Vanderlt Chorale Lecture Concert
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Turner Recital Hall at Blair School of Music 2400 Blakemore Ave, Nashville, Tennessee 37240

Vanderbilt Chorale
Blair School of Music presents “Appear in Visions: A Choral Lecture Concert,” Friday, October 25, 8:00 p.m., in Turner Hall.⭐ Tickets are “Pay as You Wish” ($0 - $30) and required for admission. Reserve tickets: http://vu.edu/102524-tixConductor: Tucker BiddlecombeAssistant Conductors: Daniela Diano, Nicholas ZavalaThis performance, directed by Tucker Biddlecombe, will begin with a work from Heinrich Schütz, a composer who defines the narrow bridge from the Rennaissance to the Baroque. Accompanying on the Dobson Organ will be Blair’s new Instructor of Organ, Nicholas Reynolds. This concert will also include performances of Ukrainian church music, with a talk about their cultural significance by senior Blair student Diana Nalyvaiko, a native of Ukraine. Finally, we end with Benjamin Britten’s uniquely beautiful “Hymn to St. Cecilia,” a collaboration with poet W.H. Auden during perhaps the most tumultuous time of Britten’s life, but arguably also his most creative period.Event program:Jauchzet dem Herren, Psalm 100 – Heinrich SchützSacred music by Ukrainian composers (Dyletski, Koshyts, Havrylets)Hymn to St. Cecilia - Benjamin Britten
Blair School of Music presents “Appear in Visions: A Choral Lecture Concert,” Friday, October 25, 8:00 p.m., in Turner Hall.
⭐ Tickets are “Pay as You Wish” ($0 - $30) and required for admission. Reserve tickets: http://vu.edu/102524-tix
Conductor: Tucker Biddlecombe
Assistant Conductors: Daniela Diano, Nicholas Zavala
This performance, directed by Tucker Biddlecombe, will begin with a work from Heinrich Schütz, a composer who defines the narrow bridge from the Rennaissance to the Baroque. Accompanying on the Dobson Organ will be Blair’s new Instructor of Organ, Nicholas Reynolds. This concert will also include performances of Ukrainian church music, with a talk about their cultural significance by senior Blair student Diana Nalyvaiko, a native of Ukraine. Finally, we end with Benjamin Britten’s uniquely beautiful “Hymn to St. Cecilia,” a collaboration with poet W.H. Auden during perhaps the most tumultuous time of Britten’s life, but arguably also his most creative period.
Event program:
Jauchzet dem Herren, Psalm 100 – Heinrich Schütz
Sacred music by Ukrainian composers (Dyletski, Koshyts, Havrylets)
Hymn to St. Cecilia - Benjamin Britten