Madison Bach Musicians with Bella Voce
First Congregational United Church of Christ 1609 University Ave., Madison, Wisconsin 53726
media release: December 14, 2:45 pm lecture/3:30 pm concert (also livestream), First Congregational Church, 1609 University Avenue, Madison
Single ticket prices are:
In-person tickets (including on-demand access to the concert recording through October 12)
$40 — In-person concert attendance purchased in advance; seniors at the door
$43 — In-person general concert attendance purchased at the door
$10 — Student rush in-person attendance purchased at the door, if available
Livestream only tickets — $25 (available on-demand through October 12)
also: December 15—St. Luke’s Episcopal Church (Evanston, IL; See bellavoce.org for details and tickets for Dec. 15)
MBM is thrilled to announce that this year’s Baroque Holiday Concert—A 17th-Century German Christmas—is a long-awaited collaboration with the outstanding vocal ensemble Bella Voce from Evanston, Illinois, Andrew Lewis, director. On Saturday afternoon, December 14, in the clear and warm acoustics of Madison’s First Congregational Church, vocalists from Bella Voce and instrumentalists from MBM will join forces in performing an array of masterpieces by Buxtehude, Praetorius, Hammerschmidt, Geist, Biber, Schmelzer, Schütz, Hassler, and Schein. The concert will be presented a second time on Sunday, December 15, in the elegant sanctuary of St. Luke’s Episcopal Church in Evanston, IL.
The program is a deep dive into the musical wonders composed in the German-speaking countries during the exceptionally turbulent years of the 17th century. The hardships of this era included the Thirty Years’ War (1618-1648)—which decimated the German-speaking countries in particular, several outbreaks of plague, and many abnormally long and cold winters (now referred to as the Little Ice Age). Yet, somehow, amid this tribulation, a trove of magnificent music was created and performed—though frequently by small ensembles because often those were all that were available. Seventeenth-century music presents an irresistible mixture of the predictable and the capricious. Repeated baselines (grounds, chaconnes, passacaglias) are everywhere, providing a solid foundation, while, above them, variations and melodic divisions were frequently impetuous. Indeed, as the century wore on and the new genre of opera came into fashion, vocal lines, even in religious music, increasingly followed the irregular, syllabic grain of the text—with astonishingly convincing results!
We hope you can join us for this remarkable program of 17th-century musical gems to celebrate the Holiday Season!