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Show Volume XXIII Issue XVIII The Ogden Valley news Page 7 March 1, 2016 Mormon Tabernacle Choir & Orchestra at Temple Square Present Handel’s Messiah in Concert Reprising the enormous success of their 2014 concert, the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and Orchestra at Temple Square will once again join forces to present Handel’s beloved oratorio Messiah in its entirety this Easter. The concerts will be held Thursday, March 24, and Good Friday, March 25 at 7:30 p.m. in the Tabernacle in Salt Lake City. The concert will be conducted by Mack Wilberg, music director of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, who has prepared a completely new edition of Messiah for the Choir and Orchestra. Wilberg said as he worked on the score, in the back of his mind was the question “What would Handel have done if he had had ensembles as large as the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and Orchestra at Temple Square?” This required Wilberg to examine every note of the vocal and instrumental parts and make decisions as to what would accommodate a 360-voice choir and large orchestra and still reflect present-day knowledge of Baroque performance practices. The result is an edition of Messiah that honors the extraordinary history of this brilliant masterpiece as only the Choir and the Orchestra can. In 1741, swimming in debt and out of favor as a composer, George Frideric Handel accepted a commission for a benefit concert in Dublin, Ireland. On August 22, the 56-year-old sequestered himself in his London home and began to compose music to biblical texts heralding the life of Jesus Christ. In just 23 days, he completed a 260-page oratorio he named Messiah. This magnum opus has inspired listeners, crossing generational and cultural boundaries from Handel’s time to our own. The Choir and Orchestra will be joined by four New York Metropolitan Opera soloists with extensive musical backgrounds. Performing the soprano solo will be Erin Morley, an acclaimed artist who has sung at opera houses around the world and with leading orchestras in the United States. Sasha Cooke, a performer described by the New York Times as “a luminous standout,” will sing the mezzo-soprano role. In addition to her Met performances, she has appeared at opera houses from Vienna to Singapore, and regularly performs with the world’s major symphonies. Paul Appleby, tenor soloist, will appear this year for return engagements at the New York Metropolitan Opera and have his San Francisco Opera debut. With a voice described as “vocally robust,” Joseph Barron, a bassbaritone, has appeared in multiple seasons at the Met, the Pittsburgh Opera, and the Opera of Philadelphia. Barron will also appear with the Choir and Orchestra on the Sunday, March 27, Music and the Spoken Word broadcast. To provide the most opportunities for concert seating, the performances will be heard in three locations: the live concert in the Tabernacle, a premium simulcast in the Joseph Smith Memorial Building Legacy Theater, and a closed-circuit simulcast in the Conference Center Theater. There will be no random selection for the 2016 Messiah concerts. Tickets will be distributed for all three locations on a first-come, first-served basis on Tuesday evening, February 23, 2016, at 7:00 p.m. MST exclusively through lds.org/events. For those unable to get tickets, the concert will be shown on a live stream at mormontabernaclechoir.org/messiah on Friday, March 25 at 7:30 p.m. MDT. Using the live stream, various community, music, and churches will join their voices with the Choir, singing Messiah at various locations throughout the world. Ron Jarrett, the Choir’s president, says, “We have heard from people in several countries who are organizing events. This is a wonderful way to celebrate the birth, life, death and resurrection of Christ with all Christians of the world.” The live stream will be available from the Choir’s website for ten days to accommodate time zones and schedules. To assist participants with the Messiah sing experience, the Choir is providing resources, such as connection instructions, a downloadable PDF file of the concert program with lyrics, and historical information about Messiah, at <www.mormontabernaclechoir. org/messiah> Participants are asked to post their experiences on social media with the hashtag #MessiahLive. As announced last week, the Choir and Orchestra are also asking fans to sing Handel’s “Hallelujah” chorus in the world’s largest virtual Hallelujah choir by uploading their recordings on YouTube. The performances will be featured in a video that will be released March 13, 2016. Instructions, sheet music, a music video, and the submission form are all posted at <virtualchoir.mormon.org> In addition, on March 4, 2016, the Choir and Orchestra will release a new recording of Handel’s Messiah in two versions: the complete oratorio version on 2 CDs with a bonus DVD and a 60-minute highlights version. Composed of 360 volunteer voices, the Mormon Tabernacle Choir serves as a musical ambassador for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The Orchestra at Temple Square is a 150-member, all-volunteer symphony orchestra organized in 1999 to perform and accompany the musical ensembles of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir organization. Nearly 200 recordings have showcased the Choir from the early days of long-playing records to modern digital compact discs and DVDs. Utah-Filmed Music Video Announced by Eden Vocalist After some challenging times, holistically what we were hoping for.” healing from cancer and a vehicle accident “It’s going to be really different I think.” that put her in the hospital, Eden resident and She continued, “There’s a lot of visual emotion, Classical Crossover soprano Alicia more than I expected to feel when Blickfeldt is back on her feet and we first decided to film this piece. moving forward - fast. It illustrates how life’s journey can Ms. Blickfeldt recently returned be very difficult but that, in the from a music video shoot in Snow end, we can find peace. I’ve most Canyon State Park just outside St. definitely been there so I get that. George, Utah. An emotionally poiI believe this video will translate gnant piece, Pie Jesu promises to into something very commanding.” bring a tear to anyone whose life In addition to Pie Jesu, has had challenges. Blickfeldt is in production of Made famous by internationally another music video that will be acclaimed composer Andrew Lloyd filmed in Ogden and on Antelope Webber, Ms. Blickfeldt’s powerful Island. Regarding this project, she rendition is as much a visual jourstated, “This one will be shot in ney of redemption as it is a musical three separate locations, have three one. As the lyrics explain (which costume changes, and a few mysare in Latin), “Merciful Jesus, who terious characters. Our aim is to Alicia Blickfieldt is takes away the sins of the world, cross the Classical genre I sing in grant them rest, everlasting rest.” with Fantasy, which is very popular right now. I When asked about her experience filming think it will really get people’s attention.” Pie Jesu, Ms. Blickfeldt commented, “It was so The expected release date for Pie Jesu is amazing! The team and I filmed in a beautiful March 12. There will likely be a screening red rock slot canyon, which turned out to be the party announced in the next issue of The Ogden perfect location. It created a very stark contrast Valley news where the public will be invited between the darkness and the light as the sun to attend. In the interim, anyone wishing to crawled up the canyon walls. It is very reflec- follow Ms. Blickfeldt’s progress is welcome to tive of the music itself. Visually, it was exactly subscribe to her YouTube page or on Facebook. Frost in the Air in Ogden Valley Bruce Grandin of Eden took this photo of a moose that was loose in the Heritage Knowles subdivision near Middle Fork on a February morning feasting on the apple trees.The nice thing about an inversion is that it creates some photogenic frosty trees. |