Sunday, March 7, 2027 · Santa Clarita Performing Arts Center at College of the Canyons
Look up. Listen. Soar.
To the Stars is the Santa Clarita Master Chorale's most ambitious classical program in recent memory—a breathtaking journey through music inspired by light, sky, wonder, and the infinite reaches of the universe.
From Elaine Hagenberg's luminous opening meditation to Eric Whitacre's shimmering Lux Nova, from Ēriks Ešenvalds' mystical tone painting of the stars to Morten Lauridsen's achingly beautiful Sure on this Shining Night—this program assembles some of the most beloved names in contemporary choral music alongside timeless masterworks. Randall Thompson's beloved Choose Something Like a Star leads us toward Vaughan Williams' visionary Toward the Unknown Region, while Jason Narverud's soaring Ad Astra and Joanne Whitfield Geilo's Song of the Universal push the journey ever skyward.
Christopher Tin's Astronomy from To Shiver the Sky adds a contemporary shimmer, before Gerald Finzi's radiant In Terra Pax grounds us in the beauty of this earth—and Beethoven's glorious Hallelujah from Mount of Olives brings the evening to a triumphant close.
This is a concert for stargazers, dreamers, and anyone who has ever looked up at the night sky and felt something larger than themselves. We'll see you there.
All seating is first come, first served.
Sunday, March 7, 2027 · Santa Clarita Performing Arts Center at College of the Canyons
Look up. Listen. Soar.
To the Stars is the Santa Clarita Master Chorale's most ambitious classical program in recent memory—a breathtaking journey through music inspired by light, sky, wonder, and the infinite reaches of the universe.
From Elaine Hagenberg's luminous opening meditation to Eric Whitacre's shimmering Lux Nova, from Ēriks Ešenvalds' mystical tone painting of the stars to Morten Lauridsen's achingly beautiful Sure on this Shining Night—this program assembles some of the most beloved names in contemporary choral music alongside timeless masterworks. Randall Thompson's beloved Choose Something Like a Star leads us toward Vaughan Williams' visionary Toward the Unknown Region, while Jason Narverud's soaring Ad Astra and Joanne Whitfield Geilo's Song of the Universal push the journey ever skyward.
Christopher Tin's Astronomy from To Shiver the Sky adds a contemporary shimmer, before Gerald Finzi's radiant In Terra Pax grounds us in the beauty of this earth—and Beethoven's glorious Hallelujah from Mount of Olives brings the evening to a triumphant close.
This is a concert for stargazers, dreamers, and anyone who has ever looked up at the night sky and felt something larger than themselves. We'll see you there.
All seating is first come, first served.