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The 2007 Edition Is Available in PDF Form By
VOX The new Chapter Secretary: Nick Gale [email protected] The Academy of St Cecilia Patrons: The Most Hon. The Marquess of Londonderry Dean and Education Advisor: Sir Peter Maxwell Davies CBE John McIntosh OBE Vice Patrons: James Bowman CBE, Naji Hakim, Monica Huggett [email protected] From the master Treasurer: Paula Chandler [email protected] elcome to the 2007 edition of Vox - the mouthpiece of the Academy of St Cecilia. Registrar: Jonathan Lycett We always welcome contributions from our members - [email protected] indeed without them Vox would not exist. In this edition we announce our restructured Chapter and its new members; feature a major article on Thomas Tallis Director of Communications: whose 500th anniversay falls at this time; and we Alistair Dixon review the Academy’s most major event to date, the [email protected] chant day held in June 2006. Our new address is: Composer in Residence: Nicholas O'Neill The Academy of St Cecilia Email: [email protected] C/o Music Department [email protected] Cathedral House Westminster Bridge Road Web site: LONDON SE1 7HY www.academyofsaintcecilia.com Archivist: Graham Hawkes Tel: 020 8265 6703 [email protected] ~ Page 1 ~ ~ Page 2 ~ Advisors to the Academy Thomas Tallis (c.1505 - 1585) Alistair Dixon, a member of the Chapter of the Academy, spent ten years studying and performing the music of Thomas Tallis. In 2005 Academic Advisor: he released the last in the series of recordings with his choir, Chapelle Dr Reinhard Strohm PhD (KU Berlin) FBA HonFASC. Heather Professor of Music Oxford University du Roi, of the Complete Works of Thomas Tallis in nine volumes. -
Completions and Reconstructions of Musical Works Part 1: Introduction - Renaissance Church Music and the Baroque Period by Stephen Barber
Completions and Reconstructions of Musical Works Part 1: Introduction - Renaissance Church Music and the Baroque Period by Stephen Barber Introduction Over the years a number of musical works have been left incomplete by their composers or have been partly or wholly lost and have been reconstructed. I have a particular interest in such works and now offer a preliminary survey of them. A musical work in the Western classical tradition is the realization of a written score. Improvisation usually plays a very small part, and is replaced by interpretation, which means that a score may be realized in subtly different ways. The idiom in most periods involves a certain symmetry in design and the repetition, sometimes varied, sometimes not, of key parts of the work. If the score is unfinished, then a completion or reconstruction by a good scholar or composer allows us to hear at least an approximation to what the composer intended. The use of repetition as part of the overall design can make this possible, or the existence of sketches or earlier or later versions of the work, or a good understanding of the design and idiom. Without this the work may be an incomplete torso or may be unperformable. The work is not damaged by this process, since, unlike a picture, a sculpture or a building, it exists not as a unique physical object but as a score, which can be reproduced without detriment to the original and edited and performed without affecting the original version. Completions and reconstructions may be well or badly done, but they should be judged on how well they appear to complete what appears to be the original design by the composer. -
John Amner's Sacred Hymnes
Domestic Sacred Music in Jacobean England: John Amner’s Sacred Hymnes … for Voyces and Vyols (1615) Mark Keane Dissertation submitted to the University of Dublin in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree Doctor in Music Performance ROYAL IRISH ACADEMY OF MUSIC Supervisor: Dr Denise Neary January 2019 Declaration I hereby certify that this material, which I now submit for assessment on the programme of study leading to the award of Doctor in Music Performance, is entirely my own work, and that I have exercised reasonable care to ensure that the work is original, and does not to the best of my knowledge breach any law of copyright, and has not been taken from the work of others save and to the extent that such work has been cited and acknowledged within the text of my work. Signed: Mark Keane ID No.: 133072051 Date: 24 January 2019 Terms and Conditions of Use of Digitised Theses from Royal Irish Academy of Music Copyright statement All material supplied by Royal Irish Academy of Music Library is protected by copyright (under the Copyright and Related Rights Act, 2000 as amended) and other relevant Intellectual Property Rights. By accessing and using a Digitised Thesis from Royal Irish Academy of Music you acknowledge that all Intellectual Property Rights in any Works supplied are the sole and exclusive property of the copyright and/or other Intellectual Property Right holder. Specific copyright holders may not be explicitly identified. Use of materials from other sources within a thesis should not be construed as a claim over them. -
Sacred Music and Female Exemplarity in Late Medieval Britain
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Los Angeles The Iconography of Queenship: Sacred Music and Female Exemplarity in Late Medieval Britain A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in Musicology by Gillian Lucinda Gower 2016 © Copyright by Gillian Lucinda Gower 2016 ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION The Iconography of Queenship: Sacred Music and Female Exemplarity in Late Medieval Britain by Gillian Lucinda Gower Doctor of Philosophy in Musicology University of California, Los Angeles, 2016 Professor Elizabeth Randell Upton, Chair This dissertation investigates the relational, representative, and most importantly, constitutive functions of sacred music composed on behalf of and at the behest of British queen- consorts during the later Middle Ages. I argue that the sequences, conductus, and motets discussed herein were composed with the express purpose of constituting and reifying normative gender roles for medieval queen-consorts. Although not every paraliturgical work in the English ii repertory may be classified as such, I argue that those works that feature female exemplars— model women who exemplified the traits, behaviors, and beliefs desired by the medieval Christian hegemony—should be reassessed in light of their historical and cultural moments. These liminal works, neither liturgical nor secular in tone, operate similarly to visual icons in order to create vivid images of exemplary women saints or Biblical figures to which queen- consorts were both implicitly as well as explicitly compared. The Iconography of Queenship is organized into four chapters, each of which examines an occasional musical work and seeks to situate it within its own unique historical moment. In addition, each chapter poses a specific historiographical problem and seeks to answer it through an analysis of the occasional work. -
Newsletter 80 Complete
assemblyof speakers. Full details theof speakers andtheir topics theon centre pages. The 2009-2010LAHS lecture series promisesa wide range subjects of and a remarkable topographical artistsus tell the about past. from changing perceptionsofBritain in the Roman Empire to what Leicestershire’s From theIronAge ‘suburbs’ modernof Leicester theto Third Radiocarbon Revolution, themes theseason New for new Newsletter B B The Leicestershire Archaeological and Historical Society i i r r m m i i n n g g h h a a m m until May 2010 and the series will be screened on BBC2 and BBC4 in either late either in BBC4 and BBC2 on screened be will series the and 2010 May until continue will Filming left). Wood (pictured Michael historian known television well-by presentedbe to series a six-part for focus as the villages these chosen has company, production television independent an International, Vision Maya Westerby. and Smeeton Harcourt Kibworth Beauchamp, Kibworth of villages the pits testacross fifty than less no opened diggers volunteers with working families local in July 2009, weekend Over one The Kibworth Big Dig Leicestershire. for volumes VCH the remaining completing for plans Trust’s the ground-breaking volume on the city of Leicester. In this newsletter, an outline of the after in 1964 stopped 1899, worked but in set up was Trust VCH original The May). Squire Gerald de Lisle (pictured left at Trust’s the launch Quenby at Hall in President, our of chairmanship the meets under which Trust History County ria Victo- Leicestershire recently-formed the to support agreed has The Committee Victoria CountyHistory plans The isSociety supporting Leicestershirethe & 17. -
A 16Th-Century Meeting of England & Spain
A 16th-Century Meeting of England & Spain Blue Heron with special guest Ensemble Plus Ultra Saturday, October 15, 2011 · 8 pm | First Church in Cambridge, Congregational Sunday, October 16, 2011 · 4 pm | St. Ignatius of Antioch Episcopal Church, New York City A 16th-Century Meeting of England & Spain Blue Heron with special guest Ensemble Plus Ultra Saturday, October 15, 2011 · 8 pm | First Church in Cambridge, Congregational Sunday, October 16, 2011 · 4 pm | St. Ignatius of Antioch Episcopal Church, New York City Program Blue Heron & Ensemble Plus Ultra John Browne (fl. c. 1500) O Maria salvatoris mater a 8 Blue Heron Richard Pygott (c. 1485–1549) Salve regina a 5 intermission Ensemble Plus Ultra Tomás Luis de Victoria (1548–1611) Ave Maria a 8 Ave regina caelorum a 8 Victoria Vidi speciosam a 6 Vadam et circuibo civitatem a 6 Nigra sum sed formosa a 6 Ensemble Plus Ultra & Blue Heron Victoria Laetatus sum a 12 Francisco Guerrero (1528–99) Duo seraphim a 12 Blue Heron treble Julia Steinbok Teresa Wakim Shari Wilson mean Jennifer Ashe Pamela Dellal Martin Near contratenor Owen McIntosh Jason McStoots tenor Michael Barrett Sumner Thompson bass Paul Guttry Ulysses Thomas Peter Walker Scott etcalfe,M director Ensemble Plus Ultra Amy Moore, soprano Katie Trethewey, soprano Clare Wilkinson, mezzo-soprano David Martin, alto William Balkwill, tenor Tom Phillips, tenor Simon Gallear, baritone Jimmy Holliday, bass Michael Noone, director Blue Heron · 45 Ash Street, Auburndale MA 02466 (617) 960-7956 · [email protected] · www.blueheronchoir.org Blue Heron Renaissance Choir, Inc. is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt entity. -
Radio 3 Listings for 27 December 2008 – 2 January 2009 Page 1 of 17
Radio 3 Listings for 27 December 2008 – 2 January 2009 Page 1 of 17 SATURDAY 27 DECEMBER 2008 5.45am 07:58 Arriaga, Juan Cristosomo (1806-1826): Stabat mater SAT 01:00 Through the Night (b00g2vbr) Grieg Academy Choir Richard FARRANT With John Shea. Bergen Philharmonic Choir and Orchestra Lord for thy Tender Mercy’s Sake Juanjo Mena (conductor) The Cambridge Singers 1.01am John Rutter (conductor) Nielsen, Carl (1865-1931): Prelude: Hr. Oluf han Rider (Master 5.53am COLLEGIUM COLCD 107 Tr 8 Oluf Rides) - incidental music Liszt, Franz (1811-1886): (Lassen) Lose Himmel meine seele, 1.07am S494 (transcr. for piano) 08:04 Sibelius, Jean (1865-1957): Symphony No 3 in C Sylviane Deferne (piano) 1.37am BACH Sibelius, Jean (1865-1957): Symphony No 4 in A minor 5.59am Courante (Partita in D Minor) Danish National Symphony Orchestra/DR Obrecht, Jakob (1450-1505): Omnis spiritus laudet - offertory Thomas Zehetmair (violin) Thomas Dausgaard (conductor) motet for five voices WARNER 9031 76138 2 CD2 Tr 2 Ensemble Daedalus 2.12am 08:06 Nielsen, Carl (1865-1931): Springtime on Funen 6.06am Inger Dam-Jensen (soprano) Haydn, Joseph (1732-1809): Cello Concerto in D KABALEVSKY Mathias Hedegaard (tenor) France Springuel (cello) Suite - The Comedians John Lundgren (bass-baritone) Netherlands Radio Chamber Orchestra BBC Philharmonic Orchestra Danish National Choir/DR Antoni Ros-Marba (conductor) Vasily Sinaisky (conductor) Danish National Vocal Ensemble/DR CHANDOS CHSAN 10052 Tr 5 – 14 Danish Girls' Chorus/DR 6.26am Danish National Symphony Orchestra/DR Anonymous: -
Camerata Musica Cambridge
CAMERATA MUSICA CAMBRIDGE ! BLUE HERON Saturday 7 October 2017 CAMERATA MUSICA CAMBRIDGE ! BLUE HERON Directed by Scott Metcalfe Treble Mean Contratenor Bass & tenor Margot Rood Jennifer Ashe Michael Barrett Paul Guttry Teresa Wakim Pamela Della Owen Macintosh David McFerrin Shari Alise Martin Near Mark Sprinkle Steven Hrycelak Wilson Jason McStoots Trinity College Chapel (By kind permission of the Master and Fellows) Saturday 7 October 2017 ! CAMERATA MUSICA CAMBRIDGE A message from the Chairman Camerata Musica Cambridge was founded in 2006 to bring new audiences, especially among the young, to the great riches of classical music. We seek to do this by presenting major works in performances of the very highest quality, and by offering the tickets to our concerts at prices that students can afford. Through the generosity of our sponsors — and, not least, through the generosity of the artists themselves — Camerata Musica has now been fulfilling this mission for over a decade. As we start out on our second decade of concert-giving, the roll of artists who have appeared in the concert series includes many of the most celebrated ensembles and instrumentalists performing today — among them Dame Mitsuko Uchida, Piotr Anderszewski, Pierre-Laurent Aimard, Sir András Schiff, Daniil Trifonov, Igor Levit, Kristian Bezuidenhout, Viktoria Mullova, Pinchas Zukerman, the Hagen, Belcea and Artemis Quartets, and many others of equal distinction. !3 For all our concerts, fully half the hall is reserved for students and those under twenty-five, and all these seats — again, thanks to the enlightened support of our sponsors — are made available at generously subsidized prices. None of this would be possible without the support of our magnificent group of Patrons and Benefactors. -
Copyright 2017 Janet Mccumber
Copyright 2017 Janet McCumber “I WYL POURE OUT THE WORDES OF SORROWE”: POLITICS IN THE PROTESTANT AND CATHOLIC SETTINGS OF PSALMS 51 AND 79 DURING THE ENGLISH REFORMATION BY JANET MCCUMBER DISSERTATION Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirementS for the degree of Doctor of MuSical ArtS in Music with a concentration in Choral Conducting in the Graduate College of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2017 Urbana, Illinois Doctoral Committee: AsSiStant ProfeSSor ChriStopher Macklin, Chair and Director of ReSearch Professor Andrew Megill John Wagstaff, Librarian, ChriSt’S College, UniverSity of Cambridge, UK Professor Sever Tipei ABSTRACT The muSic of the Tudor era in England reflected the period’S political instability. This instability had itS rootS in, among other thingS, the religiouS movement known aS the Reformation. ProteStant and Catholic factionS relied upon biblical textS, SermonS, tractS and other circulating workS to Spread their propaganda, with muSical SettingS of the PSalms alSo finding a part in thiS diSSemination. Beginning in the reign of Edward VI, the metrical pSalterS of the Anglican Church functioned aS perSonal devotional inStrumentS aimed at laity poSSeSSing limited muSical and academic training. They provided, in their Simple tuneS and metricized textS, an eaSy meanS of memorizing the PSalms. Latin motetS, on the other hand, eSpecially thoSe circulating in copied manuScript collectionS in the latter half of the sixteenth century, reflected the political situation of EngliSh CatholicS who were legally unable to worShip openly by incorporating Such textS aS PSalm 50 [51] (Miserere mei, Deus) and PSalm 78 [79] (Deus, venerunt gentes) into lamentS of perSecution. -
Blue Heron Hugh Aston Robert Jones John Mason
Music from the Peterhouse Partbooks, volume 1 Hugh Aston Robert Jones John Mason Blue Heron Scott Metcalfe Music from the Peterhouse Partbooks, volume 1 Blue Heron Hugh Aston (c1485-1558) Noël Bisson, Lydia Brotherton, Teresa Wakim, Brenna Wells (fl1520-35) Robert Jones Jennifer Ashe, Pamela Dellal, Martin Near John Mason (c1480-1548) Michael Barrett, Allen Combs, Jason McStoots, Marc Molomot, Aaron Sheehan, Steven Soph, Mark Sprinkle, Sumner Thompson Blue Heron Scott Metcalfe Cameron Beauchamp, Glenn Billingsley, Paul Guttry Scott Metcalfe director 1 Hugh Aston Ave Maria dive matris Anne (11:17) NB TW BW • PD MN • JM MS • AC ST • CB GB PG 2 Robert Jones Magnificat (13:38) NB LB BW • JA MN • JM MS • AC AS • CB PG ST 3 Aston Gaude virgo mater Christi (12:02) NB TW BW • PD MN • JM MS • MB AC • CB PG ST Acknowledgements 4 John Mason Our greatest thanks to Nick Sandon for making it possible for the incomplete Peterhouse music to sound again in our time. His work Quales sumus O miseri (12:13) MM MN • JM SS • AS MS • AC ST • GB PG is an unfailing inspiration for ours. 5 Aston This recording was made possible by the generosity of many donors, including major underwriting from Laurie Francis-Wright, NB LB BW • JA MN • AS MS • AC JM • CB GB PG Ave Maria ancilla trinitatis (14:36) William and Elizabeth Metcalfe, Harry Silverman, and Erin McCoy, and substantial support from John Paul and Diane Britton and William J. Vaughan. Our grateful thanks to all who contributed: Cheryl K. Ryder, Peter Belknap and Jennifer Snodgrass, Michael P. -
Concert Program Book
THE LOST MUSIC OF CANTERBURY Friday, April 28, 2017 | 8pm TAKING APART THE PARTBOOKS Saturday, April 29, 2017 | 9am - 5pm CATHOLIC MUSIC ON THE EVE OF REFORMATION First Church in Cambridge, Congregational FRIDAY | APRIL 28 Concert: The Lost Music of Canterbury Exultet in hac die Hugh Sturmy Magnificat Robert Jones Kyrie Orbis factor Sarum plainchant Missa sine nomine: Gloria & Credo Anonymous — intermission — Missa sine nomine: Sanctus & Agnus Anonymous Ave Maria dive matris Anne Hugh Aston Pre-concert talk by Nick Sandon (Antico Edition; Exeter University, retired) sponsored in part by The Cambridge Society for Early Music BLUE HERON Scott Metcalfe,director treble Margot Rood, Teresa Wakim, Shari Alise Wilson mean Jennifer Ashe, Pamela Dellal, Martin Near contratenor & tenor Michael Barrett, Owen McIntosh, Jason McStoots, Mark Sprinkle bass Paul Guttry, Steven Hrycelak, David McFerrin Blue Heron is funded in part by the Massachusetts Cultural Council, a state agency. The Friday concert is supported in part by a grant from the Cambridge Arts Council, a local agency which is supported by the Massachusetts Cultural Council, a state agency. Blue Heron 950 Watertown St., Suite 11, West Newton, MA 02465 (617) 960-7956 [email protected] www.blueheron.org 2 SATURDAY | APRIL 29 Taking Apart the Partbooks: Catholic Music on the Eve of Reformation Margaret Jewett Hall 8:30 Coffee & pastries 9:00 Introductory remarks: Scott Metcalfe 9:15-9:45 “Catholicism in England around 1540” Liza Anderson (Episcopal Divinity School) 9:45-10:15 “Protestants in -
CD Liner Notes
LUX FULGEBIT: The Mass at Dawn of Christmas Day St. Mary’s Schola Cantorum (Norwalk, CT) The traditional Latin Mass provides a good structure for a recording because, in addition to its religious and theological significance, it is the supreme form of music drama. That the Mass is primarily a sung event is striking to any visitor: every text that is intended to be audible to the congregation is sung. Music has the practical effect of making the text more audible in a large stone church than when it is merely spoken. The musical backbone of Christian liturgical worship is plainchant. Even in the most elaborate musical establishments at the height of the Renaissance, the majority of the daily liturgical cycle of Mass and Divine Office was sung to the ancient plainchant formulas and melodies. Each text of the Mass is set differently according to its function, for musical setting has the ability to manipulate the speed with which a text is pronounced on a scale far beyond that of even the most affected speech. The prayers and lessons each have a distinctive recitational formula, but all present the text at a spoken pace. In contrast, the parts of the Mass sung by the choir, the proper chants that vary by feast and the ordinary chants that are sung at every Mass, are set at a slower pace: the text unfolds at a speed that would be unsustainably slow for spoken words. The most elaborate are the gradual and alleluia; the meditative musical punctuation between the two lessons. Each sets a psalm verse in a highly ornate manner that allows the singer and the listener to savor and contemplate the meaning in a different way from the longer scripture readings.