soaring sound of massed voices for mother's day
Sopranos and the soaring sound of massed voices offered in special Mother’s Day concert
Sopranos Dame Malvina Major and Polly Ott will be the soloists for the Christchurch City Choir’s Concert for Mothers Day at ChristChurch Cathedral at 2 p.m., Sunday 10 May.
They will be accompanied by organist Jeremy Woodside and directed by Brian Law in a programme of songs selected for the occasion and including items written by Johannes Brahms, Edward Elgar, Herbert Hamilton and George Shearing and pieces from the lighter repertoire.
Brian Law said the Cathedral has a majestic vaulted acoustic which enhances the experience of hearing a massed choir in full voice.
Dame Malvina is one of the country’s most popular and
respected sopranos, and whose efforts to nurture and develop
young talent have won widespread admiration. She will be
joined by young Christchurch singer Polly Ott, a member of
Dame Malvina Major’s Emerging Artists Programme and a
finalist in the 2009 Lexus Song Quest.
Polly was a
performance voice student with Dame Malvina at the
University of Canterbury, an opera chorus member, and in the
Tower NZ Youth Choir which toured Canada and Europe in 2007.
She was a member of the NZ Secondary Students’ Choir from
2003-06, which toured Canada and the USA, and took part in
the Choir of World competition in China (2006).
And as
well as hearing two beautiful sopranos and the soaring sound
of the City Choir in massed song, there will be the music
played by the Cathedral’s brilliant young organist Jeremy
Woodside. He was a ten year old chorister at the Cathedral
when he first became interested in the pipe organ and began
lessons with Russell Kent. He passed his Licentiate with
Distinction from Trinity College, London (2005) and since
then Jeremy has played at Wells Cathedral, Manchester
Cathedral, Notre Dame and The American Cathedral in Paris,
and various venues in Switzerland and Austria. He has also
been involved in performances with Dame Malvina, Hayley
Westenra, Fiona Pears, and is studying music at Canterbury
University. He is the Sir Gil Simpson Organ Scholar at
ChristChurch Cathedral and is releasing two CDs very
shortly.
This concert showcases just some of the incredibly rich range of musical talent nurtured in Canterbury, not least by Music Director Brian Law and Dame Malvina Major.
ENDS