Collectio
Musicorum presents a free concert in memory of Dr. Ronald Cross and Dr. Arnold
Rosner
The Festival Chorus of Collectio Musicorum (“Collection
of Music”) is presenting a concert on Friday, October 20th, in
memory of two Wagner College music professors.
Collectio Musicorum presents concerts of
music you will not hear elsewhere. Founded in 2013 by musicologist Jeff
S. Dailey, Collectio Musicorum is devoted to giving the best possible
performances of music from the earliest of times
The concert will focus on music by Mattheus Pipelare (c. 1450-1515), a composer active in the Low
Countries during the great flowering of Franco-Netherlandish music. He
lived and worked in Louvain, Antwerp and ‘s-Hertogenbosch, and, unlike many of
his contemporaries, seems never to have left to study in either France or
Italy. A master of polyphony, his surviving music consists mainly of
sacred works, and the Festival Chorus of Collectio Musicorum will present
several of these works, including his magisterial Missa de Feria and Magnificat,
at a free concert on Friday, October 20th at Christ and St. Stephen’s
Church, 122 West 69th St, New York, NY 10023
at 8 PM. Also on the program are keyboard intabulations of works by
Pipelare, performed by the organist James Wetzel.
This concert is a tribute to the memory of Dr.
Ronald Cross (1929-2013), whose work as a musicologist brought the compositions
of Pipelare to light and life. Dr. Cross was also a composer, and several
of his organ works will be heard at the concert, along with music by his
colleague, Dr. Arnold Rosner (1945-2013), a composer inspired by Renaissance
polyphony. In addition to choral music by Dr. Rosner, the concert will
feature his “Wedding March,” which Dr. Cross performed at Dr. Rosner’s wedding
at the United Nations Chapel.
Other works by composers associated with Dr.
Cross will also appear on the program.
Dr. Cross was a great admirer of Richard Wagner’s music, and he
developed and taught a class on Wagner’s operas at Wagner College. The concert will feature two choruses from
Wagner’s early opera Rienzi, with
James Wetzel performing the organ part.
Although Dr. Cross was not known as a performer
of the music of Arthur Sullivan, he was very supportive of Dr. Dailey’s
scholarship in that area, and wrote one of the evaluations of the latter’s
study of the opera Ivanhoe which led
to its publication. Dr. Dailey will
conduct two pieces by Sullivan on the program—the anthem “I Will Sing of Thy
Power,” with Nathaniel Adams as the tenor soloist, and the original version of
the madrigal, “When Love and Beauty” from his early opera The Sapphire Necklace. Although
Sullivan wrote this opera early in his career, it was never performed. One of only two selections from the score
that was ever published, the version of the madrigal which went on the market
two years before the composer died was abridged and simplified. This concert will present the composer’s
original intentions.
Christ and St. Stephen’s Church is accessible
to the 72nd Street stations of the 1, 2, 3, B, and C
trains. For further travel information, go to http://www.csschurch.org/contact-us/map/.
Collectio Musicorum is a tax-exempt 501(c)3
corporation. For more details, go
to http://collectio-musicorum.blogspot.com/.
This concert is part of the
NEW YORK EARLY MUSIC CELEBRATION 2017
an Early Music Foundation Service Project
For a listing of the other Celebration Events, go to: www.NYEMC.org
NEW YORK EARLY MUSIC CELEBRATION 2017
an Early Music Foundation Service Project
For a listing of the other Celebration Events, go to: www.NYEMC.org
0 comments :
Subscribe to:
Post Comments
(
Atom
)