About the Chorale

A Little History

Founded by the late Monsignor Richard J. Schuler in 1956, the Twin Cities Catholic Chorale has been singing at the Church of Saint Agnes since 1974.

The Second Vatican Council ordered that the treasury of sacred music be preserved and fostered with great care. It also commanded that the Latin language be used in worship and Gregorian Chant be given pride of place in liturgical celebrations.

We are trying to fulfill these directives by singing polyphonic Masses with orchestra, a capella compositions and the propers of the Mass in Gregorian Chant.

The Chorale Today

Many Catholics and music lovers have heard choral Masses only in concert halls, but we offer a very different experience: choral Masses sung as an integral part of the liturgy, as the composers intended.

Now in his sixth year as Music Director of the Chorale, Dr. Marc Jaros will conduct the approximately 60 volunteer singers and our professional orchestra and vocal soloists: Laura LeVoir, D.M.A., soprano; Jocelyn Kalajian, contralto; John deCausmeaker, tenor; and Andrew Nalley, bass. Lawrence Henry is the organist.

The Chorale and the Church of Saint Agnes

While the Twin Cities Catholic Chorale initially made its home at the University of Saint Thomas—where Monsignor Schuler taught music—it wasn’t long before the Chorale made its new home in the same parish where the beloved Monsignor was pastor: the Church of Saint Agnes.

We feel blessed to be able to sing in this lovely and acoustically fine structure. Modeled by Stift Sclagl, a monastery church at Aigen, Upper Austria, it reflects the Austrian and Bavarian origins of Saint Agnes’ founding families. Its 205-foot high Zwiebelturm (onion tower) is a landmark visible throughout Saint Paul’s Frogtown neighborhood.