QUICKSILVER
ROBERT MEALY & JULIE ANDRIJESKI, Directors
FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2023
8PM | FIRST CHURCH IN CAMBRIDGE, CONGREGATIONAL
BEMF.ORG
InternatIonal Baroque opera • CeleBrated ConCerts • World-Famous exhIBItIon
ROBERT MEALY & JULIE ANDRIJESKI, Directors
FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2023
8PM | FIRST CHURCH IN CAMBRIDGE, CONGREGATIONAL
BEMF.ORG
InternatIonal Baroque opera • CeleBrated ConCerts • World-Famous exhIBItIon
“ i find the Carlophilipemanuelbachomania grow upon me so, that almost every thing else is insipid to me.”
Thomas Twining, letter to Charles Burney, 1774
Published by The Packard Humanities Institute cpebach.org
JUNE 4 -11, 2023
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 | Orlando Consort | Sollazzo Ensemble
The Organ & Keyboard Mini-Festival | Doulce Mémoire
Hamburger Ratsmusik | Tiburtina Ensemble
Stile Antico | Ricercar Consort | ACRONYM
Amanda Forsythe, Lucile Richardot & Dorothee Mields
Erik Bosgraaf, recorder & Francesco Corti, harpsichord
TICKETS ARE NOW ON SALE!
Visit BEMF.org for the complete schedule.
LES DÉLICES
ORLANDO CONSORT ACRONYM
DOULCE MÉMOIRE
SATURDAY, MARCH 25, 2023
8PM | NEC’s Jordan Hall, Boston
SHADES OF MINOR: BEETHOVEN, SCHUBERT, AND MENDELSSOHN
SATURDAY, APRIL 22, 2023
8PM | First Church in Cambridge, Congregational
MIREILLE LEBEL, mezzo-soprano
Rodolfo Richter, Leader
VIVALDI: FORCES OF NATURE—LOVE OF NATURE
FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 2023
8PM | St. Paul Church, Cambridge
ENGLAND’S NIGHTINGALE: MUSIC OF WILLIAM BYRD
ENJOY IN PERSON & ONLINE—LEARN MORE AT BEMF.ORG!
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We are delighted to welcome back the acclaimed musicians of Quicksilver, under the inspired direction of violinists Robert Mealy and Julie Andrijeski. Tonight’s program of Viennese Baroque masterworks, titled “Early Moderns: The (very) First Viennese School,” explores the rich chamber music repertoire that developed and flourished in the vibrant artistic climate of 17th-century Imperial Vienna under the Hapsburg emperors, including Ferdinand III and Leopold I, both composers in their own right, and includes works by Schmeltzer, Bertali, Kerll, Legrenzi, Rosenmüller, Fux, and Oswald.
We hope you will join us as our 2022–2023 Season continues on Saturday, March 25 at NEC’s Jordan Hall, when we present the celebrated Chiaroscuro Quartet in their eagerly anticipated BEMF début. April marks the début of the Austrian-based Ensemble Castor in an all-Vivaldi program featuring radiant mezzo-soprano Mireille Lebel and esteemed violin virtuoso Rodolfo Richter. Our Season is brought to a satisfying close with the luminous voices of Stile Antico in a program celebrating the 400th anniversary of the death of William Byrd. And, of course, we look forward to seeing you at our remarkable weeklong 22nd biennial Boston Early Music Festival— A Celebration of Women—which takes place June 4 to 11, 2023.
We are also excited to share the enclosed early announcement of our 2023–2024 Boston Early Music Festival 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 tonight’s performance by Quicksilver, and please accept our best wishes for a music-filled month of March as we head into Spring!
Kathleen Fay Executive DirectorKathleen 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
Paul O’Dette and Stephen Stubbs, Artistic Directors
Gilbert Blin, Opera Director
Robert Mealy, Orchestra Director
Melinda Sullivan, Lucy Graham Dance Director
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
Diane Britton | Gregory E. Bulger | Robert E. Kulp, Jr. | James S. Nicolson
Amanda Pond | Robert Strassler | Donald E. Vaughan
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
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 †
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
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.
Robert Mealy & Julie Andrijeski, Directors & violins
Sonata settima à 5 Johann Heinrich Schmeltzer from Sacro-profanus concentus musicus (1662) (ca. 1623–1680)
Sonata terza à 2 Giovanni Legrenzi from La cetra, sonate a 2–4, Libro Quarto, Op. 10 [11] (1673) (1626–1690)
Sonata à 3 Andreas Oswald from the Ludwig Partiturbuch, Gotha (1662) (1634–1665)
Sonata à tre in G minor Johann Caspar Kerll from the Düben Collection, Uppsala (1627–1693)
Sonata à 3 in A minor Antonio Bertali from Prothimia suavissima, Book II (1672) (1605–1669)
Sonata à 4 “La Carolietta” Schmeltzer from the Kroměříž Library (1669)
Passagaglia variata Kerll from Toccate, Canzoni, et altre Sonate (1675)
Sonata à 4 in G minor Johann Joseph Fux from the Kroměříž Library (1717) (1660–1741)
The Boston Early Music Festival thanks LORNA E. OLECK for her leadership support of tonight’s performance by Quicksilver and DIANE and JOHN PAUL BRITTON for their leadership support of tonight’s performance by Robert Mealy, Co-director and violin
Sonata à 2 in F major Kerll from the Rost MS (Baden-Baden, ca. 1660)
Sonata decima à 5 Johann Rosenmüller from Sonate à 2, 3, 4, e 5 (Nuremberg, 1682) (ca. 1619–1684)
Double-manual German harpsichord by Allan Winkler, Medford, Massachusetts, 1989, after Fleischer, property of the Boston Early Music Festival.
Continuo Organ by Bennett & Giuttari, Rehoboth, Massachusetts, Op. 6, 1996.
LIVE CONCERT
Friday, March 10, 2023 at 8pm First Church in Cambridge, Congregational 11 Garden Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts
VIRTUAL CONCERT
Friday, March 24, 2023 – Friday, April 7, 2023 BEMF.org
Robert Mealy & Julie Andrijeski, Directors & violins
Dominic Teresi, dulcian
David Morris, viola da gamba
Greg Ingles, sackbut
Charles Weaver, guitar & lute
Avi Stein, harpsichord & organ
Program subject to change.
Ball Square Films & Kathy Wittman, Video Production
Antonio Oliart Ros, Recording Engineer
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
Vienna, that splendid city on the very edge of Europe, is best known today in music for two great epochs: the era of Mozart and Haydn in the 1780s, and the “Second Viennese School” of Schoenberg, Berg, and Webern in the 1900s. But there was another, earlier, historical period in which Austrian music flourished. This was during the seventeenth century, when the court of the Holy Roman Emperors became the only serious European rival to the more famous court of Louis XIV in Versailles.
This very first Viennese school began with the patronage of the Hapsburg Emperor Ferdinand II, whose marriage to Eleanora Gonzaga of Mantua in 1622 brought the music of Monteverdi and his colleagues to Vienna. It continued to flourish under his successor Ferdinand III and reached a high point with the music-loving Leopold I, who came to the throne in 1658.
This highly cultured emperor managed to create a court in which the arts thrived, despite constant wars with the French and with the Ottoman Turks. Italian virtuosi sought refuge at his court, bringing with them the new stile moderno, full of the passionate give-and-take of friends in conversation. This new style found fertile soil in Austria, where Italian extravagance was grafted onto a German love of counterpoint and highly expressive harmonies.
Toward the end of the century, Vienna had its first native-born Kapellmeister, Johann Heinrich Schmeltzer. Before him, this influential job had only been held by Italians like Giovanni Valentini and Antonio Bertali. After working at the court for several decades, Schmeltzer finally attained the exalted rank of Kapellmeister in 1679. Alas, he held it only for a few months before he fell victim to the terrible plague that swept Vienna and Prague that year. His great mid-century collection of ensemble pieces, the Sacro-profanus concentus musicus, includes several sonorous five-part works, among them the highly atmospheric Sonata settima
The gifted composer and organist Giovanni Legrenzi was one Italian who, despite his best efforts, did not win a position in Vienna. He spent much of his career in cities like Bergamo and Ferrara. In 1665, thanks to a Ferrarese patron, he managed to have one of his operas performed in Vienna, and he even persuaded the Duke of Mantua to put in a good word for him at court as the next Kapellmeister. Unfortunately, the position was already filled by Antonio Bertali, who remained in the job until his death in 1669.
As part of his efforts to win favor in Vienna, Legrenzi named one of his books of sonatas La cetra after Emperor Leopold’s emblem; the word means both “The Scepter” and
“The Lyre.” Sonata terza from this collection is an excellent example of how the sonata was changing by mid-century, influenced by the lyricism of Venetian opera composers like Cavalli and Cesti. The passionate overlapping dissonances heard in the opening of this sonata were later to become a regular feature in the works of Arcangelo Corelli.
By contrast, the heartfelt opening of the Sonata à 3 by Andreas Oswald is very much in the high seventeenth-century ensemble sonata style. Here our program takes a brief detour northward: Oswald spent his career as a church organist in Weimar and Eisenach, two towns later associated with Johann Sebastian Bach. Most of Oswald’s surviving ensemble music is preserved in the Ludwig Partiturbuch, an important collection of seventeenthcentury German sonata repertoire. This sonata is particularly striking for its sonorous instrumentation of violin, trombone, and dulcian.
Among Emperor Leopold’s musicians in Vienna was the organist Johann Caspar Kerll, who first studied with Valentini before traveling to Rome to study with Carissimi. Kerll served as Kapellmeister at the Munich court until 1673, when a violent dispute with the Italian opera singers there prompted him to move to Vienna. He became one of Leopold’s court organists five years later. After an eventful decade in Vienna, where he lived through both the great plague of 1679 and the Ottoman siege of 1683, he returned to Munich for the last years of his career. We have a number of splendid masses by Kerll and some very influential collections of keyboard music which provided Handel (among others) with endless inspiration. Only a very few ensemble sonatas of his survive, including the gorgeous Sonata à tre, where the viola da gamba is treated as an equal solist with the violins. This sonata appears in the huge collection of music assembled in Uppsala by Gustav Düben, for use by the Swedish court—another example of how the music of this first Viennese School traveled far and wide across Europe.
One of the most important Italians to come north was the “valoroso nel’violino” Antonio
Bertali, who arrived in Vienna around 1624 and became Kapellmeister to the Emperor in 1649. His Sonata à 3 is a striking example of his highly theatrical style, with its heartfelt adagio that frames a truly rocking ciaccona. This sonata turns up in at least two sources. We use the version that appears in Book II of his Prothimia suavissima. The sonata can also be found in the Düben collection.
Johann Heinrich Schmeltzer’s fame reached far beyond Vienna. By the mid-1660s, he was in correspondence with Karl LichtensteinCastelcorno, the Prince-Bishop of Olmütz and son of Emperor Ferdinand II. Karl kept an elaborate musical establishment at his court in the town of Kremsier (modern-day Kroměříž). He commissioned several works from Schmeltzer including the festive Sonata la Carolietta, probably written in celebration of the Prince-Bishop’s name-day.
The keyboard works of Johann Caspar Kerll show off his mastery of the two great national styles of the time. He composed both extravagant Italian toccatas and elegant French dance suites. His elaborate Passagaglia is a great example of how the South Germans incorporated Italian virtuosity into this classic French form (and how they altered French words to fit their Southern accent!).
Johann Jacob Fux is best known today for his guide to counterpoint, the Gradus ad Parnassum. His own climb to the Parnassus of the Viennese court is slightly mysterious; he received a thorough Jesuit education at Graz, but his matriculation document remarks that he “fled away secretly” before graduating. By the 1690s, he seems to have been working for the Archbishop of Hungary, who was a good friend of Emperor Leopold. Fux dedicated a Mass to the Emperor in 1695, and soon thereafter began working for the Imperial court. He remained in service through three emperors, providing everything from masses and oratorios to chamber music to operas, while also deeply involved in the court administration.
Fux’s music, like his career, traces a generational shift. Some of his chamber works like the
Sonata à 4 are very much in the mode of the seventeenth-century sonata, but by the end of his career he was creating High Baroque trio sonatas. A remarkable figure, Fux deserves far more recognition for his music than he has yet received.
Kerll’s Sonata à 2 appears in a huge anthology of 157 trio sonatas assembled by a cleric, Franz Rost, probably for the use of the Margrave of Baden-Baden. In this sonata, Kerll explores the extravagance of the sonata concertata, with extended solos for both violins, but places all this virtuosity in a characteristically South German lyric melancholy.
With Johann Rosenmüller, we come to a major composer whose unexpected life events led to some interesting musical developments. Rosenmüller was the leading musical figure in Leipzig in his day, and was set to begin his new post as Thomaskantor (the position Bach took
on thirty years later) when he was arrested for homosexuality. Forced to flee, he ended up in Venice where he worked at San Marco and taught at the Pietà, doing the same work that Vivaldi did fifty years later.
This dramatic trajectory transformed his musical style as well as his career. Rosenmüller’s instrumental music had been largely made up of dance suites in Leipzig, but once he got to Venice, he discovered the power of operatic melody and theatrical gesture. The Sonata decima à 5 comes from his last set of sonatas published in 1682, which combine heartbreaking adagios with dramatic, precipitous allegros. Rosenmüller’s sonatas were known and admired by the musicians at the Imperial court, and Leopold may well have enjoyed the unexpected surprises of this wonderful sonata. n
—Robert Mealy“Revered like rock stars within the early music scene” (New York Times), Quicksilver brings together today’s top North American historically informed performers. Described as “drop dead gorgeous with a wonderful interplay of timbres” (Early Music America) and praised as “irresistible” (Fanfare), Quicksilver vibrantly explores the rich
chamber music repertoire from the early modern period to the High Baroque.
The ensemble has been featured at numerous music series and prestigious festivals, receiving critical acclaim, standing ovations, and repeat invitations. Recent and upcoming appearances include Carnegie Hall, Mostly
Mozart Festival at Lincoln Center, The Library of Congress, Buffalo Chamber Music Society, CU Presents Artist Series (Colorado), Toronto Consort Series, the Miller Theatre at Columbia University, Da Camera Society (Los Angeles), San Diego Early Music Society, Boston Early Music Festival, Vancouver Early Music Festival, Berkeley Festival and Exhibition, Early Music Now (Milwaukee), Shriver Hall Concert Series, Chamber Music Tulsa, Indianapolis Early Music Festival, San Francisco Early Music Society, Miami Bach Society, Madison Early Music Festival, Dumbarton Oaks Concert Series (Washington, DC), Houston Early Music, Early Music Hawaii, and Music Before 1800 (New York City).
Quicksilver’s début recording, Stile Moderno, was described as “Breakthrough of the Year” (Huffington Post) and “convincing…terrific” (Early Music-Oxford Journal). Quicksilver’s second recording, Fantasticus, was named one of the New Yorker’s Ten Notable Recordings of 2014 and praised as “Fantasticus, indeed” (Gramophone). Quicksilver’s latest recording, Early Moderns: The (very) First Viennese School, has been described as “highly addictive…utterly captivating” (Limelight Magazine, Editor’s Choice). n
winning recordings since 2005. He has also led the Mark Morris Dance Group Music Ensemble in performances here and in Moscow, accompanied Renée Fleming on the David Letterman Show, and recorded and toured a wide variety of repertoire with many distinguished ensembles both here and in Europe. Committed to education as well as performing, he directs Juilliard’s distinguished Historical Performance Program. From 2003 to 2015, he taught at Yale, directing the postgraduate Yale Baroque Ensemble and the Yale Collegium Musicum. Prior to that, he taught at Harvard for over a decade, where he founded the Harvard Baroque Chamber Orchestra. In 2004, he received EMA’s Binkley Award for outstanding teaching and scholarship. He has recorded over 80 CDs on most major labels. n
One of America’s most prominent historical string players, Robert Mealy (Co-director, violin) has been praised for his “imagination, taste, subtlety, and daring” (Boston Globe). A frequent soloist and orchestral leader, Mr. Mealy is principal concertmaster at Trinity Wall Street and Orchestra Director of the Boston Early Music Festival Orchestra; he has served as concertmaster of BEMF in festival productions, international tours, and Grammy-nominated and Grammy-
Lauded for her “invigorating verve and imagination” (Washington Post), Julie Andrijeski (Co-director, violin) is among the leading Baroque violinists and early music pedagogues in the United States. In addition to co-directing Quicksilver, she maintains an active performance schedule, playing with many diverse early music groups across the nation including the Atlanta Baroque Orchestra (Artistic Director), NYS Baroque (Concertmaster), Apollo’s Fire (Principal Player), and Les Délices. As a full-time Senior Instructor at Case Western Reserve University and Teacher of Baroque
Violin at the Cleveland Institute of Music, Ms. Andrijeski leads classes in historical performance practices, teaches lessons in Baroque violin, and directs the Baroque music and dance ensembles. Her combined skills in music and dance often culminate in workshops and special teaching engagements at schools such as the Oberlin Conservatory,
Indiana University, Juilliard, the University of Colorado – Boulder, and at several summer workshops as well. Her recordings can be found on Acis Productions, Dorian Recordings, Centaur, Koch, CPO, Avie, and Musica Omnia. n
A native of California, Dominic Teresi (dulcian) is principal bassoon of Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra, Boston Early Music Festival Orchestra, and Carmel Bach Festival, and teaches historical bassoons and chamber music at The Juilliard School. He is also on faculty at the University of Toronto. As a chamber musician, he plays regularly with Quicksilver, Juilliard Baroque, and Toronto Consort. He has also enjoyed performances with Le Concert d’Astrée, Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique, American Bach Soloists, Philharmonia Baroque, Ensemble Caprice, Smithsonian Chamber Players, and others. In demand on dulcian and Baroque, Classical, and modern bassoon, his playing has been described as “stellar” (New York Times) and “dazzling” (Toronto Star). Mr. Teresi was invited to be a featured artist on CBC Radio, where he performed a nationally broadcast radio concert of bassoon concertos and sonatas, and has appeared as a concerto soloist throughout Europe, North America, and Australia. In addition to his work at Juilliard, Teresi teaches at the Tafelmusik Institutes, American Bach Soloists Academy, and Juilliard’s Piccola Accademia di Montisi in Italy. He has been an invited lecturer at the Musikinstrumentenbau Symposium in Saxony-Anhalt. n
Avi Stein (harpsichord, organ) is the associate organist and chorus-master at Trinity Church Wall Street and the artistic director of the Helicon Foundation. He teaches continuo accompaniment, vocal repertoire, and chamber music at The Juilliard School and recently conducted Juilliard’s production of Dido and Aeneas in London and at the Royal Opera House of Versailles. He performed on the 2015 Grammy Award–winning recording of Marc-Antoine Charpentier’s La Descente d’Orphée aux Enfers and La Couronne de
Fleurs by the Boston Early Music Festival. The New York Times described Avi as “a brilliant organ soloist” in his Carnegie Hall début and he was recently featured in Early Music America magazine in an article on the new generation of leaders in the field. He has directed the International Baroque Academy of Musiktheater Bavaria and the young artists’ program at the Carmel Bach Festival and has conducted a variety of ensembles including the Opera Français de New York, OperaOmnia, the Amherst Festival opera, and a critically acclaimed annual series called the 4x4 Festival. Avi studied at Indiana University, the Eastman School of Music, the University of Southern California, and was a Fulbright scholar in Toulouse, France. n
Greg Ingles (sackbut) attended high school at the Interlochen Arts Academy and went on to graduate from the Oberlin Conservatory and SUNY Stony Brook. Before his career in early music, Greg was the Solo Trombone in the Hofer Symphoniker. He enjoys unearthing rarely heard gems as the music director of the early brass ensemble Dark Horse Consort. Greg is a member of Piffaro and made his Carnegie Hall début with Quicksilver. He has played with such ensembles as the American Bach Soloists, Philharmonia Baroque, Concerto Palatino, the Handel and Haydn Society of Boston, Portland Baroque, and Tafelmusik. He played with the Globe Theater in their Broadway début of Twelfth Night and Richard III. Greg is currently the Lecturer in Sackbut at Boston University and taught at the Madison Early Music Festival each summer. n
Charles Weaver (guitar, lute) is on the faculty of The Juilliard School, where he teaches historical plucked instruments and Baroque music theory. He was music director for Cavalli’s La Calisto with New York’s Dell’Arte Opera in 2017, when the Observer remarked on “the superb baroque band led by Charles Weaver…it was amazing to hear what warm and varied sounds he coaxed from the ensemble.” He has served
as assistant conductor for Juilliard Opera and has accompanied operas with the Yale Baroque Opera Project and the Boston Early Music Festival. As an orchestral musician, he has performed with the New York Philharmonic, the Philadelphia Orchestra, and the Virginia Symphony. His chamber appearances have included Quicksilver, Piffaro, Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, Folger Consort, Apollo’s Fire, Blue Heron, Musica Pacifica, and others. He also works with the New York Continuo Collective, an ensemble that mounts workshop productions of seventeenthcentury vocal music. He has taught at the Lute Society of America Summer Workshop, the International Baroque Institute at Longy, and the Madison Early Music Festival. He is associate director of music at St. Mary’s Church in Norwalk, Connecticut, where he sings and directs Renaissance polyphony. He is pursuing a doctoral degree in music theory at the City University of New York. n
David Morris (viola da gamba) is a member of the Galax Quartet and the Bertamo Trio. He is a frequent performer on the NYS Baroque and Pegasus Early Music series and with the Boston Early Music Festival Orchestra. He has performed with Tafelmusik, Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra, American Bach Soloists, Tragicomedia, the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Mark Morris Dance Group, and Pacific MusicWorks. Mr. Morris received his BA and MA in music from UC Berkeley, where he also received the Eisner Prize for outstanding achievement in the performing arts. He has been a guest instructor in early music performance-practice at Cornell University, Amherst College, UC Berkeley, UC Santa Cruz, the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, Mills College, Oberlin College, and the Madison Early Music Festival, and has recorded for Harmonia Mundi, New Albion, Dorian, New World Records, Drag City Records, New Line Cinema, and CBC/ Radio Canada. n
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).
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
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
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.
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).
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
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!
This list reflects donations received from July 1, 2021 to February 9, 2023
($25,000 or more)
Anonymous (3)
Bernice K. & Ted† Chen
Brit d’Arbeloff
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†
($10,000 or more)
Anonymous (3)
Katie & Paul Buttenwieser
Susan Denison
Susan Donaldson
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
Karen Tenney & Thomas Loring
Donald E. Vaughan & Lee S. Ridgway
($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
Judy & Wayne Hall
Robert E. Kulp, Jr.
Victor & Ruth McElheny
Kenneth C. Ritchie & Paul T. Schmidt
David Scudder, in memory of Marie Louise Scudder
Maria van Kalken & Hal Winslow
Will & Alexandra Watkins
Christoph & Barbara† Wolff
($2,500 or more)
Anonymous
Alan Brener
Pamela & Lee Bromberg
Robert Burger
Joan & Frank Conlon
Peter & Katie DeWolf
John Felton & Marty Gottron
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
Joanne Zervas Sattley
Raymond A. & Marilyn Smith
Richard K. & Kerala J. Snyder
Keith S. Tóth & John B. Herrington III
($1,000 or more)
Anonymous (9)
Dee Dee & John Brinkema, in memory of Bobby Brinkema
Amy Brown & Brian Carr
James Burr
Shannon Canavin & Kevin Goodrich
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
Michael Herz & Jean Roiphe
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
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
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
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
($500 or more)
Anonymous (9)
Morton Abromson & Joan Nissman
Debra K.S. Anderson
Eric Hall Anderson
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 Bruzelius
Carolyn Bryant-Sarles
Robert Burton & Karen Peterson
Betty Canick
Robert & Elizabeth Carroll
JoAnne Chernow
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
Sally Hodges
Jessica Honigberg
George Humphrey
Charles Bowditch Hunter
Robert & MaryEllen James
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
Frederick V. Lawrence, in memory of Rosemarie Lawrence
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
Robert Neer & Ann Eldridge
Louise Oremland
Richard & Julia Osborne
John R. Palys
William J. Pananos
Henry Paulus
Kitty Pell
Joseph L. Pennacchio
Anne & François Poulet
Tracy Powers
Harold I. Pratt
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
Wendy Shattuck & Sam Plimpton
Bettina Siewert, M.D. & Douglas L. Teich, M.D., in memory of David Elliott
Paola Stone, in memory of Edmondo Malanotte
Theresa & Charles Stone
Monica Strauss & Mark Vangel
Lonice Thomas
Mark S. Thurber & Susan M. Galli
Nancy M. Tooney
Peter Tremain
Reed & Peggy Ueda
Peter & Kathleen Van Demark
Michael Wise & Susan Pettee
Kathleen Wittman & Melanie Andrade
Louisa Woodville
Susan Wyatt
The Zucker Family
($250 or more)
Anonymous (10)
Anonymous, in memory of Adrian van Kalken
Joseph Aieta III
Nicholas Altenbernd
Julie Andrijeski & J. Tracy Mortimore
Margaret Angelini & John McLeod
Neil R. Ayer, Jr. & Linda Ayer
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
Floyd & Aleeta Christian
Mr. & Mrs. 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
Ellen Dokton & Stephen Schmidt
Charles & Sheila Donahue
Tamar & Jeremy Kaim Doniger
Ms. Helen A. Edwards
Mark Elenko
Anne Engelhart & Douglas Durant
David & Noel English
Charles Epstein
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
Gisela & Ronald Geiger
Joseph Glenmullen, M.D.
Philip Glynn
Barbara Godard
Nancy L. Graham
The Graver Family
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 & Catherine 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 & William McCants
William McLaughlin
Margo Miller
Ray Mitzel
David Montanari & Sara Rubin
John Nelson
Kevin Oye & June Hsiao
Henry & Judy Paap
Eugene Papa
Robert Parker
David & Beth Pendery
Elizabeth V. Phillips
Hon. W. Glen Pierson & Hon. Charles P. Reed
Pamela Posey
Rodney J. Regier
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
Louisa C. Spottswood
Ronald W. Stoia
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 Wolff & Helen Berger
Michael Wyatt
Ellen L. Ziskind
($100 or more)
Anonymous (13)
Greg Abbe
Maria Adams
Martha Ahrens
Druid Errant D.T. Allan-Gorey
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 Ardnt
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
Alan H. Bates & Michele Mandrioli
Trevor & Dax Bayard-Murray, in memory of Roger Lakins
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
Steven Davis
Mr. & Mrs. Patrick J. Day
Kate Delaney
William Depeter
Richard DesRosiers
Mr. & Mrs. Dennis Dewitt
Deborah & Forrest Dillon
Kathryn Disney
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
Carol L. Fishman
Dr. Jonathan Florman
Deborah Fox & Ron Epstein
Gary Freeman
Robert Freeman
Peter Frick
Friends
R. Andrew 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
Lorraine & William Graves
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
Katherine A. Hesse
Peter & Peg Hewitt
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
Dr. Arnold Matlin & Dr. Margaret Matlin, Ph.D.
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
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
Cosmo & Jane Papa
Faith Parker
Beth Parkhurst
Susan Patrick, in memory of Don Partridge
Phillip Petree
John Petrowsky
Bici Pettit-Barron
Susan L. Porter & Robert S. Kauffman
Charles & Elizabeth Possidente
David Posson
Stephen Poteet & Anne Kao
Christa Rakich & Janis Milroy
Marian Rambelle
Sandra Ray
Sheila Reese
Norm Rehn
Susan Reutter-Harrah
Douglas Riis
Julia & Stephen Roberts
Liz & David Robertson
Julia W. Robinson
Randy Robinson
Sue Robinson
Sue Robinson
Dennis & Anne Rogers
Philip W. Rosenkranz
Lois Rosow
Peter & Linda Rubenstein, in memory 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
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
John Strasswimmer
Elliott & Barbara Strizhak
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
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
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
21st Century Fox
Allegro MicroSystems
Amazon Smile
AmFam
Analog Devices
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Automatic Data Processing, Inc.
Biogen
Carrier Global
Dell, Inc.
Exelon Foundation
FleetBoston Financial Corporation
Genentech, Inc.
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
SATURDAY, MARCH 25, 2023
8PM | NEC’s Jordan Hall, Boston
Shades of Minor: Beethoven, Schubert, and Mendelssohn
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
Paul O’Dette & Stephen Stubbs, Artistic DirectorsAfter 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.
n JUNE 4, 7, 9 & 11, 2023 | Boston, MA
n JUNE 10, 2023 | Boston, MA
n JUNE 23 & 24, 2023 | The Berkshires, MA
A weeklong celebration of Early Music with Opera, Concerts, the world-famous Exhibition, and so much more.