- Timothy Takach (b. 1978): Circles:
- 1 Takach: Circles 04:09
- Edward Thompson (1924 - 1993): Guest House:
- 2 Thompson: Guest House 04:19
- Orlando di Lasso (1532 - 1594): In quoscumque locos:
- 3 Lasso: In quoscumque locos 02:51
- Lauren Bydalek (b. 1995): Pieces of My Heart:
- 4 Bydalek: Pieces of My Heart 04:11
- Angélica Negrón (b. 1981): There Once Was…:
- 5 Negrón: There Once Was... 07:51
- Jamiroquai (b. 1969): Virtual Insanity:
- 6 Jamiroquai: Virtual Insanity 04:35
- Michael Weinstein-Reiman: Leaves:
- 7 Weinstein-Reiman: Leaves 07:23
- Irving Fine (1914 - 1962): Design for October from "The Choral New Yorker":
- 8 Fine: Design for October from "The Choral New Yorker" 06:53
- Matthew Marcus: Spring and Fall:
- 9 Marcus: Spring and Fall 04:51
- Mike Rowan: I Choose:
- 10 Rowan: I Choose 02:59
- Stevie Wonder (b. 1950): Heaven Help Us All:
- 11 Wonder: Heaven Help Us All 03:30
Info for Changing
Choral Chameleon, under the direction of Vince Peterson, explores the concept of change as a fundamental aspect of our existence on CHANGING from Navona Records. The texts and poems in this release delve into change as something that is inevitable and cyclical, to be actively embraced and critically examined in how it transforms our experiences, identities, and worldviews. CHANGING encourages listeners to move forward together with joyful anticipation of what is to come — not only with willingness, but with courage and evergreen determination.
Choral Chameleon
Vince Peterson, artistic director
Choral Chameleon
is an acclaimed vocal ensemble based in New York City, renowned for its diverse repertoire and innovative programming. Established in January 2008, Choral Chameleon consists of a semi professional chorus of over 50 voices and a core professional ensemble of 16 singers. The group is celebrated for blending popular music with Western art music, breaking down barriers between genres, and creating dynamic and transformative concert experiences.
Choral Chameleon’s performances are distinguished by their inclusion of mixed media, cross-field collaborations, and audience engagement. This approach has earned them the prestigious ASCAP/Chorus America Award for Adventurous Programming. The ensemble has commissioned and cultivated over 320 new works in its first 16 years, cementing its reputation as a champion of new choral music.
The group’s founder, Dr. Vince Peterson, is a recipient of the Louis Botto Award for Innovative Action and Entrepreneurial Zeal from Chorus America, a lifetime distinction he shares with fewer than 25 of the most influential American choral music directors.
Notable collaborations include culinary choral work with Lish Steiling, The Gauntlet with Sxip Shirey and Coco Karol, and the world’s first choral sound bath, Washing, with Bloom Sound Collective. Choral Chameleon has also achieved several firsts, including being the inaugural vocal ensemble in residence at National Sawdust in Brooklyn and hosting the first Choral Music Rave Dance Party at Irondale Center for the Arts.
Central to Choral Chameleon’s mission is a commitment to the longevity and evolution of the choral art form. The ensemble has established an internationally recognized teaching institute for composers and conductors, which convenes semi-annually in New York City and has welcomed over 150 students from five continents. This institute also offers a multi-year Music Directing Fellowship Program for early-career choral conductors, provided free of charge.
Choral Chameleon’s recent highlights include the 2019 release of Eri Yamamoto’s Goshu Ondo Suite, the innovative concert series Bigger Than My Body, and the 2022 premiere of Ed Thompson’s Step Into The Night. The ensemble also launched the immersive choral rave dance party, Bigger Than My Song, and continues to be featured on the PARMA Recordings’ Navona Record label.
Upcoming projects include a collaboration with the new music ensemble Contemporaneous for the Fall 2024 premiere of Zachary Ritter’s Heaps, and a 2025 collaboration with jazz pianist and composer Eri Yamamoto on a new double-scat concerto. This follows their previous work on the 2019 album Goshu Ondo, which was praised by Downbeat Magazine.
Choral Chameleon’s educational outreach initiative has significantly impacted high school and college students. The highlight of this program is the annual Institute for composers and conductors, featuring a world-class faculty including multi-GRAMMY® award winners Vance George and Matthew Oltman, along with other leading figures in modern choral music. The Institute offers a Fellowship Program for early career composers, a Winter Institute for conducting students, and a Summer Institute for composition students. These programs provide intensive training and performance opportunities, culminating in final concerts featuring world premieres of works created during the sessions.
Praised by TimeOut New York as a “shape-shifting” ensemble and acclaimed in Downbeat Magazine, Choral Chameleon continues to be a significant force in the classical music industry. Through its diverse programming, community engagement, and educational initiatives, Choral Chameleon fosters a vibrant, inclusive, and forward-thinking musical community in New York City.
From Examier.com: “Constructing a chamber chorus out of singers with diverse backgrounds can incur significant risk if not committed carefully. Choral blend is fragile enough when all singers are on the same stylistic page, sharing the same lexicon and semiotics. Incompatible personalities alone can demolish any sense of ensemble. It is therefore a great credit to the musicians of Choral Chameleon and especially their director, Vince Peterson, that the group can so superbly and aptly tackle new works of varying aesthetic proclivities, perform each idiomatically, and yet not compromise its particular sound.”
Choral Chameleon was founded in 2008 by Peterson in order to showcase his interests both in the contemporary a cappella choral classical repertoire and in pop and music theater, and in the wealth of singers available in New York who are not only fluent in popular stylings, but also possess first-class musicianship. The voices that currently comprise the ensemble hail from the operatic, choral, Broadway, and pop scenes, and brilliantly not only avoid internal competition, but do impeccable work informing one another, through sound and phrasing, how to address their specialties.”
Vince Peterson
is a respected choral conductor, composer/arranger, and teacher of music in the United States. His 20-year hybrid career spans the worlds of choral music, theater, sacred music, and music education. He has, however, established himself most prominently in the world of choral music, notably having founded the “shape-shifting” vocal ensemble Choral Chameleon in 2008. Across his work, he is responsible for presenting nearly 300 premieres of new choral and theater music in the last 15 years and has won critical acclaim in The New York Times, Time Out New York, The New York Concert Review, I Care If You Listen, The Examiner, and other publications. He is also a recipient of the prestigious ASCAP/Chorus America Award for Adventurous Programming.
As a prolific arranger, Peterson has received seven commissions to date from the multi-Grammy Award-winning ensemble Chanticleer, whose YouTube videos of his work have garnered over half a million views. Several of his choral arrangements and original compositions have become staples for choirs across the United States. Distinguished performance venues include Chicago Symphony Hall, San Francisco’s War Memorial Opera House, Bartok National Concert Hall in Budapest, New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Carnegie Hall, among others.
A recognized thought leader in the music world, The New York Times called Peterson “authoritative beyond his… years,” and The Brooklyn Eagle praised his work as “a stunning symphony of the spiritual and secular,” while hailing him as a solo performer “with depth and vigor” who “provided a universal context which resonated with his audience.”
In 2018, Vince was awarded the Louis Botto Award for Innovative Action and Entrepreneurial Zeal by Chorus America, a lifetime distinction he shares with only 15 of the most influential choral musicians in the United States.
He has been the Artistic Director of Empire City Men’s Chorus since 2014 and led the group through its 25th Anniversary Season.
This album contains no booklet.