Connecting the arts, fostering collaboration and building community.
Calendar courtesy of The Dirt.
There are several other great resources for finding arts and culture events, exhibits, performances, and other creative activities in the Davis area:
Davis Enterprise | UC Davis Arts & Entertainment | YoloArts | Visit Yolo
featuring Alturas Duo
Scott Hill, guitar
Carlos Boltes, churrango and viola
Gonzalo Cortés, Andean woodwinds
With the guest ensemble Alturas Duo, the Choruses of UC Davis and Nicolás Dosman bring the rhythms and holiday vocal traditions of the Americas (both Southern America and Northern America) to Davis. Works include “Navidad Nuestra” by Ariel Ramírez (an Andean influenced folk telling of the nativity story), Aaron Copland’s “Zion’s Walls” (drawn from Appalachian America’s hymnal traditions), and “Abreme la Puerta” (a traditional Christmastime song from Puerto Rico).
Concert Choir
arr. Albert McNeil: Hold Out Your Light (with Chamber Singers)
Jeffrey Ames: Gloria Fanfare
Manuel de Sumaya: Albricias Mortales
Nunes Garcia: Cum Sancto Spiritu
Chamber Singers
arr. Cristian Grases: Abreme La Puerta
Andrea Ramsey: In The Bleak Midwinter
B.E Boykin: Dormi Jesu
Kenneth Lampl: Adon Olam
arr. Moses Hogan: Glory, Glory, Glory to the Newborn King
Combined Choruses
Aaron Copland: Zion’s Walls
Allan Naplan: Al Shlosha D’Varim
Herbert Bittrich: Festejo de Navidad
Ariel Ramirez: Navidad Nuestra
$12 Students and Children, $24 Adults (Open Seating)
The award-winning Alturas Duo (along with Andean flute and woodwind specialist Gonzalo Cortés) delight working with orchestras and choral ensembles, and collaborating with composers in creating new and interesting repertoire. Bringing together the worlds of South American folk, western classical, and contemporary music, guitarist Scott Hill and violist and charango player Carlos Boltes have performed throughout the United States, Canada, and Europe as well as Central and South America to great acclaim. Praised by The Washington Post as playing with “marvelous virtuosity,” Alturas Duo takes its name from the Chilean poet Pablo Neruda’s poem, Alturas de Macchu Picchu. The English translation for Alturas means “heights.”