Boston Early Music Festival | 2022-2023 Season: Chiaroscuro Quartet

Page 27

CHIAROSCURO QUARTET
Baroque
SATURDAY, MARCH 25, 2023 8PM | NEW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY’S JORDAN HALL, BOSTON BEMF.ORG InternatIonal
opera
CeleBrated ConCerts
World-Famous exhIBItIon

he omplete orks

“ he is the father, we are the kids. Those of us who know anything at all, learned it from him.”

—Attributed to Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Published by The Packard Humanities Institute cpebach.org

Carl Phili PP Emanu E l Ba C h

JUNE 4 -11, 2023

Boson Early Music Fesival

Enjoy a weeklong Festival with dazzling OPERA, celebrated CONCERTS, the world-famous EXHIBITION, and so much more!

FESTIVAL CONCERTS FEATURING: The all-star BEMF Orchestra

Maxine Eilander, harp & Tekla Cunningham, violin

Les Délices | Vox Luminis | La Donna Musicale & Rumbarroco

The Newberry Consort | The Orlando Consort | Sollazzo Ensemble

The Organ & Keyboard Mini-Festival | Doulce Mémoire

Hamburger Ratsmusik | Tiburtina Ensemble

Stile Antico | Ricercar Consort | ACRONYM

Amanda Forsythe, Dorothee Mields & Lucile Richardot

Erik Bosgraaf, recorder & Francesco Corti, harpsichord

TICKETS ARE NOW ON SALE!

Visit BEMF.org for the complete schedule.

THE ORLANDO CONSORT ACRONYM

DOULCE MÉMOIRE

OPERA • CONCERTS • EXHIBITION LES DÉLICES
ALSO AVAILABLE
Early Music
Paul O’Dette & Stephen Stubbs, Musical Directors INTERNATIONALLY AWARD-WINNING Opera CDs ORDER TODAY AT BEMF.ORG MARC-ANTOINE CHARPENTIER Les Plaisirs de Versailles Les Arts Florissants
2019 GRAMMY NOMINEE!
Boson
Fesival
2022–2023 SEASON 1

Boson Early Music Fesival Boson Early Music Fesival

VIRTUAL CONCERT AVAILABLE NOW

Watch until April 7, 2023

QUICKSILVER

ROBERT MEALY & JULIE ANDRIJESKI, Directors

EARLY MODERNS: THE (VERY) FIRST VIENNESE SCHOOL

SATURDAY, APRIL 22, 2023

8PM | First Church in Cambridge, Congregational

ENSEMBLE CASTOR

MIREILLE LEBEL, mezzo-soprano

RODOLFO RICHTER, Leader

VIVALDI: FORCES OF NATURE—LOVE OF NATURE

FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 2023

8PM | St. Paul Church, Cambridge

STILE ANTICO

ENGLAND’S NIGHTINGALE: MUSIC OF WILLIAM BYRD

ENJOY IN PERSON & ONLINE—LEARN MORE AT BEMF.ORG!

SAVE 10% WHEN YOU SUBSCRIBE TO 3 OR MORE PROGRAMS

2 BOSTON EARLY MUSIC
FESTIVAL
Paul O’Dette & Stephen Stubbs, Artistic Directors

Dear Friends,

Tonight, we are thrilled to welcome the virtuoso instrumentalists of Chiaroscuro Quartet in their eagerly anticipated BEMF début. Praised for their innovative approach to Classical chamber music performed on gut strings with historical bows, the quartet’s unique sound has been described in the Observer as “a shock to the ears of the best kind.” Their program, “Shades of Minor,” focuses on string quartets by Beethoven, Schubert, and Mendelssohn from a seventeen-year period in the early 1800s, all composed in minor keys and displaying deeply contrasting elements, characters, and affects.

We hope you will join us in April for the final two concerts of our 2022–2023 Season. The Austrian-based Ensemble Castor makes their BEMF début on Saturday, April 22, at First Church in Cambridge, with an all-Vivaldi program featuring radiant mezzo-soprano Mireille Lebel and esteemed violin virtuoso Rodolfo Richter. Our Season is brought to a satisfying close six days later on Friday, April 28, at St. Paul Church in Cambridge, with the luminous voices of Britain’s Stile Antico in a program titled “England’s Nightingale,” commemorating the 400th anniversary of the death of William Byrd.

We look forward to seeing you at our 22nd biennial Boston Early Music Festival—A Celebration of Women—which takes place June 4 to 11, 2023. Join us for an inspiring week honoring women in music from the present day and past centuries. Subscriptions and single tickets are now on sale, and a full brochure with in-depth descriptions of the week’s operas, concerts, and other events will be available very shortly.

We are also excited to share the enclosed early announcement of our 2023–2024 Season. A comprehensive brochure with in-depth descriptions of the concert offerings will be available this summer. Please visit BEMF.org for the latest updates and information.

Thank you for attending this evening’s performance by Chiaroscuro Quartet, and please accept our best wishes as we head into Spring!

2022–2023 SEASON 3
Concert Program 9 Program Notes 13 Artist Profiles 19 About BEMF 23 Friends of BEMF 27
WELCOME
TABLE OF CONTENTS
4 BOSTON EARLY MUSIC FESTIVAL

Boson Early Music Fesival

MANAGEMENT

Kathleen Fay, Executive Director

Carla Chrisfield, General Manager

Maria van Kalken, Assistant to the Executive Director

Brian Stuart, Director of Marketing and Publicity

Elizabeth Hardy, Marketing and Development Associate & Exhibition Manager

Perry Emerson, Operations Manager

Corey King, Box Office and Patron Services Manager

Conor Faherty Flynn, Box Office Associate & Advertising Coordinator

Andrew Sigel, Publications Editor

Nina Stern, Director of Community Engagement

ARTISTIC LEADERSHIP

Paul O’Dette and Stephen Stubbs, Artistic Directors

Gilbert Blin, Opera Director

Robert Mealy, Orchestra Director

Melinda Sullivan, Lucy Graham Dance Director

BOARD OF DIRECTORS

Bernice K. Chen, Chairman | David Halstead, President

Brit d’Arbeloff, Vice President | Lois A. Lampson, Vice President

Susan L. Robinson, Vice President

Adrian C. Touw, Treasurer | Peter L. Faber, Clerk

Michael Ellmann | George L. Hardman | Ellen T. Harris | Glenn A. KnicKrehm

Miles Morgan | Bettina A. Norton | Lee S. Ridgway | Ganesh Sundaram

BOARD OF OVERSEERS

Diane Britton | Gregory E. Bulger | Robert E. Kulp, Jr. | James S. Nicolson

Amanda Pond | Robert Strassler | Donald E. Vaughan

BOARD OF TRUSTEES

Marty Gottron & John Felton, Co-Chairs

Mary Briggs | Deborah Ferro Burke | Mary Deissler | James A. Glazier

Edward B. Kellogg | John Krzywicki | Douglas M. Robbe | Jacob Skowronek

2022–2023 SEASON 5
BOSTON EARLY MUSIC FESTIVAL, INC. 43 Thorndike Street, Suite 302, Cambridge, MA 02141-1764 Telephone: 617-661-1812 | Email: bemf@bemf.org | BEMF.org
6 BOSTON EARLY MUSIC FESTIVAL

MEMBERS OF THE BEMF CORPORATION

Jon Aaron

Debra K.S. Anderson

Kathryn Bertelli

Mary Briggs

Diane Britton

Douglas M. Brooks

Gregory E. Bulger

Julian G. Bullitt

Deborah Ferro Burke

John A. Carey

Anne P. Chalmers

Bernice K. Chen

Joel I. Cohen

Brit d’Arbeloff

Vivian Day

Mary Deissler

Peter L. DeWolf

JoAnne W. Dickinson

Richard J. Dix

Alan Durfee

Michael Ellmann

Peter L. Faber

Emily C. Farnsworth

Dorothy R. Fay†

Kathleen Fay

John Felton

Frances C. Fitch

Claire Fontijn

Randolph J. Fuller

James A. Glazier

Marty Gottron

Carol A. Haber

David Halstead

George L. Hardman

Ellen T. Harris

Richard Hester

Jessica Honigberg

Jennifer Ritvo Hughes

Edward B. Kellogg

Thomas F. Kelly

Glenn A. KnicKrehm

Christine Kodis

John Krzywicki

Kathryn Kucharski

Robert E. Kulp, Jr.

Ellen Kushner

Christopher Laconi

Lois A. Lampson

Thomas G. MacCracken

William Magretta

Bill McJohn

Miles Morgan

Nancy Netzer

Amy H. Nicholls

James S. Nicolson

Bettina A. Norton

Scott Offen

Lorna E. Oleck

Henry P.M. Paap

James M. Perrin

Bici Pettit-Barron

Amanda Pond

Melvyn Pond

Paul Rabin

Christa Rakich

Lee S. Ridgway

Michael Rigsby

Douglas M. Robbe

Michael Robbins

Susan L. Robinson

Patsy Rogers

Wendy Rolfe-Dunham

Loretto Roney

Thomas Roney

Ellen Rosand

Valerie Sarles

David W. Scudder

Andrew Sigel

Jacob Skowronek

Arlene Snyder

Jon Solins

Robert Strassler

Ganesh Sundaram

Adrian C. Touw

Peggy Ueda

Donald E. Vaughan

Ingeborg von Huene

Nikolaus von Huene

Howard J. Wagner

Benjamin D. Weiss

Ruth S. Westheimer

Allan Winkler

Hal Winslow

Christoph Wolff

Arnold B. Zetcher

Ellen Zetcher †

2022–2023 SEASON 7
deceased

Boson Early Music Fesival

2022–2023 NAMED GIFT SPONSORSHIPS

Boston Early Music Festival extends sincere thanks to the following individuals for their leadership support of our 2022–2023 Season:

David Halstead and Jay Santos

Sponsors of the October 2022 performance by Philippe Jaroussky, countertenor, and Ensemble Artaserse

Joan Margot Smith

Sponsor of the November 2022 performance by Vox Luminis and Lionel Meunier, Artistic Director

Two Local Fans

Sponsors of the February 2022 performance by Bach Collegium Japan with Masaaki Suzuki, Director, and Roderick Williams OBE, baritone

Lorna E. Oleck

Sponsor of the March 2023 performance by Quicksilver

Partial Sponsor of BEMF’s Community Engagement Program and the June 2023 début of the BEMF Youth Ensemble

Peter L. and Joan S. Faber

Partial Sponsors of BEMF’s Community Engagement Program and the June 2023 début of the BEMF Youth Ensemble

David M. Kozak and Anne Pistell

Sponsors of the December 2022 performance by The Tallis Scholars and Peter Phillips, Director in memory of their parents

Diane and John Paul Britton

Sponsors of Robert Mealy, Co-director and violin, for his March 2023 performance with Quicksilver

Donald E. Vaughan and Lee S. Ridgway

Sponsors of Philippe Jaroussky, countertenor, for his October 2022 performance

Joanne Zervas Sattley

Partial Sponsor of the March 2023 performance by Chiaroscuro Quartet

Amanda and Melvyn Pond

Partial Sponsors of BEMF’s Community Engagement Program and the June 2023 début of the BEMF Youth Ensemble

You can help make this list grow. For more information about investing in BEMF performances with a Named Gift, please email Kathleen Fay at kathy@bemf.org, or call the BEMF office at 617-661-1812. Your support makes a difference. Thank you.

8 BOSTON EARLY MUSIC FESTIVAL
o
o

Boson Early Music Fesival PRESENTS

Chiaroscuro Quartet

Alina Ibragimova, violin Pablo Hernán Benedí, violin Emilie Hörnlund, viola Claire Thirion, violoncello

Shades of Minor

in C minor, D. 703

assai

String Quartet No. 11 in F minor, Op. 95, “Serioso”

Allegro con brio (1770–1827)

Allegretto ma non troppo

Allegro assai vivace ma serioso — Più allegro Larghetto espressivo — Allegretto agitato — Allegro

String Quartet No. 2 in A minor, Op. 13

Mendelssohn

Adagio — Allegro vivace (1809–1847)

Adagio non lento

Intermezzo

Presto — Adagio

The Boston Early Music Festival thanks JOANNE ZERVAS SATTLEY for her leadership support of tonight’s performance

2022–2023 SEASON 9
Franz
Quartettsatz
Schubert Allegro
(1797–1828)
Ludwig
van Beethoven
Felix

LIVE CONCERT

Saturday, March 25, 2023 at 8pm

New England Conservatory’s Jordan Hall

30 Gainsborough Street, Boston, Massachusetts

VIRTUAL CONCERT

Saturday, April 8, 2023 – Sunday, April 23, 2023

BEMF.org

Program subject to change.

Ball Square Films & Kathy Wittman, Video Production

Antonio Oliart Ros, Recording Engineer

10 BOSTON EARLY MUSIC FESTIVAL

Boson Early Music Fesival

2022 CHAMBER OPERA SERIES NAMED GIFT SPONSORSHIPS

Boston Early Music Festival extends sincere thanks to the following individuals and organizations for their leadership support of the November 2022 BEMF Chamber Opera Series performances of Lully’s Idylle sur la Paix and Charpentier’s La Fête de Rueil:

Constellation Charitable Foundation

Sponsor of the Production

Joan Margot Smith

Sponsor of Melinda Sullivan, Choreographer

Sponsor of Phoebe Carrai, violoncello, and Laura Jeppesen, viola, BEMF Chamber Ensemble

Andrew Sigel

Sponsor of Mireille Lebel, mezzo-soprano, Jason McStoots, tenor, and John Taylor Ward, bass-baritone, BEMF Vocal Ensemble

David Halstead and Jay Santos

Sponsors of Teresa Wakim, soprano, and Aaron Sheehan, tenor, BEMF Vocal Ensemble

Lorna E. Oleck

Sponsor of Robert Mealy, Concertmaster

Sponsor of Danielle Reutter-Harrah, soprano, BEMF Vocal Ensemble

Bernice K. Chen

Sponsor of Gilbert Blin, Stage Director

Elizabeth Davidson

Sponsor of David Morris, viola da gamba

2022–2023 SEASON 11
o
12 BOSTON EARLY MUSIC FESTIVAL

PROGRAM NOTES

Quartettsatz in C minor, D. 703

Born January 31, 1797, Vienna

Died November 19, 1828, Vienna

Schubert composed the Quartettsatz—that title, which did not originate with Schubert, means simply “quartet movement”—in December 1820, when he was just a few weeks short of his twenty-fourth birthday. He had apparently planned to write a standard four-movement quartet, but completed only the first movement and a 41-measure fragment of what would have been an Andante second movement. No one knows why he set so promising a work aside and left it unfinished, but—like the “Unfinished” Symphony—what survives is significant enough by itself to stand as a satisfying whole.

Curiously, the Allegro assai opening movement of this quartet is similar to the first movement of the “Unfinished” Symphony: both feature the same sort of double-stroked opening idea in the first violins, both are built on unusually lyric ideas, and both offer unexpected key relations between the major theme-groups. In fact, the key relationships are one of the most remarkable aspects of the quartet: it begins in C minor with the first violin’s racing, nervous theme, and this

quickly gives way to the lyric second idea in A-flat major, which Schubert marks dolce. The quiet third theme—a rocking, flowing melody—arrives in G major. As one expects in Schubert’s mature music (and the 23-yearold who wrote this music was a mature composer), keys change with consummate ease, though one surprise is that the opening idea does not reappear until the coda, where it returns in the closing instants to hurl the movement to its fierce conclusion.

Listed as the twelfth of Schubert’s fifteen string quartets, the Quartettsatz is generally acknowledged as the first of his mature quartets. The first eleven had been written as Hausmusik for a quartet made up of members of Schubert’s own family: his brothers played the violins, his father the violoncello, and the composer the viola. Because he was writing for amateur musicians in those quartets, Schubert had kept the demands on the players relatively light—his cellist-father in particular was given a fairly easy part in those quartets. But in the Quartettsatz and the three magnificent final quartets Schubert felt no such restrictions. The Quartettsatz, which makes enormous technical demands (including virtuoso runs for the first violin that whip upward over a span of three octaves), was clearly intended for professional performers.

2022–2023 SEASON 13
14 BOSTON EARLY MUSIC FESTIVAL

String Quartet No. 11 in F minor, Op. 95, “Serioso”

Ludwig van Beethoven

Born December 16, 1770, Bonn

Died March 26, 1827, Vienna

Beethoven’s manuscript for the Quartet in F minor is dated October 1810, but almost certainly he continued to work on this quartet for some years after that, and it was not published until 1816. This quartet has a nickname, “Quartetto Serioso,” that— unusually for a musical nickname—came from the composer himself. Well aware of the music’s extraordinary character, Beethoven described the quartet as having been “written for a small circle of connoisseurs and…never to be performed in public.” Joseph Kerman has described it as “an involved, impassioned, highly idiosyncratic piece, problematic in every one of its movements, advanced in a hundred ways” and “unmatched in Beethoven’s output for compression, exaggerated articulation, and a corresponding sense of extreme tension.” Yet this same quartet—virtually the shortest of Beethoven’s string quartets—comes from the same period as the easily accessible “Archduke” Trio, the Seventh and Eighth Symphonies, and the incidental music to Goethe’s Egmont, and this music’s extraordinary focus and tension seem sharply at odds with those scores. In fact, this quartet in many ways prefigures Beethoven’s late style and the great cycle of quartets written during his final years.

The first movement is extraordinarily compressed (it lasts barely four minutes), and it catapults listeners through an unexpected series of key relationships. The unison opening figure is almost spit out, passing through and ending in a “wrong” key and then followed

by complete silence. Octave leaps and furious restatements of the opening figure lead to the swaying second subject, announced in flowing triplets by the viola. The development section of this (highly modified) sonata-form movement is quite short, treating only the opening theme, before the movement exhausts itself on fragments of that theme.

The marking of the second movement, Allegretto ma non troppo, might seem to suggest some relief, but this movement is even more closely argued than the first. The violoncello’s strange descending line introduces a lovely opening melody, but this quickly gives way to a long and complex fugue, its sinuous subject announced by the viola and then taken up and developed by the other voices. A quiet close (derived from the violoncello’s introduction) links this movement to the third, a violent fast movement marked Allegro assai vivace ma serioso. The movement is in ABABA form, the explosive opening section alternating with a chorale-like subject for the lower three voices which the first violin decorates. Once again, Beethoven takes each section into unexpected keys. The last movement has a slow introduction—Larghetto espressivo full of the darkness that has marked the first three movements, and this leads to a blistering finale that does much to dispel the tension. In an oft-quoted remark about the arrival of this theme, American composer Randall Thompson is reported to have said: “No bottle of champagne was ever uncorked at a better moment.” In contrast, for example, to the nearcontemporary Seventh Symphony, which ends in wild celebration, this quartet has an almost consciously anti-heroic close, concluding with a very fast coda that Beethoven marks simply Allegro.

Some have felt that the Quartet in F minor is composed with the same technique as the late quartets but without their sense of spiritual elevation, and in this sense they see the present quartet as looking ahead toward Beethoven’s late style. But it is unfair to this music to regard it simply as a forerunner of another style. This quartet may well be dark, explosive, and extremely concentrated. But it should be valued for just those qualities.

2022–2023 SEASON 15
16 BOSTON EARLY MUSIC FESTIVAL

String Quartet No. 2 in A minor, Op. 13

Felix Mendelssohn

Born February 3, 1809, Hamburg

Died November 4, 1847, Leipzig

Mendelssohn turned 18 early in 1827, a year that was important for many reasons. Already the composer of two masterpieces—the Octet (1825) and the Overture to A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1826)—Mendelssohn spent the summer on a walking tour of the Harz Mountains in central Germany and in the fall entered the University of Berlin, where he attended Hegel’s lectures. One other event from 1827 had a profound effect on the young composer: Beethoven died on March 26.

Mendelssohn never met Beethoven—he had grown up in northern German cities, far from Vienna where Beethoven lived the final thirtyfive years of his life. But the young composer regarded Beethoven as a god. In the fall of 1827, only months after Beethoven’s death, Mendelssohn wrote his String Quartet in A minor. This quartet seems obsessed by the Beethoven quartets, both in theme-shape and musical gesture, and countless listeners have wondered about the significance of these many references.

The Quartet in A minor opens with a slow introduction. This Adagio, which evokes memories of Beethoven’s Quartet in A minor, Op. 132, also quotes one of Mendelssohn’s own early love-songs, “Ist es wahr?”, and

that song’s principal three-note phrase figures importantly in the first movement. The music leaps ahead at the Allegro vivace, and Mendelssohn’s instructions to the players indicate the spirit of this music: agitato and con fuoco. The second movement also begins with a slow introduction, an Adagio that has reminded some of the Cavatina movement of Beethoven’s String Quartet in B-flat major, Op. 130; the main body of the movement is fugal, based on a subject that appears to be derived from Beethoven’s String Quartet in F minor, Op. 95, played earlier in this program.

The charming Intermezzo is the one “nonBeethoven” movement in the quartet. In ABA form, it opens with a lovely violin melody over pizzicato accompaniment from the other voices; the center section (Allegro di molto) is one of Mendelssohn’s fleet scherzos, and he combines the movement’s principal themes as he brings it to a graceful close. The sonataform finale opens with a stormy recitative for first violin that was clearly inspired by the recitative that prefaces the finale of Beethoven’s String Quartet in E-flat major, Op. 127. Not only does Mendelssohn evoke the memory of several Beethoven quartets in this finale, but at the very end he brings back quotations from this quartet’s earlier movements: the fugue subject from the second movement is heard briefly, and the quartet ends with the heartfelt music that opened the first movement.

What are we to make of the many references to Beethoven’s late quartets in this quartet by the teenaged Mendelssohn? Are they slavish imitation? The effort of a young man to take on the manner of an older master? An act of homage? There may be no satisfactory answers to these questions, but Mendelssohn’s Quartet in A minor the work of an extremely talented young man still finding his way as a composer—is accomplished music in its own right: graceful, skillfully made, and finally very pleasing. n

2022–2023 SEASON 17
18 BOSTON EARLY MUSIC FESTIVAL

ARTIST PROFILES

Formed in 2005, Chiaroscuro Quartet comprises violinists Alina Ibragimova (Russia) and Pablo Hernán Benedí (Spain), the Swedish violist Emilie Hörnlund, and violoncellist Claire Thirion from France. Dubbed “a trailblazer for the authentic performance of High Classical chamber music” in Gramophone, this international ensemble performs music of the Classical and early Romantic periods on gut strings and with historical bows. The quartet’s unique sound—described in the Observer as “a shock to the ears of the best kind”—is highly acclaimed by audiences and critics all over Europe.

Recent releases in their growing discography includes Schubert’s Death and the Maiden, Haydn’s Opus 76, Beethoven’s Opus 18, and Mozart’s “Prussian” quartets.

Chiaroscuro Quartet was a prize-winner of the German Förderpreis Deutschlandfunk/ Musikfest Bremen in 2013 and received Germany’s most prestigious CD award, the Preis der deutschen Schallplattenkritik in 2015 for their recording of Mozart’s Quartet in D minor, K. 421, and Mendelssohn’s String Quartet No. 2 in A minor, Opus 13. Among the ensemble’s chamber music partners are renowned artists such as Kristian Bezuidenhout, Trevor Pinnock, Jonathan

Cohen, Nicolas Baldeyrou, Chen Halevi, Malcolm Bilson, Christian Poltera, Cédric Tiberghien, and Christophe Coin.

Recent engagements included their enthusiastically received début concerts at Vienna Konzerthaus and Philharmonie Warsaw, their début at Carnegie Hall as part of their first U.S. tour, and a return visit to Japan. Other highlights have taken the ensemble to the Edinburgh International Festival, Concertgebouw Amsterdam, London’s Wigmore Hall and King’s Place, Auditorio Nacional de Música Madrid, The Sage Gateshead, Auditorium du Louvre Paris, Théâtre du Jeu-de-Paume in Aixen-Provence, Grand Théâtre de Dijon, Gulbenkian Foundation Lisbon, Boulez Saal, and Beethoven Haus Bonn.

In the 2022–2023 season they continue their residency at Turner Sims Concert Hall, make return visits to London’s Wigmore Hall and Berlin’s Boulez Saal, as well as a return tour of North America including Jordan Hall in Boston, Princeton, San Francisco, Vancouver, and Montreal’s Bourgie Hall.

Chiaroscuro Quartet are grateful to Jumpstart Jr Foundation for the kind loan of the 1570 Andrea Amati violin. n

2022–2023 SEASON 19

Performing music from Baroque to new commissions on both modern and period instruments, Alina Ibragimova has established a reputation as one of the most accomplished and intriguing violinists of her generation.

As soloist, Alina appears with orchestras including the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Sinfonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks, Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, Chamber Orchestra of Europe, London Symphony Orchestra, Swedish Radio Symphony, Boston Symphony, Montréal Symphony, and Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony, and has performed at chamber music at venues including the Wigmore Hall, Amsterdam Concertgebouw, Mozarteum Salzburg, Musikverein Vienna, Carnegie Hall New York, Palais des Beaux Arts Brussels, and at festivals including Salzburg, Verbier, and Aldeburgh.

Born in Russia in 1985, Alina studied at the Yehudi Menuhin School and Royal College of Music with teachers including Natasha Boyarsky, Gordan Nikolić, Christian Tetzlaff, and Adrian Butterfield. She was also a member of the Kronberg Academy Master’s program. n

Pablo Hernán Benedí was born in Madrid and began studying at the Padre Antonio Soler Conservatory of San Lorenzo de El Escorial with Polina Kotliarskaya. In 2009 he moved to London to continue his studies at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama with David Takeno and András Keller and was supported by scholarships from the Martin Musical Scholarship Fund, Juventudes Musicales, and La Caixa. Since the age of 14, Pablo had regular contact with Gordan Nikolić who helped shape and nurture his development.

Pablo is also a founding member of Trio Isimsiz. Current winners of the Borletti Buitoni Award Fellowship, the trio has also won 1st prize and the audience prize at the Trondheim International Chamber Music Competition and 2nd prize at the Haydn Vienna Competition.

As a soloist Pablo has performed with the Philharmonia, London Chamber Players, and Concerto Budapest amongst others. He is the concertmaster of Balthasar Neumann Orchestra and also has played regularly as leader or section leader with Arcangelo, Concerto Budapest, Chamber Orchestra of Europe, and Swedish Radio Orchestra. n

20 BOSTON EARLY MUSIC FESTIVAL

Emilie Hörnlund was born in Gothenburg, Sweden. Formerly a member of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Emilie has held the position of Principal Viola at the Swedish Royal Opera since 2010. Emilie works with many other leading orchestras in the UK and Sweden, including BBC Philharmonic, London Chamber Orchestra, English Chamber Orchestra, Philharmonia Orchestra, Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra, and Kungliga Filharmonikerna Stockholm. In 2006, Emilie became the first viola player to reach the final of the Ljunggrenska Tävlingen (Swedish Soloist Competition) in Sweden.

Emilie studied at the Falun Music Conservatory, Guildhall School of Music, and the Royal College of Music with teachers including Timothy Boulton, Jack Glickman, David Takeno, and Andriy Viytovych. She also studied Baroque viola with Annette Isserlis. n

Born in France, Claire Thirion studied at the conservatoires (CNR) in Marseille and Boulogne-Billancourt, then at the Paris Conservatoire (CNSM), before entering the Royal College of Music in London to study with Jérôme Pernoo and Catherine Rimer (Baroque violoncello). In 2006 she was awarded the prestigious Tagore Gold Medal.

Since completing her studies, Claire has been in great demand for the performance of both modern compositions and Baroque works. In 2008–2010 she held the position of principal continuo player with Emmanuelle Haïm’s ensemble, Le Concert d’Astrée.

As an active chamber musician, she is a member of the Ensemble Fragonard, which also performs on period instruments. Since 2006, she has been part of a duo with pianist Karine Sélo, and regularly performs in festivals throughout Europe.

She is frequently invited as a guest leader for projects on period instruments with various ensembles. n

2022–2023 SEASON 21

Make a Difference Boson Early Music Fesival

22 BOSTON EARLY MUSIC FESTIVAL 2019 | Orlando generoso
PLANNED GIVING Play a vital and permanent role in BEMF’s future with a planned gift. Your generous support will create unforgettable musical experiences for years to come, and may provide you and your loved ones with considerable tax benefits. Join the BEMF ORPHEUS SOCIETY by investing in the future of the Boston Early Music Festival through a charitable annuity, bequest, or other planned gift. With many ways to give and to direct your gift, our staff will work together with you and your advisors to create a legacy that is personally meaningful to you.
learn more,
call us at 617-661-1812, email us at kathy@bemf.org,
visit us online at BEMF.org/plannedgiving.
To
please
or

Boson Early Music Fesival

The Boston Early Music Festival (BEMF) is universally recognized as a leader in the field of early music. Since its founding in 1980 by leading practitioners of historical performance in the United States and abroad, BEMF has promoted early music through a variety of diverse programs and activities, including an annual concert series that brings early music’s brightest stars to the Boston and New York concert stages, and the biennial weeklong Festival and Exhibition, recognized as “the world’s leading festival of early music” (The Times, London). Through its programs BEMF has earned its place as North America’s premier presenting organization for music of the Medieval, Renaissance, and Baroque periods and has secured Boston’s reputation as “America’s early music capital” (Boston Globe).

INTERNATIONAL BAROQUE OPERA

One of BEMF’s main goals is to unearth and present lesser-known Baroque operas performed by the world’s leading musicians armed with the latest information on period singing, orchestral performance, scenic design, costuming, dance, and staging. BEMF operas reproduce the Baroque’s stunning palette of sound by bringing together today’s leading operatic superstars and a wealth of instrumental talent from across the globe to one stage for historic presentations, all zestfully led from the pit by the BEMF Artistic Directors Paul O’Dette and Stephen Stubbs, and creatively reimagined for the stage by BEMF Opera Director Gilbert Blin.

The twenty-first biennial Boston Early Music Festival in June 2021 took place virtually, and featured a video presentation of André Campra’s extraordinary  Le Carnaval de Venise  from the June 2017 Festival. The twenty-second Festival, in June 2023, will have as its centerpiece Henry Desmarest’s 1694 opera Circé from a libretto by LouiseGeneviève Gillot de Saintonge, which will feature the Boston Early Music Festival Dance Company, a troupe of dancers under the guidance of BEMF Dance Director Melinda Sullivan.

BEMF introduced its Chamber Opera Series during its annual concert season in

2022–2023 SEASON 23
InternatIonal Baroque opera • CeleBrated ConCerts • World-Famous exhIBItIon AMANDA FORSYTHE IN BEMF’S 2013 PRODUCTION OF HANDEL’S ALMIRA PHOTO: KATHY WITTMAN

November 2008, with a performance of John Blow’s Venus and Adonis and MarcAntoine Charpentier’s Actéon. The series focuses on the wealth of chamber operas composed during the Baroque period, while providing an increasing number of local opera aficionados the opportunity to attend one of BEMF’s superb offerings. Subsequent annual productions include George Frideric Handel’s Acis and Galatea, Henry Purcell’s Dido and Aeneas, combined performances of Charpentier’s La Descente d’Orphée aux Enfers and La Couronne de Fleurs, Monteverdi’s Orfeo, a double bill of Pergolesi’s La serva padrona and Livietta e Tracollo, a production titled “Versailles” featuring Les Plaisirs de Versailles by Charpentier, Les Fontaines de Versailles by Michel-Richard de Lalande, and divertissements from Atys by Jean-Baptiste Lully, Francesca Caccini’s Alcina, the first opera written by a woman, a combination of Telemann’s Pimpinone and Ino, and most recently joint performances of Lully’s Idylle sur la Paix and Charpentier’s La Fête de Rueil. Acis and Galatea was revived and presented on a four-city North American Tour in early 2011, which included a performance at the American Handel Festival in Seattle, and in 2014, BEMF’s second North American Tour featured the Charpentier double bill from 2011.

BEMF has a well-established and highly successful project to record some of its

groundbreaking work in the field of Baroque opera. The first three recordings in this series were all nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Opera Recording, in 2005, 2007, and 2008: the 2003 Festival centerpiece Ariadne, by Johann Georg Conradi; Lully’s Thésée; and the 2007 Festival opera, Lully’s Psyché, which was hailed by BBC Music Magazine as “superbly realized…magnificent.” In addition, the BEMF recordings of Lully’s Thésée and Psyché received Gramophone Award Nominations in the Baroque Vocal category in 2008 and 2009, respectively. BEMF’s next three recordings on the German CPO label were drawn from its Chamber Opera Series: Charpentier’s Actéon, Blow’s Venus and Adonis, and a release of Charpentier’s La Descente d’Orphée aux Enfers and La Couronne de Fleurs, which won the 2015 Grammy Award for Best Opera Recording and the 2015 Echo Klassik Opera Recording of the Year (17th/18th Century Opera). Agostino Steffani’s Niobe, Regina di Tebe, featuring Philippe Jaroussky and Karina Gauvin, which was released in January 2015 on the Erato/Warner Classics label in conjunction with a seven-city, fourcountry European concert tour of the opera, has been nominated for a Grammy Award, was named Gramophone’s Recording of the Month for March 2015, is the 2015 Echo Klassik World Premiere Recording of the Year, and has received a 2015 Diapason

24 BOSTON EARLY MUSIC FESTIVAL
SCENE FROM BEMF’S 2022 PRODUCTION OF LULLY’S IDYLLE SUR LA PAIX PHOTO: KATHY WITTMAN

d’Or de l’Année and a 2015 Preis der deutschen Schallplattenkritik. Handel’s Acis and Galatea was released in November 2015. In 2017, while maintaining the focus on Baroque opera, BEMF expanded the recording project to include other select Baroque vocal works: a new Steffani disc, Duets of Love and Passion, was released in September 2017 in conjunction with a sixcity North American tour, and a recording of Johann Sebastiani’s St. Matthew Passion was released in March 2018. Four Baroque opera releases followed in 2019 and 2020: a disc of Charpentier’s chamber operas Les Plaisirs de Versailles and Les Arts Florissants was released at the June 2019 Festival, and has been nominated for a Grammy Award; the 2013 Festival opera, Handel’s Almira, was released in late 2019, and received a Diapason d’Or. Lalande’s chamber opera Les Fontaines de Versailles was featured on a September 2020 release of the composer’s works; Christoph Graupner’s opera Antiochus und Stratonica was released in December 2020.

CELEBRATED CONCERTS

Some of the most thrilling musical moments at the biennial Festival occur during one of the dozen or more concerts presented around the clock, which always include the acclaimed Boston Early Music Festival Orchestra led by Orchestra Director Robert Mealy, and which often feature unique, oncein-a-lifetime collaborations and programs by the spectacular array of talent assembled for the Festival week’s events. In 1989, BEMF

established an annual concert series bringing early music’s leading soloists and ensembles to the Boston concert stage to meet the growing demand for regular world-class performances of early music’s beloved classics and newly discovered works. BEMF then expanded its concert series in 2006, when it extended its performances to New York City’s Gilder Lehrman Hall at the Morgan Library & Museum, providing “a shot in the arm for New York’s relatively modest earlymusic scene” (New York Times).

WORLD-FAMOUS EXHIBITION

The nerve center of the biennial Festival, the Exhibition is the largest event of its kind in the United States, showcasing nearly one hundred early instrument makers, music publishers, service organizations, schools and universities, and associated colleagues. In 2013, Mozart’s own violin and viola were displayed at the Exhibition, in their first-ever visit to the United States. Every other June, hundreds of professional musicians, students, and enthusiasts come from around the world to purchase instruments, restock their libraries, learn about recent musicological developments, and renew old friendships. For four days, they visit the Exhibition booths to browse, discover, and purchase, and attend the dozens of symposia, masterclasses, and demonstration recitals, all of which encourage a deeper appreciation of early music, and strengthen relationships between musicians, participants, and audiences. n

2022–2023 SEASON 25
A STANDING OVATION FOR LA STORIA DI ORFEO IN NOVEMBER 2019 PHOTO: KATHY WITTMAN

BECOME A FRIEND OF THE

Boson Early Music Fesival

Revenue from ticket sales, even from a sold-out performance, accounts for less than half of the total cost of producing BEMF’s operas and concerts; the remainder is derived almost entirely from generous friends like you. With your help, we will be able to build upon the triumphs of the past, and continue to bring you thrilling performances by today’s finest Early Music artists.

Our membership organization, the FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON EARLY MUSIC FESTIVAL, includes donors from around the world. These individuals recognize the Festival’s need for further financial support in order to fulfill its aim of serving as a showcase for the finest talent in the field.

PLEASE JOIN THE FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON EARLY MUSIC FESTIVAL BY DONATING AT ONE OF SEVERAL LEVELS:

• Friend $45

• Partner $100

• Associate $250

• Patron $500

• Guarantor $1,000

• Benefactor $2,500

• Leadership Circle $5,000

• Artistic Director’s Circle $10,000

• Festival Angel $25,000

THREE WAYS TO GIVE:

• Visit BEMF.org and click on “Give Now”.

• Call BEMF at 617-661-1812 to donate by telephone using your credit card

• Mail your credit card information or a check (payable to BEMF) to Boston Early Music Festival, 43 Thorndike Street, Suite 302, Cambridge, MA 02141-1764

OTHER WAYS TO SHOW YOUR SUPPORT:

• Increase your philanthropic impact with a Matching Gift from your employer.

• Make a gift of appreciated stocks or bonds to BEMF.

• Planned Giving allows you to support BEMF in perpetuity while achieving your financial goals.

• Direct your gift to a particular area that interests you with a Named Gift.

QUESTIONS? Please e-mail Kathleen Fay at kathy@bemf.org, or call the BEMF office at 617-661-1812. Thank you for your support!

26 BOSTON EARLY MUSIC FESTIVAL

Boson Early Music Fesival

This list reflects donations received from July 1, 2021 to March 9, 2023

FESTIVAL ANGELS

($25,000 or more)

Anonymous (3)

Bernice K. & Ted† Chen

Brit d’Arbeloff

Susan Donaldson

David R. Elliott†

Peter L. & Joan S. Faber

Dorothy Ryan Fay†

David Halstead & Jay Santos

George L. Hardman

Glenn A. KnicKrehm

David M. Kozak & Anne Pistell, in memory of their parents

Miles Morgan

Lorna E. Oleck

Susan L. Robinson

Andrew Sigel, in memory of Richard Sigel & Carol Davis

Joan Margot Smith

Piroska Soos†

ARTISTIC DIRECTORS’ CIRCLE

($10,000 or more)

Anonymous (2)

Anonymous, in memory of Ted Chen

Katie & Paul Buttenwieser

Susan Denison

Tony Elitcher & Andrea Taras

Marie-Pierre & Michael Ellmann

Lori Fay & Christopher Cherry, in memory of Dorothy Ryan Fay

James A. Glazier

Donald Goldstein, in memory of Constance Kellert Goldstein

Ellen T. & John T. Harris

Barbara & Amos Hostetter

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas G. MacCracken

Heather Mac Donald & Erich Eichman

Bill McJohn

Ruth McKay & Don Campbell

Nina & Timothy Rose

David Scudder, in memory of Marie Louise Scudder

Karen Tenney & Thomas Loring

Donald E. Vaughan & Lee S. Ridgway

LEADERSHIP CIRCLE

($5,000 or more)

Anonymous

Annemarie Altman

Mary Briggs & John Krzywicki

Diane & John Paul Britton

Douglas M. & Aviva A. Brooks

Beth Brown, in memory of Walter R.J. Brown

Elizabeth Davidson, in honor of David Morris

Jean Fuller Farrington

Kathleen Fay, in memory of Dorothy Ryan Fay

John Felton & Marty Gottron

Judy & Wayne Hall

Robert E. Kulp, Jr.

Victor & Ruth McElheny

Kenneth C. Ritchie & Paul T. Schmidt

Joanne Zervas Sattley

Maria van Kalken & Hal Winslow, in memory of Adrian van Kalken

Will & Alexandra Watkins

Christoph & Barbara† Wolff

BENEFACTORS

($2,500 or more)

Anonymous (2)

Alan Brener

Pamela & Lee Bromberg

Robert Burger

Joan & Frank Conlon

Peter & Katie DeWolf

Katherine Goodman

Maarten Janssen & Rosan Kuhn-Daalmeijer

Alan M. King

Dr. Peter Libby, in memory of Dr. Beryl Benacerraf

Harriet Lindblom, in memory of Daniel Lindblom

Marianne & Terry Louderback

Stephen Moody

Michael & Karen Rotenberg

Raymond A. & Marilyn Smith

Richard K. & Kerala J. Snyder

Keith S. Tóth & John B. Herrington III

GUARANTORS

($1,000 or more)

Anonymous (10)

Dee Dee & John Brinkema, in memory of Bobby Brinkema

Amy Brown & Brian Carr

James Burr

Shannon Canavin

John A. Carey

David J. Chavolla

Carla Chrisfield & Benjamin D. Weiss

J. R. Colofiore

Dr. Franklyn & Mary Beth Commisso

Linzee Coolidge

Joseph E. Coppola

Mary Cowden

Richard & Constance Culley

The Cusack Family, in memory of J. Howland Auchincloss

Belden & Pamela Daniels

Jeffrey Del Papa

Alan Durfee

Henk Elderhorst

Charles & Elizabeth Emerson

David Emery & Olimpia Velez

Thomas G. Evans

Michael E. Fay

Claire Fontijn, in memory of Dr. Arthur Fontijn

Bruce A. Garetz

Sarah M. Gates

David & Harriet Griesinger

Peter B. & Harriette Griffin

Phillip Hanvy

Dr. Robert L. Harris

Rebecca & Ronald Harris-Warrick

H. Jan & Ruth H. Heespelink

2022–2023 SEASON 27
FRIENDS OF THE

Michael Herz & Jean Roiphe

Sally Hodges

Linda Hodgkinson

Jane Hoover

Thomas M. Hout & Sonja Ellingson Hout, in honor of Kathy Fay for her hard work

Barry Kernfeld & Sally McMurry

Fran & Tom Knight

Kathryn Mary Kucharski

Robert & Mary La Porte

Frederick V. Lawrence, in memory of Rosemarie Lawrence

Amelia J. LeClair & Garrow Throop

John Leen & Eileen Koven

Catherine Liddell

Lawrence & Susan Liden

Roger & Susan Lipsey

Mark & Mary Lunsford

William & Joan Magretta

John S. Major & Valerie Steele

David McCarthy & John Kolody

Amy & Brian McCreath

Marilyn Miller

Robert Neer & Ann Eldridge

John M.† & Bettina A. Norton

Keith Ohmart & Helen Chen

Clara M. & John S. O’Shea

Richard & Lois Pace, in honor of Peter Faber

Gene & Margaret Pokorny

Amanda & Melvyn Pond

Susan Pundt

Paul Rabin & Arlene Snyder

Alice Robbins & Walter Denny, in honor of Kathy Fay

Michael Robbins

Jose M. Rodriguez & Richard A. Duffy

Kevin Ryan & Ozerk Gogus, in memory of Dot Fay

Irwin Sarason, in memory of Suzanne Sarason

Susan Sargent & Tom Peters

Lynne & Ralph Schatz

Arah Schuur

Wendy Shattuck & Sam Plimpton

Laila Awar Shouhayib

Cynthia Siebert

Elizabeth Snow

Murray & Hazel Somerville, in honor of Robert Mealy

Catherine & Keith Stevenson

Campbell Steward

David & Jean Stout

Carl Swanson

Lisa Teot

Adrian & Michelle Touw

Paula & Peter Tyack

Kathy H. Udall

Patrick Wallace & Laurie McNeil

Peter J. Wender

Allan & Joann Winkler

PATRONS

($500 or more)

Anonymous (9)

Morton Abromson & Joan Nissman

Debra K. S. & Brian Anderson, in honor of Kathleen M. Fay

Eric Hall Anderson

Margaret Angelini & John McLeod

Barry & Sarita Ashar

Louise Basbas

William & Ann Bein

Michael & Sheila Berke

John Birks

Tracey Blueman & Brandon L. Bigelow

Susan Bromley

Elizabeth A.R. Brown & Ralph S. Brown, Jr., in honor of Kathleen Fay

Julie Brown & Zachary Morowitz

Caroline A. Bruzelius, in memory of Kristin Mortimer

Carolyn Bryant-Sarles

Robert Burton & Karen Peterson

Betty Canick

Robert & Elizabeth Carroll

JoAnne Chernow

Floyd & Aleeta Christian

Sherryl & Gerard Cohen

Joseph Connors

Geoffrey Craddock

Eric & Margaret Darling

Leigh Deacon

Carl E. Dettman

JoAnne Walter Dickinson

Diane L. Droste

Ross Duffin & Beverly Simmons, in honor of Kathleen Fay

Gabriel Ellsworth

Austin & Eileen Farrar

Nicole Faulkner

Charles Fisk & Louis Risoli

Martin & Kathleen Fogle

Elizabeth French

Jonathan Friedes & Qian Huang

Frederick & Barbara Gable

Sandy Gadsby & Nancy Brown

Christopher K. Gaffney, in memory of Bill Crocker

The Goldsmith Family

Eric & Dee Hansen

Elizabeth B. Hardy, in memory of Renate Wolter-Seevers

David J. Harris, MD

Joan E. Hartman

James & Ina Heup

Jessica Honigberg

George Humphrey

Charles B. Hunter

Robert & MaryEllen James

Laura Jeppesen & Daniel Stepner

Paul & Alice Johnson

Judith L. Johnston & Bruce L. Bush, in memory of Daniel Lindblom

Ronald Karr

Thomas F. Kelly & Peggy Badenhausen

Art & Linda Kingdon

Robert L. Kleinberg

Jason Knutson

Jasper Lawson

Sarah Leaf-Herrmann

Joanne & Carl Leaman

Rob & Mary Joan Leith

Susan Lewinnek

Marcia Lieberman

James Liu & Alexandra Bowers

Dr. Gary Ljungquist

Robert & Janice Locke

Kenneth S. Loveday

MAFAA

Jeffrey & Barbara Mandula

Carol Marsh

Carol & Pedro Martinez

Anne H. Matthews

June Matthews

Jeffrey G. Mora & Wendy Fuller-Mora

Alan & Kathy Muirhead

Louise Oremland

Richard & Julia Osborne

John R. Palys

William J. Pananos

Henry Paulus

Kitty Pell

Joseph L. Pennacchio

Susan Pettee & Michael Wise

Pamela Posey

Anne & François Poulet

Tracy Powers

Harold I. Pratt

28 BOSTON EARLY MUSIC FESTIVAL

Mahadev & Ambika Raman

Sandy Reismann & Dr. Nanu Brates

Marge Roberts

Arthur & Elaine Robins

Patsy Rogers

Ellen Rosand

Nancy & Ronald Rucker

Carlton & Lorna Russell

Rusty Russell

Phil & Catherine Saines

Suzanne Sarason†

Sharon Scaramozza

Len & Louise Schaper

Charles & Mary Ann Schultz

Bettina Siewert, M.D. & Douglas L. Teich, M.D., in memory of David Elliott

Louisa C. Spottswood

Paola Stone, in memory of Edmondo Malanotte

Theresa & Charles Stone

Lonice Thomas

Mark S. Thurber & Susan M. Galli

Nancy M. Tooney

Peter Tremain

Reed & Peggy Ueda

Peter & Kathleen Van Demark

Mark Vangel, in memory of Monica Strauss

Kathleen Wittman & Melanie Andrade

Louisa Woodville

Susan Wyatt

The Zucker Family

ASSOCIATES

($250 or more)

Anonymous (10)

Anonymous, in memory of Adrian van Kalken

Joseph Aieta III

Nicholas Altenbernd

Julie Andrijeski & J. Tracy Mortimore

Neil R. Ayer, Jr. & Linda Ayer

Alan Bates & Michele Mandrioli

Mary Baughman

Sarah Bixler & Christopher Tonkin

Peter Bronk & Susan Axe-Bronk

Carlo Buonomo

Frederick Byron

Joseph Cantey

Eleanor Carlson

Anne Chalmers & Holly Gunner

Mary Chamberlain

Priscilla H. Claman

John K. Clark & Judith M. Stoughton

Lois Evelyn Conley

Derek Cottier & Lauren Tilly

Donna Cubit-Swoyer

Christopher Curdo

Warren R. Cutler

Elizabeth C. Davis

Carl & May Daw

Ellen R. Delany

Katharine B. Desai

Michael DiSabatino, in honor of Nancy Olson

Kathryn Disney

Ellen Dokton & Stephen Schmidt

Charles & Sheila Donahue

Tamar & Jeremy Kaim Doniger

Ms. Helen A. Edwards

Mark Elenko

Anne Engelhart & Douglas Durant

David & Noel English

Chuck Epstein & Melia Bensussen

Susan Fairchild & Jeff Buxbaum

Lori Fay & Christopher Cherry, in memory of Gerry Weber

Gregg, Abby & Max Feigelson

Kent Flummerfelt, in memory of Jane Flummerfelt

Patrick Joseph Fox, in honor of Dr. Nancy Olson

Gary Freeman

Gisela & Ronald Geiger

Joseph Glenmullen, M.D.

Philip Glynn

Barbara Godard

Nancy L. Graham

The Graver Family

Lorraine & William Graves

Mary Greer

Laury Gutierrez & Elsa Gelin

Eric Haas, in memory of Janet Haas

G. Neil & Anne Harper

Jasjit & Donald L. Heckathorn

Diane Hellens

Catherine & John Henn

Mary Hepburn, in honor of Laura Jeppesen

Jennifer L. Hochschild & C. Anthony Broh

Roderick J. Holland

Keith L. & Catherine B. Hughes

Alex Humez

Jean Jackson, in memory of Louis Kampf

Patrick G. Jordan

Dian Kahn

Elizabeth Kaplan

David Keating

Louis & Susan Kern

George Kocur

Scott-Martin Kosofsky & Betsy Sarles

Katharine & Tom Kush, in honor of Michael Ellmann

William & Betsy Leitch

Joan Lippincott

Mary Maarbjerg

Rodolfo Machado & Jorge Silvetti

Dr. Bruce C. MacIntyre

Quinn MacKenzie

Marietta Marchitelli

Sally Mayer

James McBride

Anne McCants

William McLaughlin

Margo Miller

Ray Mitzel

David Montanari & Sara Rubin

John Nelson

Kevin Oye & June Hsiao

Henry & Judy Paap

Cosmo & Jane Papa

Eugene Papa

Robert Parker

David & Beth Pendery

Elizabeth V. Phillips

Hon. W. Glen Pierson & Hon. Charles P. Reed

Rodney J. Regier

Hadley & Jeanette Reynolds

Sherry & William Rogers

Alison & Jeff Rosenberg, in honor of Martha Gottron & John Felton

Paul Rutz, in memory of Sandra Henry

Richard Schroeder & Dr. Jane Burns

Susan Schuur

Alison M. Scott

David Sears

Mr. Terry Shea & Dr. Seigo Nakao

Harvey A. Silverglate, in memory of Elsa Dorfman

Mark Slotkin

Elliott Smith & Wendy Gilmore

2022–2023 SEASON 29

Ronald W. Stoia

Elliott & Barbara Strizhak

Ralph & Jeanine Swick

Lois Swirnoff

Richard Tarrant

Kenneth P. Taylor

Edward P. Todd

John & Dorothy Truman

Delores & Robert Viarengo

Robert & Therese Wagenknecht

Dr. Alan J. Ward

Thomas & LeRose Weikert

Marina & Robert Whitman

John C. Wiecking

John Wolff & Helen Berger

Michael Wyatt

Ellen L. Ziskind

PARTNERS

($100 or more)

Anonymous (13)

Anonymous, in memory of Dorothy Ryan Fay

Greg Abbe

Maria Adams

Martha Ahrens

Druid Errant D.T. Allan-Gorey

Kenneth Allen & Hugh Russell

Tom & Judy Anderson Allen, in memory of Dorothy Fay

Tom & Judy Anderson Allen, in memory of Adrian van Kalken

William Ames

Cathy & William Anderson

Margarete Arndt

Renee Ashley

Carl C. Baker & Susan R. Haynes

Peter Bals

Antonia L. Banducci

Lois Banta

Dr. David Barnert & Julie A. Raskin

Rev. Joseph & Nancy Bassett

Trevor & Dax Bayard-Murray, in memory of Roger Lakins

George Beach

Elaine Beilin

Lawrence Bell

Alan Benenfeld

Helen Benham

Susan Benua

Noel & Paula Berggren

Judith Bergson

Larry & Sara Mae Berman

Ann & Richard Bingham, in honor of Kathy Udall

Barbara R. Bishop

Thomas N. Bisson, in memory of Carroll Bisson

Katharine C. Black

Moisha Blechman

Wes Bockley & Amy Markus

Deborah Boldin & Gabriel Rice

Richard Borts

Sally & Charlie Boynton

Todd A. Breitbart

David Breitman & Kathryn Stuart

Joel Bresler

Andrew Brethauer

Laura Brewer & Neil Gershenfeld

Derick & Jennifer Brinkerhoff

Catherine & Hillel Shahan Bromberg

David C. Brown

Robert Brown

Susan Bryant

Andrew J. Buckler

Russell & Dee Burgett

Jean C. Burke

John H. Burkhalter III

Judi Burten, in memory of Phoebe Larkey

Kevin J. Bylsma

Richard & Lois Case

Peter Charig & Amy Briemer

Robert B. Christian

Daniel Church & Roger Cuevas

Edward Clark & Joan Pritchard

John Clark

Joel I. Cohen, in honor of Anne Azéma

Dr. Martin Cohen & Dr. Rae Jacobs Cohen

Saul B. & Naomi R. Cohen

Carol & Alex Collier

Mary C. Coward & John Empey

Robert B. Crane

Dan & Sidnie Crawford

Martina Crocker, in memory of William T. Crocker

Matthew & Ellen Cron

Gray F. Crouse

James Cyphers

Ruta Daugela

Mr. & Mrs. Patrick J. Day

Kate Delaney

William Depeter

Richard DesRosiers

Mr. & Mrs. Dennis Dewitt

Deborah & Forrest Dillon

Priscilla Drucker

Laura Duffy

Ben Dunham & Wendy Rolfe-Dunham

John W. Ehrlich

Karen M. El-Chaar, Esq.

Jane Epstein

Paula Erikson

Jake Esher

Richard Fabian

Lila M. Farrar

Marilyn Farwell

Grace A. Feldman, in honor of Bernice Chen

Henry & Judith Feldman

Kevin Feltz

Annette Fern

Janet G. Fink

Hans & Ruth Fisher

Carol L. Fishman

Dr. Jonathan Florman

Deborah Fox & Ron Epstein

Robert Freeman

Peter Frick

Friends

Alexander Garthwaite

Stephen L. Gencarello

Monica & David Gerber

David & Susan Gerstein

Hans Gesell

Rebecca Gifford

Michael Goldberg

Diane Goldsmith

Jeffrey Goldsmith

Lisa Goldstein

Joseph Grafwallner

Kim T. Grant

Winifred Gray

Thomas H. & Lori B. Griswold

John Gruver & Lynn Tilley

Peter F. Gustafson

Sonia Guterman

Richard & Les Hadsell

Suzanne & Easley Hamner

Barbara & Markos Hankin

Judith & Patrick Hanlon

Joseph & Elizabeth Hare

Elizabeth Harris

Barbara & Samuel L. Hayes III

Donatus Hayes

Elwood Headley

Karin Hemmingsen

30 BOSTON EARLY MUSIC FESTIVAL

Katherine A. Hesse

Peter & Peg Hewitt

Carole Hilton

Raymond Hirschkop

John & Olivann Hobbie

Sterling & Margaret Hopkins

Valerie Horst & Benjamin Peck

Beth F. Houston

David Howlett

Wayne & Laurell Huber

Judith & Alan Hudson

Joe Hunter & Esther Schlorholtz

Brian Hussey

Francesco Iachello

Susan L. Jackson

Deborah L. Jameson

Donna Jeker

Gayle Johnson

Robert & Mary Johnson

Robert & Selina Johnson

Robin Johnson

David K. Jordan

Marietta B. Joseph

June Kagdis

Lorraine Kaimal, in memory of Jagadish C. Kaimal

Seamus & Marjorie Kelly

Roger & Mary Jane Kelsey

Joseph J. Kesselman, Jr.

David P. Kiaunis

John N. Kirk

Rebecca Klein

Pat Kline

Kathryn Kling

Sara M. Knight

Christine Kodis

Crystal Komm & Christopher Potter

Ellen Kranzer

Benjamin Krepp & Virginia Webb

Lisa Kugelman

Bob Kunzendorf & Liz Ritvo

Carol LaFontaine

Peter A. Lans

Tom Law

David A. Leach & Laurie J. LaChapelle

William Lebow

Alison Leslie

Ricardo & Marla Lewitus

Rebecca Lightcap

Laura Loehr

Sandra & David Lyons

Ted MacDonald & Yuan Wang

Peter G. Manson & Peter A. Durfee

Sarah Marsh

Dr. Arnold Matlin & Dr. Margaret Matlin, Ph.D.

Donna McCampbell

Lee McClelland

George McKee

Dave & Jeannette McLellan

Mr. Daniel P. Melish, in memory of William Paul Melish

Gerald & Susan Metz

Amy Meyer

Ruth Milburn

Nathaniel & Judith Mishkin

Richard Molitor

Jennifer Moxley & Steve Evans

Gene Murrow

Rodney & Barbara Myrvaagnes

Myrna Nachman

Debra Nagy, in honor of Robert Mealy

Paul & Rebecca Nemser

Nancy Nicholson

Jeffrey Nicolich

Caroline Niemira

Lyle & Patricia Nordstrom

Nancy Nuzzo

Leslie Nyman

Karen Oakley & John Merrick

Nancy Olson

Nancy Olson & Charles Di Sabatino

Patricia Owen

David & Claire Oxtoby

Faith Parker

Beth Parkhurst

Susan Patrick, in memory of Don Partridge

John Howard Percy

Phillip Petree

John Petrowsky

Bici Pettit-Barron

Andrea Phan

Susan L. Porter & Robert S. Kauffman

Charles & Elizabeth Possidente

David Posson

Stephen Poteet & Anne Kao

Lawrence Pratt & Rosalind Forber

Christa Rakich & Janis Milroy

Marian Rambelle

Sandra Ray

Sheila Reese

Norm Rehn

Susan Reutter-Harrah

Douglas Riis

Julia & Stephen Roberts

Liz & David Robertson

Professor Julia Williams Robinson

Randy Robinson

Sue Robinson

Sue Robinson

Dennis & Anne Rogers

Philip W. Rosenkranz

Lois Rosow

Peter & Linda Rubenstein, in memory of Malcolm Cole

Cheryl K. Ryder

Gregory Salzman

R.F. Scholz & M.B. Kempers

Lynn & Mary Schultz

Joyce Schwartz

Melbert Schwartz

Jean Seiler

Miriam N. Seltzer

Aaron Sheehan & Adam Pearl

Chuck Sheehan

Michael Sherer

Dr. Glenn Sigl & Mr. John Self

Alexander & Kathy Silbiger

Elizabeth Wade Smith

Jennifer Farley Smith & Sam Rubin

David Snead & Kate Prescott

Richard Snow

Jon Solins

William & Barbara Sommerfield

Joseph Spector & Dale Mayer

Scott Sprinzen

Kathryn Steely

Esther & Daniel Steinhauer

John Strasswimmer

Imogene A. Stulken & Bruce Brolsma

Richard Stultz

Richard Stumpf

Victoria Sujata

Elizabeth C. Sulak

Nancy Rutledge Swan

Jonathan Swartz

Elizabeth Sylvester

Jeffrey & Boryana Tacconi, in memory of Nikolay Tonev

Lee & Judith Talner

Pierre Trepagnier & Louise Mundinger

Lynette Tsiang

John & Anne Turtle

Dr. Tyler J. Vanderweele

Barbara & John VanScoyoc

Judy von Loewe

2022–2023 SEASON 31

Richard & Virginia von Rueden

Lee Vorderer & Robert Bass

John Wand

Hilary & John Ward

Robert Warren

Janice & Ty Waterman

Prof. Eldon L. Wegner

Cheryl S. Weinstein

Esther Weinstein

Mary E. Wheat

Barbara K. Wheaton

The Rev. Roger B. White, in memory of Joseph P. Hough

Susan & Charles Wilkes

Robert Williams, in honor of Annette Fern

David L. Williamson

Phyllis S. Wilner

Scott Winkler & Barbara Slover

Charlotte Winslow†

Mr. & Mrs. Dwayne Wrightsman

Lawrence Zukof & Pamela Carley

† deceased

FOUNDATIONS & CORPORATE SPONSORS

Anonymous (2)

Aequa Foundation

American Endowment Foundation

Applied Technology Investors

BNY Mellon Charitable Gift Fund

Bank of America Charitable Gift Fund

The Barrington Foundation, Inc.

The Bel-Ami Foundation

The Boston Foundation

Boston Private Bank & Trust Company

Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, Inc.

Gregory E. Bulger Foundation

Burns & Levinson LLP

The Catherine and Paul Buttenwieser Foundation

Cabot Family Charitable Trust

Cambridge Community Foundation

Cambridge Trust Company

Cedar Tree Foundation

Cembaloworks of Washington

City of Cambridge

The Columbus Foundation

Combined Jewish Philanthropies

Community Foundation of Western MA

Connecticut Community Foundation

Constellation Charitable Foundation

The Fannie Cox Foundation

The Crawford Foundation

CRB Classical 99.5, a GBH station

The Dusky Fund at Essex County Community Foundation

Eastern Bank Charitable Foundation

Fidelity Charitable

Fiduciary Trust Charitable

French Cultural Center / Alliance Française of Boston

Ann and Gordon Getty Foundation

GlaxoSmithKline Foundation

Goethe-Institut Boston

The Goldman Sachs Philanthropy Fund

The Florence Gould Foundation

GTC Law Group

Haber Family Charitable Foundation

Hausman Family Charitable Trust

The High Meadow Foundation

Houghton Mifflin Harcourt

The Isaacson-Draper Foundation

The Richard and Natalie Jacoff Foundation, Inc.

Jewish Communal Fund

Key Biscayne Community Foundation

Konstantin Family Foundation

Maine Community Foundation

Makromed, Inc.

Massachusetts Cultural Council

Mastwood Foundation

Morgan Stanley

National Endowment for the Arts

Newstead Foundation

Barbro Osher Pro Suecia Foundation

The Packard Humanities Institute

Plimpton-Shattuck Fund at The Boston Foundation

The Mattina R. Proctor Foundation

REALOGY Corporation

Renaissance Charitable

The Saffeir Family Fund of the Maine Community Foundation

Scofield Auctions, Inc.

Schwab Charitable

The Seattle Foundation

Shalon Fund

TIAA Charitable Giving Fund Program

The Trust for Mutual Understanding

The Tzedekah Fund at Combined Jewish Philanthropies

The Upland Farm Fund

U.S. Small Business Administration

U.S. Trust/Bank of America

Private Wealth Management

Vanguard Charitable

Walker Family Trust at Fidelity Charitable

Archie D. & Bertha H. Walker Foundation

Marian M. Warden Fund of The Foundation for Enhancing Communities

The Windover Foundation

MATCHING CORPORATIONS

21st Century Fox

Allegro MicroSystems

Amazon Smile

AmFam

Analog Devices

Aspect Global

Automatic Data Processing, Inc.

Biogen

Carrier Global

Dell, Inc.

Exelon Foundation

FleetBoston Financial Corporation

Genentech, Inc.

Google

Grantham, Mayo, van Otterloo & Co. LLC

John Hancock Financial Services, Inc.

Community Gifts Through Harvard University

Houghton Mifflin Harcourt

IBM Corporation

Intel Foundation

Investment Technology Group, Inc. (ITG)

Microsoft Corporation

MLE Foundation, Inc.

Natixis Global Asset Management

Novartis US Foundation

NVIDIA

Pfizer

Pitney Bowes

Salesforce.org

Silicon Valley Community Foundation

Takeda

Tetra Tech

United Technologies Corporation

Verizon Foundation

Xerox Foundation

32 BOSTON EARLY MUSIC FESTIVAL

Boson Early Music Fesival

SATURDAY, APRIL 22, 2023

8PM | First Church in Cambridge, Congregational

ENSEMBLE CASTOR

MIREILLE LEBEL, mezzo-soprano

VIVALDI: FORCES OF NATURE—LOVE OF NATURE

AMHERST EARLY MUSIC Workshops n Festival n Classes n Concerts n Music Publications

Spring Break Workshop

April 22-23, 2023, Arlington, VA

Memorial Day Weekend Workshop

May 26-29, 2023, Litchfield, CT

AMHERST EARLY MUSIC FESTIVAL

July 2-9 and 9-16, 2023

Two weeks of classes on the campus of Muhlenberg College in Allentown, PA

Baroque Opera, Choral Workshop, Ensemble Singing Intensive, and more!

AEM ONLINE New classes each month!

Publications AEM publishes four playerfriendly, modern editions:

Ottaviano Pettruci's Odhecaton, Canti B, Music for the Duke of Lerma, and Music from the Regensburg Partbooks 1579

See website for the latest details on all of AEM's programs!

We hope you'll join us!

amherstearlymusic.org

ALSO AVAILABLE Boson Early Music Fesival Paul O’Dette & Stephen Stubbs, Musical Directors INTERNATIONALLY AWARD-WINNING Opera CDs ORDER TODAY AT BEMF.ORG CHRISTOPH GRAUPNER Antiochus und Stratonica “Nothing short of revelatory.” —GRAMOPHONE
PHOTO: ROLF SCHOELLKOPF

That Feeling You Get

classical.org | on-air • online • in the app

Boson Early Music Fesival

After the divine sorceress Circé welcomes Ulisse and his weary companions to her island home, the forces of love, magic, and fate clash and threaten to ensnare them all.

CENTERPIECE OPERA

n JUNE 4, 7, 9 & 11, 2023 | Boston, MA

CHAMBER OPERA

n JUNE 10, 2023 | Boston, MA

n JUNE 23 & 24, 2023 | The Berkshires, MA

OPERA • CONCERTS • EXHIBITION

A weeklong celebration of Early Music with Opera, Concerts, the world-famous Exhibition, and so much more.

ORDER TODAY at BEMF.org

Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.