MFSM Program 2013 - Michigan Festival of Sacred Music
Transcription
MFSM Program 2013 - Michigan Festival of Sacred Music
Seventh Biennial Michigan Festival of Sacred Music music … celebrating many faiths November 7–17, 2013 Sounds of the Season Saturday, Dec. 21| 8pm Miller Auditorium The Kalamazoo Symphony Orchestra presents a festive concert of seasonal hits and sacred and popular favorites. A treat for the entire family during the most magical time of the year! Tickets 387-2300 | KalamazooSymphony.com Table of Contents Dedication to Dr. Wen Chao Chen . . . . . . . . . . 5 A Welcome from the Executive Director . . . . . 6 Please consider becoming a supporter of the Festival. All donations are tax-deductible. MFSM Organization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Festival Sponsors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Festival Donors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Special Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 The Michigan Festival of Sacred Music is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) corporation. Sound & Spirit of Kalamazoo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 P.O. Box 50566 Kalamazoo, MI 49005-0566 Sons of the Three Fires . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 (269) 382-2910 Scott Montgomery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Scott Montgomery masterclass . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 The Briner Lecture Cor Cantiamo and Daniel Knaggs . . . . . . . . . 19 www.mfsm.us Chatur with Rohan Krishnamurthy . . . . . . . . . 20 Find us on Facebook! Cor Cantiamo and Daniel Knaggs . . . . . . . . . . 22 Festival Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Joshua Nelson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 The Michigan Festival of Sacred Music follows an Equal Employment Opportunity Policy and employs personnel and provides programs and services without regard to gender (including pregnancy), gender identification, sexual orientation, race, color, ethnic or religious background, descent or nationality, disability (including past, present, or future physical, intellectual or psychiatric disability, learning disorders or disease), marital status, age, height and weight. This EEO policy applies to employment, internal promotions, training, opportunities for advancement, terminations, relationships with outside vendors and customers, use of contractors and consultants and in dealing with the general public. Joseph & Grace Byrd . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Konya Turkish Tasawwuf Music Ensemble with Whirling Dervishes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Samite . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Southwest Michigan Taizé Collective with guest artist Elden Kelly . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Golosá Choir . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 James Falzone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 Allos Musica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 Paul Winter Consort . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 7 t h B i e n n i a l • N ov e m b e r 7 – 1 7, 2 0 1 3 3 Fretwork SAT, NOV 9, 2013 · 8 PM Dalton Center Recital Hall, WMU with support from National Endowment for the Arts and Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs Meredith Arwady SAT, DEC 7, 2013 · 8 PM Dalton Center Recital Hall, WMU sponsored by Metro Toyota No matter what message you want to send, CTS can deliver it with quality high speed. $35 Zone 1, $25 Zone 2, $15 Students fontanachamberarts.org 269/382-7774 Get connected, stay connected with CTS. CTSTELECOM.COM Authentic cuisine of the Mediterranean and Middle East kalamazoo’s best hummous baba ghannouj & 25 entrées many vegetarian choices full bar open for lunch & dinner 7 days a week 1710 West Main Located in Tiffany’s Village plaza 382-4444 zooroonarestaurant.com D e d i c at i o n We dedicate this festival to the memory of Dr. Wen Chao Chen. Dr. Chen was a pillar of the Kalamazoo area for decades, and we at the Michigan Festival of Sacred Music (MFSM) are just a small segment of the population who benefited from his wealth of ideas and talent for bringing people together in common causes. The MFSM was his brainchild, and in true Chen fashion, once the idea gained momentum and he had brought together appropriate people to address the task, he stepped back and coached from the sidelines as the idea took form and came to life. He continued, informally, as a valued adviser to the festival until his death in August 2012. We at the MFSM strive to continue, in our small way, his legacy by connecting community constituents through our programs and collaborations. We truly miss him. Wen Chao Chen was born in Chen Village, Fenxi County, Shanxi Province, China, one of seven children. At the age of six he began working on his father’s 33-acre farm, attending small village schools, before an older brother helped him attend boarding school and an American Christian missionary center. After his studies were interrupted in 1937 by the Japanese invasion, he worked as a tax collector, medic, and newspaper proofreader, while taking college courses. By 1943, Chen was a lieutenant in the Chinese Army, and a translator for the US Army in China. Toward the end of WWII, he was sent to the U.S. for further training. After the war, he completed a bachelor’s degree in political science at Grinnell College, then a master’s degree in public administration and a doctorate in political science from St. Louis University. While teaching at Kalamazoo, he earned a master’s degree in library science from the University of Chicago. Chen became a U.S. citizen in 1983. Chen joined the faculty of Kalamazoo College in 1950 as professor of political science. During his 36 years with the College, he also served as librarian, director of academic services, dean of special services, vice president, acting president, and executive director of the L. Lee Stryker Center, and helped establish the Heyl Scholarship program. Chen received honorary degrees from Nazareth College, WMU, and Kalamazoo College and Kalamazoo College’s Weimer K. Hicks Award. He was named a Fellow of the College, Emeritus; and the Wen Chao Chen Chair in East Asian Social Sciences was endowed at Kalamazoo College. Throughout his career in Kalamazoo, Chen was active in civic, business, and cultural matters. He helped establish the Michigan Festival of Sacred Music, the Kalamazoo Network, the Kalamazoo Forum, and the Core Council of Governments. In 2000, he and wife Lilia, a gifted artist, created an art scholarship fund. 7 t h B i e n n i a l • N ov e m b e r 7 – 1 7, 2 0 1 3 5 W e l c o m e f r o m t h e f e s t i va l D i r e c t o r Welcome to the 7th Biennial Michigan Festival of Sacred Music … Our 12th year presenting events which bring our community together to celebrate our rich heritage of many faiths and explore new ideas. We are very excited about our line-up of programs, featuring artists from near and far, and our collaborations with partners old and new. We dedicate this festival to the memory of one of our very special founders, Dr. Wen Chao Chen, who was a master at bringing people together in common causes. Last year, we began asking “What’s Sacred to You?”, in an effort to develop new collaborative partners in human services and environmental awareness, which our audiences will encounter as volunteers at some of our programs. As with our musical programs themselves, we can only sample from a wealth of wonderful resources. The organizations participating in this “What’s Sacred to You?” connection are Mothers of Hope, Hispanic American Council, Kalamazoo Junior Girls Organization, Volunteer Kalamazoo, Open Doors, Loaves and Fishes, Peace House, Ministry with Community, Kalamazoo River Cleanup Coalition, Deacon’s Conference, Partners in Transition and Clean Water for the World. Please join us as we enjoy transformational music and celebrate the rich fabric of our community and beyond. Photo © Tom Hansen Elizabeth Start, Executive Director 6 Michigan Festival of Sacred Music M i c h i g a n F e s t i va l o f S ac r e d Mus i c • 2 0 1 3 B oa r d | council | s ta ff Executive Director Elizabeth Start 2013-2014 Board of Directors Shaghil Husain President Zahida Luqmani Vice President Betsy Meagher, CSJ Secretary Maureen Dobbie Treasurer John Hemmer Aubrey Matthews Sherie Veramay Mary Wills Shirley Wise Nadia Zafar Advisory Council Jeffrey Harkins Raymond Harvey Joy Light Betty Lee Ongley Nancy Owen Denise Posie David Reilly Alfrelynn Roberts Harvey Spivak Kathleen Tosco Finance Committee Shaghil Husain, Chair Maureen Dobbie John Emilio Sherie Veramay Nadia Zafar Elizabeth Start, ex officio Marketing & PR Committee Betsy Meagher, CSJ, Chair Shaghil Husain Zahida Luqmani Alfrelynn Roberts Mary Wills Shirley Wise Elizabeth Start, ex officio Kathy Jennings, ex officio Programming Committee Janet Hill, Chair John Hemmer Aubrey Matthews Betsy Meagher, CSJ Eric Strand Elizabeth Start, ex officio Staff Kathy Jennings Marketing Coordinator Michael Krischer Festival Assistant and Volunteer Coordinator The Michigan Festival of Sacred Music Offering events which represent diverse religious traditions, promoting mutual respect and understanding through sharing the music treasured by these traditions. We continue in our efforts to contribute to the sacred music repertoire by commissioning a new work from Daniel Knaggs. The MFSM welcomes inquiries from donors interested in commissioning works for future festivals. Volunteers Welcome If you enjoy inspirational music, like to meet new people and receive free admission to concerts when you volunteer, contact the MFSM office at (269) 382-2910 or by email at [email protected]. 7 t h B i e n n i a l • N ov e m b e r 7 – 1 7, 2 0 1 3 7 love where you live Kalamazoo Community Foundation 269.381.4416 www.KalFound.org 2013 Sponsors Arts Fund through Arts Council of Greater Kalamazoo Arts Midwest Performing Arts Fund Burdick-Thorne Foundation Dorothy U. Dalton Foundation Constantin & Ruth Butiu, John E. Fetzer Institute Funds, through Kalamazoo Community Foundation Irving S. Gilmore Foundation Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs National Endowment for the Arts Ravitz Foundation Jacob & Naomi Stucki Fund Harold & Grace Upjohn Foundation Corporate Matching Gifts Pfizer and IBM Platinum Business Sponsors Briner Lectureship Jewish Federation of Kalamazoo and Southwest Michigan Kalamazoo Nature Center Supporting Business Sponsors Borgess Health Congregation of Moses David J. McCarthy, First VP, Raymond James & Associates Zion Lutheran Church Associate Business Sponsors Orrin B. Hayes Gurdwara Singh Sabha Congregation of St. Joseph Event co-sponsors First Congregational Church First Presbyterian Church Kalamazoo Public Library Kalamazoo Russian Festival St. Augustine Sacred Music at the Cathedral Southwest Michigan Chapter, American Guild of Organists Turkish American Society of Michigan WMU Dept. of Music Therapy WMU Student Music Therapy Association Support for this program was provided by a grant from the Kalamazoo Community Foundation. This activity is supported in part by an award from the Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs and the National Endowment for the Arts. The Joshua Nelson concert is sponsored by The Jewish Federation of Kalamazoo and Southwest Michigan with support, in part, from the Ravitz Foundation. The presentation of Paul Winter Consort is supported by the Arts Midwest Touring Fund, a program of Arts Midwest that is funded by the National Endowment for the Arts, with contributions from Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs and General Mills Foundation. 7 t h B i e n n i a l • N ov e m b e r 7 – 1 7, 2 0 1 3 9 2013 in-kind Donors 2013 individual Donors current as of October 22, 2013 Congregation of Moses Discover Kalamazoo Maureen Dobbie Fisher Spiegel Kunkle & Gerber P.L.L.C. First Baptist Church First Congregational Church First Presbyterian Church Henderson Castle Holy Family Chapel, Nazareth Kalamazoo Nature Center Kalamazoo Public Library Carolyn Koebel Gurdwara Singh Sabha Muslim Community of Kalamazoo Russian Festival Saffron Restaurant Shawarma House Shawarma King on Westnedge Ave. St. Augustine Cathedral St. Luke’s Episcopal Church Clarice W. Start Elizabeth Start Turkish American Society of Michigan Turkish Ministry of Culture Mary and Doug Wills Shirley Wise and Frank Szopo Zion Lutheran Church Zooroona Restuarant 10 Festival Sponsor Lilia Chen, in memory of Dr. Wen Chao Chen Pete Koenig, in memory of Dr. Wen Chao Chen Timothy & Joy Light Clarice W. Start, in memory of Dr. Wen Chao Chen Elizabeth Start, in memory of Dr. Wen Chao Chen Jacob & Naomi Stucki Fund Doug & Mary Wills Benefactor John R. Light Elizabeth Upjohn Mason & Lowell B. Mason, Jr. Patron Bill & Martha Beverly Dennis & Janice Burke Arthur & Marilyn Feinberg Shaghil & Gulnar Husain Ejaz Iqbal & Mrs. Mariya Ejaz Thomas & Gail Kasdorf Aubrey & Yolanda Matthews Ann Paulson & William Pierce Barbara & Milt Rohwer, in memory of Dr. Wen Chao Chen Rabbi Harvey & Natalie Spivak Sherie Veramay Supporter Michelle H. Angel Carol & Bernard Baker Hari & Urmila Bhargava Maureen Dobbie Diane & Randall Eberts Dr. Anne Arbetter Fischell Charles M. Hall John Hemmer E. Kathy Jennings Barbro & Norman Jung Dr. & Mrs. Azzam Kanaan Roger Start Keyes & Elizabeth Ismay Coombs Carolyn Koebel Michael Krischer & Janet Heller Nadeem & Sidratul N. Mirza M i c h i g a n F e s t i va l o f S ac r e d Mus i c • 2 0 1 3 Tom Nehil & Gail Walter George M. Nielsen Catherine Niessink Carolyn Nycum John & Joyce Petro Sophia Quraishi & Ishrat Farooqui Phyllis Rappeport David & Janet Scarrow Robert & Carol Payne Smith LaVonne & Richard Stavig James vanWestrienen Bill & Carrie Venema Roger & Molly Williams Friend Anonymous Anonymous Anonymous Saadat Abbasi & Sattar Shaikh Aqeel Ahmed & Humaira Aqeel Ione Ambrose Amy Anderson Imtiaz, Shahnaz & Iqra Chaudhary Nauman Choudhry Ruth L. Collins Sherwood & Mary Cordier, in memory of Dr. James William Armstrong Clifford Davidson Carl Doubleday Karen & Stuart Eddy Peg Edmondson Kay Ensfield Gyula & Sarolta Ficsor George & Edna Fleming Gary Forsleff Joe & Louise Fugate, in memory of Dr. Wen Chao Chen Dorothy A. Giovannini Michele Gossman Mohammad & Shakila Hassan Tajammal A. & Nasreen A. Hayat James & Martha Hilboldt, in memory of Dr. Wen Chao Chen Janet & Kent Hill Sarah Husain Sajid Hussain & Farhana Sajid Isabel Jackson Judy K. Jolliffe Howard & Hildy Kerney Betty Kirch Patricia & Richard Kirschner Kenneth & Marlena Kirton Robert & Nancy Klesert Dr. Mushtaq & Mrs. Zahida Luqmani Chalmer & Alice Mastin Judy Maze Anne Mehring Marsha Meyer & Michael Dunn M.A. & Shahida A. Mohiuddin Rosalie & Joe Novara Don & Ann Parfet, in memory of Dr. Wen Chao Chen Ahsan Qureshi & Aisha Ahsan Rick & Lynn Russell Chris & Kathy Shook Robert Graham Small & Kathleen Tosco Michael R. Stoline Dr. & Mrs. Paul Wienir Shirley Wise & Frank Szopo Deanna Witkowski Mohammed Zafar Nadia Zafar & Muhammad A. Dar OUR MISSION is to engage in research, teaching and service to promote: Understanding of race and ethnic relations Appreciation of diverse peoples and cultures More equitable and inclusive communities and institutions Want to learn more? Contact us at: Phone: 269-387-2141 Fax: 269-387-2789 E-mail: [email protected] 7 t h B i e n n i a l • N ov e m b e r 7 – 1 7, 2 0 1 3 11 THEGILMORE.ORG Intriguing stories & beautiful images celebrating life in Southwest Michigan. Subscribe today at www.encorekalamazoo.com We are Southwest Michigan’s Magazine. Special Events Include these special Festival events on your calendar! Middle Eastern Dinner with a Turkish Flair Special appearance by members of the Konya Turkish Tasawwuf Music Ensemble Zooroona, 1710 West Main St., Kalamazoo Sunday, November 10, 2013 5:00 pm Appetizers and Cash Bar 5:30 pm Dinner, Dessert and Music $50 plus tax and gratuity Proceeds benefit MFSM & the Turkish American Society of Michigan Seating is limited Reservations: by phone: 269-382-2910 or 269-207-3909 by email: [email protected] or [email protected] Sunday, December 1, 2013, 4 pm First Congregational Church, 129 S. Park St. Annual Messiah Sing The 18th Annual “Messiah” Sing will be held in the historic First Congregational Church sanctuary, downtown Kalamazoo, in collaboration with the Michigan Festival of Sacred Music. A Kalamazoo community tradition since 1995, the Sing features a Chamber Orchestra made up of musicians from the Kalamazoo Symphony Orchestra and the Aspire Quartet as soloists. Conducting this year will be Michael Palmer, First Congregational Church Interim Music Director. Portions of the “Messiah” as Handel composed them will be sung by those who wish to participate. Please bring a “Messiah” score with you, or copies will be available to borrow at the door. For those who wish to listen only, you are welcome and encouraged to join us! Admission is free; however, a free-will offering will be accepted. 7 t h B i e n n i a l • N ov e m b e r 7 – 1 7, 2 0 1 3 13 F estival Sc he dule Thursday, November 7, 2013, 7 pm First Baptist Church of Kalamazoo, 315 W. Michigan Free; donation suggested Sound & Spirit of Kalamazoo A sampling of sacred music from the Kalamazoo area Performers include: Bell Book and Canto is a women’s vocal group from Kalamazoo, MI that specializes in what they call “Pagan Sacred Choral” music. Their members come from a variety of spiritual backgrounds ranging from Asatru to Unitarian, Wiccan to Christian, and a few points in between. They are thrilled to be a part of this year’s festival, and to have a chance to celebrate their faith through song! Borgess Resounding Spirit Choir, Jeffrey Spenner, Music Director: Comprised entirely of Borgess associates and volunteers, the Resounding Spirit Choir believes that music enables people to be well, get well and live well. They believe their job is to celebrate the gift of music — and give this gift to those they care for and care about. Carmen Chamochumbi, a native of Peru, is a retired Kalamazoo Public School teacher’s aide and is a well known local teacher of Hispanic dance. She has lived in the USA for a long period of time, and welcomes inquiries into the culture, dance, and foods of Peru. Robert Jordan, organ: Originally from southern Indiana, Robert Jordan completed his BME in Music Education and Trumpet at the Robert Jordan Bell Book and Canto left to right Lisa Tyson (1st Sop), Jennifer Jones (Director, 1st Alto), Christen Kat Baxter (2nd Sop), Susan Fisher (2nd Alto) , and Martha Bay (2nd Alto) Carmen Chamochumbi 14 M i c h i g a n F e s t i va l o f S ac r e d Mus i c • 2 0 1 3 Jacobs School of Music, Indiana University-Bloomington in 1998. After teaching instrumental music in the Coldwater Community Schools, Robert moved to Kalamazoo, Mich., attended Western Michigan University and completed a MM in Organ Performance with Dr. Karl Schrock in 2008. He is now the Music Director at First Baptist Church of Kalamazoo and teaches choral and instrumental music in Portage Public Schools. Michigan Hiryu Daiko/Flying Dragon Drummers under the direction of Sensei Esther Vandecar: The mission of Michigan Hiryu Daiko (Flying Dragon Drummers) is to educate and entertain children and adults in Michigan by introducing them to the 2000 year old authentic art of Taiko, from Japan. Performances are dynamic and exciting, with great audience appeal. Director Esther Vandecar learned this tradition in Japan for 7+ years. She studied, performed, and taught taiko there. She studied with KODO and Oguchi, Daihachi, (father of modern taiko) among many. She brings back many traditional pieces, 1000 years old to modern. Esther teaches all over the USA. Sikh musicians Rajwinder Kaur (baja and vocalist) and Gaggan Singh (tabla) perform a Sikh traditional song of praise in Gurbani (words) from the Siri Guru Granth Sahib in classical raga and tala. Persian tombak player/singer Reza Sedaghat Shirazinejad, a performer and teacher in his native Iran, is presently in his second semester studying civil engineering at WMU. Taizé duo comprised of Carolyn Koebel and Elizabeth Patterson. Reza Sedaghat Shirazinejad Rajwinder Kaur (baja and vocalist) and Gaggan Singh (tabla) Flying Dragons,back left to right: Kaitlin Koto, King Chang, Gerren Young, Carolyn Koebel, Heather Bergseth, Miza Timmer. Front center: Sensei Esther Vandecar 7 t h B i e n n i a l • N ov e m b e r 7 – 1 7, 2 0 1 3 15 F estival Sc he dule Friday, November 8, 2013, 7 pm St. Augustine Cathedral, 542 W. Michigan Ave. Free, $10 suggested donation Scott Montgomery Presented in collaboration with St. Augustine’s Sacred Music at the Cathedral series Scott Montgomery is Director of Music Ministries and Organist for Holy Cross Roman Catholic Church in Champaign, Illinois. Scott received his undergraduate and graduate degrees from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, in organ performance, studying with Dr Dana Robinson. Scott has been a prize winner in several competitions including firstprize in the American Guild of Organists’ Region V Competition in Evansville, Indiana (1997), second-prize in the Arthur Poister National Organ Competition in Syracuse, New York (2002), and was also the first recipient of the M. Louise Miller Scholarship (2002) sponsored by the Greater Bridgeport Chapter of the American Guild of Organists. In 2006 he was winner of both the Lilian Murtagh Memorial Award (first-prize) and the Audience Prize of the American Guild of Organists’ National Young Artist Competition in Organ Playing (NYACOP), the first person to win both prizes in the history of the competition. Scott has given numerous concerts and master classes around the country including performances at the 1998 National AGO 16 M i c h i g a n F e s t i va l o f S ac r e d Mus i c • 2 0 1 3 Convention in Denver, the 2006 National Convention in Chicago, and two performances at the 2008 National Convention in St Paul-Minneapolis. Scott has also been a featured performer and presenter at the Tallahassee Church Music Conference in Tallahassee, Florida; the National Pastoral Musician Conference in Indianapolis, Indiana; and for the 2009 Pipe Organ Encounter (POE) in Wheaton, Illinois. His performances have been broadcast on American Public Media’s series, Pipedreams. His debut recording, Water and Light, was released in 2008 by the Pro Organo label. His second CD, Inspirations From England, was released in 2009 by the Regent Record label. Most recently, Scott has released his third CD, Organo Plano: Music for a Joyous Occasion on the Raven label. www.scottmontgomerymusic.net Friday night’s program includes works by Johann Sebastian Bach, Seth Bingham, Herbert Brewer, Dudley Buck, César Franck, Alexandre Guilmant, John Knowles Paine, and Camille Saint-Saëns. Saturday November 9, 2013 10 am St. Augustine Cathedral 542 W. Michigan Ave. Free Masterclass Scott Montgomery with Performers will include: David Heinze: Buxtehude D Minor, BuxWV 140 Lucky Middaugh: Raymond Haan — Organ Hymn Alexis Young: Dieterich Buxtehude — Praeludium in C BuxWV 137 (“Prelude, Fugue, and Chaconne”) “Here is an artist of great promise — technically assured and well able to interpret very different styles of music.” — The Organ, 2008 7 th B i enn i al • N ov e m b e r 7 – 1 7, 2 0 1 3 17 Saturday, November 9, 2013, 2 pm and 3:30 pm Kalamazoo Public Library, 315 S. Rose St. Free Sons of the Three Fires Native American Music and Dance, sponsored in part by the Kalamazoo Public Library Sons of the Three Fires present Native American Pow-Wow music and dance representing sacred and social traditions of the Three Fires Tribes, known as the Bode’wadmi, Ojibwe and Odawa (Potawatomi, Ottawa and Chippewa). Their program includes informative commentary and dancers in regalia. Left to right: Junsun Bush, John Bush, Terry Chivis, Kyle Freund, Eric Angell PROGRAM Grand Entry, Welcome Song Sons of the Three Fires Invocation John Bush, elder, Match-e-Be-Nash-She-Wish Band of Pottawatomi Introductions Sons of the Three Fires and our women back-up singers Veterans Song This is an Honor Song for all those who have served our country. All veterans are welcome to come into the dance area. Please stand to show respect. Inter-Tribal Dances Inter-Tribal dances, sometimes called Friendship Dances, offer everyone the opportunity to participate. Anyone can join this dance that brings the community together. Specialty Dances Round Dance, Crow Hop, Two-Step, Buffalo Dance Traditional Dance Traditional male and female dancers preserve the oldest style of Native American dancing. Old-style Girl’s Traditional Dance Onyleen Zapata Hoop Dance Mary Bush: With her many hoops she will dance to the beat of the drum and form various shapes such as an eagle, thunderbird, butterfly, turtle and shawl. Jingle Dress Dance Based on a young Ojibwe woman’s dream, the jingle dress is a special dress covered in 365 cones made from rolled snuff can lids. There is one cone for each day of the year. These cones are special and filled with prayers that are sent to the Creator as the woman dances. Closing Songs AIM Song (2:00) Traveling Song (3:30) 18 M i c h i g a n F e s t i va l o f S ac r e d Mus i c • 2 0 1 3 Saturday, November 9, 2013, 4 pm First Presbyterian Church, 321 W. South St. Free The 20th Anniversary Briner Lecture Cor Cantiamo and Daniel Knaggs A workshop with the chamber choir and composer. Knagg’s piece, Hear My Voice, commissioned by the Michigan Festival of Sacred Music and the Briner Lectureship, will have its premiere performance on November 10 (see page 22 for biographical information about Cor Cantiamo, Eric Johnson and Daniel Kraggs.). Co-sponsored by the Briner Lectureship of First Presbyterian Church Eric A. Johnson, Artistic Director, Cor Contiamo Daniel J. Kraggs, Composer Hear My Voice (2013) by Daniel J. Knaggs Commissioned by Michigan Festival of Sacred Music and the Briner Lectureship of First Presbyterian Church of Kalamazoo for Eric A. Johnson and Cor Cantiamo, Hear My Voice is a cry for an end to hatred and violence — a prayer for peace. The text consists of five “invocations” which come from words delivered by John Paul II at the Hiroshima Peace Memorial (Japan) on Feb 25, 1981. Each invocation is preceded and followed by relevant passages from the Psalms, drawn from the Latin Vulgate Bible: a translation stemming back from late 4th century. 7 t h B i e n n i a l • N ov e m b e r 7 – 1 7, 2 0 1 3 19 F estival Sc he dule Saturday, November 9, 2013, 8 pm First Baptist Church of Kalamazoo, 315 W. Michigan $ Chatur: Sacred Indian Music and Dance Quartet with Rohan Krishnamurthy Meaning “four” in Sanskrit, Chatur is a novel music and dance quartet drawing from the ancient and sacred classical traditions of India. The ensemble blends pitched drums from South and North India — the mridangam and tabla, respectively — with the bamboo flute and bharatanatyam dance. Chatur showcases the breadth of the traditional music and dance repertoire, along with new works representing contemporary streams in the Indian arts. Each piece will be described from stage. Acclaimed an “international performer and promoter” of the South Indian pitched drum, the mridangam, by USA Today, and “Pride of India” by India’s leading newspaper, The Times of India, Dr. Rohan Krishnamurthy, a Kalamazoo-native, is considered a young musical ambassador. Having received advanced mridangam training with maestro Guruvayur Dorai in India, Rohan has performed in hundreds of concerts around the world since the age of nine. He has spearheaded new cross-musical collaborations with eminent symphony orchestras, jazz ensembles, dancers, and Grammy Award-winning musicians. Rohan has presented Indian percussion institutes and camps, workshops, and lectures at esteemed institutions, and is the recipient of international awards. An innovator, Rohan designed a new drumhead tensioning system and obtained a patent. Rohan’s multifaceted accomplishments as a performer, composer, educator, researcher, and entrepreneur earned him a one-on-one meeting and performance for the President of India, Dr. Abdul Kalam, at the presidential office and estate in New Delhi. Rohan obtained bachelor’s degrees in music and chemistry from Kalamazoo College as a Heyl Foundation Scholar, and Master’s degrees in musicology and ethnomusicology from the Eastman School of Music. He completed a Ph.D. in musicology at Eastman as a Provost Fellow. www.rohanrhythm.com 20 M i c h i g a n F e s t i va l o f S ac r e d Mus i c • 2 0 1 3 Samir Chatterjee is a virtuoso tabla player, and travels worldwide, performing in numerous festivals as a soloist or with other musicians from both Indian and Western traditions. He performed at the Nobel Peace Prize Ceremony in Oslo, Norway in December, 2007. In the fall of 2009 he performed twice at the UN General Assembly. Samir is the Founder-Director of Chhandayan, an organization promoting and preserving Indian music and culture. He teaches at Yale University, University of Pittsburgh, Manhattan School of Music and New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music. He has authored two significant books on Indian music: A Study of Tabla and Music of India. Since June 2008 Samir has been doing pioneering work in Afghanistan toward their musical revival. www.tabla.org/samir.html V.K. Raman is one of the leading flautists in the Carnatic style. He was awarded Best Flautist from the Madras Music Academy for his concert in December 2009. As a performer, producer, and educator, he has performed in all genres of music. Raman has been very successful as a composer, and has released more than 60 CDs which include several best-sellers on various labels worldwide. His latest CD, Music for Deep Meditation, produced by Inner Splendor Media, reached #1 on Apple iTunes for world music. www.ramankalyan.com Malini Srinivasan is a third-generation Bharatanatyam choreographer, dancer and teacher. A critically acclaimed soloist, Malini also performs with her company, Malini Srinivasan and Dancers, and with groups including Ragamala, Rajika Puri and Dancers, and Thresh. Malini has performed at prestigious venues worldwide including The Music Academy (Chennai), The New Victory Theater (NYC), Joyce SoHo (NYC) and the Schaubühne am Lehniner Platz (Germany). She was awarded the NYC Fringe Award for Overall Excellence in Choreography (2012), the Dance in Queens Residency (2009) the LaGuardia Performing Arts Center Residency (2010), and the Queens Council on the Arts Individual Artist Grant (2010 & 2012). Based in Queens, NY, Malini is a lecturer at the Asian & Asian-American Studies Department at SUNY Stony Brook and is on the dance faculty of the Young Indian Culture Group and Anamika. www.malinisrinivasan.com 7 t h B i e n n i a l • N ov e m b e r 7 – 1 7, 2 0 1 3 21 F estival Sc he dule Sunday, November 10, 2013, 3 pm First Presbyterian Church, 321 W. South St. $ Cor Cantiamo premieres new work by Daniel Knaggs Commissioned by Michigan Festival of Sacred Music and the Briner Lectureship Cor Cantiamo is a touring chamber choir in residence at Northern Illinois University, founded with the mission to perform and promote contemporary choral music and foster new composers for the art form. Since their founding in the spring of 2009, the choir has emerged as an energetic and accomplished vocal ensemble, receiving accolades for their performances. In their inaugural year, Cor Cantiamo performed with Morten Lauridsen, who praised the ensemble for presenting “choral artistry at its finest.” In spring 2014 Centaur Records will release Cor Cantiamo’s first commercial recording, a CD of choral music by Finnish composer Jaakko Mäntyjärvi. Maestro Mäntyjärvi participated in all of the recording sessions 22 M i c h i g a n F e s t i va l o f S ac r e d Mus i c • 2 0 1 3 and commended Cor Cantiamo as representing “professional excellence in choral music, examples of which are few and far between.” Cor Cantiamo will be performing at the American Choral Directors Association Division Convention 2014 in Cincinnati, Ohio. In partnership with Soli Deo Gloria, Inc., Cor Cantiamo will present two premieres in 2014, the US premiere of a new Psalm setting by Ukrainian-born composer Galina Grigorjev, and the world premiere of a new work by Swiss composer Richard Dubugnon. Over the next three years, Cor Cantiamo has also been contracted to record all fifteen of the SDG Psalms Project choral works. www.corcantiamo.org (continued on page 26) Cor Cantiamo: The Singers Soprano JoEllyn Caulfield Kim Duncan Sarah Fallon Carrie M. Filetti Chelsey Kloster Jenilyn Roether Erin Truesdell Alto Amy Allen Julie Dee Adrianne GallaugherBeetstra Kirsten LaPrade Janna Mudlin Toria BurrellHrencecin Tenor Mark Baglione Peter Barsch Daniel Beetstra Robert Campbell Niall Casserly Zach Weiss John Paul Rakes Bass Brian Balika Ryan Ferguson Tom Foust Nicholas Kalina Anthony Quaranta Bobby Truong 7 t h B i e n n i a l • N ov e m b e r 7 – 1 7, 2 0 1 3 23 Fest i val S c he dul e Thursday, Nov. 7† 7 pm Sound & Spirit of Kalamazoo Friday, Nov. 8† 7 pm Scott Montgomery Saturday, Nov. 9 10 am Scott Montgomery Masterclass Saturday, Nov. 9 2 pm & 3:30 pm Saturday, Nov. 9 4 pm Briner Lecture: Cor Cantiamo and Da Saturday, Nov. 9* 8 pm Chatur with Rohan Krishnamurthy Sunday, Nov. 10* 3 pm Cor Cantiamo and Daniel Knaggs Sunday, Nov. 10* 7 pm Joshua Nelson Monday, Nov. 11 7 pm Joseph & Grace Byrd Tuesday, Nov. 12† 7 pm Konya Turkish Tasawwuf Music Ensem Wednesday, Nov. 13 7 pm Samite Thursday, Nov. 14† 7 pm SW Michigan Taizé Collective with Eld Friday, Nov. 15* 8 pm Golosá Choir Saturday, Nov. 16† 3 pm James FalzoneH Saturday, Nov. 16* 8 pmAllos MusicaH Sunday, Nov. 17* 3 pm Sons of the Three Fires Paul Winter Consort * Indicates a ticketed event. † Free, donation suggested. All other events a 24 M i c h i g a n F e s t i va l o f S ac r e d Mus i c • 2 0 1 3 aniel Knaggs First Baptist Church of Kalamazoo, 315 W. Michigan Ave. St. Augustine Cathedral, 542 W. Michigan Ave. St. Augustine Cathedral, 542 W. Michigan Ave. Kalamazoo Public Library, 315 S. Rose St. First Presbyterian Church, 321 W. South St. First Baptist Church of Kalamazoo, 315 W. Michigan Ave. First Presbyterian Church, 321 W. South St. Congregation of Moses, 2501 Stadium Dr. Zion Lutheran Church, 2122 Bronson Blvd. mbleHoly Family Chapel, Nazareth, 3427 Gull Rd. den Kelly Kalamazoo Public Library, 315 S. Rose St. Kalamazoo Nature Center, 7000 N. Westnedge Ave. St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, 247 W. Lovell St. Holy Family Chapel, Nazareth, 3427 Gull Rd. Holy Family Chapel, Nazareth, 3427 Gull Rd. Chenery Auditorum, 714 S. Westnedge Ave. are free. Schedule and venues subject to change. 7 t h B i e n n i a l • N ov e m b e r 7 – 1 7, 2 0 1 3 25 F estival Sc he dule • Co r C a n t i a m o / Danie l K naggs Eric A. Johnson D.M.A. is the Founding Artistic Director of Cor Cantiamo (www.corcantiamo.org) and Director of Choral Activities at Northern Illinois University. Ensembles under his direction have performed at national, division and state ACDA, MENC and NCCO conventions, Avery Fisher Hall Lincoln Center, toured internationally, and appeared with many professional orchestras. Internationally, Johnson has served as a guest conductor of the Clare College Chapel Choir, Cambridge, England, taught at Makumira University, Tanzania, and directed guest choral residencies at Canterbury and Worcester Cathedrals. Dr. Johnson has published music with Santa Barbara Music Publishing, served as a music editor for Earthsongs Publications, and has published articles in the Choral Journal. He is active nationally as a clinician and conductor and is a Past-President of Illinois-ACDA. Dr. Johnson has collaborated with many leading composers of our time including Morten Lauridsen and Libby Larsen and commissioned new works from Sir John Tavener, Jaakko Mäntyjärvi, and Stacey Gibbs. He currently is collaborating with Soli Deo Gloria, Inc. (SDG) to perform and record newly commissioned works created through the Psalms Project (SDGmusic.org/Psalms), which is made possible by a grant from the Lilly Endowment Inc. The scope of the SDG Psalms Project, during the initial three-year pilot, is to create a collection of fifteen contemporary choral works in the Western art-music tradition, written by the world’s foremost composers engaging with the text of the Hebrew Psalter. MFSM thanks our volunteer hosts for their hospitality in housing Cor Cantiamo. 26 M i c h i g a n F e s t i va l o f S ac r e d Mus i c • 2 0 1 3 Daniel J. Knaggs, native of southeast Michigan, is a concert composer working in a wide range of media and styles. He has lived in France, Mexico, and Nicaragua and many aspects of these diverse cultures and languages find their way into his music. Daniel’s music is heard in concert halls, churches, and radio broadcasts in both Europe and the Americas. His compositions have secured performances throughout the USA, Mexico, Poland, Italy, Lithuania, and the UK. Performers of his music include Trinity College Choir (UK), Polski Chór Kameralny (Poland), Jauna Muzika (Lithuania), Coenobium Vocale (Italy), Mexico City Philharmonic Orchestra (México), Xanthos Ensemble, Great Noise Ensemble, Third Millenium Ensemble, Young New Yorkers’ Chorus, Indianapolis Symphonic Choir, Boston Metro Opera, and the Basilica Choir of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception (USA). Daniel completed his master’s degree in music composition at Bowling Green State University in 2009 and graduated in 2007 from the University of Michigan with bachelor’s degrees in voice performance and Spanish. His composition teachers include Bright Sheng, Marilyn Shrude, Karim Al-Zand, and Pierre Jalbert. Daniel was a full-time high school Spanish teacher for three years (20092012) and is now pursuing a doctorate in music composition at Rice University Shepherd School of Music. www.danieljknaggs.com Sunday’s 3 pm program also includes works by William Appeling, Eriks Esenvalds, Pietro Ferrario, Moses Hogan, Craig Hella Johnson, Ily Matthew Maniano, Jaakko Mäntyjärvi, Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina, Heinrich Schütz, and Jan Pieerszoon Sweelink. Sunday, Nov 10, 10:30 am Thomas Kasdorf and the First Presbyterian Church choir will perform the premiere of Knaggs’s “I am the Good Shepherd” for choir and oboe at worship service, as part of the 20th anniversary celebration of the Briner Lectureship. 7 t h B i e n n i a l • N ov e m b e r 7 – 1 7, 2 0 1 3 27 F estival Sc he dule Sunday, November 10, 2013, 7 pm Congregation of Moses, 2501 Stadium Dr. $ Joshua Nelson The Prince of Kosher Gospel Recently named one of Time magazine’s Top 10 Jewish Music stars, Joshua Nelson is the Prince of Kosher Gospel. Kosher gospel is the marriage of Jewish religious lyrics and meanings with the soulful sounds of American gospel music. While the word “gospel,” a Greek word meaning good news, is usually associated with African-American Christian churches, 28 M i c h i g a n F e s t i va l o f S ac r e d Mus i c • 2 0 1 3 the musical styling is African, sounds that came from several African tribes, and developed as a tool to escape social injustice. This was the Spiritual, the Meter Hymns, Jubilee songs and ultimately, the coined “Gospel Music.” These African rhythms pre-date the West Africans’ introduction to Christianity. These same sounds have been retained in the musical cultures of Black African Muslims and Jews, and such soul-inflected vocalizations filled the Black Hebrew synagogue Joshua Nelson attended as a child with his family, observant Jews who traced their lineage back to Senegal. When he was eight, Joshua Nelson discovered an album by Mahalia Jackson, the Queen of Gospel, in his grandparents’ record collection, and he fell in love with her singing. During his teens and early twenties, he became widely celebrated as a gospel singer continuing the Jackson legacy. Born and raised Jewish, he continued studies of Judaism, including two years on a college and kibbutz program in Israel, and clarified his understanding that throughout history, Jews had always integrated Jewish law and religious practices with the cultural context in which they lived; for example, as Nelson points out, any ethnic style of cuisine can be Jewish if it is kosher. Upon his return from Israel, Nelson began to apply this understanding to music, beginning what has been called “a revolution in Jewish music” by combining Jewish liturgical lyrics with one of America’s best-known indigenous musical forms; thus kosher gospel music was born. For Joshua Nelson, kosher gospel is a way to claim both parts of his identity as a Black Jew. For his audiences, whatever their faith or heritage, kosher gospel has been a revelation. Now in his early thirties, Nelson has performed around the world, for Presidents, congregations, major music festivals — and for Oprah, who named him a “Next Big Thing.” He has produced a stellar album, Mi Chamocha, sung with stars from Aretha Franklin to the Klezmatics, and served as the subject of the acclaimed documentary film Keep on Walking. Nelson also passes on this musical gift as an artist in residence at Jewish congregations across the country, including at his home synagogue of Temple Sharey Tefilo-Israel, a Reform congregation in South Orange, New Jersey where he taught Hebrew School for 15 years. Whatever the venue, Joshua Nelson, the Prince of Kosher Gospel, brings people — and cultures — together in joyous song. www.joshuanelson.com The Joshua Nelson concert is sponsored by The Jewish Federation of Kalamazoo and Southwest Michigan with support, in part, from the Ravitz Foundation. 7 t h B i e n n i a l • N ov e m b e r 7 – 1 7, 2 0 1 3 29 F estival Sc he dule Monday, November 11, 2013, 7 pm Zion Lutheran Church, 2122 Bronson Blvd. Free Joseph & Grace Byrd Guided Meditations: From Words to Wordlessness Co-sponsored by Zion Lutheran Church A journey through music of Vaughan Williams, John Beall, and Arvo Pärt all framed by the words of poet and visionary William Blake and by Appalachian folk hymnody as we sit with questions about innocence, experience, awareness, and acceptance. Joseph and Grace Byrd are your guides through this mystical terrain including images from Blake’s oeuvre, stories from their work with Shakespeare Behind Bars, and meditative exercises on the structure and substance of the music of these three master composers. Grace Byrd is Violist-in-Residence with the Kalamazoo Symphony and the Burdick-Thorne string quartet. She received Bachelors and Masters degrees from the Eastman School of Music and was a kontaktstudentin of Kim Kashkashian at the Hochschule ‘Hanns Eisler’ in Berlin, Germany. As a member of the Rogue Valley Chamber Players, she 30 M i c h i g a n F e s t i va l o f S ac r e d Mus i c • 2 0 1 3 visited over 10,000 students in Southern Oregon through the Rogue Valley Symphony’s ‘Meet the Composer’ education series, has played with the Rochester Philharmonic, the Grand Rapids Symphony, the Heidelberg Schlossfestspiele Orchestra, the Ohio Light Opera, and has appeared as a guest artist with Fontana Chamber Arts. Joseph Byrd’s love of the interior process, and of how the arts and social justice collide, has happily led him toward working as a Facilitator with Shakespeare Behind Bars, as well as the Animator of The School for Contemplatives in Action in Holland, Mich., partnering with those interested in learning, and living, the riches of the inner life. His music is published by earthsongs and he holds Masters degrees from the Eastman School of Music, as well as the Performer’s Certificate in Voice and a Doctor of Ministry in Spiritual Direction from the Graduate Theological Foundation. Since 1998 he’s served as Minister of Music and Spiritual Life at Zion Lutheran Church in Holland, Mich. and he is chaplain for the Order of Lutheran Franciscans, a religious community of vowed Lutheran brothers and sisters committed to living in the simple ways of Francis of Assisi. www.theschoolforcontemplativesinaction.org From Words to Wordlessness…. Ten Blake Songs R. Vaughan Williams (1872-1958) Infant Joy A Poison Tree The Piper London The Lamb The Shepherd Ah! Sun-flower Cruelty has a Human Heart The Divine Image Eternity Wondrous Love: Variations for Viola & Piano John Beall (b. 1942) Andante espressivo Lightly, same tempo Fast and driving Vigorously Suddenly slower Vigorously Somewhat faster Slower, rhapsodically Cadenza-like, somewhat faster Moderately fast Spiegel im Spiegel, für viola und klavier (1978) Arvo Pärt (b. 1935) 7 t h B i e n n i a l • N ov e m b e r 7 – 1 7, 2 0 1 3 31 F estival Sc he dule Tuesday, November 12, 2013, 7 pm Holy Family Chapel, Nazareth, 3427 Gull Rd. Free; donation suggested Konya Turkish Tasawwuf Music Ensemble with Whirling Dervishes Co-sponsored by the Turkish American Society of Michigan The dervishes perform a ritual dance, called Sema, that is among the most exquisite ceremonies of spirituality. For the whirling dervishes this is an act of love and a drama of faith. The Sema is a precise choreography, a meditation in motion in which the dervishes are accompanied by beautiful, authentic Sufi music. The Vocalists music contains some of the Ömer Faruk Belviranlı most core elements of Eastern Ufuk Yürüç classical music and serves as Kudüm Player an accompaniment for Rumi’s Ümit Atalay poetry. The evening ends with Tanbur Player Turkish coffee. Ahmet Yavuzhan Erdem Ney Player Hüseyin Kutsi Sezgin Kanun Player Atilla Akıntürk Whirling dervishes Ahmet Tekelioglu Sıtkı Çokünlü Res, at Varol 32 M i c h i g a n F e s t i va l o f S ac r e d Mus i c • 2 0 1 3 7 t h B i e n n i a l • N ov e m b e r 7 – 1 7, 2 0 1 3 33 F estival Sc he dule Wednesday, November 13, 2013, 7 pm Kalamazoo Public Library, 315 S. Rose St. Free Samite Co-sponsored by the Kalamazoo Public Library The world-renowned musician and music therapist Samite was born and raised in Uganda, where his grandfather taught him to play the traditional flute. When he was twelve, a music teacher placed a western flute in his hands, setting him on his way to becoming one of East Africa’s most acclaimed flutists. He performed frequently to enthusiastic audiences throughout Uganda until 1982, when he was forced to flee to Kenya as a political refugee. Samite immigrated to the United States in 1987, and now he and his wife Sandra make their home in Ithaca, New York. Today, his smooth vocals accompanied by the kalimba, marimba, litungu, and various flutes, mesmerize audiences throughout the world. www.almaartistbooking.com/samite/ Samite will also visit the Music Therapy Department at Western Michigan University during his time in Kalamazoo. 34 M i c h i g a n F e s t i va l o f S ac r e d Mus i c • 2 0 1 3 7 t h B i e n n i a l • N ov e m b e r 7 – 1 7, 2 0 1 3 35 F estival Sc he dule Thursday, November 14, 2013, 7 pm Instrument Petting Zoo, 6:30 pm Kalamazoo Nature Center, 7000 N. Westnedge Ave. Free; donation suggested Southwest Michigan Taizé Collective with guest artist Elden Kelly The ensemble consists of core members Carolyn Koebel, Rainbow Weldon, and Heather & Janice Marsh-Prelesnik. They will be joined in this program by vocalist Beth Patterson, bassist Jon Moody, and multi-string virtuoso Elden Kelly. The ensemble will invite young listeners to a pre-show preview of instruments and sounds at 6:30. This time will be an opportunity for new listeners to experience the kinesthetic vibrations of the gongs and singing bowls that will be woven into the Taizé experience. The program will include music, songs, chants, and meditations from a host of the world’s most beloved spiritual traditions, with an underlying theme of the natural world. The Southwest Michigan Taizé Collective came together nearly three years ago out of a shared interest in multi-cultural, interfaith ministry. Group members’ backgrounds and interests include Judeo-Christianity, Sufism, Paganism, Shamanism, Baha’i teachings, Native wisdom, and the New Thought movement. This program also acknowledges music from Islamic traditions, Bhakti Yoga, Tibetan Buddhism and indigenous peoples. Group members combine broad interests in traditional musics of the world, as well as a broad palette of instruments, sounds and timbres reflective of diverse cultural traditions. Further, group members’ backgrounds in music therapy, sound healing, and the expressive arts merge to create an interactive sensory experience for audiences of all ages. “Taizé is an ecumenical sung and silent participatory prayer service designed to achieve a contemplative state through music, song and silence.” 36 M i c h i g a n F e s t i va l o f S ac r e d Mus i c • 2 0 1 3 Guest artist Elden Kelly holds degrees of distinction from the New England Conservatory in jazz studies and contemporary improvisation, and a graduate degree in ethno-musicology from Michigan State University. His specific interests include classical Indian music and Turkish music, bringing the diverse voices of the glissentar and Turkish banjo to the Taizé experience. He previously appeared at the MFSM presenting a program of original settings of Baha’i prayers in song. www.eldenkelly.com The Taizé Community is an ecumenical monastic order in Taizé, Saône-et-Loire, Burgundy, France. It is composed of more than one hundred brothers, from Protestant and Catholic traditions, who originate from about thirty countries across the world. The tradition was founded in the 1940’s by Brother Roger in Taizé, France. Short chants, repeated again and again, give it a meditative character. Using just a few words, the chants express a basic reality of faith, quickly grasped by the mind. As the words are sung over many times, this reality gradually penetrates the whole being. The purpose of the prayer is to foster reconciliation and peace among all people. Left to right: Heather Marsh-Prelesnik, Rainbow Weldon, Carolyn Koebel, Janice Marsh-Prelesnik, Jon Moody. 7 t h B i e n n i a l • N ov e m b e r 7 – 1 7, 2 0 1 3 37 2013/14 Artist Series November 10 - Bronze Medalist Laura Park-Kalamazoo Junior Symphony Chenery Auditorium - 4pm January 5 - Gold Medalist Youjin Lee-Kalamazoo Symphony Orchestra Dalton Center Recital Hall - 3 pm March 7 - Master Class Students Art Hop, Epic Center, Downtown Kalamazoo May 17- Stulberg Competition Dalton Center Recital Hall, WMU May 16&18 - Stulberg Master Classes Dalton Center, WMU [email protected] www.stulberg.org or 269/343-2776 Many of the seeds that grew into the Michigan Festival of Sacred Music were first sown at First Baptist Church. Come see what else is growing at First Baptist...introducing our new pastor, Rev. Dr. George A. Huffsmith Sunday worship 10:30 am First Baptist Church of Kalamazoo 315 W. Michigan Ave., Kalamazoo 49007 (269) 345-2195 www.fbckazoo.org, email [email protected] Friday, November 15, 2013, 8 pm St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, 247 W. Lovell St. $ Golosá Choir Presented in collaboration with the Kalamazoo Russian Festival Golosá is Chicago’s one and only Russian folk choir, founded in 1997 at the University of Chicago. Under the supervision of Artistic Director Tamara Ghattas, they sing sacred and secular Russian folk songs in a mixed-voice a capella ensemble, and perform all year long throughout the Chicago area and beyond. The songs that Golosá (Russian for “voices” and also “melodies”) performs are the descendents of songs heard in the early twentieth century in villages throughout Russia; and those songs in turn were the latest incarnation of music many years older. In 1996, Founder Noel Taylor first encountered the repertoire when he sang with the famous Russian Choir of Frieburg, founded in 1929 by Aleksander Kresling. In 1999, he met “Sud’binushka”, a group from the village of Tarbagatay in the province of Buryatia on the shores of Lake Baikal. The songs learned from Sud’binushka became the core of Golosá’s repertoire. Members of Golosá have traveled to Siberia twice since then to study. They have also studied the unique singing style and the history and culture of the Semeiskie Old Believers of the Trans-Baikal, who created it. www.golosa.org 7 t h B i e n n i a l • N ov e m b e r 7 – 1 7, 2 0 1 3 39 F estival Sc he dule Saturday, November 16, 2013, 3 pm Holy Family Chapel, Nazareth, 3427 Gull Rd. Free; donation suggested James Falzone (clarinet, Allos Musica) Sighs Too Deep For Words A solo clarinet work at the intersection of improvisation and composition, Sighs Too Deep For Words uses words of St. Paul as the starting place for an exploration of mindfulness and contemplative practice through sound. Reminiscent of the haunting music of Olivier Messiaen and incorporating clarinets, ritual bells, shruti box, and percussion, the work has been performed by Falzone in the US, Canada, and Europe and was documented on film in a 2011 performance at Experimental Sound Studio in Chicago and released on James’ Allos Documents label. 40 M i c h i g a n F e s t i va l o f S ac r e d Mus i c • 2 0 1 3 Saturday, November 16, 2013, 8 pm Holy Family Chapel, Nazareth, 3427 Gull Rd. $ Allos Musica James Falzone: clarinet, tin whistle, launeddas, shruti box Jeremiah McLane: accordion Ronnie Malley: oud, voice, harmonium Tim Mulvenna: hand drums and percussion Working at the intersection of classical, jazz, and world music traditions, James Falzone’s Allos Musica will present repertoire from the Middle East, Andalusia, and Brittany, alongside original compositions and arrangements from Falzone, many newly created for the 2013 Michigan Festival of Sacred Music. Incorporating wind, string, and percussion instruments from around the globe, this unique quartet takes the listener on a contemplative yet lively journey where tradition and experimentation blend seamlessly. Allos Musica “The variety of has performed and toured approaches that extensively in the US and was featured on the 2010 recording he employs—the Lamentations (Allos Documents), solemn tolling of described by Phillip McNally of prayer bells, fragile Cadence magazine as having “Intense feeling and great reed multiphonics, beauty, filled with the sadness of tangles of piercing, reality yet flashing with the joy writhing tones—not of returning hope in the end . . . remarkable.” only displays the full range of his technique but also speaks to the breadth of spiritual experience, from serenity to struggle.” —Bill Meyer, on “Sighs Too Deep for Words” The Chicago Reader Multi-faceted clarinetist/ composer James Falzone is an acclaimed member of Chicago’s jazz and creative improvised music scene, a veteran contemporary music lecturer and clinician, the longtime Director of Music for Grace Chicago Church and an awardwinning composer who has 7 th Biennial • N ov e m b e r 7 – 1 7, 2 0 1 3 41 F estival Sc he dule • A l los Mu s i c a been commissioned by chamber ensembles, choirs and symphony orchestras around the globe. He leads his own ensembles KLANG, The Renga Ensemble, and Allos Musica and has released eight highly regarded recordings on Allos Documents, a label he founded in 2000. James has performed in recital halls, festivals and jazz venues throughout North America and Europe, appears regularly on Downbeat magazine’s Critics’ and Readers’ Polls, and was nominated as the 2011 Clarinetist of the Year by the Jazz Journalist Association. His work has been featured in the New York Times, The Chicago Tribune, New Music Box, Point of Departure, and many other publications. Educated at Northern Illinois University and New England Conservatory, James is a respected educator himself and is currently on faculty at Columbia College Chicago where he teaches in the interdisciplinary First Year Seminar program. allosmusica.org Since the early 1990s accordionist and pianist Jeremiah McLane has helped shape the sound of New England and Franco-American roots music through his work as a composer, performer and teacher. He holds a Master’s in Contemporary Improvisation from the New England Conservatory of Music and teaches regularly at summer music programs throughout the US. Formerly on the faculty on the State University of New York in Plattsburg, NY and St. Michael’s College in Colchester, VT, he is currently on the faculty of the Summit School of Traditional Music in Montpelier, VT, and director of the Floating Bridge Music School in Sharon, VT. In addition to teaching and performing, Jeremiah has also composed numerous pieces for film and theatre. In 1996, he received National Public Radio’s “favorite picks” award for his second solo recording, Smile When You’re Ready, and in 2003 the French music magazine Trad Mag’s “BRAVO” award for his fifth release, Hummingbird. His most recent release, DANSE with classical pianist Annemieke Spoelstra, came out in 2013. jeremiahmclane.com 42 M i c h i g a n F e s t i va l o f S ac r e d Mus i c • 2 0 1 3 A Chicago native of Palestinian descent, Ronnie Malley is a versatile and multi-talented instrumentalist, who tours internationally with Lamajamal, Mucca Pazza, Duzan Ensemble to perform a vast repertoire of folk, classical, and spiritual music from all over the world. After years of playing Middle Eastern and American rock music, Ronnie expanded his musical palette to explore different traditions from around the world. He has studied and collaborated with musicians from Senegal, Sudan, North Africa, India, Kashmir, Macedonia, Iran, Greece, Turkey, as well as with Afro-Peruvian folk artists, Rodolfo Munoz and Miguel Ballermos. He has collaborated as both musician and actor in Lookingglass, Berkeley, Arena Stage Theatre and Oregon Shakespeare Festival productions of renowned director Mary Zimmerman, and has also produced music for film documentaries. Ronnie began his education with guitar lessons at age nine, later moving on to piano, Middle Eastern percussion, and taught himself his principal instrument, the Oud (Mid-Eastern lute). He played percussion with his father and brother in the family band and accompanied renowned artists such as Kazem Al Saher, Majdi Husseini, Wael Jassar, and Tony Hanna. Ronnie currently teaches at the Old Town School of Folk Music, and conducts Arabic music workshops for Chicago Public Schools and the University of Chicago’s Startalk camp. ronniemalley.com Tim Muvenna has been performing and teaching for the last two decades in Chicago, as well as playing festivals and touring in the USA, Canada, Japan, Europe, Thailand, and Brazil. Tim has worked with many international artists including the Eternals, Robbie Fulks, Ken Vandermark, Fareed Haque, Fred Anderson, Lin Halliday, Jarek Smietana, Jeb Bishop, Ritchie Cole, the Smothers Brothers, Roscoe Mitchell, Rob Mazurek, Ella Leya, Jeff Parker, Ken McIntire, Liquid Soul, Michael Urbaniak, Dan Phillips, Peter Brotzmann, John Abercrombie, and the Gypsy Rhythm Project. His playing is represented on over 70 recordings on labels as diverse as Blue Note, Drag City, Delmark, Atavistic, Okka Disc, Submarine, Blujazz, and Aesthetics. timmulvenna.com 7 t h B i e n n i a l • N ov e m b e r 7 – 1 7, 2 0 1 3 43 F estival Sc he dule Sunday, November 17, 2013, 3 pm Chenery Auditorum, 714 S. Westnedge Ave. $ Paul Winter Consort a short moderated discussion follows the program Award-winning saxophonist, bandleader, composer, explorer of the world’s musical traditions and founder of Living Music and the Paul Winter Consort, Paul Winter has been motivated for the past thirty years by the vision of a musical-ecological community, and has followed a steady course towards his unique ‘Earth Music’, a vital celebration of the creatures and cultures of the whole earth. Paul’s musical realm has long embraced the traditions of many of the world’s cultures, interweaving widely diverse instruments and elements with the extraordinary voices from what he refers to as “the greater symphony of the Earth”, including wolves, whales, eagles, and several dozen other species of ‘wilderness musicians’. This program will celebrate the sacredness of the earth, and feature especially reflections on water. Paul is joined by pianist Paul Sullivan; cellist Eugene Friesen; and percussionist Jamey Haddad. Paul Winter has spent a lifetime exploring the music of the world. From his college days as the leader of a jazz sextet to his later work with the Paul Winter Consort, the saxophonist and composer has aspired to bridge the cultures of the world through music. Fame first found Winter in 1961 when his sextet won the Intercollegiate Jazz Festival. The US State Department then sent the group in 1962 on a six-month concert tour of 23 countries of Latin America. The tour opened Winter’s ears to a wider world, and led to an invitation from First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy to play at the White House, presenting the first jazz concert ever held there. As an outgrowth of his original sextet, he founded in the late ‘60s a new ensemble, the Paul Winter Consort, as a forum for the broad range of music he had come to love. With the Consort he has toured in 52 countries, playing some 3,000 concerts, and recorded over 50 albums, six of which have won Grammy® awards: Spanish Angel, Prayer for the Wild Things, Celtic Solstice, Crestone, Silver Solstice, and, in 2011, Miho: Journey to the Mountain. Winter also produced Pete Seeger’s Grammy-winning album Pete. In May, 2011 Winter was awarded an honorary Doctor of Music degree from the University of Hartford. His latest album, Count Me In, is a 2-CD 50th anniversary anthology of his 1962/1963 jazz Sextet, which includes the never-released recordings from their historic concert at the Kennedy White House. paulwinter.com (continued on page 46) 44 The presentation of Paul Winter Consort is supported by the Arts Midwest Touring Fund, a program of Arts Midwest that is funded by the National Endowment for the Arts, with contributions from Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs and General Mills Foundation. 7 t h B i e n n i a l • N ov e m b e r 7 – 1 7, 2 0 1 3 45 F estival Sc he dule • Pau l Wi n t e r co n so rt Eugene Friesen has been the cellist with the Paul Winter Consort for over 30 years. A graduate of the Yale School of Music, he is featured on over 20 Living Music albums, including two solo recordings: New Friend and Arms Around You. Eugene has produced four albums: In the Shade of Angels, Sono Miho, The Song of Rivers, and Colorful Transitions. Since 1992, he has also been a member of Trio Globo, which he founded with Glen Velez and Howard Levy. Eugene is currently on the faculty of the Berklee College of Music, and resides with his family in Vermont. celloman.com Jamey Haddad’s musical voice transcends styles and trends, and the universal quality of his playing has attracted many international collaborations. Regarded as one of the foremost world music and jazz percussionists in the U.S., Haddad is an associate professor at Boston’s Berklee College of Music, New England Conservatory, Oberlin Conservatory and the Cleveland Institute of Music. Haddad collaborates regularly with Paul Simon, Simon and Garfunkel, Osvaldo Golijov, Yo Yo Ma, Dawn Upshaw, Joe Lovano, Elliot Goldenthal, Brazil’s Assad Brothers, Daniel Schnyder, Simon Shaheen, the Paul Winter Consort, Nancy Wilson, Dave Liebman, Esperanza Spalding, Maya Beiser, Trichy Sankaran, vocalist Betty Buckley, Steve Shehan, Leo Blanco, Nguyen Lee, among others. He can also be heard on more than 170 recordings and routinely has articles published internationally relating to the experiences of the contemporary world musician. www.jameyhaddad.com Paul Sullivan grew up in Boston, receiving his first professional training in Cambridge. He graduated from Yale with a BA in Music in 1977. Since then, he has enjoyed a richly varied and distinguished career as a composer and a pianist. As a soloist, with his trio, and as a member of the Paul Winter Consort, he has played concert tours worldwide. He has performed with legendary orchestras, and in New York’s most prestigious jazz clubs. His work has been performed extensively on and off Broadway and in the dance world. A Grammy Award-winning artist with the Paul Winter Consort for his collaboration on the Consort CD Silver Solstice, he has produced over 15 CDs under his own label, River Music, available at www.rivermusic.com. He and his family live on the coast of Maine. 46 M i c h i g a n F e s t i va l o f S ac r e d Mus i c • 2 0 1 3 TRY LOCAL MUSIC LOCAL ARTS &NEWS F i n e D i n i n g I n d i a n C u i s i n e F i w Before and after the concerts let us bring your imagination alive with the sensuous aroma of fine Indian cuisine. Monday – Friday Lunch Buffet 11:30 am – 2:00 pm Dinner 5:00 – 9:15 pm (Fri 10:15) Saturday Lunch Buffet 12:00 – 2:30 pm Dinner 5:00 – 10:15 pm w w w . s a f f r o n k z o o . c o m 1710 Suite D West Main St. Kalamazoo, MI 49006 [email protected] p.269.381.9898