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    American Voices

    Spiritual music: Composer transforms her 30-year quest into a special Houston premiere

    Joel Luks
    May 16, 2014 | 7:14 am

    While some art is created with the intention of sharing it with the world, some is so reflective that it's reserved for individual contemplation.

    It was during a time of personal growth when composer Ann K. Gebuhr first penned Triptych for high voice and piano 30 years ago. As she began to explore different types of meditative practice, her aesthetic followed suit. The 9-minute work, written for beloved Rice University voice faculty member Jeanette Lombard and dedicated to Rochelle Manske, is sketched as a through-composed, three-part invocation with an Offertory, Meditation and Alleluia.

    Recently rearranged for four-part chorus, the new version of Tripych, in a way, signals Gebuhr's revelation of a pivotal spiritual journey that shaped her life. The Houston premiere of this setting has been entrusted to the singers of the Houston Cecilia Chamber Choir and artistic director Kevin Klotz as part of a concert titled "American Voices," slated for 7:30 p.m. Friday at Grace Presbyterian Church.

    "Many choral directors and colleagues, including Jeanette Lombard, had encouraged me to recompose the work," Gebuhr tells CultureMap. "It was time."

    Gebuhr describes Tripych as a representation of the meditative experience, of thoughts and feelings about thankfulness, of internal joy and inner peace.

    Divinely Inspired

    The tenor of Triptych is aligned with Gebuhr's interests as a music theorist and author. In 2012, she published Hildegard!, a book that delves into the remarkable life of 12th century visionary abbess-cum-composer Hildegard von Bingen. Gebuhr's Eight Contemplations On Texts By Hildegard, a collection of short solo flute pieces, responds to the nun's texts (listen to a clip here). Gebuhr's opera Bonhoeffer, premiered by the Houston Baptist University Opera in 2000, is based on the life of Lutheran pastor Dietrich Bonhoeffer, a pacifist who assisted in a failed conspiracy to assassinate Hitler.

    Gebuhr describes Tripych as a representation of the meditative experience, of thoughts and feelings about thankfulness, of internal joy and inner peace. In sharing the work with larger musical forces, it's her wish that more listeners savor the uplifting release and enlightened consciousness that she associates with meditation, just as it's expressed in the opening plea, "O Lord, Take and receive my liberty."

    "The piece mirrors the values imparted in me while growing up in a Lutheran household," she adds. "My family had a very strong commitment to help others, to do unto others what you would have them do to you. It's a prayer that encourages people to find their inner truth, their place in life."

    In addition to the prominent religious connotations — such as allusions to the Holy Trinity, modal musical language and sparse plainsong textures that she marks as "freely" and "non-metric" — a recurring six-note upward piano flourish that opens the work offers a curious allegory. Although this leitmotif is configured of mainly open intervals, which are typically found in monophonic sacred songs, the inclusion of one dissonant note is intriguing.

    "Our goal is to give a heartfelt performance that communicates the composer's voice."

    Such a note forges a tritone, the most unstable of intervals within the Western tonal system. Nicknamed diabolus in musica (the devil in music) since the 18th century, the sound, which today has lost some of its dramatic thrust, can be interpreted as the idea that personal growth never ends.

    "The music is very unique in that it blends old elements with new elements," Klotz explains. "It juxtaposes different extremes of composition — 20th century harmony and irregular meters with a chant-like quality to the melodic curve."

    Music From The Heart

    "American Voices" closes the Houston Cecilia Chamber Choir's 2013-14 season. Think of the program as a sampler of notable American choral music. Beginning with William Billings, considered by academics to be the first American choral composer, the playbill includes oeuvres by Randall Thompson, Moren Lauridsen, Eric Whitacre, Moses Hogan and Aaron Copland.

    When Klotz coaches the choir to perform works by deceased composers such as Bach and Mozart, his interpretation is informed by historical context. Where was Bach when he wrote this? What was going on in Mozart's life when he finished that? What renders the world premiere performance of Triptych unique, he says, is that he's able to dialogue with the creator about the essence of the composition.

    "It makes the concert that much more special," he explains. "It's a responsibility that we take with care. Our goal is to give a heartfelt performance that communicates the composer's voice."

    Sounds like the pressure is on.

    Houston Cecilia Chamber Choir artistic director Kevin Klotz.

    Kevin Klotz Houston Cecilia Chamber Choir
    Courtesy photo
    Houston Cecilia Chamber Choir artistic director Kevin Klotz.
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    Arts News

    Houston arts organization spins up a new record label for creative works

    Jef Rouner
    Jan 27, 2026 | 2:30 pm
    Two CD copies of Tyshawn Sorey's Monochromatic Light (Afterlife)
    Photo courtesy of DACAMERA Editions
    DACAMERA's unique musical contribution to Houston now comes in LP form.

    For more than three decades, Houston arts and music non-profit DaCamera has brought innovative and unique jazz and chamber music performances to the city. Now, they are launching their own record label called DaCamera Editions, starting with TyShawn Sorey's Monochromatic Light (Afterlife) releasing on January 30.

    Since 1987, DaCamera has been a nationally-celebrated curator, commissioner, and presenter of modern works that often fly under the mainstream radar. With the establishment of an in-house record label, the music they are known for becomes more widely available to audiences.

    "Following the thrilling experience of commissioning, performing, and recording Monochromatic Light (Afterlife), we saw an opportunity to launch our own label," DaCamera artistic director Sarah Rothenberg said in a statement. "DaCamera Editions will enable us to share our distinctive, curated mix of new music, classical repertoire, and jazz in a way that emphasizes connections to art, literature and the world in which we live, all under the DaCamera umbrella."

    Monochromatic Light (Afterlife) is the perfect album to herald a new Houston record label. The meditative piece was a joint commission from DaCamera and the Rothko Chapel to celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the renowned Houston landmark. Featuring soloists Davóne Tines (bass-baritone), Kim Kashkashian (viola), Sarah Rothenberg (piano/celesta), Steven Schick (percussion), and the Houston Chamber Choir, the 75-minute work was a critical hit when it premiered in 2022. It built on a previous work, Morton Feldman's Rothko Chapel, which debuted at the site in 1972. Sorey composed a bass-baritone part for Tines and expanded the keyboard role by adding piano. As part of the performance, Tines sings lines from the spiritual "I Feel Like a Motherless Child."

    Both The New York Times and The New Yorker named the premiere of Monochromatic Light (Afterlife) as a top 10 classical performance of 2022. It was also a Finalist for the 2023 Pulitzer Prize in Music.

    The album will be released on both CD and digital formats. Pre-orders are available at DaCameraEditions.com.

    Future planned releases include Rothenberg's In Darkness and Light (May 2026), a piano album inspired by the anxiety of COVID and featuring Vijay Iyer’s eloquent personal memorial "For My Father;" and Tyshawn Sorey’s solo piano work For Julius Eastman, a tribute to the minimalist composer and activist whose work has undergone a 21st Century renaissance since his death in relative obscurity in 1990.

    "DaCamera Editions will enable us to share our distinctive, curated mix of new music, classical repertoire, and jazz in a way that emphasizes connections to art, literature and the world in which we live,” Rothenberg said.

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