Tuesday, Nov 1, 2016
Three of Westminster鈥檚 choral ensembles will perform in Philadelphia and Princeton this weekend.
The Westminster Chapel Choir, conducted by Amanda Quist, will perform as part of the 2016 Family Weekend. The Family Weekend Concert will be Saturday, November 5 at 7:30 p.m. at St. Paul鈥檚 Roman Catholic Church, 214 Nassau Street, in Princeton. Admission is free, but seating is limited. The program will include movements from W.A. Mozart鈥檚 Requiem in D Minor, Kim Andr茅 Arnesen鈥檚 Even When He Is Silent by and Moses Hogan鈥檚 arrangement of Wade in the Water, as well as solo works performed by choir members.
Westminster Chapel Choir is composed of students in their first year of study at Westminster. As a member of the Westminster Choir College faculty, Amanda Quist conducts the Westminster Chapel Choir, Westminster Kantorei, and teaches graduate and undergraduate conducting.
The Westminster Williamson Voices, conducted by James Jordan, will present a concert titled 鈥淧盲rt The Mystic鈥 at the Cathedral Basilica of Saints Peter and Paul in Philadelphia on Saturday, November 5 at 7:30 P.M. The ensemble Kanon Pokajanen, a stunning work by renowned Estonian composer Arvo P盲rt. The work was inspired by the text of an early Orthodox hymn, the Canon of Repentance to Our Lord Jesus Christ. Part devoted two years to composing this evening-length work. The Westminster Williamson Voices will perform it again at the Metropolitan Museum鈥檚 Temple of Dendur on Saturday, November 19. That concert has been sold out for months, so the concert in Philadelphia offers the community the only other opportunity to hear this choral masterwork.
The Westminster Choir, conducted by Joe Miller, will present a concert titled 鈥淎 Thousand Years to Live鈥 twice this weekend: Saturday, November 5 at 7:30 P.M. at the New Sanctuary at Fairview in Fairview Village, Pa. and Sunday, November 6 at 3:00 P.M. in Bristol Chapel on the Westminster campus in Princeton. The program鈥檚 theme reflects on the words of American Shaker Ann Lee, 鈥 Do all your work as though you had a thousand years to live, and as you would if you knew you must die tomorrow,鈥 which conclude Paul Crabtree鈥檚 composition The Valley of Delight: Death and Resurrection. The choir will also perform U模is Prauli艈拧鈥 Laudibus in sanctis; Kile Smith鈥檚 鈥淵es, It鈥檚 beautiful鈥 from The Consolation of Apollo; Brahms鈥 Abendstandchen and Warren Martin鈥檚 Great Day, as well as other works. The audience will be invited to participate in a project titled 鈥淭oday I Will,鈥 that asks them to consider how they will use the day鈥檚 24 hours and share their intention using social media with the hashtag #TodayIwill.