For its 2014 Countryside series, Apollo's Fire proudly premieres "GLORY ON THE MOUNTAIN: An Appalachian Journey." Created and directed by Jeannette Sorrell and starring singers Amanda Powell and Ross Hauck, the program will be performed in 8 concerts in rustic venues in Hunting Valley, Chardon, Bay Village and Bath, during June 12-22.
Five years ago, Apollo's Fire's first foray into Appalachian music - "COME TO THE RIVER: An Early American Gathering" - premiered in 9 sold-out concerts and soon became a Billboard Classical Top-10 CD. It was hailed as "A fascinating journey . . . which a sold-out audience savored. The theatrical aspects are so charmingly realized that you can't help but wonder if a sequel is in store." (The Cleveland Plain Dealer). The American Record Guide called the CD "one of the most joyous releases, intoxicated by the sheer joy of being alive."
Since then, requests have poured in for "more, please!" However, Sorrell, who created "Come to the River," felt that any new Appalachian program from AF must be unique in its own right. "I didn't want to do a follow-up program if it was just going to be more of the same," she said. "I wanted to go more deeply into the repertoire and its historical roots - and more deeply into the Appalachian psyche and experience."
She spent the past two years contemplating this new program, researching the renaissance British Isles repertoire that took root in Appalachia, and building a troupe of artists whose unique talents cross the lines of early music and traditional British Isles and Appalachian folk music.
Through music, song and a bit of storytelling, "GLORY ON THE MOUNTAIN" explores the joys and sorrows of daily life among the early settlers in Appalachia. Sorrell said, "The rich repertoire of renaissance English and Scottish ballads took on its own life in Appalachia during the 17th, 18th and early 19th centuries. As the old songs came across the water, they evolved into different versions reflecting the Appalachian psyche and experience. Likewise, the lively fiddle tunes of the British Isles appear in Appalachian sources in differing versions," she said. "And then, these people encountered the African slaves and their spirituals. I think at that point, when the British Isles music met the influence of the spirituals, that's when Appalachian music came fully into its own as a unique and distinctive repertoire."
Sorrell and her colleagues follow the "journey" of these songs as they evolve from their British and Celtic roots into distinctly Appalachian versions. At the same time, the program follows the "journey" of the British and Celtic immigrants - mostly impoverished - who crossed the Atlantic and settled in the mountains to build new lives. Passing through love and loss, dancing and prayer, the music overflows in celebration as the people of the mountains raise their communal voices.
As with "Come to the River" and the equally popular "Celtic Christmas" program, Sorrell has built this program around the unique talents and personalities of the individuals involved. Performers include:
The program also features AF favorites Kathie Stewart on wooden flutes and René Schiffer on cello, as well Brian Kay on lute, guitar and banjo. (Full bios follow at the end of this press release.)
The program includes historic/traditional Elizabethan/Appalachian ballads such as Twa Sisters (Two Sisters) and Edward & Queen Jane; British and Celtic fiddle tunes such as Farewell to Ireland, The Highlander's Farewell, and Over the Isles to America; early American party/play songs such as A Frog He Went a-Courtin' and Robin Hood (a 3-part round with audience participation); a set of virtuoso fiddle variations on Oh Susannah; early American shape-note hymns; a couple of early Civil War songs; spirituals such as Oh Mary Don't You Weep and Glory, Glory (Lay My Burden Down); and a bluegrass song called Sweet Appalachia.
Sorrell said she is excited to have the chance to create a second early American program. "With 'Come to the River,' I was pretty much a newcomer to the field," she said. "I spent two years putting together that program, but I was just starting to get to know the repertoire and the style. I thought we would workshop the program the first year - presenting it only for our local audience, before taking it on tour. But instead, it ended up premiering in 9 sold-out concerts - that's not really a workshop! So I felt I never got the chance to experiment. This time, I have the foundation of everything I learned about this music and this type of programming, and I'm building on that. I feel I'm starting from a deeper place. And I'm thrilled about the fantastic colleagues who will be performing."
The Countryside Series this year includes two Special Events:
Apollo's Fire and the Crossover/Folk Tradition: For over 15 years, Apollo's Fire has developed a unique ensemble of crossover artists who specialize in early American and British Isles traditional repertoire, performing on period instruments in a historically informed aesthetic, but with the lively freedom of folk performers. These artists strive to break down the modern barrier between art music and popular music and to revive the "crossover" spirit of the 17th century, when great composers regularly wrote artful variations on street tunes and tavern songs.
Music Director Jeannette Sorrell and Apollo's Fire have won special distinction for their pioneering work in early American repertoire. Sorrell's premiere early American program, titled "Spirit of '96," received the Noah Greenberg Award from the American Musicological Society for reconstructions of compositions by early American composers and arrangements of Ohio folk songs. This was followed by a British Isles program called "Scarborough Fayre," which can be heard on CD on the Koch International Classics label. Sorrell's early American program "Come to the River" premiered in 2009 with 9 sold-out concerts in Northeast Ohio. The program has since toured throughout the U.S, and the international CD released on British label AVIE became a top-10 bestseller on the classical Billboard Chart.
In 2011 Apollo's Fire introduced crossover programing on its regular subscription series season with "Sacrum Mysterium: A Celtic Christmas." Welcomed by audiences as "A grand holiday stew made from deliciously blended sacred and secular ingredients" (The Cleveland Plain Dealer), the program reprised in 2012 and 2013 to sold-out audiences regionally. An international CD release of the program reached number 11 on the Billboard Classical Charts.
CONCERT DATES & VENUES:
Thursday, June 12, 7:30 PM Baroque Music Barn
Friday, June 13, 8:00 PM SW corner of Shaker Blvd. & Chagrin River Rd.
Saturday, June 14, 8:00 PM Hunting Valley, OH 44022
Sunday, June 15, 7:30 PM
Sunday, June 15, 2:00 PM Huntington Playhouse
28601 Lake Road
Bay Village, OH 44140
Friday Night at Bath - special YOUNG ADULT DISCOUNTS!
Friday, June 20, 8:00 PM* Bath Church UCC
Saturday, June 21, 8:00 PM* 3980 W. Bath Road
Bath, OH 44210
Sunday, June 22, 3:00 PM Geauga Lyric Theater
101 Water Street
Chardon, OH 44024
* Free student tickets to the 8:00 Bath concerts underwritten by the GAR Foundation.
Also Catch the Children's Concert version!
Saturday, June 21, 4:00 PM* Bath Church UCC
3980 W. Bath Road
Bath, OH 44210
TICKETS:
Tickets range from $17-$50, dependent upon location.
Student and group discounts are available in select seating sections.
Children's Concert tickets are $10 for adults, $5 for children under 18.
Call (800) 314-2535 or visit www.apollosfire.org for details.
BIOGRAPHIES:
Amanda Powell, soprano vocals, enjoys a diverse career that includes classical, folk, jazz and global music performance. She holds a degree in vocal performance from Shenandoah Conservatory and a certificate in jazz improvisation from the Jazz in July Institute (University of Massachusetts). Amanda has performed as soloist with Apollo's Fire in the Praetorius Christmas Vespers, Mozart's The Magic Flute, and as Liza Jane in a national tour of "Come to the River." A nationally recognized leader in the field of sacred world music, she has sung concerts around the world, including concert halls in Italy, Spain, France, Mongolia and China. Amanda has performed at venues including Wolftrap in Washington D.C., Severance Hall in Cleveland and the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville. She grew up in Virginia and spent significant time on her grandparent's farm in the Blue Ridge Mountains of West Virginia. Appalachian folk songs and Southern hymns were a beloved part of her childhood and she was often heard singing tunes loudly from the back of her grandfather's pick-up truck while wandering through the mountains. Amanda is a Creative Workforce Fellow. The Creative Workforce Fellowship is a program of the Community Partnership for Arts and Culture. The Fellowship program is supported by the residents of Cuyahoga County through a public grant from Cuyahoga Arts & Culture.
Ross Hauck, tenor vocals, is a busy concert artist specializing in early music, sacred oratorio, and premieres of new works. A regular with Apollo's Fire, Mr. Hauck has been heard as Tamino in the Magic Flute and as "Johnny" in the Come to the River tour, as well as being the featured Irish tenor in the 2012 and 2013 Countryside Concerts. He has sung with the symphonies of Seattle, Dallas, Phoenix, Chicago, Portland, Grand Rapids, Kansas City, and the National Symphony. Mr. Hauck has been heard live in broadcast on PBS. He serves as a professor of voice at Seattle University. An alumnus of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music, he undertook further training at the Tanglewood, Ravinia, and Aspen Festivals and at the Wolf Trap Opera Company. He can be heard on the AVIE label on the Apollo's Fire recording of Messiah and on the Naxos label in the world premiere of the song cycle Vedem by Lori Laitman. Mr. Hauck comes from a family of Southern preachers and church musicians, and grew up singing spirituals and Southern hymns in his father's church.
Jeannette Sorrell, harpsichord, direction, and primary musical arranger, is a leading voice in the new generation of early music conductors. As a conductor, she studied at the Tanglewood Festival under Leonard Bernstein and Roger Norrington, and served as a conducting fellow at the Aspen Festival. As a harpsichordist, she is the winner of two international competitions. In addition to founding and directing Apollo's Fire, she has performed as keyboard artist with the Cleveland Orchestra and as guest conductor and soloist with the Pittsburgh Symphony, Seattle Symphony, Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, Grand Rapids Symphony and the Handel & Haydn Society.
Ms. Sorrell's several awards include an honorary doctorate from Case Western Reserve University. She also received the Noah Greenberg Award from the American Musicological Society for her reconstructions and arrangements of early American music. She also received two prestigious "American Masterpieces" grants from the National Endowment for the Arts for the research, production and touring of "Come to the River." As a teenager, Ms. Sorrell lived in the rural Shenandoah Valley, where she grew to love Appalachian music and Southern harmony.
Collaborating Musicians:
Tina Bergmann, hammered dulcimer, earned her Bachelor's degree from Kent State University. In demand as a teacher at festivals and camps, she has been hailed by Pete Seeger as "the best hammered dulcimer player I've heard in my life." Her contradance bands Strings & Things and Hu$hmoney have explored traditional American and Celtic dance music. A cornerstone of the Apollo's Fire folk-baroque crossover programs, she has performed throughout the US, including appearances at the Ojai Music Festival and at Chautauqua gatherings in Boulder, Colorado and Chautauqua, New York.
Brian Kay, lute, guitar & banjo, is a modern-day troubadour. He specializes in historical plucked instruments and ancient songs of the world, is a songwriter, plays a variety of percussion and wind instruments, writes poetry and paints. Cleveland Classical Review called Brian "far-ranging", "Brilliant", and "exciting", and Early Music America called Brian "phenomenal". His debut album Ocean was released in November 2013.
Susanna Perry Gilmore, fiddle, is concertmaster of the Omaha Symphony, a position she previously held with the Memphis Symphony for fifteen years. In addition to her orchestral role, Ms. Gilmore enjoys a multifaceted career as a solo artist and chamber musician and has been heard on National Public Radio on Performance Today, A Prairie Home Companion, and America's Music Festivals. Ms. Gilmore received her Bachelor's degree in music from Oxford University in England and Master's in Violin Performance at the New England Conservatory in Boston. Interested in folk music since her youth, she learned to play Celtic fiddle through listening to recordings and sitting in on Irish sessions during her years in England and in more recent years performed regularly with the Memphis-based Irish band Planet Reel.
René Schiffer, cello, is a protégé of the renowned baroque cellist Anner Bylsma of the Netherlands. He received soloist diplomas with honors from the Sweelinck Conservatory in Amsterdam. From 1989 to 2005, he toured internationally as a member of La Petite Bande. He has also performed with the Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra, Les Musiciens du Louvre, and in over thirty projects with Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra. He can be heard on the Harmonia Mundi, Philips, Virgin Classics and Sony labels, as well as on Apollo's Fire recordings.
Kathie Stewart, wooden flutes, teaches baroque flute in Oberlin Conservatory's Historical Performance Department, where she is also the Curator of Harpsichords. A founding member of Apollo's Fire, she has performed extensively with the ensemble as a soloist and in the flute/recorder section. She is an avid proponent of Irish music, playing Irish flute in Cleveland-based band Turn the Corner. She has also performed with the Cleveland Orchestra, Oberlin Baroque Ensemble, ARTEK, Cleveland Lyric Opera, and Cleveland Opera.
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