Sidney Hauser photo by Daniel Sheehan.
Saturday, December 28, 7:30pm
Town Hall Seattle
1119 8th Ave
On December 26, 1965, Duke Ellington presented his first concert of Sacred Music at Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church in New York City. Ellington’s extraordinary, operatic opus, which combines gospel, swing, and classical music, broke convention in the best of ways, and would be followed by two more concerts in 1968 and 1973. As a child, Ellington had attended Methodist and Baptist ministries twice each Sunday, and despite criticisms of bringing jazz to church, his last major works testified to his radical vision for the world, to say out in the open, as he put it, “what I have been saying to myself on my knees.” This year marks Seattle’s 31st annual concert of Ellington’s Sacred Music, the longest running in the country.
Returning to the newly renovated Town Hall Seattle Great Hal, the concert features the 17-piece Seattle Repertory Jazz Orchestra (SRJO), codirected by Michael Brockman and Clarence Acox, tap dancer Alex Dugdale, and the best of local vocal ensembles: the Northwest Chamber Chorus under the direction of Mark Kloepper, including vocal soloists Nichol Veneé Eskridge and Dr. Stephen Newby.
Performed less often than his earlier works, Ellington’s Sacred Music presents a challenge of scale and time for musicians and audiences: each concert is truly an event. Lara Morrison, with support from the Interfaith Council of Seattle, began in 1989 to produce the first sacred music concerts at her own financial risk at the University Christian Church, with Earshot Jazz providing assistance. Backed by a band that included Michael Brockman and Clarence Acox, soloists including pianist Marc Seales and saxophonist Don Lanphere, and the Total Experience Gospel Choir, Morrison brought a community together behind the enormity of Ellington’s music.
In 1993, Morrison entrusted the stewardship of the sacred concerts to Earshot Jazz, providing some of the impetus for the formation of SRJO under Acox and Brockman in 1994. That same year, Earshot succeeded in raising enough money to purchase scores previously rented by Morrison from the Ellington Estate (which happened to contain notes and adjustments made by Brockman, one of the foremost Ellington scholars in the country).
Throughout the years, this grassroots event has been a meeting point of the community and legendary Seattle musicians such as Floyd Standifer, Don Lanphere, Hadley Caliman, and Ed Lee.
“Its expansive spirit welcomes everyone in,” says Earshot executive director John Gilbreath, who volunteered as an usher at the concerts when he first came to the organization in 1990.
Built upon material from his earlier jazz suites that depicted his family upbringing and childhood in the Black church, the sacred concerts reflect Ellington’s late-career meditations on the struggle for freedom, justice, and forgiveness during the Civil Rights era. Their dissonances and harmonies joined sacred and secular values, drawing thousands of listeners during their first performances. Thanks to the talents of Seattle’s performers and the grace of its listeners, Ellington’s message rings out clearly to us today, having brought, and once again bringing, the greater community together for a truly joyful noise. –Editor
New this year—Pick your own assigned seat! Purchase early for the best selection. Tickets available at earshot.org.