Podcast: Mozart’s spirit pervades students’ monumental performance of Requiem

ChoirsIn a musical collaboration unlike anything seen at Lewis & Clark in recent decades, two choirs and the orchestra will together perform a concert including Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s final masterpiece, the Requiem, in two concerts this weekend.

Following a year of tremendous choral growth, with student participation more than doubling, the Requiem performances will bring together approximately 140 vocal and instrumental performers, including four professional vocal soloists. [Learn more about the growth of the choir in the first audio file below.]

“The Mozart Requiem is one of the great masterpieces of choral-orchestral literature,” Director of Choral Activities Katherine FitzGibbon said. “Orchestra Director George Skipworth and I started talking about building a collaboration like this last year, when I interviewed for this position. We felt that doing the Requiem would provide the right level of challenge for students, where it would stretch them as musicians and yet still be attainable.” [Learn more about the decision to perform the Requiem in the second audio file below.]

Kathy FitzGibbonFor student musicians, who will perform the Requiem both on campus and in downtown Portland, the challenge is part of the appeal. One reason the choir has grown this year is because of students’ interest in pushing themselves musically, FitzGibbon said. Another draw, according to students, has been FitzGibbon’s passion and the energy she has brought to her first year as choral director. [Hear from a student and listen to rehearsal in the third audio file below.]

“I’ve never been as challenged in a choir,” said junior Ben Larsen, a music performance major and member of the Cappella Nova choir. “The first word that comes to mind when I think of the Requiem is ‘epic.’ When we started it, I thought Kathy was out of her mind, but as the semester progressed, that attitude flew out of the window.”

Mozart’s spirit has pervaded the Department of Music this spring; in addition to the choir and orchestra rehearsals, Mozart has been the focus of Professor of Music Nora Beck’s Exploration & Discovery course this semester. Beck’s students have studied biographies of the composer and discussed the cultural and historical contexts of his work. [Learn more about the history of the Requiem in the fourth audio file below.] Beck also encouraged her students to extend their learning experience by getting involved in the production.

In addition to the Requiem, the concert will also feature Brahms’s Music for Women’s Chorus, Harp, and Two Horns as well as Mahler’s Adagietto. Performances will take place April 24 in Evans Auditorium and April 26 at the First United Methodist Church in Portland. For more information, including ticket prices, please visit the event website.

 
icon for podpress  Tremendous growth of choir: Kathy FitzGibbon and senior Emma Pelkey [4:49m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
icon for podpress  Why the Requiem? Kathy FitzGibbon and junior Ben Larsen discuss the piece [3:23m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
icon for podpress  Rehearsal recording and senior Ariana Lenarsky on the rehearsal process [3:18m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

 
icon for podpress  Kathy FitzGibbon on the history and lore around Mozart's Requiem [5:09m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download


*Junior Emily Stevens and first-year student Ethan Allred helped to produce these podcasts.

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