Dr. Zanaida Robles
September 27, 2019
Handel and Haydn Society to Honor the Diversity of its Community with EVERY VOICE
Members of the Handel and Haydn Society Orchestra and Chorus will
lift their voices to celebrate the diverse communities that make up the
city of Boston at the Every Voice concert for peace and justice.
Presented in partnership with the Unitarian Universalist Urban Ministry
and Union United Methodist Church, the free performances will take place
at the First Church in Roxbury at 3pm on Saturday, November 2 and at
the Union United Methodist Church in the South End at 3pm on Sunday,
November 3.
"Music has always had the ability to shine a light on the issues of
our times, allowing us to celebrate the positives and reflect on the
challenges," said David Snead, President and CEO of the Handel and Haydn
Society. "We are thrilled to partner with the Unitarian Universalist
Urban Ministry and Union United Methodist Church, to celebrate the
voices of the Jewish and Black communities of Boston, in a moving and
joyous performance designed to showcase the healing and unifying power
of music."
Every Voice will feature works created by Black and Jewish musicians,
including compositions by Harry T Burleigh, an African American
composer, arranger, and baritone soloist; Joseph Bolougne, Chevalier de
Saint-Georges, a champion fencer, classical composer, virtuoso
violinist, and conductor of the leading symphony orchestra in Paris who
was the son of a wealthy married planter and an African slave; Abraham
Caceres, a Portuguese-Dutch Jewish composer of the late Baroque period;
Giacobbe Cervetto, and Anglo-Italian Baroque musician of Jewish descent
and his son, James Cervetto; Bobby McFerrin,
a Grammy Award-winning American jazz vocalist and composer; Allan
Naplan, composer and executive director of the Arizona MusicFest; Zanaida
Robles, conductor, composer, educator, vocalist, and fierce advocate
for diversity and inclusion in music education and performance; Salamone
Rossi, an Italian/Jewish composer of the late Renaissance/early Baroque
period; Ignatius Sancho, a British composer of African descent; and
Jonathan Woody, whose new work Nigra Sum Sed Formosa had its world
premiere by the Handel and Haydn Society with Castle of Our Skins in
April 2019.
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