Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Mount Auburn as a Community Resource | Page 14

People and Happenings Music, Musicians and Mount Auburn The Friends of Mount Auburn presented a special music event in Bigelow Chapel on June 20 featuring Soprano Jean Danton and Pianist Thomas Stumpf. During the hour long concert, Ms. Danton, a soloist with Handel and Hayden Society, Oregon Bach Festival, Boston Baroque and the Boston Pops Orchestra, and Mr. Stumpf, who has performed across four continents and appeared with the Hong Kong Philharmonic, the Boston Pops Orchestra and numerous other ensembles, celebrated some of the notable poets and com- posers now buried at Mount Auburn. Their program featured poetic verse set to music and included the works of poets Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Julia Ward Howe, Amy Lowell and David McCord. The program also included a wonderful and crowd- pleasing performance of Edward Ballantine’s “Variations on ‘Mary Had a Little Lamb’” by Mr. Stumpf (Mary Sawyer Tyler, the inspiration for the poem, is buried at the Cemetery). Program notes, written by musicologist Steven Ledbetter, helped to explain Boston’s literary and musical circles and how these collaborative works between poet and composer came to be. The wine reception following the concert allowed concert attendees to mingle and chat with the musicians. What began as a single concert to celebrate the works of composers now buried at Mount Auburn during our 175th An- niversary in 2006-2007 Musicologist Steven Ledbetter (left), and has since become an soloist Jean Danton (right) with Mount annual event. While Auburn’s Bree Harvey. preparing for that first concert in June 2006, Ms. Danton uncovered a wealth of material composed by figures now buried at Mount Auburn. So much, in fact, that it could not all be used in one program. Ms. Dan- ton and Mr. Stumpf have since prepared two additional programs for the Cemetery. As has been the case with the previous two concerts, some of the pieces performed this June were uncataloged works discovered by Ms. Danton in the archives of the New England Conservatory that have been performed or heard for the first time in decades. With even more discoveries, there is no doubt that Ms. Danton and Mr. Stumpf will join us again in the future to celebrate some of Mount Auburn’s musical figures and continue to bring this music back to life. Musicologists all agree that Boston’s most lasting impression on the cultural identity of the nation was its importance in establishing American music in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Many of the individuals who helped to define Boston’s musical life and establish the city as the epicenter of American music—including composers George Whit- field Chadwick (1854–1931), John Knowles Paine (1839– 1906), Arthur Foote (1853–1937), and Mabel Wheeler Daniels (1878–1971)—are now buried