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Choral Collage: Derrick Fox, Conductor Derrick Fox, Conductor Janet Galván, Conductor Janet Galván, Conductor

This document provides a program for a choral concert featuring four choirs from Ithaca College: the Ithaca College Chorus, Ithaca College Madrigal Singers, Ithaca College Women's Chorale, and Ithaca College Choir. The program lists the conductors, locations, dates, repertoire, and brief biographies of the two conductors, Janet Galván and Derrick Fox. Program notes provide context and analysis for selected pieces being performed by the Ithaca College Chorus.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
175 views16 pages

Choral Collage: Derrick Fox, Conductor Derrick Fox, Conductor Janet Galván, Conductor Janet Galván, Conductor

This document provides a program for a choral concert featuring four choirs from Ithaca College: the Ithaca College Chorus, Ithaca College Madrigal Singers, Ithaca College Women's Chorale, and Ithaca College Choir. The program lists the conductors, locations, dates, repertoire, and brief biographies of the two conductors, Janet Galván and Derrick Fox. Program notes provide context and analysis for selected pieces being performed by the Ithaca College Chorus.

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Americo Mazuelos
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Choral Collage

Ithaca College Chorus


Derrick Fox, conductor
Ithaca College Madrigal Singers
Derrick Fox, conductor 
Ithaca College Women's Chorale
Janet Galván, conductor
Ithaca College Choir
Janet Galván, conductor

Ford Hall
Sunday October 6th, 2013
3:00 pm
Program

Ithaca College Chorus


Derrick Fox, conductor
Christopher Harris and Justin Ka'upu, graduate
assistants
Jonathan Vogtle and Marcia Rose, collaborative pianists

Blessed Be the Name of the Lord Dale Grotenhuis


(1931-2012)

Seal Lullaby Eric Whitacre


(b. 1970)

Fiela arr. Matlakala Bopape

Ithaca College Madrigal Singers


Derrick Fox, conductor

Vere languores Tomas Luis De Victoria


(1548-1611)

Shakespeare Songs Book III Matthew Harris


  (b.1956)
I. It Was a Lover and His Lass (from As You Like It)
IV. O Mistress Mine (from Twelfth Night) 

Amor vittorioso Giovanni Gastoldi


(1566-1609)
Ithaca College Women's Chorale
Janet Galván, conductor
Christopher Harris and Justin Ka'upu, graduate
assistants
Ali Cherrington and Gina Fortunato, collaborative
pianists

Bright Morning Star arr. Shawn Kirchner


(b.1970)
Soloist: Michelle Ammirati
Octet: Hannah Abrams, Rachel Silverstein, Hillary Robbins, Penelope Voss,
Kimberly Hawley, Katrina Kuka, Caitlin Walton, Karimah 'Mimi' White
Soloist: Taylor Eike

Remember the Ladies Carol Barnett


(b.1949)

El Vito arr. Joni Jensen


(b.1973)
Soloist: Katrina Kuka

Ithaca College Choir


Janet Galván, conductor
Christopher Harris and Justin Ka'upu, graduate
assistants
Sam Martin, collaborative pianist

Tafellied Johannes Brahms


(1833-1897)

Va, Pensiero Giuseppe Verdi


     from the opera "Nabucco" (1813-1901)
 
Entreat Me Not to Leave You Dan Forrest
(b.1978)

My Soul's Been Anchored in the Lord Moses Hogan


(b.1957)
Soloists: Christopher Harris, Kimberly Hawley
Biographies
Janet Galván
Dr. Janet Galván is Director of Choral Activities at Ithaca
College, Artistic Director for the Ithaca Children's Choir, and
founder and conductor of UNYC.                                    

Galván has conducted national, regional, and all-state choruses


throughout the United States in venues such as Carnegie Hall,
Boston’s Symphony Hall, and Minneapolis’ Symphony Hall. She
has conducted her own choral ensembles in Carnegie Hall,
Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall, and Avery Fisher Hall as well
as in concert halls throughout Europe.  Her choral ensembles
have appeared at national, regional, and state music
conferences.  She has conducted the chamber orchestra,
Virtuosi Pragneses, the State Philharmonic of Bialystok, Poland,
the Cayuga Chamber Orchestra, the Madrid Chamber
Orchestra, and the New England Symphonic Ensemble in
choral/orchestral performances. Galván was the sixth national
honor choir conductor for ACDA, and was a guest conductor for
the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in 2002.

Galván has been a guest conductor and clinician in the United


Kingdom, Canada, Belgium, Austria, the Czech Republic,
Greece, and Brazil as well as national choral and music
education conferences and the World Symposium on Choral
Music.  She was on the faculty for the Carnegie Hall Choral
Institute, the Transient Glory Symposium in February of 2012. 

Galván has been recognized as one of the country’s leading


conducting teachers, and her students have received first place
awards and have been finalists in both the graduate and
undergraduate divisions of the American Choral Directors
biennial National Choral Conducting Competition. Dr. Galván
was a member of the Grammy Award-winning Robert Shaw
Festival Singers (Telarc Recordings).
Derrick Fox
Dr. Derrick Fox is an assistant professor of choral music
education and choral conducting at Ithaca College. He conducts
the Ithaca College Chorus, the Ithaca College Madrigal Singers
and teaches choral conducting/rehearsal techniques.

He is an active adjudicator and clinician for regional and state


choirs from the middle/junior high school to the collegiate level.
He has worked with ensembles and presented sessions in
Arkansas, Pennsylvania, Kansas, Missouri, Florida and Michigan.
Dr. Fox has presented for the Michigan School Vocal Music
Association's Choral Adjudication Workshop, Arkansas Choral
Directors Association Convention, Missouri Choral Directors
Association Summer Convention, Florida Music Educators
Association Convention and the Texas Choral Director's
Association Convention.

As a soloist, Dr. Fox has collaborated with the Arkansas


Symphony, Lansing Symphony, St. Louis Symphony, Columbia
Chorale, the University of Nebraska - Omaha, the University of
Missouri, Michigan State University and the Espaço Cultural
(Brasilia, Brazil). He performed selections from Gershwin's
Porgy and Bess on the C.D. entitled In This Hid Clearing, on the
Naxos Classical Music label. He debuted with the St. Louis
Symphony in their performance of Meredith Monk's Night.

He earned degrees from Arkansas State University (B.M.E.), the


University of Missouri – Columbia (M.M.) and Michigan State
University (D.M.A.), where he was awarded the prestigious
University Enrichment Fellowship. Dr. Fox's research interests
and presentations focus on assessment, building classroom
community, rehearsal strategies, South African choral music
and shape note singing in the African American community. He
is the Multicultural and Ethnic Perspectives R&S chair for New
York chapter of ACDA.
Program Notes
Ithaca College Chorus

Blessed Be the Name of the Lord


Grotenhuis’ Blessed Be the Name of the Lord has been a tried and true staple
in the choral repertory of American choral music. The majestic chordal
opening gives way to an exuberant and jaunting multi-meter exclamation of
blessings and praises delivered by the men and repeated by the women. A
hymn-like a cappella section provides a more introspective moment before
the highly rhythmic opening returns but with the men and women delivering
the material together. The composer effectively elevates the piano from a
place of accompaniment to an equal voice that drives this energetic
expression of joy. 

Seal Lullaby
The Seal Lullaby is among the later works of Eric Whitacre, who attended
Juilliard in the early 1990s and has since become one of America’s leading
choral composers. Departing from his signature harmonic language rooted in
tonal clusters, Whitacre incorporates sonorous consonant harmonies, with
lyrical melodic phrasing to capture the essence of the relationship between
the flipperling and its mother. Whitacre also relies heavily upon varying
texture as a means of expressing the text of Ruyard Kipling’s (1865 – 1936)
The White Seal. The piece opens with a predominately chordal vocal texture,
representing the undulating seas characterized in the poem. The melodic
theme is then presented in the upper voices as the lower voices accompany
with dynamic contours that represent the ebb and flow of the seas. Whitacre
continues the interplay of low voices against high voices until the end, where
the surging waves of the sea are once again musically represented in the
voices. Throughout the work, the piano has served in a secondary role
providing a backdrop against which the voices tell a story, but at the
conclusion becomes the most important voice as it delivers the last
statement of the Whitacre’s haunting melody.

Fiela
At the helm of the Polokwane Choral Society based in the Limpopo province
of South Africa, Matlakala Bopape is at the forefront of perpetuating the
makwaya choral traditions of South Africa. She has led the choir on tours of
Europe and North America, in addition to her workshops in the United
Kingdom and Italy. Her work as a conductor has been lauded in very popular
choral festivals throughout South Africa. As an arranger, Bopape’s works
capture the essence of South African choral music, which is rooted in the
activities of everyday life. South Africans sing for birth, death, marriage,
sickness and health. The distinguishing characteristic of South African choral
music is the use of dance. The accompanying dance adds a new rhythmic
pattern to already complex songs. Fiela exemplifies how modern South Africa
arrangers continue to encapsulate the spirit of the South African people
through choral music. The text highlights the complex relationship between a
wife and mother in law but we in the Ithaca College Chorus are champions of
equal opportunity so in our house EVERYONE (husband and wife) sweeps!

Translation:
Sung in Sotho: 
Sweep, sweep girl and don’t dine in dirt.  
Your mother-in-law, she is a shrewd woman. 

Ithaca College Madrigal Singers


Vere languores
Tomás Luis de Victoria (1548-1611), a prominent figure of the late
Renaissance, is the most well known Spanish composer of the 16th century.
Victoria may have studied with Palestrina during his twenty tenure in Rome
giving way to Palestrina’s influence in Victoria’s motets. Victoria’s music
departs from his Italian mentors via its more direct, passionate emotional
appeal. While Palestrina’s polyphonic music exhibits harmonic purity and
textural continuity, Victoria’s works are shorter, have more frequent
cadences, more chromatic alterations, and intense word painting. Victoria
utilizes a variety of motives and textures throughout Vere languores in order
to capture the mystery and awe associated with Catholicism in Spain.

Translation:
(Isaiah 53: 4-5) Truly He Himself bore our griefs,
Vere languores nostros ipse tulit, and He Himself carried our
et dolore nostros ipse portavit; sorrows;
Cujus livore sanati sumus. by His wounds we are healed.
Dulce lignum, dulces clavos, Sweet cross, sweet nails,
dulcia ferens pondera, sweetly bearing the weight,
quae sola fuisti digna  you alone were worthy
sustinere Regem coelorum et to bear the King of heaven and
Dominum. the Lord.

Amor vittorioso
Gastoldi was integral in bringing the balleto to the forefront of the late 16th
Century. This light genre is characterized by the vivacious, homophonic style
and simple harmonies. As indicated by the name, these pieces were meant
for dancing and can be easily identified by the “fa-la-la” refrains and the
AABB phrase structure. Gastoldi’s influence surpassed the confines of the
Italian borders as early English madrigal composers like Thomas Morley
would model their madrigals after the Italian works found in the Musica
Transalpina.

Translation:
Come all ye, armed, my hardy soldiers! Fa la la. I am Love the unconquered,
the accurate marksman. Do not fear in the slightest, but in a handsome
formation, united, follow me, lusty ones. Fa la la!
Shakespeare Songs Book III
Shakespeare Songs are musical settings of the lyrics to songs in
Shakespeare’s plays. The cycle comprises fourteen songs, divided into four
books. Books III was completed in 1992 and premiered by the New
Amsterdam Singers, Clara Longstreth, director, in March 1993. Harris only set
three verses of the original tune It Was a Lover and His Lass. The verses are
composed of a rhymed couplet separated by a hey, and a ho and a hey
nonino. The chorus also adheres to a regular rhyme scheme
(springtime/ringtime, sing/ding/spring). On the surface, this country tune
gives way to the idea of innocent young love in the spring but the bawdier
double meaning would be quite apparent to the vernacular audience. Feste,
the clown, sings O Mistress Mine in Act II scene iii of the play Twelfth Night.
Feste’s tune of carpe diem, reminds us that "Youth's a stuff will not endure"
and that we must take our pleasures now, while "Present mirth hath present
laughter."

Ithaca College Women's Chorale


Bright Morning Stars
Bright Morning Stars is among my very favorite American folksongs.  I learned
it from my college roommate during a road trip as we shared songs in turn-
the old-fashioned way of passing time!  I fell in love with it immediately and
made everyone in the car sing it over and over again in harmony.  I especially
liked the way the song linked the beautiful universal and “external” imagery
of dawn and morning stars to the similar “internal” movements of renewal
that we all also experience – “day a-breaking in my soul.”  I did make one
addition to the original lyrics.  The original verses ask, in turn, “O where are
our dear fathers?  O where are our dear mothers?”  I added a final verse in
which the long-departed “fathers” and “mothers” have a chance to ask “o
where are our dear children?”  The response:  “they’re upon the
earth-a-dancing.”  I like the image of those who have passed on and those
who are yet present upon the earth calling to each other “across eternity.”
-Shawn Kirchner

Remember the Ladies


While John Adams was in attendance at the Second Continental Congress in
Philadelphia, his wife Abigail was at home in Braintree, Massachusetts,
running the farm, raising four children, and maintaining a lively
correspondence with her husband.  The topics included news of family and
friends, the activities of the British troops which had recently left Boston, and
her advice on what to put into a proposed Constitution.  This sprightly text is
adapted from her letter dated 31 March 1776.  I have set her text for treble
chorus and piano in a style partially influenced by music which would have
been heard in Europe during the late 1700s.
-Carol Barnett

Complete unabridged text in original form (But not the entire letter)
“I long to hear that you have declared an independency – and by the way, in
the new Code of Laws which I suppose it will be necessary for you to make, I
desire you would remember the ladies.  Be more generous and favorable to
them than your ancestors.  Do not put such unlimited power into the hands of
the husbands.  Remember, all men would be tyrants if they could; that your
sex are naturally tyrannical is a truth so thoroughly established as to admit of
no dispute.  Why then not put it out of the power of the vicious and the
lawless to use us with cruelty and indignity.  If particular care and attention is
not paid to the ladies we are determined to foment a rebellion, and will not
hold ourselves bound by any laws in which we have no voice or
representation.  But such of you as wish to be happy willingly give up the
harsh title of master for the more tender and endearing one of friend.  Adieu.
I need not say how much I am your ever faithful friend.”  -Abigail Adams

El Vito 

El Vito is the result of necessity.  In the fall of 2010, my colleagues and I


planned a collaborative concert focusing on the music of Spain.  In my
research, I found music for my mixed ensemble very quickly, but the only
women’s music available was pretty lullabies.  We needed an exciting piece
to showcase the passionate flamenco-style music of Spain, so I arranged one
myself.  The vito is a song and dance (St. Vitus is the patron saint of dance)
from Andalusia.  Its character is fierce and flashy…the piano takes on the role
of the guitar accompaniment and the singers participate in the percussion by
clapping (although this is quite simplified from true flamenco clapping).  –Joni
Jensen

Translation:
With the vito it goes
I don’t want them to look at me for I blush.  
Single ladies are of gold, married ladies are of silver.
The widows are of copper, and the old ones are of tin.
Don’t look straight at my face for I blush.  
I don’t want you to look at me for I’m going to fall in love.
A Malaguean lady went to Sevilla to see the bulls and in the middle of the
way the Moors captured her.

 
Ithaca College Choir
Tafellied
Born in Hamburg, Germany, Johannes Brahms was a composer and pianist of
the Romantic period, who wrote symphonies, concerti, chamber music, piano
works, choral compositions, and more than 200 songs. Throughout his life
Brahms worked with choirs and had an interest in writing music for them.  He
had an extensive understanding of their capabilities.
In 1884 Brahms composed Tafellied for six-part mixed chorus to a text by
Joseph von Eichendorff (1788-1857) as a gift for his friends in the Krefeld
Singing Society on the occasion of their 50th anniversary. Normally, he would
not agree to write occasional pieces but made an exception to provide this
delightful “table
song.”

Translation:
The women:
Just as the echo of happy songs
must give a happy answer,
so we also approach and return
the gallant gretting with thanks. 

The men:
Oh, you kind and charming ones!
For the fair flight of the echo
Take from the joyful musicians
the homage that is offered! 

The women:
Ah, but we perceive that you pay homage
to other Gods as well.
Red and gold we see it twinkling,
Tell us how should we take that? 

The men:
Dear ones!  Daintily with three fingers,
more securely with the entire hand -
And so the glass is filled from those
not halfway, but to the rim. 

The women:
Now we see that you are masters.
But we are liberal today.
Hopefully, as handsome spirits
you can be led to some ideal. 

The men:
Each one sips and thinks of his own lady
and he who doesn't have one in particular -
now, he drinks in general
renewed praise to all beautiful ones! 

All:
That is right!  All around clink
toasts and returned toasts!
Where singers and women are united,
there will be a bright sound!
 

Va, Pensiero
This chorus from the third act of Verdi’s opera Nabucco (1842) is also known
as the Chorus of the Hebrew Slaves.   The text by Temistocle Solera was
inspired by Psalm 137.  This was Verdi’s third opera and was written in a time
of sadness in Verdi’s life.  He had lost two children and his wife between 1838
and 1840. 

The setting of the opera is 587 BCE in Jerusalem and the defeat of the
Israelites and the destruction of the First Temple by the armies of Nabucco
(Nebuchadnezzar).  The Israelites are taken captive and removed from their
homeland. They sing this piece in lament of this loss.  They sing on the banks
of the Euphrates as they rest from their forced labor.

This is an important anthem in Italy.  Some scholars thought that the chorus
was intended to be an anthem for Italians who were longing for freedom from
foreign control.   As recently as 2009, there was a proposal to replace Italy’s
national anthem with Va Pensiero.  In 2011 conductor Riccardo Muti
interrupted a performance of the chorus in Rome to protest national budget
cuts to the arts.  The audience was invited to sing along.

There is one reference to the harps in the trees in the text.  This refers to the
time when the Jewish people who were slaves chose to give up playing harps
rather than share the beauty of the sound with their captors.  They hung their
harps on willow trees.  This was a sign of mourning. 

At the first performance in 1842, the audience members stood and cheered
Verdi’s name and went into the streets of Milan singing Va Pensiero. 
Musicians who have traveled to Italy remark upon the fact that everyone in
Italy seems to know the piece and will sing along if it is performed.

Nabucco is considered Verdi’s first great success and made him a national
figure.  When he died, the crowds at his funeral procession spontaneously
sang Va Pensiero. 

Translation:
Go, thoughts, on golden wings.   Go settle upon the slopes and hills

Where the sweet and soft

air of the native land smell fragrant!

Greet the shores of the Jordan River,

The toppled towers of Sion. Oh, my country, so beautiful and lost! Oh
remembrance, so dear and fatal. 

Golden harp of the prophetic seers,


 

Why do you hang mutely from the willow?

Rekindle memories in our breasts,

and speak to us about the time that once was.
 

Oh, like the fate of Solomon give a sound drawn from crude mourning,

May the Lord inspire you a harmony of voices which may give virtue to the
suffering.  

Entreat Me Not to Leave You


Born in 1978, Dan Forrest is a pianist-turned-composer whose music has
already established a lasting presence in the U.S. and abroad. Dan holds a
doctoral degree in composition from the University of Kansas and a master’s
degree in piano performance. He is a former professor of music at Bob Jones
University, where he served as Department Head of Music Theory and
Composition for several years. This composition by Dan Forrest was
commissioned by the Salt Lake Vocal Artists, a professional choral ensemble. 
The text is adapted from Ruth 1:16-17.  

Text:
Entreat me not to leave you.
Nor to turn back from following after you.
For where you go, I will go; And where you live, I will live;
Your people shall be my people, And your God my God.
Where you die, I will die, And there will I be buried
The Lord do so to me, and more also,
If ought but death parts you and me,
Entreat me not to leave you.

My Soul's Been Anchored in the Lord


Moses Hogan was a hugely talented and influential director and arranger of
African American Spirituals. Born in 1957 he studied at the New Orleans
Center for Creative Arts, the Oberlin Conservatory of Music, the Juilliard
School of Music, and Louisiana State University. He created sparkling new
arrangements of classic spirituals and formed new choirs to perform them.
During his short life, he published more than 70 works and was the editor of
the new Oxford Book of Spirituals, a wonderful collection of spirituals.

 
Personnel
Ithaca College Chorus
Soprano I Soprano II
Katarina Andersson Julie Allison
Browyn Bishop Emily Beseau
Christina Dimitriou Andrea Bickford
Kayla Dwyer Ava Borowski
Emily Faris Lauren Bristow
Jill Gagliardi Haley Evanoski
Amanda Galluzzo Jillian Francis
Emily Heerd Lauren Hoalcraft
Annina Hsieh Ann-Marie Iacoviello
Leigh Ann Kaminek Ellen Jackson
Sarah Lottes Casey Kobylar
Alina Marhefka Alice Lambert
Keelyn McLaughlin Rachael Langton
Deanna Payne Chelsea Kaye Lanphear
Maegan Pollard Jessica MacKimm
Hallie Smith Amanda Miller
Claudia Torzilli Sandi O'Hare
Christy Troia Jennie Ostrow
Judelle White Jessica Plude
Laura White Abby Rogers
Kathleen Winschel Michelle Rosnack
Emily Wood Johanna Ruby
Lily Saffa
Alto I Emmalouise St. Amand
Emilie Benigno Christine Vanella
Sarah Broadwell Leila Welton
Emma Brown Alexandra Wright
Allison Ditsig
Madeline Docimo Alto II
Christine Dookie Victoria Boell
Brittany Francis Elena DeLuccia
Shannon Frier Nicole Dowling
Rebecca Kabel Katie Jessup McDermott
Ryan Kennedy Emily Pierson
Cara Kinney Kiersten Roetzer
Cynthia Mathiesen Kailey Schnurman
Sara Pelaez Rose Steenstra
Phoebe Ritrovato Emily Wilcox
Marcia Rose Stephanie Zhang
Cristina Saltos
Kirsten Schmidt
Amanda Schmitz
Miranda Schultz  
Jocelyn Suarez
Danielle Wheeler

 
Tenor I Tenor II
Matt Allen Kyle Banks
Dan Block Aidan Boardman
Zachary Brown Taylor Chadwick
Tyler Campolongo Josh Condon
Drew Carr Jacob Cordie
Mark Farnum Max Deger
Duncan Krummel Anthony DeLuca
Joseph Michalcyk-Lupa Scott Irish-Bronkie
Jacob Minter Alexander Greenberg
Andrew Nave Nick Kellihner
Brandon Reyes William 'Zach' Latino
James Smith Michael McCarthy
Patrick Starke Anthony Mekos
Joshua Vanderslice Adam Morin
Ben Van De Water Mike Nowotarski
Jacob Walsh Michael Ranalli
Joshua Rosen
Baritone Taylor Smith
Alex Abrahams Graham Terry
Ben Alessi Alex Toth
Scott Altman Stephen Tzianabos
Jordan Bachmann
Nathan Balester Bass
Ryan Bardenett Ben Allen
Patrick Cannady Martin Castonguay
Michael Cho Christopher Chi
Kevin Covney Michael Cooperstein
Thayre Davis Liam Cunningham
Joshua Dufour David Fenwick
St. John Faulkner Michael Galvin
Daniel Felix Stephen Gomez
Kevin Flanagan Anaximander Heiter
Christopher Hauser Hiroo Kajita
Callahan Hughes Patrick LaRussa
Joshua Kelly William Leichty
Jesse Law Justin Parish
Roosevelt Lee James Parker
Nate Long Jason Peterson
Jackson May Christian Savini
Kenji Michaud Matt Sidilau
John McQuaig Nivedhan Singh
Alec Miller Greg Sisco
Paul Morgan Mitchel Wong
Matthew Morrison
Jacob Morton-Black
Michael Palmer  
Joseph Pellittieri
Ryan Pereira
Jordan Rosas
Andrew Satterberg
Brandon Schneider
Bryan Spencer
Sean Swartz
Paul Tine
Seth Waters
Ian Wiese
Derek Wohl
 
Ithaca College Madrigal Singers
Soprano Tenor
Lucrezia Ceccarelli Jacob Cordie
Leanne Contino Timothy Powers
Edda Fransdottir Adriel Miles
Katie O'Brien Stephen Tzianabos

 Alto Bass
Sophie Israelsohn Michael Galvin
Mattina Keith Anaximander Heiter
Sunhwa Reiner Paul Morgan
Ariana Warren Joseph Pellittieri
Paul Tine

Ithaca College Women's Chorale


Soprano I-Soprano II Soprano II-Alto I
Hannah Abrams Brittney Aiken
Megan Benjamin Megan Brust
Jenna Bock Hillary Robbins
Lucrezia Ceccarelli Penelope Voss
LiAn Chen
Michelle Cosentino Alto I
Emily DeMarzio Kimberly Hawley
Laura Douthit Julia Imbalzano
Kimberly Dyckman Sophie Israelsohn
Elizabeth Embser Alexandria Kemp
Gina Fortunato Gillian Lacey
Edda Fransdottir Jennifer Pham
Caroline Fresh Daniela Schmiedlechner
Kate Griffin
Mollie Hamilton AltoI-Alto II
Xandry Langdon Hannah Bero
Cynthia Mickenberg Mattina Keith
Katie O'Brien Claire Noonen
Rachel Silverstein Jenny Schulte
Kristi Spicer Alexa Mancuso
Kelly Timko Caitlin Walton
Cherisse Williams
Alto II
Soprano II Michelle Ammirati
Christina Christiansen Ali Cherrington
Kendra Domotor Carolyn Kruszona
Taylor Eike Katrina Kuka
Emily Gaggiano Amanda Nauseef
Carrie Lindeman Sunhwa Reiner
Meredith Morse  Kelly Sadwin
Karimah 'Mimi' White
 
Ithaca College Choir
Soprano I  Soprano II 
Leanne Averill Shelley Attadgie
Emily Behrmann-Fowler Lyndsey Boyer
Leanne Contino Kate Clemons
Abigail Doering Lynn Craver
Shaylyn Gibson Rachel Mikol
Josi Petersen Laura McCauley
Brittany Powell Vicky Trifiletti
Sarah Welden
Megan Wright Alto II 
Mika Genatossio
Alto I  Kimberly Hawley
Annie Barrett Samantha Kwan
Chan Wei En  Namarah McCall
Jenna Fishback Rachel Ozols
Sarah Loeffler Sunhwa Reiner
Rebecca Saltzman Melissa Schachter
Ariana Warren
Tenor II 
Tenor I  David Allen
Eric Flyte Kevin Fortin
Joshua Fogerty Justin Ka'upu
Joseph Fritz Timothy Powers
Torrance Gricks Tom Riley
Joseph Kaz Miggy Torres
Adriel Miles Bradley Whittemore

Baritone  Bass 
Christopher Harris Matt Boyce
Matthew Jones Elidoro Castillo
Dave Klodowski Fred Diengott
Travis Pilsitts Nathan Haltiwanger
Michael Roddy Jeremy Pletter
D'quan Tyson Brett Pond
Ryan Zettlemoyer

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