Cardinal Singers – UofL News Fri, 17 Apr 2026 13:44:53 +0000 en-US hourly 1 All the world’s a stage this summer for UofL students and faculty /section/arts-and-humanities/all-the-worlds-a-stage-this-summer-for-uofl-students-and-faculty/ Tue, 11 Jun 2019 15:02:45 +0000 http://www.uoflnews.com/?p=47134 is going worldwide this summer with an especially long list of travel opportunities on the books.

Students and faculty are learning, teaching and performing in such far-flung locales as Ecuador, Costa Rica, Vienna, Austria, Denmark, Korea and Thailand.

It’s no wonder as “advancing the art of music globally through the work of faculty composers, performers and researchers” is in the school’s mission statement.

“The faculty and students of the School of Music have been increasingly active from an international perspective for the past dozen years or more, with the current summer representing a kind of apex of these opportunities in terms of the nature of international programs in which we are involved and the numbers of music students and faculty members participating in some fashion,” said Christopher Doane, dean of the School of Music. “Our students and music faculty members expect to have these opportunities as a part of their UofL experience and we have been fortunate to have the international connections and network of friends, donors and music alumni to make these opportunities possible.”

Costa Rica performance

Kimcherie Lloyd, director of Orchestral Studies, traveled this May with 32 students – both instrumentalists and singers – to perform in Costa Rica’s National Theater for a concert celebrating the .

The trip, which included sightseeing, masterclasses and other performances, was commended in official letters signed by the president of Costa Rica.

It was the second such trip to Costa Rica for the School of Music. Students performed there five years ago as well. Both trips were a result of connections formed when Josue Ramirez came to UofL to study piano performance in 2010 as a Fulbright Scholar.

As amazing as that first experience was, this one was even better, Lloyd said. The

Costa Rica

hospitality, comraderie and quality of music shared was incredible, she said.

“I cannot say enough about our Costa Rican friends who hosted us,” Lloyd said. “It was extraordinary … I think the students would say it was a life-changing experience. There were lots of tears when it was time to leave.”

Jessica Wise, who graduated this spring with her Masters in Music in Flute Performance, agreed.

Mike Tracy, Jazz professor, plays with students in Ecuador

“Playing the flute duet in the Bach Magnificat with my duet partner Katie McDonald in the National Theater was my favorite part of the trip. To play in such a beautiful hall filled with musicians and a full audience is an experience I will never forget,” she said. “My host family was also absolutely incredible and my favorite part of the trip too. They made me feel a part of their family and so welcome. It was very difficult to leave them. They invited me back to their homes in the near future, so I hope to travel back to Costa Rica and see them again soon.”

The trip marked the beginning of a formal exchange program between UofL’s School of Music and Costa Rica’sNational University School of Music, which will ensure many more students will have similar experiences in years to come.

Other international trips for the School of Music this summer include:

Jazz in Ecuador

Twenty students and faculty from UofL’s jazz program joined Mike Tracy, Jazz Program director, for an exchange program at the Universidad de las Américas Escuela de Música in Ecuador. .

Music Therapy in Vienna

The music therapy study abroad program is traveling to Vienna, Austria and Denmark in June. The group will visit the University of Music and Performing Arts and participate in a music therapy career day with the famous Vienna Boy’s Choir. In Denmark, they will attend the European Congress of Music Therapy. Students will present a workshop with Petra Kern, UofL music therapy professor.

Cardinal Singers in Korea and Thailand

Kent Hatteberg will lead the award-winning Cardinal Singers on tour to perform in Korea and Thailand June 20-July 8.

Comstock Piano from Germany

Even the instruments are in on the globe-trotting action. Piano faculty members Anna Petrova, Krista Wallace-Boaz and Naomi Oliphant traveled to Hamburg, Germany, to pick out a new Steinway piano for Comstock Hall. The purchase was made possible by a bequest from donors Calvin and Helen Lang. to see Oliphant playing the piano before it makes its journey back to Louisville.

Piano faculty select a new piano for Comstock concert hall
Piano faculty select a new piano for Comstock concert hall
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Cardinal Singers take home another international award /section/arts-and-humanities/cardinal-singers-take-home-another-international-award/ /section/arts-and-humanities/cardinal-singers-take-home-another-international-award/#respond Tue, 05 Jun 2018 19:30:01 +0000 http://uoflnews.com/?p=42437 The are international stars, once again.

UofL’s most selective choir won the Grand Prize in the 11th International Choir Competition in Zadar, Croatia.

The 34 singers, mostly School of Music majors, competed against about a dozen other choirs from across Eastern Europe and beyond.

“We had a really well-rehearsed and diverse program,” said director Kent E. Hatteberg.

The group was required to sing a song written by a composer born before 1600, a contemporary piece, a song from the U.S., and it was recommended they include music from aCroatian composer, too. The performance needed to total 15-20 minutes of music, all sung a cappella.

“We all worked very hard and stayed focused to give our best performance,” said Seon Hwan Chu, a graduate student of choral conducting.

As prestigious as the honor was, it was hardly the first for the group.

Since 2003, the group has traveled widely, making an international trip nearly every year, sometimes more, racking up dozens of awards.

For example, in 2013, the group won the Grand Prize at the Yeosu (Korea) International Choir Competition and the Hội An Choir Prize at the 3rd Vietnam International Choir Competition. They won the German Chancellor’s Prize at the Harmonie Festival in Linden-Holzhausen in 2011.

So many accolades have solidified the Cardinal Singers’

They are often invited to perform at concerts across the globe, like last year’s Gotham SINGS! Collegiate Choral Showcase in Carnegie Hall, New York City, and the China International Chorus Festival in Beijing in 2016.

On such trips, Hatteberg always makes sure the students do some sightseeing and extra performing along the way. For example, on their recent trek, they performed additional concerts in Vienna, Slovenia and Croatia and had some tourist fun at each stop.

Hatteberg said that for many students, these trips are life-changing experiences.

“They’re kind of awe of everything,” Hatteberg said. “I say take it all in because it may not happen again for the rest of their lives.”

The trip to Croatia was the fourth time Chu has been abroad with the Cardinal Singers. His undergraduate degree was in biology, and he was considering dentistry. But, he’d always loved music and wanted to study it. His time with the Cardinal Singers made him realize he wanted to become a choral director.

“It built me into a musician,” he said.

Hatteberg said he’s had other students who met their spouse abroad or decided to go back and teach in that country.

“Sometimes it completely changes someone’s life,” he said.

Follow the Cardinal Singers on to learn about upcoming performances.

 

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