Russian-American Orthodox choir nominated for 2019 Grammy

Los Angeles, December 10, 2018

Photo: referencerecordings.com Photo: referencerecordings.com
    

The nominees for the 2019 Grammy Awards were announced on Friday, and notably, a Russian-American Orthodox choir is among the nominees.

In particular, the Patriarch Tikhon Russian-American Music Institute’s (PaTRAM) latest album, “Teach Me Thy Statutes,” featuring works of Pavel Chesnokov, under the direction of Maestro Vladimir Gorbik, has been nominated in the Best Choral Performance category.

The PaTRAM website notes that MusicWeb International also recently designated “Teach Me Thy Statutes” as its recording of the year.

The album was recorded in Saratov Russia with a 42-piece ensemble including superb singers from Russia and America. The album has received many rave reviews, including from Dan Morgan of MusicWeb International, who said:

“Really, this is a remarkable recording… Is there nothing this choir can’t do, no challenge to which they can’t rise? Of course, so much credit is due to Gorbik’s inspiring leadership, his devotion to, and affinity for, this music laid bare in every bar. Intensely beautiful singing and sound; quite simply, choral albums don’t come much better than this.”

The album can be listened to and purchased at Reference Recordings, Amazon, and iTunes.

The conductor, Vladimir Gorbik is one of the most respected in Russia today, and is well-known beyond the bounds of Russia as well. He completed a specialization in choral conducting at the Moscow State Conservatory in 1998 and in orchestral conducting in 2000. Since 1996, he has served as the choir director at the Moscow Representation Church of the Holy Trinity-St. Sergius Monastery, and since 1998 has been the Artistic Director and Conductor of the professional men’s chorus formed at the Metochion. On September 2012, he was appointed to the conducting faculty of the Moscow State Conservatory. He is also a PaTRAM founding board member.

Furthermore, Benedict Sheehan, the head of music at St. Tikhon’s Monastery and Seminary in South Canaan, PA, who is also a PaTRAM founding board member and sings on “Teach Me Thy Statues,” also associate directed a second album nominated in the Best Choral Performance category—“Kastalsky: Memory Eternal” by the Clarion Choir.

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12/10/2018

See also
Journeying Up the Mountain: A Sacred Choral Music Workshop with Maestro Vladimir Gorbik Journeying Up the Mountain: A Sacred Choral Music Workshop with Maestro Vladimir Gorbik
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An Interview with Isaac Crabtree
Jesse Dominick, Isaac Crabtree
"As I listened to us all singing Divine Liturgy with Vladimir Gorbik, on the feast of All Saints of Moscow, at the Podvoriye of Trinity-Sergius Lavra, surrounded by the holy fathers and the faithful, standing at the kliros before the icon of the holy Royal Passion-bearers, I remembered Maestro Gorbik’s mountain analogy from the beginning of our class. It occurred to me then that only as we reached the summit of this mountain was it revealed to be none other than Mount Tabor: 'Lord, it is good for us to be here.'”
"Where your treasure is, there your heart is." The state of Church singing in America
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"I think if you really care then you’ll do something, you’ll do better, you’ll do really well if you really care. Christ said Where your treasure is there your heart is. If the liturgy in your church is sung poorly, or half-heartedly, or in a slovenly or disorderly manner, then your heart’s not there. It can’t be."
First PaTRAM Institute Moscow Choral Workshop Concludes First PaTRAM Institute Moscow Choral Workshop Concludes
Andrew Gould
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"As one of the participants, I found the experience broadening and fascinating in several ways. It was a great joy to sing with such an excellent group of musicians, and it was a surprise to see how readily this international group of voices blended. The guest singers were from the USA, Canada, and Australia. Most did not speak Russian, and some had little to no experience singing in Slavonic. Thanks to excellent transliterated scores from Musica Russica and crystal-clear directing on the part of Maestro Gorbik, it took little time for this group to blend perfectly with the professional singers who joined us from the Podvorye Male Choir and the Moscow Conservatory."

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