Anna's Bay Chorale's NYC trip a warmup for Oly performance

By MOLLY GILMORE | Contributing writer • Published December 07, 2012

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When he received an email asking whether his Mason County community chorale wanted to perform in New York City, Matthew Blegen couldn’t quite believe it was real.

HANDEL'S 'MESSIAH'

What: Fresh from engagements at the Lincoln Center and Radio City Music Hall in New York, the Union-based Anna’s Bay Chorale presents “Messiah,” accompanied by the South Shore Chamber Orchestra.

When: 7 p.m. Saturday

Where: Minnaert Center for the Performing Arts at South Puget Sound Community College, 2011 Mottman Road SW, Olympia

Tickets: $17 for adults, $13.50 for seniors and children younger than 12, in advance; $22 for adults, $19.80 for seniors and children, day of the show

More information: annasbay.org, olytix.com, 360-753-8586


“I thought it was a joke at first,” said Blegen of Union, director of Anna’s Bay Chorale. “The email said that our YouTube clips of last year’s ‘Messiah’ had been seen online and would we like to come and anchor a performance at Lincoln Center.”

As it turned out, Anna’s Bay Chorale was on its way to Lincoln Center and Radio City Music Hall, where the group performed last month along with other amateur choirs from around the world.

However, Anna’s Bay Chorale wasn’t just another part of the group; the chorale was the anchor of the performance, which included more than 200 singers and a large orchestra.

“Normally, the choirs that come only sing one half,” Blegen said. “Because of our experience with the piece and because we were so many singers, we were invited to sing the whole piece.”

The concert was produced by Distinguished Concerts International New York, which stages choral extravaganzas, including an annual “Messiah.” “They’ve never had a choir with this many singers,” Blegen added.

On Saturday, the chorale will make another debut — its first Thurston County performance. A group of about 70 singers will present Handel’s “Messiah,” accompanied by the South Shore Chamber Orchestra, Anna’s Bay’s professional chamber orchestra. Founded in 2005 on the south shore of Hood Canal, the Anna’s Bay Center for Music is a nonprofit charitable organization with a mission of building community in rural Mason County through music. While the chorale might have humble roots, its performance got a solid review in The New York Times. Critic Steve Smith wrote, “The chorus, as you might expect from an ad hoc aggregation, was uneven at times but handled some of the work’s most involved passages confidently and produced a ravishing sound at climaxes.”

And the producers loved Anna’s Bay Chorale, Blegen said. The group was told it is welcome to return, and Blegen, who’s studying for a doctoral degree in conducting at the University of Washington, was asked to be part of the organization’s conducting mentorship program.

The New York City “Messiah” was different from the one the chorale will sing Saturday night in Olympia — although the vocal parts are the same, so the group’s experience on tour will still serve them well. It was a newer orchestration written in 1959 by Eugene Goosens, making use of the larger and more diverse sound of a modern orchestra.

While in New York City, the chorus also performed at Radio City Music Hall, opening for the Rockettes. That appearance was by the Anna’s Bay group alone.

This was the 7-year-old chorale’s first tour. A proud Blegen is certain it won’t be the last.

“It took to a new level the pride the singers have in what they do,” he said. “The ages of the singers there were from 15-84. At every age, they were professional and responsive to what the conductor wanted. They were there to grab everything they could from the experience.”

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