
How Lutheran Hymns Lost Their Monopoly in the Missouri Synod
An opinion piece by Paul Raabe on what happened to traditional hymns in American Christianity
An opinion piece by Paul Raabe on what happened to traditional hymns in American Christianity
Two recent posts on Bach’s personal Bible, housed in Concordia Seminary’s Library
On “mestizaje” in the world of Bach, Beethoven, and Brahms
The season opens on Sunday, Dec. 11, at Concordia Seminary’s Chapel of St. Timothy and St. Titus
Seminary choir to make stops in Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Missouri and Illinois
Performances for 2015-16 on Oct. 4, Dec. 13, Feb. 7, and May 15, all at 3:00pm in the Seminary Chapel
“Bach at the Sem” enters its 20th season with concerts on Oct. 28, Dec. 2, March 24, and April 28
Bach at the Sem will perform new concerts on February 12 and April 22, 2012, both at 3:00pm in the chapel of Concordia Seminary, St. Louis
As it happens, when Classic 99 went off the air in July 2010, it never died. Classic99.com continues to live stream its vast catalog of classical and sacred music online, just as it did when it broadcast on the FM dial. Matter of fact, I’m listening to it as I write this post, and I’m even hearing the familiar voices of former KFUO-FM announcers, now volunteers for the Internet station. And The Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod has announced that the Synod’s Board of Directors voted to provide an additional $193,000 through at least mid-2012 “not only to continue but to improve the way it provides quality classical and sacred music to listeners via the Internet.” And, evidently, both the online station and its listener base are expanding
The first Bach at the Sem concert of the season will take place this Sunday, October 10, at 3:00 p.m. in the Chapel of St. Timothy and St. Titus on the Concordia Seminary campus
The 2010-2011 season of the renowned “Bach at the Sem” program begins October 10, with four concerts that run through April 2011
Rock, Resurrection, and Radio Stations — a conversion story