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Ekklesia (Choir)

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  • “…All gatherings move in storytime: the beginning, which is the coming together, the togetherness itself, and the going-away…”

    Listen to Ekklesia

    Performed by The Pittsburgh Camerata

    Conducted by Mark A. Anderson

    View Sample Score

    Ekklesia

    Program Note

    By Andy Wilkinson

    The Greek word ekklesia means a coming-together, a political gathering in their original usage, later coming to mean a spiritual gathering to the early Christians that soon also came to include the body of the church. All gatherings move in storytime: the beginning, which is the coming together, the togetherness itself, and the going-away, the end of the gathering. One of the most important things about story—and about any and every coming-together—is that the world is forever changed by each one. The Universe is the sum total of all the stories that have come before. There is no better example, in our view, than the performance of music, which is always a coming-together. Indeed, music that is done only by the individual we call practice; the minimum for music is at least one player and one listener. When we make music, we become part of a whole that is greater than ourselves, and when we’re done, when the final measure has been played, we leave richer than when we began.


    Notable Performances

    Premiere Performance by The Pittsburgh Camerata
    Mark A. Anderson, artistic director

    Video Score

    Text

    EKKLESIA!
    by Andy Wilkinson

    Here we are, the final measure
    Before tonight turns yesterday.
    We will leave forever better
    As we go,
    As we go, our separate ways

    We have gathered, one and another,
    In this moment, for this song,
    Voices joining all together.
    Now the many,
    Now the many become the one

    Ekklesia! Ekklesia!
    We are each part of the other.
    Ekklesia! Ekklesia!
    Every other is part of us,
    As we go,
    As we go.

    About Andy

    Andy Wilkinson

    Andy Wilkinson is a poet, song writer, singer, playwright, and visual artist whose particular interest is the history and peoples of the Great Plains. He has recorded a dozen albums of original music and has written seven plays. In addition to magazine articles and chapters in various non-fiction books, he has written four monographs: “A Family of the Land: the Texas Photography of Guy Gillette” (University of Oklahoma Press, 2013); “Storyline” (Dry Crik Press, 2017); “Surprise, Texas” (a novel, Zenchilada Press, 2018); “Mystery Mechanics: the Creative Process” (Zenchilada Press, 2020); “Llanero: a boyhood on the 360-of-180” (a memoir, Zenchilada Press, 2021); and “Raw + Ripe, Collected Poems 1965-2023” (Zenchilada Press, 2023). He has been recognized with several awards, among them the Kerrville Folk Festival’s New Folk Contest (1985), the Texas Historical Foundation’s John Ben Shepperd Jr. Craftsmanship Award, and seven National Western Heritage Wrangler Awards in five different categories. His visual art works are principally done in gouache, pencil, or pastel. Since 2001, he has been affiliated with Texas Tech University, having served as Artist in Residence at the Southwest Collection, as an instructor in songwriting in the School of Music, and as a teacher in the Honors College. Retired from his regular duties with the University, he continues to teach.

    Dedication

    For Dr. Jeffery Wall and the Vox Solaris Chamber Choir

    Premiere

    Ekklesia premiered on February 9, 2025 at Shadyside Presbyterian Church (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) performed by the Pittsburgh Camerata conducted by Mark A. Anderson.

    View program here.

    Publisher

    Markowski Creative (ASCAP)

    Instrumentation

    SATB Choir (with divisi)

    Errata

    No known errata.

    Year Completed

    2025

    Weight N/A
    Dimensions N/A
    Difficulty

    Genre

    Vocal, Newest

    Duration