Durango Choral Society

Durango Choral Society Our mission is to enhance the musical and cultural development of our community through the promotion of and participation in the choral arts.

Emphasis is placed on providing educational opportunities for both singing participants and audience members. For over 50 years, the Durango Choral Society (DCS) has drawn singers from the Four Corners area interested in performing choral music. Our mission is to enhance the musical and cultural development of our community through the promotion and participation by the DCS members in musical prog

rams for the benefit and enjoyment of the community. DCS has grown from a small, casual group of singers to a vibrant non-profit organization that has four top notch performing choirs: the 100-voice mixed choir, the 16 voice Durango Women’s Choir (DWC), the Durango Children’s Chorale (DCC) and the Durango Youth Chorus (DYC). We are proud that we have a seat for singers of every age. Our mission is to enhance the musical and cultural development of our community through the promotion of and participation in the ACCESSIBLE choral arts. We work hard to keep our prices low and create opportunities for all interest singers and audience members through scholarships and donations. We are committed to offering our community exemplary and diverse concerts of the highest quality. Our touring groups have performed by invitation across Europe and the United States. Most recently, DCS was thrilled to be the 2016 recipients of the Chorus America/ASCAP Alice Parker Award for Adventurous Programming. We had many plans for our 50th season, 2019/2020. 2020 has us re-visioning a resilient return to live singing and, until then, an expansion into the virtual concert realm.

CONCERT THIS SUNDAY Thank you Judith Reynolds and Durango Herald! Young singers will take the stage SundayBy Judith Reyn...
04/16/2026

CONCERT THIS SUNDAY Thank you Judith Reynolds and Durango Herald!

Young singers will take the stage Sunday
By Judith Reynolds, Special to the Herald
Wednesday, Apr 15, 2026 3:35 PM Updated Wednesday, Apr. 15, 2026 3:35 PM

The Durango Choral Society and its youthful minions will spin a kaleidoscope of American music on Sunday afternoon at Christ the King Church.

“’America, We Sing’ is a vibrant celebration of our nation’s musical heritage,” said Artistic Director and Conductor Rhonda Muckerman. “This concert is largely about the Durango Children’s and Youth choirs, with Farmington’s Caliente Choir, directed by Virginia Nickels.”

If you go
WHAT: “America, We Sing,” presented by the Durango Children’s Chorale, Durango Youth Chorus and the Durango Choral Society, with special guests, the Caliente Children’s Choir.

WHEN: 3 p.m. Sunday

WHERE: Christ the King Church, 495 Florida Road

TICKETS: $15 adults, $5 teens and students, children 12 and younger free

MORE INFORMATION: Visit https://durangochoralsociety.org

The April concert is part of a yearlong celebration of the 250th anniversary of the United States and the 150th anniversary of Colorado, Muckerman said: “both our shared history and the next generation of singers.”

To launch the afternoon concert, the Durango Choral Society will open with two folk songs: “Will the Circle Be Unbroken,” a familiar standard, and “Oh, Durango,” and a new work and world premiere by area songwriter Jerry Harris.

The bulk of the concert will feature youthful voices from the Durango and Farmington groups singing a variety of American music. The program adds a second world premiere composed by former St. Mark’s Episcopal Church Music Director C. Scott Hagler and Fort Lewis College professor emerita Rochelle Mann.

“We will debut ‘Rockin’ Mountain High,’” Amy Barrett said. Director of both Durango youth choirs, she said the piece was specifically written for the Durango Children’s Chorale – “a fun mashup of two well-known children’s songs.”

“We’ll open with ‘Song for Mother Earth,’ a lovely tune honoring the Indigenous people who lived on this continent before us,” she said. “It is about taking care of the earth and, if we do, she will take care of us.”

In addition, the singers will perform “Banjo Sam,” with Camp Brown on banjo; “There’s a Hole in the Bucket”; “Route 66,” a jazz standard; “The Peanut Butter Song,” by Coloradan Jean Berger; and “You’re Never Fully Dressed Without a Smile,” a nod to Broadway. Barrett said she has added a verse about some well-known Durango styles as a bonus.

All the singers, adult and young, will unite to close the concert with “We are a People.”

Songwriter Jerry Harris stands in a Durango landscape complete with the town, the Animas River and the La Plata Mountains. (Courtesy of J. Reynolds)
Songwriter Jerry Harris: Sound vibrations
“’Oh, Durango’ is a jolly song about the charms of Durango,” Muckerman said. She decided to incorporate the new piece into the April program, she said, after hearing it from local songwriter Jerry Harris. The work, sung by the adult singers of the Durango Choral Society, will set a jubilant tone for the afternoon concert. “It speaks of the train, the Animas River, the sunny skies, Music in the Mountains, etc.”

The rolling, singable song rises out of the American folk music tradition with five verses, three choruses and a bridge that functions as a land acknowledgment. It honors the Ancient Ones and challenges the current stewards of Mother Earth.

Harris is a retired government engineer with a Ph.D. in electrical engineering from The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C. Before retiring to Durango with his wife Linda, he had a distinguished career in ultrasound technology and continues to do volunteer international work.

“Music has been as much a part of my life,” he said, as engineering. Ironically or not, the fields moved on parallel tracks throughout his life. “For most of my career, I worked in a government lab responsible for testing medical ultrasound equipment.”

Throughout his 47-year career, Harris became a Fellow of the Acoustical Society of America, American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine, the American institute for Medical and Biological Engineering, and the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. In 1993, he was named the Department of Health and Human Services Engineer of the Year, about the time he and Linda began making regular trips to the Southwest thinking about retirement. In 2010, the Harrises bought a town house here, dividing their time between Colorado and the Maryland/District of Columbia area. In 2014, they moved here permanently.

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Music has been part of Harris’ life since childhood.

“My mom was a college music major, played piano and organ, directed choirs, and taught piano, so there was always music of all kinds in our home,” he said. “I didn’t inherit her performance skills, but I did enjoy trying, taking piano lessons, singing in choirs, and playing trumpet and French horn in school bands.”

As an engineering student at Georgia Tech, Harris said he picked up a guitar and started writing songs, a “hobby” he has continued throughout his life. He’s composed quantities of songs about topics or whimsies that interest him.

Harris writes all his own lyrics and music, inspired by a lifetime of listening to folk, rock and classical music. As a lyricist, he prefers old-school rhyming schemes, inner rhymes, and likes to be melodically and rhythmically creative.

“I have always written songs for baritone voice,” he said, and continues to work out ideas, tunes and text by playing the guitar. “Oh, Durango” started as a baritone solo with guitar, but he transformed it into four-part, soprano-alto-tenor-bass harmony with piano accompaniment for the Choral Society.

For lyrics, Harris said he often starts with a simple list – places, images, thoughts and/or experiences.

“From a long list of things I liked about Durango, I then looked for rhyme,” he said. “After that, I could build a coherent set of verses. Each verse is different as each chorus is different. The sequence tells the story.”

“Oh, Durango” holds a special place in all his music, he said. From their first trip to the area, Harris singled out the area’s natural beauty and cultural opportunities.

“Our trips, along with now living here, inspired this song,” he said.

Judith Reynolds is an arts journalist and member of the American Theatre Critics Association.

Durango Choral Society is a group of singers from the Four Corners area based in Durango Colorado who perform numerous concerts each year.

Thank you Judith Reynolds and Durango Herald. Read about Stream of Song, our concerts on March 27th & 28th.By Judith Rey...
03/23/2026

Thank you Judith Reynolds and Durango Herald. Read about Stream of Song, our concerts on March 27th & 28th.

By Judith Reynolds, Special to the Herald
Friday, Mar 20, 2026

Ebb and flow: Durango and Telluride Choral Societies Celebrate Water Music

Musicians will perform double bill at Summit Methodist Church

Durango and Telluride Choral Societies will team up for a joint set of concerts March 27 and 28.
“Music and water move in currents,” Rhonda Muckerman said. Preparing for the late March pair of Durango Choral Society concerts, the director is mindful of the healing properties of both.

“I’ve always been captivated by the relationship between nature, specifically water, and music, hence our season theme: Stream of Song,” she said. “Most of the songs on our March program have a connection to water.”

If you go
WHAT: Durango Choral Society, Rhonda Muckerman, artistic director, and Telluride Choral Society, Hal Adler, conductor

WHEN: 7 p.m. March 27 and 1 p.m. March 28

WHERE: Summit Methodist Church, 2917 Aspen Drive

TICKETS: $25 general, $5 students, children younger than 12 free. Available at www.durangochoralsociety.org and at the door

MORE INFORMATION: Visit www.durangochoralsociety.org

From the astonishingly beautiful “Sure on this Shining Night,” by Morten Lauridsen, to “The Seal Lullaby,” by Eric Whitacre, the singers will unspool many recognizable works that remind listeners of the healing connections between music and water.

Two works by composer Dan Forrest will be on the program. Both concerts will open with his “Music of Living.”

“He’s widely recognized as one of the leading American choral composers of our time,” Muckerman said. “Dan’s music spans genres and difficulty, ranging from extended major works for chorus and orchestra and significant concert choral repertoire to more accessible works for church and community choirs.”

The second Forrest work will surface in the middle of the concert, the only piece not related to water, Muckerman said: “The Sun Never Says.”

Rhonda Muckerman is artistic director of the Durango Choral Society and singers. (Photo courtesy of Durango Choral Society)
“It is so beautiful, I couldn’t help myself,” she said. “There’s a wonderful recording on YouTube with the BYU women’s chorus singing it near the Great Salt Lake.”

Given the challenge of organizing a foundational program with the large DCS group and the Durango Women’s Choir then adding the Telluride Choral Society for a Saturday performance, Muckerman said music lovers can expect “a surprise solo or two to be added to Friday’s program.”

Telluride’s spring concert theme is “Remembrance and Reflection,” and Director Hal Adler will select pieces from their larger spring program to perform in Durango, Muckerman said.

“The music itself evokes a certain state of mind,” Adler said about the Telluride selections. “This program invites us to take a look back and look inside. It gives us an opportunity to reflect on who we are, what’s important to us, and how we sit in relationship to the world around us.”

Hal Adler is artistic director of the Telluride Choral Society. (Photo courtesy of Telluride Choral Society)
As in years past, a Durango-Telluride combined concert offers a distinct experience for area music lovers. Choral presentations differ in style, interpretation and sound. At some point, it would be interesting to hear parallel performances of a few specific works in one of the combined concerts. In the meantime, the creative offerings by our distinguished regional choral ensembles continue to enlighten us and, this year particularly, reveal the common currents of music and water.

Durango Choral Society to play Carnegie Hall in 2027
Artistic Director Rhonda Muckerman announced recently that the Durango Choral Society will perform in Carnegie Hall in New York City a year from now – May 2027.

“We will be opening with one of Dan Forrest’s pieces: ‘Arise, Shine!’” she said. “I will have the privilege of conducting that piece, as well as John Rutter’s ‘Gloria.’ And I will share the stage with our previous artistic director, Linda Mack. She will conduct another piece by John Rutter. By programming some of Dan Forrest’s works now, I am ‘aiming the ship’ in the direction of New York City.”

Judith Reynolds is an arts journalist and member of the American Theatre Critics Association.

Two chances to see this amazing concert ~ tickets on sale now!
02/13/2026

Two chances to see this amazing concert ~ tickets on sale now!

Thank you, TBK Bank!
12/15/2025

Thank you, TBK Bank!

WE DID IT! You helped us surpass our fundraising goal! On behalf of every singer in the four choirs of the Durango Chora...
12/11/2025

WE DID IT! You helped us surpass our fundraising goal! On behalf of every singer in the four choirs of the Durango Choral Society, our directors, and our staff, thank you for your generous support on SWCO Gives Day 2025! We want to extend our heartfelt gratitude, both for you, and for your donation. You make a difference in the choral arts and in turn, a big difference in your community. We are so delighted to have the opportunity to continue to live our mission of education, artistic excellence, and uplifting our members and audiences-- because of you! Thank you again for giving where you live. We cannot wait to sing for you in the coming year.

CONCERT TODAY AT 3:00! Thank you, Judith Reynolds and Durango Herald! See you at the Community Concert Hall at Fort Lewi...
12/06/2025

CONCERT TODAY AT 3:00! Thank you, Judith Reynolds and Durango Herald! See you at the Community Concert Hall at Fort Lewis College This Sunday afternoon!

Arrive early and stay late. That’s the word for the annual Durango Choral Society Family Christmas Concert on Sunday. By early, organizers mean around noon to peruse the unusual, one-of-a-kind holiday...

On this Giving Tuesday, please support us through CoGives Day! We need your help and we appreciate you so much. You can ...
12/02/2025

On this Giving Tuesday, please support us through CoGives Day! We need your help and we appreciate you so much. You can give today or schedule a donation for CoGives Day, December 9th. Donations of any size help our cause and our quest to have more donors each year. Support the music that you love in your beautiful Durango. Thank you for your dedication to our mission and your support of all of our local non profit organizations. https://www.coloradogives.org/organization/DurangoChoralSociety

Thank you, Judith Reynolds and Durango Herald.
10/17/2025

Thank you, Judith Reynolds and Durango Herald.

“This year’s music will ground us in our home and community,” Rhonda Muckerman said. Artistic director of the Durango Choral Society, she is known for thoughtful programming, solid preparation and cre...

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PO Box 1043
Durango, CO
81302

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