Christmas Concert – 91ֱ Tue, 24 Feb 2026 23:03:26 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/uploads/2021/07/cropped-favicon-32x32.png Christmas Concert – 91ֱ 32 32 91ֱ to Present Annual Christmas Concert Dec. 16 /news/2025/culver-stockton-college-to-present-annual-christmas-concert-dec-16/ Wed, 10 Dec 2025 20:54:59 +0000 /?p=47666 CANTON, Mo. — 91ֱ will celebrate the season with its annual Christmas Concert, featuring performances by all three C-SC Choirs and the Jazz Band. The event will take place Tuesday, Dec. 16 at 7 p.m. in the Alexander Campbell Auditorium located in the Robert W. Brown Performing Arts Center. The concert offers a festive evening of music for the campus and surrounding community.

Under the direction of Dr. Andrew Schroetter, the Collegiate Choir, Chamber Choir, and Concert Choir will present a program centered on the miracle of Christ’s birth, with particular emphasis on the star that guided the way to the manger.

According to Schroetter, audiences will experience a blend of traditional and contemporary carols, from Wilhousky’s “Carol of the Bells” to Handel’s “And the Glory of the Lord,” alongside works by Mendelssohn, Ritter, Britten, Takach, and more.

The Jazz Band, directed by Dr. Trent Hollinger, director of bands and chair of the music department, will perform four movements from Duke Ellington’s arrangement of the “Nutcracker Suite”: “Overture,” “Arabesque Cookie,” “Sugar Rum Cherry,” and “Dance of the Floreadores.” The work features many students throughout the ensemble.

The concert will conclude with an audience sing-along, featuring a special co-arrangement by senior music technology major Eireland Cady and Dr. Hollinger.

“The Christmas Concert is one of our most beloved traditions,” said Dr. Dylan Marney, chair of the C-SC Civic Engagement, Humanities, and Performing Arts Division and associate professor of music. “Our students have worked diligently to prepare a program that captures the beauty, wonder, and joy of the holiday season. We’re excited to welcome our community to share in this celebration.”

The event is free and open to the public, and all are invited to attend.

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91ֱ prepares for Christmas Choir Concert /news/2023/culver-stockton-college-prepares-for-christmas-choir-concert/ Fri, 08 Dec 2023 21:10:00 +0000 /?p=28638 The Division of Fine, Applied, and Literary Arts will present this event, featuring performances by the collegiate choir, chamber choir, and concert choir, all under the direction of Interim Director of Choirs Amy Stollberg ‘87. Dr. Dylan Marney, Associate Professor of Music, will provide accompaniment. The concert is titled The Light of Christmas and will include 45 minutes of music, closing with the traditional “Peace Peace.”

Admission to this event is free, and tickets do not need to be purchased in advance. Following the concert, guests are welcome to attend a reception in Merillat Chapel and Recital Hall, which will include music provided by the C-SC Jazz Combo.

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Culver-Stockton’s Christmas Concert can be found on YouTube /news/2020/culver-stocktons-christmas-concert-can-be-found-on-youtube/ Mon, 30 Nov 2020 22:18:52 +0000 http://culver.flywheelsites.com/?p=1518 CANTON, Mo. — The 91ֱ Department of Music continues to honor tradition by sharing music of yuletide in its 2020 Christmas Concert.

The Concert, Chamber and Collegiate Choirs sing age-old carols and chants, as well as modern expressions of joy, to celebrate a season of peace and goodwill.  The choirs are directed by Dr. Scott Allison, assistant professor of music. He is accompanied by Dr. Dylan Marney, associate professor of music.

Precautions taken for the COVID-19 pandemic prevent live performances on campus this year, but this year’s musical selections can be found on YouTube. The Collegiate Choir was divided into treble, bass and mixed choirs to honor social distancing and meet rehearsal safety guidelines.

The Collegiate Treble Choir explores an ancient English chant, brought to harmony in the “1514 Sarum Primer” and set to tonalities of today in Dan Forrest’s arrangement of the “Sussex Carol.”  The choir then continues with scriptural words of hope expressed in “Psalm 23” in an arrangement by Randall Stroope. The Collegiate Bass Choir follows with a setting of Isaac Watts’ “Cradle Hymn” by contemporary Norwegian composer Kim André Arnesen.

The treble and bass choirs also rehearsed as two mixed voice choirs for this Concert. Collegiate Mixed Voice Choir A reminds us of the joy of the season in Craig Courtney’s setting in English of the German carol “How Great Our Joy.” Collegiate Mixed Voice Choir B seeks to “illumine through sound” as composer Morten Lauridsen describes his blend of 13th century apocryphal accounts of animals at the crèche with references to the liturgical Gregorian Christmas matins chant.

Expressing Christmas joy takes on many guises, and the Chamber Choir presents one of the most rhythmically delightful in Robert Shaw and Alice Parker’s arrangement of the Catalan carol “Fum, Fum, Fum.” Dating from the 16th century, this carol recalls a widespread European tradition of processing to the church on Christmas Eve and feasting after Mass.

English cathedral composer Philip W.J. Stopford’s setting of the Coventry Carol, “Lully, Lulla, Lullay,” honors another reimagining of the night of the crèche from the 14th century when medieval guild plays added to the scriptural account episodes that resonated with their own lives. The solo quartet is soprano Brianna Holder, a senior music education major from Moberly, Mo.; alto Jay Bettis, a junior English major from Hermann, Mo.; tenor Isaac Reinwald, a freshman history education major from Hannibal, Mo.; and baritone Samuel Morgan, a freshman music technology major from Columbia, Ill.

The Chamber Choir brings a jazz standard to Russ Robinson’s arrangement of “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas.” Written in 1943 in the dark days of World War II for the movie “Meet Me in St. Louis,” the song reminds us that someday “we all will be together, if the fates allow” and offers with it the hope that next year, we will all be together making music.

In “Spotless Rose,” the Concert Choir relates a tale of the Nativity, foretold in Isaiah and already reimagined in a 16th century poetic text: “from the root of Jesse shall spring forth a flower to show God’s love for all humanity.” Composer Ola Gjeilo’s setting of the medieval carol text works equally well in English or in his native Norwegian. The soloists are sopranos Anna Gabel, a sophomore art education major from Quincy, Ill., and J’ordan Scurlock, a senior criminal justice major from St. Louis.

In Arvo Pärt’s setting of the scriptural antiphon “Magnificat,” Mary’s song of exultation at bearing God’s son shifts and resounds with a bell-like effect through a compositional technique called tintinnabuli. The choir weaves beautiful harmonies around the fixed tone of a soprano chant, sung by Dr. Carol Mathieson, professor emerita of music.

Fred Bock’s “Peace, Peace,” a highlight of C-SC Christmas Concerts for several years, partners the traditional German carol “Silent Night” with the composer’s own expression of the yearning of the season for peace on earth. With a soprano saxophone obbligato played by Dr. Trent Hollinger, associate professor of music, the Concert Choir crescendos gradually to the finale, when all of the choirs join in with the beloved carol — peace, peace, Silent Night.

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Christmas Choral Concert set for Dec. 17 /news/2019/christmas-choral-concert-set-for-dec-17/ Thu, 05 Dec 2019 15:40:28 +0000 https://culver.flywheelsites.com/?p=9592 CANTON, Mo. — 91ֱ’s Christmas Choral Concert, which has ushered in the holidays at the school and the Canton community for more than 150 years, will be at 7 p.m. Dec. 17 in the Alexander Campbell Auditorium in the Robert W. Brown Performing Arts Center.

The concert will begin with the 60-voice Collegiate Choir singing a joyful, syncopated processional based on the ancient chant “Veni, Veni Emmanuel” by Michael John Trotta, continue the rhythmic energy with “Noél Ayisyen,” a carol from Haiti, and then showcase seasonal works of John Rutter, Eric Whitacre and Charles Ives.

The Chamber Choir will offer a wide contrast of styles, ranging from the “Hodie Christus natus est” of Heinrich Schütz to the lovely Hugo Distler arrangement of “Lo! How a Rose E’er Blooming” and the more angular and syncopated “Ave Maria” by Javier Busto.

The Concert Choir enters with its own processional to an arrangement of “O Come, O Come, Emmanuel” arranged with a completely different sense of time and grandeur. Capturing the rejoicing of the season with the Parker/Shaw arrangement of “Christ was born on Christmas Day” and “Hallelujah, Christ is Born” by Rosephanye Powell, the Concert Choir charges the tempo with André J. Thomas’s “Rockin’ Jerusalem” before returning to the peace of the season in the Hughes/Loose “Lullaby for a King” and ending with their traditional “Peace, Peace” with candlelight “Silent Night.”

Scotty Allison conducts all the choral ensembles.

A brass quintet and saxophone quartet will provide instrumental interludes under the direction of Aren Van Houzen and Trent Hollinger respectively. A dessert reception in Merillat Chapel and Recital Hall will follow the concert, with light seasonal music provided by various instrumental ensembles.

Admission is free. The concert also will be streamed live on Culver-Stockton’s Facebook page.

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