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In Remembrance - 9.11

25 Years

Requiem
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

with Juniata College Concert Choir,
Cantores Convallis, Master Singers,
and Pennsylvania Chamber Orchestra

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Sunday, September 13
3:00 pm

State College High School Performance Hall
650 Westerly Parkway
State College, PA 16801


Erik Clayton, Artistic Director

In September, we begin with In Remembrance ~ 9/11 ~ 25 years, commemorating the 25th anniversary of 9/11 with a performance of Mozart’s Requiem. Following that tragic day 25 years ago, millions of people sought solace and understanding through Mozart’s great masterwork. From the thunderous Dies irae to the mournful Lacrymosa, the power of Mozart’s music
encapsulates the emotional turbulence of September 11, 2001. The impact of that fateful day echoes still, with a complex legacy that continues to unfold.

To Sing in Times of Trouble

with the SCCS Orchestra

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Sunday, November 15
3:00 pm

State College High School Performance Hall
650 Westerly Parkway
State College, PA 16801
​
Erik Clayton, Artistic Director

Nelson Mass

Franz Joseph Haydn

Abraham Lincoln Walks at Midnight

Florence Price

Chariot Jubilee

R. Nathaniel​ Dett

In November, we will present To Sing in Times of Trouble, featuring Haydn’s Nelson Mass and Florence Price’s Abraham Lincoln Walks at Midnight. Both works were written during the great conflicts of their age, the Napoleonic Wars and World War I respectively, and both eloquently express the tension of their time. Originally titled “Mass in Time of Stress,” Haydn wrote the Nelson Mass in 1798, during a time of economic and political hardship in Austria. Napoleon’s French forces seemed unstoppable, when on the day of the Mass’s first performance, word of Admiral Nelson’s great victory at the Nile reached Vienna. The work's association with the great Admiral remains to this day. Abraham Lincoln Walks at Midnight is a poem written in 1917 during the darkest days of World War I and describes the restless soul of Abraham Lincoln unable to sleep because of the tragic war in Europe. This is Florence Price’s longest and most important work and has only recently been brought to light. We conclude the concert with Chariot Jubilee by R. Nathaniel Dett, another great work by an African-American composer of the early 20th century.  This is one of the first symphonic-choral works to include spirituals and ends the concert with a message of hope and triumph.

Let There Be
Peace on Earth

Saturday, December 5
3:00 pm

State College High School Performance Hall
650 Westerly Parkway
State College, PA 16801
​
Erik Clayton, Artistic Director

Christmas with the Choral Society

with State High Chamber Singers,
Centre Region Youth Choirs,
and Centre Brass

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Christmas Cantata

Daniel Pinkham

Our December concert, Let There Be Peace on Earth, will celebrate the music and spirit of the season. From Daniel Pinkham’s Christmas Cantata to the familiar song “Let There Be Peace on Earth,” seasonal music brings gladness and light. Featuring local youth choirs and sing-a-long, we hope you will join us for this joyful concert.

As in years past, this concert is also a food drive with all proceeds going to a local food bank.

So please remember to bring donations of dry goods in lieu of the cost of a concert ticket! 

Grant Us Peace

with State High Master Singers
and the SCCS Orchestra

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Sunday, April 25
3:00 pm

State College High School Performance Hall
650 Westerly Parkway
State College, PA 16801
​
Erik Clayton, Artistic Director

Five Mystical Songs

Ralph Vaughan Williams

Dona Nobis Pacem

Ralph Vaughan Williams

Serenade to Music

Ralph Vaughan Williams

In April we conclude our 78th season with Grant Us Peace, a concert featuring works of Ralph Vaughan Williams. Our concert begins with Five Mystical Songs and baritone soloist, Dr. Ted Christopher. The texts are by 17th century poet, George Herbert, a favorite source of inspiration for Vaughan Williams. The crowning work of the program is the great Dona Nobis Pacem, a masterpiece that Vaughan Williams wrote in 1936. A veteran of World War I, he could see the gathering clouds of another world conflict and wrote this work as a reminder of the horrors of war and a plea for peace. The concert concludes with a beautiful epilogue, Serenade to Music, perhaps the most beautiful work Vaughan Williams ever wrote, and concludes our season with
"soft stillness and...the touches of sweet harmony.”

Our 77th Season

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Our 76th Season

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© 2026 State College Choral Society.

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