Te Deum concert

Past Seasons

2024-25 Season

The Peaceable Kingdom

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Audiences experienced unforgettable a cappella choral music that searched for and promises peace, featuring Randall Thompson’s iconic masterpiece, “The Peaceable Kingdom,” James MacMillan’s “Miserere” and African-American Spirituals. This concert uplifted and inspired, celebrating the enduring human spirit through the transformative power of music.

2023-24 Season

Sacred Banquet

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Te Deum concludes its 16th season with an exploration of the sacred music for the Feast of Corpus Christi, featuring guest conductor and professor of chant, Antanina Kalechyts. The performance featured music that spanned nearly 800 years and included the second world premiere of the season by composer-in-residence, Anthony Maglione.

 

Salve Mundi Salutare

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Salve Mundi Salutare, a poem that honors the parts of Christ’s body on the Cross, is explored, longed for, and celebrated in unique ways in the three pieces on this Antiqua series program, in collaboration with Kansas City ensemble Bach Aria Soloist. This concert presented masterworks from Bach, Britten, and Buxtehude.

 

 

Lessons and Carols for Today

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Lessons and Carols for Today offered a modern twist on the Anglican tradition of interspersing biblical passages with choral and congregational singing. Collaborating with Kansas City poet Natasha Ria El-Scari, Natasha will wrote and performed new poetry to replace the traditional biblical lessons, delivering modern reflections on the Nativity story through an African American Feminist lens.

 

Truer Words

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Te Deum launched its 16th season with Truer Words, an exploration of the works of great poets, thinkers, and faith leaders whose words offer comfort, grace, inspiration, understanding, and joy. The great poets included John Donne, King David, Gandhi, Christopher Smart, Michael Dennis Brown, and Mother Teresa; and music by Britten, Burleigh, Parry, Paulus, Bruckner, Julia Wolfe, and a world premiere by Te Deum’s new Composer-in-Residence, Anthony J. Maglione.

2022-23 Season

Monteverdi’s Venetian Vespers of 1641

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During Monteverdi’s 30 year tenure as Maestro di Cappella of St. Mark’s Basilica in Venice, he did not publish any sacred choral music until the very end. This single publication, Selva Morale et Spirituali, contains music that Monteverdi chose to represent the very best of his illustrious career. In collaboration with the Kansas City Baroque Consortium, Te Deum brought to life this music of deep faith, infectious charm, and musical virtuosity.

A Glimpse of Heaven

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The profound spirituality and compositional genius of the 16th century’s treasures were celebrated in works by Tallis, Byrd, Palestrina, Lassus, Josquin, and more. The highest aim for the Renaissance sacred composer was to give the listener a reprieve from daily strife, and offer a peace-filled glimpse of heavenly serenity. This concert offered the 21st century listener a peek at the celestial sliver for which the greatest Renaissance composers sought.

 

O Magnum Mysterium

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Meaningful aspects of the season were explored and celebrated by structuring the concert around four different musical settings of one of the most famous Christmas texts, O Magnum Mysterium. Each section explored one of the 4 lines of text – the mystery of this gift, the animals present at the birth, that sacrifice and love of the mother, and finally, “Alleluia,” a song of praise and joy.

 

Mozart Requiem

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Combining with the Te Deum Chamber Orchestra and distinguished soloists, Te Deum celebrated its 15th season with Mozart Requiem, a masterpiece work and  showcase of virtuosity and emotion.

 

 

 


2021-22 Season

Divine

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Te Deum presented sections of the Orthodox All-Night Vigil service and the Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom, integrating works of the most famous Orthodox composers. “Divine” offered a window into the solemnity of the faith, showcasing the beauty and depth of its spirituality, reinforced by the sounds, smells, and visual icons of the Orthodox Church.

 

Music of the Sistine Chapel

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Patrons were invited to travel with Te Deum to 16th-century Rome and experience a Renaissance era service of the Sistine Chapel, the Pope’s private space for prayer and worship. The concert featured Palestrina’s beloved Pope Marcellus Mass, motets of Josquin des Prez, and Gregorian chant.

Christmas Joy

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Featuring Kirke Mechem’s “7 Joys of Christmas,” Te Deum’s Christmas concert celebrated the many Joys of the Christmas season, including the times that joy feels out of reach. The program explored themes of Love, Joy, Generosity, and Singing, with included works by Abbie Betinis, Samuel Barber, William Dawson and Kirke Mechem.

 

The Heart Cries Out

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As our community, country, and world was shaken to the core by a world-wide pandemic, all people have found themselves crying out. There have been cries of pain for the loss of a loved-one, cries of loneliness and hurt from isolation, and cries of gratefulness for help from a friend. The Heart Cries Out put music and poetry to these cries, featuring Bach’s Komm, Jesu, Komm, as the centerpiece, and a new commission from our composer-in-residence, James Eakin III, with a commissioned text by Charles Anthony Silvestri.


2020-21 Season

Brahms Requiem

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“Brahms Requiem” is Te Deum’s first virtual concert, a rebroadcast of our award-winning, previously recorded live performance from April 2016. This performance features pianists Jan Kraybill and Elisa Bickers, baritone Brian Ming Chu, soprano Ida Nicolosi, and Te Deum. The concert begins with an organ solo by Dr. Bickers, newly recorded for this concert, and also includes the original introduction given by Mark Ball, who brings a special poignancy and emotional context to the work.

 

Peace and Joy

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Te Deum’s 3rd annual Christmas concert was designed to thoughtfully reflect on the warmth of the Holiday season. At Peace and Joy, audiences heard Te Deum like never before. This online livestream featured newly recorded music for 2020, and the concert was more intimate than ever as Te Deum divided into two 12-voice ensembles to rehearse and record new, meaningful pieces for the Christmas season.

 

Kreuzige – A German Passiontide

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Te Deum and the Kansas City Baroque Consortium presented some of the Baroque era’s most profound music for Passiontide (the week leading up to Easter). The concert included J.S. Bach’s Cantata 182 Himmelskӧnig, sei willkommen (King of Heaven, welcome), and Heinrich Schütz’s Die Sieben Worte Jesu Christi am Kreuz (The seven last words of Jesus Christ on the Cross)

 

The King of Instruments

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Featuring GRAMMY nominee Jan Kraybill on the organ and local gospel recording artist Isaac Cates, Te Deum’s final concert of the 13th season explored a broad range of repertoire for organ and choir. Hope was the central theme of King of Instruments, a theme mirrored in life as we anticipated the end of the pandemic.

 

 


2019-20 Season

Be a Blessing concert

Be a Blessing

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“Be a Blessing” paired a Beatitude with a non-biblical text that illuminates the humanistic values of the scripture, inspiring listeners to be generous and caring citizens, regardless of faith background. The universality of goodness is demonstrated in ways that are inclusive and enlivening, with texts from Thoreau, British Philosopher Alasdair MacIntyre’s After Virtue, and even courtroom testimony. The primary work upon which the concert is set is contemporary British composer Patrick Hawes’ Beatitudes, written for choir and piano.

 

Peace and Joy concert poster

Peace & Joy

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Te Deum presented an exciting and engaging version of its now annual “Peace and Joy” concert. This season’s concerts focused on two of the season’s most important themes, music of peace and joy, and also gave special attention to local Kansas City composers. The concert featured world premieres by composers Ed Frazier Davis and Geoff Wilcken and the performance of one of the most virtuosic and grand choral pieces ever composed, Schoenberg’s Friede Auf Erden (Peace on Earth).

 

A Spanish Lament concert poster

A Spanish Lament

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On the first Sunday in Lent, the solemn six weeks leading to Easter, Te Deum presented Victoria’s Maundy Thursday and Good Friday Lamentations in the beautiful acoustics and serene atmosphere of Our Lady of Sorrows. The chants woven throughout the concert were a special aspect of this performance. Te Deum brought in the world’s foremost expert on performing liturgical chant. Professor Eugene Liven d’Abelardo of the Netherlands. He was in residence for a week to coach our ensemble in Gregorian chant performance.


2018-19 Season

To Life

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Te Deum paid tribute to the centennial of legendary composer/conductor Leonard Bernstein with a presentation of “Chichester Psalms.” Two world premieres also were on the program. The first was a setting of text from the Torah by Kansas City composer Stewart Duncan, commissioned as a gift in memory of Carol Lynn Stockton, a longtime vocal music teacher and past Te Deum board member. The concert concluded with a setting of a Hebrew Benediction by New York-based composer Karen Siegel. Pieces by contemporary Jewish composers David Lang and Aaron Jay Kernis rounded out the program.

 

Peace & Joy

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This was Te Deum’s first Christmas-season concert – done Te Deum’s way. Audiences experienced a thoughtfully planned selection of a cappella gems that are fresh, festive and beyond the seasonal standards. The program included fresh settings of carols by Jocelyn Hagen, Susan LaBarr, and Sofia Sӧderberg, as well as works by Walton, Poulenc, Tavener, and Pӓrt.

 

Convent Music

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In 17th century Italy, opportunities for women to sing in public were prohibited in many spheres of daily life. But within the inner walls of the convent, cloistered nuns could raise their voices in musical praise to their Maker. For this concert, the women of Te Deum Antiqua with Jan Kraybill playing continuo explored the music of these cloistered nuns and the sacred riches that came from this period.

 

Cathedral Classics

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Te Deum wrapped up its 11th season with a program of some of the 20th century’s most notable composers. Focusing on familiar music designed for the warm of acoustics of the world’s greatest cathedral, the audience experienced a cappella classics by Byrd, Barber, Britten, Mendelssohn, Stanford, Rachmaninoff and more.

 

 


2017-18 Season

Secret Service

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It was against the law to be Catholic in Elizabethan England, so William Byrd composed Masses in secret. He composed a series of three Catholic Masses between 1592 and 1595, secretly presented in private homes to evade the possibility of imprisonment for treason. Byrd’s deeply personal and devout Masses represent a remarkable portrait of faith in a time of religious persecution. This concert featured Byrd’s evocative Mass for Five Voices, and included the proper motets and chants for a complete service.

 

To Light the World

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Te Deum Chamber Choir put the exclamation point on its 10th season with a program that showcased wide-ranging repertoire for choir and organ. The program included William Walton’s The Twelve, James MacMillan’s Te Deum, and works by Tavener, Pärt, McDowell, and Dove. Concluding the concert was a commissioned piece by award-winning German composer Ingrid Stölzel, with a text written in celebration of Te Deum’s 10th season by Dr. Robert Bode. “To Light the World” introduced Kansas City audiences to organist and composer Kurt Knecht, who brings national acclaim for his composing, teaching, and organ playing.

 

Seven Last Words from the Cross

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Te Deum Chamber Choir offered a choral reflection for the Lenten season with James MacMillan’s virtuosic masterpiece depicting the crucified Christ’s final utterances. Commissioned by BBC Television in 1994, it was first heard in seven nightly episodes broadcast for English audiences during that year’s Holy Week, and has been described by reviewers as “mesmerizing” and “deeply, deeply moving” with “an inexorable sense of the drama in the text.” “It is not easy,” one critic has noted, “but what riches there are for those who scale these heights!”