Church Offers Unique Multi-Sensory Worship Service on Sunday Evenings – Parkland Talk


Scape Service at St. Mary Magdalene and St. Martin Episcopal Church

By Agrippina Fadel 

A multi-sensory worship service at St. Mary Magdalene and St. Martin Episcopal Church in Coral Springs invites people into a unique spiritual experience – an exploration into the landscape of the soul through ancient prayers, live music, projected images, and a walking meditation in the candlelight. 

The service is called SCAPE and is offered on Sundays night at 7 p.m.  

SCAPE is a collaboration between the church and Mishkhah, a retreat and worship experience created by Kate Eaton. Founded to reveal the mystery of Christ by stirring the senses and opening the heart,” Mishkhah creates multi-sensory services that integrate music, images, textures, light and movement, and prayer across the US and abroad.

Since founding Mishkhah in 2010, Eaton has partnered with churches, conventions, conferences, and seminaries to share her experience in creating worship environments. 

Eaton said Father Lee Davis, Rector at St. Mary Magdalene and St. Martin Episcopal Church, invited her to partner with them to create SCAPE as an offering to the community for people seeking places of beauty, peace, and transformation. 

SCAPE fosters worship and prayer environments that enable us to fall into the embrace of our Creator. New rhythms in our breathing open us to ancient truths. We sense the possibility of healing and move out into the world again, restored and hopeful,” she explained. 

Eaton added that Mishkhah’s mission is to reveal the mystery of Christ through the arts, music, movement, and interaction.

She said that with the first night of Advent this past Sunday, the congregation starts the four-week season before Christmas, marked by waiting, pondering, and allowing the Christ child to form in Mary’s womb.

“It is a time for all to consider what they are waiting for in life. When God speaks, sometimes it’s hard for us to listen because of all the push-pull we experience in our everyday lives,” she said, adding that the service changes to honor the occasion.

The church is bathed in candlelight and live music that crosses centuries and continents, weaving instruments from all over the world into the unfolding of the prayers,” said Eaton, adding that residents are welcome to attend the worship service, regardless of affiliation. 

All are invited to explore the landscape of their souls every week through a walking meditation where stations around the church are created with questions, found objects, and icons where people can stop, ponder and pray,” she said. 

A recent visitor of the service, Katelyn, said that while it had been many years since she stepped inside a church, which can often be intimidating, her experience with SCAPE was quite the opposite.

I felt incredibly welcomed, and the atmosphere created invites your spirit to open and connect with God with such ease. The ambient candlelight, ancient sounds, and experiential stations touched all senses and united the mind, body, and spirit. It was almost as though I stepped into another space and time and felt true peace,” she added.

The Episcopal Church of St. Mary Magdalene and St. Martin is a member of the Episcopal Diocese of Southeast Florida and a descendant of the Church of England and the Scottish Episcopal Church.

St. Mary Magdalene and St. Martin Episcopal Church is located at 1400 Riverside Drive in Coral Springs. 

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Author Profile

Agrippina Fadel
Agrippina Fadel grew up in Siberia and received her master’s in journalism from Tyumen State University. Agrippina is also a writer and editor at Draftsy.net. She has been a US resident for over ten years and speaks English and Russian.

Coffee, Tea, and Chocolate | CRB



There’s no question that at this time of year our tea pots and coffee machines are doing extra duty. And the warm drink jokes are flying, too. Listeners send me the funniest ones, often about the need for coffee: “First I do the coffee, then I do the things,” and “The ‘ea’ in tea is silent,” were just two of the most recent.

But love of the warm cups isn’t something new. At the same time that coffee drinking was becoming widespread, 16th century clergymen were petitioning to have “this devil’s brew” banned. It wasn’t until Pope Clement VIII drank some, liked it and gave his blessing, that people felt free to drink without recrimination.

In the late 17th century, coffee houses started springing up all over Europe. What was it about this amazing drink that energized one into being more productive, even more creative? Composers not only loved their brews, they also saw coffee houses as places to perform music and coffee as a worthy music subject.

Georg Philipp Telemann jumped on the idea of coffee house concerts, in which you would bring new music to a place where people were already gathering. In 1701 he founded a music society, the Collegium Musicum, made up of university students who performed in one of Leipzig’s coffee houses. He later took that same idea with him to Frankfurt for performances in a private club where people drank coffee and smoked.

Telemann’s good friend, Johann Sebastian Bach, loved his coffee, too. What’s not known is whether or not he was already a coffee drinker when he took over Telemann’s Leipzig concerts at Gottfried Zimmermann’s coffeehouse. What is known is that some prominent Europeans of the day believed that coffee drinking could lead to an addiction that would result in poor morals for women, and possible impotence for men. It’s possible that the “evils” of coffee addiction were the underlying theme that drove Bach’s comic piece, Schweigt stille, plaudert nicht (“Be still, stop chattering”). In what has come to be known as his “Coffee Cantata,” a father tries to ban the drink to stop his daughter’s addiction.

Liesgen, the daughter, sings, “Coffee, I have to have coffee, and if someone wants to pamper me, ah, then bring coffee as a gift.” Later she claims that, without coffee, she will “turn into a shriveled-up roast goat.”

Her father goes so far as to say he’ll prevent her from marrying if she cannot stop drinking the brown brew. Liesgen says she‘ll tell potential suitors they must allow her to drink coffee if they are to marry. All ends well with her father writing into her marriage contract that she must be guaranteed three cups of coffee a day.

Here’s Ton Koopman and the Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra and guest soloists with the piece.

How much did Bach love his coffee? It is said that he could drink up to 30 cups a day!

Mozart also loved his coffee. In a 1791 letter to his wife, he wrote, “Right after you left I played two games of billiards … then I sold my nag for 14 ducats; then I had Joseph summon Primus and bring me black coffee, with which I smoked a wonderful pipe of tobacco; then I orchestrated almost all of Stadler’s rondo.” The description of working under a combination of caffeine and nicotine could easily have been written by someone today!

No surprise, then, that his characters mention coffee (and hot chocolate, which was also appreciated for its caffeine effect), in at least two of his operas. In Don Giovanni the protagonist calls to the servants to bring a drink which will make his intended conquest loosen up: “Ehi! caffè!” The character Leporello adds “Cioccolata!” To which the peasant Masetto answers “Ah, Zerlina, giudizio,” or “Ah, Zerlina, be careful!”

In Act 1, Scene 1, of the opera Così fan tutte, the old philosopher Don Alfonso is sitting in a coffee house, debating with other patrons about human nature, especially women’s nature. In the next scene Despina, the housemaid, is whipping hot chocolate for her mistresses, the sisters Dorabella and Fiordiligi. Here’s Teresa Stratas singing the role of the maid.

O dearest ladies,
You have the substance,
And I only the smell!
Damnit, I’m going to try it.
[She tastes it]
Delicious!
[She wipes her mouth]
Someone’s coming!
Goodness, it’s my ladies!

Although Mozart’s works often mention wine, it is pretty telling about the growing popularity of coffee and hot chocolate that they, too, are featured drinks.

Beethoven was also a coffee lover. One of the first things he did when he arrived in Vienna was to invite his teacher, Haydn, for a coffee. Later, he had instructions written for his housekeeper that he would start each day with a cup made from exactly 60 coffee beans.

The French writer Honoré de Balzac quoted the Italian opera composer Gioacchino Rossini as saying that the effects of what we’d call a “caffeine rush” today would wear down with time. “Coffee is a matter of fifteen or twenty days: luckily, the time to make an opera.”

If Beethoven was particular about his perfect cup, and Rossini was worried about a caffeine “plateau,” Glenn Gould had them beat on quantity. The celebrated Canadian pianist described himself in a 1979 TV documentary as regularly drinking “gallons of coffee.”

Two other composers known to frequent coffeehouses were Frédéric Chopin, and Heitor Villa-Lobos. Chopin began visiting cafés in Warsaw when he was a teenager so he could discuss Poland’s cultural life with other coffee drinkers. Villa-Lobos made quite a name for himself in Paris coffeehouses. The Brazilian composer held court and wove stories about exploring the Amazon jungle and confronting cannibals. People were enthralled by his tales, which turned out to be just that…made-up stories. But in the meantime, they got him local recognition.

The German composer Engelbert Humperdinck turned to the exotic with his 1898 Moorish Rhapsody. The three movements describe scenes Europeans could only imagine, including the bustling second movement’s “Night in a Moorish Coffee-House.” The Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra is conducted by Martin Fischer-Dieskau.

Not as much has been written about another caffeinated drink, tea, but there are a couple of pieces in the classical genre.

In 1924 the song “Tea for Two” was included in the Broadway musical No, No, Nanette. It was an instant hit for composer Vincent Youmans and lyricist Irving Caesar. A few years later, the Russian conductor Nikolai Malko bet composer Dmitri Shostakovich he couldn’t orchestrate a song after having heard a recording just once, and to do it in an hour. Malko chose “Tea for Two,” which Shostakovich re-named “Tahiti Trot.”

Shostakovich not only won the bet, he did the orchestration in about 45 minutes!

In 2002 composer Tan Dun composed an opera entitled Tea: A Mirror of Soul. Briefly, a prince-turned-monk teaches lessons about life through performing tea rituals. Here’s a little bit to give you “a taste.” Tan Dun conducts this performance in Suntory Hall, Tokyo

One of the poignant moments in this full-of-symbolism opera happens at the end, as one character dies and must drink the “tea of emptiness.”

Coffee, tea, and chocolate all appear in a holiday favorite. Tchaikovsky’s ballet, The Nutcracker, brings the lead characters, the Nutcracker Prince and the young girl, Clara, to the Palace of Sweets where Mother Ginger, Peppermint Sticks, and other delights dance before their honored guests.

Coffee is also known as the Arabian Dance. This is the scene from a Boston Ballet production:

Tea is known as the Chinese Dance. This video is from the Mariinsky Ballet.

And finally, Chocolate, the Spanish dance, is danced by New York City Ballet dancers dressed in chocolate-colored costumes.

What’s true is that whether you prefer your coffee, tea, and hot chocolate smooth, sweet, or robust…you’re sure to find something for everyone in smooth, sweet, or robust classical music.

CODA: Here’s a perfect song to wrap up how so many feel about their cups of warmth: Java Jive is often called “I love coffee, I love tea!” The King Sisters made it a huge hit in 1940.



‘George & Tammy,’ Holiday TV Deluge, College Football, ‘SNL’ Returns


Dana Hawley/Showtime

George & Tammy

SUNDAY: They lived their lives and conducted their torrid, tormented relationship as if reenacting the country-music lyrics that made them famous. Michael Shannon and Oscar winner Jessica Chastain star, and provide their own vocals, as country legends George Jones and Tammy Wynette in a six-part limited series that often plays like a real-life version of A Star Is Born. (See the full review.)

Michael Courtney/CBS

Fit for Christmas

SUNDAY: Network TV movies are almost as rare as a white Christmas in Miami, but CBS gets back in the game with a holiday film starring and executive produced by The Talk’s Amanda Kloots, who also co-wrote the film’s story. She plays Audrey, a Christmas-phile fitness instructor who gets cozy with a businessman (Paul Greene) who’s planning to turn the community center where she works into a lucrative resort.

Getty

World Cup

SATURDAY & SUNDAY: It’s make-or-break time for team USA as the knockout round of 16 begins with U.S. facing the Netherlands (Saturday, 10 am/ET, Fox), followed by the ArgentinaAustralia match (2 pm/ET, Fox). Sunday’s matches pit France against Poland (10 am/ET, FS1) and Senegal against England (2 pm/ET, FS1).

Jordin Althaus/NBC

Saturday Night Live

SATURDAY: The irrepressible Keke Palmer (Nope, Password) makes her debut as guest host in the first of three new episodes in December. (The Only Murders in the Building duo of Steve Martin and Martin Short, both with long SNL histories, are next week’s hosts, and Elvis star Austin Butler is the first-time host Dec. 17.) SZA returns as musical guest for her second time.

College Football Conference Championships:

  • Marking the end of the college football season, teams battle it out for their conference titles through the day on Saturday. Undefeated TCU faces Kansas State in the Big 12 Championship (noon/ET, ABC), Toledo takes on Ohio in the MAC Championship (noon/ET, ESPN), Coastal Carolina goes to war with Troy in the Sun Belt Championship (3:30 pm/ET, ESPN), undefeated Georgia looks to whomp LSU in the SEC Championship (4 pm/ET, CBS), Fresno State faces Boise State in the Mountain West Championship (4 pm/ET, Fox), and in prime time, the Big Ten Championship (8 pm/ET, Fox) pits undefeated Michigan against Purdue, and Clemson takes on North Carolina in the ACC Championship (8 pm/ET, ABC).

TV Yule Log:

  • The Great Holiday Bake War (Saturday, 9/8c, OWN): A fictional baking competition is the background for a holiday romance involving pastry school rivals Julian (Finesse Mitchell) and Brianna (LeToya Luckett).
  • Homes for the Holidays (Saturday, 7/6c, AXS TV): Ashley McBryde hosts an event benefiting families of fallen first responders and Gold Star heroes. Making appearances and/or performances: Travis Tritt, Yellowstone’s Cole Hauser, Robert Randolph & the Family Band and country trio Runaway June.
  • Reno 911! It’s a Wonderful Heist (Saturday, 8/7c): The wacky Nevada cops are back with a twist on It’s a Wonderful Life, as a dejected Lt. Dangle (Thomas Lennon) learns from a roller-skating angel how the other deputies would have fared—better, it turns out—if he’d never been born.
  • On UpTV: Christmas on the Slopes (Saturday, 7/6c) stars Soma Chayya as a down-on-her-luck celebrity chef posing as a sous chef in a luxury resort, where she falls for the curmudgeonly head chef (Oliver Renaud). Christmas on the Rocks (Sunday, 7/6c) takes place during a snowstorm that disrupts a corporate Christmas party at a ski resort where the manager (Lyla Porter-Follows) soon realizes the CEO (Jon McLaren) is an old beau.
  • On Lifetime: R&B legend Patti LaBelle appears in A New Orleans Noel (Saturday, 8/7c) as a New Orleans praline mogul who hires rival architects (Keshia Knight Pulliam and Brad James) to renovate her home. In Merry Textmas (Sunday, 8/7c), app developer Gaby (Ariana Ron Pedrique) heads home to Mexico, unaware her matchmaking family has also invited graphic designer Alex (Rodrigo Massa).
  • On Hallmark: A Fabled Holiday (Saturday, 8/7c) brings disillusioned childhood pals (Brooke D’Orsay and Ryan Paevey) back together in a magical town. In Undercover Holiday (Sunday, 8/7c), pop star Jaylen Rodriguez (Noemi Gonzalez) heads home, letting her family think her bodyguard (Stephen Huszar) is her boyfriend. On Hallmark Movies & Mysteries, the Mahogany presentation The Holiday Stocking (Saturday, 10/9c) is touched by an angel, when RJ (B.J. Britt) returns to earth to help his estranged sisters (Nadine Ellis and Tamala Jones) reconcile.
  • On Great American Family: Christmas on Candy Cane Lane (Saturday, 8/7c) stars Andrea Barber as Ivy, who hopes to live up to the legacy of her late mother, the “Christmas Maven” of Icicle Falls. B&B Merry (Sunday, 8/7c) is the story of a travel blogger (Jen Lilley) checking out a small town’s B&B, whose owner’s son (Jesse Hutch) is worth a rave review.
  • The Search for Secret Santa (Sunday, 8/7c, ION): Skye Coyne is a young reporter tracking down the Secret Santas connected to a gift that was never delivered—a priceless nutcracker that turns out to have been stolen.
  • HouseBroken (Sunday, 8:30/7:30c and 9/8c, Fox): The animated comedy teeming with anthropomorphic house pets returns with back-to-back holiday episodes. In the first, poodle Honey (Lisa Kudrow) gets sent to a dream home after a vet’s mix-up. In the second, Honey and her dopey St. Bernard housemate Chief (Nat Faxon) are home alone when they protect the family home from an intruder.
  • America’s Funniest Home Videos (Sunday, 7/6c, ABC): No holiday season is complete without a new compilation of Christmas-themed videos, including a runaway inflatable Santa and a mom who surprises her son by jumping out of a giant gift box

Inside Weekend TV:

  • 2022 NASCAR Awards (Saturday, 8 pm/ET, streaming on Peacock): Country star Erin Kinsey sings her hit “Just Drive” at the Nashville ceremony honoring the 2022 Series champs Joey Logano (Cup Series), Ty Gibbs (Xfinity Series) and Zane Smith (Truck Series).
  • 60 Minutes (Sunday, 7:30/6:30c, 7 pm/PT, CBS): Bill Whitaker interviews French President Emmanuel Macron in Paris, of the eve of his trip to Washington, D.C. for a state visit and White House dinner.
  • Yellowstone (Sunday, 8/7c, Paramount Network): John Dutton (Kevin Costner) would rather brand cattle on the ranch than attend to state business. He may need to wrangle daughter Beth (Kelly Reilly) as well, who’s none too happy that her dad has brought environmentalist Summer (Piper Perabo) back home.
  • Let the Right One In (Sunday, 10/9c, Showtime): Things are dicey for Mark (Demián Bichir) in the supernatural drama’s penultimate episode. He’s now a prisoner after being caught snooping around the Logan estate and Claire’s (Grace Gummer) experiments in finding a cure for vampirism. When his vampire daughter Eleanor (Madison Taylor Baez) learns her dad is in danger, watch out.

Kantara’s popular song ‘Varaha Roopam’ is FINALLY back to your playlist!







© Provided by Zee News


New Delhi: Kantara’s most popular and loved song, ‘Varaha Roopam’ is now officially back in the film. Amidst the dispute, now the song is available for listeners to enjoy. The song Varaha Roopam has been a fan favorite since the time it was released and every single one of them has thoroughly enjoyed the music of the song. 

Today, Kantara is bigger than ever. Everything about the film has been widely appreciated by the audience. Kantara’s storyline has been spreading like a wildfire and the audience around all quarters are relishing it. The movie has completed 50 days and is still running in 1000+ screens globally. The film has completed 50 days in Australia, the UK, Canada, UAE, and the USA as well. In India, the movie is still being played across 900+ screens.

Kantara is a sumptuous meal that one should not miss. It is a perfect culmination of craft, culture and technical brilliance at display. It is that rare piece of Southern India that you would have barely witnessed or heard about. And is worthy of every piece of accolade and appreciation, it is received from everywhere.

Ayushmann Khurrana says Jehda Nasha remake ‘will reach the masses’: ‘My watchman had not heard the song before’


Ayushmann Khurrana’s An Action Hero released in theatres on Friday and has largely received positive reviews. However, the makers of the film have received flack for remaking the two songs – Jehda Nasha and Aap Jaisa Koi – in the film.

Amid backlash for Jehda Nasha, Ayushmann has said that he is happy that the original creators of the song, Faridkot, has collaborated with An Action Hero and said that “now this song will reach the masses”.

Ayushmann told Mashable India in an interview, “I was listening to this song on loop during the pandemic. Independent music rose during the pandemic, the pandemic gave independent music such a push. Because you could be home, compose music and put it out there, everyone was home and a lot of us were listening to a lot of music and consuming it. All the big stars of independent music today owe it to the pandemic.”

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Adding that Faridkot got mainstream success because of his film, Ayushmann said, “Talking about Faridkot band, it is a good thing that they’re the collaborators and this song is onboard for An Action Hero. Now this song will reach the masses. It already did and I know it because the watchman of my building was watching the video of the song, and he told me how good it is. When I asked him if he had heard it before, he said no. I am glad the song has reached an audience where it hadn’t reached before.”

Earlier, the film’s music composer Tanishk Bagchi had said that recreations help “original singers in getting noticed”. In a chat with Hindustan Times, the composer said that the audience does not “even know the name of Jehda Nasha’s original singers (Amar Jalal and IP Singh). You only know my name because I have recreated it. Log jaante hi nahi ki kisne gaaya hai wo gaana (People don’t know the names of the original singers).” He added, “This step of recreating the song and picturising it on Ayushmann Khurrana and Nora Fatehi will help the original singers in getting noticed. We are just becoming a window for these people to come out in the mainstream.”



veggi releases new EP called PRODUCE – Aipate


Californian producer veggi is celebrating his eclectic new sound on a new EP named PRODUCE.

The 5-song project arrived with the aptly titled focus-track, “GROOVE”. This funky, groove-laden disco/pop tune features vocals of KALLITECHNIS (who also performs on “Bliss” alongside Pell) and Bipolar Sunshine.

Other songs are “TASTE”, “LOVE” and “THRU THE MOTIONS”.

Commenting about this release, veggi says, “The name of my project ‘PRODUCE’ serves as a double entendre. One interpretation could be in relation to the agricultural products that are associated with my artist name veggi. The other interpretation is that this project is a culmination of my current sound as a music PRODUCER.”

Stream the whole EP on Spotify below and follow veggi on Instagram.



Study Sessions: Top 10 ambient and atmospheric songs to listen to while studying | Entertainment


As finals are quickly approaching, it can be difficult to sit down and force yourself to study. Sometimes what you need is a good song to block out the world and help you focus.

This is no easy task because what works for one person may distract another, but overall, the recurring factors that make a good study song are songs that are ambient and/or atmospheric. This means the best study songs are usually ones that don’t focus on vocals and are more instrumental in production.

In an attempt to make this more interesting, I tried to pick some songs you may not normally think about when considering studying, with selections from electronic dance music to atmospheric black metal to classical ballet songs. 

10. “Dreams Blacker Than Death” by Xasthur 

Xasthur is a dark ambient, atmospheric black metal solo project, which may immediately turn some people away. Stylistically, by focusing on the ambient noises of the wailing vocals and distorted guitars, Xasthur creates a wall of noise that is shockingly good to study to, especially if you want something heavier and louder than other types of music. This entry definitely has a little personal bias because I love to study to a good Xasthur album. 

9. “Nightmare” by Polyphia

Despite the name, this song is actually very pleasant. Polyphia is a progressive technical, instrumental rock group and all the players are virtuosos at their instruments. Polyphia borrows from many genres to create a beautiful enveloping sound that fully incorporates the capabilities of the guitars and bass.

8. “Tamarack’s Gold Returns” by Panopticon

Panopticon is probably the most fascinating and weirdest band on this list. The creator of this one-man project attempts to combine the Appalachian folk music of his home state of Kentucky with abrasive and loud black metal. “Tamarack’s Gold Returns” fully leans into Panopticon’s folk sensibilities with banjo, fiddle and acoustic guitar melodies molding together to create an instrumental piece that fills one with calmness and tranquility.

7. “Danse Macabre” by The Oh Hellos

The Oh Hellos combine indie music and folk music to create a beautiful, softer sound. This song is an instrumental off the album “Dear Wormwood” that features more of an upbeat feel to study to. It is a cover of the tone poem for orchestra by Saint-Saëns, a French romantic composer. The Oh Hellos version provides a unique folk interpretation of the piece. This one is definitely a great study song for any fans of indie music.  

6. “Midnight in a Perfect World” by DJ Shadow

DJ Shadow is known for his unique style that fuses electronic music, ambient music and hip hop. This song in particular is an ambient hip hop piece with a pulsing electronic backing. It’s great to play in your earbuds to block out the surrounding world and focus on studying. 

5. “Da Funk” by Daft Punk 

Daft Punk, a French duo, became famous for its perfect combination of house music, electronic music and dance music. The duo blended all the genres into its own new brand of music. A lot of Daft Punk’s works, especially the older albums, are instrumental and have no vocals. “Da Funk,” off Daft Punk’s debut album, is my personal favorite due to its beat and the great synthesizer action.   

4. “Master of None” by Beach House

Beach House is an indie dream pop duo that is known for chill and laid-back songs. While “Master of None” does have vocals, the lyrics are delivered so softly over such a dreamy backing that it is very easy to sit down and study while listening to this tranquil song.

3. “Duel of the Fates” composed and conducted by John Williams

This song has insane levels of nostalgia for me, and likely many “Star Wars” fans. It is an awe-inspiring piece that is composed perfectly by John Williams. The song features a beautiful choir, strings section and explosive brass instruments that all combine to make an amazingly fast-paced instrumental theme. 

2. “Serenade” by Franz Schubert

Franz Schubert was a late classical and early Romantic period composer that helped bridge the two eras with his unique style. “Serenade” is a personal favorite composition from Schubert because of its beautiful and distinct melodies that stimulate the mind while studying.

1. “Swan Lake, Op. 20, Act II: No. 10, Scene. Moderato” by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky 

Tchaikovsky was a famous Russian Romantic composer who composed the ballet “Swan Lake” from 1875-1876. This piece from the ballet is a breathtaking composition that has so many magnificent melodies. It is a perfect example of instrumental music to enjoy while studying for finals. 

Elaine Agnew – Hold (World Première)


Today’s Advent Calendar piece is an example of what may well prove to be a substantial body of work that we might call ‘Covid music’, composed during the pandemic. Hold, by Northern Irish composer Elaine Agnew, is a short work for string orchestra responding to the experience of lockdown in December 2020, when Agnew was “mindful of the word ‘hold’, and all that it suggests. That need of wanting to support each other, to hold and to keep ourselves and our families secure and safe, was foremost in our minds. We globally needed to hold each other and to hold ourselves up.”

That sentiment, though positive, is nonetheless driven by necessity in what were difficult, trying and upsetting circumstances. As such, Hold primarily exhibits a great deal of tension and discomfort. Throughout the opening minute, while a couple of soft, harmonically ambiguous chords move below, the violins sustain a high note overhead, something of an unsettling presence. That note is subsequently extended into a slow-moving line during what follows, a cautious, tight kind of lyricism, as if all the strings were moving in a confined space. The resultant, slightly gnarly, harmonies have a whiff of Berg to them, lending the music a conflicted blend of warmth and anxiety.

That ominous high violin line finally slides downward, leading to a brisk sequence filled with rhythmic pizzicati, a burst of movement that turns out to be short-lived: the high violin note returns, triggering a repeat of the work’s opening chords, a lyrical moment followed by another brief stab at energy. The aftermath of this is a beautiful though even more constricted upper string sequence that suddenly finds itself at a rich D major tried. The opening chords return, and the piece enters its most oblique episode, not merely slow and cautious but rather lost and forlorn. The D major triad and the opening chords return again but, as they repeat, their blurred major / minor tonality brings Hold to a close as a soft, poignant triadic mess.

The world première of Hold was performed by the Ulster Orchestra conducted by Jac van Steen.


Georgia Country Music Hall of Fame inducts Class of 2022


Dec. 2—MOULTRIE, Ga. — Fifty-two individuals and groups were honored at the fourth annual induction ceremony for the Georgia Country Music Hall of Fame.

The ceremony recognized individuals in the Hall of Fame, Hall of Honor, Rising Country Music Star, Dedication and Band of Angels categories, while organizations had a separate category.

The event was held Oct. 29 at Maxine Daughtry’s The Barn, located near Meigs.

“A packed house for our HOF celebration was again great to see,” organizer Shirley Maule said in an email to The Observer. “A catered meal with some good ol’ Southern BBQ was served at noon as the event started. Music is played and sung between each five or six inductions and a photographer was hired to capture the honors happening this day.”

Organizations that were recognized included the Blue Holler Bluegrass Band, the Caliber Band, the Copperhead Express, Danny and The Jets, and Vine Ripe Music Publishing. Some band members had been honored individually in the past or separately in the individual categories during the same ceremony.

Individuals inducted into the Hall of Fame included Alan Jackson, Allan Day, Allen L. McCormick Jr., Bill Kennedy, Billy Wilson, Brandon Gandy, Brandon Taylor, Brenda Lasseter McCormick, Carol L. Nelms and Curtis Thornton.

Also, David. R Gibson, Dewey Howell, Donny Smith, Doug Roland, Eric Herndon, Gary DiBenedetto, Gary Page, Glenn Humphries, Jamie Hunter, Jay Roach, Jay T. Farlow, Joan Cox, Johnny Wade Ball and Joy Brinson.

Also, Les Lonsdale, Lewis Willey Farlow, Marshall Roberts, Michael Billingsley, Mike Groh, Paul Simpson, Rendi Jones, Rodney Brinson Sr., Rob Ferrell, Skylar Russell Gandy, Steve Cason, Steve Small, Tim Maxwell, Tommy Gordon Ladshaw, Trampus McCoy and Wayne Watson.

David Ray was named to the Hall of Honor.

Some of the Hall of Fame honorees were promoted from the Hall of Honor, where they had been recognized in previous years.

Jordan Poole, an Elvis impersonator, was inducted into the Hall of Fame in the Rising Country Music Star category.

Bernice Davis and Christine Reynolds were inducted in the Dedication category for their work in the Staggerwing and Pelham jamborees.

The Band of Angels category recognized musicians who’ve passed away. This year’s honorees were Gary Dean Maule, a vocalist and founder of the Quest, a seven-member band that included three Hall of Fame inductees; Jimmy Davis, bandleader of the Country Rockers that performed at the Staggerwing and Pelham jamborees for years; and Vicki Lynn Corbitt Hardeman, who performed with her sister in the Vicki Lee Band.

The Seaplane Opry House in Moultrie is the home of the Georgia Country Music Hall of Fame, Inc. Formerly the Staggerwing Jamboree, it’s open every Friday night with gospel music 6-7 p.m., open mic karaoke from 7 to 7:30 and live music 7:30 to 10 p.m. with Steve Cason’s Holy Smoke Band. Guest musicians sometimes attend.

For information about upcoming shows, search for “Seaplane Opry House — A great new beginning” on Facebook.

To nominate someone for the Georgia Country Music Hall of Fame’s Class of 2023, email a copy of the person’s musical or work history (typed in the Word format) to Maule at shirleymaule@aol.com. A typed page for each nominee with their photo is required for the HOF judge’s voting catalog and another typed copy is the nominee’s presentation page for Wes James to read during the induction event.

Cellist and composer Clancy Newman beautifully plays 20th and 21st century American music


You don’t see many concert cellists who also write music. If those talents are combined, they are usually in someone who is a composer first and a cellist second.

Luigi Boccherini, Heitor Villa-Lobos, Victor Herbert and David Baker were all good enough cellists to play professionally.

Then there are cellists who focus their compositions on their own instrument, such as Pablo Casals and David Popper. Clancy Newman, who tours as an orchestral soloist and recitalist, seems to have found success in this niche.

Newman played several of his works and arrangements Thursday at Cuyamaca College as part of the Echo Chamber Music Series, along with compositions by Samuel Barber, Lukas Foss and Kenji Bunch. He was sharply accompanied by Natalie Zhu on piano.

Newman’s 2008 opus, “From Method to Madness,” certainly begins methodically. A repeated pitch is plucked out first by the cello, then sounded by the piano. A second pitch is brought in, then a third, as the rhythms and the tempos increase in a somewhat mechanical manner. As this section reaches a climax of volume and texture, it suddenly switches into a frenetic pattern of 2 + 2 phrasing, with a blues-like tune ground out by the cello — presumably the “madness” section.

It plays out rather simply but effectively, although the only thing tying the two sections together is the underlying tonality.

Newman’s solo cello arrangements of Billboard-charting hits seem more likely to appeal to other cellists. In his “Pop-Unpopped” series, he stretched his techniques to better simulate melody and accompaniment.

His version of Ed Sheeran’s “Thinking Out Loud” calls for left hand pizzicatos and fingerboard hammer-ons in contrast to the more typical right hand plucking. His arrangement of “Uptown Funk” employs percussive effects on the cello body and glissandos simulating Bruno Mars’ cat calls.

The cleverness of the arrangements and Newman’s effortless mastery of these unusual techniques made “Pop-Unpopped” winning works.

The concert opened with Barber’s 1932 Sonata for Cello and Piano in C Minor, Op. 6. Composed while Barber was still a student at Curtis, it doesn’t quite have the hallmarks of his mature style. Yet its hyper-Romantic gestures and some nontraditional harmonic progressions hint at things to come.

Over a decade later, Foss — a recent Curtis alumnus in his early 20s — wrote his Capriccio for Cello and Piano, a sassy romp that hints at Hindemith and Copland (especially “Billy the Kid” and “Rodeo”).

Bunch, an American violist, is a successful composer of unabashedly tonal works. His “Broken Voice” for cello and piano was premiered by Newman in 2003. Bunch lives in Portland, Ore., yet somehow “Broken Voice” took 19 years to make it to the West Coast.

You’d think that more contemporary tonal composers would be able to write a good tune as Bunch can, but only a few of his peers possess that skill. Bunch’s compositions get the job done, but they are prone to long stretches of static harmony. One wishes there was more liveliness and inevitability in moving from one chord to the next.

The four movements of “Broken Voice” are exceedingly well scored for the cello, with equally fluent textures in the piano. Newman and Zhu performed it — as they did all evening — with assured technique and winning showmanship.

For any audience members who needed something more traditional and European, an encore of the slow movement from Chopin’s Sonata for Cello and Piano was beautifully played.

Hertzog is a freelance writer.

This story originally appeared in San Diego Union-Tribune.