Don't miss any of these superb concerts by Austin-based, double Grammy® Award-nominated Conspirare, fresh from their triumph at the 8th World Symposium on Choral Music in Copenhagen. >From "Home" (to be recorded for PBS broadcast) to always sold-out "Christmas at the Carillon" (including one performance at the Long Center) to the Rachmaninoff Vespers, Handel's Messiah at Easter, and a thrilling world-premiere by choral superstar composer Eric Whitacre, it's our best season yet. And don't forget the award-winning Conspirare Youth Choirs, now performing three great concerts. Order today at (512) 476-5775!
HOME
Friday, October 3, 8:00 pm St. Martin's Lutheran Church, 606 West 15th Street, Austin
Saturday, October 4, 8:00 pm St. Martin's Lutheran Church, 606 West 15th Street, Austin
Sunday, October 5, 2:30 pm Northwest Hills United Methodist, 7050 Village Center Drive, Austin
CHRISTMAS AT THE CARILLON
Saturday, December 6, 7:30 pm Our Lady of Victory Cathedral, 1309 East Mesquite Lane, Victoria
Sunday, December 7, 2:30 pm The Carillon, 2630 Exposition Boulevard, Austin
Sunday, December 7, 8:00 pm The Carillon, 2630 Exposition Boulevard, Austin
Monday, December 8, 6:00 pm Christmas At The Carillon Gala, Kodosky Donor Lounge, the Long Center, 701 West Riverside Drive, Austin (call for ticket information)
Monday, December 8, 8:00 pm The Long Center, 701 West Riverside Drive, Austin
Tuesday, December 9, 8:00 pm The Carillon, 2630 Exposition Boulevard, Austin
Wednesday, December 10, 8:00 pm The Carillon, 2630 Exposition Boulevard, Austin
RACHMANINOFF VESPERS
Thursday, February 26, 7:30 pm St. Mary's Catholic Church, Fredericksburg
Friday, February 27, 8:00 pm Laurel Heights Methodist Church, San Antonio
Saturday, February 28, 8:00 pm St. Martin's Lutheran Church, 606 West 15th Street, Austin
Tuesday, March 3, 8:00 pm Perkins Chapel, SMU, Dallas call (214) 768-2502 for tickets
AMERICAN SONGS AND SPIRITUALS
Sunday, March 1, 2:30 pm St. Martin's Lutheran Church, 606 West 15th Street, Austin
HANDEL'S MESSIAH (At Easter, with Period Instruments)
Friday, March 27, 7:30 pm Our Saviour's Lutheran Church, Victoria
Saturday, March 28, 7:30 pm St. Martin's Lutheran Church, 606 West 15th Street, Austin
Sunday, March 29, 2:30 pm St. Martin's Lutheran Church, 606 West 15th Street, Austin
ERIC WHITACRE WORLD PREMIERE
Friday, June 5, 8:00 pm The Long Center, 701 West Riverside Drive, Austin
Saturday, June 6, 8:00 pm The Long Center, 701 West Riverside Drive, Austin
UNTRAVELED WORLDS
Friday, November 21, 7:00 pm St. Martin's Lutheran Church, 606 West 15th Street, Austin
Saturday, November 22, 7:00 pm St. Martin's Lutheran Church, 606 West 15th Street, Austin
REFLECTIONS
Saturday, May 9, 7:00 pm St. Matthew's Episcopal Church, 8134 Mesa Drive, Austin
By David Vernier
ClassicsToday.com
Artistic Quality: 10
Sound Quality: 10
Thirty-year-old British composer Tarik O'Regan has been very favorably represented on recordings so far--his Scattered Rhymes (type Q11590 in Search Reviews) was issued to very positive reviews earlier this year, sharing a program (as well as musical and structural ideas) with Machaut's Messe de Nostre Dame. If you heard that work and liked it, you'll find much more to enjoy here; if you found the going through the three sections of Scattered Rhymes a bit difficult, you absolutely should not hesitate to give this program a listen. The seven works on offer here, all recorded for the first time (several commissioned for this CD), are not only significant and eminently worthy entries into the modern choral repertoire, but they also are accessible in the best sense of the word--that is, the music immediately reveals itself and rewards careful, serious listening. There's nothing to "figure out", no detailed explanations to read before listening (although the composer's brief notes on each work are useful and informative)--rather, O'Regan's intentions and realization of the texts speak for themselves through artful, consistently engaging choral writing.
It's not easy to describe the music, which is fundamentally tonal but not based on traditional ideas of melodic themes and harmonic movement, but there are some recurring structural and thematic features, including the use of imitative, often overlapping layers of melodic/rhythmic fragments; increasing and decreasing density of textures, which range from clusters to wider voicings, from solo voice and duet to octets and full choir, spiced with tangy dissonances and occasional, judiciously planted, unaltered chords or unisons; ostinatos and pulsing, momentum-building rhythms (reminiscent of minimalist techniques) usually in the instrumental accompaniment; and moods of high energy contrasted with ethereal, meditative quietness.
Most of these works are written for voices with strings--itself a rather unusual if very affecting combination that lends itself particularly well to O'Regan's harmonic and textural sensibility. The poetry also is intriguing--works by Edgar Allan Poe next to Emily Dickinson and Pablo Neruda. While much could be said about each of these pieces, highlights for me were two a cappella works--Threshold of Night and the setting of Neruda's Tal vez tenemos tiempo (Maybe we have time), the former notable for O'Regan's technique of over-layering and rhythmically staggering lines of text, lending remarkable dynamism to the interaction of the voices, while the latter is a marvelous evocation of the text by means of primarily homophonic structure (but what harmony!) complemented by careful, language-sensitive rhythmic articulation.
The works here were all written (or in one case, revised) within the past three years, but they are all quite distinctive and different, owing to O'Regan's concern for and ability to "get inside" the poetry and because, well, he's a truly gifted, skilled, creative artist who seems to be concerned with writing original music--no hooks, gimmicks, or formulas--that although variously challenging, people can hear and feel and perform and understand, music that's worthy and demanding of repetition, which will engender a desire for more. You may find this in the very lovely, affecting final minutes of the Poe setting, The Ecstasies Above, or in the profoundly moving middle section of Triptych ("As We Remember Them"), but if you love choral music, you'll definitely want to spend some serious time with these works--and you'll certainly want to hear more. Needless to say, the performances are first rate--this choir has an established reputation for excellence and has taken to O'Regan's music as if it were created just for them (which some of it was!). The sound, from one of North America's premiere recording and performance venues--the Troy Savings Bank Music Hall in Troy, NY--is ideal. Don't miss this. [And if you can't wait, the recording is available for download through digital media outlets such as iTunes, Zune, and emusic.]
Classics Today Web Site Review
Austin-American Statesman preview
Join us at 4:00 pm this Sunday at Waterloo Records, 600 North Lamar Blvd, to purchase your copy of the new Threshold of Night CD. Purchase your copy before, prior to official public sale, and have it signed by the composer and conductor! Grammy buzz has already begun for this extraordinary CD and two national critics have given it outright rave reviews. Come on Sunday and secure your copy! Signing is from 4:00 pm until 5:30 pm. Thank you, Waterloo and Harmonia Mundi!
A native of Indiana, Dana studied at Westminster Choir College at Princeton, New Jersey and Duquesne University in Pittsburgh. Please see her full bio.
Conspirare Founder and Artistic Director, Craig Hella Johnson, will be inducted into the Austin Arts Hall of Fame on June 2 in ceremonies immediately following our 6:00 pm Choral Conversations. The Hall of Fame event at 7:00 pm at Cap City Comedy Club is free and open to the public.
Join us in welcoming Illinois native Will Culbertson to the Conspirare staff. Will was appointed Production Manager for the company effective April 1. For more information on this dynamic new staffer, please see his bio.
Auditions are scheduled throughout the year. Contact us for more information. Click here to learn more.