This week’s Early Music Monday looks at once of my perennial favorites - Michael Praetorius - and Terpsichore, his fantastic collection of instrumental dances. Read more about the collection here, and then check out this fantastic video from Voices of Music!
A Mozart Celebration
My 2019-2020 season starts this coming weekend with a fantastic program of Mozart with Handel + Haydn Society! Check out these awesome program notes and then come hear it on Friday and Sunday!
Vibrato or no vibrato?
I generally live somewhere between the “straight-tone only” and “vibrato always” worlds, believing that the best singers do both, according to the needs and styles of the repertoire being performed. But what do the treatises say? Early Music Sources does an excellent job exploring the options (with special shout-outs to organ treatises and my perennial fav, Praetorius)!
Preview of The Bach Project presents Dashon Burton
This week’s Early Music Monday is a preview of The Bach Project’s concert coming up on Sunday! Check out the program notes (written by yours truly) and then come hear this fantastic program!
For tickets and more information, click here.
Bach's Children
How many children did J.S. Bach have? How many of them became musicians? This great article from Classic FM has the answers!
Q: How many children did J.S. Bach have?
A: Loads. Here’s what we know.
Cavalieri's Lamentations
I loved exploring these pieces with my colleagues in Miryam a few years ago, and I wish our edition had included these markings! Thanks as always to Early Music Sources for bringing this to life!
2 Years of Early Music Monday
Early Music Monday started 2 years ago this week!
In that time, we’ve had 36 musical excerpts,
24 posts about performance practice/theory,
22 posts about composers/patrons/performers,
16 history-related posts,
3 about instruments, and
3 about musical philosophy!
Onward for year 3!
Ye sacred muses
A death in the family this week has me thinking about grief and how musicians in history handled it. Case in point: William Byrd’s magnificent ode to his friend and mentor Thomas Tallis.
Ye sacred muses (Elegy for Thomas Tallis - 1585)
by William Byrd
with Sonnambula: Shirley Hunt, Amy Domingues, Elizabeth Weinfield, and Colleen McGary-Smith
in conjunction with the Henry Purcell Society of Boston
recorded by Russ Anderson, T-Stop Productions
Live performance, October 2018
Dulces Exuviae
Purcell wasn’t the only composer to set the story of Dido and Aeneas. This week’s post is the gorgeous “Dulces Exuviae” of Jean Mouton, his version of Dido’s lament ~200 years earlier.
Read the text here, and then listen below!
False Relations in the Late Renaissance
Part expressive device, part musica ficta challenge, Early Music Monday goes back to the Renaissance this week with an awesome video on false relations from Early Music Sources!