Thursday, February 28, 2013
Report from 2nd Catacoustic Scholarship Winner, Micah Fusselman
Micah Fusselman is the second recipient of the Catacoustic Consort's Early Music Scholarship. He wrote the following summary report of his award, which contributed toward the purchase of a viola da gamba by John Pringle. Scholarships are made possible in-part by private contributions and the annual yardsale fundraiser. If you would like to contribute to the scholarship fund, contact info@catacoustic.com.
I’m very happy to report the completion of my viola da gamba purchasing project! I am now the proud owner of a 7-string bass viol by John Pringle, with a good bow and case. Good thing it’s here; I have much practice to do for upcoming performances, and also young students who have expressed interest in learning to play gamba—cello is getting to be a little passé.
As many already know, this project began in Cincinnati, but has ended in Omaha, Nebraska where I moved with my family this summer to take up a cello studio. My teacher, colleague, and friend Annalisa Pappano foresaw my departure and aspired to help me secure my own instrument so that I would not be forced to leave gamba playing behind when it was time to leave Cincinnati. It began with a grant-in-aid from the VdGSA, continued with incredibly generous private donations, and achieved full funding with a scholarship from the Catacoustic Consort. With all of the help, it would be futile to try to name all of the people who contributed to the success of this project, but I can say with no hesitation that none of it would have been possible without the astounding support of Cincinnati’s Early Music community. To these friends I give my most heart-felt thanks, for encouragement, friendship, and the opportunity to continue sharing the music that I love. Thank you.
Micah Fusselman
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
Shake It Up!
March 6, 5:30-7:30. Add some Hamlet to your Happy Hour at
the concert:nova and Catacoustic Consort joint fundraiser. The newly renovated Carnegie Center of
Columbia Tusculum will host Shake It Up!,
a cocktail party featuring a specially brewed Beer for the Bard and
performances of music based on Shakespeare’s plays by members of both
Catacoustic and concert:nova. Music lovers and Shakespeare lovers alike will
enjoy appetizers and Shakespearean costumes provided by the Cincinnati
Shakespeare Company. Proceeds will go
toward the upcoming collaboration concert that all three groups will be
participating in. 3738 Eastern Avenue,
Cincinnati, OH 45226. Tickets $60/$35 YP
rate, available at the door or at http://cnshakeitup.eventbrite. com/. For more details, go to http://www.facebook.com/ events/133170653520511/
Monday, February 25, 2013
Cincinnati Early Music Festival Wraps Up
The first ever Cincinnati Early Music Festival has come to a
close. There were so many great moments:
In Hyde Park, Mary Stucky brought the house down with a 400-year-old
French drinking song. In East Walnut Hills, Tatiana Berman and Paul Patterson
took Bach out for a run (am I the only one whose very favorite moment was Emma
Burge’s thrilling solo?) Downtown, 200 people sat agape as Matthias Maute
performed superhuman feats with a recorder.
In Terrace Park, the Cincinnati Bach Ensemble made the rafters ring with
Tallis (was that really just five people singing?) Uptown, CCM spent a whole day with Tomas Luis
de Victoria. Downtown, Ubi Caritas rocked
the house with all Telemann, all the time.
In Northside, a man with a harpsichord walked into a bar, and magic
ensued. Downtown, the amazing acoustics of a stone chapel spun a mix of local
celebrities—Jennifer Roig-Francoli, Rob Turner, Annalisa Pappano, Michael
Maniaci. Hark how the sweet birds sing, indeed.
And there was more, so much more. Wait, how come that list had so many Downtown
concerts? Oh, it must be the TOTALLY
AWESOME Christ Church Cathedral, whose motto is essentially, “Knock, and the
door will be opened.” I don’t see how
anyone could be more supportive than they have been. Stephan Casurella, Shiloh Roby, imagine
cheering throngs showering you with bouquets.
Laura Sabo, Mistress of Classical Revolution, you’re down there on the
ice as well, glitter on your face, and the knowledge that after corralling at
least SEVEN early music groups on stage in an orderly manner, your fallback
career as cat herder is assured. Loretta
Graner, who organizes the music series at the Episcopal Church of the Redeemer. Ric Hordinski, who threw open his studio for
an experiment in community music. So
many others I don’t have room to mention. And of course, Catacoustic Consort,
Annalisa Pappano, Artistic Director, and Tina Gutierrez, Board President, whose
herculean efforts worked like a magnetic pencil, collecting all the filings
into one beautiful picture. Everyone,
please, squeeze in for one last group photo on the winner’s platform.
So, the question I put to you is this: Shall we do it again? By next year, can we
double the number of events? Can we
engage every corner of the city? Can we
draw the envious eyes of the nation? Can
we (my personal goal) delve even further back into the past and hear some music
from before 1550? Start now talking to
all your friends, Early Music performers and Early Music lovers alike. Help us get the word out, that something
surprising is happening in Cincinnati, and that everyone will want to be a part
of it. Let’s roll up the carpet and
rosin up the bow, and start living in the Early Music Capital of America.
Friday, February 15, 2013
Cincinnati Early Music Festival Final Concert
Join us for the grand finale: the Cincinnati Early Music Festival Benefit Concert!!!
February 24, 3:00, Christ Church Cathedral, downtown
This final concert in the Festival will not only wrap up for this year, it will make next year possible. Tickets begin at $15 (criminally low) and go as high as you would like to donate to ensure next year's Festival will be even better.
Musicians include Michael Maniaci (countertenor), Rob Turner on Baroque flute, Jennifer Roig-Francoli on Baroque violin, the Cincinnati Bach Ensemble led by Carlton Monroe, Rod Stucky on Baroque guitar, Elizabeth Motter on Baroque harp, Kerrie Caldwell (soprano), and Annalisa Pappano on viola da gamba.
The music will span the centuries of the Renaissance and Baroque eras. The company will be congenial, the venue will be gorgeous: this is the way you wish all afternoons could be spent.
More information can be found at http://www.facebook.com/events/398501253578789/
Friday, February 1, 2013
Cincinnati Early Music Festival!
If Early Music is what you want, Cincinnati is the place to
be. Our Early Music scene is growing by
leaps and bounds. We have musicians who
want to play it, we have venues who want to present it, we have students who
want to learn it, we have historians who want to study it. And we have audiences who want to hear
it. That, my friends, is what we mean by
synergy.
To showcase this bubbling cauldron of activity, we are proud
to announce the first ever Cincinnati Early Music Festival. The month of February is packed with events
taking place all over town. We have
visiting guest artists and scholars, and we have local performers,
professional, amateur, and student.
There are traditional concerts and very informal performances, sacred
music and secular, Renaissance and Baroque, soloists and ensembles, singers and
all manner of instruments—harpsichords, theorbos, viols, recorders, lutes. This is your chance to sample a wide range
from the first thousand years of written music.
New events are still being organized, and will be announced as the
information becomes available.
If you are on Facebook, please join the group Cincinnati
Early Music Project. This is a new
venture intended to highlight early music performances and venues in Cincinnati. The group will have all the latest updates on
Festival events, and on happenings year round.
This year’s Festival is being presented under the aegis of
Catacoustic Consort, who is generously lending their support for organization
and public relations. But the true
spirit of the Festival is one of collaboration, of all the local groups coming
together to show off the diversity of possibilities this city has to
offer. We expect that by next year, the
Second Annual Cincinnati Early Music Festival will take flight on its own
wings. All of us in Cincinnati will be
richer for it.
Here is the schedule so far.
New events are still being added.
Feb 1. 7:30
Catacoustic Consort with Matthias Maute.
The grand opening for the Festival.
Catacoustic is one of the premier Baroque ensembles in the US, and
Matthias Maute is one of the great instrumental virtuosos. Together they present an evening of recorder,
viol, lirone, and theorbo from two centuries of the Baroque. Details at http://www.catacoustic.com/season2012.html
Feb 3. 2:00
Challenging Performances Series.
CCM professor Awadagin Pratt brings his studio of piano students to
Northern Hills Fellowship Unitarian Universalist Congregation in Wyoming for a
concert dedicated to composers born in 1685.
(It was a great year for composers—Bach, Handel, Scarletti…) Details at https://www.facebook.com/events/279504438843699/ (facebook login required).
Feb 10. 3:00
CCM’s professor of voice Mary Stucky, and her husband, professor of
guitar and lute Rod Stucky, present a recital of music from the French courts of Louis XIII
and Louis XIV. This performance is part
of the Music in the Chapel series at The Episcopal Church of the Redeemer in
Hyde Park. Details at http://www.redeemer-cincy.org/
Feb 10. 8:00
Classical Revolution presents an Early Music Sampler at the Northside
Tavern. Several local groups will be
performing, including Catacoustic Consort, Adastra, the Noyse Merchants, the
CCM Early Music Lab, Ubi Caritas, Bill Willits, AND MORE! Classical Revolution is a nation-wide
movement to bring classical music to the people. It is believed this will be the first time in
the country that an entire evening’s offering will be Early Music.
Feb 13. 6:45
Melisa Bonetti presents her Graduate Recital at CCM. Among others, she will perform Barbara
Strozzi’s L’Eraclito amoroso,
accompanied by Triple Baroque Harp. Details at
https://www.facebook.com/events/404108336345625/
Feb 17. 2:30
Xavier Guitar Series welcomes Grammy Award winner David Russell. His program will include two Sonatas by
Domenico Scarlatti, and Couperin’s Vingt-sixième Ordre, and several modern
selections. Details at http://www.xavier.edu/musicseries/
Feb 17. 4:00
Bach Vespers at St. Thomas Episcopal Church in Terrace Park. The Cincinnati Bach Ensemble and Choir will
perform Thomas Tallis’ Lamentations of
Jeremiah. Details at http://bachvespers.wordpress.com/schedule-2/
Feb 19. 12:00 Ubi Caritas,
The Band of the Baroque, performs all Telemann at the Christ Church Cathedral’s
Music Live at Lunch series. Details at http://christchurchcincinnati.org/music/musicliveatlunch
Feb 21. 7:00 Bach by Candlelight. CSO musicians, students, and others present a night of all Bach. The line-up is still being assembled, so expect the unexpected--word has it that a cello suite will be performed on the mandocello. This all-acoustic evening will take place at the Monastery, a recording studio in Walnut Hills. The event is free, but tickets must be reserved in advance. Details at http://www.facebook.com/events/338284626281843/
Feb 21. 7:00 Bach by Candlelight. CSO musicians, students, and others present a night of all Bach. The line-up is still being assembled, so expect the unexpected--word has it that a cello suite will be performed on the mandocello. This all-acoustic evening will take place at the Monastery, a recording studio in Walnut Hills. The event is free, but tickets must be reserved in advance. Details at http://www.facebook.com/events/338284626281843/
Feb 22. 2:30
CCM’s “Thinking About Music” Colloquium brings in Craig Monson, author
of Disembodied Voices: Music and Culture
in an Early Modern Italian Convent.
He will be discussing Chiara Margarita Cozzolani, a 17th c
composer, with live musicians demonstrating aspects of her work. Details at http://calendar.uc.edu/wv3/wv3_servlet/urd/run/wv_event.Detail?id=19037927
Feb 23. 10:00am
Symposium on the Music of Tomas Luis de Victoria. A day-long symposium at the
University of Cincinnati, College-Conservatory of Music. Six student
presentations. Keynote lectures by Kyle Adams of Indiana University and Miguel
Roig-Francolí of CCM. In conjunction with the Cincinnati Early Music Festival.
Sponsored by the Music Theory and Musicology Society. Funded by the University
Funding Board. CCM - University of Cincinnati, Baur Room Details at https://www.facebook.com/events/438103836263583/ (facebook login required).
Feb 24. 3:00
Join us for the grand finale: the
Cincinnati Early Music Festival Benefit Concert!!!
This final concert in the Festival will not only wrap up for this year, it will make next year possible. Tickets begin at $15 (criminally low) and go as high as you would like to donate to ensure next year's Festival will be even better.
Musicians include Michael Maniaci (countertenor), Rob Turner on Baroque flute, Jennifer Roig-Francoli on Baroque violin, the Cincinnati Bach Ensemble led by Carlton Monroe, Rod Stucky on Baroque guitar, Elizabeth Motter on Baroque harp, Kerrie Caldwell (soprano), and Annalisa Pappano on viola da gamba.
The music will span the centuries of the Renaissance and Baroque eras. The company will be congenial, the venue will be gorgeous: this is the way you wish all afternoons could be spent. Christ Church Cathedral, downtown.
This final concert in the Festival will not only wrap up for this year, it will make next year possible. Tickets begin at $15 (criminally low) and go as high as you would like to donate to ensure next year's Festival will be even better.
Musicians include Michael Maniaci (countertenor), Rob Turner on Baroque flute, Jennifer Roig-Francoli on Baroque violin, the Cincinnati Bach Ensemble led by Carlton Monroe, Rod Stucky on Baroque guitar, Elizabeth Motter on Baroque harp, Kerrie Caldwell (soprano), and Annalisa Pappano on viola da gamba.
The music will span the centuries of the Renaissance and Baroque eras. The company will be congenial, the venue will be gorgeous: this is the way you wish all afternoons could be spent. Christ Church Cathedral, downtown.
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