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June Bach at Noon

June 10 @ 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm

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Our Allentown Bach at Noon series kicks off this summer with our first concert at St. John’s Lutheran Church on Tuesday, June 10th. Gather with us for this free, inspiring concert series, a musical gift to our community. Hear members of the Bach Choir and Bach Festival Orchestra along with exciting guest artists. Enjoy insightful and enlightening remarks by Christopher Jackson, Artistic Director and Conductor of the Bach Choir. The June Bach at Noon is named in honor of Dorothy Hess Baker and her mother, Elizabeth Leith Hess, both former members of the Bach Choir of Bethlehem. The concert and the participation of featured soprano and alto soloists are made possible in part by a generous legacy gift from the Dexter F. And Dorothy H. Baker Foundation.

CLICK HERE TO VIEW THE DIGITAL PROGRAM


About the Music
Before Handel and Bach, there was Giacomo Carissimi. Join us for a powerful performance of Carissimi’s Jephte, considered an early Baroque masterpiece. One of the composer’s best-known and earliest sacred oratorios, it was composed circa 1648 in Latin and predates Handel’s large-scale oratorios by nearly a century, helping lay the groundwork for future oratorio compositions. A heartbreaking tale of triumph, sacrifice, and sorrow, this dramatic work is full of intimate solos and vivid storytelling. This Baroque gem climaxes in the unforgettable chorus “Plorate, filii Israel”—a deeply moving final lament where the full breadth of talent from soloists to the full Bach Choir will be on display.Beginning the program is Bach’s “Ich bin vergnügt mit meinem Glücke,” BWV 84 (“I am content with my fortune”), a lovely and lesser-known solo soprano cantata composed and performed in 1727. Written for Septuagesima Sunday, the third Sunday before Lent, the lyrics reflect the humble and introspective mood surrounding the time. Contrasting with Bach’s more grandiose choral cantatas, only one vocal soprano soloist is featured throughout giving the piece an intimate character supported by the graceful orchestration of strings and oboes.


About the Performers
Katelyn Jackson (née Aungst) soprano, grew up in Berks County, Pennsylvania, and has spent a good portion of her singing career in Washington, D.C. Despite being surrounded by music, her first loves were reading and writing, and she dreamt of becoming a novelist and poet. Her early exposure to music ranging from the art music canon to John Philip Sousa Americana, a deep love for the written word, and a knack for choral singing led to a professional career as a soloist and chamber musician propelled by a desire to connect and communicate with other musicians and audience members alike. Hailed by the Washington Post for her “supple, haunting soprano,” Jackson performs as a featured soloist and chorister with intelligence and “particular purity of tone” (San Francisco Classical Voice). She has soloed with the American Bach Soloists, Washington Bach Consort, the Nashville Symphony Orchestra, City Choir of Washington, Cathedral Choral Society, the Washington Master Chorale, and the Handel Choir of Baltimore. Her choral and chamber experiences include recording Dame Ethel Smyth’s The Prison with the Experiential Orchestra & Chorus (2021 GRAMMY Award for Best Classical Solo Vocal Album) and performances with Ensemble Altera, The Thirteen, and Clarion Music Society.


Kristin Sands, soprano, is a co-founding member of the internationally acclaimed Antioch Chamber Ensemble, and has made a significant impact in classical music with performances in prestigious venues worldwide. Her extensive experience as a soloist and choral soprano includes collaborations with renowned groups like the Westminster Choir, The Choir of Trinity Church, Wall Street, The New York Philharmonic Chorus, and The Bach Choir of Holy Trinity Lutheran Church. Sands’ repertoire spans from early Renaissance to modern premieres, with a special affinity for Baroque music, Her performances, broadcast live on radio and television, and her recordings on labels such as Bridge Records and Naxos, continue to engage audiences globally. A magna cum laude graduate in Voice Performance from Westminster Choir College, Sands is dedicated to nurturing emerging talent as a member of Drew University’s Voice Faculty and maintains a private studio in her family’s home. She is also proud to serve on the Board of Trustees for Music in the Somerset Hills, a New Jersey-based organization committed to delivering high-quality musical experiences and education to the community.


Leah Kun, contralto, is a graduate of Westminster Choir College’s class of 2020, B.A. in Music Education. She specializes in early music and Baroque era singing, and she has been praised for her deep, rich coloratura. Kun has performed in operas across Europe; her most notable roles include Bradamante in Handel’s Alcina and Arnalta in Monteverdi’s L’incoronazione di Poppea. She has received scholarships for European young artist opera programs such as the Saluzzo Opera Academy and the Handel Opera Academy. Through these programs, she studied under singers such as Sonia Prina and Stefania Dovhan. As a choir singer, Kun has sung with the Westminster Symphonic Choir, conducted by Dr. Joe Miller, and the GRAMMY-nominated Westminster Williamson Voices, conducted by Dr. James Jordan. She was recorded in albums Ola Gjello: The Sunrise Mass, Aurora, and A Scattered Light into Winter. She is currently a member of the Bach Choir of Bethlehem and sings under the direction of Dr. Christopher Jackson. With the Bach Choir, she has performed solos in Bach’s Cantata 40 and most recently in Caroline Shaw’s To the Hands on the Bach Choir’s 2024 European tour. Kun currently provides private voice instruction to young singers in classical, musical theater, and jazz singing.


Stephen Sands, tenor, a GRAMMY-nominated “crystalline tenor” (Backstage) is a highly sought-after tenor soloist, conductor, and music educator. Sands conducts Downtown Voices at Trinity Wall Street, which has been hailed for its “incisive agile strength” (New York Times). He is the Executive Director of the Antioch Chamber Ensemble, overseeing international tours and recordings, and Managing Director of Ensemble Veritas, Harvard University’s professional chorus. Sands is the Music Director of Re:Soundings, a choral music project in New York City that utilizes the vast array of acoustical treasures to bring new ways of hearing vocal music to life. He is the Founder of Music in the Somerset Hills, where he directs The Somerset Hills Chorus and curates a full concert series and educational programs in Central New Jersey. 

Click the above logo to livestream this month’s Bach at Noon

Please help us meet June’s Bethlehem Bach at Noon Donation Challenge!

This month marks the return of The Bach Choir of Bethlehem to St. John’s Evangelical Lutheran Church for our annual Allentown Bach at Noon Concert Series. In recognition of our dedicated and talented Bach Choir singers, board member Anthony Thompson, and his wife, Vicky, have offered to match the first $1,500 of your Bach at Noon donations.

The talented Bach Choirs singers volunteer their vocal talents and more than 10,000 hours each season in rehearsal and performance time, to share their love of Bach’s music with our community. They represent the heart of our organization. We hope you will donate generously this month honor the choir and support this beloved concert series.

Support the June Bach at Noon Donation Challenge with a freewill donation at the concert using the provided envelopes, donate online, or text BNOON to 44-321. Contributions can also be mailed to The Bach Choir of Bethlehem at 440 Heckewelder Place, Bethlehem, PA 18018.

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Details

Date:
June 10
Time:
12:00 pm - 1:00 pm

Venue

St. John’s Lutheran Church
37 S. 5th Street
Allentown, PA 18101 United States
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"From anguish to elation, and just about everything in between, pretty much describes the vast emotional landscape covered in Friday evening’s concert at Packer Memorial Church presented by the Bach Choir of Bethlehem. Splendid musicianship, rousing choruses, and the sublime voices of the soloists turned grief into joy and sorrow into triumph."

—The Morning Call, May 2018

"The oft-quoted phrase 'a drumroll, please' aptly applies to the opening of Rutter’s exultant Gloria, which provided a dramatic finale to the program. What a thrill to hear those punchy, syncopated brass lines accompanying some really polished and vibrant singing. The “Domine Deus” section sported some lovely soprano voices in addition to many demanding, multi-part choruses –— some with up to eight parts. There was a miraculous blend of tone and balance throughout."

—The Morning Call, March 2018

"The performance was one of integrity, movement, passion and weight. The effortless virtuosity and stylistic homogeneity of the combined forces in the chapel's stone sanctity, allowed Bach's music to sing out with infectious, exhilarating enthusiasm."

—The Huffington Post, 2017

"The audience was thrilled by this outstanding performance of a Bach Cantata by seasoned experts immersed in the composer and informed by Greg Funfgeld's wisdom and enthusiasm...The Bachs [J.S.B and C.P.E] could not have been better served, not to mention two English Renaissances, as well as our own time. It went beyond mere intelligent programming and committed performance, enriched by a deep sense of the mutual nourishment of music and faith."

—New York Arts, 2015

"Nestled in the Pennsylvania countryside, on and around the bucolic campus of Lehigh University, the Bethlehem Bach Festival, under the artistic direction of conductor Greg Funfgeld, is in its 108th season and going strong. If it has flaws, they are like those that distinguish a fine emerald from the perfect clarity of a fake...their choral sonority is so rich you can feel it in your bones."

—The Wall Street Journal, May 2015

"Two days later I am Newark bound again, with a head full of the history of a town I previously had no awareness of, and with a heart full of the music of Bach, presented in a context that felt less like a festival than a glorious friendship between a great composer and the orchestra, conductor and choir at the heart of an extraordinary town."

—The Whole-Note - Toronto, June 2015

"The Bach Choir of Bethlehem, founded in the 19th century, has gained international recognition through its annual Bach Festival, tours and recordings. The more than 100 vocalists displayed clean tone, excellent pitch and blend, and kept good tempo even in the most stressful numbers…outstanding, energetic and crisp. The orchestra was a collection of top freelancers from around the Eastern Seaboard including several from Washington… baritone Dashon Burton, was the standout. He has a clarion instrument that projects well throughout his range…a splendid dramatic performance. Soprano Rosa Lamoreaux was also excellent, expertly modulating her silvery tone for the various roles she took…This was the choir’s big night, though, and it gave great pleasure…”

—The Washington Post, March 2013

“A handsome account of Bach’s St. John Passion on this new release confirms that the Bach Choir of Bethlehem doesn’t rest on anything resembling laurels. Greg Funfgeld has trained his singers to articulate words crisply, dance lightly when the music must move and blend elegantly. Funfgeld brings a sure sense of phrasing, texture and pacing to the narrative, and the Bach Festival Orchestra—mostly modern instruments, with viola da gamba, violas d’amore and portative organ supplying period flavors—are cohesive and nimble. Charles Daniels stands out as a poetic and powerful Evangelist, William Sharp as a warmly inflected Jesus and Julia Doyle as a shining champion of the soprano arias.”

—Gramophone, November 2012

“The Bach Choir of Bethlehem sang a Brahms motet (“Lass Dich Nur Nichts”) with all the polish and fervor it brought to cantatas by its namesake.”

—New York Times, September 2011

“..inspired program of hope, optimism and comfort …disarmingly powerful…overflows with jubilation”

—The Morning Call, October 2011

“America’s venerable Bach Choir of Bethlehem makes its Analekta debut on a disc brimming-over with festive D major trumpets-and-drums brilliance…Julia Doyle and Daniel Taylor heading up a distinguished solo line-up.”

—BBC Music Magazine, May 2010

“Conductor Greg Funfgeld coaxed a lovely rich chamber orchestra sound from the Bach Festival Orchestra strings...The hauntingly beautiful voices of Taylor and Zsigovics—she in her festival debut—melted together like two precious metals, hers of bell-like clarity, his a more complex alchemy, with a sheen like liquid mercury.”

—The Morning Call, May 2010

“As I listen to The Bach Choir of Bethlehem with Greg Funfgeld conducting…I find it hard to believe this is an all-volunteer choir but it’s true…a well polished vocal ensemble, and a true level of musicianship and understanding of the choral music of Bach.”

—Minnesota Public Radio Review, December 2009

“…an American musical treasure… they sing with a fervor and a level of musicianship that carries one away—from bass to soprano, the supple strength and solidly integrated tone of this amateur choir reflects the most admirable qualities of the European-American tradition of choral song.”

—Wall Street Journal May, 2007

“By all accounts the chorus remains as vital an institution as ever…The B-Minor Mass performance was rousing, committed and touching…Bach’s ‘St. Matthew Passion’ too was ardently and lovingly performed…”

—New York Times, May 2007

“This is Bach at its finest. The conductor, orchestra, soloists, and chorus are eminently capable of the nuances of the rich harmonic texts …spirited and vivacious…It is not likely to get any better than this on this side of the Atlantic.”

—The American Organist, January, 2004

“America’s venerable Bach Choir of Bethlehem sang Bach and Mendelssohn with good-natured and ruddy-cheeked elation. And their centerpiece was a BBC/Bach Choir co-commission, the world premiere of Libby Larsen’s I It Am, a jubilant cantata based on the writings of Julian of Norwich…this highly coloured and disarmingly unsophisticated work came from, and went straight to, the heart.”

—The Times, London, July 2003

“The Bach Choir of Bethlehem…had their audience enthralled…The choir knows and loves this work – and it shows…transatlantic magic.”

—The Scotsman, Edinburgh, July 2003

“Nearly one hundred strong, the Bach Choir of Bethlehem tempers its power and energy with the intimacy of a much smaller group. It also blends seamlessly with the excellent modern-instrument Festival orchestra which Greg Funfgeld conducts with an obvious knowledge of, and sensitivity to, modern performance practice.”

—Early Music News, California, October/November 2002

“…the Choir and Festival Orchestra, under their director, Greg Funfgeld, perform these three cantatas beautifully and convincingly. The work of the soloists is excellent, too…Excitement, dedication, power—all things that we hear more and more seldom in Bach cantatas—lend distinction to this beautiful and well-produced recording.”

—American Record Guide, November/December 2002

“Sheer jubilance…exceptional elegance and grace…radiant performance…Having heard the Bethlehem Bach Choir pour its heart into the master’s vocal music, one will never listen to it in quite the same way again.”

—Musical America, May 2001

“The Bethlehem Bach Festival is one of the most venerable musical institutions in the USA, with an unmatched tradition of introducing Bach’s music to our shores. Greg Funfgeld…has revitalized this Pennsylvania institution, and Dorian is doing well to document its vibrancy in a recording series… genuine honesty and intelligence informs this performance…Funfgeld has forged a fine body of singers and players…tightly disciplined ensemble …rousing spirit and sacred joy aplenty. This recording will not disappoint.”

—American Record Guide, November/December 2000

“…intoxicating but precise choral sound that reminds you why choruses grew this large in the first place. The elemental power is startling…the Bethlehem approach under Greg Funfgeld isn’t anachronistic, but meets the historically enlightened approach halfway…We know from Bach’s often irritable correspondence that he campaigned for more singers. The Bach Choir of Bethlehem gives him all he could have wanted. Maybe this is “in-his-dreams” Bach.”

—Philadelphia Inquirer, December 2000

“…a performance that confirmed my belief that this is one of the finest large amateur choruses in the United States.”

—The Washington Post, May 1999

The Bach Choir gratefully acknowledges and thanks our sponsors and media partners for supporting our organization and the arts.
The Choir is supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts and the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts.

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