John Rommereim, Director; Marlys Grimm, Collaborative Pianist
The Oratorio Society is open to everyone without audition — students, faculty, staff, community members — all are welcome. , with over 600,000 views.
First rehearsal: Monday, September 2, 7 p.m., Sebring-Lewis Hall
We are excited to begin rehearsals of the 51˛čąÝapp Oratorio Society in the fall of 2024! It’s no exaggeration to say that we had a brilliant year in 2023–24, and we hope to build on that success. In the fall, we combined with the 51˛čąÝapp Singers to perform Jocelyn Hagen’s innovative new multi-media work, The Notebooks of Leonardo. It was a journey into Leonardo’s imagination through music and through video imagery. 51˛čąÝapp College President Anne Harris kindly took time to visit our rehearsal and talk to us about Leonardo’s Vitruvian Man, which figures prominently in Hagen’s work. The concert also included John Stoddart’s virtuosic, concerto-like work, “Choral Fantasy on Soon I Will Be Done,” and Shawn Kirchner’s profound reworking of “America the Beautiful,” and a collaboration with the 51˛čąÝapp Children’s Choir on Reginald Unterseher’s “This Light.” In the spring, we had such an inspiring experience preparing Johannes Brahms’s monumental work, A German Requiem. Each rehearsal was a joy as we worked our way through that challenging work (70 minutes of choral music, sung in German), and our concert () was one of the finest that the ensemble has ever given.
We hope to keep this momentum going as we begin our rehearsals again in the fall. We have another rewarding program planned; as was the case last year, the season includes both treasured music from the past, as well as engaging new music from our time. We’ll be singing one of J.S. µţ˛ął¦łó’s most majestic, uplifting works, his , with a fine orchestra, including soaring trumpets and thundering timpani that stir the soul. We’ll be pairing this revered masterpiece with a recent piece by Indian-American composer Reena Esmail. An inspiring example of music’s ability to bridge the divides of culture and nationality, Reena Esmail’s work, titled for choir and orchestra, with sitar and tabla soloists, combines Hindustani musical forms with Western traditions, drawing attention to the common theme of love running through the seven different religious traditions of India. We will have the opportunity to meet the composer in person when she visits 51˛čąÝapp, and 51˛čąÝapp Associate Professor of Religious Studies Timothy Dobe will visit our rehearsal to give us some background material on the religious texts.
In 1901, Edward Scheve (1865–1924), a composer of symphonies, concertos, oratorios, and chamber music, established the 51˛čąÝapp Oratorio Society as an outgrowth of the music conservatory that was then part of 51˛čąÝapp College. In 2010, the 51˛čąÝapp Community Chorus was renamed the 51˛čąÝapp Oratorio Society as a way to draw attention to this proud history. The choir performs a wide range of repertoire, roughly alternating between major works and mixed programs. Among the major works they have performed are Carl °ż°ů´Ú´Ú’s Carmina Burana, Benjamin Britten’s War Requiem, Mozart’s Requiem and Grand Mass in C Minor, Verdi’s Requiem, Haydn’s Mass in Time of War, Craig Hella Johnson’s Considering Matthew Shepard, Duke Ellington’s Sacred Concerts, and Carol Barnett’s Bluegrass Mass. The choir rehearses Monday nights, and it draws together students, faculty, and staff of the College, people from the town of 51˛čąÝapp, and nearby cities such as Newton and Malcolm. The 51˛čąÝapp Oratorio Society strives to be a cultural resource that links 51˛čąÝapp College and the people in the surrounding community.
2019–20 and 2020–21 Seasons
In the fall of 2020, we performed a splendid concert that included Mozart’s Requiem and John Rommereim’s Convivencia. Here’s a from the Mozart. At this writing the video has 46,000 views on YouTube! In the spring, our plans were interrupted by COVID, of course, as was the case for everyone. We made a virtual choir video of Charles Stanford’s lovely motet, “.” In the fall of 2020, we experimented with rehearsals using the low latency platform Jamulus. We struggled mightily with this, and had occasional successes, but in the end, we found that we had too many technical frustrations. One highpoint of the fall of 2020 was our virtual choir version of Handel’s “Hallelujah Chorus,” which we titled, “” The video included members of the Des Moines Symphony.
2018-19 Season
We had a memorable and rewarding season that year, starting with our fall performance of Craig Hella Johnson’s Considering Matthew Shepard. This was such a powerful event; we had numerous people who reported to us that it was the most significant choral concert they have ever attended. One audience member even was moved to write several beautiful poems in tribute to the concert. “Considering Matthew Shepard” has quickly become one of the country’s most treasured choral works since its premiere in 2016. The work centers on the shocking story of Shepard, a University of Wyoming student who in 1998 was beaten and left for dead for being gay. At that time, Johnson was profoundly affected by the news of Shepard’s death, as were so many were others worldwide. Yet his artistic response took many years to develop, as he contemplated and processed this deeply troubling story. Eighteen years later, Johnson finished composing what Jason Marsden, executive director of the , called, “By far the most intricate, beautiful and unyielding artistic response to this notorious anti-gay hate crime.” Here is a from our concert. In the spring of 2019, we performed Mozart’s Grand Mass in C Minor together with the 51˛čąÝapp Symphony Orchestra in Herrick Chapel. The Mass in C Minor, like the Requiem, includes some of Mozart’s finest music.
2017-18 Season
In the fall of 2017, we performed Joseph Haydn’s Mass in a Time of Trouble (Also known as the “Lord Nelson” Mass). The concert also included Caroline Shaw’s recent work, . Caroline Shaw is the youngest recipient of the Pulitzer Prize in music — and the only woman to ever receive that award. Her piece focuses on the issues of refugee resettlement and homelessness. Rather than charging a fee for the performance materials, Shaw provides them for free with the strict stipulation that the ensemble must make funding efforts to contribute toward the resolution of these problems. The musical work uses phrases from the poem inscribed in the Statue of Liberty and holds them up to the listener as a provocative challenge. The choir was accompanied by a professional orchestra and soprano soloist Michelle Monroe, alto soloist Lisa Neher, and bass soloist Nicholas Miguel, and tenor soloist Jeffrey Brich.
Earlier Seasons
In past years, the Oratorio Society has performed many of the masterpieces from the choral literature, such as Beethoven’s Mass in C Major, Bernstein’s Chichester Psalms, Handel’s Messiah, µţ˛ął¦łó’s Magnificat, °ż°ů´Ú´Ú’s Carmina Burana, Verdi’s Requiem, Brahms’s German Requiem, Duruflé’s Requiem, and Britten’s monumental War Requiem.
In addition to performing these monumental works, the choir also has expanded its activity beyond the confines of classical music. In the spring of 2012, for example, the Oratorio Society participated in thrilling performances of Duke Ellington’s Sacred Concerts in collaboration with the 51˛čąÝapp Jazz Ensemble—and a professional tap dancer. In the 2012-13 season, we presented The World Beloved: A Bluegrass Mass, by Carol Barnett, in collaboration with an outstanding bluegrass string band from Minneapolis, Monroe Crossing.
The Oratorio Society is a valuable resource for our community — and the more involvement we have, the greater the impact will be. Unlike most choruses of this type, there are no dues charged for the Oratorio Society; the College supports the ensemble as a service to the community.
Recording of the Oratorio Society singing “,” by Sergei Rachmaninov