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Ellen M. Wilson: News

Music Video in Works - January 19, 2009

VaBoom Studios is producing a music video of "Modah Ani", the opening track from Songs of Ascent.

A party will be held to celebrate the release. Please sign up for email alerts and we will let you know when the bash is to be held.

Feminist Review - January 1, 2009

Ellen M. Wilson - Songs of Ascent

Treat your nerves to a vacation. Ellen M. Wilson’s Songs of Ascent is the perfect album for tense listeners in tense times. If you are frayed by looming debt, housing concerns, healthcare inadequacies, by any or all of the plagues of our times, Songs of Ascent is a balm that rarely comes packaged in CD form. The compositions are all based on Jewish liturgy, but the arrangements and message transcend religious affiliation.

Songs of Ascent opens with “Modeh Ani,” a grace said upon awakening. Wilson infuses the melody with haunting Middle Eastern tones reminiscent of the muezzin’s call to prayer. The second song’s lyrics, “Eil Na R’fa Na Lah,” are composed of Moses’ prayer for his sister Miriam’s healing. Wilson’s simple yet soaring melody feels as if it actually could have healing properties. In fact, the same can be said of the entire album.

I have seen Songs of Ascent labeled as “new age”, but I disagree. Rather than 'new', Wilson’s arrangements and heavenly voice seem ancient in the best sense of the word. The music and words are delivered with quiet passion as one imagines they were originally intended back in the day when religion was more universally viewed as a source of strength and communion. For example, anyone who has ever been to a synagogue service has heard “Oseh Shalom,” but not like this. This prayer, asking God to bestow peace on the world, has never been so wistful, so heartfelt and so, well, harmonically catchy. I now find this tune running through my head like a reflexive and soothing mantra. And unlike most “ear-worms,” which tend to be as pernicious as the “Meow Mix” song, I welcome this one. It is flat out gorgeous.


Last year at this time, I was exhausting my iPod battery with Sarah McLachlan’s Christmas album, Wintersong, alternately wishing there were a Jewish equivalent and also not caring if there was because while listening to the music my spirit rose and cartwheeled, no religious affiliation necessary. Yet this year I got my wish. Ellen M. Wilson’s sound is much like McLachan’s and with just as broad an appeal. Wilson’s voice is truly ethereal. She could sing programming code and still induce a Zen-like well-being in the listener. “Pitchu Li,” a request for justice, demonstrates this remarkable vocal ability, gliding from Mariah Carey highs to Pink-like contralto.


Songs of Ascent is a blend of Middle Eastern melody, traditional Jewish liturgy, impossibly beautiful harmonies, and a bit of jazz and soul. Since most cantorial albums feature men, it is an added joy to have this work by a female artist. In a world where more and more of us are reverberating from the harsh echoes of economic crises, violence, and fears for the future, one may wonder: is life still worth celebrating? Songs of Ascent answers this question in the affirmative, and in doing so, truly lives up to its name.

Review by T. Tamara Weinstein
http://feministreview.blogspot.com/2008/12/ellen-m-wilson-songs-of-ascent.html

UTEP and EPCC Music Colleagues Join Forces and Win Performance Grant - October 20, 2008

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT: Ellen M. Wilson
Info@ellenmwilson.com (915) 449-3834

El Paso, TX – When soprano Ellen M. Wilson and classical guitarist Armin Harrison first began performing the music of Renaissance composer John Dowland, little did they know they would soon have the ability to bring this 500 year-old composer’s music to hundreds of El Pasoans, many of whom have never heard of the composer, let alone his music.

Songs from the Labyrinth, a 2007 CD release by rock star Sting, has brought Dowland’s music to the attention of many popular-music fans, and Ms. Wilson and Mr. Harrison hope to build on this interest in order to draw further attention to Early English music.

Ms. Wilson and Mr. Harrison discovered they shared a penchant for Renaissance and Baroque music when discussing possible repertoire for an EPCC faculty recital back in 2004. “Ellen brought in a book of Dowland songs in which the lute parts had been transcribed for guitar. I was fascinated by the intricate interplay of melodies between the vocal and instrumental parts.”

“Across the Ages: Music of the English Renaissance and Baroque,” a program of John Dowland and Henry Purcell music for voice and guitar, had been performed by the duo around El Paso in 2007 and early 2008 and is a great example of the type of collaboration that often happens between musical colleagues at these two schools. Ms. Wilson is a lecturer in voice at the University of Texas at El Paso and she has also been on the adjunct music faculty at El Paso Community College (EPCC) and Mr. Harrison is on the music faculty of EPCC, where he heads the music program and teaches classical guitar to a rapidly growing studio. A recording of this musical program is in the works.

“Across the Ages: Music of the English Renaissance and Baroque” will be performed throughout the city of El Paso in the 2008-09 season in a series of performances funded for the coming fiscal year with a grant from the City of El Paso Museums and Cultural Affairs Department. If you have a venue that offers free admission and would like to be considered as a host for a performance of this program, please send an email to FyffeBE@elpasotexas.gov or info@ellenmwilson.com.

Local CD Release Party - September 13, 2008

KTEP Radio Interview - September 11, 2008

Sept. 11, 2008 at 12:30 p.m: KTEP 88.5 FM; Interview of Larry Lesser and Ellen on State of The Arts with host Monica Gomez. Listen to the archived interview at: www.ktep.org/program
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