Downtown Voices and Heritage Chorale
Stephen Sands and Donald Dumpson team up with their choirs from NYC and Philadelphia for a concert in each city celebrating the diversity of song. Details TBA
Stephen Sands and Donald Dumpson team up with their choirs from NYC and Philadelphia for a concert in each city celebrating the diversity of song. Details TBA
If you visit Symphony Hall in Boston you cannot fail to notice that above the main stage is a trim intended to contain a number of plaques, each dedicated to the memory of a great composer. When the hall was opened in 1900 only the central plaque had a name on it – Beethoven’s – because he was the only composer whose popularity the founders were certain would endure. To this day, the other plaques remain blank. Our tribute to music’s greatest genius on Saturday, April 25 features the Central Jersey Symphony Orchestra and the Somerset Hills Chorus, and is built around what is almost certainly Beethoven’s most famous work – the Ninth (or Choral) Symphony, which ends with Schiller’s Ode to Joy, a passionate salute to the Age of Enlightenment. Beethoven, virtually stone deaf, conducted the first performance, though a second conductor, discreetly placed, was the one from whom the singers and musicians took their time. The two female soloists (18-year-old Henrietta Sontag and 20-year-old Caroline Unger) would both go on to have great careers.
Les Plaisirs de Versailles was written by Marc-Antoine Charpentier as a divertissement for King Louis XIV and the French court in 1682. It is an extremely silly story (the librettist is wisely anonymous), but nonetheless entirely recognizable to 21st-century audiences. Two ladies – Music and Conversation – are having a ding-dong argument because Music has been interrupted by Conversation’s babbling (sounds familiar?). Various people try to appease the two ladies, and the quarrel is eventually settled over chocolate! TENET is a group of immensely talented singers, directed by Jolle Greenleaf, who are particularly renowned for their innovative programming and virtuosic singing. In this performance, they will be accompanied by the magnificent Ensemble Caprice, a group of musicians based in Montreal whose mission is “to put new life into baroque music” – luxury casting for the rediscovery of a musical pearl from the Baroque World.
Three days of concerts, large and small, to celebrate the start of Summer in the Somerset Hills.
A fall extravaganza of music, art and food in the great outdoors celebrating the 10th anniversary season of Music in the Somerset Hills
Transcendent harp and flute music inspiring the imagination and uplifting the soul. Part of the Music in the Somerset Hills Virtual Concert Series.
An intimate fireside Schubertiade: Where Only Stars Can Hear Us Part of the MISH Virtual Series
Three members of Les Delices delight us by both singing and playing medieval music to welcome the New Year. Part of the MISH Virtual Series
A Fancy For Two To Play: Music for four hands and four feet featuring the pipe organs and pianos at St. John on the Mountain. Part of the MISH Virtual Seires
The Art of Song. Part of the MISH Virtual Series