Sunday, March 29, 2026

4:00PM - 6:00PM

 

The St. Matthew's Centre
54 Benton Street, Kitchener

$50 Adult | $20 Student | $10 Child (12 and under)

 

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A luminous reimagining of the Latin Mass, Sarah Kirkland Snider’s Mass for the Endangered is both an elegy and a plea — a prayer for the planet and its threatened creatures. In this evocatively scored work, traditional texts intertwine with poetry by Nathaniel Bellows, shaping a sound world where choral beauty meets urgent environmental reflection. 

The Elora Singers, joined by an instrumental chamber ensemble, illuminates the textures and tensions of this captivating composition, its moments of stillness and its surges of emotion. The programme also includes compelling works by Andrew Balfour, Alberto Grau, Christopher Tin, Caleb Burhans, and others that grapple with belonging, loss, and renewal. 

In the resonant space of the St. Matthew’s Centre, this concert stands as both witness and call — a chance to experience music that embraces the gravity of its subject and finds moments of light within it. 

Concert Program

Christopher Tin: Hope is the Thing with Feathers

Camille Saint-Saëns: Deux Choeurs (Two Choruses), Opus 68

Andrew Balfour: Gaze Upon the Trees

Andrew Balfour: Omaa Biindig

Jonathan Dove: In Beauty May I Walk

Caleb Burhans: Super Flumina Babylonis

Alberto Grau: Kasar mie la gaji (The earth is tired)

Sarah Kirkland Snider: Mass for the Endangered

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Sarah Kirkland Snider

Composer Sarah Kirkland Snider writes music of direct expression and vivid narrative that has been hailed as “rapturous” (The New York Times), “groundbreaking” (The Boston Globe), and “ravishingly beautiful” (NPR). Recently named one of the “Top 35 Female Composers in Classical Music” by The Washington Post, Snider’s works have been commissioned and/or performed by the Boston Symphony Orchestra; Chicago Symphony Orchestra; Cleveland Orchestra; Detroit Symphony Orchestra; National Symphony Orchestra; New York Philharmonic; San Francisco Symphony; Philharmonia Orchestra; Melbourne Symphony Orchestra; Toronto Symphony Orchestra; Residentie Orkest; Birmingham Royal Ballet; Emerson String Quartet; Renée Fleming and Will Liverman; Deutsche Grammophon for mezzo Emily D’Angelo; percussionist Colin Currie; eighth blackbird; A Far Cry; and Roomful of Teeth, among many others.

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