Original compositions by faculty, students and friends of East Central University
will be featured in a recital at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 21 [MONDAY] in the Ataloa Theatre
in ECU’s Hallie Brown Ford Fine Arts Center.
Several works on the program will have their premiere performances, including “Elegy
for Saxophone and Piano” by Dr. Mark Hollingsworth and “Mizmar Kaf Gimmel” (Psalm
23) by Dr. Alan Marshall.
Also being presented for the first time ever in public are two choral pieces, “What
Does it Profit a Man” and “O Domine Jesu Christe” by local composers Victoria Davison
and Rudy Lupinski, both performed by the ECU Chorale under the direction of Dr. Steve
Walker.
A new spiritual, “And I Feel Like Goin’ Home,” by W.T. Skye Garcia, will be performed
by the ECU Gospel Choir under the direction of Dr. Melody Baggech.
Two ECU students, Sarra J.C. Blok and Angela Marshall, will make their second appearances
on the composer concert series. Blok’s “Invisible Children” is an instrumental piece
expressing the plight of the forgotten and neglected children of the world. Marshall
will contribute the video production, “Stars in a Nutshell,” for which she composed
an original soundtrack.
New to the composer concert series are ECU freshman students Claire Marquardt, Christopher
Adkins and Stephen Timperley. Marquardt, a veteran composer of works for solo piano,
will present her award-winning piece, “Beyond the Green Dakota Rise,” while Adkins’
“Eclipse: The Falling of Darkness,” and Timperley’s “Cecilia” are both compositions
for percussion.
A third work for percussion ensemble, “The Rider on a White Horse,” will be premiered
by Tommy Long, who is making his third appearance on the series.
Folk artist Bob Matson, a local piano technician, will round out the program with his original songs, “Dusty Roads” for voice and guitar, and “White Dove,” which he describes as a “9-11 tribute song.”
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