Jesus

What, could ye not even watch with Me one hour? Watch ye and pray, that ye enter not into temptation. The spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak.

Evangelist

Again he went away, prayed, and said:

Jesus

My Father, if it must be, that this cup mat not pass from Me, except I drink it, then let Thy will be done.

Chorale

What God hath willed will always be, His will is best, most surely. An ever present help

is He. If faith be fixed securely, our help in need, all good, all wise, rebukes with kindness ever, who trusts in God, on Him relies, will be forsaken never.

THE BETRAYAL AND ARREST

Evangelist

And again he came and found them sleeping, for their eyes were heavy with sleep. And he left them and again went a third time saying again the same words. Then came He to His disciples, and said unto them:

Jesus

Ah! Are ye still resting and sleeping? Lo, the hour is a hand, and the Son of Man to the hands of sinners now shall be betrayed. Then arise! Let us be going. Look ye, he is come who doth betray me.

Evangelist

And as He yet spake came Judas, who was one of the twelve disciples, and with him came a great array, with swords and with staves, who were sent by the priests and the elders of the people. Now this same Judas, who betrayed Him, had given to them a sign, and said: Whomsoever I shall kiss is He; Him take ye. And straightway he came to Jesus and said:

Judas

All hail to Thee, O Master!

Evangelist

And kissed Him. Jesus said unto him:

Jesus

My friend, wherefore art thou come?

Evangelist

And thereupon they came, and laid their hands on Jesus, and took Him.

CHRIST IS BOUND AND LED INTO THE CITY

Duet – Soprano and Alto with Chorus

Alas, my Jesus now is taken. Loose Him! Halt ye! Bind him not! Moon and stars have for grief the night forsaken, since my Jesus has been taken. Loose Him! Halt ye! Bind Him not! They pull Him on; ah, they have bound

Him. Have lightning and thunder from Heaven all vanished? Then open the fiery abysses, O Hell! Defile them, destroy them, strike swiftly to brand the false-hearted traitor, the murderous band!

THE DISCIPLES FORSAKE CHRIST

Evangelist

Behold then! One of His disciples which were there with Jesus, drawing his sword forth, he struck the high priest’s servant, and smote off his ear. Then said Jesus to him:

Jesus

Put up thy sword into its place, for all who take the sword will perish by the sword. For what thinkest thou, that I cannot now beseech My Father, and He will straightway give Me more than twelve legions of angels? But how, thereby, were the Word fulfilled, that thus it must be?

Evangelist

In that same hour said Jesus to the people:

Jesus

Are ye come out here as though against a robber, with swords and with staves that ye mat take Me? Day after day I have sat beside you, and daily have taught in the temple, and ye laid no hold upon Me. But I tell you, all has been done that there be fulfilled the scriptures of the prophets.

Evangelist

Then all the disciples forsook Him, and fled.

THE CHRISTIAN SOUL BEWAILS THE FRAILTY OF MANKIND

Chorale

O man, bewail thy grievous sin wherefore the sole begotten Son hath left His Father’s dwelling. Born of a virgin sweet and mild, to earth came down this Holy Child, God’s perfect love revealing the dead He raised to life again, He healed the sick, and eased our pain, until His time drew near Him that He for us be sacrificed then were our sins put on by Christ, and on the cross He wore them.

INTERMISSION PART II

THE DAUGHTER OF ZION SEEKS THE SAVIOR

Aria – Alto and Chorus

Ah, now is my Jesus gone! Ah, now is my Jesus gone! Whither has thy dear one departed, o thou, fairest one among women? Must it be so, can I bear it? Whither has thy Friend turned away? Ah, my Lamb in tiger’s talons! Ah, where is my Jesus gone? For we would go with thee to seek Him. Ah, my soul, what can I say to thee, when Thou wilt so anxious pray me? Ah, where is my Jesus gone?

IN THE COURT OF CAIAPHAS Evangelist

And they that had so laid hold on Jesus, led Him away unto the high priest, Caiaphas; and with him were the scribes and the elders assembled all together. Peter also followed Him afar off, unto the court of the high priest’s palace; and went therein, and sat with the guards and servants, that he might see how all would be ended. Then did the priests conspire with the elders, and all of the council how that they might false witness bring on Jesus, that He might be put to death. But found they none.

Chorale

So has the world its threch’ry wrought: with lies and false accusal sought to tangle and ensnare. Be Thou my guard in danger, Lord! And sure escape prepare me.

Evangelist

Yea, though many a false and lying witness came, they could find them none. At last two there came who falsely witnessed, in this wise:

Witnesses

This fellow said: Full pow’r is given Me to destroy God’s temple, and in three days can I again rebuild it.

Evangelist

The high priest then did arise, and say to Him:

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High Priest

Dost answer Thou nought to that which these have witnesses against Thee?

Evangelist

Yet was Jesus still silent.

Recitative - Tenor

He answers not to false accusal, never. So is my heart reliant that His great mercy standeth ever. He will endure whate’er be wrought. So, like Him, in our agony He should the pattern be: in persecution, still be silent

Aria – Tenor

Be still, be still though traitors’ tongues shall sting me. Bear I whatso’er they will. Scoff and scorn! Bear I scoff and scorn! Ah, may God their evil turn, my heart’s honor bright avenging.

Evangelist

And then the high priest gave Him an answer thus, and said:

High Priest

I adjure thee, here before the living God, that Thou do tell us if Thou be the Christ, the Son of God.

Evangelist

Jesus saith to him:

Jesus

Thou says; yet I say to you, hereafter when ye see Him, ye shall see in that time the Son of Man sitting on the right hand of powr and coming in the clouds of heaven.

Evangelist

Thereupon the High Priest tore his robes asunder, and said:

High Priest

He hath spoken blasphemy! What need we further witness? Truly, ye all have heard the blasphemy that He has spoken. What think ye now?

Evangelist

They answered to him and said:

Chorus

Of death this man is guilty!

Evangelist

They mocked Him then and spat on Him and struck Him with their fists. Others among them smote and slapped Him in His face, and shouted:

Chorus

Thou prophet! Now tell us, Thou Christ, by whom Thou art struck!

Chorale

Who was it so did strike Thee, My Lord and who requite Thee this fierce and cruel blow? For Thou wert no offender as we to sin surrender. No evil didst Thou ever know.

Evangelist

Peter sat outside in the palace court, and a damsel came unto him and said:

First Maid

Thou also hast been with Jesus of Galilea.

Evangelist

But Peter denied it before them all, and said:

Peter

I know not what thou sayest.

Evangelist

And again at the palace doorway he was seen by another maid, who said to them that stood there with him:

Second Maid

This man also was with Jesus of Nazareth.

Evangelist

He denied it a second time; and swore on an oath:

Peter

I do not know this Man!

Evangelist

And in a little while came others who had been standing behind him, and said then to Peter:

Chorus

Surely, thou also art a disciple, for all thy speech doth betray thee.

Evangelist

But still did he deny with cursing and with swearing:

Peter I do not know the Man!

Evangelist

Immediate crew the cock. Then Peter brought to mind the words of Jesus which said unto him: Ere yet the cock croweth, wilt thou have thrice denied Me. And he went out, and wept bitterly.

Aria - Alto

Thy mercy, Lord my God, see Thou my tears are flowing. Look on me: heart and eyes so cry to Thee bitterly.

Chorale

Have I also from Thee parted? Still I will return again. Life anew is in my started by Thy Son’s despair and pain I may not my guilt efface, but Thy mercy and Thy grace are far greater than my failing, and the sin within me dwelling.

Evangelist

And when morning came, all the chief priests gathered with the elders of the people to plat against Jesus that they might kill Him. And when they had bound Him, they led Him away and delivered Him to the court of the governor, Pontius Pilate. When therefore, Judas, the same who had betrayed Him, saw Jesus condemned to death, he repented of himself, and brought once again the thirty silver pieces to the high priests and the elders and said:

Judas

I have great evil done, for I have righteous blood this day betrayed.

Evangelist

They said:

Chorus

And what is that to us? Go, see thou to that!

Evangelist

Then he cast the silver pieces in the temple, and turned away, and went out: and he hanged himself. And when the priests had gathered all of the silver pieces, they said:

High Priests

We may not, by the law, in the temple treas’ry place them; for it is blood money and the price of blood!

Bass

Give me back my Jesus, pray thee! See the price of murder done cast by the tormented son at their feed who paid it.

Evangelist

And they took counsel among themselves, and brought therewith a potter’s field where within they might bury a stranger; wherefore this field has been called by the name of Blood’s-field; yea to this very day. Then was fulfilled what had been foretold by the prophet Jeremiah, when he said: They took thereupon the thirty silver pieces which were a price on Him that was valued, set by certain of the sons of Israel; and taking them, they gave them for a potter’s field; as did the Lord, my God appoint me. Jesus, therefore, stood before the governor, and the governor asked Him, and said:

Pilate

Art thou the King of the Jews?

Evangelist

Jesus answered unto him:

Jesus

Thou sayest.

Evangelist

But when He was accused, when the priests and the elders accused Him, He answered nothing. The Pilate said unto Him:

Pilate

Hearest thou not what things they charge against Thee?

Evangelist

And he answered him to never a word, not one insomuch that the governor marvelled greatly.

Chorale

Entrust thy ways unto Him and all thy heart’s distress. His wisdom and His bidding

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do highest Heav’n confess. By Him the clouds are order’d, the winds arise and blow. He best can choose the pathway whereon thy feet should go.

Evangelist

Now upon that feast the governor was accustomed to release thereon one prisoner unto them, whomever they wanted. Now at that time, and among the other prisoners, was a most notorious man, whose name was Barabbas. And when they were gathered together, Pilate said unto them:

Pilate

Whom will ye that I release unto you, Barabbas or this Jesus, of whom ‘tis said: He is Christ?

Evangelist

For he knew full well that it was for envy that He had been delivered. And while he sat on the judgement seat, then did his wife send a message, saying:

Pilate’s Wife

Have thou nothing to do with that righteous man; for I have suffered much this day in a dream because of him.

Evangelist

Still did the high priests argue, and the elders, falsely to inflame the people, that thereby Barabbas be released, and that Jesus be crucified, and the governor again returned to the people, and asked them:

Pilate

Now, which of the two will ye that I release to you?

Evangelist

And they shouted:

Chorus Barabbas!

Evangelist

Then Pilate said unto them:

Pilate

And what shall I do, then, with Jesus, of whom one sayeth He is Christ?

Evangelist

Again they shouted:

Chorus

Let him be crucified!

Chorale

What wonders rare this punishment doth offer! The Shepherd for His sheep content to suffer the Lord of Righteousness pays full deliverance for guilty servants.

Evangelist

The governor answered:

Pilate

But what evil deed has He done?

Recitative - Soprano

He is for all men good alone: the blinded have been giv’n to seek the lame to walk aright; He speaks to us His Father’s Word, He drives the devils forth; the sorrowing of their grief are free; He takes all sinners to His own; than this, my Jesus naught hath done.

Aria - Soprano

For love, now is my Savior dying, of mortal sin He knoweth naught. May the everlasting torment on that Day of Judgment wrought not on my poor soul belying.

Evangelist

But crying out all the more, they shouted:

Chorus

Let him be crucified!

Evangelist

When Pilate, therefore, had seen he prevailed nothing, but that rather arose a tumilt, he took water, and washed his hands before them all, and said:

Pilate

I am innocent of the blood of this just Man; see ye to it!

Evangelist

Then together all the people answered, and said:

Chorus

His blood be on us and on our children!

THE SCOURAGING

Evangelist

And Pilate then set Barabbas free, but Jesus he had scourged; and then he delivered Him, that they might crucify Him.

Recitative - Alto

Thy mercy, God! How stands the Saviour all unheeding! O torturers! O scourge!

O bleeding!

Ye murd’rers, let Him be! Does sight of all His anguish start no pity here within your breast? Ah, yes, ye have a heart: it must be the murderstone out last! Wast none so hard as he! Have mercy, let Him be!

Aria - Alto

Is my weeping, my bewailing naught availing? Oh, then take take my heart to thee. Could it ear the precious flooding of His wounds so mildly bleeding it would Heaven’s Chalice be.

THE CROWNING WITH THORNS

Evangelist

The guards of the governor came and they took Jesus to the common hall and gathered around Him all the soldier band. And then they did strip Him, and brought a scarlet robe and put it on Him, and platted Him a crown of thorns, and put it upon His head, and a reed in His right hand; and bowed the knee before Him low and mocked at him, and said:

Chorus

We hail Thee, King of the Jews.

Evangelist

And they spat upon his face, and took the reed, and smote Him upon His head.

Chorale

O head, so sorely wounded, defiled, and put to scorn, O Sacred Head, surrounded by mocking crown of thorn. O Head adorned and honored, so lovely fair to see, but now so low degraded, I greet and treasure Thee. Thou face of Kingly grandeur, what fear will gird

Thy throne when Thou shalt judge in splendour, though now so spat upon. Ow art Thou pale and withered Thine eyes that once were bright

with glory of no other, Ah, who was dimmed their light?

THE CRUCIFIXION

Evangelist

And after they had mocked Him thus, they took off from Him the scarlett robe, and clothed Him again in His own raiment, and led him away, that He be crucified. And as they were going out, they came upon a man of Cyrene, whose name was Simon, and compelled this man to carry Jesus’ cross.

Recitative - Bass

Yea truly for us all, must flesh and blood be forced the cross to bear. What works our spirit greatest good the least can enter there.

Aria - Bass

Come, blessed cross, I’ll not forswear it. My Jesus, give it here to me. And if the burden be too great then help Thou me to help Thee bear it.

Recitative -

Evangelist

And when in this wise they were come to a place called Golgotha-that is to say, the Place of Skulls-then they gave Him vinegar to drink that was mingled with gall; but when He tasted it, yet He then would not drink it. And when therefore, they had crucified Jesus, they divided His garments, by casting lots for them; that it might be fulfilled what had been fulfilled by the prophet: They parted all My garments equally among them, and for my vesture, yea, they cast lots. Then they sat all around and watched Him there. And over above His head they set thereon the inscription of His death accusation, namely, This is Jesus, the King of the Jews. There were also two thieves who with him were crucified, one on the right hand, and one on the left. And all who passed that way reviled at Him; deriding, they wagged their heads and said:

Chorus

Thou who destroy’st the Temple of God, and buildest it again in three days, Save Thyself. Be Thou the Son of God, come down to us, come down from off the cross.

TEXT TEXT BachFestivalFlorida.org 62 BachFestivalFlorida.org 63

Recitative - Evangelist

And likewise also did the chief priests mock at Him, with the scribes and the elders and said:

Chorus

Saviour was He of others, but for Himself not a Saviour! If He be the King of Israel, then let him now come from the cross, and we will then believe Him. He in God has trusted; let His God then deliver Him now, if He will, for, He hath said: I am the Son of God.

Evangelist

And also scoffed at Him the two thieves, which were crucified with him.

Recitative - Alto

Ah, Golgotha, unholy Golgotha! The Lord of Glory see in shameful desecration: the Blest Redeemer of the race hangs as a curse upon the cross. The Lord who heav’n and earth had made, Him earth and air hath been denied, the sinless suffers condemnation, so doth it weigh upon my soul.

Aria – Alto and Chorus

Haste ye! Jesus waiting stands. Open arms and outstretched hands. Come! (Ah, where?)

Let Jesus hold thee. Seek salvation, find His mercy. Live here, die here, softly rest. Little birds must have a nest! Stay then (Where?) Let Jesus hold thee.

THE DEATH OF CHRIST

Evangelist

Now from the sixth hour, there was darkness over all the land until the ninth hour. And about the ninth hour Jesus cried aloud, and said:

Jesus

Eli, Eli, lama asabthani?

Evangelist

That is: “My God, My God, why has Thou forsaken me? Some of them who stood and watched Him, , when they had heard Him, turned and said:

Chorus

He calleth for Elijah!

Evangelist

And straightway one of them did run and took a sponge; and filling the sponge with vinegar, he put it on a reed, and gave Him to drink. The others spoke among them:

Chorus

Wait, and see now if Elijah cometh and will save Him.

Evangelist

And again did Jesus cry aloud, and was gone.

Chorale

When comes my hour of parting, then part Thou not from me. When shades of death are dark’ning, Thy steps my guide shall be. When anxious fears shall rend me, and close my heart enchain, oh, then do Thou befriend me through Thine own grief and pain.

AFTER THE CRUCIFIXION

Evangelist

And then, behold! The veil of the temple was rended in twain, all from the top unto the ground. And there came a great earthquake and the rocks burst asunder, and the graves were opened again, and there rose many saints and the holy ones that were sleeping; and came from out the graves after Jesus’ resurrection, and went into the Holy City, and appeared to many. Now when the captain and the others with him who were watching Jesus, when they saw the earthquake and those things that were done, they trembled greatly, and said:

Chorus

Truly, this was the Son of God!

Evangelist

And many women were gathered there, from afar off beholding, who had followed after Jesus from Galilea, to minister unto Him. And among them was Mary Magdalene, and also Mary, the mother of James and of Joseph, and the mother of the sons of Zebediah. At eventide there came a wealthy man from Arimathea, by the name of Joseph, who was also one of Jesus’ disciples. He went

unto Pilate and begged of him for the Body of Jesus, wherefore Pilate commanded that it be given to him.

AT THE DESCENT FROM THE CROSS

Recitative - Bass

At even, hour of cooling rest, was Adam’s fall made manifest. At even, too, they took the Saviour down. At even did the dove return a bit of olive leaf she bore. O fairest time, O evening hour! Our peace with God is evermore assured for Jesus hath His cross endured. His body comes to rest. Ah, thou beloved, dost thou ask? Go, and beseech thee Jesus’ Body broken. O holy thought, O precious heav’nly token!

Aria - Bass

Come, my heart, and make thee clean, that my Jesus I may bury. Enter Thou, whom I adore, evermore here in sweetest rest to tarry. World away! Let Jesus in.

THE BURIAL

Recitative - Evangelist

Then Joseph took the Body, and wrapped it in a cloth of purest linen, and laid it in his own new tomb, which he had hewn from out of the solid rock. And when he had rolled up a heavy stone to the door of the tomb and went away. There were also in that place Mary Magdalene, and the other Mary, sitting over against Jesus’ grave. Now on the morrow, which followed the day of preparation, straightway there came the priests and the Pharisees together unto Pilate and said:

Chorus

Sir, we bear it in mind that this base deceiver said when He was yet alive: Upon the third day will I once again be risen. Therefore command the tomb be made secure,

yea until the third days, lest His disciple come by night there and steal Him, and say to all the people: From the grave this day He is arisen! So would then the last be a worse error than the first one.

Evangelist

And Pilate said to them:

Pilate

Ye have a watch; go your way and secure it as you may.

Evangelist

So they went out, and they guarded the grave with watchmen, and they sealed up the stone.

Recitative – Soprano, Alto, Tenor, and Bass with Chorus

Now has the Lord been laid to rest. My Jesus, My Jesus, sweet goodnight. Thy pain is o’er, which all our sin on Thee hath pressed. My Jesus, My Jesus, sweet goodnight. O Thou, most Holy Body! See, how I come in penitence to mourn Thee. Thus did my fall Thy agony betide. My Jesus, My Jesus, sweet goodnight. While life shall left I will this wonder ever thank: that thus my soul was worthy in Thy sight! My Jesus, My Jesus, sweet goodnight.

Chorus

Here bide we still with tears and weeping, and call to Thee in death now blest. Rest Thou softly, softly rest. Rest, Thou weary body sleeping. See in grave and stone a grace for the anxious, the despairing: Heaven’s pillow, comfort bearing, and the soul’s sweet resting place. Come, my joy! Slumber doth mine eyes embrace.

Keeping with Bach Festival Society tradition, we ask the audience to refrain from applause between movements and at the conclusion of the performance. If you wish to show your appreciation to the performers, we encourage you to stand in silence at the end of Part II.

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PROGRAM NOTES

ST . MATTHEW PASSION, BWV 244

JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH

The rebirth of drama was the supreme expression of the rebirth of ancient culture— the Renaissance—and it embraces all aspects of art. When Shakespeare wrote his plays, Monteverdi created works representing a new form of music, opera. But like Bach, having been immersed in the novel challenges of secular music, Monteverdi became the foremost church musician of his time, and the hallmarks of opera-recitative, aria, dramatic chorus, and orchestral accompaniment became absorbed into the music of worship.

It has been often observed that among all major musical forms of his time, opera is conspicuously absent from Bach’s work. But the fact must be regarded with some reservation. There could, in fact, be no more perfect miniature opera than the Coffee Cantata, and that Bach was not averse to the operatic music of his contemporaries is known through a report that Bach’s eldest son, Wilhelm Friedemann, gave to the Bach biographer, Johann Nicolaus Forkel:

At the time that Hasse was Kapellmeister at Dresden, the orchestra and the opera there were very brilliant and excellent. Each had had there already in his earlier years many acquaintances. He was therefore always received in an exceedingly honorable manner at Dresden and often went thither to hear the opera. He used to say in joke, some days before his departure: Friedemann, shan’t we go again to hear the lovely Dresden ditties?

That Bach wrote no operas must be understood in the context of traditions and circumstances of his artistic career, which was dissociated from the operatic centers of his time. But his fundamental commitment to the dramatic means of music is nowhere more strongly expressed than in his greatest church music.

The presentation of the Passion story, traditionally chanted in the liturgy of Holy Week, had become interspersed with the certain dramatic elements ever since medieval days. Priest, deacon, and subdeacon had assumed the principal roles in gospel narration, the vox Christi being assigned to a bass and the voice of the evangelista to a tenor. The third voice, usually in alto register, represented the other personages, and in time the number of voices was increased and combined to suggest both the crowd scenes and the comments of a Choir of Believers.

When Bach undertook the composition of The Passion According to Saint John in his first year of office in Leipzig, he merged these traditions with modern operatic practice on a scale never attempted before. Yet the St. Matthew Passion, composed several years later, shows such an infinitely enlarged dimension, such perfection of style and depth of compassion, that the work stands apart from all other human creations.

It is apparent—though the language of opera is transfigured—that the conventions of music drama guided Bach throughout the composition of the St. Matthew Passion There was a tradition in the Venetian opera by which at the crisis of the tragedy, when the protagonist’s fate had begun to separate him from the living, his role was singled out through the orchestral accompaniment of his vocal part. Instead of a merely supporting orchestral bass, enriched at times by the obbligato of isolated instruments, the sound of the all-string orchestra now surrounded his voice. In early English opera we know this practice from the moving final lament in Purcell’s Dido and Aeneas. Italian opera had even created a name for the changed role: it had passed from persona to ombra, entered into the domain of shades.

This practice was applied by Bach to the part of Jesus, except that the dramatic means were expanded, for the detachment of His role is marked through a halo of string sound from the very beginning.

With the stringed instruments assigned to this singular task, Bach chose woodwind accompaniment for the majority of recitatives and arias, thus generally enriching the individual vocal solos. But the musical characterization of roles is carried into every chorus of the hostile crowd that gave Bach the first suggestion for the grand scale of work, calling for two choruses and two orchestras. Thus Chorus I—the chorus of disciples—sings alone in the beginning of the narration. Yet how finely differentiated are even these brief choral scenes. The true, serene nature of the followers of Christ appears only in the second, in which they ask the Master where to prepare the Passover feast. In the first they appear shortsighted and distraught; in the last, the brief fugal setting of “Lord, is it I?” there are dissolved in disbelief and shock—and Bach wrote exactly eleven entrances of the theme; the twelfth disciple, Judas, is silent.

The antiphonal design lends spaciousness to the work everywhere. Solo voices emerge from the first and from the second chorus, and at times—as in the first two arias—the two orchestras alternate in their accompanying tasks. The perspective created by the two main bodies of sound is intensified in such settings as the opening choruses of Part II. There, a solo voice from the first chorus—the daughter of Zion, left desolate in the Garden of Gethsemane after the capture of the savior—is contrasted against the full second chorus answering and comforting her in the words of the Song of Songs. The opening chorus of Part I was originally planned in the same manner, as is still suggested by the first line of text, “Come, ye daughters, help me lament.” But in the musical execution of this prologue, Bach envisioned a scene of incomparably mightier proportions, and it resulted in the largest score he ever created. A third choir of soprano voices was added to the two choirs and orchestras, turning the entire chorus into a chorale fantasy upon the German Agnus Dei. Yet the power of Bach’s language is evident in its economy, as much as in its magnitude. The single outcry “Barrabas!”—one chord—marks the height of the tragedy, and the strongest dramatic contrasts are achieved by short lyric moments of utmost tenderness.

Bach himself doubtless regarded this work as a consummate expression of his art. The span of time between the composition of the St. John Passion and the St. Matthew Passion represents the most productive period in his entire life work. Its feverish creative pace must have been influenced again and again by Bach’s wish to raise his public to the level of his own artistic standards. This effort failed. It was the dramatic presentation of the Passion text to which the Leipzig congregation was least receptive.

From a book on the Divine Service in Saxony written by the church historian Christian Gerber (1732) comes the famous quotation:

When in a large town this Passion music was done for the first time, with twelve violins (strings), many oboes, bassoons, and other instruments, many people were astonished and did not know what to make of it. In the pew of a noble family, many Ministers and Noble Ladies were present, who sang the first Passion chorale out of their books with great devotion. But when this theatrical music began all these people were thrown into the greatest bewildermint, looked at each other, and said, “What will come of this?” An old widow of the nobility said, “God save us, my children! It’s just as if one were at an Opera comedy.”

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PROGRAM NOTES

Though often mentioned in connection with the first performance of the St. Matthew Passion, this passage cannot refer directly to the work; there are points of obvious incongruity. But it remains a striking document in its description of the attitude with which the St. Matthew Passion must have been met. The autograph score of the work, written in two different inks, is one of the most beautiful manuscripts that has come down to us from Bach’s pen. The pride and matchless care of the craftsman guided the hand of genius in every detail. Having given his best, Bach must have realized irrevocable severance from his audience.

Thus the St. Matthew Passion marks a turning point in Bach’s career.Three years after its first performance followed one of the most eloquent testimonies of Bach’s life, the letter written to a friend from school days asking for assistance in Bach’s search for another position, and as we know, Bach later applied unsuccessfully to the royal court in Dresden for the office of Court Kapellmeister, submitting the manuscript of his Missa in B Minor

It remains one of the most remarkable facts in cultural history that Bach sustained the level of his achievement and rose to new heights in the face of disillusionment and isolation. Abandoning the cantata as the principal form of his work and abandoning, in fact, the steady pace by which his writing was geared to the challenge of each new Sunday, Bach turned his interest to the forms of Mass and Oratorio. The last two decades of Bach’s life form a history of their own, which led to culminating points in almost all aspects of his music. Unmistakably, the beckoning of drama continued to be a strong influence in Bach’s work, even in its last and most remote phases. When eventually Bach singled out the Missa written for Dresden and widened it to a complete setting of the Mass text, he was apparently guided by the thought of creating a final monumental work of his choral art. Adding the text of the Catholic Credo, Bach encountered in its central section once more the drama of the Crucifixion.

FEATURED ARTISTS

MARY WILSON, soprano

Soprano Mary Wilson is acknowledged as one of today’s most exciting artists. Cultivating a wide-ranging career singing chamber music, oratorio, and operatic repertoire, her “bright soprano seems to know no terrors, wrapping itself seductively around every phrase” (Dallas Morning News). In demand on the concert stage, she has appeared with Los Angeles Philharmonic, Philadelphia Orchestra, Cleveland Orchestra, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, Los Angeles Master Chorale, Detroit Symphony, and at the Hollywood Bowl. An exciting interpreter of Baroque repertoire, she has appeared with Philharmonia Baroque, American Bach Soloists, Boston Baroque, Grand Rapids Bach Festival, Bach Society of St. Louis, Baltimore Handel Choir, Brooklyn Academy of Music, the Carmel Bach Festival, and our own Bach Festival of Winter Park. With the IRIS Chamber Orchestra, she sang the world premiere of the song cycle Songs Old and New written especially for her by Ned Rorem.

On the opera stage, Ms. Wilson is especially noted for her portrayals of Susannah in Le Nozze di Figaro and Gilda in Rigoletto. She has appeared with Minnesota Opera, Boston Lyric Opera, Arizona Opera, Tulsa Opera, and the Goodman Theatre.

An accomplished pianist, Ms. Wilson holds performance degrees from St. Olaf College in Northfield, Minnesota, and Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri. She is currently an Assistant Professor of Voice at the University of Memphis.

Sponsored by a generous gift by M. Elizabeth Brothers.

MEG BRAGLE, mezzo-soprano

Widely praised for her musical intelligence and “expressive virtuosity” (San Francisco Chronicle), American Meg Bragle has an international reputation as one of today’s most gifted and versatile mezzo-sopranos. She has sung with the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra and the Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra, as well as with the symphony orchestras of Toronto, Calgary, San Antonio, Charlotte, and Nova Scotia. Frequently a featured soloist with Sir John Eliot Gardiner and the English Baroque Soloists, she has performed with them at the Leipzig Bachfest, the Prague Spring Festival, and the BBC Proms. Other performances include Mendelssohn’s Elijah, Handel’s Susannah, and multiple performances of Bach cantatas. Ms. Bragle has made several recordings with Apollo’s Fire, including Mozart’s Requiem and Handel’s Dixit Dominus and Ode for the Birthday of Queen Anne

Ms. Bragle studied both violin and voice at the University of Michigan before earning a BA in Voice Performance and English, and she completed a master’s degree in Choral Conducting from Michigan State University. She is the recipient of several awards and recognitions from Symphony Magazine, the American Bach Society, the Carmel Bach Festival, and the Bethlehem Bach Festival.

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FEATURED ARTISTS

ROBERT BRACEY, tenor

Robert Bracey has performed throughout the United States, Canada, Russia, Europe, India, and Japan. He was awarded first place in the Oratorio Society of New York’s Annual International Solo Competition at Carnegie Hall and returned to Carnegie Hall for performances of Handel’s Messiah. He made his Kennedy Center debut in Washington, DC, with the Choral Arts Society of Washington.

He has performed at the Performing Arts in Mumbai, India, and with the Telemann Chamber Orchestra in Tokyo and Osaka, Japan, Oratorio Society of New York, Choral Arts Society of Washington, the Bach Festival Society of Winter Park, the Asheville Choral Society, Kalamazoo Bach Festival, and the University Musical Society in Ann Arbor, Michigan. A Regional Finalist in the New York Metropolitan Opera Auditions, other honors include first place in the National Association of Teachers of Singing Regional Competition the NATS, the Jessye Norman Award for most outstanding soloist, and first place in the University of Michigan Concerto Competition.

Dr. Bracey has been a music educator for over thirty-five years and is passionate about training young professionals for success as artists and teachers. Professional opera and concert performances, placement in competitions and young artist programs are an important part of the education, preparation, and success of his students. They have been granted opportunities at New York City Opera, Salzburg State Theatre, Brevard Music Center, Chautauqua Institution, Oregon Bach Festival, Santa Fe Opera, Opera Lyrica Italy, Ukrainian Art Song Project, Denver International Festival of the Arts, and Raleigh Bach Soloists. Many have been admitted to well-known graduate programs like The University of Michigan, University of Maryland, Indiana University, Cincinnati Conservatory, and Arizona State University.

Mr. Bracey holds a Bachelor of Music Degree in Music Education from Michigan State University, a Master of Music, and a Doctor of Musical Arts Degree in Voice Performance from the University of Michigan. Dr. Bracey is currently Professor and Chair of the Voice Area at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.

FEATURED ARTISTS

Mr. Dean made his New York Philharmonic debut in the world premiere of Aaron Jay Kernis’ Garden of Light and returned the following season for a concert performance of Street Scene His other successes include Michael Tippett’s A Child of Our Time with the Bach Festival Society of Winter Park; Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis with the Richmond Symphony; Haydn’s The Creation and Brahms’ Ein deutsches Requiem with the Louisiana Philharmonic.

On opera stages Mr. Dean has made frequent appearances with the legendary New York City Opera and was seen and heard as Jason McFarlane in the “Live from Lincoln Center” broadcast of Lizzie Borden. Other notable operatic performances include Roméo et Juliette with Los Angeles Opera; Don Giovanni and Ernani at the Landestheater in Linz, Austria; Le nozze di Figaro in Antwerp, Belgium; Of Mice and Men at Arizona Opera; and La bohème in Strasbourg and Berlin. Michael Dean has received high critical praise for his numerous recordings of baroque opera, including Agrippina, Ottone, Dido and Aeneas, Radamisto, Giustino, and Serse.

Michael Dean is currently the Music Department Chair and Professor of Voice at The University of California, Los Angeles, and a member of the voice faculty at the Chautauqua Music Festival.

JOHN GRAU , tenor

John Grau, a specialist of oratorio and opera from the Baroque to 20th-century music, has performed at the Boston Early Music Festival, the Ravinia Music Festival, the Bach Festival Society of Winter Park, the Boulder Bach Festival, the Colorado Bach Ensemble and Oratory Bach in Minneapolis, Minnesota. John, a strong advocate for contemporary music, received his BA from St. Olaf College, a master’s degree from Northern Arizona University, and his doctorate degree from the University of Minnesota. Having taught at the University of ColoradoBoulder and the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, Dr. Grau is currently head of the voice division at Rollins College in Winter Park, Florida, and appears with many professional vocal ensembles.

MICHAEL DEAN , bass-baritone

Lauded by the New York Times for his “strong appealing bass-baritone,” American Michael Dean has been hailed by the San Jose Mercury as “the standout, his voice a penetrating wake-up call.” Recent performance highlights include Mozart’s Great Mass in C Minor and Bach’s St. John Passion at the Bach Festival Society of Winter Park, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 with the Fort Wayne Philharmonic, Haydn’s The Creation with the Florida Orchestra, and Verdi’s Requiem with the Eugene Symphony.

In other recent seasons he was featured soloist in Messiah with the Richmond Symphony; in Faure’s Requiem and Mozart’s Requiem with the Bach Festival Society of Winter Park (the latter recorded and released); Messiah with the Indianapolis Chamber Orchestra and the Milwaukee Symphony; and Beethoven’s Mass in C with the Naples Philharmonic. He recently made his debut with the Utah Symphony Orchestra in Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9, and with the Boulder Bach Festival as soloist in Bach’s Mass in B Minor.

STEPHEN MUMBERT, baritone

Quickly gaining attention on the concert and opera stage throughout the United States and England, Stephen was recently praised for being vocally the most promising singer and for possessing an assured and stylish technique at the Aldeburgh Festival in England. Recent performances have included Amahl and the Night Visitors and Mozart’s Requiem with the Dakota Valley Symphony (which was broadcast on Twin Cities Public Television) and several appearances in Handel’s Messiah, including the Oratorio Society of Minneapolis.

Mr. Mumbert is active in the Central Florida area as a voice adjunct professor for the Rollins College Department of Music and is a frequent guest soloist with the Messiah Choral Society of Orlando and the Bach Festival Society of Winter Park. Stephen earned his BA from Stetson University, his MM degree at Boston Conservatory at Berklee, and is currently working toward a doctorate at the University of Minnesota.

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Sponsored by a generous gift by Michael and Aimee Kakos

JOHN V. SINCLAIR ENDOWMENT FUND FOR ARTISTIC EDUCATION

Established in 2020 in honor of Dr. John V. Sinclair’s 30th anniversary as Artistic Director, this fund will help ensure that future Artistic Directors will have sufficient resources to maintain a level of artistic excellence.

We invite all Bach Festival patrons to join the generous donors listed below to build this important resource. Contact Jane Newnum at JNewnum@BachFestivalFlorida.org for details.

GIFTS AND PLEDGES OF

$20,000 AND ABOVE

Cynthia and Alex Mackinnon

The Rev. and Mrs. Eric Ravndal, III

Sally and Jack Schott

The Tiedtke Family

$10,000-$19,999

S. Blair and Diane Murphy

Bill and Sheila Oelfke

Leila Edgerton Trismen

$5,000-$9,999

Kathy Johnson Berlinsky

Brock and Sarah McClane

Gerard and Nichola Mitchell

Bosco R. and Beverly J. Slaughter

$1,000-$4,999

Anonymous (2)

Brian Ainsley and Candice Crawford

P. Andy and Autumn Ames

Stewart Anderson

Michael and Mabel Burridge

Susan and Robert Christian

Dana and Diana Eagles

Alvaro and Routa Gomez

Leyse Lowry

Katie Mess

Janice and George Meyer

Beth and Jack Nagle

Donald A. Nash

Liana and Fred Pacilli

Dan and Barbara Preslar

Bj Price

Ann Morgan Saurman

Vivian Southwell

Edward and Virginia Ubels

BettyJane and Cecil Wilson, M.D.

UNDER $1,000

John Adams

Stewart Anderson

Meg Baldwin

Will and Barby Barbara

Jim Beck

Marianne Franus Beck

Mary Berglund-Bos

Bill and Becky Brown

Marcia and Michael Brown

Tim and Rhonda Burnham

Laurie Calhoun

Paul and Janet Chilcote

Tom Cook and Patricia Simmons

Grant and Peg Cornwell

Alan and Susan Davis

Daniel Flick

Alice and Larry Fortunato

Bill and Joanne Frederick

Elizabeth Gwinn and Michael Galletta

Lee and Diane Hansen

Kathleen Hartung

Sherwood Hawkins and Brenda Higgins

Amanda Kinder

Wendy and Rob Landry

Karen and Mickey Lane

Aaron Lefkowitz

Kay and Gerald Marin

Lora MacPherson

Elizabeth Maupin and Jay Yellen

David Odahowski

Bill and Sherry Orr

Maurice O’Sullivan

Liana and Fred Pacilli

Martin Phillips

Dan and Barbara Preslar

Dr. Mark and Beverly Rich in honor of our favorite conductor

Lisa and David Rosen

Joe Sapora and Carol Ducas

Dr. Daniel and Nancy Sharp

Karyll Shaw

Amanda Shoopman

Diana and Tim Sisley

Brian Solomon

Jessica Hall Speak

Matthew Swope

Jodi Tassos

Charles Thatcher

Jeff and Kathy Thomas

Susan and Michael Tucker

Jeanine Viau

Cezarina and Ray Vintilla

Kathleen Wassum-Hame

Diana Webb and T.J. Trapp

Jane R. White

Patty White

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Whritenour

Gwendolyn and Wilford Williams

BachFestivalFlorida.org 73

CONTINUO SOCIETY

The Continuo Society recognizes patrons who have chosen to provide for the Bach Festival Society through their estate plans. These thoughtful legacy gifts will help sustain the Society’s mission for many years to come.

For more information about major and planned gift opportunities, please contact Executive Director Kathy Berlinsky at 407.691.1056 or KBerlinsky@BachFestivalFlorida.org

CONTINUO SOCIETY MEMBERS

Anonymous (2)

John W. and Linda Cone Allen

P. Andrew and Autumn Ames in honor of John M. Tiedtke

M. Elizabeth Brothers

Dana and Diana Eagles

Paul M. Harmon

Karen and Mickey Lane in memory of Bernice and Stanley Levy

Rob and Wendy Landry

Bonnie B. and Robert M. Larsen

Leyse Lowry in honor of John V. Sinclair

Pat McKechnie

Dr. Blair and Diane Murphy

Kenneth* and Ann Hicks Murrah

The Rev. and Mrs. Eric Ravndal, III

Drs. John and Gail Sinclair

Bosco R. and Beverly J. Slaughter

Dr. Walter Stamm

Heather and David Torre

In honor of John V. Sinclair on his 25th Anniversary

Anonymous (4)

Athalia and Robert Cope

Tim Delcavo

Michael and Aimee Rusinko Kakos

Susan D. Tucker *deceased

2022–2023 SEASON DONORS

The Bach Festival Society of Winter Park would like to thank the individuals and community partners below who have generously made a pledge or contribution in support of the dynamic artistic and educational programming and community engagement for the 88th Season.

BACH FESTIVAL SOCIETY VISIONARIES

$100,000 AND ABOVE

Bach Festival Choir

Orange County Government through the Arts and Cultural Affairs Program

State of Florida, Department of State, Division of Arts and Culture and the Florida Council on Arts and Culture

Beth and Jack Nagle

Rollins College

United Arts of Central Florida

J. S. BACH LEADERSHIP COUNCIL

$50,000 - $99,999

Elizabeth Morse

Genius Foundation

The Bach Festival Society of Winter Park is delighted to announce

THE ELIZABETH AND JOHN NAGLE ENDOWMENT FOR BASS SOLOISTS IN HONOR OF BASS-BARITONE KEVIN DEAS

Long-time Bach Festival Choir members Beth and Jack Nagle understand the enormous contribution a world-class soloist brings to a choral work and have established an endowment to help ensure that the Bach Festival Society will always have the resources to engage the very best talent. Income from the endowment will be used for the financial support of bass soloists singing with the Bach Festival Society. The Nagles have chosen to name their endowment in honor of bass-baritone Kevin Deas, who is featured in this afternoon’s performance of Verdi’s Requiem.

“We have had the joy and privilege of singing with Kevin with the Bach Festival Choir and the Berkshire Choral Institute for over 25 years. We so admire his wonderful voice, hard work and kind heart, and are so pleased to honor and immortalize him through this gift!”

CONDUCTOR’S CIRCLE

$25,000 - $49,999

Jessie Ball duPont Fund

Mr. Alex and The Hon.

Cynthia Mackinnon

Richard Russell and

Thomas Ouellette

Winifred J. Sharp

Templeton World Charity Foundation

Leila Edgerton Trismen

COMPOSERS CIRCLE

$15,000 - $24,999

Edyth Bush Charitable Foundation

John V. Frank

The Joe and Sarah Galloway Foundation

Ginsburg Family Foundation

Thomas P. and Patricia A. O'Donnell Foundation

Massey Services Inc.

Borron and Beppy Owen

Anonymous in honor of John Sinclair

Wayne and Robin Roberts

Sally and Jack Schott

The Tiedtke Family

Winifred Johnson

Clive Foundation

City of Winter Park

SAINT CECILIA CIRCLE

$10,000 - $14,999

Michael and Aimee Kakos

Bonnie B. and Robert M. Larsen

Chesley G. Magruder Foundation

Charles Hosmer Morse Foundation

Bosco R. and Beverly J. Slaughter

John Templeton Foundation

Welsh Charitable Trust

CHORAL CIRCLE

$7,500 - $9,999

The Rev. Eric and Sarah Ravndal III in honor of Dr. John Sinclair

PATRON’S CIRCLE

$5,000 - $7,499

Anonymous

Kathy Johnson Berlinsky

Nicki and Jeff Bromme

Charity Challenge, Inc.

Dana and Diana Eagles

Festival of Orchestras Endowment

Kathryn Grammer

Beverly M. King

Andrea and Philip Kobrin

Jeanette G. Leinbach

Bj Price

Kelly Price and Doug Sealey

Drs. John and Gail Sinclair

Dr. Joe and Sue Warren

Marchetta Tate Wood

ARTISTIC CIRCLE

$2,500 - $4,999

Anonymous

David and Judy Albertson

John W. and Linda Cone Allen

Andy and Autumn Ames, in honor of Alex and Deanna Tiedtke's Wedding

Mr. And Mrs. P. Andy and Autumn Ames, In Memory of John M. Tiedtke

Ellen Arnold

Jay H. Berlinsky

M. Elizabeth Brothers

Leon and Larissa Glebov

Allan and Linda Keen in honor of Alex and Deanna TIedtke's Wedding

Karen and Mickey Lane in memory of Jean Murphy

Karen and Mickey Lane in memory of Estera Toaxen

Karen and Mickey Lane

David R. Mattson

The Mayflower Retirement Center, Inc.

Ann Saurman

Joel H. Sharp, Jr.

Dr. Tracy Truchelut and Mr. Robert A. White

The Wideman Family in honor of Alex and Deanna Tiedtke's Wedding

BachFestivalFlorida.org 74 BachFestivalFlorida.org 75
THANK YOU

THANK YOU

BENEFACTORS

$1,000 - $2,499

Anonymous (4)

Keith and Eleanor Ackermann

Tim and Sue Antonition

Richard Baldwin

Dr. Rita Bornstein

John D. Boulden

John D. Boulden in honor of Murray Forbes Somerville

Tim and Rhonda Burnham

Michael and Mabel Burridge

Tom and Kathy Cardwell

David Caudle and Gil Villalobos

Butch and Renee Charlan

O'Ann and Pat Christiansen

Robert and Athalia Cope

Alan and Susan Davis

Dr. Patsy Duphorne

Lee and Carolyn Eubank

Susan and Randolph Fields

Dr. and Mrs. Robert G. Flick

Barbara and Richard Fulton

Linda Modrak and Bill Gallo

Freddi and Jim Goodrich

David and Jackie Green, Green Appraisal Group, Inc.

Mrs. Janice Granier Gruber

Anonymous in memory of Clifford and Marilyn Lee

Paul M. Harmon

Jack and Annis Bowen Foundation

Lars and Julie Houmann

Dr. Mimi Hull

Allen and Dana Irwin

Allen and Dana Irwin in honor of Dr. John Sinclair

Patrick J. Knipe

Ann Kurth in memory of Sylvia Kurth

Susan C. Lackman

Rob and Wendy Landry

The Lee Foundation

Leyse Lowry

Edward Manning

Jody and Craig Maughan

Elizabeth Maupin and Jay Yellen

Dr. Margaret McMillen

Jeff and Mindy Moore

Gary and Eileen Morgenthaler in honor of Alex and Deanna

Tiedtke's Wedding

Jan Moss

John Niss and Lisa Mouton

William and Sheila Oelfke

Leslie King O’Neal

Dr. F. Robert and Norene Rolle

Joan Ruffier and Edward Manning

Joe Sapora and Carol Ducas

Jim and Pat Schroeder

Sara and Bill Segal

Dr. Karyll N. Shaw

Karyll Shaw in honor of Charlie and Noreen Shaw

Sidhu Family

Diana Sisley

Fred Lyndon Stone

John and Beatriz Struck

Jodi Tassos

Jodi Tassos in memory of John Tassos

Kathryn Chicone Ustler

Dr. Nancy van den Berg

Lee and Judy Van Valkenburgh

Hardy Vaughn and Betty Brady

Harold and Libby Ward

Michael and Kimberly Weathers

BettyJane and Cecil Wilson, MD

Armand and Alison Zilioli

FRIENDS

$500 - $999

Anonymous (6)

Jocelyn Amalong Oehmler

George and Leslie Andreae

David B. Baer

Donald and Rhonda Bartlett in honor of Alex and Deanna

Tiedtke's Wedding

Donald and Carol Beyer in memory of Dr. Don Beyer

Carolyn Blice

Diane G Boswell in honor of Alex and Deanna Tiedtke's Wedding

Lawrence D. Brown, M.D. Guy and Donna Colado

Drs. Gary and Gloria Cook

Thomas Cook and Patricia Simmons

Raphael Arenas Fernandez and Family

The Honorable and Mrs. William Frederick

Alvaro and Routa Gomez

Debra Brown Hagan

Wallace H. Hall

The Mark and Lori Harris

Charitable Fund

Allison and Peter Hosbein

Nigel John and Heather Badawi John

Bette Jore

Frank and Etta Jean Juge

Rita Lowndes

Dr. Jim Madison

Sally McHenry

Edward Meyer

Susan Miller

Lois H. Mills

Cecil and Carol Moore

D'Arcy Murphy

D'Arcy Murphy in memory of Charles E. Murphy, Natalie Murphy and Patricia Murphy

Donald A. Nash in memory of Marie D. Nash

Jane Secrist Newnum

Jane Secrist Newnum in honor of Ruby Abreu and Stephanie Rivera

Dr. and Mrs. James F. Niss

Deede Sharpe and John Parker

Gregory and Barbara Phillips

Dr. Daniel and Lesley

Podberesky

Dan and Barbara Preslar

Joy Roney

Frank Rynd

Dr. Richard Sandler

George and Joan Schiele

Taylor Sinclair

Keith McIntyre and Richard J. Skaggs

Dale Smith

Joan and Harry Travis

Donna and Keith Van Allen

Paul and Madeleine Vilmos

Frank and Karell Voelkl in honor of Alex and Deanna Tiedtke's Wedding

Dr. and Mrs. Lawrence T. Wagers

William Walker, In honor of Peter Schreyer, Crealde's Executive Director

Katy Moss Warner

Diana Webb in memory of Sylvia Kurth

Diana Webb in memory of Dr. Donald Beyer

Diana Webb and Dr. T.J. Trapp

Craig and Jeanne Weeks

Bruce A Whisler

Gwendolyn B. and Wilford J. Williams

Mike and Gartrelle Wilson

SUPPORTERS

$250 - $499 Anonymous (2)

Judy Alper

Phil and Jennifer Anderson

Billy Aylward

Cecelia Bonifay

Claudia Breese

Kimberly and Charles T. Brumback, Jr.

Dale and Patricia Burket

Minter LN Byrd in honor of Alex and Deanna Tiedtke's Wedding

Nancy Constant

Grant and Peg Cornwell

Margaret W. Cruickshank

Howard Davis

Michael Dively

Carrie Duvall

Katrina and Ray Eaton

Mary Anne Elwood

Endean Fund - Mr. Jeffrey Endean and Dr. Myrna Endean

Candice Turner Erick

Daniel Flick

Christina and Brad Gant

Penny S. Gilman

Stan and Regunia Griggs

Gregg Gronlund Family

Marty and Mike Haddad

Debbie and Larry Halye

Amine and Paula Harb in honor of Alex and Deanna

Tiedtke's Wedding

John and Marianna Hawkins in honor of Alex and Deanna

Tiedtke's Wedding

Patricia Higginbotham

Marc Himel

Dr. and Mrs. G. Wyckliffe

Hoffler

Rebecca Hull, In Memory of Norman L. Hull, Esquire, Awesome Dad!

Silvia S. Ibanez

Beth and Jack Isler

Toni Jennings

Kyle, Pat, and Mason Kanny in honor of Alex and Deanna

Tiedtke's Wedding

Kenneth and Ann Murrah

Hicks Endowment

Carol Klim

Paul and Nola Knouse in honor of Dr. John V. Sinclair

Paul and Nola Knouse

Yen-Yen Kressel

John and Ku

Dr. Mubarak Shah and Ms. Becky Lee

Gerald and Kay Marin

Carol McKelvey

Walter and Carol McKelvey

Mr. and Mrs. Peter Minderman

Ann Hicks Murrah

Mark Nevins in honor of Alex and Deanna Tiedtke's Wedding

Perry and Jane Nies

Liana and Frederick Pacilli

Nancy F. Peed

Martin Phillips

Roger D. and Rosalind Ray

Magdalena and Clemens in honor of Alex and Deanna

Tiedtke's Wedding

Bradley Roberts

Dr. Ante Rudez and Giulia Rudez

M.J. Schmid in memory of Dr. Don Beyer

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Sichler III

Tyler Simonton in memory of Susie Stone

Vivian Southwell in memory of Sylvia Kurth and Dr. Donald Beyer

Jeffrey T. Spoeri

Rene Stutzman

Jackie and Rod Sward

Dr. and Mrs. James Talcott in honor of Alex and Deanna

Tiedtke's Wedding

Amie H. Tishkoff

Beatriz Truax

Susan and Michael Tucker in memory of Dr. Donald Beyer

Susan and Michael Tucker

Barbara L. Turner

Rebecca Hull and Jeremy Udell

Drs. Jeanine Viau and Ann

THANK YOU BachFestivalFlorida.org 76 BachFestivalFlorida.org 77

THANK YOU

Gleig

Cezarina and Ray Vintilla in honor of Stela and Dumitru

Toaxen

Kenneth Ward

Jane R. White

William C. Schwartz Fund

Art and Louise Yergey Legacy Charitable Fund

CONTRIBUTORS

$100 - $249

Anonymous (14)

Anonymous in honor of Tim Delcavo

Rossana Abate in honor of Alex and Deanna Tiedtke's Wedding

Ruby Abreu in honor of Miguel Abreu

Millicent Adams and Michael Anthony

Giovanna Adimari in memory of Daniel B. Leonard

David Aiken

Stewart Anderson

Meg Baldwin

Mary D. Balk

Mr. and Mrs. Will and Barby Barbara

Beverly and Wayne Bargren

Jim D. Beck

Jerry Janesick and Cheryl Bollinger

Bill and Becky Brown

Brenda Bullock-Paget in memory of Tom T. Cole

Susan J. Burdette

Leslie Ann Chiarello

Anne Claiborne

Ellie Clark

Carolyn G. Coleman

Martin and Susan Collins

Francis and Giselle Conway

Terry and Paul Creighton

George Dappert and Judy

Wixted

Edward and Janet Davenport

Katie and Ari in honor of Alex and Deanna Tiedtke's Wedding

Janet de Guehery

Jason Dewrell in honor of Alex and Deanna Tiedtke's Wedding

Dante Duphorne

Sharon K. Dwyer in memory of George and Marie Kramer

Sharon K. Dwyer

Hoyt and Charlene Edge

Marjorie and Harold Emmert

Mary Frances Emmons and Roger Roy

John and Nancy Engle

Elizabeth and Philip Eschbach

Carolyn M. Fennell

Anonymous

Deirdre and Shayne Floyd in memory of Dr. Donald Beyer

Larry and Alice Fortunato

Nicole Fournier

Elicia Garcia

Betsy Gardner Eckbert

Gary L. Geipel

Gail Graham

Mike and Ceil Graham

Katherine and Justin Green in honor of Alex and Deanna

Tiedtke's Wedding

Dr. Scott Greenwood and Dr. Pamela Freeman

Ben and Nancy Grzeslk

Donald and Mary Pat Guske in memory of Dr. Donald Beyer

Lawrie Platt Hall

Mr. and Mrs. John Hallenbeck

James and Nancy Hannah

Kathryn Harbaugh

Barbara Hillerman Lieske

Elizabeth Hyden

Mrs. Patricia E. Jenkins

Ann Johnson

Leslie and Sondra Jones

Sandy Jordan

William Jordan

Donna and Ed Kania

Marc and Henrietta Katzen

Richard and Martha Kessler

Felice Koscinski

Ms. Phyllis Lachman

Lancaster Family Fund

Aaron Lefkowitz

Chad LeMeur in honor of Alex and Deanna Tiedtke's Wedding

Dr. Michael and Diane Levine

Nancy P. Lewis

M.J. Lowitz

Chris Ludemann-Davis in honor of Alex and Deanna

Tiedtke's Wedding

Elisabeth J Luke

Dr. Ken and Mrs. Trisha

Margeson

Paul Massimiano

Carolyn Maue

Justin McGill

Drs. Bill and Neva Meek

Friend of the Bach Festival Choir

Congressman John L. Mica

Carolyn Minear

Karen Morin in honor of Dan and Nancy Sharp

Joseph Mundy

J. Michael Murphy

Augustus Myers in honor of Alex and Deanna Tiedtke's Wedding

Linda Naughtin

Roxanne Niles

Luke M. Noles

Thomas O’Meara

Dr. Mary Palmer

The Mary Palmer Family Foundation

M. Carmela Pantano in memory of Dr. Donald Beyer

Jolene and Justin Patrou

Oliver and Kim Peters

Dr. Calvin and Pamela Peters

Edwin and Susan Peterson

Rose E. Quinlan in memory of Dr. Donald Beyer

David Rea

Tom and Cathy Regan

Shyla Reich in honor of David Albertson

Peter Riddleberger in memory of Philip Springer

Dr. Arnetta Rodgers in honor of Rev. Katrina Jenkins

Dr. Arnetta Rodgers

Holly Rogers

Dr. Mark and Leslie Sand

Jane and Bruce Scamehorn

Denise Schabacker Barnes

Paul Schmalzer

Nancy Seaman in loving memory of Hod Seaman

Seminole Spokes, Inc.

Arthur Shevchenko

William and Dorothy Silverman

Susan Slemons

Judith Smelser

Celnah Smith in memory of my husband Leon Smith

Dennis Sobeck

Sue and Allan Solomon

Scott and Nancy Stegall in honor of Alex and Deanna

Tiedtke's Wedding

Dawn and George Sumrall

Vernon Swartsel

Patricia Torbert in memory of her husband Duke Torbert

Connie Trama in loving memory of Dr. Donald Beyer

Tamara Trimble

Edward and Virginia Ubels

Ben and Nicole Vallowe in honor of Alex and Deanna

Tiedtke's Wedding

Tye Van Buren

Kim van Nymegen

Carrie and Kevin Wendelburg

Susan Whritenour

Laura M. Woodbury

Meredith Woodend

Clark and Emily Woodsby in honor of Alex and Deanna

Tiedtke's Wedding

Nicholas Yarnold

Ruth Young and Donald Rice

Mary Lou Zobel

THANK YOU

*Donors recognized for their gifts and pledges received in support of the 2022–2023

Season prior to publication date of this program guide.

We apologize for any errors or omissions.

BachFestivalFlorida.org 78 BachFestivalFlorida.org 79

UNITED ARTS DONORS

Collaborative Campaign for the Arts & United Arts of Central Florida Donors

United Arts of Central Florida is your arts agency uniting the community and fueling the arts. With the help of individual donors, corporations, foundations and public funding, United Arts inspires creativity, builds community and strengthens the economy in Central Florida. United Arts is proud to facilitate arts education programs for all ages and provide critical funding and comprehensive marketing for local art, science, and history organizations and individual artists. Leading one of the largest collaborative fundraising campaigns in the country and uniting the regions cornerstone arts and cultural organizations, United Arts is dedicated to ensuring the arts are for all. United Arts is deeply grateful to its donors and community partners for their investment in and support of Central Florida’s creative community and the enormous impact it has on our lives every day.

The following contributions were made to United Arts or the 2022 Collaborative Campaign for the Arts between July 1, 2021 – June 30, 2022.

www.UnitedArts.cc | 407.628.0333

Corporate and Government Donors

$100,000+

City of Orlando and Employees

Darden Restaurants, Inc. and the Darden Restaurants Foundation

Dr. Phillips Charities

Duke Energy and Duke Energy Foundation and Employees

Elizabeth Morse Genius Foundation Inc.

The Massey Services Family and Team Members

National Endowment for the Arts

Orange County, Florida and Employees

Orange County Public Schools

University of Central Florida

Walt Disney World Resort and The Walt Disney Company Foundation

$50,000 – $99,999

Friends of the Orlando Philharmonic Orchestra

Florida Department of State

$25,000 – $49,999

Bank of America

City of Winter Park

Edyth Bush

Charitable Foundation

UNITED ARTS DONORS

Corporate and Government Donors (cont.)

$1,000 - $2,499

Akerman LLP

AmFund

The Balmoral Group, LLC

Charities Aid Foundation of America

The Earl and Bettie Fields Automotive Group Foundation, Inc.

G R Bridges Jewelry

$100,000+

Anonymous

Hubbard Construction Company

The Joelson Foundation

MatWorkz Pilates Studio

Nulman Mediation Services

Orchid Medical

Orlando Science Center Employees

Pineloch Management Corporation

Seay Business Solutions, LLC

Spraker West Wealth Management Inc

Urban on Plant Kitchen & Bar

Valencia College Foundation

Westminster Winter Park

The Woman’s Club of Winter Park

Individual and Family Foundation Donors

Dr. Joe and Sue Warren

John and Lisa Westlake

Fred and Jeanie Raffa

Shyla G. Reich

Florida Blue

Frontline Insurance

Orlando Magic

$10,000 – $24,999

Arts Bridge Charity, Inc.

The Ballet Academy of Central Florida

Charity Challenge, Inc.

Donors of the Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts

Greater Orlando Aviation Authority

John Willis Law Firm

Lake County, Florida

Lowndes

OUC-The Reliable One and Employees

Universal Orlando Foundation Window World

$7,500 - $9,999

ABC Fine Wine & Spirits

KPMG, LLP and Employees Team Ten 4 Kids, Inc.

$5,000 - $7,499

Crystal Photonics, Inc.

Ernst & Young LLP

Fairwinds Credit Union Employees Get Off the Bus, LLC

Guignard Company

In Memory of Shellie-Ann

M. Braswell

Orlando Health

Tampa-Orlando-Pinellas Jewish Foundation, Inc.

Upshot

$2,500 - $4,999

77 Trust Me Brand

Dean Mead Employees

Different Perspective

Eric Horner Interiors, Inc.

F/X Group

IATSE Local 631

Kidsville Pediatrics

MSL CPAs & Advisors

NFTorium, LLC

Orange County Arts & Cultural Affairs

RB Advisory LLC

Santa Monica Travel & Tourism

UCF College of Arts and Humanities

United Arts of Central

Florida Employees

Wayne Dictor / Dictor

Financial LLC

Winter Park Publishing Company LLC

J. Laurence and Susan K. Costin

Ginsburg Family Foundation

The Mary Palmer Family Foundation

$50,000 - $99,999

Anonymous

The Basel-Kiene Family

John and Lee Benz

Dick and Betsy DeVos

Family Foundation

Frank J. Doherty

Robert and Melissa Kohn

Harold and Rosy Mills

Frank Santos

Mr. and Mrs. Bob Yarmuth

$25,000 - $49,999

Anonymous

David and Judy Albertson

Jim and Barbara Caldwell

Tom and Kathy Cardwell

Dr. Stephen F. Heller

Lawrence Kellogg

Andrea and Philip Kobrin

Rita Lowndes

Mr. Alex and The Hon.

Cynthia Mackinnon

Dr. Ken and Mrs. Trisha

Margeson

Wayne and Robin Roberts

John and Audrey Ruggieri

Richard Russell and Thomas

Ouellette

Jim and Valeria Shapiro and The J & V Shapiro Family Fund at the Central Florida Foundation

Chuck and Margery

Pabst Steinmetz

Elaine Berol Taylor & Scott

Bevan Taylor Foundation

The Tiedtke Family

Gail and Michael Winn

Larry and Laura Zirbel

$10,000 - $24,999

Anonymous

Keith and Eleanor Ackermann

John W. and Linda Cone Allen

Colonel Christian J. Becht and Mrs. Elizabeth M. Becht

Joe and Carol Bert

Caroline Blydenburgh

Susan K. Bright and Lawrence W. Stevenson

M. Elizabeth Brothers

Chicone Family Foundation

Hillary and Jay Cohen

Valerie and Paul Collins

Elizabeth Nerius Conklin

Judy Duda

Andrea Eliscu

Jeff and June Flowers Giving Fund

Marilyn S. Goldman

Stephen H. Goldman

Charitable Foundation

Freddi and Jim Goodrich

Sheila Greenspoon

Bea Hoelle-Hawes

Sonya C. Hough

Mary F. Kelsh

Pat and Audrey Knipe

Dr. Mitch and Swantje Levin

Melody and Brendan Lynch

David and Eydie MacInnis

McIntyre and Skaggs

Charitable Trust

The Melrose FoundationGrant Gribble

Jeff and Mindy Moore

Whitney Morse

William and Kyra Muntan

Laurie Nicoletti

Paul Oppedisano

Maria Ruiz-Hays

Dr. Rick Schell and Mr. Scott Joseph

Sally and Jack Schott

Ann and Charles Simpson

Bosco R. and Beverly J. Slaughter

Diane and Robert Smedley

Ellen and Simon Snyder

Daisy and Jan Staniszkis

Rebecca and Blaine Sweatt

Marilyn Terborg

Kathryn Chicone Ustler

Hardy Vaughn and Betty Brady

Lance and Patricia Walker

Leslie Warrington Bailey

Alan Whittaker

Lori Pearson Wise and Daniel Wise

Wisne Charitable Foundation

Gary W. Young

$7,500 - $9,999

Anonymous

Debbie and Larry Cappleman

Brian Carwile

Dr. Chris Crotty and Ms. Janie Brownlee

Dykes and Lisa Simonton Everett

Barbara and Richard Fulton

Mrs. Janice Granier Gruber

Marc and Henrietta Katzen

Francille MacFarland MD

Larry Gutter and Debbie Meitin

Steven and Kathleen Miller

Blair and Diane Murphy

Rosemary O’Shea

The Rev. Eric and Sarah Ravndal III in honor of Dr. John Sinclair

Geanne and Adrian Share

BachFestivalFlorida.org 80 BachFestivalFlorida.org 81

UNITED ARTS DONORS

Individual and Family Foundation Donors (cont.)

$5,000 - $7,499

Anonymous

Lindsay and Dan Abt

The Bob Allen Family Foundation

John and Catherine Amein

Carlos Asse

Miguel Asse

Jim and Elli AtchisonAtchison Family Fund

Margaret Atkins

Sally Blackmun and Michael Elsberry

Kirt and Cheryl Bocox

Nicki and Jeff Bromme

Bettina Buckley

Drs. Lynn Le and Wei-Shen Chin

Francie and Wayne Dear

Susan M. DeNardis

Kristy Doyle and Bob Turner

Duane Duncan

Linda Ferrone

Susan and Randolph Fields

Sarah B. Flynn

Lillian Garcia

Dr. Matt Gay

Drs. Lloyd and Pamela Gillet

Bruce Gould

Dr. David Gurney

Don and Mary Ann Harrill

Mr. and Mrs. L. P. Herzog

Donna and Bill Hoffman

Elizabeth and Justin Horn

Jacquelyn Hughes

Dr. Diane M. Jacobs

Michael and Aimee Kakos

George A. Kalogridis and Andrew G. Hardy

Cathy Karunaratne in memory of Dr. H. B. Karunaratne

Harry and Marcie Katzen

Skip Kirst and Eric Hogan

John P. Klumph

Dr. Susan Cohn Lackman and Dr. Richard D. Knapp

Gary Lambert and Shawn Hunt

Serein Lambert

William and Barbara Lynch

Jay and Traci Madara

Meghan and Alex Mannella

Jody and Craig Maughan

Suzanne McGuire

The Munro Family

Beth and Jack Nagle

William Newkirk and Cheryl Tschanz Family Foundation

Merlin I. Olson

Mark and Jennifer O’Mara

Borron and Beppy Owen

The Andy Pargh

Endowment Fund

Christina and Gabriel Preisser

Kelly Price and Doug Sealy

Chris Ranck

John and Monica Rivers

John Daniel Ruffier

Dr. Richard Sandler

Marco J. Santoro and Kimberly Dorsett

Philip and Susan Sargent Family

Charitable Fund

Deede Sharpe and John Parker

Paula Shives

Drs. John and Gail Sinclair

Larry Slung

Andrew Snyder and Christopher Nemethy

Bryan and Marjorie Thomas

Phillip Tischer

Joan and Harry Travis

Lee and Lindsey Alley Turvey

Donna and Keith Van Allen

Paul and Madeleine Vilmos

Dr. and Mrs. Lawrence T. Wagers

Waggoner Foundation in memory of Robert Waggoner

Robert and Nancy Wahl

Ann & Bill Wallace Foundation

John Webb

Louise and Richard Weiner

Barbara Weinreich

Bill and Alice Weir

Al and Brea Weiss

Robert B. White and Linda Riley

Teresa Williams

Bickley C. Wilson

Scott H. Wilson

Dr. Vonda Wright and Peter Taglianetti

$2,500 - $4,999

Anonymous

Rita & Jeffrey Adler Foundation

Russell P. Allen

Mr. and Mrs. P. Andy and Autumn Ames, In Memory of

John M. Tiedtke

Jennifer and Phil Anderson

George and Leslie Andreae

Susan and Gorden Arkin

Kim Ashby in honor of Bob and Katy Ashby

Aunt Jeanie

Andy and Phyllis Ayoob Fund

David B. Baer

Beth Barnes and John Crocitto

Jay H. Berlinsky

Kathy Johnson Berlinsky

Carol-Lynn and Frank Bevc

John and Diane Bishop

Carolyn Blice

Daniel Patrick Blumberg

Albert and Cheryl Bogdanowitsch

Dr. and Mrs. Gregory N. Boger

Cecelia Bonifay

Regine Bonneau and Elyh Saint-Hilaire

Jill and Dean Bosco

Sara R. Brady

Howard Britt

Jane and Roger Cheever

Yan Chen

O’Ann and Pat Christiansen

Bonnie and Van Church - In Loving Memory of Dorothy

Martin and Rispa Church

Michael and Jennifer Coleman

Cheryl Collins, CFRE

Carol and Ted Conner

Steve Coon

Kathy K. Cressey

Dan and Jill Croom

Susan M. Curran

Alan and Susan Davis

Drs. Ronald and Nancy Davis

Curt and Carol DiPasqua

Donna Dowless

Michael Dwulit

Dana and Diana Eagles

Jennifer Clark Evins

James Farrell and Andrea

Massey-Farrell

George S. Fender in honor of American military forces

Clive Frazier

Dr. and Mrs. Charles W. George

Jane and Charlie Gibbons

Leon and Larissa Glebov

Marcia Goodwin

Matthew Gorney

Kathryn Grammer

Jean Grono-Nowry and Ian Robinson

Dr. and Mrs. H.E. Gross

Barbara Grossman

Debbie and Larry Halye

Roseann Harrington

Jeffrey Hartog

Germaine Brugere Haserot Fund

Harvey Heller

Jim Helsinger and Suzanne O’Donnell

Larry Henrichs

Rob and Michael Highfill-Spradlin

Diane and Allan Horowitz

Joseph Robert House

Dr. Mimi Hull

Maen and Michelle Hussein

Mimi Hwang

Steven Igou

Mrs. Patricia E. Jenkins

Patricia A. Johnson

Myron R. Johnston Arts

Endowment Fund

Bette Jore

Frank and Etta Jean Juge

Eliza and Matt Juliano

Eva Krzewinski

Karen and Mickey Lane

Shelley Lake

Dr. Michael and Diane Levine

Margaret Lezcano and Rick Hartker

James R. Lussier and Nancy C. Jacobson

Embry J. Kidd and A. Noni

Holmes-Kidd

John and Pamela Lyle

James and Sarah Martin

Paul and Sue Allison

Massimiano

David R. Mattson

Judy and John Mazzotta Community Impact Fund

Deborah L. Mead

Margaret G. Miller

Ann Hicks Murrah

Steven D. Nakagawa

John Niss and Lisa Mouton

Michael A. Nocero, Jr. in memory of Mary Jo

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ott in memory of Richard David Ott

Beverly and Glenn Paulk

David and Michelle Peck

Dr. David and Darbee Percival

Celeste Pertz

Dr. Gloria Pickar

Dr. Daniel and Lesley Podberesky

Alexis C. Pugh

Bill and Joan Randolph

Richard C. Riccardi

UNITED ARTS DONORS

John and Virginia Rigsby

Nicholas Riippa and Dominic Del Brocco

Dr. Cheryl Robinson

The Roper Family Foundation

Corrine K. Roy

Joan Ruffier and Edward Manning

Steve and Melanie Ruta

Joe Sapora and Carol Ducas

Ann Saurman

Eileen Schein

Winifred J. Sharp and Joel H. Sharp, Jr.

Wayne Sheffield

Robert T. Shutts

Sidhu Family

William Slot

Dew Smith

Dennis Sobeck

Dr. Stephen Summers

Jackie and Rod Sward

Winston Taitt

Leslie J. Temmen

Cynthia Tomlinson

Leila Edgerton Trismen

Dr. Jessica Vaught-Aviles and Mr. Juan Aviles

Lindsay Vermuth

Stacia L. Wake

Harold and Libby Ward

Neil and Malka Webman

Craig and Jeanne Weeks

Peter and Frances Weldon

John and Amy Wettach

Len and Marilyn Williams

Tom and Penny Yochum

Armand and Alison Zilioli

Bob and Janet Ziomek

$1,000 - $2,499

Anonymous

Anonymous in memory of Clifford and Marilyn Lee

Abernethy Pickar Family

Millicent Adams and Michael Anthony

Jeanne Bray Ailes

Theresa Aleguas

Joseph Ales, Jr. and Stephanie

Curry Ales

Kay Allen

Dr. Mike and Janet

Loveland Allen

Rachel C. Allen

Phil and Jennifer Anderson

Melinda Antalek

Ellen Arnold

Tony and Sharon Arroyo

Jeffrey Artzi

Sandra Asse

Maria-Elena Augustin

Tom and Lara Baker

James and Deborah Balaschak

Nathan and Lynda Balint

Richard and Nancy Banks

Donna Barley

Cathy and Carlos Barrios

Dick and Andrea Batchelor

Mr. Dave Berelsman and Mrs. Lyn Berelsman

Jane Berg

Cissy Bergman, in loving memory of Rocky Bergman

Gina Bernandini

Aaron Bert

Daniel Betancourt

Paul and Collette Beuther

Amogh Bhonde and Sukhada Gokhale

Christine Billis

Jacques D. Blais

Ann and Derek Blakeslee

Darryl and Mary Bloodworth

Lauren and Barry Bloom

Theresa and Angelo Boer

Lauren and C. Thomas Bolick IV

Dr. Rita Bornstein

John D. Boulden

Carolyn E. Bourne

Jacqueline Bozzuto

Berl and Katherine Brechner

Sherry Bremer

Marian and Edward Bromberg

Lawrence D. Brown, M.D.

Mary A. and Roger D. Brown

Randall S. Brown

Ted and Ruthanne Brown

Dr. and Mrs. William J. Brown

Paul F. Bryan

Karen G. Buchan

Christine and Hans Bucheli

Verna Buchs in memory of Dr. Andy Buchs

Dale and Patricia Burket

Tim and Rhonda Burnham

Michael and Mabel Burridge

David Buxton, MD

Kay and John Cappleman

Alexander and Melinda Cartwright

James P. Caruso and Christine S. Caruso Charitable Fund Inc

BachFestivalFlorida.org 82 BachFestivalFlorida.org 83
Individual and Family Foundation Donors (cont.)

UNITED ARTS DONORS

Individual and Family Foundation Donors (cont.)

Mr. Scott Cassidy and Ms. Trish Titer

Rafael Castillo

David Caudle and Gil Villalobos

Mahesh Chaddah

Amy and Chris Chapman

Frank and Ellie Chase

Jason Chepenik

Jason Chilton

Julia Chinnock and Richard Champalbert

Dr. Jeff Cohen and Luci Belnick

Kelly Cohen

Dr. Anthony and Joan Colandrea, Jr.

Beryl R. Colbourn

Carolyn G. Coleman

Teresa Colling

Martin and Susan Collins

Judith and Richard Conk

Tracey Conner

Sharon Conway

Hal Cooper

Robert and Athalia Cope

David S. and Carol A. Cowan

Fred and Gayle Curtis

Mr. and Mrs. Noriko and Tom Davatelis

Keith M. Davenport and Jared V. Walker

Diane Davey and Dave Wiebe

Doug Davis and Jeri Weigandt

Silva Deakins in memory of my husband Jim

Debby

DEM Guys

Michelle DeVos

Mr. Duncan DeWahl and Dr. Juliet Burry

Patty and Jim DeYoung

Cara and Alex Dobrev

Jim and Gail Downing

Dr. Patsy Duphorne

Lisa Durant

Gontran and Isabelle Durocher

Sheldon Dutes

Dr. Perry and Eileen Dworkin

Bill and Jennifer Dymond

Barbara Tiffany and Jerry Eans

Ted Edwards and Nikki Seybold

Paula and Buddy Eidel

Rex and Kathy Elbert

Endean Fund - Mr. Jeffrey

Endean and Dr. Myrna

Endean

Catherine M. Engelman

Lee and Carolyn Eubank

Dr. Jay and Randye Falk

Dr. Adrianne Ferguson

Kerry Ferguson

Steve Fessler and Randy Lord

Laura M. Firth

Dr. and Mrs. Robert G. Flick

Nancy Ellen Flint

Steven and Melanie Forbrick

Julia L. Frey and Dr. David J. Carter

Dawn Frye

Garber/Collins Charitable Gift Fund

Rachel and Rob Gebaide

Stephanie Ghertner

Nancy and Fiona Gibbons

Jon Gibbs and Carolyn Salzmann

Suzanne E. Gilbert

Mike and Vicki Gillett

Biff and Kathy Godfrey

Neal Goldner

Eduardo Gomez Lambert

Steven W. Grant

Christopher and Pamela Greening

Dr. Scott Greenwood and Dr. Pamela Freeman

Chuck and Lisa Gregg

Christopher Grim and Melissa Queen-Grim

Barbara Grodin

Jessica and Vance Guthrie

Marty and Mike Haddad

Rob and Jacki Hale

Andrew and Monica Hand

Michael and Terri Harding

Paul M. Harmon

Dave and Nancy Harvey

Gary Heath

Marty and Jim Heekin

Sheri Heitker and Mark Dixon

Paul Helfrich and Jessica Hung

Marjorie Hill

Nathan Hill

John and Gale Hillenmeyer

Danielle Saba Hollander

Bob and Marty Hopkins

David Horgan

Mike and Kitti Hornreich

Allison and Peter Hosbein

Andrew and Kara Howell

Bonnie Hubbard

Jacqueline and Vincent Hughes

Rebecca Hull

Daniel W. Humphress and Enrique J. De La Torre

The Hurckes Foundation

Ellen S. Hurwitz

In honor of Peter Schreyer, Crealde’s Executive Director

In memory of Toeknee Caporelli

Allen and Dana Irwin

Beth and Jack Isler

Libby Jackson

Eric Jacobsen and Aoife

O’Donovan

Harvey and Janice Jacoby

David and Lisa Jasmund

Toni Jennings

Darrell and Lynda Jobman

Mark and Jessica Jones

Les Josephson

Daun and Lisa Junkerman

Hal Kantor

RK Kelley

Maureen and Mark Kennedy

Richard and Martha Kessler

Sheri Kettula and Denise Marra

Charles and Olga King

Bud Kirk

Carol Klim

Rachael Kobb

Harvey Kobrin and Faye David

Christina and George Kotsonis

Dr. Les and Mrs. Lynn Kramer

Holly M. Kreisler

The Labelle Family

Alyson and Michael Laderman

Deborah and Donald Lake

Patricia Lancaster

Linda Landman González

Rob and Wendy Landry

Paul Lartonoix

Dr. Sarah Layton

Mark and Noreen Levitt

Miriam Levy and Dennis Pope

Mark K. Lewis

Jack Lord

Jennifer Lowndes and Tim Boeth

Leyse Lowry

John MacDougall and Jame

Lee Mann

Dr. Jim Madison

Sheila Mahone

Jim and Wendy Malcolm Fund

Maria Manoso

Louise M. Manry

Kevin and Ditian Dai Martin

Hilary and Ming Marx

UNITED ARTS DONORS

Individual and Family Foundation Donors (cont.)

Kyle and Sarah Mattingly

Elizabeth Maupin and Jay Yellen

Jay and Alison McClelland

Donald R. McGee, DMD, PA

Daniel and Elizabeth McIntosh

Dr. Margaret McMillen

Scott R. McMillen

John and Rebekah McReynolds

Toby Mendelsohn

Congressman John L. Mica

Mrs. Arthur L. Miller

Ryan and Lucas Miller

Lois H. Mills

Sally Milton

Mr. and Mrs. Peter Minderman

Dr. Andrew Minear

Carolyn Minear

Clay and Kim Mitchell in memory of Lucy Lane

Mitchell

Jan Moss

Mari Moye

Karla Muniz

Mr. Sumanth Neelam

Alicia and Jay Nevins

Kailey and Robert Newkirk

JoAnn Newman

Andrea and Van-Tam Nguyen

Jessica Nguyen

Donna Nickel

Walter Ronald Nock

David Oigarden

Odd-o-Ts’ Entertainment in honor of all those who keep us performing!

Dan and Dana O’Keefe

Eric O’Neal

Leslie King O’Neal

Molly O’Neill

Dr. Ron and Nina Oppenheim

Jenise Osani

Dr. and Mrs. Jonathan O. Partain

Dr. Patricia Patterson

Ronald and Carrie Patterson

Beth Pendleton

Dw Phineas Perkins

John and Anne Perry

Dr. Calvin and Pamela Peters

Peter and Nancy Pfaff

Eddie and Melanie Pipkin

Lizz and Tony Pittsley

Dave Plotkin

George Poelker and Judy Black

Carol Ann Pohl

Michael and Leslie Poole

Jennet Pozzuoli

Steven and Nancy Price

Mark Pulliam and Judy St. Peter

Patricia and Bert Ramsay

Debby Randall

Bruce and LeAnne Rapée

James and Beverly Rawlings

Roger D. and Rosalind Ray

Douglas and Carole Reece

Bill “Roto” Reuter

Mr. and Mrs. Rice

Mr. and Mrs. Mills Riddick

Patricia Rixmann

Ian D. Robinson

Lenore and Howard Roland

Dr. F. Robert and Norene Rolle

Robert and Tara Rollins

Joy Roney

Lesley and Barry Rubin

Donald Rudolf

Judy Russell

Ellen C. and Allan W. Ryan

Michael and Theresa Ryan

Joan E. Sanchez

Diane L. Sandquist

Maria Isabel Sanquírico

Rocky Santomassino

The Sanz-Guerro Family

Patty Schmidt

Frank Schornagle

Jim and Pat Schroeder

Ryan Scordato

Sara and Bill Segal

Samuel W. Seymour and Karen

Patton Seymour

Rebecca Shanahan

James G. Shepp

Arthur Shevchenko

William and Dorothy Silverman

Diana Sisley

Dr. Paul Skomsky

Scott and Tina Skraban

Charlie and Becca Sloan

Brenda and Stan Smith

Keith Smith and Marc Caglia

Robert and Janan Smither

Mary and Rick Solik

Tony and Rebecca Sos

Matthew Soss

David Spiegel

Paula Stuart

Carol Studer

Rene Stuzman

Randall M. Sumner and George B. Mabry

Dr. Stella Sung

Vernon Swartsel

Thomas C. Taffinder

Jodi Tassos in memory of John Tassos

George R. and Eleanor C. Taylor

Patrick Terry

Michael Thomas

John and Nancy-Lee Thompson

Mark E. Thompson

Clinton and Renee Thompson

James William Tivy

Larry Tobin

Tamara L. Trimble

Anthea M. Turner

Jerry and Barbara Twedt

Benjamin Urrutia

Lee and Judy Van Valkenburgh

Bernie Vatter

Ms. Sterling S. Vestal

Massimo and Louise Villinger

Keith Walls

Robert Waltman

Katy Moss Warner

Tim Warzecha and Bill Neighbors

David Kevin Weaver

Todd C. Weaver

Mr. Randy Welsch

Miriam Weston

The Honorable David Wheeler

George and Cynthia White

Michael and Diane White

Trudy Wild

Jennifer Williams and James Yannucci

Jayne and John Willis

Betty Jane and Cecil Wilson, MD

Bill and Suzy Wilson

David and Diane Withee

Nancy and Jonathan Wolf

Leighton and Phyllis Yates

Michael J. Young

Edward and Phyllis Zissman

JL Zucco

BachFestivalFlorida.org 84 BachFestivalFlorida.org 85

The Bach Festival Society of Winter Park was founded in 1935 at Rollins College to commemorate the 250th anniversary of Johann Sebastian Bach’s birth by presenting the composer’s orchestral and choral music to the public for its “enlightenment, education, pleasure, and enjoyment.” The Society decided early on to operate in partnership with Rollins College while still maintaining its status as a fully independent non-profit organization.

Mrs. Isabelle Sprague-Smith, a former New York artist and school principal, was the president and driving force behind the Bach Festival Society from 1935 until her death in 1950. At Mrs. Sprague-Smith’s death, the future of the Bach Festival Society was uncertain. Rollins President Hugh McKean asked John M. Tiedtke, the treasurer of Rollins College, a music lover and an astute businessman, to fill the opening and he agreed. Mr. Tiedtke served as Chairman of the Board of Trustees until his death in December 2004. Under his leadership, the Bach Festival Society expanded its programming to include two additional choral programs beyond the Annual Festival, top-tier visiting soloists and ensembles, and community events in Winter Park.

Following Mr. Tiedtke’s death, the Society began a period of modernization and growth. Today, the Society maintains an all-volunteer choir of over 185 singers from throughout Central Florida and a professional orchestra of nearly 50 members. We present nearly 30 ticketed performances, dozens of in-school educational programs, a high school choral festival, and several community concerts; we produce recordings, present the Young at Heart Chorale, and form high-level artistic partnerships reaching approximately 50,000 people annually.

The Bach Festival Society is the third-oldest continuously operating Bach Festival in the United States and Central Florida’s longest-running performing arts organization. We maintain a strong partnership with Rollins College and provide high-quality performance and learning opportunities to students, faculty, and staff.

OUR HISTORY OUR HISTORY
BachFestivalFlorida.org 86 BachFestivalFlorida.org 87

EDUCATION AND OUTREACH

The Bach Festival Society offers music-making and educational opportunities for all ages. The Bach Festival Choir is comprised of auditioned singers, rehearsing year-round. The Young at Heart Chorale is a volunteer singing group for those 55+ years young performing at local community centers.

The Bach to the Future initiative provides programs for students from pre-K to high school, including the FreshStARTS program which brings unique musical learning experiences into the classroom featuring the Bach Vocal Artists. The annual High School Honors Choral Festival invites local groups for workshops with collegiate choral directors from across the country. This festival helps prepare those choirs for their annual Music Performance Assessments. A new initiative, The Choir of Distinction, offers area choirs a chance to hold the title and receive many benefits including a trophy, choral mentorship, educational opportunities and an invitation to perform.

Master Classes led by world-renowned visiting artists give students and patrons a unique insider’s perspective on the process of fine-tuning classical musical excellence. To learn more, visit BachFestivalFlorida.org/community

TICKETS

PURCHASE TICKETS

Online at BachFestivalFlorida.org/tickets

Call 407.646.2182

Visit the Box Office

203 East Lyman Avenue, 2nd Floor Winter Park, FL 32789

Monday–Friday, 10:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m.

TICKET POLICY

Performance details are subject to change. To learn more, please visit BachFestivalFlorida.org/ticket-policy

ACCESSIBILITY

DON’T MISS A PERFORMANCE

Save up to 30%, access the best seats, and receive promo codes for concerts at Steinmetz Hall when you purchase a subscription. Learn more at BachFestivalFlorida.com/subscriptions

EDUCATION RUSH TICKETS

$10 RUSH tickets offered to students and educators pending seating availability.

TICKETS STILL AVAILABLE FOR UPCOMING PERFORMANCES

INSIGHTS & SOUNDS: ASPEN TRIO WITH JOHN HARBISON, LECTURER

Thursday, March 23, 2023 at 7:30 pm | Tiedtke Concert Hall

Hear one of the most celebrated composers of our time discuss the creative process and subsequent product. The masterful Aspen Trio performs a program that includes a work by Pulitzer Prize–winning composer John Harbison as well as the Mozart work that inspired his composition. Tickets from $15

TAKACS QUARTET WITH JEREMY DENK, PIANO

Saturday, March 25, 2023 at 7:30 pm | Tiedtke Concert Hall

Proclaimed by The New York Times as “a pianist you want to hear no matter what he performs,” Jeremy Denk is a winner of a MacArthur Genius Fellowship and the Avery Fisher Prize. The Takács Quartet, formed in 1975 at the Franz Liszt Academy in Budapest, has won a Grammy and the Wigmore Hall Medal. Tickets from $30

INSIGHTS & SOUNDS: THE SPIRITUAL

Thursday, April 6, 2023 at 7:30 pm | Tiedtke Concert Hall

Learn more about the history of this profound genre through spirituals sung by members of the Bach Festival Choir and guest soloist Samuel McKelton. McKelton, lauded by The New York Times for the “natural elegance” of his lyric tenor voice, is dedicated to the preservation of the Negro Spiritual. Tickets from $15

PURSUIT OF PEACE

Saturday, April 29, 2023 at 7:30 pm | Sunday, April 30, 2023 at 3:00 pm | Knowles Memorial Chapel

The Bach Festival Society is committed to making its programs accessible to all audiences. Tiedtke Concert Hall and Knowles Memorial Chapel on the Rollins College campus in Winter Park have accessible entrances and parking options available, as does Steinmetz Hall at the Dr. Phillips Performing Arts Center in downtown Orlando. Please call 407.646.2182 for assistance with questions or concerns.

COMMITMENT TO INCLUSION

The Bach Festival Society of Winter Park believes that all people deserve equal access and opportunities to participate in a vibrant, creative life. We are committed to policies and practices to increase diversity in the governance and administration of the Society, to deliver programming that illuminates diverse experiences, and to engage the broader community through outreach and education.

BachFestivalFlorida.org

The musical centerpiece of this poignant program, The Armed Man: A Mass for Peace by Welsh composer Sir Karl Jenkins, was written to commemorate the victims of the Kosovo Crisis in 1999 and portrays both the horrors of war and the yearning for peace.In the last masterworks concert of the season, the Bach Choir and Orchestra, along with four guest soloists, are featured in this powerful and emotional performance. Tickets from $25

BACH VOCAL ARTISTS: MARRIAGE OF MUSIC AND POETRY

Thursday, May 18, 2023 at 7:30 pm | Tiedtke Concert Hall

For the final concert of their inaugural year, the Bach Vocal Artists will present a program entitled “The Marriage of Music and Poetry” patterned after a Rollins College class by the same name taught for many years by Dr. Sinclair.

Tickets from $25

88
BachFestivalFlorida.org | 407.646.2182

88 TH SEASON

Bach Vocal Artists: Haydn, Hummel, and Hensel

Thu, October 6, 2022 at 7:30 p.m.

Insights & Sounds: Sublime Schubert

Thu, October 27, 2022 at 7:30 p.m.

JIJI, guitar

Sun, October 30, 2022 at 3:00 p.m.

Verdi’s Requiem

Sun, November 6, 2022 at 3:00 p.m.

Chuck Seipp, trumpet and Randall Sheets, organ

Tue, November 8, 2022 at 7:30 p.m.

Christmas in the Park

Thu, December 1, 2022 at 6:15 p.m.

A Classic Christmas

Sat, December 10, 2022 at 1:00 p.m. and 4:00 p.m.

Sun, December 11, 2022 at 1:00 p.m. and 4:00 p.m.

A Voctave Christmas

Tue, December 20, 2022 at 7:30 p.m.

The King’s Singers

Fri, February 10, 2023 at 7:30 p.m.

Venus Ascending!

Sat, February 11, 2023 at 7:30 p.m.

Sun, February 12, 2023 at 3:00 p.m.

Concertos by Candlelight

Fri, February 17, 2023 at 7:30 p.m.

Sat, February 18, 2023 at 7:30 p.m.

Itamar Zorman, violin and Adam Golka, piano

Sun, February 19, 2023 at 3:00 p.m.

Lisa Terry, viola da gamba and Joanne Kong, harpsichord

Sat, February 25, 2023 at 3:00 p.m.

J.S. Bach’s St. Matthew Passion

Sun, February 26, 2023 at 3:00 p.m.

Paul Jacobs, organ

Fri, February 3, 2023 at 7:30 p.m.

Spiritual Spaces

Sat, February 4, 2023 at 3:00 p.m. and 5:00 p.m.

Bach Vocal Artists: Odes and a Hymn for St. Cecilia by Purcell, Handel, and Britten

Sun, February 5, 2023 at 3:00 p.m.

Insights & Sounds: Aspen Trio with John Harbison, lecturer

Thu, March 23, 2023 at 7:30 p.m.

Takács Quartet with Jeremy Denk, piano

Sat, March 25, 2023 at 7:30 p.m.

Insights & Sounds: The Spiritual

Thu, April 6, 2023 at 7:30 p.m.

Pursuit of Peace

Sat, April 29, 2023 at 7:30 p.m.

Sun, April 30, 2023 at 3:00 p.m.

Bach Vocal Artists: Marriage of Music and Poetry

Thu, May 18, 2023 at 7:30 p.m.

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88TH ANNUAL BACH FESTIVAL Follow Bach @BachFestivalWP online:
BachFestivalFlorida.org

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COMMITMENT TO INCLUSION

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page 46

TICKETS STILL AVAILABLE FOR UPCOMING PERFORMANCES

1min
page 46

UNITED ARTS DONORS

1min
page 42

FEATURED ARTISTS

2min
page 37

FEATURED ARTISTS

1min
page 37

FEATURED ARTISTS

1min
page 36

PROGRAM NOTES

1min
page 36

PROGRAM NOTES

5min
page 35

Bach Festival Society of Winter Park Presents

24min
pages 29-34

PROGRAM NOTES PROGRAM NOTES

5min
pages 27-28

PROGRAM NOTES ITAMAR ZORMAN, VIOLIN ADAM GOLKA, PIANO

2min
page 26

PROGRAM NOTES

4min
page 25

ITAMAR ZORMAN

4min
page 24

Bach Festival Society of Winter Park Presents

3min
page 23

FEATURED ARTISTS

2min
page 20

PROGRAM NOTES

1min
page 20

PROGRAM NOTES

4min
page 19

PROGRAM NOTES

2min
page 18

TEXT AND TRANSLATION

1min
page 18

PROGRAM NOTES

1min
pages 16-17

THE KING’S SINGERS

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page 16

THE KING’S SINGERS

1min
page 16

BACH VOCAL ARTISTS BACH VOCAL ARTISTS

3min
pages 14-15

BACH VOCAL ARTISTS BACH VOCAL ARTISTS

4min
page 13

BACH VOCAL ARTISTS BACH VOCAL ARTISTS

3min
page 12

BACH VOCAL ARTISTS BACH VOCAL ARTISTS

3min
page 11

BACH VOCAL ARTISTS

1min
page 10

BACH VOCAL ARTISTS

1min
page 10

Ode for St. Cecilia’s Day, HWV 76 G.F.

7min
pages 8-9

FEATURED ARTIST

0
pages 5-6

ANNUAL BACH FESTIVAL SPECIAL EVENTS

5min
pages 2-5
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