WHAT IS THE WHEATLAND CHORALE?
Since its founding in 1987 by Artistic Director Robert J. Upton, the
Wheatland Chorale has earned a reputation as one of Pennsylvania's premier
choral ensembles. The singers, all volunteers, are selected through
audition, and travel from throughout Lancaster and Berks counties and
beyond for rehearsals in Lancaster. The Chorale is named after the
Wheatland Hills neighborhood where Mr. Upton lived in Lancaster at the
time the group was formed.
The popularity of the Wheatland Chorale has grown steadily. The regular
season includes a two concert subscription series, performed in three
different locations in December and April. The Chorale has been recognized
by the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts for artistic excellence with
annual grants to support the choir's mission - "to promote and perpetuate
choral music through excellence in performance." The ensemble now numbers
39 singers and has performed throughout Central Pennsylvania, as well as
at St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York City, the National Cathedral and
the White House in Washington, D.C., and on tours in Austria, Germany, and England. The choir has
also performed several times with the "Celebrate Bach!" orchestra of the
Mt. Gretna Music Festival and with the Harrisburg Symphony. The Wheatland
Chorale has been heard on WITF-FM public radio and was featured on the
premiere season of "The First Art", a public radio program featuring
American choral groups.
The choir's repertoire is very broad, and features selections from all
periods. The group has also commissioned several works. The first
commission, "Child of Our Time", renamed "The Stolen Child", by composer
Scott Robinson, premiered in 1992. A recording of that performance was
broadcast twice on "The First Art".
ABOUT THE DIRECTOR
Founder and Artistic Director Robert Upton is a graduate of Westminster
Choir College, Princeton, NJ, and the Dickinson School of Law, Carlisle,
PA. Before forming the Wheatland Chorale, Mr. Upton resided in Harrisburg,
PA, where he was founder and director of The Chamber Singers of
Harrisburg. While in college, he performed in choruses under such notables
as Leonard Bernstein, James Levine, and Seiji Ozawa. Although his legal
career took him to Philadelphia very soon after founding the Wheatland
Chorale, he has continued to make the weekly commute to Lancaster for the
last 18 years, September through April of each year. Mr. Upton is
currently Senior Counsel, AAA Mid-Atlantic, Inc.
ROBERT UPTON ON THE FINE ART OF CONCERT COMPOSITION
"To me, picking out music for a concert is one of the most enjoyable
jobs of a conductor. For weeks, or months, sometimes even years, before I
actually select the music for the next season, ideas for sections of a
concert play through my mind. Although I have absolutely no talent for
writing music myself, I feel the thrill of composition as a concert
program begins to take shape.
When this process is going on, I enjoy coming across new music in a
store, at a convention or concert, or brought to me by a choir member or
someone from our audience. These pieces often trigger ideas for new or
different grouping of pieces than I had in mind. What is it I'm looking
for? I'm listening for interesting combinations and contrasts, threads of
themes, concepts that weave their way through a series of numbers, an ebb
and flow of emotional reactions, intellectual challenges, fresh musical
ideas. And of course I'm looking for all these things packaged in
beautiful, inventive music that showcases the Chorale's wonderful sound
and musicianship.
Armed with these ideas, and boxes and boxes of music I've accumulated
over the years, I finally sit down at my piano. I start with a pile of
"must sings" and a pile of "hopefuls" and build from there. I play the
pieces over and over in various combinations. Sections of the concert
form, sometimes to dissolve away, sometimes to reappear in other
configurations. Sometimes a favorite just has to wait for another year.
I love interesting transitions between pieces almost as much as the
pieces themselves. So, the emotional, intellectual and musical movement
between them is always on my mind. Is the transition too abrupt? Or is
something abrupt just what we need at this point? Do we need to keep
historical consistency for one more piece, or is it time to make a shift
in musical periods that nonetheless might point out some interesting
consistency or comparison between them? Do we need an intellectual or
musical challenge, or a restful interlude?
After much work, and though it may not be apparent from recent programming,
the concert usually takes shape except for a hole here
and there. I then dive back into my boxes, or call a friend or trusted
adviser at a music store, and look for pieces with very specific
characteristics. Maybe a certain mood, or complexity of construction, or
text or style of composition is needed at a particular point. I love the
thrill of coming up with just the right piece-usually something new to
me-to fill that spot. Then it's off to our treasurer to make sure my ideas
fit our budget.
I don't think going to a concert should feel like taking medicine. Nor
should it be like a music history lesson or a museum collection of choral
classics, one after the other with no real connection to each other. To
me, a concert should feel like a satisfying, varied journey with a sense
of organic development tying the whole experience together. It should have
time for introductions, time for surprising new ideas, time for
intellectual challenge, and time to relax with old friends. And, like an
evening with any of the arts, we should leave with the surprising sense
that we are more humane than when we started-a bit more aware, more
grounded, or more enlightened-and if we've done it right, tingling in our
fibers with a renewed sense of life."