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Our Mission
The Saint Louis Chamber Chorus dedicates its efforts to the promotion and
appreciation of choral music, its mission being not only to entertain,
but to educate and inspire. Programs are devised to match music to venue
and occasion, and result is a unique marriage of the architectural
diversity of St. Louis with the finest a cappella compositions.
Original texts and languages are sung by the
Chorus wherever possible, usually without accompaniment; a season may
span up to ten languages. To respect further the integrity of each work,
individual songs or movements are rarely excerpted, so that the audience
may appreciate the composer’s true intentions. Most significantly,
strenuous efforts are made to marry musical texture to a suitable
setting, not only culturally but also acoustically: the various
venues
are the choir’s ‘instruments’ and each must be ‘played’
differently. Consequently, the Saint Louis Chamber Chorus is not bound by
any individual auditorium. The Chorus has in fact occasionally traveled
beyond its home in the Midwest, performing at The White House, Carnegie
Hall, and on tour in Germany.
Premières are always found in every season, as the
Chamber Chorus acknowledges its obligation not only to the composers of
yesterday, but of today and tomorrow. This is
not entirely altruistic, as adventurous performers and listeners alike
relish the ‘new.’ To this end, the Chorus has commissioned numerous
original works and editions, and has introduced other works to American
audiences for the first time. Most concerts each season include a
world, American or St. Louis première performance.
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Our Repertoire
The repertoire of the Chorus ranges from the Renaissance to the present
day. The diverse nature of the Chorus’
repertoire is yet more daunting
for its linguistic range, with as many as ten languages sometimes
appearing in a single season’s repertoire.
Although the Chorus is perhaps a little too large
to perform Renaissance madrigals written on an intimate scale, there is
nonetheless much other Renaissance repertoire which benefits from a
‘choir’ (rather than a ‘consort’) performance. Among the more recognized
composers from this period regularly represented in the Chorus’ programs
are Gibbons, Handl and Palestrina.
The Chorus’ programs explore the choral writing of
acknowledged masters such as Brahms and Holst whose instrumental music
may already be familiar; this provides a different perspective on
composers who tend to be better known for their orchestral works. In
this respect the Chamber Chorus acts as a ‘classical ensemble,’
complementing other organizations such as the St. Louis Symphony and
Philharmonic Orchestras.
As befits a mixed voice choir, particular
attention is paid to the literature of the nineteenth century, a period
when choral singing enjoyed a great revival and highly proficient
choruses developed in many European and American cities. In response to
this new constituency, composers wrote challenging and extended works,
and indeed such masters as Brahms, Mendelssohn, Schubert and Schumann
found remuneration in writing for, and training, these ensembles. In
most seasons, then, the Chorus performs lieder or motets by these
composers and their contemporaries.
The renaissance of choral music in Britain during
the past hundred years provides another focus for the choir (not a
surprise, given the background of the founding and current artistic
directors). To this end, the Chamber Chorus has performed many works by
Holst, Howells and Vaughan Williams, and by some St. Louis premières of
works by contemporary British composers, such as Judith Bingham and
David Matthews. Modern American composers are also well
represented, with several world or regional
premières by
Howard Helvey, Stephen Paulus and Ned Rorem, to name but a few.
Some composers excelled in writing for the voice, and their works
constitute a central portion of the Chamber Chorus’ repertoire. Through
the Chorus’ performances you can appreciate the creativity of a wide
chronological and geographical span from Luca Marenzio to Herbert
Howells. Many of these works are not widely recorded, if at all, and so
our concerts represent a unique opportunity to hear them performed in
St. Louis. Every generation may claim its share of the unjustly
forgotten, and most Chamber Chorus concerts include hitherto unknown
‘gems,’ sometimes by indifferent composers rising, albeit briefly, to
write a beautiful miniature.
The development of the choir’s repertoire and its high standard of
performance have been corroborated in a series of commercial
CDs. Following several
privately recorded discs, the Chamber Chorus released a disc of ancient
poetry settings through Bolchazy-Carducci (Chicago). This was followed
by a selection of Spanish music for Guild Records (Switzerland), and
most recently two discs for the British label, Regent (one a selection
of four contemporary works written for the SLCC, and the other, a major
retrospective of Elgar’s contemporary and friend, Sir Granville
Bantock). These recordings have garnered praise and coverage in a wide
range of publications, from
Gramophone magazine to
Choral Journal,
to The Guardian national newspaper in the UK.
Such recordings are currently the only way to enjoy the Chamber Chorus
if attending one of the season’s six performances is not a possibility.
The choir does not tour or perform at conventions; its primary focus is
to present a series of subscription concerts in the greater St. Louis
area. Programs are tailored to, and often inspired by, the physical
setting of the performance, and given the city’s extraordinary wealth of
architecture and traditions, this may include Hungarian motets, Hebrew
laments, and ancient Greek choruses, and all within the space of four or
five months. Performances are not repeated, and repertoire is rarely
repeated within a ten year cycle, all of which encourages
choral music lovers to make the
choir’s concert dates a priority.
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The Makeup of a Season
Prior to our 50th anniversary season, a familiar structure had developed
for the arrangement of the season’s six concerts (see our
Past Season
Index). We began with a
“Voices” program that centered upon a single tradition, like Brazil or
Hungary, and followed this in November with a secular concert; the
ethnic theme returned with the Christmas performance, as in “A Polish
Christmas.” The second half of the season often began in February with a
performance at the
Cathedral-Basilica, and this
large-scale venue was then contrasted, in April, with a more intimate
performance by either the men or the women of the Chorus. The season
concluded with one of the great settings of the Requiem for both
accompanied and unaccompanied voices.
Since the 50th season, on the other hand, the
Chorus has expanded its horizons to present a more eclectic series of
concerts that explore a series of themes, as well as the greatest works
of the a cappella canon. Christmases continue to have a distinct theme,
and other presentations have focused upon a single tradition, but some
of the other ‘unifiers’ have ranged from an exploration of great musical
cities of the world (e.g., London, Vienna, Rome) to different settings
of single poets (e.g., Shakespeare, Rilke, and Whitman). Though programs
are increasingly original and diverse, we continue to feature one or
more significant choral masses from the Renaissance to the present day,
complete cycles of lieder or madrigals, and highlights of repertoire
otherwise not heard in St. Louis because of their
challenge. Collaborative projects, both with composers and other
performers, are a frequent feature of Chamber Chorus concerts, and
demonstrate the broad reach and appeal of choral music.
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