Rave reviews for latest Taylor Festival Choir CD!

We are just delighted to see that there are so many happy listeners as a result of Taylor Festival Choir’s new CD: Sing We Now of Christmas. Head on over to the Amazon.com ‘Sing We Now of Christmas’ page to read some of our listeners comments!

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Chicago’s 98.7 WFMT choose Taylor Festival Choir as favorite!

Chicago 98.7 WFMTChicago WFMT Holiday Recordings 2010
Lisa Flynn over at Chicago’s 98.7 WFMT has chosen Taylor Festival Choir’s Sing We Now of Christmas as one of her top Holiday Recordings of 2010! We are delighted to receive such an endorsement from one of the USA’s finest classical music radio stations.

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CD release: Sing We Now of Christmas

Sing We Now of Christmas CD cover

Taylor Festival Choir have released a new CD titled “Sing We Now of Christmas” for Christmas 2010!  Read below to see what people are saying about the recording and the live performances of music from the recording.  You can purchase the CD here.

Posted by Phil Muse on Audio Video Club of Atlanta Holiday Classical reviews December 2010:

Robert Taylor, director of choral activities at the College of Charleston, SC, leads his own Taylor Festival Choir “Sing We Now of Christmas” (MSR Classics), a choral feast that will linger long in your memory after you’ve heard it. The music’s spell is enhanced by the accompanying instruments, giving it a middle eastern flavor that is appropriate to many of the selections dealing with holy birth and holy mystery. Besides the catchy lilt and sway of Liz Carroll’s Celtic fiddle, John Doyle’s guitar and mandola, and Kim Robertson’s Celtic harp, we have Susan Conant playing various whistles and recorders and Danny Mallon on a variety of percussion instruments including finger cymbals, wood railing, jingle bells, and bodhran, a Celtic frame drum with an open end for the hand to control the pitch. The exquisite vocal artistry of the 28 member Taylor Festival Singers will take your breath away in stylish, imaginative arrangements of carols and traditionals such as I Saw Three Ships, In the Bleak Midwinter, Wexford Carol, Wassail, Lord of the Dancing Day, Coventry Carol, Patapan, and the Basque traditional Gabriel’s Message (in a superb arrangement by Stephen Paulus). Less familiar, but equally moving are Today the Virgin (John Tavener), Estampie Natalis (Vaclav Nelhybel, from a 16th century original), and Children’s Song of the Nativity, arranged by Ralph Vaughan Williams from an English traditional. The artistry of the choir and vocalists is such as to discourage home listener sing-alongs, though if you’re like me you will be more than content to sit back and enjoy this musical feast. I even liked the Little Drummer Boy, to which I’d been so over-exposed I didn’t think anyone’s version could possibly enchant me.

From the Amazon.com CD page:

This is the perfect gift for the Advent Season. The Taylor Festival Choir, conducted by Robert Taylor, have finally recorded a Christmas CD. So many of my favorite carols have been reinterpreted here with a Celtic flair. Virtuosic performances by singers and imstrumentalists combine to offer a spiritual restorative during this bustling, over-scheduled Season. Sit back and relax with your beverage of choice…be it a steaming cup of tea or cider, or perhaps a Guinness. Robert Taylor’s version of Mrs. Fogarty’s Christmas Cake can’t help but elicit a chuckle. In the Bleak Midwinter, as arranged by Brian Galante, is just about the loveliest thing I’ve ever heard. Karen Marrolli has given Patapan an unexpected mystical feel, transporting the listener to an earlier age replete with high stone walls and the scent of a peat fire, while Liz Carroll and John Doyle add their artistry to this not to be missed arrangement. The Taylor Festival Choir has a sound no other choir has, beautifully blending to provide an exquisite listening experience. You will emerge refreshed and in tune with the Christmas Season.

I cannot end this review wtihout a special mention of the young soloist on the final track, Children’s Song of the Nativity. The ethereal quality of her voice is deightful, and perfectly suited to this piece. I hope you have the opportunity to hear Sing We Now of Christmas by the Taylor Festival Choir. Merry Christmas!

I usually don’t post my opinions but I couldn’t agree more with the first two. The music is exceptional. The only additional comments would be to refer you to their website if you want to get a real feel for who they are as well as tell you if you have any Celtic leanings, the music WILL take you make in time.

This CD is awesome. The choir’s voices are so beautiful. The version of Little Drummer Boy is mesmerizing because the tempo is not too fast. The tracks with the Celtic improvisations with Liz Carroll and John Doyle are very clever and uplifting. Sing we now of Christmas is my favorite. What an ingenious arrangement. I have listened to it a couple of dozen times already. Mrs. Fogarty’s cake is very funny. The Whitacre and McGlynn selections are such a nice change of pace from the worn out christmas carols that are usually on holiday cds. This is definitely my favorite Christmas Cd in my collection. I hope the Taylor Festival Choir makes one every year!

My wife leaned over and said “This is the best thing we’ve seen in thee years in Charleston.” I agree! What a great array of talent across the board, from the young fiddlers, to the fine, fine singers and players, to the brilliance of Mr. Doyle. Above all, congrats to the visionary who dreamed it, and scored it out.

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C of C Concert Choir Fall Concert

The College of Charleston’s Department of Music will present a fall concert by its nationally acclaimed Concert Choir led by Dr. Robert Taylor. The event will take place at 8 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 29, 2010 in the Cathedral of St. Luke and St. Paul, 126 Coming Street. The concert will feature indvidual songs and movements from larger works and cycles, including movements from Morten Lauridsen’s Madrigali, Claudio Monteverdi’s 1610 Vespers, and Benjamin Britten’s Dances from Gloriana. The program will also feature movements from a choral setting of the Bill of Rights by Nealy Bruce, composer of the opera Flora from the 2010 Spoleto Festival. Admission is $10 at the door.

The College of Charleston Concert Choir was one of eleven collegiate choirs chosen from the United States to perform at the prestigious National Collegiate Choral Organization (NCCO) National Convention, held on the campus of Cincinnati Conservatory in Cincinnati, Ohio.

In 2005, the Concert Choir traveled to Los Angeles to perform in the American Choral Directors Association National Convention. The Concert Choir has also performed in other regional festivals, including American Guild of Organists state and regional conventions, and annually in Piccolo Spoleto’s Choral Artist Series. They frequently collaborate with the Charleston Symphony Orchestra, including the recent performance of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony.

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10th Anniversary Season: Opening Concert

Rachmaninov Vespers

Rachmaninov Vespers

Taylor Festival Choir

Dr. Robert Taylor, Director

September 25, 2010 at 8pm
Cathedral of St. John the Baptist
120 Broad Street
Charleston, SC

September 26 at 3pm
St. Paul’s Evangelical Lutheran Church
10 West 31st Street (corner of 31st and Bull st)
Savannah, GA

For more information call 953-8231

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