PAUL WINTER’S 41ST ANNUAL WINTER SOLSTICE CELEBRATION
Paul Winter’s Winter Solstice Celebration embraces the spirit of the holidays within the extraordinary acoustics of the world’s largest cathedral. This multimedia event will feature the 10-member Paul Winter Consort,gospel singer Theresa Thomason, the 25 dancers and drummers of the Forces of Nature Dance Theatre, and special guests, the 15-member Pletenitsa Balkan Choir.
Paul Winter’s Winter Solstice Celebration has become New York’s favorite holiday alternative to the Nutcracker and Radio City’s Christmas Spectacular. This event offers a contemporary take on ancient solstice rituals, when people gathered together on the longest night of the year to welcome the return of the sun and the birth of the new year.
PERFORMERS
Paul Winter | Soprano Saxophone
Pletenitsa Balkan Choir | Voice
Forces of Nature | Drums, Dance
Theresa Thomason | Voice
Paul McCandless | Woodwinds
Eugene Friesen | Cello
Paul Sullivan | Piano
Eliot Wadopian | Bass
Jamey Haddad | Percussion
Tim Brumfield | Organ
Scott Sloan | Sun Gong
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Paul Winter | Soprano Saxophone
Seven-time Grammy-winning saxophonist Paul Winter created his band, the Consort, out of roots in classical music and jazz. After his jazz sextet’s tour of twenty-three countries of Latin America, a close affinity with the musical community of Brazil, in particular, drew Paul towards a broader realm of music. In 1968 Paul heard for the first time the bluesy choruses of wild wolves and the melodic songs of the humpback whales, as haunting as any of the great jazz singers, opening him up to the great symphony of nature. These inspirations, along with the rich textures of Brazilian guitar, Afro-Brazilian percussion, and the symphonic music of Villa-Lobos, inspired his new ensemble, the Paul Winter Consort. Incorporating a very different instrumentation from the Sextet, nevertheless it continued in the same lineage: a spirit of celebration, in the democracy of ensemble, aspiring toward a balance between the improvised and the composed. Paul’s interest in the natural world, and a commitment to preserve it, continued to grow. Exploring ways to con-sort with voices of the wilderness later led the way to his unique genre of “Earth Music”. Paul has recorded more than 40 albums, 7 of which have won Grammy® Awards. Since 1980. Paul and the Consort have been artists-in-residence at the world’s largest cathedral, New York’s St. John the Divine, where they have presented over 100 special events, including annual Winter and Summer Solstice Celebrations, Carnival for the Rainforest, and their ecological mass, Missa Gaia/Earth Mass, which is performed annually each October as part of the Feast of St. Francis. The band has toured the world, performing over 3,000 concerts in 52 countries. -
Pletenitsa Balkan Choir | Voice
Founded by Christiane Karam in 2011 as a forum for exploring the choral and folk traditions of the Balkans, the Caucasus, the Middle East, and parts of the Mediterranean, the Pletenitsa Balkan Choir is primarily a women's chorus, with some music that incorporates male voices. It includes and welcomes singers from all over the world, serving as a platform for cultural exchange and a context for coming together to celebrate the beauty and spirit that connect us all. The Pletenitsa Balkan Choir has shared the stage with a diversity of artists, including Zulal, Juliana Svetlichnya, Mario Frangoulis, José Mercé, Javier Limon, Vadim Neselovskyi, Gary Burton, Tigran Hamasyan, and Binka Dobreva, a revered soloist with the internationally renowned Bulgarian folk ensemble, Le Mystère des Voix Bulgares. Upon hearing and singing with what would become the Pletenitsa Balkan Choir, Ms. Dobreva baptized the group with the name "Pletenitsa," ("braid”), saying she was inspired by the intricate melding of cultures and the tight bond she felt among the singers. The 15-voice Pletenitsa Balkan Choir will collaborate with the Paul Winter Consort throughout the autumn, creating new music for this year’s Winter Solstice Celebration as well as integrating the Consort's traditional music with music from their repertoire. -
Forces of Nature | Drums, Dance
Since its founding in 1981 by Artistic Director/Choreographer Abdel R. Salaam and Managing Director Olabamidele Husbands, Forces of Nature Dance Theatre Company has produced professional ballets, conducted dance classes and presented concerts and educational programs in New York City, the United States and throughout the world. The company mixes a unique blend of performing arts, including contemporary modern dance, traditional West African dance, ballet, house and hip-hop forms as well as live and recorded music and the martial arts. In 2016, Forces of Nature was featured in the three-part PBS “Great Performances” special on the history of Black dance in the 20th Century, entitled Free to Dance, and was also the featured dance company in a film project with the National Association of Black Museums on the influence of African American dance in Western culture entitled, When the Spirit Moves, culminating in an exhibit at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC. Abdel Salaam is also artistic director of Brooklyn’s DanceAfrica festival, director of the Harlem Children’s Zone/Forces of Nature Youth Academy of Dance, and the artistic director of an annual Kwanzaa celebration at the Apollo Theater in Harlem. -
Theresa Thomason | Voice
Theresa reached the airwaves with Fresh Enuff, a popular club single and a winning performance at the Apollo Theater in New York City. She toured Europe for over 10 years, performing in over 150 European cities. She remains a featured artist with the Paul Winter Consort at the annual Solstice, Missa Gaia and Earth Mass celebrations at St. John the Divine. Theresa has also performed live at the United Nations for the Dalai Lama and others. -
Paul McCandless | Woodwinds
Paul McCandless was the original double-reed player in the Paul Winter Consort from 1968 to 1972. He is a founding member of the acclaimed quartet Oregon, with whom he has played for the past 40 years. He has also performed with Wynton Marsalis, Pat Metheny, Steve Reich, the String Cheese Incident, and the Tchaikovsky Symphony Orchestra of Moscow. His collaboration with Béla Fleck yielded the 1996 Grammy for Best Pop Instrumental. -
Eugene Friesen | Cello
Eugene Friesen has been the cellist with the Paul Winter Consort since 1979 and been part of over 30 Living Music albums. His solo albums are New Friend and Arms Around You. He has also worked and recorded with such diverse artists as Dave Brubeck, Toots Thielemans, Betty Buckley, Will Ackerman, Joe Lovano and Dream Theater. He is a member of Trio Globo with Glen Velez and Howard Levy, and is on the faculty of the Berklee College of Music. -
Paul Sullivan | Piano
Paul’s musical journey reaches from the jazz clubs of New York and the pit orchestras of Broadway to concerts around the world with the Paul Winter Consort. Paul has played with a wide variety of jazz masters, from Benny Goodman to Tommy Flanagan. He has performed with the Philadelphia Orchestra under Eugene Ormandy, the Boston Pops under both Arthur Fiedler and Keith Lockhardt; and worked as a musical director, pianist, and conductor for many Off-Broadway and Broadway shows. He played keyboards and shared the conducting duties for the original production of the musical Nine, which won a Tony Award for Best Musical. -
Eliot Wadopian | Bass
Eliot has played on over 100 albums, in several musical styles, and has performed extensively in the United States, Europe and Asia. In addition to his work with many well-known jazz and world music ensembles, he performs regularly in the bass sections of the Asheville Symphony, Greenville Symphony Orchestra and the Charlotte Symphony Orchestra. -
Jamey Haddad | Percussion
Regarded as one of the foremost world music and jazz percussionists, Jamey has played with the Consort for nineteen years, and for the last thirteen years has been a member of Paul Simon’s band. He also collaborates with Yo Yo Ma, Dawn Upshaw, Joe Lovano, Osvaldo Golijov, Simon Shahhen, Nancy Wilson, and Dave Liebman, among others. Jamey is an associate professor at Boston’s Berklee School of Music, New England Conservatory, Overland Conservatory, and the Cleveland Institute of Music. He has been voted one of the top 4 world percussionists in the world by “Modern Drummer” (July 2007). -
Tim Brumfield | Organ
Tim is considered one of the world’s finest organ improvisers, tours regularly as a solo organist and pianist, and is often asked to lecture on the art of improvisation. He has performed throughout the US and Europe, including famed cathedrals such as France’s Notre Dame Cathedral and England’s Salisbury and St. Paul’s Cathedrals. He recently received the distinguished award of Honorary Fellow from the National College of Music, London. And he currently serves as Director of Music Ministry, Organist and Choirmaster at St. Gregory’s Episcopal Church, Boca Raton, Florida. -
Scott Sloan | Sun Gong
Musician and rigger Scott Sloan, also known as “The Gong Guy,” plays a unique role in the Winter Solstice. His part is to ride about 70 feet into the air, strapped in a bosun’s chair, beating on the world’s largest tam as it rises, spotlit like the symbolic sun after the dark night of solstice. As an instrument, 8 feet in diameter, the gong poses its own particular set of challenges, swinging with each strike of the mallet. The venue for the show, the world’s largest cathedral, New York’s St. John the Divine, has a seven-second reverberation, meaning Sloan has to adapt his percussive part to the time lapse with musicians on the stage almost half a football field length away. In addition to suspending the gong for the show, riggers hoist the massive lighting truss, set up the 25 foot tall music tree, and float an inflatable “earth ball” 125 feet up into the cosmic vastness of the massive vault above the audience.
SOLSTICE TRADITION
The two great celestial milestones of the year, the Summer and Winter Solstices, are perhaps humanity’s most ancient ritual observances. People paused at these times to reflect upon the journey of life, with its trials, blessings, hopes and promise.
The word ‘solstice’ comes from the Latin ‘sol’ (sun) and ‘stitium’ (to stand still). Summer Solstice occurs when the Sun reaches its northernmost point from the equator and seems to pause before reversing its course; at the Winter Solstice the Sun attains its southernmost point and, once again, seems to stand still before turning back.
The Sun, our great golden star, is the source of our life, and each of our lives is a multi-faceted journey with the Sun. On one level, we are cycling through each day and night, as the Earth rotates from dawn to dawn in the light of the Sun. On another, we are traveling through each year, being carried 584 million miles by the Earth as it swings around the Sun from one Summer Solstice to the next. Simultaneously, we are riding with the Sun as our entire Solar System travels within the Milky Way galaxy, which itself is one of the dozen galaxies in what astronomers call our Local Group. And this whole Local Group of galaxies, in turn, is revolving around the Virgo Cluster of 2000 galaxies, 53 million light-years distant from us.
Making music at Solstice is one way to celebrate our amazing journey. If, in our listening, we are carried by the music, then perhaps the experience of that moment can be a hologram of the entire journey. In reality, the journey is right now, wherever we are. And when we are listening, each moment is the beginning.
Thank you for being part of our ongoing Solstice journey.