A non-profit arts organization founded in 1997, Meridian Herald combines music, literature, history,
10/01/2022
CONFLUENCE 2022 was supported in part by Georgia Council for the Arts through the appropriations of the Georgia General Assembly. Georgia Council for the Arts also receives support from its partner agency - the National Endowment for the Arts.
09/26/2022
Photos from West Atlanta Watershed Alliance's Urban Waters Symposium, hosted at Trees Atlanta, part of CONFLUENCE 2022
09/23/2022
Photos from the opening reception of our art exhibit with Trees Atlanta, from CONFLUENCE 2022, September 11th - 16th
09/18/2022
Photos from our conversation with Margaret Renkl, Janisse Ray and Dwight Andrews at First Congregational Church
09/15/2022
from the premier of Steven Darsey's oratorio setting of Sidney Lanier's work. Saturday, September 10th, Atlanta Symphony Hall.
09/13/2022
CONFLUENCE 2022 is underway, and our exhibit at Trees Atlanta’s Kendeda Building location is open this week! (excluding Wednesday)
Open Exhibit – September 12th-16th @ 11:00 AM – 4:00 PM (closed Wednesday the 14th)...
09/12/2022
View our event with First Congregational Church on Sunday, featuring conversations with Margaret Renkl, Janisse Ray, and Dwight Andrews here
Conversations with Margaret Renkl, Janisse Ray and Dwight Andrews exploring the environment, arts, and activism.September 11, 2022First Congregational Church...
09/10/2022
"I Know That I Know" - Poetry of Sidney Lanier set to music by Steven Darsey, premiers tonight, 7pm at Atlanta Symphony Hall. View the live-stream here:
Registration is now open for Georgia Grows Native for Birds Month events in September, including our Georgia Audubon Wildlife Sanctuary Tour on September 10, and our closing celebration featuring Kenn Kaufman, the weekend of September 24 and 25. Learn more or register for events today at https://www.georgiaaudubon.org/georgia-grows-native-for-birds-month.html
07/09/2022
Georgia Poet Sidney Lanier wrote "God send you a soul full of colossal and simple chords." Composer Steven Darsey could hear the music in Lanier's famous poem THE MARSHES OF GLYNN, and set out to study Lanier's work and the Georgia coast. After years of devoted work, his oratorio setting of THE MARSHES OF GLYNN will premiere on September 10th at Atlanta Symphony Hall. Poetry and images from Darsey's research trips with dear friends to Ossabaw Island can be found below!
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The Meridian Chorale is comprised of many of the finest choral singer-vocal soloists in North Georgia. Conducted by Steven Darsey in the tradition of Robert Shaw, their repertoire spans the gamut of concert vocal music. The Chorale’s singing has been said to “change lives” and has been likened to “hearing stained glass.”
Founded on important regional traditions, our Folk Advent and Folk Passion programs are original creations based on texts and tunes from Georgia’s 1844 Sacred Harp tunebook. Our camp meetings, in addition to preaching and prayer, include authentic 19th century camp meeting songs and vernacular hymns as well as Native American songs. Rooted in folkways, yet imbued with contemporary idioms, these events strengthen appreciation for the wisdom of previous eras and thus fulfill a unique and vital need of contemporary culture.
Beyond American heritage and Western canonical classical works, our programs, especially our Science and Theology events, have included readings and songs from Native American, Indian Muslim, Druid, Egyptian, Taizé, Tao Te Ching repertories; an excerpt of the opera Gilgamesh by Stephan Dickman, as well as the premiere of Darsery’s aleatoric work on the Christian chant, “Ubi Caritas,” the Hebrew traditional melody, “Ki hiney kahomer,” and from Sufi spiritual song, “Tere dar se jo,” offered as a prayer for universal healing.
Our Atlanta Music Festivals are dedicated to advancing harmony among communities. These feature traditional works as well as important contemporary works of African American composers. Steven Darsey’s research revealed the common use of the folk hymn “Bound for the Promised Land” in 19th century African American and white cultures, inspiring him to paraphrase words from Barack Obama’s speech, “A More Perfect Union,” words which composer Adolphus Hailstork employed in his arrangement of this tune, commissioned for our 2016 Festival and soon to be published by Theodore Presser.
The breadth and depth of Meridian Herald’s exploration of history, culture, and spirituality is seen in its featured performers and collaborators, including renowned preachers and story‐tellers Fred Craddock, Brooks Holifield, and Will Willimon, actress Brenda Bynum, poet, novelist, and playwright Pearl Cleage, composer T.J. Anderson, composer and jazz musician Dwight Andrews, opera stars Indra Thomas, Kevin Burdette, Laquita Mitchell, Morris Robinson, Jessye Norman, speakers Taylor Branch, Robert Franklin, Ambassador Andrew Young, the Morehouse College Glee Club, Emory archivists Randall Burkett and Pellom McDaniels, and the late Rudolph Byrd of Emory’s James Weldon Johnson Institute, among others. For more information, see www.atlantamusicfestival.org.
Meridian Herald’s programs and local television broadcasts and public radio stories have attracted audiences of thousands. Its CDs and presentations at national conferences have carried traditional cultural values to national audiences. Through advancing culture, music, and worship and bridging communities and traditions of the past and present, Meridian Herald strives to benefit present and future generations.