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Tag: chorus

  • Best Bets: Stravinsky’s Firebird, Bach’s Divine Comedy and Akeelah and the Bee

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    It’s National Locate an Old Friend Day, and if you find an old friend and would like to make plans for the weekend with them, we’ve got some ideas for you. This week, both a popular movie and a bestselling book come to the stage, a choir all the way from Mexico City stops in for a joint concert, and much more await you, so keep reading for these and all of our picks for best bets.


    Houston Ballet
    returns to the Wortham Theater Center on Thursday, September 18, at 7:30 p.m. for their latest mixed repertory program: Rock, Roll & Tutus. The program includes Brett Ishida’s Houston Ballet-commissioned what i was thinking while i was waltzing, which first premiered in 2024; Christopher Bruce’s Rooster, set to music by The Rolling Stones; Illuminate, a debut work from Soloist Jacquelyn Long; and an expanded Vi et animo from Artistic Director Stanton Welch. First Soloist Tyler Donatelli told the Houston Press the movements “all have a very grand classical feel…He really pushes the classical technique and is always reaching for more perfection every time, and there’s always something more to give.” Performances will continue at 7:30 p.m. Saturdays and Friday, September 26; 1:30 p.m. Saturday, September 27; and 2 p.m. Sundays through September 28. Tickets are available here for $75 to $170.


    In 2006, Akeelah and the Bee, starring Keke Palmer, Laurence Fishburne, and Angela Bassett, proved to be “an underdog tale that manages to inspire without being sappy.” Writer-director Doug Atchison’s film has since been adapted for the stage by Cheryl L. West, and you can catch it at The Ensemble Theatre on Friday, September 19, at 7:30 p.m. Bria Washington, who plays the role of Akeelah in the production, recently told BroadwayWorld Houston, “Akeelah’s story feels so universal—it speaks to kids finding their voice, but also to adults remembering the power of resilience. She’s layered, full of internal and external battles, and that challenge excites me as an actor.” Performances will continue at 7:30 p.m. Thursdays and Fridays, 2 and 7:30 p.m. Saturdays, 3 p.m. Sundays, and 1 p.m. on Wednesday, October 8, through October 12. Tickets can be purchased here for $35 to $50.

    A classic Russian folklore character that symbolizes “rebirth, beauty, and magic” will take center stage on Friday, September 19, at 7:30 p.m. when the Houston Symphony opens its season with Valčuha Conducts Stravinsky’s Firebird at Jones Hall. Music Director Juraj Valčuha will lead the orchestra in the concert, which also includes Florent Schmitt’s Psalm 47 and the world premiere of Julia Wolfe’s Houston Symphony-commissioned Liberty Bell, plus special guests Angel Blue; Houston Chamber Choir, under Artistic Director Betsy Cook Weber; and Houston Symphony Chorus, under Director Anthony J. Maglione. The concert will be performed again on Saturday, September 20, at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday, September 21, at 2 p.m. Tickets to in-hall performances can be purchased here for $29 to $159. Saturday night’s concert will also be livestreamed, with access to the video performance available here for $20.


    If you’re used to his serious, sacred cantatas, hear another side of Johann Sebastian Bach on Friday, September 19, at 7:30 p.m., when Ars Lyrica Houston opens its season with Bach’s Divine Comedy at the Hobby Center for the Performing Arts. The program will feature three works by Bach, including The Dispute between Phoebus and Pan, which refers to a comical singing contest drawn from a Greek myth, by way of the Roman poet Ovid. Matthew Dirst, the artistic director of Ars Lyrica, has described the secular cantata as “theatrical, tongue in cheek, and it’s filled with clever references to contemporary music taste.” Tickets can be purchased here for $15 to $80. If you can’t attend the performance in person, you can buy a $20 ticket to view the digital livestream here.

    A mumps outbreak at a private school leads to increasingly contentious meetings between the school’s headmaster, four parents on the campus board of directors, and more parents over Zoom in Jonathan Spector’s Eureka Day, which 4th Wall Theatre Co. will open at Spring Street Studios on Friday, September 19, at 7:30 p.m. 4th Wall Artistic Director (and play director) Jennifer Dean told the Houston Press the play will allow audiences to reflect on things like, “What am I doing in my own life that is shutting people down or not taking care of each other?…And that you can’t have dialogue with each other and make progress if we’re not willing to listen to each other’s point of view.” Performances will continue at 7:30 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays and 2:30 p.m. Sundays through October 11. Tickets are available here for $25 to $70.

    Be in the room at the Wortham Theater Center for the first time Pride Chorus Houston performs with an international choir at 8 p.m. Saturday, September 20, during Mi Familia. The joint concert, performed with Mexico City-based Coro Gay Ciudad de México LGBTIQPA+, will feature a world premiere work and arrangements of music from different Spanish-language icons, such as Diego Torres and Juan Gabriel. Speaking to the Houston Press, David York, the artistic director of Pride Chorus Houston, said of the setlist, “We started looking at these artists as being an accurate representation of what we wanted to say as a pride chorus in an international concert. In a way, we’re representing America and we’re representing Latin culture in our set.” Tickets to the concert are available here for $28.75 to $74.75.

    The Catastrophic Theatre will open its season with dependency, futility, and existential inevitability – i.e., Samuel Beckett – on Friday, September 19, at 8 p.m. at the MATCH when they present Beckett’s Endgame, about one man, blind and unable to stand up, who lords over another man, who is unable to sit down. Catastrophic Co-Artistic Director Jason Nodler, who is directing the play for the third time, told the Houston Press he considers Beckett’s plays “tragic comedies,” adding that they “are not particularly dour. They’re certainly often considered to be about despair, and they really aren’t. None of Beckett’s characters are without hope or they wouldn’t continue.” Performances will continue at 7:30 p.m. Thursdays, 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and 2:30 p.m. Sundays through October 11. Tickets are pay-what-you-can (with a suggested price of $40) and can be purchased here.


    When American professor Robert Langdon is implicated in the murder of a Louvre curator, he finds himself forced to unravel a mystery hidden in codes and symbols—which happen to be his specialty—in Dan Brown’s bestseller-turned-Hollywood movie and now play, The Da Vinci Code, opening at the Alley Theatre on Wednesday, September 24, at 7:30 p.m. Zack Fine, who plays Langdon, recently spoke to the Houston Press about the success of Brown’s story, saying, “He’s done a great job of pulling us into a mystery. And that mystery is specific to Leonardo Da Vinci and Christianity. It pulls at the part of us that goes ‘I think there’s something more underneath what we call the truth.’” Performances will continue at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Thursdays, 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, 2 and 7 p.m. Sundays through October 19. Tickets are available here for $36 to $135.

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    Natalie de la Garza

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  • Pride Chorus Houston and Mexico City Neighbors Unite in Mi Familia

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    Last year, Pride Chorus Houston traveled to Minneapolis, Minnesota, where the Gay and Lesbian Association of Choruses (GALA Choruses) held its quadrennial festival, the largest gathering of LGBTQ+ choruses in the world.


    There, they encountered their Mexico City-based counterpart, Coro Gay Ciudad de México LGBTIQPA+.


    “We were blown away by them,” says David York, now in his third season as artistic director of Pride Chorus Houston, one of the nation’s oldest gay choruses in the United States. “And I’m happy to report that they were really pleased with what they saw in us as well.”


    Casual conversations turned to friendship, and now, just over a year later, the two choruses will perform together for the first time during Mi Familia, a joint concert at the Wortham Theater Center on September 20 before the Houston chorus travels to Mexico City for two additional performances on November 28 and 29.


    The concert marks the first time Pride Chorus Houston will perform with an international choir, and York says audiences are in for a treat when they see Coro Gay Ciudad de México LGBTIQPA+.


    “They are a very extravagant and flamboyant chorus, so they’re bringing lots of energy, very colorful costumes, and their own brand of fabulous,” says York.


    According to York, the Mexico City chorus is bringing their tried-and-true hits, with the current setlist including pieces with titles like “Pamela Anderson” – “The English translation to the first part of ‘Pamela Anderson’: ‘I love you so much / I watched your documentary yesterday’ and then it goes into details about that,” shares York – and “Muerte por Tetaso,” or “Death by Titslap.”


    “Isn’t that fun?” adds York. “That’s very campy.”


    When it came time to decide on the material Houston Pride Chorus would contribute to the show, York says popular Latin artists like Jennifer Lopez, Ricky Martin, Shakira, and Bad Bunny all came up.


    “We started looking at these artists as being an accurate representation of what we wanted to say as a pride chorus in an international concert. In a way, we’re representing America and we’re representing Latin culture in our set,” says York.


    Representation proved to be a bit trickier for his chorus, as York realized that the Mexico City chorus is more of a monoculture, meaning that almost all the members are Mexican by heritage.


    “In the Houston Pride Chorus, we have a significant percentage, probably 15 percent of our chorus is Hispanic or Latino, and some of them are from Mexico, but a lot of them are not. They come from Venezuela, Colombia, Cuba, Puerto Rico, El Salvador – all these different Spanish-speaking countries are represented by Pride Chorus, so our experience of Latin culture is different than theirs,” explains York.


    The setlist Houston Pride Chorus decided on will also feature “tailor-made” arrangements from different Spanish-language icons, including “Color Esperanza” by Argentine Diego Torres and a medley of music by Mexican superstar Juan Gabriel.


    “While Juan Gabriel never publicly came out as gay, it’s a well-known secret, so we claim him. We are representing him loud and proud at the end of our concert,” says York.


    A highlight of the program will be the premiere of a new piece of music composed by York and the artistic director of Coro Gay Ciudad de México LGBTIQPA+, Enrique Dunn.


    “There’s a fair amount of attention around immigration in our chorus, and why people came to the United States, and what their relationship with their family is like, and as we talked about that, that’s where we stumbled onto the idea of Mi Familia. That is a common theme for Mexico City Chorus to sing about and us as well,” says York.


    The idea resulted in a piece with four movements, with a melody and sweet refrain woven into each movement: “This is my family / just as we are / separated by distance / united by love.”


    The members of each chorus were asked for interesting ways to express these thoughts using experiences from their personal lives or by creating fictionalized stories. The suggestions York and Dunn received were narrowed down to four, with each artistic director setting two for the piece.


    The movements York set are titled “No Sabo,” a grammatically incorrect term used to refer to children from Spanish-speaking families who don’t speak Spanish, and “Lullaby.”


    “One of the choristers is a no sabo kid, and he wrote this beautiful story about his relationship with his grandmother, who is from Peru,” explains York. “He’d come home from school. She talked to him in Spanish; he would talk to her in English. They had about 50 common words in their vocabulary, and it was the same conversation every day.”


    Another chorister, who wrote “a really lovely, poignant lyric about what it is to be a parent,” inspired “Lullaby,” which is about two fathers, parents to three adopted children, two of whom are from Mexico.


    “The current political situation is risky for them,” says York. “The children are citizens, but they aren’t American-born citizens, and so that created some fear in their family.”


    York says the melody and lyrics will be altered in both movements to reflect each story. “In the ‘No Sabo’ lyric, it’s ‘This is my family / just as it is / separated by language / united by love.’ And in the one about the fathers, it’s ‘This is my family / just as we are / separated by fear / united by love.’”


    Dunn set the last two stories, and York describes both movements as “very grand and epic.” One is titled “Fronteras,” or “Borders,” a non-narrative movement about two trans women who both receive the medical treatment they need in Mexico but find their ability to connect compromised by challenges at the border.


    “It’s a very complex idea, and [Dunn] captures the emotion of it really powerfully,” says York. “And then the last one is called ‘Recuerdo,’ and it talks about connecting with loved ones of the departed, people who are not here anymore.”


    Though the political climate has changed drastically since York and Dunn began discussing a potential collaboration last year, York says he wants to minimize political confrontation in every aspect of the concert.


    “By and large, we’re all acutely aware of the oppression that is being thrown at, if not individually, then to people we love, people close to us, and people we care about,” says York. “We don’t need to frame that. We don’t need to resolve it. We don’t need to advocate for or against it. All we need to do is be family, to be a unified voice for the healing power of love and music, and just let that emotional experience be the tincture and the recipe for how we survive this incredibly complex and turbulent time.”


    Mi Familia is scheduled for 8 p.m. Saturday, September 20, at Wortham Theater Center, 501 Texas. The concert will be translated with English and Spanish surtitles. For more information, visit pridechorus.org. $28.75-$74.75.

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    Natalie de la Garza

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  • FeelitLIVE Announces America’s Got Choirs

    FeelitLIVE Announces America’s Got Choirs

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    US High School Choirs Invited to Participate in First of its Kind Competition – to be Judged by Some of America’s Top Choral Conductors

    FeelitLIVE, Inc., the creators of the FeelitLIVE virtual and hybrid events platform, have announced America’s Got ChoirsTM – the largest and most inclusive online high school choral competition in America. America’s Got ChoirsTM is a virtual forum to showcase the vast choral talent in the United States. In its first-ever season, America’s Got Choirs™ celebrates high school choirs that generate beautiful music every day and is the embodiment of teamwork, resilience, talent, diversity, hope, and positivity.

    High school choirs from across the country are invited to upload a song performance recorded during the 2020-2021 academic year. The contest is free to enter, and submissions must be received on or before October 8, 2021. 

    A panel of leading choral experts will evaluate the entries and shortlist the Top 10 choirs that will take part in America’s Got Choirs Virtual Grand Finale event on October 24, 2021, at 8pm EDT / 5pm PDT, when winners will be revealed.

    “2020 was a year that tested the mettle of every student in America. And those students involved in the performing arts were challenged to unleash their ingenuity and creativity like never before.” said Dr. Charlene Archibeque, one of America’s foremost choral conductors and teachers, and a judge on the esteemed panel of judges for the competition. “I’m thrilled to see this competition in the virtual medium and I’m incredibly excited to see the diversity of performances.”

    Prizes and Give-Aways

    The winning high school will receive a $2,500 cash prize along with the America’s Got Choirs 2021 Award. Category winners in the following areas will each receive $500: Best creative visuals, best soloist, and best audio/video engineering. All entrants will receive 2 free tickets to the October 24, 2021 finale, and access to the FeelitLIVE platform, including a landing page for their choir, and a virtual venue to host one event for free through December 31, 2021.

    To learn more and join the competition visit:  https://feelit.live/Americas-Got-Choirs

    The Judges

    • Dr. Charlene Archibeque, one of America’s foremost choral conductors and teachers, is the first woman to earn the DMA in Choral Conducting in 1969 from the University of Colorado. Her over six decades in choral conducting is replete with International and domestic recognitions and accolades. She spent 35 years as Director of Choral Activities at San Jose State University.
    • Dr. Jeffrey Benson, Director of Choral Activities at San José State University. He is a published composer and arranger with Colla Voce Music and Santa Barbara Music Publishing, under the Charlene Archibeque Choral Series. He has served as cover conductor for the Grammy award-winning Washington Chorus. Choirs under his direction have performed with the Rolling Stones, Josh Groban, Andrea Bocelli, and Sarah Brightman.
    • Dr. Edith Copley, Regents’ Professor Emeritus and Director of Choral Studies at Northern Arizona University. She is a recipient of the NAU School of Music Centennial Teacher of the Year Award, Arizona Music Educator of the Year, Arizona ACDA Outstanding Choral Director Award, and others. She has served the American Choral Directors Association in various leadership roles over the last 30 years and is currently National President-Elect.
    • Dr. Derrick Fox, Director of Choral Activities and Distinguished Assistant Professor of Music at the University of Nebraska-Omaha. He serves on the National ACDA Diversity Subcommittee, the Missouri Music Educators Association Diversity Council and is the Collegiate Coordinator for Student Activities for Nebraska Choral Directors Association. He has written articles for many organizations and was a contributing author in the Hal Leonard/McGraw Hill choral textbook Voices in Concert.
    • Dr. Jeffery Redding, Director of Choral Activities at the University of Central Florida (UCF). He is the 2019 GRAMMY Music Educator Award Recipient. He has led his choirs in performances at national, regional, and state conventions of the American Choral Directors Association (ACDA). He has been featured as guest conductor at Carnegie Hall, Alice Tully Hall, Kennedy Center, and Orchestra Hall on numerous occasions. He is also one of the conductors for Walt Disney World’s Candlelight Processional at Epcot.

    About FeelitLIVE (www.feelitlive.com)

    FeelitLIVE is a versatile, virtual and hybrid events platform connecting creators and audiences around the world. No matter your industry, event type, or audience size – FeelitLIVE gives you the tools to host and deliver the experience you have always imagined. FeelitLIVE is headquartered in Menlo Park, CA, with talented team members on four continents.

    Contact:

    Robert Martindale 

    press@feelitlive.com

    +1.858.864.8600

    Source: FeelItLive, Inc.

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