Bach Choir Has Final Cantata Concert Of Season Sunday

  • Monday, March 25, 2019

The Chattanooga Bach Choir 2018-19 Barnett & Company Cantata Series concludes Sunday at 5 p.m., with music celebrating the Feast of the Annunciation (March 25). The concert will be held at Christ Church Episcopal, 663 Douglas St. at McCallie Avenue.  Tickets are $20 and students are free.  For more information and to purchase tickets visit www.chattanoogabachchoir.org.

The concert will feature Bach’s Cantata BWV 1, Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern (How Beautifully the Morning Star Shines), along with Morten Lauridsen’s a cappella motet, Ave Maria, and Dietrich Buxtehude’s chorale fantasia on Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern (BuxWV 223) for organ. Completing the program are the Andante & Rondo from W.A. Mozart’s Horn Concerto No. 4 in E-flat Major, K. 495, performed by featured young artist Janelle Wigal Wagoner, French horn. Joining the Bach Choir are solo artists Maria Rist, soprano; James Harr, tenor; Zachary Cavan, bass; and Karla Fowkes, organ.

Artistic Director David Long said, “During his years as Thomaskantor in Leipzig, Bach, was expected to write cantatas not only for every Sunday (except during Lent), but also for important feast days. Our cantata on March 31, Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern (How Beautifully the Morning Star Shines) was written for the Feast of the Annunciation and was first performed on Sunday, March 25, 1725. For this Marian feast, remembering the mother of Jesus, Bach created a brilliant and joyful work based on the hymn by Philipp Nicolai, evoking the sparkling morning star through dance-like rhythms, rapturous solos, and a jubilant final chorale.

"The cantata is scored for soprano, tenor and bass soloists, four-part mixed choir, and an orchestra including two horns, two oboes da caccia (we use English horns), two violin soloists, strings and continuo. We contrast Bach’s lively cantata, with a serene contemporary work, American composer Morten Lauridsen’s a cappella motet Ave Maria, written in 1997, which features lush harmonies, polyphonic textures, divisi into multiple parts, and his trademark “gentle” dissonances.

"The program opens with Dietrich Buxtehude’s virtuosic chorale fantasia on Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern, performed by our wonderful organist, Karla Fowkes. We are also delighted to showcase a talented young musician in our area, Janelle Wigal Wagoner, performing the Andante and Rondo from Mozart’s Horn Concerto No. 4. The Bach Choir is pleased to present these concerts featuring Bach cantatas and other works as musical respites in our daily lives, especially during the Lenten season.”

The Bach Choir’s Barnett & Company Cantata Series explores J.S. Bach’s more than 200 cantatas written for every Sunday in the church year. Mr. Long presents a brief musical explanation of the featured cantata placing each work in its liturgical context and surrounds each with complimentary
music to complete the program.

The Chattanooga Bach Choir’s concerts are made possible, in part, with support from the Tennessee Arts Commission and ArtsBuild.

Entertainment
Lee University's Opera Theatre To Present Opera Scenes April 21
Lee University's Opera Theatre To Present Opera Scenes April 21
  • 4/12/2024

Lee University Opera Theatre, directed by James Frost, will present Opera Scenes in the Squires Recital Hall on Sunday, April 21, at 5 p.m. The performance, which is the final project of Lee’s ... more

Lee School Of Music To Present Sr. Honors Concert April 19
  • 4/12/2024

The Lee University School of Music will present the Senior Honors Concert on Friday, April 19, at 7:30 p.m. in Squires Recital Hall, featuring performers selected by School of Music faculty from ... more

SAU’s Choirs Present Sacred Concert As Year-End Finale April 27
SAU’s Choirs Present Sacred Concert As Year-End Finale April 27
  • 4/12/2024

Choirs from the School of Music at Southern Adventist University — including Bel Canto (women’s chorus), Die Meistersinger (men’s chorus), and I Cantori conducted by Gennevieve Brown-Kibble — ... more