Showing posts with label Masterworks Choir. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Masterworks Choir. Show all posts

Monday, March 23, 2015

March 30: Florence Symphonys Orchestra's Spring Concert with the Masterworks Choir


The Spring concert of the Florence Symphony Orchestra's 2014-2015 season will be held  Monday, March 30, 2015 at 7:30 P.M. at the FMU Performing Arts Center.   

The Masterworks Choir under the direction of William Carswell will be the featured guests for this performance. The orchestra, led by Dr.Terry Roberts will accompany the Choir for Anton Bruckner's Te Deum. The remainder of the program for this concert includes J. S. Bach's Orchestral Suite No.1 and Ludwig van Beethoven's Symphony No.1.  

 Performance information is listed on the FSO website at www.FlorenceSymphony.com. Single concert tickets begin at $30 and are available at the FMU PAC Box Office - 843.661.4444 or FMUPAC.org. Senior and student discounts are available for single ticket and season ticket purchases. 

Thursday, November 13, 2014

December 14: Christmas with the Masterworks Choir



Christmas with the Masterworks Choir

Christmas Oratorio by J. S. Bach (part 1)
Joy to the World by John Rutter

Sunday, December 14, 2014
Free Admission 4:00 PM and 7:00 PM
Central United Methodist Church

Monday, November 3, 2014

December 3: Coker College Christmas Festival Live @ Central

 Coker College Christmas Festival – Dr. William Carswell – Director

This is the third year that this group has presented a program of various Christmas music under the direction of Dr. William Carswell.    Dr. Carswell is Professor of Music at Coker College in Hartsville and Music Director and Conductor of the Masterworks Choir in Florence.  Featured in this year’s concert will be the College Premier Choral Ensemble, the Coker Singers, the Chamber Singers, the Men’s Vocal Ensemble and the members of the music faculty. 

Central United Methodist Church, Corner of Irby and Cheves Street, Florence, SC 
 
For the "Live @ Central" evening, the Program begins at 6:30 PM.  There is a dinner at 5:30 PM.  Cost is $5.00 for Adults and $2.00 for Children.  RESERVATIONS FOR DINNER AT 843-662-3218

May 17: Masterworks Choir Performance

A Spring Concert

Requiem by Giuseppe Verdi
Sunday, May 17, 2015
5pm
FMU Performing Arts Center

Masterworks Concerts are free and all are welcome

Friday, October 24, 2014

Holiday Artwork Call for Publication

The Masterworks Choir Board requests artist to submit samples of work depicting a Christmas Theme  for the cover of the program for their upcoming Christmas concert on December 14.  

Artists should feel free to interpret "Christmas season" broadly.  
Maximum size would be about 6.5" high by 7.5" wide.  Smaller images have been used.


Please send questions or example(s) of work to:
Beverly Hazelwood - beverlyhaze@yahoo.com
or
Darby Holley - DarboMo1@aol.com

Monday, September 29, 2014

Five Grants Awarded and a New Arts Grants Opportunity



The Florence Regional Arts Alliance (FRAA) announces five grant recipients in the third
quarter of its grants program. The program is designed to support a wide variety of quality arts projects, professional development opportunities for artists and arts administrators. Recipients of grants awarded this quarter are the Florence Symphony Orchestra for its Spring Concert with the Masterworks Choir, The McLeod Health Foundation for its Artful Expressions Project, Florence Downtown Development Corporation’s Chamber Music Series at the Gallery, Ms. Dolores Johnson of Williams Middle School’s Phat Pheet and the Lake City Community Theatre’s upcoming production of Curtains.

Partnering with the South Carolina Arts Commission, the Florence Regional Arts Alliance has four annual quarterly grant deadlines. The next application deadline for this year’s grant cycle is November 15th for projects taking place in April, May or June. To be considered, organizations must be based in Florence County with a Florence County mailing address and be registered charitable organizations with federal non-profit status. Individual artists must be practicing artists and have a Florence County mailing address. 

The program is funded in part by a generous award from the John and Susan Bennett Memorial Arts
Fund of the Coastal Community Foundation of SC, the South Carolina Arts Commission, The National Endowment for the Arts, Honda and local individual support to the Florence Regional Arts Alliance.

For more information about FRAA’s Quarterly Grants Program visit www.florenceartsalliance.org or contact Mrs. Uschi Jeffcoat at director@florenceartsalliance.org or 843.407-3092. 

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

May 18th: The Masterworks Choir's Spring Concert


THE MASTERWORKS CHOIR SPRING CONCERT

Four Mystical Songs by Vaughan Williams
                  Te Deum by Dvorak
Dona Nobis Pacem by Vaughan Williams

              Sunday, May 18, 2014 at 5pm

             FMU Performing Arts Center in downtown Florence
                     Free Admission!

Monday, February 24, 2014

March 2nd: Masterworks Choir to perform concert of sacred music


The 35th anniversary season of the Masterworks Choir continues Sunday, March 2, with two performances of a concert of sacred music titled Psalms, Hymns and Spiritual Songs.

The 80 voices of the Masterworks Choir, conducted by Dr. William Carswell and accompanied by Beverly Hazelwood, will perform at 4 and 7 p.m. in the historic Central United Methodist Church sanctuary.

The program features 17 works that draw on the rich and varied tradition of sacred choral music, all based on hymn tunes, psalm settings, or on spiritual songs. Most often Masterworks Choir programs are accompanied by chamber orchestra. For this unique concert the Choir will highlight the wonderful art of a cappella singing by performing over half the program without instrumental accompaniment. Many of these a cappella works will be performed by 60 members of the Choir who will be traveling to New York City in May to sing at Carnegie Hall.

The Masterworks Choir will perform a 30-minute Prelude Concert, alone, prior to joining with several other choirs to sing the Mozart Requiem under the baton of internationally-renowned composer and conductor John Rutter.

Vocal soloists for the concert are singers from the ranks of the Choir. Rebecca Thompson is the soprano soloist, along with a solo quartet comprised of Kristen Owen Hardaway, soprano; Ashley Long, alto; William Daniel, tenor; and Kevin McCormick, baritone.

Dr. Carswell is in his second season as Music Director and Conductor of the Masterworks Choir. In addition to leading the Choir, he serves as Associate Provost for Academic Affairs and Associate Professor of Music at Coker College, Hartsville.

Masterworks Choir concerts are always greatly anticipated by the Florence community as well as the Pee Dee. Admission is free and everyone is encouraged to attend.

Monday, February 17, 2014

March 2nd: The Masterworks Choir at Central United Methodist Church


The Masterworks Choir, under the direction of Dr. William Carswell, will present a winter concert entitled Psalms, Hymns, and Spiritual Songs on Sunday, March 2, 2014, at Central United Methodist Church in downtown Florence. There will be two performances; one at 4:00 pm with a reception following and at 7:00 pm. This concert is free and open to the public.

Sunday, January 5, 2014

Audition Alert: Join the Masterworks Choir on January 6th


Attention local singers: If you are a lover of fine choral music and not already a member of the Masterworks Choir, the time to join is now.  Will Carswell, conductor of the Masterworks Choir, will be holding auditions for new singers from 6 to 6:45 PM on Monday, January 6 at Central United Methodist Church.  Auditions will take place just prior to the choir's first rehearsal for its spring concerts. 

Sunday, December 1, 2013

December 8th: The Masterworks Choir to present its 35th Annual Christmas Concert



The Masterworks Choir of Florence will present its 35th annual Christmas Concert on Sunday, December 8 at 4:00 pm and 7:00 pm at Central United Methodist Church in Florence, SC. The 65 voices of the Masterworks Choir will be joined by a chamber orchestra along with eleven soloists, and will be conducted by Dr. William Carswell, Associate Professor of Music and Chair of the Department of Music, Dance and Theatre at Coker College.

The program features the joyous Magnificat by J. S. Bach. Written in Leipzig for the 1723 Christmas Vespers service, the Magnificat was conceived on a grand scale, requiring five soloists, a five-part choir and, for its time, an unusually large orchestra. The extraordinary impact of Bach’s great choral works derives essentially from his remarkable ability to balance, yet at the same time to exploit to the full, the spiritual and dramatic elements of each text, whether it be one as concise as the Magnificat or as monumental as the St. Matthew Passion.

The second featured work on the program is the Oratorio de Noël (Christmas Oratorio) by French composer Camille Saint-Saëns. Saint-Saëns was a great admirer of Bach, even noting in the instrumental introduction to the Oratorio “in the style of J. S. Bach.” The piece comes from the early part of Saint-Saëns’ career, at a time when sacred music had been in decline. Written in just eleven days the Christmas Oratorio is a work of great charm which appeals particularly because of its beautiful part-writing and its melodic grace and simplicity.

The Masterworks Christmas concert is always a greatly anticipated musical event in the Pee Dee region. Admission to all Masterworks concerts is FREE, so you will want to get there early to reserve your seat!

Monday, November 25, 2013

December 8th: The Masterworks Choir to present its 35th Annual Christmas Concert



The Masterworks Choir of Florence will present their 35th annual Christmas Concert on Sunday, December 8 at 4:00 pm and 7:00 pm at Central United Methodist Church, Florence, SC.  The 65 voices of the Masterworks Choir will be joined by a chamber orchestra along with eleven soloists, and will be conducted by Dr. William Carswell, Associate Professor of Music and Chair of the Department of Music, Dance and Theatre at Coker College.

The program features the joyous Magnificat by J. S. Bach.  Written in Leipzig for the 1723 Christmas Vespers service, the Magnificat was conceived on a grand scale, requiring five soloists, a five-part choir and, for its time, an unusually large orchestra.  The extraordinary impact of Bach’s great choral works derives essentially from his remarkable ability to balance, yet at the same time to exploit to the full, the spiritual and dramatic elements of each text, whether it be one as concise as the Magnificat or as monumental as the St. Matthew Passion.

The second featured work on the program is the Oratorio de Noël (Christmas Oratorio) by French composer Camille Saint-Saëns.  Saint-Saëns was a great admirer of Bach, even noting in the instrumental introduction to the Oratorio “in the style of J. S. Bach.”  The piece comes from the early part of Saint-Saëns’ career, at a time when sacred music had been in decline.  Written in just eleven days the Christmas Oratorio is a work of great charm which appeals particularly because of its beautiful part-writing and its melodic grace and simplicity.

Vocal soloists for the concert are singers from the ranks of the Masterworks Choir, many familiar in the Florence arts community.  The Magnificat will feature sopranos Rebecca Thompson, Sharyn Mapes, Julie Thomas, Kat Justice and Kari McKeone; alto Ashley Long, tenors Paul Zwiers and Shaw Thompson, and bass Bill Hazelwood.  The Christmas Oratorio soloists include sopranos Rebecca Thompson and Julie Thomas, alto Ashley Long, tenor Shaw Thompson, and basses Bill Hazelwood, Ray Hazelwood, and Steve Mapes.

The Masterworks Christmas concert is always a greatly anticipated musical event in the Pee Dee region.  Admission to all Masterworks concerts is FREE, so you will want to get there early to reserve your seat!

Friday, April 12, 2013

April 21st: Masterworks Choir's Spring Concert to be held at the FMU PAC



The next concert of the Masterworks Choir on Sunday April 21 will feature a premier of a new work by Dale Warland and Mozart’s great masterpiece “Requiem”. The performance will be held at the FMU Performing Arts Center starting at 5PM and is free to the public. Conducting the program will be the Choir’s Music Director Dr. Will Carswell.

A Coker College faculty member since 2002, Dr. William Carswell is an Associate Professor of Music, Director of Choral Studies, and Chair of the Department of Dance, Music & Theater.  In addition to conducting the Coker Singers and Coker Chamber Singers, he teaches courses in choral literature, choral conducting and music education.  Dr. Carswell was recently named Music Director and Conductor of The Masterworks Choir in Florence, SC after having completed five seasons as Music Director and Conductor of the Columbia Choral Society in Columbia, S.C.  He has appeared as a clinician, guest conductor or adjudicator across the Southeastern US, as well as in Austria, Bulgaria, England, and France. 

The Voices is a new composition commissioned by Chorus America’s Commission Consortium of 21 choruses to benefit Chorus America, an advocacy research and leadership development organization in the choral field.  The Masterworks Choir is proud to be one of two South Carolina groups to take part in this consortium.  The other ensemble is the Greenville Chorale.   The text is by poet Michael Dennis Browne and the music is by acclaimed composer and conductor Dale Warland.  It is written for SATB chorus and solo cello.  This performance is the Southeastern U.S. premiere of this new work.

Mozart began work on the Requiem (K.626) in 1791 but died before completing this valedictory work; the standard performing version, heard at this performance, is that of the completion by Franz Xaver Süssmayer, a student of Mozart’s. Features soloist for this piece are Serena Hill-LaRoche, soprano, Jami Rhodes, mezzo soprano, Daniel Stein, tenor, and Alexander Elliot, bass.

Serena Hill-LaRoche is Assistant Professor of Music and Coordinator of Vocal Studies at Coker College, where she teaches applied voice, diction, vocal pedagogy and song literature.  Hill’s recent performance and/or master class engagements include East Tennessee State University, Greenville Light Opera Works, University of North Carolina at Pembroke, South Carolina Philharmonic, University of South Carolina, Columbia College, Bechtler Museaum of Art, East Carolina University, Virginia Commonwealth University, Palmetto Opera, Columbia Music Teachers Association, University of Maryland, Central Florida Lyric Opera, Firenze Lirico, Columbia Museum of Art, and Abadía Benedictina de la Santa Cruz del Valle de los Caídos as well as other performances in both Spain and Italy.  An award winning vocal artist, Hill was a 2003 finalist in the Southeast Regional Metropolitan Opera Auditions, a 2012 and 2008 NATS Artist Award Regional Finalist and the 2006 Artist of the Year with FBN Productions, Inc.  In 2003, she was the Bizet Award winner for the Orpheus National Young Artist Vocal Competition and a Palmetto Opera Competition Finalist in 2005.  Hill received a Doctorate in Musical Arts and a Master of Music from the University of South Carolina, both in Vocal Performance, and a Bachelor of Music from the University of North Alabama. Upcoming events include a performance of Samuel Barber’s Knoxville: Summer of 1915 and the world premiere of the “Songs for My People” by David Clay Mettens. For more information, please visit www.serenahill.com.

A native of North Carolina, mezzo-soprano, Jami Rhodes is currently Assistant Professor of Voice at East Carolina University in Greenville, North Carolina.  She holds the Doctor of Musical Arts degree in vocal performance and pedagogy from Louisiana State University, a Master of Music in vocal performance from the University of South Carolina, and a Bachelor of Music in music education from East Carolina University.   Frequently seen on the operatic stage, she holds a number of favorite leading roles to her credit including Rosina in Il Barbiere di Siviglia, Dorabella in Cosi fan tutte, Baba inThe Medium, Jo in Little Women, Charlotte in Werther, Lucretia in The Rape of Lucretia, and the title role in Bizet’s Carmen.  Also a frequent of the concert stage, Dr Rhodes is an active recitalist and performs regularly in oratorio and other concert works.  As a soloist, she has sung with Des Moines Metro Opera, Nashville Opera, Central City Opera, Lake George Opera, Opera in the Ozarks, the Ohio Light Opera, the Greenville Choral Society, the Concert Singers of Cary, the Choral Society of Durham, the Louisiana Sinfonietta, the Baton Rouge Symphony Orchestra, Symphony of the Mountains, the Wilmington Symphony, and the Austin Symphony. Recent and upcoming appearances include performances of Dominick Argento’s critically acclaimed song cycles From the Diary of Virginia Woolfand Miss Manners on Music, Rossini’s cantata Giovanna D’Arco, Mahler's Lieder eines fahrenden gesellen, the leading role in the world premiere of Salvatore Macchia’s opera Insectaphobia, and mezzo-soprano soloist in Corigliano’s Fern Hill, Handel’s Messiah, Bach’s Magnificat, Rossini's Petite Messe Solennelle, Haydn's Lord Nelson Mass, Mozart’s Requiem, Brahms’ Alto Rhapsody, and Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9.

Tenor Daniel C. Stein, whose voice has been described as “ringing” and “warm and flexible”, opens the 2012-2013 season making his debut with Maestro Christopher Warren Green and the Charlotte Symphony as soloist for Mass in C-Minor (Mozart). Other upcoming engagements for the season include singing as soloist for Messiah (Handel) with the Greensboro Oratorio Society, and a recital of songs and arias by Handel, Fauré, Rachmaninoff, Rodgers, Weill, Bock, and Jason Robert Brown at Winthrop University (Rock Hill, SC). The season concludes with Stein performing J.S. Bach's Cantata No. 4: Christ Lag im Todesbanden with the York County Choral Society and Mozart's Requiem with The Masterworks Choir of Florence as well as at Providence Baptist Church, Charlotte, NC.

Baritone Alexander Elliott is an emerging young singer who is currently in demand across the United States. In the 2012-2013 season, Alexander performed with Tulsa Opera in mainstage performances of The Corporal in Donizetti’s The Daughter of The Regiment, and The Postman in Frank Loesser’s The Most Happy Fella. As an apprentice in the 2012 season, Alexander made his debut with Des Moines Metro Opera as Perichaud in Puccini’s La Rondine, and as The Captain in Tchaikovsky’s Eugene Onegin.

While there, he also covered the role of Eugene Onegin, a role that Alexander performed earlier in the season under special invitation from The Florida State Opera. Equally at home on the concert stage, recent performances have included Handel’s Messiah, with the Pensacola Symphony, and Vaughan Williams’ Five Mystical Songs with the Albany Chorale. Other concert engagements have included performances with the Tallahassee Symphony, and the Epiphany Concert Series in South Carolina.

As a member of Des Moines Metro Opera’s Opera Iowa troupe, Alexander participated in over 70 performances of Papageno in The Magic Flute and The Strongman in Sid The Serpent Who Wanted To Sing. Alexander was also an Apprentice Artist with Des Moines Metro Opera during the summer of 2011.

Alexander is a graduate of Florida State University, where he studied with David Okerlund. While there he performed the roles of Figaro in Il barbiere di Siviglia, Demetrius in A Midsummer Night’s Dream, and Pish-Tush in The Mikado, among other roles. He is a native of Florence, South Carolina, and currently resides in New York City.

Thursday, April 11, 2013

April 21st: The Masterworks Choir to present its Spring Concert at the FMU PAC


The Masterworks choir, under the direction of Dr. William Carswell, presents their annual spring concert featuring the music of Mozart, plus a special event - the premiere of a choral work by renowned conductor and composer Dale Warland. Concert is a 5pm. Admission is free.

The concert will be held at the Francis Marion University Performing Arts Center, located at 201 South Dargan Street, in downtown Florence.

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Masterworks Choir Ushers in the Holiday Season



The Masterworks Choir presents its annual Christmas Concert on Sunday December 9, 2012 at Central United Methodist Church. There will be 2 performances, one at 4 PM and the other at 7 PM. The church is located in downtown Florence at the Corner of Irby and Cheves Streets. All are welcome to this free concert. Bring the whole family, a nursery for the little ones will be provided.

The program will feature 2 great works for the Season, The Rutter GLORIA and Handel’s MESSIAH. Under the baton of the Masterwork’s new Music Director, Dr. Will Carswell the 70 plus voice choir will be joined by soloists Tina Milhorn Stallard, soprano; Janet Hopkins, mezzo-soprano; Walter Cuttino, tenor and Eric Kesler, Bass.

Dr. William Carswell is an Associate Professor of Music and Director of Choral and Vocal Studies at Coker College in Hartsville, SC.  In addition to conducting the Coker Singers and Coker Chamber Singers, he teaches conducting, voice, and courses in music education.  Dr. Carswell recently completed five seasons as Music Director and Conductor of the Columbia Choral Society in Columbia, SC.   Walter Cuttino Upon completing his education, Mr. Cuttino performed throughout Europe, with over 1,000 operatic performances to his credit.  Ferrando (Cosi fan Tutte), Almaviva (Barber of Seville), Tamino (The Magic Flute), Lenski (Eugene Onegin), Alfredo (La Traviata) and Rodolfo (La Boheme) are a sampling of the more than forty roles in his repertoire.  He has also performed over 500 concerts, including a concert tour with the late Leonard Bernstein to London and Moscow.  Janet Hopkins New York Metropolitan Opera mezzo-soprano Janet Hopkins has won world wide critical acclaim for her wide-ranging operatic and concert repertoire.  Active as a concert artist, soprano Tina MilhornStallard has performed solos in works such as Brahms’ Ein Deutsches Requiem, Haydn’sThe Creation, Bach’s St. John Passion, Poulenc’s Gloria and Handel’s Messiah. In June, 2011, she made her Lincoln Center debut as soprano soloist in Timothy Powell’s Incarnation Mysteria.  Eric Kesler holds a Master in Music Performance and Bachelor in Music Education degrees from Appalachian State University. He is currently a Candidate for the Doctorate of Musical Arts degree from the University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC and is adjunct professor of voice at Coker College, Hartsville, SC.

John Rutter is, perhaps, the most widely known and respected living composer of choral music today. He is best known for his Christmas carols including What Sweeter MusicShepherd Pipe’s CarolStar Carol, and Candlelight Carol, to name a few.  Many know him from his wedding anthem composed for the wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton; This is the Day which the Lord Hath Made.

Messiah, the most famous oratorio ever written, is quite unlike Handel's other ones, let alone those by most earlier and later composers. A German who initially made his fame writing Italian operas for English audiences, Handel found in the 1730s that the public wanted something new and more understandable. After composing some three dozen Italian operas, works of great musical brilliance but often dramatically inert and set to mediocre librettos, he shifted his energies to creating what are in essence sacred English operas.

This project is made possible through funding from the Florence
Regional Arts Alliance's Quarterly Grants Program, which is funded in
part by a generous award from Honda of South Carolina, the South
Carolina Arts Commission and the John and Susan Bennett Memorial Arts
Fund of the Coastal Community Foundation of SC.

Monday, September 3, 2012

Masterworks Choir Rehearsal kicks off Saturday, September 8th


The Masterworks Fall Kick-off Rehearsal begins Saturday, September 8th @ 9:30 am at Central United Methodist Church.  Come enjoy a continental breakfast, check out music scores, and pay semester dues.  Then read through the music for the fall term.  The regular weekly rehearsals will begin on Monday, September 10th @ 7:30 pm.  Dr. Carswell will be conducting auditions from 6:00 - 7:00 pm on Monday, September 10th and 17th.

For more information, contact:

Mary Ann Nash
Masterworks Choir 
manash42@aol.com

Friday, May 4, 2012

Florence Masterworks Choir to honor late founder





Florence’s Masterworks Choir has announced a competition and scholarship for young people in honor of its late founder.

William Mills, the group’s longtime conductor, died in February after a battle with cancer. He founded the Masterworks Choir in 1979 to bring the Pee Dee’s most talented vocalists together to perform choral classics at the Central United Methodist Church on Irby Street.

Now, the group has decided to honor Mills’ work with a competition to recruit talented high school juniors and seniors and allow them to work with the group and vie for scholarships to pursue their artistic aspirations. Though the group is still ironing out details, the inaugural auditions will be in the fall of 2013 and winners will be invited to sing in the 2014 spring concert.

Roger Malfatti is the group’s board chairman and said it is important to the group, as it was to Mills, to develop young artists so there will be more talent in the future.

“Bill was very instrumental in bringing young voices in and developing the talent in this community,” Malfatti said. “His artistry was so great, everyone wanted to follow him, everyone wanted to be a part of it. He was a magnet for musical people in this town.”

Mills conducted his final performance last December. Current conductor William Carswell wrote in Sunday’s spring concert program that “beauty has been diminished with the loss of Bill Mills.” He recounted his colorful remarks, facial expressions, smirks and stories, noting that he lived for his art.

“Music and all things musical seemingly coursed through every fiber of his being,” Carswell wrote. “Rarely have I experienced such a force of nature.”

Mills’ legacy is a 65-member-strong choir, and though all participants are volunteers, Malfatti said they are certainly professional quality. Though many of the classic works it performs are religious, the choir is open to all singers regardless of religion.

More details will be available about the competition this fall, and Malfatti said it likely won’t be the only way the group honors Mills’ life and work. But for now, he thinks this is a good start that Mills would love.

“I think he’s singing ‘Hallelujah’ right now,” Malfatti said.

The Masterworks Choir’s next performance will be Handel’s “Messiah” on Sunday, Dec. 9.

Anyone wishing to make a donation to the “Competition Fund” can mail a check to Masterworks Choir, P.O. Box 469, Florence, S.C., 29503.



---


This article was written by Ellen Meder 
and originally appeared on scnow.com.

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

April 29th: Masterworks Choir presents Spring Concert at FMU's Performing Arts Center



The Masterworks Choir of Florence will present their annual Spring Concert at 5 p.m. Sunday, April 29, in the FMU Performing Arts Center on Dargan Street.  Admission is free.
The performance will be dedicated to the choir’s founder and music director William B. Mills, who passed away Feb. 18. The 65 voices of the Masterworks Choir will be joined by a chamber orchestra along with seven soloists, and will be conducted by Dr. William Carswell, Associate Professor of Music at Coker College and music colleague of Bill Mills. 
Carswell conducts the Coker Singers, teaches conducting, voice, and courses in music education. He is active as a clinician, guest conductor and adjudicator throughout the Southeastern United States and has presented sessions on choral literature, choral methods and performance techniques for various levels of the American Choral Directors Association. Recent conducting engagements include performances in Bulgaria, England, Austria and France.              
The concert opens with “Hallelujah” from Christ on the Mount of Olives, Op. 85, an oratorio by Ludwig van Beethoven, which portrays the emotional turmoil of Jesus in the garden of Gethsemane prior to his crucifixion.
The program features the beautiful Serenade to Music by English composer Ralph Vaughan Williams. The Serenade (1938) was written as a tribute to the conductor Sir Henry Wood to mark the 50th anniversary of Wood’s first concert.  The Serenade has outlived the occasion for which it was written and is widely regarded as one of the most beautiful and inspired of all settings of Shakespeare.  The text is an adaptation of the discussion about music and the music of the spheres in Act V, Scene 1 of The Merchant of Venice byWilliam Shakespeare.  Sergei Rachmaninov, present at the work’s premiere, is said to have been so overcome by the beauty of the music that she wept. 
Nanie  (“Song of Lamentation”) is one of the least known of Johannes Brahm’s major works, and one of the most incredibly beautiful. The piece was written to memorialize the composer’s friend and artist, Anselm Feuerbach. Reading the text, by the poet Schiller, one might fear a rather gloomy work, but it is not. Nanie is at times serene and accepting and at other times soaring. The work is a fitting tribute to musician and friend to many, Bill Mills.
Beethoven’s Choral Fantasy is the final work on the program. The piece will feature Dr. Benjamin Woods, Professor Emeritus of Music at Francis Marion University, at the piano.  Woods was also the soloist more than 20 years ago when the Masterworks Choir last performed the work.  He has conducted concerts of the Francis Marion College Chorus, the Florence Choral Society, and the Florence Masterworks Choir and Orchestra.  Having served as Music Director/Conductor of the Florence Symphony Orchestra from 1996 to 2002, he conducted a performance of the Beethoven Ninth Symphony with the Florence Symphony and the Masterworks Choir. Woods was named one of the University’s Board of Trustees’ Research Scholars. This distinction recognizes his outstanding achievements in music performance, and the promise of continued scholarly activity in the future.  He was also selected as the 2005-06 recipient of the J. Lorin Mason Distinguished Professor award which recognizes excellence in teaching, scholarship and professional achievement, and service to Francis Marion University and the community. 
The Fantasy was the last piece on the program at a benefit concert in 1808, showcasing new works by Beethoven. It is not difficult to hear glimpses of both the Fifth Symphony and the mighty finale of the Ninth Symphony in this brilliant and stirring work.
Vocal soloists for the concert are singers from the ranks of the choir.  The Serenade to Music will feature Erin Figueras, soprano; Karen Porter, alto; Shaw Thompson, tenor; and Jim Fincher, bass.  The Choral Fantasy calls for six soloists to include Chrissy Welch and Sharyn Mapes, sopranos; Karen Porter, alto; Paul Zwiers and Shaw Thompson, tenors; and Jim Fincher, bass.
This concert has been greatly anticipated by the musicians and the community alike, as it will be the first performance by the Masterworks Choir in the new Performing Arts Center. 

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Masterworks Choir Christmas Concert set for December 11th



Masterworks Choir is presenting its annual Christmas concert this Sunday, December 11,  at 4:00 and 7:00 at Central United Methodist Church in downtown Florence! This concert is a collection of Christmas carols! The public is invited, and the admission is free! There will be a nursery provided!


Central United Methodist Church is located at 265 West Cheves Street in Florence.


Pee Dee Arts would like to thank Darby Holley for providing this information.