Starting to plan for next season? How about including music by Black composers? Sacred, secular, early, modern... this resource is a great place to get started!
Black Early Music
This Early Music Monday let's talk about Black Early Music, because it's there, it's awesome, it's frequently ignored, and we need to program more of it (year-round, not just in February)! Here's what's in the archive so far, and I look forward to adding to it!
Heinrich Schütz
Faced with the reality of being a musician during a period of intense upheaval (and war), Schütz made the best of it by traveling for strategic study breaks in Venice and moving around to stable court positions. The help of Moritz, Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel didn't hurt either...
O Maria
Early Music Sources does a deep dive into some gorgeous 17th-century monody! But let's also remember that "beautiful skin" meant different things in different times/cultures and art can unfairly impose one standard on everyone. (…and the Virgin Mary most definitely was not a white European…)
Magi viderunt stellam
Another of my favorite Epiphany pieces, this time by Victoria!
Sibylla Cimmeria
There are many pieces for the feast of the Epiphany (coming up this Wednesday), but my favorite straddles the line between sacred and secular with a healthy dose of mysticism!
Praetorius Magnificat
A hybrid of "Joseph lieber, Joseph mein", "In dulci jubilo", and an epic magnificat setting... does it get better than that?
Iconography - helpful or not?
How much can art inform us about musical practice in the past, and how much does it just get in the way? Early Music Sources finds out (with some really pretty paintings)!
Laetentur coeli
Another Byrd motet for Advent, this time his "Laetentur coeli"!
How to improvise polyphony
Improvisation - it’s not just for jazz musicians! Early Music Sources gives a fantastic exploration of polyphonic improvisation according to the work of Tomás de Santa Maria!