Baylor Music Professor Receives 2018 Grammy Nomination for Chorale Album of Holocaust Victim’s Sacred Compositions

December 11, 2017
Brian Schmidt - Featured News Story(Front)

Baylor's Brian Schmidt - 2018 Grammy Nomination


Baylor Associate Professor Brian Schmidt has been nominated for Best Choral Performance for the 2016 album “Tyberg: Masses.” Together, Schmidt and the South Dakota Chorale, of which he is founder and artistic director, garnered a total of four nominations for the recording.



WACO, Texas – Baylor Associate Professor of Choral Music Brian Schmidt and the professional choir he founded are giving voice to the music of a long-unknown Holocaust victim, and receiving critical acclaim — and Grammy nominations — for their efforts.



Born in 1893 in Vienna, Austria, to musically gifted parents, Marcel Tyberg (pronounced “TEE-burg”) composed symphonies, choral music, piano sonatas, chamber pieces and other works in the neo-Romantic style. Though a practicing Catholic with only one-sixteenth Jewish heritage, that was enough to lead to his arrest by the Nazi Gestapo and his internment in the infamous Auschwitz death camp, where he died in 1944 at the age of 51.



Only days before his arrest, Tyberg sensed it was imminent and assembled a group of his friends in a local church where they performed some of the composer’s works. He then entrusted his manuscripts to a physician friend, Dr. Milan Mihich, who later passed the music to his son Enrico, who moved to Buffalo, New York, bringing Tyberg’s scores with him and storing them in his basement. Decades passed and Mihich, who died in 2016, decided to seek ways to bring Tyberg’s work to light. Over the last five to ten years, some of Tyberg’s orchestral, chamber and piano works have gained a following, but his sacred compositions — two Catholic masses — remained unexplored until a colleague brought them to Schmidt’s attention.



“I've always been interested in giving voice to unsung heroes of the past and present,” Schmidt said. “I like performing the music of composers that are rarely heard or unknown, but Tyberg's story and music felt more like a calling. Once I knew about him and played through the music, I felt compelled to give his music life.”



In addition to Schmidt’s nomination for Best Choral Performance, the album was nominated in the Best Engineered Album–Classical (with Boston-based Sound Mirror), Best Surround Sound Album, and Producer of the Year–Classical categories.



A native of New Ulm, Minnesota, Schmidt studied choral music at South Dakota State University before earning his master’s degree and doctorate of music arts in choral conducting at the University of North Texas. In 2009 he founded Sioux Falls-based South Dakota Chorale as a professional chorus. The Chorale recorded the album under Schmidt’s direction in January of 2016 at the First Plymouth Congregational Church in Lincoln, Nebraska. The recording was released later that year. Regardless of whether Schmidt brings home the coveted golden Gramophone trophy that gives the award its name, he is grateful for the recognition and for the privilege of bringing Tyberg’s work to the world.



“Marcel Tyberg is somebody the world needs to know about, and we are honored to play a part in preserving and honoring Marcel Tyberg’s legacy,” Schmidt said.



A video of Schmidt’s description of the Tyberg project can be viewed here. Tyberg: Masses can be sampled and purchased from Amazon.



The 60th Grammy Awards will be aired by CBS on January 28, 2018.