Tag: Choir

  • Winter Concert Preview: “Be Like the Bird” by Abbie Betinis

    By: Concentus At first blush, “Be Like the Bird” by Abbie Betinis appears unremarkable. It’s a short, unison piece that gets sung as a canon. Compared to her complex and multi-movement “From Behind the Caravan,” which Concentus performed in 2019, this new piece seemed extremely simple, almost trifling. And yet… First, there are the composer’s…

  • Spring Concert Preview: Paper Crane

    Spring Concert Preview: Paper Crane

    By Annie Nichol Concentus Women’s Chorus will present our spring concert in just a few weeks, on May 31 and June 1. Titled “Songs through the Senses,” this beautifully programmed concert invites singers and listeners to savor the five senses: sight, smell, hearing, taste, and touch. Before attending this concert, I invite you to reflect…

  • Spring Concert Preview: Everyday Wonders

    Spring Concert Preview: Everyday Wonders

    By Maggie Symington On May 31 and June 1, 2024, Concentus Women’s Chorus will be performing concerts of “Songs through the Senses” to honor the work of Rochester Refugee Resettlement Services*. (Click here for more details and to purchase tickets!) The cornerstone piece of our concerts is “Everyday Wonders: The Girl from Aleppo,” with music…

  • Spring Concert Preview: Song of Miriam

    Spring Concert Preview: Song of Miriam

    By Johanna Rehbaum We are a story people. Humans always have been. We have always told stories to make sense of our existence as a people, to make sense of ourselves and each other. We begin telling stories to our children, but we never stop telling them, because we never stop trying to make meaning…

  • Sirens at the RPO

    Sirens at the RPO

    By Maggie Symington Concentus was honored to join the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra to sing both Debussy’s Nocturnes and Holst’s The Planets on the same program in January 2024. This was our third time performing The Planets with the RPO and the second time Nocturnes, all under different guest conductors. Each conductor brings something different and…

  • Being Me

    Being Me

    By Maggie Symington Concentus first received this piece, a poem by Joshua Everett set to music by Joanna Gill, last spring, in anticipation of our joint concert with Vox Anima in Kent, England. I didn’t really focus on the lyrics as I was learning the piece, and the music wasn’t particularly intricate – no annoying…