SATB
Stella Maris, Stella Caeli, Sterna Paradisaea (2025)
Instrumentation: Cantata for Soprano and Tenor Soli,
Treble Chorus and String Quintet
Text: Yvonne Gray
Duration: 35:00
Note: This work can be performed as a concert work, a staged work, or somewhere
in between. Projections by Ben Robinson of Nicki Gwynn-Jones photography
enhance the live performance experience. Please inquire.
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Librettist: Yvonne Gray
Choreography: Amy O’Brien
Photography: Nicki Gwynn-Jones
Projections:
Benjamin Robinson Rachel Schutz, soprano
Omar Najmi, tenor
Ithaca College Treble Chorale, Sean Linfors, conductor
Tegan Faran, violin; Ho-Yin Kwok, violin; Kyle Armbrust, viola; Greg Hesselink, cello; Tristen Jarvis, double bass
Stella Maris, Stella Caeli, Sterna Paradisaea (2025) is a 30-minute semi-staged cantata for soprano and tenor soli, treble chorus and string quintet. This production is directed by Ben Robinson and incorporates choreography by Amy O'Brien and projections of photography by Orkney-based artist Nicki Gywnn- Jones.
The text by Orkney poet Yvonne Gray celebrates the Arctic tern, an adept but now threatened survivor in a changing world. The year of the tern is presented as two seasons summer in the south; summer in the north - as the birds span the earth, flying over 60,000 miles from their feeding grounds in the Antarctic Ocean to their breeding grounds on land in the sub-Arctic and back. The form of the eleven-movement work is symmetrical, featuring accompanied Latin chants at the beginning and end, with alternating choruses and arias which incorporate, at times, phonetic representations of bird calls. In the central movement, a solo tern sings “the sky harps in our feathers - a morning song!” In "Come, Come! Remembered Songs!" the bird chorus sings of the growing light in the north and the urge to return for the breeding season. In “Totus pulcher Es” (You are entirely beautiful) and in “They travel from seas of ice”, soprano and tenor soloists (birders) reflect on what they know of the birds, awe and concern mingled. The harmonic language of the music is largely tonal, incorporating modes and other scales, and the music makes full use of text painting opportunities, “crissing” and “crossing” and “soaring”. The year’s cycle ends with silence – the "dread" – that falls when the flock is poised to take off on its return journey south after the chicks have fledged. That pause might invite questions. What lies ahead – for bird and for human – and how well will we adapt? The final chant and chorus express hope and a plea to look at and listen closely to the world around us.–SM & YG
Silent Sea
SATB with Piano (2019)
Text: Rachael Boast
Duration: 3:30
View the Publication >
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The poetry of “Silent Sea” by Rachael Boast, appeared in a series of poems about climate change in 2015, the same year as the landmark Paris Agreement. Adding music to this powerful text lifts the message to new heights and encourages singers and listeners to seek a sustainable lifestyle on this beautiful planet.
The Heart of the Tree
for Chorus and Piano Accompaniment (2015)
Duration: ca. 4:00
Oseh Shalom (Debbie Friedman, arr. McCune)
SATB with Piano and Clarinet (2013)
Duration: ca. 5:00
Text: Hebrew, Jewish liturgical prayer
“This is a beautiful and complex arrangement of a popular song by Debbie Friedman. Using a clarinet like a shofar and the piano like a klezmer band, this is a worthy piece for any fine choir.” - Hal Leonard Publications
Come Round Right: A Folk Song Suite
(arr. Sally Lamb McCune) SATB. Piccolo, Snare Drum, String Quartet or Piano (2013); arrangements of three timeless American folk songs can be performed as a set or as individual pieces: Simple Gifts; When Johnny Comes Marching Home; Get Off the Track. Historical notes included offer a solid beginning for further study.
Duration: ca. 10:00 (3:00, 4:45, 2:15)
Text: Brackett, Gilmore, Hutchinson
Crossing
SATB with Piano Accompaniment (2011)
Duration: ca. 3:00
Text: Philip Booth, Robert Louis Stevenson, African-American Spiritual
For Heroes Proved
SATB A Cappella (2011)
A Meditation on “America the Beautiful” by Samuel Ward (1882)
Duration: ca. 5:05
Text: Kathryn Lee Bates
Common Be Our Prayer
SATB A Cappella (2010)
Duration: ca. 2:00
Text: Hindu Prayer from the Rig Veda
SSAA
The Cricket Sang
SSAA with Piano Accompaniment (2018)
Duration: ca. 3:00
Text: Emily Dickinson
Discendi, Amor Santo
for Women’s Choir (SSAA) A Cappella (2012)
Duration: ca. 3:25
Text: Christina Rosetti, Bianco da Siena
Four Little Angels
for Women’s Choir (SSAA) with Marimba, Double Bass and Piano Accompaniment (2012)
Duration: ca. 3:00
Text: Shaker Hymn, African-American Spiritual
Go Dig My Grave
for Women’s Choir (SSAA) A Cappella (2012). Companion piece with “Jubilee” and “Where Do the Roads Go?”
Duration: ca. 3:10
Text: Anonymous
Jubilee
for Women’s Choir (SSAA) and Piano Accompaniment (2012). Companion piece with “Go Dig My Grave” and “Where Do the Roads Go?”
Duration: ca. 1:50
Text: Anonymous
Questions About Angels
for Women’s Choir (SSAA) with Marimba, Double Bass and Piano Accompaniment (2012)
Duration: ca. 7:30
Text: Lydia Hunt Sigourney, Emily Dickinson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Where Do the Roads Go?
for Women’s Choir (SSAA) and Piano Accompaniment. Companion piece with “Jubilee” and “Go Dig My Grave.” (2012)
Duration: ca. 4:20
Text: Louise McNeil
The Sadness of the Sea
for Women’s Choir and Piano Accompaniment (2004)
Duration: ca. 9:10
Text: Lydia Hunt Sigourney, Emily Dickinson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow