HOUSTON EARLY MUSIC
P. O. Box 271193
Houston, TX 77277-1193
HoustonEarlyMusic.org
Media contact:
Susan Love Fitts, 936-597-8825 susan@susanlovefitts.com
HOUSTON – August 25, 2014 -- Apollo's Fire, The Cleveland Baroque Orchestra, will open the Houston Early
Music season on Nov. 10 with a performance of Claudio Monteverdi's magnificent Vespers of 1610 in one of
Houston's most dramatic concert settings, the Co-Cathedral of the Sacred Heart, co-sponsor of the event.
“I think of Monteverdi like Beethoven,” Apollo's Fire artistic director Jeannette Sorrell said. “Both were revolutionary composers living at the end of one era — in Monteverdi's case, the Renaissance — and forging a new, more-expressive style. Beethoven gave us the new Romantic spirit. Monteverdi gave us the Baroque.”
Monteverdi's monumental Vespers is the most ambitious work of sacred music written before those composed by
Johann Sebastian Bach . Apollo's Fire will perform it with seven vocal soloists, the Apollo's Singers chamber choir and a period orchestra.
“What makes the piece so extraordinary for me,” said Sorrell, “is the tension between the archaic, medieval plainchant that Monteverdi uses and the bold, new, flamboyant counterpoint in Baroque style that he weaves around the chanting.”
Formally titled Vespro della Beata Vergine 1610 , the Vespers sets a collection of evening prayers traditional to the Roman Catholic liturgy for several Marian feasts. It intersperses psalm settings and motets, and concludes with two of the greatest early Baroque settings of the Magnificat .
Although Monteverdi's precise intentions in creating the work remain unknown, it employs a wide range of musical forms while maintaining overall unity by basing each movement on the traditional Gregorian plainchant for each text, which serves as a cantus firmus.
“The Monteverdi
Vespers has been my favorite piece ever since I was a teenager,” said Sorrell, whose group has made it a signature work for the last 15 years. Apollo's Fire recorded the music on an internationally acclaimed
CD, which made Billboard's top 10 during their national tour of the Vespers in 2010.
In addition to Houston, Apollo’s Fire will perform at a half-dozen other cities across the nation during their tour of the work this fall. This national tour by Apollo's Fire is supported by a generous grant from the National
Endowment for the Arts.
“We are thrilled that Houston Early Music is presenting the concert at the perfect venue for the piece,” Sorrell said. “Monteverdi's masterpiece is meant for a cathedral ambiance. I think it will be a special and memorable event for all of us involved!”
Apollo's Fire will perform Monteverdi's Vespers of 1610 on Monday, Nov. 10, at 7:30 p.m. at the Co-Cathedral of the Sacred Heart, 1701 San Jacinto St., Houston, Texas 77002. A pre-concert talk with Jeannette Sorrell will begin at 6:45 p.m.
SUBSCRIPTION / TICKET INFORMATION:
Full season subscriptions and individual tickets for the Houston Early Music 2014-2015 season are available now and can be purchased at HoustonEarlyMusic.org.
Full-season subscriptions may be purchased for $200 general admission and $175 senior admission. A mini-pass option, which provides a selection of any three concerts, is also available for $110 general admission and $95 for seniors. Individual tickets are available for $40 general admission, $35 senior admission and $20 for students with a valid student ID card. Children under the age of 15 receive free admission.
For more information, e-mail info@HoustonEarlyMusic.org or call 281-846-4222.
SEASON OVERVIEW:
Monday, Nov. 10, 2014, 7:30 p.m.
APOLLO’S FIRE, The Cleveland Baroque Orchestra – Claudio Monteverdi’s Vespers of 1610
Co-Cathedral of the Sacred Heart
1701 San Jacinto St.
Houston, Texas 77002
Thursday, Nov. 13, 2014, 8:00 p.m.
TAFELMUSIK – The Galileo Project
Cullen Theater at Wortham Center
500 Texas Ave.
Houston, Texas 77002
Friday, Dec. 12, 2014, 8 p.m.
HISPANIC HERITAGE SERIES
EL MUNDO – Villancicos y Cantadas de Navidad
Christ Church Cathedral
1117 Texas Ave.
Houston, Texas 77002
Sunday, Feb. 15, 2015, 3 p.m.
CIARAMELLA – Make a Joyful Noise
(A main stage concert for the 2015 Houston Early Music Festival)
First Evangelical Lutheran Church
1311 Holman St.
Houston, Texas 77004
Friday, March 27, 2015, 7:30 p.m.
EMERGING ARTISTS SERIES
THE SEBASTIANS – Bach and Forth
First Evangelical Lutheran Church
1311 Holman St.
Houston, Texas 77004
Friday, April 10, 2015, 7:30 p.m.
QUICKSILVER – Stile Moderno, New Music from the 17th Century
Salem Evangelical Lutheran Church
4930 West Bellfort St.
Houston, Texas 77035
ABOUT HOUSTON EARLY MUSIC
As the city’s only organization dedicated to covering the large historical span of early music in all of its forms,
Houston Early Music epitomizes a movement that has swept the world of classical music. Officially incorporated in 1969, the nonprofit provides performance opportunities for up-and-coming and major early music artists from around the world in an annual concert series. A successful educational outreach program introduces a future generation to a broad range of music. Houston Early Music is funded in part by grants from the Houston Arts
Alliance, the Texas Commission on the Arts and The National Endowment for the Arts.
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Attached photo courtesy of Roger Mastroianni:
Caption:
Apollo's Fire will open Houston Early Music’s 2014-2015 season with a performance of Claudio Monteverdi's
Vespers of 1610.
Media contact:
Susan Love Fitts
Susan Love Fitts Communications Inc.
936-597-8825 susan@susanlovefitts.com