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STUDENT RECITAL SERIES: Zach Ward, cello
in 12 hours in 29 minutes
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STUDENT RECITAL SERIES: Daul Lee, piano/composition
May. 07
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STUDENT RECITAL SERIES: Richard Galbreath Jr., saxophone
May. 07
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Community Music School Recital
May. 09
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STUDENT RECITAL SERIES: Shujing Guo, soprano
May. 09
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STUDENT RECITAL SERIES: Sherry Dou, conducting
May. 09
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STUDENT RECITAL SERIES: Minghao Hu, voice
May. 09
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STUDENT RECITAL SERIES: Maddie James, soprano
May. 09
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STUDENT RECITAL SERIES: Hong Du, trumpet
May. 10
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STUDENT RECITAL SERIES: Toni Mae Rainey, mezzo-soprano
May. 10
Known around the world for its eclectic repertoire and dazzling virtuosity, the Grammy Award-winning vocal ensemble Chanticleer, under the leadership of Music Director Tim Keeler, has been hailed by The Boston Globe as “breathtaking in its accuracy of intonation, purity of blend, of color and swagger of style.” Founded in San Francisco in 1978 by singer and musicologist Louis Botto, Chanticleer quickly took its place as one of the most prolific recording and touring ensembles in the world—an “orchestra of voices” performing thousands of live concerts and selling more than one million recordings. Rooted in the Renaissance, Chanticleer’s repertoire has expanded to include a wide range of classical, gospel, jazz and popular music, and the group performs its beloved A Chanticleer Christmas program on tour every December. A new Christmas album, Joy to the World, was released in fall 2025. With a deep commitment to the commissioning of new compositions and arrangements, Chanticleer foregrounds American repertoire and a distinctively American sound, complementing the group’s signature diversity in terms of membership and genre. The ensemble has dedicated much of its vast recording catalog to these commissions, garnering Grammy Awards for its recordings of Sir John Tavener’s Lamentations & Praises and the ambitious collection of commissioned works entitled Colors of Love. Chanticleer’s 2002 album, Our American Journey, was inducted into the National Recording Registry of the Library of Congress in 2025.