| Many of our larger-scale
programmes explore the fabulously rich and varied soundworld of renaisssance
and baroque court masques and entertainments in which an orchestra of lutes,
viols and harp, the ‘thousand twangling instruments’
of Shakespeare’s
Tempest, provides an exquisite backdrop to the human voice.
Singers with whom we work
with include Emma Kirkby, Julia Gooding, Rachel Elliott and Rebecca Outram
sopranos, Robin Blaze, James Bowman, William Purefoy and William
Towers countertenors, and James Gilchrist and Andrew Carwood
tenors.
Please contact
us for full details or with your own requirements!
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- Britannia
Triumphans
- forces: five voices, six viols,
violin, organ, three lutes and harp
- Spectacular music for royal masques
and entertainments by William Lawes, based on a concert recorded for BBC
Television.

- A
Venetian Entertainment
- forces: five voices, five viols,
lute and virginals
- Recreating a musical evening at one
of the great 16th century Venetian academies, including music by Arcadelt,
Willaert, Rore and Andrea Gabrieli.
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- Sing
unto the Lord
- forces: six voices and six viols
- Verse anthems and fantasies by
William Byrd and Orlando Gibbons.
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- Music
for Mademoiselle de Guise
- forces: six voices, four viols,
theorbo and organ
- Sacred music by the wonderful French
baroque composer Marc-Antoine Charpentier. The greatest of his early
works were created for Mlle de Guise's ensemble of voices and viols.
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- The Cries of London
- forces: five voices and five viols
- Advertising jingles aren’t just a modern phenomenon.
Even in Shakespeare’s day, market traders sold their wares with familiar
cries: ‘New fresh herring at Billingsgate…’
‘Ha’ ye any rats or mice to kill?’ ‘Buy a fine
washing ball or a poking stick with a silver dildo...’.
Orlando Gibbons' evocation of the streets of early 17th-century London,
forms the starting point for this exploration of music with city
connections. We also visit the countryside with a selection of bawdy cries
and catches celebrating animals and the lusty men and women who care for
them.
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- The
Regina Monologues
- forces: staged with Elizabeth I in
full costume, countertenor, five viols, lute and virginals
- First produced for the Covent Garden
Festival and now set to tour in the UK, USA and Japan, this powerful show
combines music with a specially commissioned set of monologues for the
ageing Queen Elizabeth I in which she reminisces on her life, loves,
regrets, passions and the state of the nation [
more information ]. TV star
Penelope Keith was our first Elizabeth and tour performances are planned
to be shared between her, Vanessa Redgrave and Felicity Palmer.
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- Music for Mona Lisa
- forces: staged with dancers and
voice of Leonardo, countertenor, lute, four viols, four wind instruments
and percussion
- Why does the Mona Lisa smile? Giorgio Vasari provided
the answer in 1550:
- “Mona Lisa was very beautiful, and while Leonardo
was painting her portrait he engaged musicians who played and sang and
continually jested in order to take away the melancholy that painters are
used to give to their portraits... This figure of Leonardo's has such a
pleasant smile that it seems rather divine than human...”
- Concordia brings together a band of voice, viols, early
winds and percussion, as well as spectacular costumed dancers, to recreate
the musical entertainment provided by Leonardo, which brought the world's
most celebrated smile to the face of the Mona Lisa while her portrait was
being painted in Florence in the year 1503. We include music ranging from
sophisticated works by the international superstar composers of the time,
Heinrich Isaac and Josquin Desprez, to dances and lute pieces reflecting
the improvised styles of contemporary popular music, sounds as hauntingly
beautiful as the Mona Lisa herself.
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- The show can also be performed in an acclaimed
contemporary staging with new dance, dramatic lighting and readings from
Leonardo's notebooks [ more information,
reviews and images ].
Back to chamber programmes
Contact us
for full details or with your own requirements! |
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