New groups added to lineup for annual a cappella benefit concert
Northeastern University’s premier co-ed a cappella group, the Nor’easters.
Arts

New groups added to lineup for annual a cappella benefit concert

BRATTLEBORO — Vocal music will rattle the rafters of Brattleboro's Latchis Theatre at the 17th Annual Collegiate A Cappella Concert, a benefit for the Brattleboro Museum & Art Center on Saturday, Feb. 8, at 7:30 p.m.

Tickets start at $10 and are available at brattleboromuseum.org or 802-257-0124, ext. 101.

This year's lineup includes several newcomers to the annual concert: Northeastern University's Nor'easters, 2017 winners of the International Championship of Collegiate A Cappella; the Vocal Suspects of the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, 2019 nominees for a Contemporary A Cappella Recording Award; and the multicultural, multi-genre Univoz Vocal Ensemble, which is based in Boston and features Brattleboro's own Ian Epstein.

Those groups will join the Williams College Ephlats, who performed in Brattleboro in 2015, and two other groups to be announced.

One of Brattleboro's most popular musical events, the Annual Collegiate A Cappella Concert was launched in 2004 by Dede Cummings, then a trustee of BMAC. Cummings arranged for the Brown University Jabberwocks, of which her son, Sam Carmichael, was a member, and other groups with local connections to perform in Brattleboro, and a lasting tradition was born.

“As a former collegiate a cappella singer myself, I know how much it means to these young musicians to perform in such an amazing venue as the Latchis Theatre and in front of an audience as enthusiastic and appreciative as the one that comes out for this concert every year,” BMAC Director Danny Lichtenfeld said in a news release.

The Feb. 8 collegiate concert at the Latchis Theatre will be preceded by the High School A Cappella Warm-Up Concert at BMAC the previous night.

During Gallery Walk on Friday, Feb. 7, at 7:30 p.m., local high school groups will perform in the Museum's Wolf Kahn & Emily Mason Gallery. Tickets are $5 at the door, free for youth 18 and under.

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