| Encore! SPU Musicians Play Benaroya With 
            Songs of Christ’s Birth
 
 
 FOR THE THIRD CHRISTMAS season in a row, Seattleites will 
            hear concert music rarely performed outside of churches today. The 
            concert in downtown’s Benaroya Hall will center not on reindeer or 
            nutcrackers, but on the birth of Jesus.
 
 
 
              On December 1 at 4 p.m. in Benaroya’s main concert hall, Seattle Pacific 
            University presents “The Sacred Sounds of Christmas,” performed by 
            the Concert Choir, Chamber Singers, Männerchor, Women’s Choir and 
            Symphonic Wind Ensemble. 
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                | Director of SPU’s Symphonic Wind Ensemble Gerry Marsh 
                  (above) recently composed a cantata, “Song of Luke,” part of which students will perform at Benaroya Hall (right) on December 
                  1.
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 Led by Assistant Professor of Music David Anderson and Instructor 
            of Music Gerry Marsh, “Sacred Sounds” is an annual concert of sacred 
            literature for choirs and instruments, centering on the spiritual 
            meaning of Christmas.
 
 Anderson, director of choral activities, designs the music program 
            each year. “This concert makes an impact in the community,” he says, 
            “showing that SPU is Christian and academic, with a vision for high 
            artistic quality. We’re careful to program it so that it points to 
            what Christmas is: the incarnation of God.”
 
 Marsh, who directs the Symphonic Wind Ensemble, suggested Benaroya 
            Hall as a venue for Seattle Pacific several years ago. “There are 
            people from the National Orchestra who say that Benaroya is better 
            than the Lincoln Center in terms of acoustics and setting,” says Marsh. 
            “And SPU’s musicians are great enough to perform in a setting of this 
            caliber.”
 
 For their first concert at Benaroya in 2000, Seattle Pacific musicians 
            performed before a packed audience in the smaller hall. So many people 
            came, in fact, that dozens had to be turned away at the door. The 
            following year, SPU musicians graduated to the main hall, performing 
            their repertoire of classic Christmas music from around the world 
            to a near-capacity audience. The evening concluded with a standing 
            ovation from the 2,200 concert-goers.
 
 This year’s program will include compositions that range from Early 
            Renaissance music to both familiar and rarely heard carols, which 
            the audience will be invited to sing. Anderson wrote the setting for 
            several of the pieces, such as the regal processional, “Come, Thou 
            Long-Expected Jesus.” SPU performers will play some intriguing instruments 
            during the concert, for instance a shofar made from a ram’s horn in 
            Israel.
 
 Tickets for the concert are $15, available through Ticketmaster at 
            206/628-0888 or .
 
 
— BY MARGARET D. SMITH— PHOTO BY DANIEL SHEEHAN
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