Plans for Monday

At some point, I’ll be spending time printing the handouts for the performance practice workshop that I spend last week typesetting.

I have a ticket to the “King’s Noyse”:http://www.bemf.org/pages/06fest/concerts/noyse.htm festival concert tonight. I’ll have to leave early enough to stand in line to pick up my program book, and to figure out how to get a one-week pass out of the T machine.

The “Fringe Concert Schedule”:http://www.bemf.org/pages/06fest/fringe.htm#FrMon is thin today compared to what it will be later in the week, but if I had time (unlikely with the printing), I would like to see both “Liber Unusualis”:http://www.liberunusualis.com/ and Concertino.

I haven’t heard Liber Unusualis recently, but friends who have say their sound and their commitment to the music is inspiring.

I haven’t heard Concertino either, but I’ve heard both Elaine Funaro and Owen Watkins, and I’d like to hear them together. Too many of the local fine recorder players don’t bother getting equally fine keyboard players to play with.

h3. Dog walking

“Sunny’s”:http://www.laymusic.org/sunny.html friends are presumably concerned about how all this gadding about to concerts and other events that I’m doing is going to affect Sunnys walk schedule. Today it shouldn’t be a problem, as I’ll be home at all the normal times. The 6:00 trip to the dog park may have to be a bit shorter than sometimes.

Preparations

Today is the official start of the Festival, but of course anyone heavily involved has been working hard for weeks or months to get ready.

My own preparations involved getting the “Boston Recorder Society”:http://www.bostonrecordersociety.org” summer meeting flyer printed and into the hands of someone who can put it out on the exhibit floor before I’ll get there on Wednesday.

I’ve also been typesetting the handout for John Tyson’s “Renaissance Performance Practice Workshop”:http://www.bemf.org/pages/06fest/fringe.htm#FrTues, which led to “additions”http://laymusic.org/wordpress/?p=335 to the music on this site.

“Exhibitors”:http://www.bemf.org/pages/06fest/ex.htm have been sending out their literature; I got “Tom Prescott’s”:http://www.prescottworkshop.com/ brochure in the mail a couple of weeks ago.

I caught the tail end of the WHRB preview program, which included a very nice recording of the “Harmonious Blacksmith”:http://www.bostonrecordersociety.org/calendar/cal_popup.php?op=view&id=522 group, which is doing a “fringe concert”:http://www.bemf.org/pages/06fest/fringe.htm on Thursday at 11 AM.

“Judith Conrad”:http://home.mindspring.com/~judithconrad/ (disclaimer: She’s my sister, so my opinion that she gives the best clavichord concerts I’ve ever heard is biased, but not necessarily wrong) sends the program for her “two programs”:http://www.serpentpublications.org/laymusic/wp-content/uploads/2007/06/judy-bemf07.txt. She’s also making t-shirts; I’ve seen the design and I’m really looking forward to having one.

Report on the June 5 meeting

We played:
* Auprés de vous
** Four part version (Sermisy)
** Basse Dance (Gervaise)
* Wilbye:
** Weep O mine eyes
** Draw on Sweet night

h3. Schedule

We will not be meeting on Tuesday, June 12. To find out what people are doing instead, go to “my site blog”:http://www.laymusic.org/wordpress/ to read or write about “The Boston Early Music Festival”:http://www.bemf.org.

After that, we resume our regular dropin meetings on Tuesdays at 7:45 PM.

Additions

I spent a lot of last week typesetting a handout for the “Renaissance Performance Practice Workshop”:http://www.bemf.org/pages/06fest/fringe.htm#FrTues. So there are a couple of new pieces, and some corrections and improvements to others.

Four settings of ??Auprés de vous??
* “Four part”:http://www.laymusic.org/music/sp/html/pieces/412.html by “Sermisy”:http://www.laymusic.org/music/sp/html/bycomposer.html#42
* “Two part”:http://www.laymusic.org/music/sp/html/pieces/193.html by Sermisy. This now has an editorial underlay of words. I originally transcribed it from a recorder edition that didn’t have the words. If anyone finds the real underlay, and wants to correct my errors, I’d be happy to hear about them.
* “Three part”:http://www.laymusic.org/music/sp/html/pieces/192.html by Sermisy
* “Basse Dance”:http://www.laymusic.org/music/sp/html/pieces/413.html by “Gervaise”:http://www.laymusic.org/music/sp/html/bycomposer.html#59

In addition, I updated “La Plus des Plus”:http://www.laymusic.org/music/sp/html/pieces/313.html by “Josquin”:http://www.laymusic.org/music/sp/html/bycomposer.html#8.

Spaces still available in recorder masterclass

Shannon Canavin of the BEMF staff writes:

Spaces are still available in the Paul Leenhouts

Recorder Masterclass at the 2007 Boston Early Music Festival!

Paul Leenhouts, an internationally-renowned recorder player and director of
The Royal Wind Music recorder consort, will present a masterclass on Saturday,
June 16 from 4pm to 6pm in the Emmanuel Church Music Room. Students of
intermediate to advanced ability who are interested in a historical approach
to recorder playing are encouraged to apply. Materials are available at http:
//www.bemf.org/pages/06fest/concur.htm#master or call 617-661-1812 for more
information. Auditors are invited to attend to watch these informative public
coachings; admission is $5 or FREE with a BEMF Week Pass ($20) or Day Pass
($5).

Paul Leenhouts is a founding member of the Amsterdam Loeki Stardust Quartet
and the Baroque ensemble Collegium Atlántis. He holds a Soloist Diploma from
the Sweelinck Conservatory in Amsterdam, where he has served as a faculty
member since 1993, and is director of the International Baroque Institute at
the Longy School of Music in Cambridge, MA. An active composer, arranger, and
editor of several works for recorder (Moeck, Ascolta, and ¡Huzza! Editions),
Leenhouts initiated the Open Holland Recorder Festival Utrecht in 1986 and has
recorded for Decca L’Oiseau-Lyre, Channel Classics, Vanguard, and Berlin
Classics.

I think one of the really good things about BEMF is that you can see the musicians in all stages of development, and the international stars like Paul Leenhouts in their roles as performers and teachers. So if you’d like to have a recorder lesson from an internationally known player, sign up.

Report on the May 29 meeting

We played:
* ??Aupres de vous:??
** Two part version
** Three part version
* Cavendish, ??Come gentle Swains??
* Gabrielli, ??Canzon a 6??
* ??Slaves are they that heap up mountains??

h2. Party plans

It’s Saturday, June 2, starting at about 5 PM. If the weather is nice, we’ll eat in the back yard. In any case, we’ll move upstairs when we start playing, probably at about 7, or whenever people are mostly through eating.

I now have a couple of people saying what they want to bring, so I can say something more useful than “Whatever you want to,” if you ask me what you should bring. In any case, let me know whether you’re coming, and what you’d like to bring.

h2. Schedule

We will meet as usual next week, on Tuesday, June 5, at 7:45 PM at “my place”:http://www.laymusic.org/directions.html.

The following week, June 12, we will not be meeting, because of the “Boston Early Music Festival”:http://www.bemf.org.

After that, we’ll be having our regular meetings on Tuesdays for the forseeable future.

I haven’t heard a lot of interest in going as a group to the “Wort Processors”:http://www.wort.org picnic on June 30. Unless that changes, we won’t plan anything.

h2. Guest Bloggers wanted

I’m going to be “blogging”:http://laymusic.org/wordpress/?cat=19 from “BEMF”:http://www.bemf.org. If you want to blog too, let me know, and I’ll give you an account that lets you post entries about your own experiences at BEMF. In any case, your comments on the posts are welcome.

Buying tickets

If you aren’t sure how much you’ll be around, it’s probably fine to just wait and buy them at the venues. The exception is the exhibition pass, which lets you into masterclasses that can be a fair ways away from the place where the passes are sold, so if you aren’t planning to go the main exhibition at the Raddisson first, you might want to order one of those from the “web”:http://www.bemf.org.

But those of us who intend to spend the week there usually pore over the booklet and the website and order a bunch of tickets. I used to get the ??Golden Serpent??, which is tickets to everything, but it was a lot more concerts than anyone would want to see in one week. The last time I did it, I actually did manage to sell all the tickets I didn’t want at face value, so it ended up a pretty good deal, but that was enough work that I haven’t bought the Golden Serpent since then.

The last festival I just bought all the tickets I wanted at the lowest possible price. This worked out fine for the normal concerts; for the opera it puts you in the nosebleed section, and everyone else seems to have enjoyed the opera more than I did. So this year I went for the ??Bronze Serpent??, which gives you a B class ticket to the opera and 4 concerts. Then I also got some D (lowest) price tickets to a couple of other concerts, and a couple of the unreserved seating late night concerts.

When you’re deciding how much you can afford for tickets, don’t forget that you’ll also want to see some fringe events, not all of which are free, and buy instruments and music at the exhibition.

If the decision is that you can’t afford as many tickets as you want, one possibility is to “volunteer”:http://www.bemf.org/pages/jobs.htm. They have a complicated system of making sure the less glamorous jobs get covered by making you work a certain number of hours at the exhibition or other daytime events before you get to usher at the concerts or opera. But the ushers do get to see things.

Blogging from the BEMF

The “Boston Early Music Festival”:http://www.bemf.org will be happening from June 11-17, 2007.

If you haven’t been, and you’re at all interested in early music, recorders, instrument making in general, improvisational music, music teaching, or music publishing, you should try it.

There’s an exhibition, where instrument makers from all over the world come and show off what they can do. It’s a particularly good place to buy a recorder — you try them all out in the exhibition hall, and when you’ve decided which ones you’re serious about, you take them into the ladies room and play them and ask the people who come through to help you decide.

Also, all the people who sell music come with lots of stuff you can browse. Many of them give festival discounts, and they all hand out catalogs.

Many of the instrument makers have good players perform short exhibition concerts on their instruments, so if you haven’t heard some of these early instruments, it’s a good opportunity to find out what they sound like. The first exhibition I went to in 1989, I heard Ben Harms demonstrate pipe and tabor, and heard some fine young musicians play Schubert’s ??Der Hirt auf dem Felsen?? with fortepiano and early clarinet.

Then there are the Fringe Concerts. All the Boston-area professional early musicians, and many from out-of-town find a space near the exhibition and give concerts. I listed some of the things my friends are doing in my “Cantabile post”:http://laymusic.org/wordpress/?p=328 a couple of weeks ago.

There are many good teachers among the musicians who come for the festival, so there are Masterclasses, symposia, and panel discussions, which are usually free if you’ve bought a pass to the exhibition.

And finally, there are the official festival concerts and the Opera. These are going to concentrate on French music this year. The opera is ??Psyché?? by Lully. So far my favorite opera (I’ve seen all the BEMF opera productions since 1993) was ??Thesée?? by Lully, so I’m looking forward to this one. The last year they did French, my favorite group was ??Ensemble Clément Janequin??, and they’ll be doing two concerts again this year. And there’s always a recorder and a viol concert. Thiis year the recorder concert is Paul Leenhouts’ group ??The Royal Wind Music??, and the viol concert is Philippe Pierlot, and
Jan Willem Jansen, harpsichord.

They unfortunately don’t always do a brass concert, and this year they aren’t.

I’m going to be blogging about the things I see and do. Comments on what I say are welcome. If you’re attending and would like to be a guest blogger, let me know and I’ll give you an account where you can post your own articles.

Report on the May 22 meeting

We played:

* Chédeville:
** Les Jumeaux
** Le Bosquet de Flore
** Marche des Signes
** La Sandrillon
* Morley:
** Good morrow, fair ladies of the May
** See, See, Myne Owne Sweet Jewel}
** Joy, joy doth so arise
** Crewell you pull away to soone
** Ladie, those eies
** Hould out my hart
* Cavendish, Come,Gentle Swains
* Purcell, ??Down with Bacchus??

h3. Schedule

* May 29, regular meeting, 7:45 PM.
* June 2, Party, 5 PM to whenever.
* June 5, regular meeting, 7:45 PM.
* June 12, no meeting, “Boston Early Music Festival”:http://www.bemf.org
* June 19, regular meeting, 7:45 PM.
* June 25, regular meeting, 7:45 PM.
* June 30, “Wort Processors”:http://www.wort.org June Picnic
* July 3, regular meeting, 7:45 PM.

I don’t know of any reason not to have our regular meetings every Tuesday all summer. But of course, something might come up.

Report on the May 15 meeting

We played:

* ??May hymn??
* Byrd:
** ??The Greedy Hawk??
** ??The Eagle’s Force??
* Cavendish ??Come gentle swains??
* Farmer, ??Fair Phyllis??
* Ravenscroft (lyrics, Laura and Sunny) ??Humans are so slow??
* Campian, ??Never weather-beaten Saile??

h3. Schedule

Regular meetings are on Tuesdays at 7:45 PM at “my place”:http://www.laymusic.org/directions.html

We’ll be having a party on June 2, starting at 5 PM, also at my place. It’s potluck, so let me know whether you’re coming, and what you’re planning to bring.

We will not meet on Tuesday, June 12, during the “Boston Early Music Festival”:http://www.bemf.org.

If we want, we can go to the “Wort Processor’s”:http://www.wort.org summer picnic on June 30 in “Freetown”:http://www.wort.org/Directions/sterner.shtml and sing and play some easy music we know well.

h3. Other events

On Sunday, May 20, I’ll be playing at John Tyson’s student recital. It will be from 10 AM until 3 PM or so at Karen Kruskal’s house, 22 Kenwood St. Brookline. The schedule is flexible; it’s likely I’ll be in the afternoon, but if I know you’re coming, I can arrange to play when you’re there. It’s probably worth going to only if you like listening to *lots* of amateur (and not so amateur) recorder playing. I’ll be playing some Chédeville duets with John.

“Convivium Musicum”:http://www.convivium.org/, with Anne Kazlauskas, will be repeating the concert they did last weekend on Saturday and Sunday.

Lots of people we know will be doing things at BEMF:

* “Renaissonics”:http://www.renaissonics.com will be doing a workshop (10-1) and concert (2 PM) on Tuesday, June 12, in Williams Hall at the “New England Conservatory of Music”:http://www.newenglandconservatory.edu/.
* On Thursday, June 14, at 10 AM, Judith Conrad will be playing the music of Cabanilles in the “Paulist Center”:http://www.paulist.org/boston/ Library.
* On Friday, June 15, at 3:45 PM (*not* 3 PM as the “BEMF fringe concert listing”:http://www.bemf.org/pages/06fest/fringe.htm has it), Judith Conrad will play 16th- & 17th-century Gregorian chant-based keyboard music with a labyrinth to walk; music by Cabezon, Lassus & Titelouze in the Paulist Center Auditorium.