The UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA presents
Townsend Losey, conductor
MM Choral Recital
featuring
Repertory Singers
Townsend Losey, conductor
MM Choral Recital
featuring
Repertory Singers
Stacey V. Gibbs (b. 1962) — Hold On!
Kyra Stahr, soprano
Townsend Losey (b. 1990) — Interlude: Of Oppression
Chamber Ensemble*
Josquin des Prez (c. 1450-1521) — Mille regretz
Gabrielle Losey, soprano
Laura Leigh Spillane, soprano
Ali Sandweiss Hodges, alto
Josh Munnell, alto
Samuel Avila, tenor
Marcus Desir, tenor
Connor Scott, bass
Theo Trevisan, bass
J. S. Bach (1685-1750) — Nach dir, Herr, verlanget mich, BWV 150
1. Sinfonia
2. Nach dir, Herr, verlanget mich
3. Doch bin und bleibe ich vergnügt
4. Leite mich in deiner Wahrheit
5. Zedern müssen von den Winden
6. Meine Augen sehen stets zu dem Herrn
7. Meine Tage in dem Leide
Micheala Kelly, soprano
Ali Sandweiss Hodges, alto
Jon Lee Keenan, tenor
Chung Uk Lee, bass
Townsend Losey (b. 1990) — Interlude: Of Flight
Chamber Ensemble*
Abbie Betinis (b. 1980) — Be Like the Bird
Daniel Leese, tenor
Moira Smiley (b. 1976) — A Sto Cemo
Michelle Packman, cello
Townsend Losey (b. 1990) — Interlude: Of Desire
Chamber Ensemble*
Townsend Losey (b. 1990) — Three Choral Songs
1. The Lady & Her Castle
2. He Walks Along Alone
3. That Lucky Old Sun
Michaela Kelly, soprano
Jon Lee Keenan, tenor
Chamber Ensemble*
*Abigail Park, violin
*Sara Yamada, violin
*Michelle Packman, cello
*Daniel St. John, bassoon
*Collin Boothby, organ
*So-Mang Jeagal, piano
Oh yes.
Keep your hand on the plow,
hold on, just hold on.
Nora, Nora, let me come in,
the doors all fastened and the windows pinned.
Nora said, “You done lost your track,
well, you can’t plow straight
and keep-a looking back.
Brother, hold on, oh sister, hold on.
Keep your hand on the plow,
hold on, just hold on
If you want to get to Heaven, let me tell you how,
just keep your hand on the gospel plow.
If that plow stays in your hand,
land you straight into the Promised land.
Mary had a golden chain
and every link spelled my Jesus’ name.
Keep on climbing and don’t you tire
cause every rung goes higher and higher.
Brother, hold on, oh sister, hold on.
Keep your hand on the plow,
hold on, just hold on
Mille regretz de vous abandonner
A thousand regrets for abandoning you
Et d'eslonger votre fache amoureuse,
and to lengthen your frustration in love,
Jay si grand dueil et paine douloureuse,
I have such great sadness and painful distress
Quon me verra brief mes jours définer.
That they will see, soon my days will dwindle away
Nach dir, Herr, verlanget mich.
For you, Lord, is my longing.
Mein Gott, ich hoffe auf dich;
My God, I hope in you;
laß mich nicht zuschanden werden,
let me not be put to shame,
daß sich meine Feinde nicht freuen über mich.
so that my enemies may not rejoice over me.
Doch bin und bleibe ich vergnügt,
But I am and remain content,
obgleich hier zeitlich toben
although here for a time there rage
Kreuz, Sturm und andre Proben,
cross, storm and other trials,
Tod, Höll und was sich fügt.
death, hell and what is ordained.
Ob Unfall schlägt den treuen Knecht,
Even if misfortune strikes your faithful servant,
Recht ist und bleibet ewig Recht.
right is and always remains right.
Leite mich in deiner Wahrheit und lehre mich!
Lead me in your truth and teach me!
Denn du bist der Gott, der mir hilft;
For you are the God, who helps me;
täglich harre ich dein.
everyday I wait for you.
Zedern müssen von den Winden
Cedars must before the wind
oft viel Ungemach empfinden,
often feel much hardship,
niemals werden sie verkehrt.
never they are overturned.
Rat und Tat auf Gott gestellet,
Thought and action entrust to God,
achtet nicht, was widerbellet,
pay no attention to what howls against you,
denn sein Wort ganz anders lehrt.
for his word teaches quite otherwise.
Meine Augen sehen stets zu dem Herrn;
My eyes look always towards the Lord;
denn er wird meinen Fuß aus dem Netze ziehen.
for he will pull my foot out of the net.
Meine Tage in dem Leide
My days spent in sorrow
endet Gott dennoch zur Freude.
God ends nevertheless with joy.
Christen auf den Dornenwegen
Christians on the thorny ways
krönet Himmels Kraft und Segen.
are crowned by heaven's strength and blessing.
Bleibet Gott mein treuer Schutz,
If God remains my faithful protection,
achte ich nicht Menschentrutz.
I do not heed men’s spite.
Christus, der uns steht zur Seiten,
Christ, who stands at our side,
hilft mir täglich sieghaft streiten.
helps me everyday to victoriously struggle.
Be like the bird that,
pausing in her flight a while on boughs too slight,
feels them give way beneath her,
and sings, and sings, and sings knowing she hath wings.
—Victor Hugo
A sto cemo ljubav kriti kad ja moram toja biti?
And why should we hide our love When you should be mine?
Srce vise nije moje tebi dragi pripaloje.
My heart is no longer mine. It belongs to you, my dear.
Sto me tebi tako vude? Osjecaji mene muce.
What attracts you to me so? My feelings are tormenting me.
Il’ me uzmi il' me ubi. Ne daj drugom de me ljubi.
Either take me or kill me. Don't let another love me.
The grass bounds over hills.
Purple-flowered trees cast gentle shadows over the fertile earth.
The birds build their nests in the thick, green walls that enclose the castle yard.
Even the deer come around for the roses,
And they stay to play in the open field.
But you are not there.
Alone, she surveys the landscape,
And what does she see?
Memories tread transparently across the luscious wasteland.
Not one of them finds a breath of rest here.
Not one of them breathes at all.
How can a place this void of hope look so serene?
What is this false hope that tries to fool her?
Has the world no empathy for her now
After all the life she has shared with it?
What good is fulfillment once it’s over and gone?
Why does it leave you more empty than before?
he walks
through moonlight,
on a smooth
stone
path
that’s gnawing
at his cold
bare feet
he walks
alone,
though he
could be
home,
where
little
more
warmth will greet
him
Tonight,
he walks along
alone
looking
down as his
toes turn to
ice
hoping
only that
his heart will grow
numb,
too if
he walks
far enough to
know
where.
Up in the mornin’, out on the job
Work like the devil for my pay
But that lucky old sun has nothin' to do
But roll around heaven all day
Fuss with my woman, toil for my kids
Sweat till I'm wrinkled and gray
While that lucky old sun has nothin' to do
But roll around heaven all day
Good Lord above, can't you know I'm pining
Tears all in my eyes
Send down that cloud with a silver lining
Lift me to Paradise
Show me that river, take me across
Wash all my troubles away
Like that lucky old sun, who has nothing to do
But roll around heaven all day
—Haven Gillespie
Hold On! | traditional spiritual arr. Stacey V. Gibbs (b. 1962)
The Negro spirituals hold an important place in choral repertoire, not simply for their excellence as a musical style, but for their significant history of origination. In the midst of the evil of slavery and oppression, the enslaved people sang songs of poignant hope for liberation. Hold On! is one of these songs—a work song to be sung during the toilsome labor, which serves as a communal expression of lament, as well as inspiration for perseverance and hope amidst the injustice. The speaker urges brothers and sisters who want to get to heaven to keep their hand on the gospel plow and don’t look back.
Stacey V. Gibbs—a renowned composer, arranger, and clinician specializing in this style—arranges the spiritual using two contrasting units of the ensemble. As the tenors and basses play a supportive roll with a backdrop of syncopated rhythmic textures, the sopranos and altos express the melodic and textual material in gospel-like, homophonic, three-part harmony. In addition to the contrapuntal texture, Gibbs embellishes the spiritual with modern blues notes and jazz harmonies, making the piece a sophisticated yet authentic and compelling rendition of the original spiritual.
Mille regretz | Josquin des Prez (c. 1450-1521)
Among the greatest composers of the Renaissance era was Josquin des Prez, a prolific Franco-Flemish composer for both the church as well as the popular scene. In the fashion of a true renaissance man, Josquin could compose for any light-hearted or somber genre of the day, including sacred mass and motet, Italian madrigal and frottola, and French chanson. He was famous during his lifetime—considerably less so, however, than Obrecht—but for decades after his death, his fame only grew. Prominent figures praised his work, including Martin Luther, exclaiming in a table talk 1538, “Josquin is the master of the notes, which must do as he wishes, while other composers must follow what the notes dictate.” Luther went on to request that Josquin’s music be performed at his deathbed.
Mille regretz is one of Josquin’s late chansons in four voices. Though in this case abandoning his characteristic use of canons, the texture is based on imitation. The thematic melodic motive makes use of the rising and falling of a half-step interval, as heard in the opening measures in the bass line, unmistakably emoting passionate longing to enhance the text, “A thousand regrets at deserting you.” As is typical of his style, Josquin often employs either two or three voices at a time, which would overlap with an answering phrase of a different combination of two or three voices. He reserves the simultaneous use of all four voice parts for climactic moments, as in “J’ay si grand dueil…” [“I feel such great sadness…”] which he abruptly abandons to two voices as he continues “…et paine doloreuse” [“and painful distress”]. Josquin repeats the final line of text—“brief mes jours définer” [“soon my days are dwindling”]—several times in strict homophony, as if it were a fading echo.
Nach dir, Herr, verlanget mich, BWV 150 | Johann Sebastion Bach (1685-1750)
Before the refined and celebrated cantatas of J. S. Bach’s days at Thomaskirche in Leipzig (1723-1750), Bach most likely began composing his sacred cantatas in 1707 at his position in Mühlhausen or possibly at his former position in Arnstadt. In this same year, Bach married his first wife, Maria Barbara (b 20 Oct 1684), who soon gave birth to their first child, Catharina Dorothea Bach (1708 – 1774). Although the purpose and performances of the composition are unknown, Cantata no. 150 is among the earliest known cantatas that Bach composed in around 1708. Due to its unrefined nature in comparison to the Leipzig cantatas, the authorship of this cantata was uncertain for many years. However, Bach scholar Hans-Joachim Schulze confirmed its authenticity in an essay from 2010. Schulze discovered a hidden acrostic dedication using the first letters of the lines in the freely written poetry of movements 3, 5, and 7, spelling Doctor Conrad Meckbach, who was a member of the city council in Mühlhausen who proposed to elect Bach for the position of organist at the Divi Blasii church (Hofmann, Forward to BWV 150, Carus Verlag).
The libretto of Nach dir, Herr, verlanget mich is derived from Psalm 25, verses 1, 2, 5, and 15, intermingled with original poetry, the authorship of which is unknown. In his cantata on the theme of longing, Bach opens the Sinfonia with the same melodic expression of longing as Josquin in Mille regretz: a rising and falling half step in the first violin. The pervasive theme of the cantata is an upward leap followed by descending stepwise chromatic seconds as heard in the opening choral lines of the second movement, which express weariness and struggle through the text, “After you, O Lord, is my longing.” In the 16 measures before this first text is sung, this chromatic theme appears 6 times in the violins and continuo. Simultaneously, Bach introduces a shorter, diatonic version of the theme (an upward leap of a perfect fourth followed by a descending scale) in eighth notes. This material is a clear melodic quote from the chorale “Herzlich tut mich verlangen” [“I do very sincerely desire”] by Hans Leo Hassler, which audiences would have recognized at the time. In the opening section of the second movement, the descending chromatic theme appears 14 times in various voices before an abrupt quickening of tempo with the words “Ich hoffe auf dich” [“I hope in you”]. The chromatic theme returns in an embellished melismatic form in the final sprint to close the movement.
The third movement features imitative melodies between the continuo, violins, and soprano soloist. As with much of the cantata, the listener senses a conflict of emotions, in this case between contentment in God amidst the raging of the world. The soloist asserts that even if misfortune were to befall God’s faithful servant, God’s righteousness is undiminished. The following choral movement begins with contrast—an ascending melody that dovetails though all four sections, starting from the basses up to the sopranos, and continuing to the violins— as the subject pleads for God’s truth to guide and teach. The section ends in brisk melismas expressing the urgency of waiting on God’s answer with the text “täglich harre ich dein” [“every day I wait on you”].
The fifth movement, a trio with alto, tenor, and bass soloists and continuo, effectively paints the tension in the text. The fierce blowing of the wind (cello) and the howling of the world (“widerbellet”) do nothing to interrupt the security in God’s word (the steady bassoon, and the pleasant homophonic phrases in the voices). In the sixth movement translated “My eyes look always toward the Lord”, Bach repeats the text “stets zu dem Herrn” [“always toward the Lord”] in various harmonies to place this statement in different circumstances as if to say, “Whether in stability, in silence, in questioning, or in disappointment, my eyes look always toward the Lord.” The initial theme of descending chromatic seconds returns in the closing section, “For he will pull my foot out of the net.”
The seventh and final movement depicts a reversal even though circumstances remain unchanged. Whereas most of the piece up to this point has themes melodic descent, this movement is founded on a a persistent upward progression in the continuo. This repeating four bar figure is interrupted by one descending series just before the first iteration of the last line of text, “Christus, der uns steht zur Seiten, hilft mir täglich sieghaft streiten” [“Christ, who stands at our side, helps me daily to victoriously struggle”]. The name “Christus” is sung only twice, and both times in haunting duets, first by the sopranos and altos, then by the tenors and basses. This invokes Bach’s understanding of Christ’s compassion as one who enters inter human suffering as one who sacrificed his life, accepting a brutal death to atone for the sins of all humankind. The final word of the cantata “streiten” translates to “fight” or “struggle,” which could suggest that the victory is in faithfully engaging our daily struggle and not in overcoming it through a miraculous change of circumstances.
Be Like the Bird | Abbie Betinis (b. 1980)
Composer Abbie Betinis writes music called "inventive, richly melodic" (The New York Times) and “joyful… shattering, incandescent” (Boston Globe). A two-time McKnight Artist Fellow, and listed in NPR Music's 100 Composers Under Forty, she was recently named Musical America’s Artist of the Month, with a feature article lauding her “contrapuntal vitality” and “her ability to use her talents to effect social change.” She has written over 80 commissioned pieces for world-class organizations, including the American Choral Directors Association, Cantus, Chorus Pro Musica, Dale Warland Singers, The Schubert Club, St. Olaf Choir, and Zeitgeist. She lives in Minnesota, where she is adjunct professor of composition at Concordia University-St Paul and co-founding executive director of Justice Choir. (*from composer’s personal website: https://www.abbiebetinis.com/biography.html)
Be Like the Bird is composed in a brilliantly simplistic five-part round. Listeners will hear the melody sung once as a solo, then in two subsequent combinations—first as a three part round, then in a five-part round, which effectively highlight different dissonances.
A Sto Cemo | Bosnian folk song arr. Moira Smiley (b. 1976)
As a composer, Moira Smiley is known worldwide for choral arrangements like Bring Me Little Water, Silvy and originals, Stand in That River and How Can I Cry. She’s in demand as a commissioned composer, writing multi-movement pieces like Time In Our Voices and In The Desert With You for the Los Angeles Master Chorale, Vonnegut Requiem: Light Perpetual for Voces Novae, Loud My Soul for Ad Astra Festival and Headwaters for The Myrna Loy Theater. The European premiere of Time In Our Voices was performed by the voices and mobile phones of Ars Nova Copenhagen under the direction of Paul Hillier. In 2018-2019 Moira released the album and choral songbook, Unzip The Horizon as companion to her The Voice Is A Traveler solo show. She continues composing and improvising in collaboration with artists in film, video game production, theater and dance, and her work can be heard on feature film soundtracks, BBC & PBS television programs, NPR, and on more than 70 commercial albums. Upcoming premieres and current projects include Greta Sails for youth choir, Utopias for voices and strings, and a re-telling of Ovid’s tale of Narcissus for mobile phones and voices. (*from composer’s personal website: https://moirasmiley.com/?page_id=121234)
Smiley’s arrangement of A Sto Cemo, a popular Sevdah or urban folk song from Bosnia, maintains the folky quality of the song, adding simple harmonies to the melody along with cello accompaniment. The folk song features dramatic vocal expressions with rubato phrasing and ornamentation. It appears in simple verse-chorus form to tell the story of one who longs for her lover to “take me or kill me, and don’t let another love me!”
The Lady and Her Castle | Townsend Losey (b. 1990)
This piece is about my Aunt Kathy. In real life, she was a cheerful, positive, and sweet lady, and I think all the sadness in this song comes from my own projections. But still, I knew that her heart was heavy with sadness from the sudden loss of her husband many years ago. I knew she still missed him every day. I always felt that her heart was beautiful, and that if everything lovely and sweet about her life could have just come back, I would want it that way.
Though I wrote the music in the summer of 2020, I used text from one of my journal entries in 2015. Life was very different then. I lived at my Aunt Kathy's house in Arcadia, California, which became known as Aunt Kathy's Castle because of its sheer size and beauty. The yard was always lush and vibrant, and it had many visitors—birds, deer, coyotes, bobcats, bears... It was a lovely place to be, and I'll never stop being grateful for the time I had there.
My life was sad at that time. I had lots of pretty things, and I was in a pretty place, but I felt very alone. I would watch Aunt Kathy peering out over the steps down to the pool and beyond across the field and out into the trees. I knew she felt the same thing I did. She missed someone, and she wished they would fill that space again. I had been in love with Gabrielle for some time, now. We had shared many transcendent moments, but she had not decided to love me, and at that point, I was not sure that she ever would.
But one thing I knew. I loved her. And I had Aunt Kathy, my sweet and lovely friend who sat next to me, feeling her own deep and beautiful longings. And the place where we sat, alone together, was full of luscious life—a present declaration of hope that we had either forgotten or not yet known.
I composed the music for this piece in the summer of 2020, just months before Aunt Kathy’s death on Thanksgiving of that year. She is remembered as a beacon of gentleness and kindness by everyone who knew her.
He Walks Along Alone | Townsend Losey
This is one of my earliest compositions, first composed in 2012 for double choir and soloists. Since then, it has undergone a number of versions. More recently, I reorchestrated the piece for choir, soloists, winds and strings, as a movement of a larger work entitled Reckless Remembering. I wanted this work to shed some light on my experience with depression, which has been a part of me in some form or another for most of the years I can remember. Though it can be a challenging, heavy, or even dangerous thing, it is also beautiful. It often results in depth of understanding, greater compassion for others, and a more wholesome sense of identity—if managed healthfully and carefully, of course—though it often takes long seasons of trials, doubt, sadness, and patience to get there. He Walks Along Alone highlights the feeling of loneliness I could not seem to escape as a child, though all my life I have been surrounded by a large and supportive family, as well as loving friends! I have never truly been alone, but feelings—especially in long seasons of depression—can convince us otherwise.
That Lucky Old Sun | Beasely Smith (1901-1968) and Townsend Losey
When we were young, my brothers and sisters reluctantly enjoyed the mornings when our father would wake us up with singing. Sometimes it was “Reveille” or “It’s A Good Day” by Peggy Lee, but more often it was “That Lucky Old Sun”, the pop song from the 1970’s with by Beasley Smith with lyrics by Haven Gillespie, made popular by iconic performers including Frankie Lane, Louis Armstrong, and many others. Oddly enough, I had never heard a recording of the song until I was in my twenties, but I knew it well, in a very sleepy way.
In this composition, I adapted the text and the melody to capture that moment of being woken up by my dad, affectionately known by family as “Pop” or “Dr. Losey” by all of my acquaintances. When he first heard the piece, he both laughed and cried, telling me that he wasn’t sure I captured the original escapist intention of the piece, but somehow made it much more reverent.
I do love this text for its expression of longing—even in fullness. The author has a reliable job to show up to each day, along with a wife to quarrel with and kids to toil for. What is full life if not this? And in this season of my own life, this is something that resonates with me. No matter what season of life we are in, we are made to long—for expression, for connection, for affirmation, for deliverance, for peace, and for rest. I do believe that these are things to lean in to, and to cry out in our longing, for it draws us deeper into the relationships that matter most, and it can drive us to create beauty out of longing.
Townsend Losey’s impassioned vision for community integration through excellence in music drives him to conduct vigorous psychologically and spiritually charged concerts. Through his introspective compositions for choral and instrumental ensembles, Townsend celebrates the commonalities and complexities of human experience. Commended by Grant Gershon for his “musical” conducting of Handel’s Dixit Dominus and praised by Richard Burchard for the interpretation of his choral music, Townsend embodies character in music with intuitiveness and depth.
Before finishing his Bachelor of Music degree in Composition at Azusa Pacific University, Townsend founded Ensoma Creative, a small volunteer choir of young choral artists dedicated to collegiality, collaboration, and excellence. Since its conception in 2014, the ensemble has offered fourteen concerts under his leadership, including performances of Fauré Requiem, Drurflé Requiem, and Handel’s Dixit Dominus with professional orchestra and soloists, as well as premieres of dozens of works composed for the ensemble.
At the onset of the COVID-19 outbreak, Townsend produced eleven virtual choir projects with Ensoma Creative featuring local visual artists, soloists, songwriters, arrangers, and composers.
Townsend’s undergraduate focus was in choral music with continuous membership in elite academic choirs. To further his reputability in the professional choral world, Losey returned to his studies at the University of Southern California. He is a current Master of Music candidate in Choral Music at the Thornton School of Music, where he studies composition with Frank Ticheli and conducting with Troy Quinn, Tram Sparks, Christian Grases, and Nick Strimple.
Townsend resides in the South Bay with his wife, son and two daughters, and he serves as the Director of Worship Ministries at Ascension Lutheran Church of Ranchos Palos Verdes.
There are a number of people without whom this concert would not have been possible.
I owe a debt of gratitude to Dr. Sparks, Dr. Scheibe, Dr. Grases, and Dr. Strimple for the ways that you have shaped this program and allowed me this opportunity, as well as for your invaluable instruction. I am privileged to learn from you.
To my conducting instructor, Dr. Troy Quinn—you have imparted critical insights in my recital preparation process, and your guidance on this music has enabled me to conduct this difficult repertoire with clarity and confidence. Thank you for your attention and inspiration!
To So-Mang, our collaborative pianist—you continue to inspire me! You are a remarkable musician who cares deeply for the purpose beyond the notes on the page. Thank you for contributing true beauty to this performance, an for being the inspiration behind the instrumental interludes. I am delighted to collaborate with you.
To my wife, Gabrielle—I would not have the capacity nor the time to pursue this degree without your willingness to take on so much at home. The sacrifice that you make to keep our children and our family thriving is tremendous, and I can never stop thinking about it. Thank you for believing me enough to make this possible, and for possessing the strength to help me follow through on this endeavor, even as you toil on the home front—day in and day out—for what must seem like an eternity to you. I would not be here if it were not for you.
Josh Kun
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Cristian Grases
Professor, Choral & Sacred Music
Jo-Michael Scheibe
Professor, Choral & Sacred Music
Nick Strimple
Professor of Practice, Choral & Sacred Music
Suzi Digby
Adjunct Professor, Choral & Sacred Music
Museop Kim
Adjunct Instructor in Vocal Arts
Troy Quinn
Adjunct Instructor in Conducting
Iris Levine
Part-Time Faculty
Mikhail Shtangrud
Part-Time Faculty
Collin Boothby
Stevie Hirner
Ali Sandweiss Hodges
Michael Raleigh
Connor Scott
Laura Leigh Spillane
Nicholas Tham
We are grateful to the following individuals who have made contributions to the
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