Explore the Past. Create Today. Inspire the Future.
Anonymous is Star of the Arundel Choirbook
An early 16th-c. illuminated manuscript of English sacred music, known as the Arundel (or Lambeth) Choirbook, contains polyphony by known composers and the equally skilled Anonymous. A compelling new album offers seven world premieres by these mysterious creators.
A Half-Century of the York Early Music Festival
Hailed as the top of its field, the York Early Music Festival celebrates a milestone anniversary in 2026 with a deluxe calendar of celebrated and emerging artists. Across its 50 years, they’ve made ‘important scholarship come to life through vibrant and sometimes bewildering performances.’
When Good Music Happens to Really Bad People
Last week, on Friday the 13th, New York’s Music Before 1800 concert series hosted the U.S. premiere of ‘Death of Gesualdo,’ a ghostly retelling of the Renaissance composer’s life and grisly crimes, set to his avant-garde music. Performed by puppets, actors, and the British vocal ensemble the Gesualdo Six, the show is the latest from Bill Barclay, whose ‘Secret Byrd’ was a revelation for putting ancient music in a profoundly living context.
A Deep South Collection of Old Instruments
The Sigal Music Museum, in South Carolina, is the only such public collection in the South and includes the oldest-known piano, from the 1770s, that was commercially build and sold in the nascent United States. With performances from its collection and substantive lectures on historical instruments, the Sigal is a treasure trove of musical history.
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