Boston Baroque, the first permanent Baroque orchestra in North America, will perform Monteverdi's masterpiece, the Vespers of 1610, under the leadership of music director Martin Pearlman, on Saturday, March 6, 2010. The performance will take place within another masterpiece-The cathedral of St. John the Divine, the largest Gothic cathedral in the world. With its extraordinary beauty and scale, The cathedral will provide a dramatic setting for the Vespers, which, in its own time, brilliantly exploited the spatial and acoustical possibilities of St. Mark's Basilica in Venice. The performance will mark both the 400th anniversary of the Vespers' publication and Boston Baroque's first appearance in New York since the mid 1980s (a Carnegie Hall performance of Handel's Messiah under the ensemble's original name, "Banchetto Musicale").
Tickets for the March 6 concert, at $20, $35 and $55, are available online at www.BostonBaroque.org and www.Stjohndivine.org; and from Boston Baroque by telephone at 617/484-9200.
Cathedral of St. John the Divine, 1047 Amsterdam Avenue, New York, NY 10025.
"The Vespers is a work of extraordinary emotional power," declares Martin Pearlman, "astonishing for the grandeur of its conception and the opulence of its sound. No other surviving work from that period is written on such a scale, combining the grandest of public music with the most intimate of solo songs. Like the music itself, our performing forces are on a grand scale: seven solo singers; a chorus large enough to divide into anywhere from four to ten voice parts; and an orchestra with a rich variety of instrumental colors, including virtuosic solo parts for violins and cornetti."
The instrumentation for the Vespers, however, is specified by Monteverdi only in certain movements. For much of the piece, it is the conductor who determines the orchestration - whether and where to double voice parts with instruments, as well as which instruments to use. It is also left to the conductor to decide whether to assign certain passages to the chorus or to solo singers. Thus, the piece can vary greatly from one performance to another.Founded by Martin Pearlman in 1973, Boston Baroque was the first permanent Baroque orchestra established in North America, and is now widely regarded as one of the world's premier period-instrument ensembles. Boston Baroque reaches an international audience with its 20 recordings on the Telarc label, three of which received Grammy® nominations. The ensemble produces a subscription concert series in Greater Boston, now in its 36th season, and made its European debut in 2003, performing Handel's Messiah to sold-out houses and standing ovations in Kraków and Warsaw, Poland. In addition to its acclaimed Disney Hall, Ravinia and Tanglewood performances of the Monteverdi Vespers, Boston Baroque has performed Purcell's Dido and Aeneas with the Mark Morris Dance Group in Chicago and Ann Arbor. In 2009, the ensemble made its debut with two programs at the international Casals Festival in San Juan, Puerto Rico-the first period-instrument orchestra invited to perform there. Boston Baroque's latest recording on Telarc, Mozart: Arias for Male Soprano, featuring soloist Michael Maniaci, was released in January 2010.
For more information, visit www.BostonBaroque.org.
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