Sep 19, 2005 Print This Article

Bach at the Sem Begins New Season on September 27

Concordia Seminary, St. Louis, is pleased to announce the 14th season of Bach at the Sem, featuring presentations of J.S. Bach’s music by The American Kantorei under the direction of Robert Bergt. All but one of the sacred concerts in the Bach at the Semseries will take place in the Seminary’s Chapel of St. Timothy and St. Titus. There is no admission charge and no tickets are issued.

The 2005-06 season features “A Celebration in Music from the Golden Age of Church Music, 1500–1759: Music of Luther’s Time to the Deaths of Bach (1750) and Handel (1759).”

Performances of Bach at the Sem scheduled for the 2005-2006 season include:

Tuesday, September 27, 7:00 p.m.—A concert for the inauguration of Rev. Dr. Dale A. Meyer: Johann Sebastian Bach, Mass in B Minor—“Kyrie” and “Gloria”; George Frideric Handel, Messiah, Part III
Sunday, November 27, 3:00 p.m.—Bach, Christmas Oratorio, Parts I, II, III
Sunday, January 22, 3:00 p.m.—Organ recital, Dennis Bergin; Bach solo cantata, Ich habe genug (David Berger, Bass)
Sunday, February 19, 3:00 p.m.—Bach, Concerto in D Minor for Two Violins (Wanda Becker and Kaoru Wada, Violins); Motets from the early and middle Baroque periods
Sunday, April 2, 3:00 p.m.—The Passion of our Lord and Savior revered in great choruses by Schütz, Praetorius, Gumpelzheimer, Buxtehude, Bach, and Handel
Sunday, April 9, 3:00 p.m.—In Wartburg Hall, the Arianna String Quartet; Franz Joseph Haydn, The Seven Last Words of Our Savior on the Cross; Robert Bergt, brief meditations on the Seven Words
Tuesday, April 18, 7:00 p.m.—Bach, Mass in B Minor—“Credo,” “Sanctus,” and “Agnus Dei”; Buxtehude and Schütz

The American Kantorei is a choral and orchestral ensemble dedicated to the performance of church music from the Renaissance, Baroque, Classical and Neoclassical periods. The works of J.S. Bach form the core of its repertoire. Conductor and music director Robert Bergt is known as an international Bach scholar, especially in understanding the centrality of the German chorale to all of Bach’s musical compositions for worship. Bach at the Sem is funded largely through the generosity of individual supporters.

For more information concerning Bach at the Sem or to be added to the Bach at the Sem mailing list, contact Seminary Relations, Concordia Seminary, 801 Seminary Place, St. Louis, MO 63105; (314) 505-7370; [email protected]; or visit the Bach at the SemWeb site at www.csl.edu/Bachat.htm.