2024-2025 Season
Anchored by our ever-popular Candlelight Christmas concerts, Bach’s monumental St. Matthew Passion, and an evening of Palestrina and luminaries of the Roman Renaissance, Voices’ ambitious 2024–25 season includes a survey of American music from three very different perspectives: a program weaving together threads from multiple immigrant traditions of American choral music; an appearance at Lincoln Center’s FUTUROS Festival celebrating new ideas in Latine composition; and Voices of Mannahatta; a site-specific multimedia exploration of the land on which the Church of the Ascension sits through a commission by composer Danielle Jagelski, an enrolled member and citizen of the Oneida Nation of Wisconsin.
Subscribe now and save up to $75!
Get 5 concerts in Level A Orchestra for $425 ($500 value), or in Level B Side Seat for $180 ($220 value).
December: Candlelight Christmas
〰️
February: Palestrina and Victoria
〰️
March: St. Matthew Passion
〰️
April: Mannahatta
〰️
May: Samuel Barber, Charles Ives, Randall Thompson
〰️
December: Candlelight Christmas 〰️ February: Palestrina and Victoria 〰️ March: St. Matthew Passion 〰️ April: Mannahatta 〰️ May: Samuel Barber, Charles Ives, Randall Thompson 〰️
Candlelight Christmas
Concerts
Monday, December 16, 2024 at 7:30 pm
Tuesday, December 17, 2024 at 7:30 pm
Church of the Ascension
Brittany Olivia Logan, Soprano
Mihai Marica, Cello
Kevin Cobb, Trumpet
Daniel Beckwith, Organ
Our most popular two concerts of the season are back! Lit by the glow of hundreds of candles, enjoy seasonal masterworks, Christmas choral anthems, and family holiday favorites performed by Voices of Ascension. 25 candelabras and close to 600 candles turn the majestic Church of the Ascension into an immaculate Christmastime experience. This is an unforgettable Christmas tradition for New York concertgoers of all ages!
Rome & the renaissance
Tuesday, February 4, 2025, 7:30 pm
Church of the Ascension
Music by Palestrina, Victoria, and more
This a cappella concert celebrates the glories of Renaissance Rome, home to some of the most beloved and enduring vocal compositions of all time. The concert features works by the “Prince of Music,” Giovanni Palestrina.
Also featured will be Tomás Luis de Victoria, a Spaniard by birth who spent the peak of his career working as Maestro di Capella in cathedrals throughout Rome.
St. Matthew passion
Thursday, March 13, 2025, 7:00 pm*
Church of the Ascension
Johann Sebastian Bach’s St. Matthew Passion is perhaps the most beloved in his tremendous canon of works for chorus and orchestra. Across a full riveting evening, the piece unfolds using two orchestras, two choruses, a children’s chorus, dramatic characters, narration, and exquisite baroque aria performances.
The full scope of Bach’s unmatched talent for marrying compositional complexity with profound emotional expression come together to tell the timeless story of the Passion narrative.
*Please note the early start time
voices of mannahatta
Tuesday, April 8, 2025, 7:30 pm
Church of the Ascension
World premiere composition by Danielle Jagelski
Video Art by Sage Ahebah Addington
Hai-Ting Chinn, Curator, Voices of The New
No consideration of the complexity of American culture could be complete without the perspective of the Indigenous people, who steward this land past, present, and future. Voices of Ascension commissioned composer Danielle Jagelski to write an extended ensemble narrative exploring the history and context of the piece of land on which the Church of the Ascension sits today in Mannahatta (Manhattan Island).
american voices
Thursday, May 8, 2025 at 7:30 pm
Church of the Ascension
Music by Samuel Barber, Charles Ives, Randall Thompson, Bora Yoon, Moses Hogan, Gian Carlo Menotti, and more
This concert will traverse the full range of American choral music, celebrating the rich diversity of Americans with roots in Europe, Asia, and Africa. Featuring Charles Ives’s Psalm 90 and Randall Thompson’s Alleluia, the program will also include the evocative sounds of contemporary Korean-American composer Bora Yoon; a panorama of African-American spiritual arrangements by Harry Burleigh, William Dawson, and Moses Hogan; and the motets of Gian Carlo Menotti. A highlight of the evening will be a rare performance of Samuel Barber’s Agnus Dei, which is the choral version of his beloved and deeply moving Adagio for Strings.