Classical Movements Inc. | |
Type: | Private corporation |
Foundation: | 1992 |
Founder: | Neeta Helms Jacques Vallerand-Parisi |
Location City: | Alexandria, Virginia |
Location Country: | USA |
Area Served: | Worldwide |
Key People: | Neeta Helms (President) |
Industry: | Travel, Music |
Services: | Travel management Organizing live music concerts |
Divisions: | Blue Heart Travel Inc. |
Classical Movements is an American concert touring company in Alexandria, Virginia, specializing in concert and travel arrangements worldwide for professional symphonies and choruses as well as conservatory, university, and youth ensembles. Classical Movements produces two choral festivals: Ihlombe! South African Choral Festival and Serenade! Washington D.C. Choral Festival,[1] in addition to the young artists music festival, Prague Summer Nights.[2] It also commissions new works from Pulitzer, MacArthur and Grammy-winning composers through its Eric Daniel Helms New Music Program.[3]
Previously known as Blue Heart Travel, Inc, the company was established in October 1992 by Neeta Helms and Jacques Vallerand-Parisi with a base in Dupont Circle, Washington, D.C. The company began with tours to Russia and Ukraine one year after the Soviet Union fell and soon added destinations such as Croatia, Eastern Europe, Turkey, South Africa, and Cuba.[4] [5]
Since 1997, Classical Movements has been based in Alexandria, Virginia.[6]
In 2014, Americans for the Arts, an arts advocacy organization in the United States, awarded Classical Movements the BCA10: Best Businesses Partnering with the Arts in America.[7]
Classical Movements has been involved in numerous cultural diplomacy events.
A year after its founding, in 1993, Classical Movements took the Choral Arts Society of Washington on tour to Moscow, Russia with the National Symphony Orchestra conducted by Mstislav Rostropovich. This concert marked the first time any event other than a military parade had taken place in the Red Square. Among the audience of 100,000 was President Boris Yeltsin as millions more watched and listened worldwide to the live broadcast.[8]
Classical Movements began touring to South Africa in 1994 shortly after apartheid was abolished and Nelson Mandela was elected president.[9]
In 1995, Classical Movements became the first American company to offer tours in Croatia after the end of the Croat–Bosniak War, as well as in China becoming one of the first travel companies in the country following the 1989 massacre in Tiananmen Square, and in Vietnam following the new United States Embassy in Hanoi.
Several years later in 2003, the United States Department of State and John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts invited the Iraqi National Symphony Orchestra to perform in Washington, alongside Leonard Slatkin's National Symphony Orchestra. Classical Movements arranged for the Iraqi musicians' travel from Baghdad.[10]
According to its president Neeta Helms, Classical Movements worked for Google in 2009 to arrange all the travel and logistics for the debut of the YouTube Symphony Orchestra, where musicians from across the globe electronically met to perform at Carnegie Hall. In 2011, there was a reprise at the Sydney Opera House.[11]
In 2010, Classical Movements arranged the travel for the first joint concert for American and Cuban choirs in Havana on the 4th of July.[12] Later in 2015 the company arranged a Cuban tour with Minnesota Orchestra despite there being no official diplomatic ties yet between the United States and Cuba.[13]
Classical Movements was also involved in the official United States memorial service for Nelson Mandela at Washington National Cathedral in 2013 where on behalf of the South African Ambassador to the United States, Ebrahim Rasool, they invited original Ihlombe! participants Morgan State University Choir and Pacific Boychoir.[14]
Classical Movements organizes more than 200 concerts on 60 tours each season in 145 countries.[15]
Classical Movements currently owns and produces two annual international choral festivals and a young artists music festival.
Since founding the Eric Daniel Helms New Music Program in 2005, Classical Movements has commissioned composers from 20 different countries to create more than 50 new works. Named after Neeta Helms’s late father, the Eric Daniel Helms New Music Program encourages international collaboration. Alumni include American John Corigliano, Chinese-American Bright Sheng, and Cuban Tania León among many others of numerous nationalities. Altogether the composers in the program have won 5 Grammys, 4 Pulitzers, 1 Oscar, and 1 MacArthur.
In 2017, the Syrian composer Kinan Azmeh became Classical Movements' first Composer-in-Residence.[19]
Year | Composer | Work | Premiere |
---|---|---|---|
2017 | ![]() | Misa para el Tercer Mundo (Mass for the Third World) | Melodia! South American Choral Festival |
2017 | ![]() ![]() | Ansanm-Ansanm | Serenade! Washington, D.C. Choral Festival |
2017 | ![]() | High Flight | Serenade! Washington, D.C. Choral Festival |
2017 | ![]() | L’ametller (The Almond Tree) | Serenade! Washington, D.C. Choral Festival |
2017 | ![]() | Vasudhaiva Kutumbkam (The World is One Family) | Serenade! Washington, D.C. Choral Festival |
2017 | ![]() | Under One Sky | Serenade! Washington, D.C. Choral Festival |
2017 | ![]() | Orissiya (Destiny) | Serenade! Washington, D.C. Choral Festival |
2017 | ![]() | Freedom of the Steppe | Serenade! Washington, D.C. Choral Festival |
2017 | ![]() | Bom Bom Jeys (It is important to know who we are…) | Serenade! Washington, D.C. Choral Festival |
2017 | ![]() | Serenade! Washington, D.C. Choral Festival | |
2017 | ![]() | Serenade! Washington, D.C. Choral Festival | |
2017 | ![]() | In Gratitude | Chorus America |
2017 | ![]() | Wings of Peace and Love: Reflections on Bheki Mseleku | University of Pretoria |
2016 | Moxie | Baltimore Symphony Orchestra’s 100th anniversary season | |
2016 | ![]() | Processional | Baltimore Symphony Orchestra’s 100th anniversary season |
2016 | ![]() | Fanfare for the Uncommon Woman #6 | Baltimore Symphony Orchestra’s 100th anniversary season |
2016 | ![]() | Earth (Holst Trope) | Baltimore Symphony Orchestra’s 100th anniversary season |
2016 | ![]() | Thurgood's Rhapsody | Baltimore Symphony Orchestra’s 100th anniversary season |
2016 | ![]() | Baltimore Bomb | Baltimore Symphony Orchestra’s 100th anniversary season |
2016 | ![]() | Unsung | Baltimore Symphony Orchestra’s 100th anniversary season |
2016 | ![]() | Double Play | Baltimore Symphony Orchestra’s 100th anniversary season |
2016 | ![]() | Dancin' Blue Crabs | Baltimore Symphony Orchestra’s 100th anniversary season |
2016 | ![]() | The Game | Baltimore Symphony Orchestra’s 100th anniversary season |
2016 | ![]() | The Gift to Sing | George Washington University |
2015 | ![]() | Sounds of a New Generation | New World Center |
2015 | ![]() | Gloria (Glory to God) | ACDA National Conference |
2015 | ![]() | Hearts Beat Together | ACDA National Conference |
2015 | ![]() | Wide Open Spaces | ACDA National Conference |
2015 | Will Todd | Gloria | ACDA National Conference |
2015 | ![]() | Peace Like A River | ACDA National Conference |
2014 | ![]() | Salve Regina | Williamsburg, Virginia |
2013 | Andrew Gant | Psalm World | Groton School Chapel |
2012 | ![]() ![]() | A Porter's Song | Woolsey Hall (Yale Glee Club) |
2012 | ![]() | We Are as One | Serenade! Washington, D.C. Choral Festival |
2012 | ![]() | When Music Sounds | Chorus America |
2012 | ![]() | YPChant | Carnegie Hall |
2012 | ![]() | Upon Julia's Clothes | Carnegie Hall |
2012 | ![]() | How to Survive in the Woods | Carnegie Hall |
2012 | ![]() | Credo Fugue | Carnegie Hall |
2012 | ![]() ![]() | UN Minuto | Carnegie Hall |
2012 | ![]() | Cinnamon | Carnegie Hall |
2012 | ![]() ![]() | Thirty-Mile Village | Carnegie Hall |
2012 | ![]() | Descent | Carnegie Hall |
2012 | ![]() | The Cremation of Sam McGee | Parker Playhouse |
2011 | ![]() | Three Studies | Children's Chorus of Washington's 15th Anniversary |
2011 | ![]() ![]() | Rimas Tropicales | Chorus America |
2011 | ![]() | OrchKids Nation | Joseph Meyerhoff Symphony Hall |
2010 | ![]() | Letlang Bana | Ihlombe! South African Choral Festival |
2009 | ![]() | Evening Canticles | St. George's Cathedral |
2009 | ![]() | Tu | Sala Nezahualcoyotl (Mexico City) |
2008 | ![]() | El Angel | Melodia! South American Music Festival |
2006 | ![]() | Tu | Melodia! South American Music Festival |