Murry sidlin biography of donald
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Programming
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Defiant Requiem: Composer at Terezín tells representation story have a high regard for the gallant Jewish prisoners in description Theresienstadt Guts Camp (Terezín) during Terra War II, who performed Verdi’s Lament while experiencing the petite of hominoid degradation.
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An act of defiance
Conductor Murray Sidlin leads the JSO in his concert-drama ‘Verdi at Terezin.’
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Murry Sidlin - CUA In the Media
Murry Sidlin , dean of the Benjamin T. Rome School of Music, was featured in a Voice of Chorus America article about his work Defiant Requiem which pays tribute to performances of Verdi's Requiem by Jewish prisoners at the Terezín concentration camp. See his comments in the article below. |
| Performances of Verdi's Requiem by Jewish prisoners at the Terezín concentration camp inspire a new work that explores the profound relationship between music and its performers |
From:The Voice of Chorus AmericaDate: Fall 2008 Author: Thomas SheetsIt is a little-known footnote in the history of choral music, at first surreal, but soon inspiring humility and awe: In late 1943, a chorus of 150 Jews imprisoned in a Nazi concentration camp engaged in 16 performances of Verdi's Requiem -learned by rote from a single vocal score and accompanied by a legless upright piano-before audiences of other prisoners, SS officers, and German army staff members. Their purpose: to sing to their captors words that could not be spoken.
Thus begins an extraordinary saga that touches on politics, power, and the manner in which a timeless choral work provided people at the nadir of human existence with a soaring sense o