BGSU to join ‘Rolling Requiem’
on 9-11
BOWLING GREEN, O.—Voices at Bowling Green State University
will join others around the world on Sept. 11 to remember
the victims, and heroes, of the terrorist attacks on America.
The University Choral Society will participate in an internationally
organized reading of Mozart’s “Requiem,”
continuing through the seventh of the work’s 12 movements,
in the Lenhart Grand Ballroom of the Bowen-Thompson Student
Union. As of this writing, BGSU is the only university in
Ohio taking part in the event.
The University’s participation in the worldwide choral
commemoration, known as the “Rolling Requiem,”
will begin shortly after 8:46 a.m.—the time of the first
attack on the World Trade Center. Campus bells, including
the bell in the ballroom, will toll at that time, followed
by a minute of silence and the beginning of the “Rolling
Requiem” program, which will end at about 9:20 a.m.
The ballroom will open at 8 a.m. for the Sept. 11 remembrance,
which is open to the public. A color guard of Army and Air
Force ROTC students will present the flags at 8:35 a.m., and
Deborah Fleitz, director of public events for BGSU’s
College of Musical Arts, will officially open the event at
8:43 a.m.
Activities will continue at noon, when two BGSU faculty members
who have conducted Sept. 11-related research will lead informal
discussion groups.
Speaking in room 208 in the Bowen-Thompson Student Union will
be Dr. Annette Mahoney, associate professor of psychology,
who found that spirituality played a powerful role in how
her study’s subjects dealt with the tragedy. Overflow
seating will be in the union’s multipurpose room 228,
which, along with campus classrooms and BGSU Firelands, will
receive a broadcast of the presentation.
Leading discussion on the lawn in front of University Hall
will be Dr. Melissa Spirek, associate professor of journalism.
Her research indicated that the amount and type of television
news sought by U.S. viewers after Sept. 11 could be linked
to a personality trait difference. In the event of rain, Spirek
will speak in the McFall Center Gallery.
The remembrance will conclude at 9 p.m. with a candlelight
vigil. A campuswide march will begin at each residence hall,
converging at the Alumni Mall between Harshman and Kreischer
quadrangles. In the event of rain, the vigil will be held
in the Perry Field House.
Directed by Dr. William Skoog, director of choral activities
at BGSU, the University Choral Society is joining choirs from
nearly all 50 states and more than 20 other countries in the
“Rolling Requiem.” Beginning at the International
Date Line at 8:46 a.m. and moving through each time zone,
these renderings will follow the sun around the world, providing
24 hours of music and giving voice to hope and healing.
The idea for the event came following a January performance
of the “Requiem” by the Seattle Symphony Chorale,
when a singer had a chance encounter with a patron. The unidentified
woman shared a vision of all the best choruses in the country
gathering around Ground Zero in New York to sing the “Requiem”
in honor of those who died. Deciding to make the woman’s
vision a reality, members of the symphony chorale began to
meet as a committee, expanding the vision until it became
the “Rolling Requiem.”
Anyone wishing to sing with the choral group should attend
a 7:30 p.m. rehearsal Monday (Sept. 9) in Kobacker Hall of
the Moore Musical Arts Center. Scores will be provided.
Soloists for the event will be soprano Jane Schoonmaker Rodgers
and tenor Christopher Scholl, assistant professors of music
performance studies at BGSU; mezzo-soprano Tina Bunce, BGSU
alumna and publicity and publications manager for the College
of Musical Arts, and bass Mark Moliterno, visiting assistant
professor of music performance studies.
Pianists will be Cynthia Benson, assistant professor of music
education, and Kevin McGill, BGSU alumnus and choral society
accompanist.
The victims of Sept. 11 will also be remembered Wednesday
evening at a Faculty Artist Series recital by saxophonist
John Sampen, a Distinguished Research/Artist Professor, and
composer Mark Bunce, director of recording services for the
College of Musical Arts. Dedicated to those who lost their
lives will be a performance of “Four 5” by John
Cage and selected readings from e.e. cummings. The performance
will begin at 8 p.m. in Bryan Recital Hall of the Moore Musical
Arts Center.
For more information on the “Rolling Requiem”
or the Faculty Artist Series performance, contact the College
of Musical Arts at 419-372-2181.
(Posted September 6, 2002)