Holy Cross Chapel Artist Series | David Jonies
DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC - St. Joseph Memorial Chapel - 1 College St, Worcester, MA, United StatesGerman organist David Jonies will present a program that includes works of Bach, Cabanilles and Widor.
German organist David Jonies will present a program that includes works of Bach, Cabanilles and Widor.
The Holy Cross Jazz Ensemble will perform American Jazz standards under the direction of Mike Monaghan.
This recital features the students who participate in the College's Chamber Music course, who will perform the works they have studied during the semester.
The dance concert is a spring tradition featuring a dazzling variety of styles and genres, including Hip-Hop, Modern, Breakin’, Afro-Haitian Dance and Ballet.
Rhiannon’s recital aims to uplift the voices of women and nonbinary individuals throughout Jazz history. This concert will include her students from OpporTUNEiety, professionals from the Boston area, Holy Cross students, and Holy Cross faculty.
Join the Holy Cross Wind Ensemble for a concert showcasing new and diverse music for wind ensemble, highlighting underrepresented voices. The program features diverse selections by Liliana Alarcon, Tyler Mazone, Michele Fernández, Satoshi Yagisawa, and more.
Department of Music Professor Daniel DiCenso's Chants Class will sing Gregorian Vespers under the direction of Laurence Rosania, Director of Liturgy and Music.
Brooks Scholar Rhiannon Hurst ’25 presents an afternoon of jazz selections drawing from her Fenwick Scholar project celebrating underrepresented voices in jazz.
Room of Wonders is the first in a series of annual summer exhibitions that foregrounds and celebrates the Worcester arts community at the Cantor Art Gallery. In this inaugural show, Birgit Straehle—co-owner of The White Room celebration hall and gallery and former co-manager of the iconic Sprinkler Factory—invites nearly 30 creatives to participate in this group exhibition.
Join us at the Room of Wonders: A Worcester Wunderkammer exhibition for a gallery talk from Bill Wallace of the Museum of Worcester about the origins of the iconic Smiley Face.