Friends of Music at Guilford hosts ‘Christmas at Christ Church’
The historic Christ Church in Guilford is again the setting for the annual Friends of Music at Guilford’s “Christmas at Christ Church” concert.
Arts

Friends of Music at Guilford hosts ‘Christmas at Christ Church’

GUILFORD — Friends of Music at Guilford presents “An Olde New England Christmas” on Friday, Dec. 13, at 7:30 p.m., and at 4 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 14.

By tradition, this 47th annual Christmas at Christ Church event includes choral and instrumental music for the season, a dramatic reading, and a few carols for everyone.

The a cappella vocal program was drawn from tune books by New England composers born in the middle of the 18th century: William Billings, Supply Belcher, Oliver Holden, Timothy Swan, and Samuel Adams Holyoke, as well as one English composer, Joseph Stephenson.

These itinerant singing masters traveled the region from about 1770 through 1810, teaching sight-singing to groups in church parishes. They gave concerts for local people and then moved on to the next town. This practice changed the place of music in worship, which finds its legacy in church choirs today.

While the tunes are invariably religious, finding Christmas carols among them was a challenge for the Chamber Singers' director Tom Baehr. Eight examples are included in this concert, contrasted by two modern pieces by New England composers Karl P. Harrington and Charles Ives.

The 18th-century carols, despite their antiquity, are adventurous for their time and enjoyable for both singer and audience. Although a couple have familiar traditional texts from earlier centuries, their settings in the hands of these composers are very different from “standard” arrangements.

While there's a wide variety of expression in the collection, fans of shape-note singing will find some resonance of that style among them.

Led by Baehr for an eighth season, members of the Chamber Singers for this concert include sopranos Debbie Barry, Christina Gibbons, and Elizabeth Lewis; altos Jenny Holan, Laurie Schneski, and Joy Wallens-Penford; tenors Bill Johnson, Peter Tracy, and Bob Wykoff; and basses Orion Barber, Calvin Farwell, and Tom Green.

Instrumental interludes of repertoire from the 18th to early 19th century are provided by a few Guilford Chamber Players.

The program's dramatic reading, performed as usual by Friends of Music founder Don McLean, is Christmas Jenny, a story by Mary E. Wilkins Freeman (1852-1930), who lived for a time in Brattleboro as a teenager and finished her education at Glenwood Seminary in West Brattleboro.

She became a celebrated writer of verse, short stories, and novels, and was the first recipient of the William Dean Howells Medal for Distinction in Fiction from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

After McLean's reading, everyone joins in on a few seasonal carols before heading into the night as the church bell tolls across Algiers Village.

Because the noisy heating system has to be shut down during the 60- to 75-minute performance, it's good to wear extra layers and consider bringing a lap blanket and scarf for extra insulation. The bathroom at Eric Morse's surveying office next door is available for emergency use.

Door donations at these performances are divided between Friends of Music at Guilford and Christ Church Guilford Society, a nonprofit that oversees the building's preservation and manages its special-event use.

Located a little over a mile south of Exit 1 off Interstate 91, at the corner of Melendy Hill Road and Route 5, Christ Church was built in 1818; it celebrated its bicentennial birthday in 2018 but has not had a resident congregation since the early 1890s.

Friends of Music will also offer a holiday boutique of concert CDs, as well as several card series with images by local and regional artists whose work has been featured on posters and program books. To learn more, contact the Friends of Music office at 802-254-3600 or [email protected], or visit www.fomag.org.

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