MLHS represented at Dorian Music Festival

Student vocal event in its 66th year at Luther College

 

 

A TRIO OF Mountain Lake Public High School juniors, all members of the Senior Choir, recently attended the Dorian Vocal Festival. Above, standing at the top of the rehearsal and mass choir seating area are, from left, Caleb Rempel, Ben Grev, Vocal Director Andrea Brinkman and Jenny Wright.
A QUARTET OF Mountain Lake Public High School members of the Senior High Choir recently attended the Dorian Vocal Festival at Luther College in Decorah, Iowa. Above, standing at the top of the rehearsal and mass choir seating area are, from left, Carmen Syverson, Sam Grev, Michaela Cate and Ruben Fentanez. (Andrea Brinkman photo)

 

 

A quartet of Mountain Lake Public High School (MLHS) Senior High Choir vocalists recently participated in the 66th-annual Dorian Vocal Festival, held on the campus of Luther College in Decorah, Iowa. Attending were two seniors – Carmen Syverson and Michaela Cate and two juniors – Sam Grev and Ruben Fentanez. They were chaperoned by the school’s vocal director, Andrea Brinkman.

The event, which ran from Saturday, January 9 through Monday, January 11, is the largest of its kind in the United States. For the festival, regional choir directors bring select students form all over the Midwest to participate in a mass choir, made up of between 1,200 to 1,400 students in any given year.

According to Brinkman, and the Luther College web site, the Dorian Festivals began in 1949 when Professor Weston Noble invited directors from just over 20 schools in the region to each bring a few selected band students to the Luther campus for a two-day honor band band festival. The event was called the Dorian Band Festival. A vocal festival was added in 1950, and the family of Dorian Festivals and Camps has been growing in scope and participation ever since.  Well over 90,000 students have shared in a Dorian musical experience since the festivals were started.

Adds Brinkman, “Why the name ‘Dorian?’ The ancient Greeks build their music around a series of modes, or scales – one of which was the Dorian mode. The students who formed the Dorian Singing Society at Luther College took the name of this scale as the name of their organization when they started the ensemble, shortly after the college was founded in 1861.'”

The students attending spent time in rehearsal with their peers – and then performed in a Grand Concert.

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