$25 for a General Admission Ticket to "A Seraphic Fire Christmas" ($50 Value). Choose from Three Performances.
Similar deals
- Choose from three dates
- National choral ensemble
- Program of international carols
- Dynamic performances
A single skilled vocalist can shatter a glass with a well-placed note, but a talented ensemble's harmonies can pick up the broken pieces and sculpt them into an exquisite keepsake mobile. Witness feats of auditory expertise with today's Groupon: for $25, you get one general admission ticket to A Seraphic Fire Christmas, presented by Seraphic Fire (a $50 value). Choose one of the following choral performances:
- December 8 at 7:30 p.m. at St. Jude Catholic Church in Miami
- December 10 at 7:30 p.m. at First United Methodist Church of Coral Gables in Coral Gables
- December 14 at 7:30 p.m. at St. Gregory Episcopal Church in Boca Raton
A nationally sourced all-star roster of professional singers, Seraphic Fire weaves complex vocals and dynamic performance into a shimmering audio-visual tapestry. Their popular Christmas program features English, Spanish, and American carols, sung with classical poise and seasonally appropriate gusto. Patrons can fill their ears amidst flickering candlelight, and enjoy sweeter sounds than those produced by well-intentioned but atonal door-to-door carolers and traveling reindeer choirs.
Reviews
The South Florida Classical Review featured Seraphic Fire twice. NPR and Time Out Chicago has also profiled the group.
- From the opening measures of the Monteverdi, there’s a glow to the voices, a clarity and nuance of diction… an extraordinary vocal balance that showcases Seraphic Fire’s strength: creating a luxurious ensemble blend while retaining the individual traits of each singer. – Time Out Chicago
- The choir’s 13 singers — all rigorously selected and arriving from all over the United States — performed with their usual pure tones, sensitive phrasing and perfect harmonic balances, and did so in seven languages – English, Old English, German, Italian, Ukrainian, Latin and Old Church Slavonic. – David Fleshler, South Florida Classical Review