Jolkebuddha.com reports: "Johann Sebastian Bach wrote a
great many musical compositions and had a large number of children. In between,
he practiced on an old spinster which he kept up in the attic."
The father of twenty children and one of history’s greatest
composers, J. S. Bach epitomizes the juncture between music and paternity. The Two and Three-Part Inventions were
written by Bach as a gift to his ten-year-old son Wilhelm Friedemann as a guide
to mastering keyboard techniques and a model of polyphonic composition. In
honor of Fathers’ Day, a group of these perennially beloved teaching pieces
opens the morning’s Prelude.
The CUUC Choir is on hand with a special valedictory offering for the final service of the “official” church year, along with anthems related to the monthly theme of Freedom and the eternal longing for peace. Tchaikovsky’s “June”, a seasonal offering written as part of a monthly commission for the St. Petersburg music journal Nouvelliste, rounds out Sunday morning’s music.
The CUUC Choir is on hand with a special valedictory offering for the final service of the “official” church year, along with anthems related to the monthly theme of Freedom and the eternal longing for peace. Tchaikovsky’s “June”, a seasonal offering written as part of a monthly commission for the St. Petersburg music journal Nouvelliste, rounds out Sunday morning’s music.
Read on for programming details.
Prelude: Adam Kent, piano
Prelude: Adam Kent, piano
Two-Part Inventions Nos. 1, 4, 6, 8, 9 and 13
J.
S. Bach
Introit: CUUC Choir, directed by Lisa N. Meyer and
accompanied by Georgianna Pappas
And Wherever You Go
Douglas
E. Wagner
Anthem:
Flying Free
Don
Besig
Offertory:
June: Barcarolle, Op. 37, No. 6
Pyotr
Ilyich Tchaikovsky
Anthem:
Let There Be Peace On Earth
Sy
Miller and Jill Jackson, arr. by Mark Hayes
No comments:
Post a Comment