Moravian College 'Vespers' offered in Foy Hall preview
A concert featuring music of Moravian College "Christmas Vespers" performed by the Moravian Choir, Women's Chorus, Brass Ensemble, and other chamber ensembles will be held 7:30 p.m. Nov. 22, Foy Concert Hall, Priscilla Payne Hurd Campus, Main and Church streets, Bethlehem.
Prelude music begins at 7 p.m.
The theme of the program will follow the college's "In Focus" theme of "War, Peace Building and the Just Society."
Choral selections will feature recent motets by well-known contemporary composers Karl Jenkins and Imant Raminsh; a piece by student composer Michael McAndrew '15; and an arrangement of Handel's "Pastoral Symphony," which was transcribed from memory and arranged for women's voices by women who were captive at a prison camp for women and children in Sumatra during WW II.
Hymns will be sung and a soloist will perform the "Morning Star" solo.
The Women's Chorus is directed by Eduardo Azzati, an artist-lecturer in voice.
The Moravian Choir will be directed by Paula Ring Zerkle, associate music professor and the Director of Vocal Music at the college.
The preview to the Moravian College Christmas Vespers is offered for members of the public and those who enjoy the music and spirit of Vespers who cannot attend the services, which are held for the campus community.
In the service, the music has been carefully selected and arranged to bring the Christmas message without need of a sermon.
The Vespers service is an expression of two traditional forms of worship in the Moravian Church: the Singstunde and the Candlelight Service.
A Moravian Singstunde (Singing Hour) is a service of music with no preaching.
Since the 1720s, Moravians have been known for their worshipful singing.
The Moravian candlelight service originated in 1747 in Marienborn, Germany, when candles with red trimming were distributed at the children's Christmas service. Bethlehem's first candle service was in 1756.
The hymn "Morning Star," traditionally sung with a child soloist, was composed in 1836 by Francis Florentine Hagen, a member of the Moravian Theological Seminary Class of 1835.
Admission is by donation.
Information: moravian.edu/music