When you say “September weather” in New England, you think of sunny, dry, maybe a little nippy in the morning, maybe warm and sunny in the afternoon. But we’ve mostly been getting the other kind — cloudy hazy, and opressively humid. Humans like the first kind better, but the fungi love the second. Here’s one growing around the corner from me.
Author: Laura Conrad
News of the week of September 12, 2017
Meeting Report
We played:
- Tallis Ordinal
- York
- Asola, Pria che’l ciel
fosse - Campian: My love hath vowed he
will forsake me, Fain would I love a faire young
man, When the god of merrie love, Though your
strangenesse frets my hart - Asola, Scorgi dolce
Signor - Tallis, Third mode tune
Schedule
We meet Tuesdays at 7:45 pm, at 233 Broadway, Cambridge, as
long as enough people have told me by Monday night that they want
to come.
News of the week of September 5, 2017
Meeting report
We played:
- Morley: Love learns by laughing, Arise get up my dear
- Sermisy, Martin menait son
porceau - Crequillon, Alix avoit au dent la
malerage - Entre vous qui amait
- Purcell, ‘Tis women
Schedule
We meet Tuesdays at 7:45 pm, at 233 Broadway, Cambridge, as
long as enough people have told me by Monday night that they want
to come.
Playing opportunity
The Boston Recorder
Society has announced their schedule of meetings for the
year. They’re low on details (since they can’t hire thousands of
coaches until thousands of players sign up), but the loud band has
been a particularly good place to play loud wind instruments the
past few years, and has enough experienced people to overcome even
mediocre coaches. The recorder groups are usually coached by good
people. You can sign up on their website.
If this isn’t enough to make you want to write a check, go to the
first meeting on September 17 at 6PM in the old Sears building in
Porter Square and you can have a free meeting to see if you want
to join.
News of the week of August 29, 2017
Meeting Report
We played:
- Cima, O dulcedo
- Isaac, Ein
frolich wesenth - Ockeghem,
Ma
bouche rit - Josquin:
Scaramella,
Entré je suis en grant pensée - Hayne,
De
tous biens playne - Purcell,
I
gave her cakes
Schedule
We meet Tuesdays at 7:45 pm, at 233 Broadway, Cambridge, as
long as enough people have told me by Monday night that they want
to come.
Terry Pratchett’s Unpublished Work Crushed by Steamroller – The New York Times
A pity to not be able to see it, but it probably isn’t as good as what we know and love. It’s hard to see how there could be a better goodbye than “The Shepherd’s Crown”.
News of the week of August 22, 2017
Meeting Report
Another all-Dowland
meeting:
- My Thoughts are Winged with Hopes
- Can She Excuse
- Now O Now I Needs Must Part
- Awake Sweet Love
- Fine Knacks for Ladies
- Shall I Sue
- Weep You No More Sad Fountains
- To Ask For All Thy Love
Schedule
We meet Tuesdays at 7:45 pm, at 233 Broadway, Cambridge, as
long as enough people have told me by Monday night that that want
to come.
The Demons of Darkness Will Eat Men, and Other Solar Eclipse Myths – The New York Times
News of the week of August 15, 2017
Meeting Report
We played:
- Campian, The peaceful Western winde
- Arcadelt, Dormend’un giorno
- Agricola, Royne des fleurs
- Morley, Hold out my heart
Schedule
We meet Tuesdays at 7:45 pm, at 233 Broadway, Cambridge, as
long as enough people have told me by Monday night that that want
to come.
News of the week of August 8, 2017
Meeting Report
We played all Dowland, all the time:
- Time
stands still - Stay
time awhile thy flying - Weepe
you no more sad fountains - Shall
I sue - Wofull
hart with griefe oppressed - Whoever
thinks or hopes of love for love - Can
she excuse my wrongs - Come
heavy sleep
Schedule
We meet Tuesdays at 7:45 pm, at 233 Broadway, Cambridge, as
long as enough people have told me by Monday night that that want
to come.
Why I want to know your plans
It’s a dropin group, and you are welcome to come for as much or
as little of as many meetings as you want to.
However, I do want to know as much as possible about your
plans, since I need both to organize my own time, and to plan the
meetings so that the people who come can get what they want out of
them. I am grateful to all the poeple who consistently let me
know what they’re planning do.
Last Tuesday’s meeting was a brilliant success in terms of
people getting together and playing music they love. I kept
remembering the 1993 Boston Early Music Festival Exhibition, where
I stood at the Braude Brothers booth wistfully looking at the
Dowland facsimiles and wondering if I’d ever have a group that
could play that music. It’s been almost a quarter of a century,
and a lot of hard work, but now we have one. Many thanks to all
the people who have given their time and skill to make that
happen, including the ones who are no longer with us.
In terms of
planning and organization, however, it was a flat failure.
This is because, based on what I had been told about who was
coming, I spent several hours on Tuesday transcribing something
that really needed those specific people to look at it for half
an hour or so.
Then, at 5pm, someone else called and asked if it made sense
for him to come, and said he’d be happy to take a break if there
was something we needed to do that he couldn’t help with.
At about 9, he reminded me that I’d promised him a break, and I
said he could have one when the third person arrived. He’s just
getting back into playing his instrument, which he’s had physical
problems with in the past, so he’s trying hard to not play for too
long at a time.
The third person finally arrived at about 20 minutes to 10, and
we decided to just go on with what we were doing, instead of
trying to rush through reading the new transcription.
So I spent several hours doing something that didn’t benefit
the Tuesday meeting, when there were other things of more
immediate benefit I could have been doing, and I failed to get
someone who’s working hard at learning his instrument the break
he might have really needed.
The moral of the story is that if you’ve said you’re coming,
and it turns out that you won’t be there for a substantial part
of the meeting, it would be good if you could call and tell me that.
News of the week of August 1, 2017
Meeting report
We played:
- Morley:
O
thou that art so cruel, La
Sirena - Agricola,
Royne
des fleurs - Sermisy,
On
en dira ce qu’on vouldra - Susato,
Mille
regrets
Schedule
We meet Tuesdays at 7:45 pm, at 233 Broadway, Cambridge, as
long as enough people have told me by Monday night that that want
to come.


