GRACE NOTES: THE HOLIDAYS MARCH ON

Pinocchio, Winter reveries, Messiah and Swingin’ Brass

By Peter Alexander Dec. 10 at 2:50 p.m.

Boulder Opera Company will present four performances of The Adventures of Pinocchio by English composer Jonathan Dove over the coming weekend (Dec. 14 and 15; details below).

Based on the familiar book by Italian author Carlo Collodi, Dove’s one-hour opera tells the story of the wooden puppet who becomes a boy in 20 brief scenes that range from Gepetto’s hut to the Blue Fairy’s cottage, Funland and the inside of a big fish. Described by Boulder Opera as “A magical opera for all ages,” The Adventures of Pinocchio will be accompanied by an ensemble orchestra led by music director Mario Barbosa, and stage directed by Zane Alcorn.

Zane Alcorn

In the company’s press release, Alcorn is quoted saying “Pinocchio is is a coming-of age story meant to subtly teach children how selfishness will always harm you. Whenever Pinocchio makes a selfish choice like skipping school, lying or going to Funland, he is punished rather quickly, but when he helps the community and saves this father, this leads to the ultimate reward, becoming a real boy.”

The moral of the story is, he says, “those who help others help themselves.”

Dove is highly regarded composer of operas, choral works and instrumental music. His opera Flight, based on the real-life experiences of a refugee trapped in the Charles DeGaulle Airport in Paris for 18 years, has been widely performed around the world, including a premiere at the Glyndebourne Festival, at the Opera theatre of St. Louis, Des Moines Metro Opera, Seattle Opera and the Museum of Flight in Washington, D.C.

The Adventures of Pinocchio was commissioned by Opera North and Sadler’s Wells and first performed in Leeds, U.K., Dec. 21, 2007. It has subsequently been performed by Minnesota Opera as well as companies in Germany, South Korea and Russia.

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Boulder Opera
Mario Barbosa, conductor, and Zane Alcorn, stage director

  • Jonathan Dove: The Adventures of Pinocchio

2 and 4 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 14
1 and 3 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 15
eTown Hall

TICKETS

All the constituent groups of the Boulder Chorale will come together to perform “Winter Reverie,” this year’s edition of their annual Holidays program, Saturday and Sunday in Boulder (Dec. 14 and 15; details below). 

Also appearing with the Chorale will be the Boulder Philharmonic String Quartet: Yenlik Weiss and Reagan Kane, violin; Lee Anderson, viola; and Kimberlee Hanto, cello.

In addition to the full Concert Chorale and the adult Chamber Chorale, the performance will feature all four age groups from the Boulder Children’s Chorale: Bel Canto, Volante, Prima Voce and Piccolini. They will each sing alone and together, including a concluding piece with the full adult Concert Chorale. 

Boulder Chorale and Children’s Chorales at a previous holidays program. Photo by Glenn Ross.

The program opens with the combined children’s groups performing an arrangement of Leroy Anderson’s evergreen Holiday favorite, “Sleigh Ride.” Other performances by the children’s groups include the Jewish traditional song “Maoz Tzur,” “Winter Dreams’ by the prolific composer PINKZEBRA, and the youngest singers performing “Chrissimas Day” with auxiliary percussion accompaniment. 

The adult Chamber Chorale will perform Morten Lauridsen’s setting of the James Agee text “Sure on this Shining Night” and the Magnificat setting of Latvian composer Ēriks Ešenvalds. In addition to traditional holiday numbers, the program also features works by CU faculty member Daniel Kellog and Norwegian composer Ole Gjeilo. The program concludes with the combined adult and children’s ensembles performing in English and Spanish David Kantor’s “Night of Silence/Noche de Silencio,” which incorporates the familiar carol “Silent Night.” Audience members will be invited to sing along.

The director of the adult choirs and co-artistic director of the Boulder Chorale is Vicki Burrichter. Guest director for this concert is Larisa Dreger. Co-artistic director Nathan Wubbena is director of the Children’s Chorale and leads Bel Canto, the oldest children’s group. Directors of the other children’s groups are Anna Robinson, Prima Voce; Larisa Dreger, Volante; and Melody Sebald, Piccolini.

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“Winter Reverie”
Boulder Chorale and children’s chorales, Vicki Burrichter and Nathan Wubbena, co-artistic directors
With the Boulder Philharmonic String Quartet and collaborative pianists Susan Olenwine, Caitlin Strickland, Matthew Sebald, Margaret Schraff and Joanna Lynden

  • Leroy Anderson: “Sleigh Ride” (arr. Hawley Ades)
  • Jewish Traditional: “Maoz Tzur” (arr. Matt Podd)
  • Mary Donnelly and George L.O. Strid: “Winter’s Beauty”
  • Christina Witten Thomas: “Snow Song”
  • PINKZEBRA: “Winter Dreams”
  • Morten Lauridsen: “Sure on This Shining Night”
  • Ēriks Ešenvalds: Magnificat
  • English Traditional: “Chrissimas Day” (arr. Shirley W. McRae)
  • Irish Traditional: “Frosty Weather” (arr. Margaret Scharff)
  • French Traditional: “Pat-a-Pan” (arr. Andy Beck)
  • Andrew Parr: “Winter’s Stillness”
  • Jewish Traditional: “Hanerot Halalu: These Chanukah lights we kindle” (arr. Becky Slage Mayo)
  • Daniel Kellog: “Sim Shalom
  • Ola Gjeilo: “Ecce Novum”
    “Tundra”
  • David Kantor: “Night of Silence” (arr. Nathan Wubbena)

3 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 14 and 5 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 15
First United Methodist Church, Boulder
Livestream 5 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 15

In person and livestream TICKETS

The Longmont Symphony Orchestra (LSO) will perform Handel’s Messiah for their annual Holiday “Candlelight Concert” on Saturday (4 p.m. Dec. 14), in the Vance Brand Civic Auditorium. Elliot Moore will conduct.

A longstanding seasonal offering from the LSO, the “Candlelight Concert” has presented Handel’s oratorio in some years, including 2019 and 2022. The latter year also featured a Messiah singalong for audience members to sing the popular choral numbers with the LSO. In other years they have offered “A Baroque Christmas” or other Holiday-themed performances. 

Although not strictly a Christmas piece, since the entire oratorio goes through the Easter story and the Resurrection, Messiah is undoubtedly one of the most popular pieces of the Christmas season. The first section tells the Christmas story in music that has touched audiences since the first performance in Dublin in 1742. 

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Candlelight Concert
Longmont Symphony Orchestra and Longmont Chorale, Elliot Moore, conductor
With Julianne Davis, soprano; Elijah English, countertenor; Charles Moore, tenor; and Andy Konopak, bass-baritone

  • Handel: Messiah

4 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 14
Vance Brand Civic Auditorium

TICKETS 

The Boston Brass brings their Holiday show, “Christmas Bells are Swingin’,” to Macky Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 14. They will be joined for the performance by the Brass All-Stars Big Band, an ensemble recruited by the Boston Brass from local musicians, including members of the CU College of Music Faculty.

Founded in 1986, the Boston Brass performs brass quintet arrangements of classical music and jazz standards as well as original works for brass. They have toured throughout the United States and to more than 30 countries world wide. In addition to they quintet performances, they also perform with orchestras, bands and jazz bands.

Boston Brass

Their numerous recordings include one released in 2007 with the same title as their Macky program—“Christmas Bells are Swingin’”—recorded with the Syracuse University Wind ensemble. Pieces on both the CD and the Macky concert program include arrangements of three dances from The Nutcracker, the Sousa-carol blend “Jingle Bells Forever,” and Irving Berlin’s “White Christmas.”

Other works on the concert program are Stan Kenton’s arrangement of “Joy to the World” and several familiar Christmas Carols, including “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen,” “Angels We Have Heard on High,” and “The Holy and the Ivy.”

The Boston Brass’s latest album, titled “Joe’s Tango,” features the world premiere of Five Cities Concerto by Jorge Machain. Recorded with the University of Nevada-Las Vegas Wind Orchestra, the album also features New York Philharmonic trombonist Joe Alessi performing with the Boston brass.  

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“Christmas Bells are Swingin’”
Boston Brass and Brass All-Stars Big Band

  • Anon.: “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen” (arr. Ralph Carmichael)
  • John Henry Hopkins, Jr.: “We Three Kings of Orient Are” (arr. Carmichael)
  • Traditional: “Angels We Have Heard on High” (arr. Carmichael)
  • Tchaikovsky: Dances from The Nutcracker (arr. J.D.Shaw)
  • Robert W. Smith: “Jingle Bells Forever” (arr. Shaw)
  • “The Grinch” (arr. William Russell)
  • “Ho, Ho, Ho” (arr. Rick DeJonge)
  • Traditional: The Twelve Days of Christmas (arr. Carmichael)
  • Leroy Anderson: “Sleigh Ride” (arr. Shaw)
  • Jack Rollins: “Frosty the Snowman” (arr. Shaw)
  • Franz Xaver Gruber: “Silent Night” (arr. Chris Castellanos)
  • Anon.: “Good King Wenceslas” (arr. Carmichael)
  • Henry Gauntlett: “Once in Royal David’s City” (arr. Carmichael)
  • Traditional: “The Holly and the Ivy” (arr. Carmichael)
  • David Cutler: “Faithful”
  • Irving Berlin: “White Christmas” (arr. Shaw)
  • Anon.: “Greensleeves” (arr. Shaw)

7:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 14
Macky Auditorium

TICKETS

GRACE NOTES: Holiday Music Here and There

Warning! The most popular shows are selling out

By Peter Alexander Dec. 4 at 4:50 p.m.

The CU-Boulder College of Music’s annual “Holiday Festival” has limited tickets still available for the four performances Friday through Sunday (Dec. 6–8 in Macky Auditorium; details below).

The annual holiday extravaganza features orchestras, bands, jazz ensembles and world music groups and individual performers from the School of Music, in addition to faculty and guests. Based on previous years, it is almost a certainty that the performances will sell out by the weekend. If you wish to attend, move fast!

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“Holiday Festival”
Performers from the CU College of Music:
—Chamber Singers, Coreen Duffy, conductor
—Holiday Festival Chorus, Coreen Duffy and Elizabeth Swanson, conductors
—Holiday Festival Orchestra, Gary Lewis and Matthew Dockendorf, conductors
—Trumpet Ensemble, Ryan Gardner conductor
—Holiday Festival Jazz, Brad Goode, conductor
—Holiday Festival Brass, Elias Gillespie conductor
—West African Highlife Ensemble, Maputo Mensah, director
—Andrew Garland, baritone; Daniel Silver, clarinet; and Bobby Pace, carillon 

  • Program of selected music for the Holidays

7:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 6 LIMITED TICKETS
1 p.m. and 4 p.m. Saturday 7 LIMITED TICKETS
4 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 8 LIMITED TICKETS

TICKETS

The “Gentle Nutcracker,” a sensory-friendly, abridged version of Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker ballet presented by Boulder Ballet and the Longmont Symphony Orchestra (LSO) for individuals with special needs and their families, has limited tickets available for Saturday’s performance in Longmont’s Vance Brand Auditorium (1 p.m. Dec. 7; details below).

The same is true for one performance of the full Nutcracker ballet, Saturday at Vance Brand (4 p.m. Dec. 7). While Sunday’s performance is sold out, a few more tickets are available for Saturday.  All performances will be led by the LSO music director Elliot Moore.

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Boulder Ballet with the Longmont Symphony, Elliot Moore, conductor

“Gentle Nutcracker”

1–2 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 7
Vance Brand Civic Auditorium

TICKETS 

The Nutcracker

4 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 7 LIMITED TICKETS
2 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 8 SOLD OUT 
Vance Brand Civic Auditorium

TICKETS

Ars Nova Singers will celebrate the winter solstice with “Light/Shadow,” a program featuring rarely heard seasonal music that welcomes the return of light after winter’s darkness. A series of four concerts in Denver, Boulder and Longmont opens Saturday at the St. Paul Community of Faith in Denver with conductor Tom Morgan (Dec. 7; full concert details below).

Additional performances will be Sunday, Dec. 8 in Longmont; Thursday Dec, 12 at Mountain View Methodist  church in Boulder; and Friday, Dec. 13, at First Church in Boulder. All performances are at 7:30 p.m. In addition to the Ars Nova Singers, the performances will feature violist Matthew Dane and flutist Christine Jennings.

Highlights of the program will include the Magnificat by the Estonian composer Arvo Pärt, featuring the composer’s “tintinnabuli” style. This style, which Pärt introduced in the 1970s, combines a chant-like voice moving in stepwise motion with a “tintinnabular voice” that moves mostly in arpeggios. One of Pärt’s most popular works, the Magnificat is characterized by its gentle lyricism and calm mood.

Also noteworthy on the program is the U.S. premiere of the Vocalise for viola and choir by the Bulgarian composer Emil Tabakov. Known as both a conductor and composer in Bulgaria, Tabakov has written extensively for large ensembles, including 10 symphonies and a Concerto of Orchestra as well as a number of concertos. In that respect, the restrained and meditative Vocalise is exceptional among his works. 

Also on the program are pieces by the African-American composer B.E. Boykin, Shira Cion, the American singer/songwriter/actress Sara Bareilles, and arrangements of seasonal music by Morgan.

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“Light/Shadow”
Ars Nova Singers, Tom Morgan, conductor
With Matthew Dane, viola, and Christina Jennings, flute

  • Phillipe Verdelot: Beata es Virgo Maria
  • Anton Bruckner: Virga Jesse floruit
  • Joan Szymko: Illumina le tenebrae
  • B. E. Boykin: O magnum mysterium
  • Arvo Pärt: Magnificat
  • Emil Tabakov: Vocalise for solo voila and choir (U.S. premiere)
  • Abbie Betinis: “Be Like the Bird”
  • John Rutter: Musica Dei donum
  • Mykola Leontovych: “Carol of the Bells”
  • Italian Carol: Dormi, dormi (arr. Guy Turner)Israeli song: Ma navu (arr. Shira Cion)
  • “The Angels and the Shepherds” (arr. Paulus/Morgan)
  • Sara Bareilles/Ingrid Michaelson: “Winter Song” (arr. Morgan)
  • Traditional “The Holly and the Ivy” (arr. Morgan)

7:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 7
St. Paul Community of Faith, 1600 Grant St., Denver

7:30 pm. Sunday, Dec. 8
United Church of Christ, 1500 9th Ave., Longmont

7:30 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 12
Mountain View United Methodist, 355 Ponca Place, Boulder

7:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 13
First Church, 1421 Spruce St., Boulder

TICKETS

NOTE: Matthew Dane is the correct name of the guest violist for this concert. The original posting had his name correctly in the text by misspelled as “Dance” in the program listing below.

Boulderites should act now for Holiday event

Low Ticket Warning for Dec. 1 Nutcracker in Macky; limited Longmont tickets still available

By Peter Alexander Nov. 26 at 12:05 a.m.

What would the Holiday season be without Tchaikovsky’s beloved ballet The Nutcracker?

For many families, something would definitely be missing from their celebrations. The Boulder Philharmonic and Boulder Ballet open their annual performances of Nutcracker this weekend, with performances Saturday and Sunday (Nov. 30 and Dec. 1; details below), but they are warning that the Sunday matinee, an especially popular time for families to attend events together, has a limited number of tickets left. 

Boulder Ballet production of The Nutcracker

If you do miss the Boulder performances, however, you need not despair! Boulder ballet will also present The Nutcracker in Longmont the following weekend (Dec. 7 and 8; details below) with the Longmont Symphony. Tickets are limited but still available for those performances. 

The Boulder Ballet and the Longmont Symphony will also present their annual “Gentle Nutcracker,” an abbreviated and sensory-friendly one-hour version of the ballet at 1 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 7. These performances are designed for individuals with special needs and their families.

In addition to the performances of the full ballet, Boulder Ballet will also feature additional events. As part of a theme titled “Unlocking Tradition,” the stage curtain will be left open until 10 minutes before the performance begins. This will offer audience members a glance behind the scenes, as they will be able to see dancers, musicians and stage crew preparing for the performance. 

For the performance with the Boulder Philharmonic in Macky Auditorium, there will be a coloring contest for children. A line drawing of characters and images from The Nutcracker has been posted online. Children attending each performance are invited to color the drawing, and bring their colored pages to the performance for a chance to win a Nutcracker doll.

Tchaikovsky: The Nutcracker Ballet

Boulder Ballet with the Boulder Philharmonic, Gary Lewis, conductor

  • The Nutcracker
    1 and 6:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 30
    1 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 1 LOW TICKETS
    Macky Auditorium

TICKETS 

Boulder Ballet with the Longmont Symphony, Elliot Moore, conductor

  • “Gentle Nutcracker”
    1–2 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 7
    Vance Brand Civic Auditorium

TICKETS

  • The Nutcracker
    4 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 7
    2 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 8
    Vance Brand Civic Auditorium

TICKETS