Guess Who Wrote These Songs of Love

Did you take the quiz in the February 2018 issue of Alla Breve On-Line?  Here are the songs.  The answers are below.  Happy Valentine's Day!

  1. 'Somewhere'
  2. 'Till There Was You'
  3. 'If I Should Fall Behind'
  4. 'In the Shape of a Heart'
  5. 'The Heart of the Matter'
  6. 'Something'
  7. 'I Can't Tell You Why'
  8. 'I've Got You Under My Skin'
  9. 'Mary Hynes'
  10. 'She Walks in Beauty'
  11. Bonus: Which of these songs did Frank Sinatra say was "the greatest love song of the past 50 years"?

1. Stephen Sondheim/L. Bernstein; 2. Meredith Willson; 3. Bruce Springsteen; 4. Jackson Browne; 5. Don Henley; 6. George Harrison for the Beetles; 7. Glenn Frey, Timothy Schmit, Don Henley for The Eagles; 8. Cole Porter; 9. Samuel Barber; 10. Paul Mealor; Bonus 'Something'

notes and heart.jpg

Art for A Song Featured Artist, Elizabeth Sauder

The Friends of the RCS welcomes our first Art for A Song artist participants, Lee and Elizabeth Sauder, Rockbridge County artists and brother and sister-in-law of our own mezzo-soprano, Anne Sauder.  The Sauders have donated two beautiful art works to kick us off for our raffle to be held in conjunction with the Rockbridge Choral Society's final concert of the 2016/2017 season - Rachmaninoff's Vespers.  Please, join the chorus at 7 PM on April 2, 2017 at the Lexington Presbyterian Church, downtown Lexington, and enter for a chance to win.  Read on for a bit about Elizabeth.

Elizabeth Sauder describes herself as a plein air painter, ie, she paints outdoors.  She often visits a site several times during the day, analyzing how light and weather impacts the subject of her paintings.  Of her work philosophy, she says “I paint as a way to explore and become intimate with a place and to better understand the visual and environmental phenomena surrounding it…to understand the fundamental characteristics, the very essence of the land that I call home.” 

You’ll encounter Elizabeth painting all over Rockbridge County, from a downtown Lexington street on a warm, fall evening at twilight to the middle of a barn-lot surrounded by curious calves on a snowy morning.   Check out her work www.elizabethsauder.com or at Artists in Cahoots in Lexington.

Elizabeth's donated work is titled Spring.  She chose one of her favorite spots off of Turnpike Rd. and painted this lovely work over a few days in March 2016 "when the trees were first budding out and the grass was newly freshened with chlorophyll." She set her easel up in the field and painted what was in front of her, as is often her practice.   Come to the concert and enter for a chance to win Spring.

Elizabeth Sauder paints en plein air

Elizabeth Sauder paints en plein air

Spring, 24 X 18" painted en plein air, artist Elizabeth Sauder

Spring, 24 X 18" painted en plein air, artist Elizabeth Sauder

Art for A Song - Featured Artist, Lee Sauder

 

The Friends of the RCS welcomes our first Art for A Song artist participants, Lee and Elizabeth Sauder, Rockbridge County artists, and brother and sister-in-law of our own mezzo-soprano, Anne Sauder.  The Sauders have donated two art works to kick us off with our first drawing which audience members can enter at our April 2, 2017 concert. Drawing will be held on April 3, and winners will be notified by mail or email.  In today's post, learn a bit about Lee Sauder and his work.

Lee is a blacksmith, bloomsmith, and sculptor.  He has donated to the Friends of the RCS a work in wrought iron which he titles Reclining

Lee “digs up iron ore and transforms it into metal by the ancient and long-forgotten art of bloomery smelting…then tries to forge something beautiful out of the iron he’s made”.  Lee produces his sculpture, architectural iron and customized furniture at his home forge, Germinal Ironworks, on the south slope of House Mountain right here in Rockbridge County.  He started working in iron as a blacksmith’s apprentice at the age of 12.  Today he is best known in the blacksmith community for his research into ancient iron smelting.  He travels extensively to research and teach smelting techniques.  

Check out Lee’s sculptures on his website http://www.leesauder.com and watch how bloom iron is made http://www.leesauder.com/smelting_video.php.

The Friends of the Rockbridge Choral Society thanks Lee for his donation in support of the RCS and our first Art for A Song give-away.  Our audience members will have a chance to enter and win Reclining on Sunday, April 2, 2017 when the RCS presents Rachmaninoff's Vespers as they close their 2015/2016 performance season.  Please join us! 

Reclining - 17 X 3 " in wrought Iron, by Lee Sauder

Reclining - 17 X 3 " in wrought Iron, by Lee Sauder

Smelting

Smelting

Art for A Song

On April 2, 2017, the Rockbridge Choral Society will present Sergei Rachmaninoff’s Vespers, and we hope you will join us for this ethereal musical setting of texts from the Russian Orthodox liturgical all-night vigil ceremony.  It is often praised as Rachmaninoff’s finest achievement and was one of his own favorite works. 

As this performance season comes to a close, the Friends of the RCS is excited to say thanks to our loyal audience by inviting concert attendees to participate in our inaugural Art for A Song drawing.  We are extremely grateful to two local artists, Lee and Elizabeth Sauder, for donating art works for our kick-off drawing, which will be held on Monday April 3, 2017.  Our April 2nd concert audience members will be able to enter at the concert and the winners will be notified by email or mail.  Stay tuned for more information on the artists and Art for A Song.   If you are a local artist and would like to participate in future drawings, send an email to communications@rcs.org.

Patriotic Chicken?

A Brahma Bantam (Chinese-breed) chicken in Germantown, Maryland named Jokgu (Korean) plays America the Beautiful on an electronic keyboard using her beak.  Jokgu’s owner, Shannon Myers, says it took about two weeks to teach the feathered prodigy to play the song using a clicker training technique.  Jokgu uses her beak to play the tune by striking keys that are lit up. But wait, there’s more.   Jokgu has a band - The Flockstars.  Only in America folks!   You can watch Jokgu play here   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XfPBfMGLf9Q

Two Tenors, A Baritone, and Some Strings

The Rockbridge Choral Society rehearsed hard for our January 22, 2017 concert, which was a success.  We had a super chamber orchestra, and as always we were blessed with our soloists. Gregory Parker, Nick Leitch, and Nate Pence listened and studied while the chorus did it's work. Our very fine cellist, John Moran, joined us again and kept us on track.  Our ever reliable Evelyn P. McCorkle endowed concertmaster, Risa Browder, kept us all in line including the maestro.  We thank them all for their time and talents!  On to Rachmaninoff's Vespers on April 2, 2017!

The Drone Out There...

Astronomers have discovered something unexpected coming from the Perseus Cluster of galaxies which lies some 250 million light years from Earth.  Dr. Andrew Fabian at the Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge, England has heard the lowest sound waves from an object in the universe ever detected by humans and coming from the center black hole of a cluster of galaxies which turns out to be the largest structure in the cosmos.   Fabian’s team determined that this note is a B-flat some 57 octaves below middle-C, or one million, billion times lower than the lowest sound audible to the human ear.  The Perseus Cluster’s black hole sound waves have a frequency of 10 million years!  The lowest sounds a human can hear travel at about 1/20th of a second by comparison. 

Dear reader, your editor made C’s in physics, so this is all Greek, but suffice it to say that greater minds can tell us how black holes are ‘singing’ using NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory, an orbiting telescope that sees the Universe in X-ray frequencies just as the Hubble Space telescope sees it in visible light.  Interesting to a musician to be sure, but to astronomers, this drone may be the key in learning how galaxy clusters, the largest structures in the Universe, grow.   So, they are looking at other galaxy clusters to ‘hear’ more ‘singing’ black holes.      

           

Our Volunteers

The Friends would like to thank all our volunteers who work tirelessly to foster the work of the RCS and the RYC.  Most come from the ranks of the RCS.  These folks organize ticket distribution and sales, stage assembly, advertising through local media, poster distribution, program layout and design, housing for out-of -town soloists and players when needed, organizing and keeping track of the music catalog for the singers, party organization, etc.  Yes, this is a long list of jobs.

Over the years, the current holders of these crucial positions have put together the efficient systems which allow our singers to do the most important job - learning and presenting great choral music.  

We hope some new folks will be inspired to join our volunteer ranks.  We could not do what we do without them.

Anne Sauder (Soprano II) authors our concert programs.

Anne Sauder (Soprano II) authors our concert programs.

Halloween Musical Saints

Musical Saints - RIP

As we approach All Hallows Eve, here are a few stories surrounding the weird and untimely deaths of musicians.  Seriously, you can’t make this stuff up.

Enrique Granados

Enrique Granados

Enrique Granados died in 1916 at the height of his success.  This Spanish nationalist composer was invited by President Woodrow Wilson to give a piano recital at the White House.  When Granados and his wife missed the boat back to Spain, they procured passage to England and then boarded the Sussex ferry which would take them on to France.  While crossing the English Channel, the Sussex was hit by a German U-boat torpedo.  Granados, who had a life-ling fear of the ocean, drowned when he jumped out of his lifeboat in a valiant but futile attempt to save his wife.

Jean-Baptiste Lully, the French Baroque master and King Louis XIV’s favorite opera composer, died in 1687 from a self-inflicted wound to his foot.  He stabbed his foot with his own pointed staff (used for keeping time) while conducting a performance of his Te Deum.  Resulting infection and gangrene killed him three months after he had dealt himself what turned out to be the fatal blow.

Anton Webern

Anton Webern

Austrian composer, Anton Webern, was a pupil of fellow Austrian composer, Arnold Schoenburg.  Webern  died on September 15, 1945 just at the end of World War II.  On this evening, he stepped outside to smoke a cigar, unaware that a curfew was being enforced by the Allied occupying forces.  He was shot dead by an American soldier who saw him light up.

The Ticket Man

Elijah was a sell out, and in no small measure, this is due to the work of one of our many volunteers.  We are so fortunate to have the help of one of our singers, Rick Richter, who for many years has been our point man on ticket distribution and sales.  Rick and his wife Janie spend part of their year in Lexington and part in Michigan, and Rick sings in the bass section of both the RCS and the Chamber Singers.   

In brief, ticket management involves proofing the ticket design before it goes to the printers and then distributing the tickets and keeping track of sales.  Ahead of the concert date, tickets are distributed to the chorus members who pre-sell tickets, and to the two retail locations in downtown Lexington which, for years, have graciously pre-sold tickets - McCorkle's Hallmark and Books & Company.   And, yes, Rick has a system to make it easy for the retail store sellers.  The week of a concert, Rick collects remaining unsold tickets and the sales proceeds and then makes ready to sell tickets at the door on concert night.  He has recruited volunteer ticket sellers who arrive early to sell tickets, and he makes sure the student volunteers at our W&L venues can check for tickets as they hand out programs.  Rick says that the most critical thing he does is tracking tickets out and tickets sold when we are performing in smaller venues like Wilson Hall at the Lenfest Center, where there are only 300 seats.  These concerts often sell out and there is over-flow in one of the adjacent rooms with video and sound, so keeping track of ticket count is crucial to make sure everyone who wants to attend can do so. 

After many years of faithful service in this most important role, Rick would like to turn the ticket system over to another volunteer(s) in the coming year, so if anyone is interested in apprenticing, please let Rick know.

Keith Spencer as Elijah

On Sunday evening April 24th, the Rockbridge Choral Society and a stellar orchestra completed it's 2015-2016 season with Mendelssohn's  Elijah,  and the house was packed!  The Friends would especially like to congratulate our soloists - sopranos, Christine and Maggie Fairfield; alto, Toby Newman; tenor, Eric Hanson; and baritone, Keith Spencer, in the title role.  Our soloists did not disappoint; they looked and sounded superb!  We expect great things from Maggie, who follows in mom's (Christine's) footsteps.   As always, the Lenfest Center staff - John Lindberg and Graham Spice - did their efficient and reliable work to help the RCS pull it off without a hitch.  

    A couple of days later, on Tuesday, April 26, the Rockbridge Youth Chorale (RYC), directed by Lacey Lynch and Lori Parker, closed out our season with their spring concert held at the Lexington Presbyterian Church.  These kids never disappoint.  It was a fine program and well sung!  The Friends of the RCS is so happy to support the efforts of this group.  We are fortunate to be able to increase the stipends for our youth directors for the coming season and to be able to fund a paid intern to assist with the music education of our young singers.  The intern position will be filled through application from music education majors currently enrolled at W&L and Southern Virginia University.  We think this is an exciting addition to the youth choral experience. 

Great job all!  We can't wait until next season and preparations are under way even as this season comes to an end.