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UMS Choral Union Ann Arbor Symphony Orchestra Scott
Hanoian, conductor Yulia Van Doren, soprano John Holiday, countertenor Miles Mykkanen, tenor Alex Rosen, bass Joseph Gascho, harpsichord Scott VanOrnum,
organ
Saturday, December 1 // 8 pm Sunday, December 2 // 2 pm Hill Auditorium
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The UMS Choral Union was formed in 1879 by a group of local university and townspeople who gathered together for the study of Handel’s Messiah. The group continues to perform the oratorio annually and these performances have since become an eagerly anticipated holiday season tradition. In a true community tradition, the UMS Choral Union is joined by the Ann Arbor Symphony Orchestra and performs under the direction of Choral Union music director Scott Hanoian.
The 175-voice UMS Choral Union is known for its definitive performances of large-scale works for chorus and orchestra. The ensemble has performed with many of the world’s distinguished orchestras and conductors in its 138-year history, including the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony, Budapest Festival Orchestra, and the Mariinsky Orchestra. Notably, in 2006, the UMS Choral Union won Grammy Awards for "Best Choral Performance" and "Best Classical Album" for their Naxos recording of William Bolcom’s Songs of Innocence and of Experience.
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RELATED EVENTS
Pre-Performance Talk: Meet the Conductor Sat, Dec 1 // 6 pm // Hill Auditorium Mezzanine Lobby Scott Hanoian, music director of the UMS Choral Union, gives an insider’s look at conducting Handel’s Messiah before the Saturday evening performance. Presented by the Michigan Center for Early Christian Studies.
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Supporting Sponsor: Carl and Isabelle Brauer Endowment Fund Media Partners: WRCJ 90.9 FM and Ann Arbor's 107one
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Charles Lloyd & The Marvels with special guest Lucinda Williams
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Charles Lloyd, tenor saxophone and flute Lucinda
Williams, vocals Bill Frisell, guitars Greg Leisz, pedal steel guitar Reuben Rogers, bass Eric Harland, drums
Saturday, December 8 // 8 pm Michigan Theater
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Charles Lloyd returns to UMS for the first time since 2012 with his new band, The Marvels. The ensemble features Bill Frisell on guitar and pedal steel guitar master Greg Leisz alongside his longtime collaborators Eric Harland (drums) and Reuben Rogers (bass). Modern folk icon Lucinda Williams will front the band for portions of the program with selections from their new Blue Note release, Vanished Gardens. The album is a collection of songs that range from traditional hymns and anti-war folk protests to re-envisioned originals that appeared on Lloyd’s earlier recordings.
First elected "Jazz Artist of the Year" by Downbeat over 50 years ago and named an NEA Jazz Master in 2015, Lloyd is admired for concerts and recordings of pristine beauty and elegance, full of intensely felt emotion and passion that touch deep inside the heart. Charles Lloyd was recognized with multiple wins in the 2017 Annual Downbeat Critics' Poll, including "Tenor Saxophonist of the Year" and "Jazz Group of
the Year" (for Charles Lloyd & The Marvels).
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Presenting Sponsor: Doris and Herbert E. Sloan Endowment Fund Supporting Sponsor: Ellie Serras Funded in part by: JazzNet Endowment Fund Media Partners: WEMU 89.1 FM, WDET 101.9 FM, Ann Arbor's 107one, and Metro Times
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National Theatre, London Live in HD The Madness of George III
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By Alan Bennett
Sunday, December 9 // 7
pm Michigan Theater
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Written by Alan Bennett, one of Britain’s best-loved playwrights (The History Boys, The Lady in the Van), this epic play was also adapted into an Award-winning film (British Academy of Film and Television Arts/BAFTA) following its stage premiere in 1991.
Set in 1786, the play follows King George III as he he succumbs to fits of lunacy with increasingly erratic behavior. With the King’s mind unraveling at a dramatic pace, ambitious politicians and the scheming Prince of Wales threaten to undermine the power of the Crown, and expose the fine line between a King and a man.
The cast of this new production includes Olivier Award-winners Mark Gatiss (Sherlock, Wolf Hall) in the title role, and Adrian Scarborough (Upstairs Downstairs).
Presented in partnership with the Michigan Theater.
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Joyce DiDonato, mezzo-soprano Yannick Nézet-Séguin, piano
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Sunday, December 16 // 4 pm Hill Auditorium
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Joyce DiDonato returns to UMS after her stellar debut in Handel's Ariodante at the end of the 2016-17 UMS season. For this
UMS recital debut, she performs Schubert’s Winterreise, a dramatic song cycle of 24 poems, usually sung by a tenor, that journeys through grief to despair. She is joined for this very special duo recital by Yannick Nézet-Séguin, music director of both the Philadelphia Orchestra and the Metropolitan Opera, who trades in his baton for a piano.
Winner of the 2018 Olivier Award for Outstanding Achievement in Opera, DiDonato is a multi-Grammy Award winner and a fierce advocate for the arts. The most recent addition to her acclaimed discography, Berlioz’s Les Troyens, won the Award for Best Complete Opera Recording at the 2018 International Opera
Awards, the 2018 BBC Music Magazine Opera Award, and the 2018 Gramophone Classical Music Award for Opera.
Yannick Nézet-Séguin became the third music director of the Metropolitan Opera in September 2018 and has been music director of the Philadelphia Orchestra since 2012 and the Orchestre Métropolitain of Montreal since 2000. He has also served as chief conductor of the Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra since 2008.
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Performed in German with English supertitles.
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RELATED EVENTS
Pre-Performance Talk: How Singers and Pianists Collaborate Sun, Dec 16 // 3 pm // Hill Auditorium Mezzanine Lobby Matthew Thompson, SMTD professor and U-M alumnus of Martin Katz’s studio, will speak about the collaborative relationship between singer and pianist, shedding light on the behind-the-scenes process of preparing a song concert, with a focus on the songs and legacy of Franz Schubert. He will be joined during this discussion by a graduate student currently studying in U-M’s renowned voice program.
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Patron Sponsor: Susan B. Ullrich Endowment Fund Media Partners: WRCJ 90.9 FM and WGTE 91.3 FM
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The Bolshoi Theater, Moscow Live in HD The Nutcracker
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Choreographed by Yuri Grigorovich
Sunday, December
23 // 2 pm Michigan Theater
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Featuring Piotr Tchaikovsky’s cherished score and some of the Bolshoi’s greatest
artists, Yuri Grigorovich's The Nutcracker made its premiere on the iconic Bolshoi Theater stage in 1966. More than 50 years later, this cherished ballet will be broadcast to cinema audiences across the globe.
The ballet follows the unforgettable adventure of Marie and her wooden nutcracker doll, who comes to life at the stroke of midnight on Christmas Eve and transforms into a prince.
Presented in partnership with the Michigan Theater.
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2014 National Medal of Arts recipient
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University Musical Society
Burton Memorial Tower
881 N University Ave
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1011
United States
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