Gratitude and Opportunity

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Our “Seize the Moment” online season of concerts concluded this past weekend with “C’est Magnifique” - our first live-streamed concert ever! Trinity Lutheran Church graciously welcomed us into their beautiful sanctuary and with the possibility of using Covid testing for all the musicians to help determine safety, we were most excited to try this format.

A special message from the Artistic Directors

We hope you are all keeping well and safe. As we enter our fourth month of necessary social-distancing due to the Covid-19 pandemic crisis, we remain committed to keeping our connection with you as strong as possible despite the mandated safe distance we must maintain. We hope you have been able to take in and enjoy our educational video podcasts and short concert excerpts as a relief from new stresses or as touchstones to a cherished cultural experience. We thank you for your appreciative and encouraging messages and other means of support to us - you inspire us to keep going!

Hickford's Room

While prepping for our "Lure of London" concerts, we have learned about a trendy venue for public concerts in Baroque London known as "Hickford's Room." Not much is known about the venue's founder—John Hickford—except that he was a dancing-master. The hall was initially known as the Great Dancing Room and was located on James Street in Haymarket. As it was one of only two rooms in London's West End large enough for concerts, musicians approached Hickford to use the space, and he soon developed a reputation as a concert organizer. At that point, it became known as Mr.

Celebrating Women Composers this season

 

The opening program of our 31st season “Harmony at Home” celebrated two talented women composers who have been unjustly neglected: Fanny Mendelssohn (the older sister of Felix), and Sophia Corri Dussek (wife of Jan Ladislav Dussek). We performed two little-known instrumental duos from among their oeuvre together with piano trios by Felix Mendelssohn and Jan Ladislav Dussek offering a window on domestic music-making in the early 19th century. 

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Subscriptions and single tickets are now on sale!
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This season we are offering three levels of subscription with a variety of benefits. Premier Subscribers will receive free tickets to our headlining performance at the Early Music America Annual Summit in Boston on October 24.
Water
Water: Cascading Baroque Passion

Immerse yourself in Élisabeth Jacquet de la Guerre’s dramatic cantata about Jonah and the whale along with other vocal and instrumental works evoking themes of water by Vivaldi, Werner, Campra, and others.
With soprano Teresa Wakim
Saturday, Oct. 28, 4 pm - Old South Church, Boston
Sunday, Oct. 29, 4 pm - First Parish, Sudbury
Sunday, Oct. 29, 4 pm - Online

Air
Air: Heavenly Baroque Christmas

Celebrate the season with celestial works from Spain & New Spain. Music by Iribarren, Salazar, others, including Zumaya, one of the first Mexican-born Classical composers. With guests from ensemble La Fontegara of Mexico.
Featuring soprano Adriana Ruiz & mezzo-soprano Hilary Anne Walker
Saturday, Dec. 9, 4 pm - First Unitarian, Worcester
Sunday, Dec. 10, 4 pm - Church of the Covenant, Boston
Saturday, Dec. 9, 4 pm - Online

Fire
Fire: Blazing Italian Baroque

Experience Baroque pyrotechnics on full display in concerti and sonatas for flute, strings, and harpsichord, including a flute concerto by Nardini, Vivaldi’s La Follia, a concerto grosso by Avison/Scarlatti, a cello sonata by Geminiani, and a flute sonata by Anna Bon.
Saturday, March 9, 4 pm - First Parish, Wayland
Saturday, March 9, 4 pm - Online
Sunday, March 10, 4 pm - Old South Church, Boston

Earth
Earth: Rustic Classical

Indulge in rollicking chamber music with a Bohemian flair for flute and strings, including a flute quartet by Gyrowetz, a nocturne for string trio by Brandl, a flute quintet by Lidl, lively Hungarian dances, and a period arrangement of Mozart's Rondo alla Turca.
Friday, April 19, 8 pm - Old South Church, Boston
Friday, April 19, 8 pm - Online
Sunday, April 21, 4 pm - Worcester Historical Museum

Musicians of The Old Post Road’s Artistic Directors Win Noah Greenberg Award
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Musicians of the Old Post Road proudly announces that Artistic Directors Suzanne Stumpf and Daniel Ryan have just been chosen for the 2023 Noah Greenberg Award from the American Musicological Society. The award was presented on November 11 in Denver at the annual conference of the American Musicological Society.

Established to recognize and foster outstanding contributions to historical performance practice, the award is named after the late conductor and musicologist Noah Greenberg, who is credited with contributing to the revival of interest in early music. Stumpf’s and Ryan’s work to bring attention to the little-known and outstanding chamber music by the German composer Christoph Graupner was the impetus for this year's award.
Updated Health and Safety Protocols
While we no longer require proof of vaccination or masks at our concerts, concertgoers are welcome to wear masks in our concert venues, should they desire. If you feel unwell or are exhibiting any symptoms of Covid-19 or any other illness on the day of the concert, please stay home and contact the MOPR office to make arrangements for a virtual ticket (if the concert is being streamed) or to exchange your ticket for a future concert. (Your ticket value can also be converted to a donation.) We appreciate your partnership in keeping our patrons, musicians, and staff safe and healthy! Any changes in protocols may be made based on current recommendations from the CDC, WHO, and the State of Massachusetts.

Join us for Chamber Chats
Chamber Chats
This free presentation-performance series explores a variety of topics focusing on chamber music and historical performance. Watch this series to learn about the evolution of the violin bow over the centuries from Sarah Darling, keyboard tuning and historical temperaments from Dan Ryan, and a variety of little-known composers, including Anna Amalia, Manuel Zumaya, and Elisabeth Jacquet de la Guerre.
All episodes are now available on YouTube.

Review of Stars in Their Eyes

Musicians of the Old Post Road shoot for the ‘Stars’

By John Zeugner, Telegram & Gazette Reviewer

It’s no secret that classical music, like everything truthful, rational, beautiful and compassionate, has been losing ground lately. And there are lots of attempted cures: live orchestral accompaniment to intensely popular films; flash crowd-sourced concerts; highly flexible small chamber orchestras (A Far Cry, The Knights); new off-beat venues (nightclubs, waterfront penthouses) for contemporary compositions; steep discounts for under age audiences; and the apparent winner — themed programs that subsume composers under bold titles that suggest potential audiences will find a way into something more than music.

Case in point: “Stars in Their Eyes,” Thursday night’s concert at the Worcester Historical Museum by Musicians of the Old Post Road. One could also point to Worcester Chamber Music Society’s recent concerts boldly titled: “Love and Vengeance”; “Vampires and Crocodiles”; “Censored Identity.” What’s in a name? Maybe a wider audience.

SITE’s bold-titled theme encompassed the surprising proposition that fairly obscure 18th century scientists with astronomical interests also wrote music. SITE took an added step and provided an interesting mini lecture before the concert by Harvard astronomer, James Moran, with details about William Herschel, the most celebrated astronomer of his time for his discovery of the planet Uranus. Herschel was a German émigré to Bath, England, where he was that legendary town’s band director and resident composer until his telescope production and successful data mining of the night sky overflooded and buried his musical career. Moran also supplied information about our own father of rocketry, Robert Goddard.

Only hyper cognoscenti have ever heard of scientist-composers Johann Christopher Schmidt, John Marsh, Johan Daniel Berlin or Carl Frederich Baumgarten. The ever energetic Musicians of the Old Post Road had dug out some of those scientists’ neglected scores, and, characteristically, gave them superbly polished performances. Schmidt’s Chaconne from his Les Quatre Saisons certainly had elements of Vivaldi’s better known version, especially in the supple traverso/flute work of Suzanne Stumpf and her guest partner Rachel Carpentier. Their sweet sound in this piece and also in Baumgarten’s enlarged quartet in the concert’s second half spiraled above and through deft string accompaniment by violinists Sarah Darling, and Jesse Irons, Marcia Cassidy viola and cellist Daniel Ryan. As always Michael Bahmann’s gifted harpsichord playing provided solid underpinning.

For this reviewer, Herschel’s “Symphonia di Camera in F Minor” was the most arresting music of the evening. There was a darker, denser tone to his three movements which seem far less derivative. Marsh’s String Quartet seemed a pale mimic of Haydn’s more spritely and beguiling efforts. Herschel’s work, on the other hand, commanded attention and had almost romantic era anticipations in its suppressed energy and churning but sturdy individual lines. A SITE 2.0 might entirely focus on Herschel.

There was one traditional gesture toward well-knowness: the concert ended with three selections from Rameau’s opera “Castor et Pollux,” and featured guest soprano Kristen Watson resplendent in a black sleeveless gown and striking mirror-grey long scarf. Her delivery in the second “Ariette” movement was sumptuous and stunning as she sang out “Shine, shine, new stars” neatly tying up SITE’s theme.

https://www.telegram.com/entertainmentlife/20190503/musicians-of-old-post-road-shoot-for-stars

1719 Dresden "Festival of the Planets"

2019 marks the 300th anniversary of the Dresden Festival of the Planets. In 1719, the Dresden court reached its climax of cultural display for the marriage of the Crown Prince Friedrich Augustus to Maria Josepha, daughter of the Emperor Joseph I of Austria. This weeks-long spectacle centered on musical works created to celebrate the six planets known at that time.

Among the many court activities was the performance on September 23rd of Kapellmeister Johann Christoph Schmidt’s French divertissement, Les quatres saisons, part of the Festival of Venus. An open air stage was constructed for this performance in the Grossen Garten, and it is said to have been danced by more than 100 members of the court.

Our 2018-19 season finale program “Stars in Their Eyes,” features music by 18th-century scientist-musicians and other works inspired by stargazing. We have chosen to include Schmidt's wonderful chaconne from his Les quatres saisons on this concert that concludes our season exploring the impact of the Enlightenment on 18th-century music and culture.