The Valley Catholic May 7, 2019 | Page 22

22 May 7, 2019 | The Valley Catholic COMMUNITY San Jose Symphonic Choir Collaborates on Special Performance San Jose Symphonic Choir (SJSC) will present its final concert of the 2018 - 19 season on May 19, 3 pm, at the Campbell Heritage Theatre, 1 W. Campbell Avenue, Campbell. The concert will feature a first time collaboration between three lo- cal groups, and an unusual pairing of works: a 21 st century opera, and a rarely performed 19 th century sym- phony-cantata. Tickets for this event are: General, $30 in advance, $35 at the door, Seniors/Students/Military $25 in advance, $30 at the door, and are available through the theatre box office. Visit the Choir’s website, www.sanjosesymphonicchoir.org for a direct link to tickets and additional information. The SJSC is thrilled to be working in tandem with Bay Shore Lyric Opera and Mission Chamber Orchestra, to produce the West Coast premiere of Henry Mollicone’s one-act opera La- dybird: First Lady of the Land. Mr. Mol- licone, a local composer, and Pullitzer Prize-winning librettist Sheldon Har- nick created a fascinating work based upon events in the life of Lady Bird Johnson, wife of President Lyndon B. Johnson. The opera honors Lady Bird’s contribution to America, as the woman who stood witness to the historical magnitude of her husband’s term as President of the United States, and rode down bigotry as a daughter of the South. When LBJ’s 1964 presi- dential campaign was considered to be at risk, due to his support of the Civil Rights Act, Ladybird coura- geously campaigned for him across the Southern states on a special train – the “Ladybird Express” - at times putting her own life at risk. Mollicone’s delightful score em- ploys a variety of styles to create vivid orchestration, lyrical solos for the principal roles, and choruses that are in turn jazzy, jaunty, and exquisitely melodic. Principal roles will be sung by company members of Bayshore Lyric Opera, while SJSC takes to the opera stage for the first time to sing as the opera chorus. Mission Chamber Orchestra, led by Guest Conductor Ari Bocian, accompanies the action. Led by SJSC Music Director Le- roy Kromm, the choir and orchestra will perform the second work on the program: Felix Mendelssohn’s Sym- phony #2, Lobgesang (Hymn of Praise). Commissioned in 1840 for a festival celebrating the 400 th anniversary of Gutenberg’s invention of movable Ladybird, First Lady of the Land Symphony #2 “Lobgesang” an opera in one act, by Henry Mollicone by Felix Mendelssohn Mollicone & Mendelssohn Sunday, May 19th · 3:00 PM Campbell Heritage Theatre | 1 W. Campbell Avenue, Campbell CA 95008 BAY SHORE LYRIC OPERA MISSION CHAMBER ORCHESTRA SAN JOSE SYMPHONIC CHOIR General $30 in advance, $35 at the door; Senior/Students/Military $25 in advance, $30 at the door Tickets available through Heritage Theatre Box Office, https://www.ci.campbell.ca.us/353/Heritage-Theatre or 408-866-2700 For more information please contact [email protected], or call 408-995-3318. San Jose Symphonic Choir is supported, in part, by a Cultural Affairs Grant from the City of San Jose, and by the Peery Fund. type, Mendelssohn’s symphony was performed as the final event, bring- ing the festival to a suitably imposing conclusion. The texts of the nine vocal move- ments, chosen principally from the Bible, concern the praise of God and mankind’s progress from darkness to light, and enlightenment - through the dissemination of God’s word, its implied agent being the Gutenberg Bible, which considerably advanced the German Reformation and the spread of literacy. The outset of the piece is a dramatic call-and-response between the trom- bones and full orchestra; the figure recurs in the opening chorale (“All that has breath, praise the Lord”). This opening leads to a highly struc- tured musical progression, which accompanies the textual progression from darkness to light as God’s word is promulgated. The dramatic peak of the cantata is the tenor soloist’s recitative question: “Watchman, is the night past?”, posed three times. The answer, given by a soprano solo, introduces the lifting of the darkness in the radiant chorus that follows (“The night is past”). This is followed by the familiar chorale “Now thank we all our God”, a culminating fugal chorus, and a final appearance of the initial call-and-response trombone figure, bringing the composition full circle and reaffirming the unity of the whole. The use of the title “cantata” is a reflection of the influence of J.S. Bach, and other Baroque compos- ers, in Mendelssohn’s musical style. (Mendel ssoh n de eply respec ted Bach, and was largely responsible for re-establishing his music in the 19 th century.) The writing is clearly influenced by Bach’s example in the layout of recitatives, arias, and cho- ruses, the fugues of the opening and closing choruses, and the use of the chorale (“Now thank we all our God”) - all quintessential elements of Bach’s art. The lyrical beauty and drama of the work, however, are unmistakably Mendelssohn. Archbishop Gregory Shares Memories, asks for Prayers from Atlanta ATLANTA (CNS) -- As he prepares to leave the archdiocese of Atlanta for his new assignment in Washington, Archbishop Wilton D. Gregory shared the memories he has made and asked for prayers during an April 11 interview with the Georgia Bulletin, archdiocesan newspaper. “It seems to me that we here in Atlanta are in a privileged position. We are experiencing growth and expansion while many other dioceses are experiencing contraction and realignment of ex- isting structures,” said the archbishop, who had led the church in Atlanta since 2005. “And we’re building churches and expanding facilities, so we are enjoying right now certainly a great blessing as the Lord,” he added. In an Atlanta news conference in early April, the archbishop said he doesn’t think in terms of a legacy. He said he takes the greatest satisfaction from having come to “know this diocese well and I think that’s an important accomplishment for any pastor to be able to say that after a certain number of years, ‘I know, and I love my people.’ CAREGIVER-ELDERCARE IN-HOME CARE AGENCY We are offering COMPETITVE Rates & Flexible Schedules 408-677-3682 | 408-613-7189 caregivereldercare.com