Houston Early Music Launches 2017-18 Season with 'THE INSTRUMENT OF KINGS'

By: Sep. 15, 2017
Enter Your Email to Unlock This Article

Plus, get the best of BroadwayWorld delivered to your inbox, and unlimited access to our editorial content across the globe.




Existing user? Just click login.

Houston Early Music opens its 2017-18
season with 'THE INSTRUMENT OF KINGS."
The concert features American cornetto
virtuoso Bruce Dickey (above), and known
Dutch organist Liuwe Tamminga.

Houston Early Music will open its 2017-18 season with a concert of Spanish and Italian late-Renaissance and early-Baroque music for cornetto and organ at Christ the King Lutheran Church on Friday, Sept. 15.

Titled "The Instrument of Kings & the King of Instruments," the program will feature American cornetto virtuoso Bruce Dickey and Dutch organist Liuwe Tamminga, a specialist in 16th- and 17th-century Italian organ repertoire. The concert will be co-presented with Bach Society Houston.

"The cornetto was the most important wind instrument for 200 years in Europe," said Dickey, who has spent the last four decades trying to bring it back from the brink of extinction. Once a staple of courts and cathedrals, it fell out of favor about two centuries ago.

Dickey's passion for the instrument led him to move to Italy in 1981 so he could be closer to its original sources. He co-founded an ensemble devoted to the instrument and the Baroque trombone called Concerto Palatino in 1987 in Bologna, where he now lives. His efforts to revive the cornetto won him the Historic Brass Society's Monk Award in 2000 and a Taverner Award in 2007.

He was initially attracted to the instrument by its large and languishing repertoire. Made of wood and with a cupped mouthpiece, the cornetto is famous for imitating the human voice. It was often paired with the organ so intimately that it came to be thought of as "embedded" in the keyboard instrument. The cornetto became the "top voice" of the organ, said Dickey, who will play florid ornamentations above the organ lines.

The concert covers the time when the cornetto was at its peak, roughly from 1550 to 1650. This transitional period between the Renaissance and Baroque witnessed the greatest composer who ever wrote for the instrument, Giovanni Gabrieli. Two canzonas, or instrumental songs, by Gabrieli will open the program.

Other highlights include a motet by the short-lived cornetto player Ascanio Trombetti, who was murdered at age 46 by his lover's jealous husband. There will also be a motet by the polyphonic master Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina and a capriccio for organ by the influential Girolamo Frescobaldi. Works by nearly a half-dozen additional composers will round out this evening of secular and sacred music.

Houston Early Music is the city's only organization dedicated to covering the large historical span of early music in all of its forms. 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.

See the Houston Early Music full season at houstonearlymusic.org. Full-season subscriptions may be purchased for $180 general admission and $155 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.

THE INSTRUMENT OF KINGS & THE KING OF INSTRUMENTS. 7:30 p.m. Friday, Sept. 15. 2353 Rice Blvd. A pre-concert talk will begin at 6:45 p.m. General admission is $40, senior admission is $35, and student admission is $10. Children under the age of 15 receive free admission. For more, email info@HoustonEarlyMusic.org or call 281-846-4222.

Photo Courtesy of Bruce Dickey



Comments

To post a comment, you must register and login.

Vote Sponsor


Videos