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Light, Love, and Joy

Light, Love, & Joy
A Choral Kaleidoscope

Sunday
Nov 3, 2024
3:00 PM

Winston-Salem Symphony Chorus
Winston-Salem State University Singing Rams

Christopher Gilliam Conductor
D’Walla Simmons Burke Conductor

Vytautas Miškinis
Light Mass

André Thomas
A Celebration of Love and Joy

This concert is expected to last approximately one hour and 40 minutes with no intermission. Restrooms are located in the Brendle Recital Hall lobby.

Enjoy two innovative choral settings of the mass—one in jazz, one in gospel—as the Symphony Chorus is joined by the Singing Rams from Winston-Salem State University and an instrumental jazz trio to celebrate light, love, and joy through music.

AMErectors

Single tickets to this event go on sale August 1, but you can save your seat with a subscription!

Symphony Chorus:
Light, Love, & Joy

Sunday
Nov 3
3:00 PM

Venue

Brendle Recital Hall
Scales Fine Arts Center, Wake Forest University
Winston-Salem, NC

Rideshare and Dining

Chris Gilliam

Christopher Gilliam
Symphony Chorus Director

A conductor praised for his “precision and clarity,” and performances hailed as “enlightened,” Christopher Gilliam is the Director of the Winston-Salem Symphony Chorus, Director of Choral Activities at Wake Forest University, and Director of Music at Highland Presbyterian Church in Winston-Salem.

Winston-Salem Symphony Chorus

The Winston-Salem Symphony Chorus traces its beginnings to the 1940’s when there were three separate choral ensembles in Winston-Salem. The three ensembles merged in 1960 to the Singers’ Guild. In the years following their union, the Singers’ Guild collaborated frequently with the Symphony, and in the fall of 1971 merged with the Symphony to become known as the Winston-Salem Symphony Chorale. In 2018 the organization became known as the Winston-Salem Symphony Chorus. 

On Video

Symphony Chorus members discuss their experiences in preparing Considering Matthew Shepard.
Composer Craig Hella Johnson:
The meaning behind the title “Considering Matthew Shepard”

Why Matthew Shepard’s story is relevant today

How performance and participation help a work evolve

How we can move forward during dark times

Program Note

American composer, choral conductor, and arranger, Craig Hella (né Morris) Johnson was born on June 15, 1962 in Crow Wing County, MN. He and his sister adopted the middle name, Hella, after his ancestral village in Norway. He attended St. Olaf College, where he studied piano and sang in the famous St. Olaf Choir. He continued his musical studies at Juilliard, the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, and Yale University, from which he received his Doctor of Musical Arts degree. Johnson has directed several choral ensembles, including Texas State University, the Houston Masterworks Chorus, and the University of Texas Chorus. He founded the choral ensemble, Conspirare, at the University of Texas in 1991. In May 2013, Johnson was named Music Director and Conductor of Vocal Arts Ensemble in Cincinnati, Ohio. Considering Matthew Shepard is a “fusion oratorio” inspired by the brutal murder of the young gay man of the same name in Wyoming in 1998 and was commissioned by Conspirare in 2016. Johnson’s libretto was co-authored by Michael Dennis Browne. First performed in 2016, Considering Matthew Shepard is scored for chorus, solo voices, cello, piano, violin, clarinet, double Bass, viola, guitar, and percussion.

The savage beating and murder of Matthew Shepard in Laramie, Wyoming in October 1998 was an unspeakably shocking event that shook the conscience of the nation. His loss has become an emblem how mindless, as well as intentional hate has confronted, and continues to confront the LGBTQ+ community. His mutilated body hanging on a fence, discovered the next day by a fellow student at the University of Wyoming, has also become a symbol. This, of course, is a reminder of the figure of Jesus on the Cross. How, one might ask, can anyone bring art as a means of addressing truth, grief, loss, anger, hate, hope and redemption be woven into a fabric of music and words that can begin to do justice to the event that sparked its creation?

Craig Hella Johnson, himself a sensitive gay man, felt compelled to try to find a way. By weaving together a wide range of poetic and soulful texts by poets including Hildegard of Bingen, Lesléa Newman, Michael Dennis Browne, and Rumi, Johnson created a work that has touched, and continues to touch, the souls—as well as pricking the conscience—of all who experience Considering Matthew Shepard. It is part elegy, part Passion play, part drama, that at times gently, and at times forcefully, fashions a memorial that keeps the flame of Matthew Shepard’s life and death alive. Using passages from Matt’s personal journal, interviews and writings from his parents Judy and Dennis Shepard, newspaper reports, as well as additional texts Johnson has created a musical tapestry that cannot fail but to touch our souls.

Program Note by David B. Levy, © 2023

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$29 – $96

Sunday, Nov 3, 2024 // 3:00 pm

2629 Wake Forest Rd.
Winston-Salem, NC 27109
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