October 12, 2011, City Classics
Music and Dance through October
The last two weeks of October finds most Kansas City classical music and dance organizations fully engaged in their seasons. The Kansas City Ballet bows at the Muriel Kauffman Theatre in the Kauffman Center for its first regular season performances, opening October 14 and running two weekends (rather than just one, as in past seasons) with the world premiere three-act ballet Tom Sawyer. It should be the dance event of the season. Fans of dance will also enjoy the Owen/Cox Dance Group’s performance with the International Center for Music at Park University in Parkville. The Kansas City Symphony Chorus is featured in Brahms’ Deutsches Requiem (German Requiem) near the end of the month. Other choral concerts include the Kansas City Chorale’s Chant and Beyond and two concerts by the UMKC Conservatory Choirs and one by Schola Cantorum in Liberty. Two of the great soloists performing today grace our stages this month: pianist Marc-André Hamelin and violinist Midori both appear with the Harriman-Jewell Series. The Friends of Chamber Music presents its intriguing collaborative Darwin Project at Helzberg Hall, and also a concert by the famed Tokyo String Quartet. Another string quartet, the Latin-oriented La Catrina Quartet, appears at the Lied Center in Lawrence. We also have many other delightful concerts and recitals by some of our outstanding community orchestras and other ensembles; please check the full listings below.
Kansas City Ballet
Tom Sawyer: A Ballet in Three Acts
Friday, October 14 at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, October 15 at 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, October 16 at 2:00 p.m.
Thursday, October 20 at 7:30 p.m.
Friday, October 21 at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, October 22 at 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, October 23 at 2:00 p.m.
Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts, Muriel Kauffman Theatre
1601 Broadway Blvd, Kansas City, MO
For tickets, call 816-931-2232 or visit online at www.kcballet.org.
Of all Kansas City arts organizations making their debuts at the Kauffman Center this fall, this writer doesn’t think that any have matched the Kansas City Ballet in the pure brilliance of its selection: a world premiere, based on an classic American novel, by a famous Missourian, performed right here in Missouri at the new Kauffman Center. What an unbeatable combination!
For its fall series of performances, the Ballet is presenting the world premiere of a ballet based upon the famous Mark Twain novel, featuring an original score by Tony Award-winning composer Maury Yeston, with choreography by the KC Ballet’s artistic director, William Whitener.
The full-length ballet covers many of the episodes in the classic novel, including Tom’s wild and untamed childhood, his budding romance with Becky, his exploits on the Mississippi river with his friend Huck Finn, their staged “funeral,” and, according to the Ballet, “the many other adventures that have become part of our central American myth and treasured heritage.”
Yeston, primarily known as a Broadway composer, won Tony Awards for Best Musical and Best Score for both Nine in 1982 and Titanicin 1997. He also won a Drama Desk Award for Nine. In addition, he wrote a significant amount of the music and most of the lyrics to the Tony-nominated musical Grand Hotel in 1989, which was nominated for Best Score.
Longtime Starlight Theatre audience members may recall his musical version of the novel The Phantom of the Opera called Phantom, not to be confused with Andrew Lloyd Webber’s version, which Starlight debuted a number of years ago. This writer frankly preferred the Yeston to the more eclectic and jarring Webber score. Yeston is also a composer of classical concert music, including a song cycle and a Cello Concerto.
This writer, along with the rest of a capacity audience at the Muriel Kauffman Theatre, saw a sampling of Tom Sawyer at the Kauffman Center’s grand opening gala on September 16, and the music and action appeared charming, indeed. In fact, several friends, after seeing this scene, promptly went out and purchased tickets to the full performance.
It should be the greatest evening in the Ballet’s history. Do you want to admit that you missed it?
A note to longtime Ballet audience members: for this production, the Ballet performing over two weekends instead of the usual single weekend. The first weekend does not include a Thursday performance, but the second one does.
The Friends of Chamber Music
The Darwin Project
Friday, October 14 at 8:00 p.m.
Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts, Helzberg Hall
1601 Broadway Blvd, Kansas City, MO
For tickets, call 816-561-9999 or visit online at www.chambermusic.org.
Cynthia Siebert’s Friends of Chamber Music kicks off its 2011–12 season with an unusual multimedia presentation in Helzberg Hall at the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts. The evening is a collaboration of The Friends of Chamber Music and the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts.
The music selections will feature the Daedalus String Quartet and pianist Alon Goldstein, along with the Kansas City Collegium Vocale, directed by Ryan Board.
Actors and a narrator will perform Jeremy Lillig and Nancy Cervetti's script, and we understand that a video presentation will also be a part of the performance. Kyle Hatley of the Kansas City Repertory Theatre directs Gary Neal Johnson as Charles Darwin and Kathleen Warfel as Emma Darwin. Cinnamon Schultz is the narrator. Scientific consultation is provided by Robert Powell, Ph.D., William Ashworth, Ph.D., and Bruce Bradley.
In the words of The Friends of Chamber Music, “this unique multi-media concert experience explores the life of Charles Darwin and the theory that changed our view of life. Renowned actors; beautiful classical music performed by string quartet, solo piano, and chamber choir; stunning historical images and captivating original photography from some of today’s finest field biologists combine to bring Darwin’s story to life in this dynamic original event.”
It is surely only a coincidence that this concert happens to come just weeks after the discovery of a possible “missing link” in human evolution, the 1.97-million year-old Australopithecus sediba, was announced by paleontologist Lee Berger in South Africa.
Harriman-Jewell Series
Marc-André Hamelin, pianist
Saturday, October 15, at 8:00 p.m.
Folly Theater
12th St and Central Ave, Kansas City, MO
For tickets, call 816-415-5025 or visit online at www.hjseries.org.
Canadian pianist Marc-André Hamelin is one of the most brilliant pianist alive today. In his previous appearances in Kansas City, hosted by the UMKC Conservatory of Music and Dance, the Kansas City Symphony, and the Harriman-Jewell Series, Hamelin has displayed an unparalleled technique in which his exceptional artistry excels in some of the most difficult works ever written for the piano. In his last performances here, under the sponsorship of the Harriman-Jewell Series in 2010, he also showed a sensitive and finely wrought pianism, which brought out the emotional depths of the pieces he played.
In this recital, sure to be one of the hits of the Kansas City recital season, Hamelin will perform Berg’s Sonata for Piano, Liszt’s Sonata for Piano in B minor, selections from Debussy’s Preludes, Book 2, and four of the pianist’s own Etudes. The Berg and Liszt works should provide ample opportunity for display of technical virtuosity, while the Debussy should allow Hamelin to show his more emotive side. It sounds like a great set of selections for an outstanding performer to demonstrate both sides of his artistry. This recital is not to be missed.
Kansas City Chorale
Chant and Beyond
Saturday, October 15 at 7:30 p.m.
St. Michael and Archangel Church
143rd St and Nall Ave, Overland Park, KS
Sunday, October 16 at 2:00 p.m.
Redemptorist Catholic Church
3333 Broadway Blvd, Kansas City, MO
Tuesday, October 18 at 7:30 p.m.
Asbury United Methodist Church
5400 W 75th St at Nall Ave, Overland Park, KS
For tickets, call 816-235-6222 or visit online at www.kcchorale.org.
The ancient chants of the 13th-century master Hildegard von Bingen, rediscovered and popularized in the 20th century, have become among the most popular representations of ancient music in modern times. In this concert, Kansas City Chorale director Charles Bruffy turns the Chorale’s attention to chants by Hildegard as well as other composers of ancient times, in a program which, according to the Chorale, features works of the 12th, 13th and 15th centuries, as well as “pieces written in our own time, inspired by these ancient tunes.”
Lee’s Summit Symphony
Fall Classic
Saturday, October 15 at 7:30 p.m.
Summit High School Bernard C. Campbell Performing Arts Center
400 SE Blue Pkwy, Lee’s Summit, MO
Tickets are available at Hy-Vee East and West locations in Lee’s Summit, and online at www.lssymphony.org.
Russell Berlin, Jr. begins his seventh season as conductor of the Lee’s Summit Symphony with the organization’s annual fall concert. The selections include Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s Overture to Don Giovanni, the Carmen Suite No. 1 by George Bizet, and Gustav Mahler’s Symphony No. 1 (“Titan”).
Lied Center of Kansas
La Catrina Quartet
Sunday, October 16 at 2:00 p.m.
Lied Center
KU Campus
1600 Stewart Drive, Lawrence, KS
For tickets call (785) 864-2787, or online at www.lied.ku.edu.
The La Catrina Quartet bills itself as “chamber music with Latin American flavor,” and has been praised by none other than cellist Yo-Yo Ma as “a wonderful ambassador for music.” The string quartet’s mission is to perform string quartets by Latin American and Mexican composers.
In this program, La Catrina will perform an all-Latin American program including works by Astor Piazzolla, Silvestre Revueltas and a new quartet by Roberto Sierra.
The Arkansas Democrat-Gazelle has written that the members of the La Catrina Quartet “maintained stylistic passion, eye contact and physical intensity whether playing classical styles or music based on Mexican dance, entrancing the audience. They managed to go from the intensity of elephants stomping to the lightness of feathers all within a breath.”
Kansas City Civic Orchestra
An American Tradition
Sunday, October 16 at 3:00 p.m.
Yardley Hall, Carlsen Center
Johnson County Community College Campus
12345 College Blvd., Overland Park, KS
Free admission. For more information visit http://kccivic.org
The Kansas City area’s oldest and finest community orchestra begins its 2011–12 season under the direction of Christopher Kelts with a program including the works of American composers Copland, Barber and Gershwin.
Aaron Copland is represented by the charming Billy the Kid ballet suite, Samuel Barber by the stunning Knoxville: Summer of 1915 which evokes the charm of the old South, and George Gershwin by both An American in Paris and Lullaby for string orchestra.
The soprano soloist in the Knoxville: Summer of 1915 is Korean singer Haekyung An.
Northland Symphony Orchestra
Bruckner Symphony No. 4
Sunday, October 16 at 3:00 p.m.
Park Hill South High School
4500 NW River Park Dr, Riverside, MO
Free admission. For more information visit http://www.northlandsymphony.org
The Northland Symphony Orchestra opens its concert season under conductor James Murray with an ambitious undertaking: the monumental Symphony No. 4 of Anton Bruckner. Long one of the composer’s most popular works, the “Romantic” symphony, as the composer nicknamed it, depicts a day in the life of a medieval city, and is intended to be a portrayal of Romanticism, along the lines of Wagnerian operas.
Bruckner’s later symphonies developed a huge arc of sound and melody which many writers have compared to the architectural features of medieval cathedrals. Even in the relatively early Fourth Symphony, however, these features are already evident. The Northland Symphony should be commended for taking on such a challenging work.
Bach Aria Soloists
Lerner Hauskonzert
Sunday, October 16 at 7:00 p.m.
Private Home
Tickets are available online at www.bachariasoloists.com.
Soprano Sarah Tannehill Anderson is featured in selections by Bach and Mozart at the Bach Aria Soloists’ first Hauskonzert of the season, at the home of Leslie Lerner in Mission Hills, Kansas. The Hauskonzerts are a unique phenomenon in Kansas City, presenting first-class classical music performances in intimate settings much like they might have enjoyed in Baroque times. In addition to outstanding performances by supreme violinist Elizabeth Suh Lane and her colleagues, the concerts feature delightful social gatherings and an excellent buffet.
UMKC Conservatory of Music and Dance
Joint Faculty Recital: Carter Enyeart and Robert Weirich
Sunday, October 16 at 7:30 p.m.
James C. Olson Performing Arts Center, White Recital Hall
UMKC Campus
4949 Cherry St, Kansas City, MO
Free admission. For more information visit http://conservatory.umkc.edu
Cellist Carter Enyeart and pianist Robert Weirich, both of the UMKC Conservatory of Music and Dance faculty, present a joint recital featuring the work of Beethoven, Liszt, Debussy, Messiaen, and Brahms.
St. Olaf Orchestra
St. Olaf Orchestra on tour
Monday, October 17 at 7:00 p.m.
Performing Arts Center
Blue Valley West High School
162nd and Antioch Road, Overland Park, KS
Tickets available at 1-800-363-5487 or online at www.stolaftickets.com.
St. Olaf College in Minnesota has one of the finest college music programs in the country, and its college orchestra has been called “one of the best college orchestras in the nation” by Time Magazine. The orchestra is making a national tour this fall, and its repertoire includes the Roman Carnival Overture by Hector Berlioz, the premiere performance of Hyperborea by St. Olaf alumnus Matthew Peterson, and Dmitri Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 5.
William Jewell College Schola Cantorum
Choral Evensong for Michaelmas Term
Tuesday, October 18 at 5:30 p.m.
Grand River Chapel
William Jewell College Campus
500 College Hill, Liberty, MO
Free admission. For more information, visit http://bit.ly/pfcnl0
Director Jay Carter presents the William Jewell College Schola Cantorum in this concert of Tudor and Jacobean music for the Feast of St. Michael. The performance will feature the compositions of William Byrd, Thomas Tompkins, and Richard Dering.
Westport Center for the Arts
Goldenberg Duo
Friday, October 21 at 12:10 p.m.
Westport Presbyterian Church
201 Westport Road, Kansas City, MO
Free admission; donations accepted. For more information, visit http://www.westportcenterforthearts.org/
Kansas City Symphony violinist Susan Goldenberg and her brother William Goldenberg, pianist, perform one of their duo recitals during the lunch hour. These lunchtime concerts make from a great break from work near the end of the week, and you’re invited to bring your lunch and snack, as long as you’re not too disruptive (might want to leave the crackly potato chips at home). The Goldenbergs are both very talented musicians and their programs are entertaining and informative. They have been performing together for 32 years.
Friends of Chamber Music
Tokyo String Quartet
Friday, October 21 at 8:00 p.m.
Folly Theater
12th and Central Streets, Kansas City, MO
For tickets, call 816-561-9999 or online at www.chambermusic.org.
The Friends of Chamber Music presents one of the world’s leading string quartets, the Tokyo String Quartet, at the Folly Theater in a program of Haydn, Hindemith, and Schuman.
Founded more than forty years ago, the quartet continues to win acclaim for its performances and recordings. A recent review in the Toronto Globe and Mail said:
“Fit, classy, seasoned, impeccable, the Tokyo scaled the dizzying heights…. One approaches with some trepidation performances by a group that has been before the public for more than 40 years: We can admire their solidly won fame and full measure of experience, but fear the possibility of the mailed-in, the jaded, the stale. No such fears were realized [in the performance being reviewed]. Not only was [the music] vigorous, limber and fresh, but…[this] group has reached an ideal balance in their thinking and their individual virtuosities.”
UMKC Conservatory of Music and Dance
Fall Conservatory Orchestra Concert
Friday, October 21 at 7:30 p.m.
White Recital Hall, James C. Olson Performing Arts Center
UMKC Campus
4949 Cherry Street, Kansas City, MO
For tickets call 816-235-6222 or online at http://conservatory.umkc.edu
The Conservatory Orchestra of the UMKC Conservatory of Music and Dance performs its fall concert with selections by Russian composer Mikhail Glinka, American composer Aaron Copland, and French romanticist Hector Berlioz. The Glinka selection is the Overture to the opera Ruslan and Lyudmila, the Copland selection is excerpts from his ballet Appalachian Spring, and the Berlioz piece is the orchestral showpiece Symphonie fantastique.
Fine Arts Chorale
Howl-o-ween Laughter Songs & Stories with Storyteller Priscilla Howe
Friday, October 21 at 7:00 p.m.
Kansas City Public Library, Plaza Branch
4801 Main Street, Kansas City MO
No admission charge, but tickets are required. Reserve them from the Plaza Library at www.kclibrary.org/event. For more information visit http://fineartschoralekc.org
Conductor Terri Teal brings her Fine Arts Chorale to the Plaza Library for a Halloween concert including haunted tales by storyteller Priscilla Howe. According to the Library, “Howe tells stories from books and world folktales, served with a generous dollop of humor to be appreciated by audiences of all ages.”
Country Club Plaza
Waterfire
Saturday, October 22 at dusk
(rain date October 29)
Brush Creek on the Country Club Plaza, Kansas City, MO
Free admission. For more information visit http://www.countryclubplaza.com/Events/WaterFire
Waterfire is a multi-faceted entertainment that has become one of this community’s most interesting and prized fall evenings. This year’s event on Brush Creek features not only the intriguing sight of fireboats sailing up and down the creek, but also a variety of music and dance entertainment, including opera singers Sylvia Stoner-Hawkins, Elaine Fox and Nathan Granner, KC Swing and Tango, and the intriguing dance/acrobatic troupe Quixotic.
Performing Arts Series at Johnson County Community College
Los Angeles Guitar Quartet
Saturday, October 22 at 8:00 p.m.
Yardley Hall, Carlsen Center
Johnson County Community College Campus
12345 College Blvd., Overland Park, KS
For tickets call 913-469-4445 or online at www.jccc.edu/performing-arts-series
The Los Angeles Guitar Quartet is billed as a group that performs “From Bach to Bluegrass.” Founded three decades ago, the four acoustical guitarists perform transcriptions of instrumental classics as well as contemporary and world music. Winner of a 2005 Grammy award, the group has received critical and audience acclaim.
“The world’s hottest classical ensemble or its tightest pop band? However it helps you to think about the LAGQ,” wrote a Los Angeles Times critic, “keep the emphasis on superlatives for its unrivaled joy, technical élan, and questing spirits.”
In this concert, the Los Angeles Guitar Quartet is scheduled to play the works of Boccherini, De Falla and Stravinsky, a set of jazz tunes by Miles Davis and John Coltrane, and excerpts from the group’s latest compact disc recording, LAGQ: Brazil.
Liberty Symphony Orchestra
Music of John Williams
Saturday, October 22 at 7:30 p.m.
Liberty Performing Arts Theatre
1600 S. Withers Road, Liberty, MO
For tickets call 1-800-71-TICKETS or online at www.libertysymphony.org.
Film composer John Williams is one of the most popular tunesmiths of our day, and the Liberty Symphony performs a variety of his works in this concert, including music from the Star Wars, Indiana Jones and Harry Potter film series. The music director is Dr. Tony Brandolini of William Jewell College.
Village Church Music Programs
Lament for Jerusalem
Sunday, October 23 at 5:00 p.m.
Village Presbyterian Church
6641 Mission Road, Prairie Village, KS
Free admission, but offering will be received to benefit the KC Interfaith Youth Alliance. For more information, visit http://villagepres.org/worship-music/music-ministry/upcoming-music-events/
Matthew Christopher Shepard, director of the Village Presbyterian Church music programs, presents the Midwest premiere of this new choral work by English composer John Tavener. The Lament for Jerusalem weaves Islamic, Christian, and Jewish texts, representing Jerusalem’s three religions.
Tavener describes his piece as a mystical love song: “It is only through love that there can be a transcendent unity of all religions and all manifestations of God.” This concert is sponsored in part by The Greater Kansas City Festival of Faiths.
UMKC Conservatory of Music and Dance
Conservatory Choirs: Faith, Hope and Love
Sunday, October 23 at 3:30 p.m.
St. John’s United Methodist Church
6900 Ward Parkway, Kansas City, MO
Free, but contributions are requested to benefit Susan G. Komen for the Cure. For more information, visit http://conservatory.umkc.edu
This concert is tenth annual benefit concert by the UMKC Conservatory choirs for Susan G. Komen for the Cure. Featured in the concert will be the Conservatory Concert Choir, directed by Charles Robinson; Canticum Novum, directed by Jacob Narverud; the Lee’s Summit West High School Una Voce, directed by Amy Krinke; and the Truman High School Chamber Singers, directed by Jonathan Krinke.
Musical selections will include compositions by Praetorius, Morley, di Lasso, Janequin, Handel, Brahms, Dello Joio, and more.
Kansas City Youth Symphony
Fall Concert
Sunday, October 23 at 3:00 p.m.
Ruskin High School Auditorium
7000 East 111th Street, Kansas City, MO
Free admission. For more information, visit http://youthsymphonykc.org
The Academy Orchestra, Symphonette Orchestra and String Orchestras of the Kansas City Youth Symphony will perform this afternoon. No programming details are available as of the publication date for this issue of KCMetropolis.
UMKC Conservatory of Music and Dance
Wind Symphony and Wind Ensemble Concert
Wednesday, October 26 at 7:30 p.m.
Blue Valley Southwest High School
17600 Quivira Road, Overland Park, KS
For tickets call 816-235-6222 or online at http://conservatory.umkc.edu
This presentation is a combined concert of the UMKC Conservatory Wind Symphony directed by Steven D. Davis and the UMKC Conservatory Wind Ensemble directed by Joseph Parisi. The two groups will perform works by Chen Yi, William Bolcom, Mozart, Steve Mackey, and others but the crown jewel is Schmitt's Dionysaique.
Harriman-Jewell Series
Midori
Thursday, October 27 at 8:00 p.m.
Folly Theater
12th and Central Streets, Kansas City, MO
For tickets call 816-415-5025, or visit online at www.hjseries.org.
The extraordinary Japanese violinist Midori is now completing the third decade of a remarkable international career. Fresh off performances in Denmark, she is spending October on recital tour of the United States with pianist Özgür Aydin. Their program consists of works by Mozart, Shostakovich, Schumann, and Schubert.
A recent review of a Midori performance in the Lexington Herald Leader said that “every aspect of her well-seasoned performance gave the impression of having been worked out in minute detail and then delivered with organic immediacy…. Midori seemed even more to find every conceivable expressive effect…. The audience received the concerto enthusiastically, calling Midori back to the stage several times….”
Kansas City Symphony
Brahms’ German Requiem
Friday, October 28 at 8:00 p.m.
Saturday, October 29 at 8:00 p.m.
Sunday, October 30 at 2:00 p.m.
Helzberg Hall, Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts
1601 Broadway, Kansas City, Missouri
For tickets call 816-471-0400 or online at www.kcsymphony.org.
The Brahms Deutsches Requiem [German Requiem] has long been considered one of the choral masterpieces of the Romantic era. The Kansas City Symphony chorus receives its official debut in Helzberg Hall this weekend as it sings this magnificent work with the Kansas City Symphony. Soprano Layla Clair and baritone Christopher Feigum are featured.
Also on the Symphony program are Beethoven’s Elegischer Gesang [Elegaic Song] and an offering by the iconoclastic French composer Olivier Messiaen, Les offrandes oubliées.
Owen/Cox Dance Group
International Center for Music
Collaborative Concert
Saturday, October 29 at 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, October 30 at 3:00 p.m.
Graham Tyler Memorial Chapel
Park University Campus
8700 N. W. River Park Drive, Parkville, MO
Tickets available online at www.owencoxdance.org.
Owen/Cox Dance Group, one of Kansas City’s most innovative small dance companies, collaborates with the remarkably talented musicians of Stanislav Ioudenitch’s International Center for Music at Park University for this concert. The performance will include new dance works to the music of Igor Stravinsky, Johann Sebastian Bach, Dmitri Shostakovich and more.
Topeka Symphony Orchestra
The Fifth!
Saturday, October 29 at 7:30 p.m.
White Recital Hall
Washburn University Campus, Topeka, KS
For tickets call 785-232-2032 or visit http://www.topekasymphony.org
Ludwig von Beethoven’s monumental Symphony No. 5 is the featured work on this ambitious program of the Topeka Symphony, led by Stephen Strickler. Also on the concert will be the Sinfonia da requiem by Benjamin Britten, and Rainbow Body by Christopher Theofanidis.
Theofandis is the composer of Heart of a Soldier, an opera being premiered by the San Francisco Opera this year, and is becoming one of America’s most popular composers. His Rainbow Body dates from the year 2000, and according to the composer was inspired by the music of medieval mystic Hildegard von Bingen and “the Tibetan Buddhist idea of Rainbow Body, which is that when an enlightened being dies physically, his or her body is absorbed directly back into the universe as energy, as light.”
Metropolitan Chorale of Kansas City
Of Peasants and Princes
Saturday, October 29 at 7:30 p.m.
Stone Church Community of Christ
1012 West Lexington, Independence, MO
Free admission. For more information visit http://mcckc.edu/blueriver/humanities/music/
The Metropolitan Chorale of Kansas City, directed by Rebecca Johnson, includes students from the Metropolitan Community Colleges in Kansas City.
The promotional information for this concert states: “Journey with the Chorale as we explore the exquisite ‘princely’ music of the Renaissance as well as the more, well, ‘earthly’ music of that era. From England to Italy, Spain to Paris, the music will transport you to another time, another culture.”
UMKC Conservatory of Music and Dance
Conservatory Combined Choirs
Sunday, October 30 at 7:30 p.m.
Old Mission United Methodist Church
5519 State Park Road, Prairie Village, KS
Free admission. For more information visit http://conservatory.umkc.edu
The UMKC Conservatory of Music and Dance features in this concert the Conservatory Concert Choir, directed by Charles Robinson, and Canticum Novum, directed by Jacob Narverud. Programming details were not available as of press time for this issue of KCMetropolis.
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