Skip to content

  • Home
  • Subscribe / donate
  • Events calendar
  • News
    • Local
    • National
    • Israel
    • World
    • עניין בחדשות
      A roundup of news in Canada and further afield, in Hebrew.
  • Opinion
    • From the JI
    • Op-Ed
  • Arts & Culture
    • Performing Arts
    • Music
    • Books
    • Visual Arts
    • TV & Film
  • Life
    • Celebrating the Holidays
    • Travel
    • The Daily Snooze
      Cartoons by Jacob Samuel
    • Mystery Photo
      Help the JI and JMABC fill in the gaps in our archives.
  • Community Links
    • Organizations, Etc.
    • Other News Sources & Blogs
    • Business Directory
  • FAQ
  • JI Chai Celebration
  • JI@88! video
Scribe Quarterly arrives - big box

Search

Follow @JewishIndie

Recent Posts

  • Galilee Dreamers offers teens hope, respite
  • Israel and its neighbours at an inflection point: Wilf
  • Or Shalom breaks ground on renovations 
  • Kind of a miracle
  • Sharing a special anniversary
  • McGill calls for participants
  • Opera based on true stories
  • Visiting the Nova Exhibition
  • Join the joyous celebration
  • Diversity as strength
  • Marcianos celebrated for years of service
  • Klezcadia set to return
  • A boundary-pushing lineup
  • Concert fêtes Peretz 80th
  • JNF Negev Event raises funds for health centre
  • Oslo not a failure: Aharoni
  • Amid the rescuers, resisters
  • Learning from one another
  • Celebration of Jewish camps
  • New archive launched
  • Helping bring JWest to life
  • Community milestones … May 2025
  • Writing & fixing holy scrolls
  • Welcoming by example
  • Privileges and responsibilities
  • When crisis hits, we show up
  • Ways to overcome negativity
  • Living in a personal paradise
  • I smashed it! You can, too.
  • חוזרים בחזרה לישראל
  • Jews support Filipinos
  • Chim’s photos at the Zack
  • Get involved to change
  • Shattering city’s rosy views
  • Jewish MPs headed to Parliament
  • A childhood spent on the run

Archives

Byline: Early Music Vancouver

Shining a light on early music

The new season of Early Music Vancouver started with a presentation of the Goldberg Variations and continues with DanteNova: Music from Dante’s Commedia Oct. 25.

From the wailing cries and silences of Inferno to the angelic concerts of Paradiso, this program revisits the pages of Dante’s Divine Comedy, where music resounds throughout. Dante wrote Comedy around the time when a new musical style, the Ars Nova (New Art) spread throughout France and Italy. La Fonte Musica, directed by Michele Pasotti, is an ensemble whose artistic journey is to unveil the roots of the music composed during the transition from the Middle Ages to Renaissance humanism. They will take listeners on a musical journey through the Ars Nova and Dante’s timeless masterpiece, to Heaven from Hell, as Bill Richardson provides the narration.

Bahauddin Dagar, world master of the rudra veena, an ancient classical musical instrument of India, makes his Vancouver debut Nov. 23. 

Countertenor Iestyn Davies joins the viol consort Fretwork, directed by Richard Boothby, in an exploration of the lament on Nov. 26. A genre of the Baroque era, the lamento’s origins lay in early 17th-century Italian opera, before finding its way into sacred music. It was quickly embraced by German sacred composers and Johann Christoph Bach’s Ach, dass ich Wassers gnug hätte, his best-known work that laments the sinfulness of humanity, forms the foundation of this program.

Blessed Echoes: Elizabethan Lute Songs is next on the lineup, on Dec. 5. Robin Pharo and the ensemble Près de votre oreille (Close to Your Ear) offer a dive into English lute song during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. Blessed Echoes brings to light other treasures of Elizabethan and Jacobean song in one, two, three or four voices, which still remain unknown or poorly known, composed by famous poets and composers like Thomas Campion or Philip Rosseter.

The first part of Early Music Vancouver’s new season rounds up with Festive Cantatas: Bach & Zelenka, with performances in Victoria Dec. 21 and in Vancouver Dec. 22.

Festive Cantatas returns with a pairing of the Gloria in excelsis Deo cantata BWV 191 by Johann Sebastian Bach with Czech composer Jan Dismas Zelenka’s Missa Nativitatis Domini (ZWV 8) of 1726. The only Bach church cantata set to a Latin text, BWV 191 is based entirely on the “Gloria” from the B Minor Mass (BWV 232), with an unusual première in Leipzig on Christmas Day to celebrate the Peace of Dresden (1745).

Zelenka (1679-1745), whose output consisted mainly of sacred music for the Catholic court at Dresden, was the most important Bohemian composer before Christoph Willibald Gluck. His Missa Nativitatis Domini was found in Carl Philipp Emannuel Bach’s personal effects, giving us a clue that the piece was known to J.S. Bach.

Festive Cantatas will be performed by Hélène Brunet and Suzie LeBlanc, sopranos; Cecilia Duarte, alto; James Reese, tenor; William Kraushaar, bass; Vancouver Chamber Choir and Pacific Baroque Orchestra, directed by Alexander Weimann.

For more information on these performances and the rest of the Early Music Vancouver season, visit earlymusic.bc.ca. 

– Courtesy Early Music Vancouver

Posted on October 11, 2024October 9, 2024Author Early Music VancouverCategories MusicTags Early Music Vancouver
Proudly powered by WordPress