Monday, October 8, 2012

Houston Early Music announces 2012-2013 season, debuts Emerging Artists Series

PRESS RELEASE: Houston Early Music announces 2012-2013 season, debuts Emerging Artists Series

Click to HEM-2012 Season Press Release
Houston Early Music announces 2012-2013 season, debuts Emerging Artists Series
HOUSTON, TX – July 5, 2012 – Houston Early Music, premier presenter of the world’s finest period ensembles and soloists, is introducing something new to audiences this year.
For its 2012-2013 season, Houston Early Music will debut its Emerging Artists Series, adding to its usual line-up of world-class performers.

Nancy Ellis, artistic director, said the new series will make for an especially exciting season. “We always search to bring first-class ensembles and soloists to Houston audiences,” Ellis said. “This year, we searched some of the most interesting emerging artists to put a new twist on our season.”
Magali Suárez Candler, Houston Early Music Board member, said the Emerging Artists Series distinguishes the organization. “It is something we can truly be proud to offer,” she said. “Nancy Ellis is excellent at discovering new artists and new groups. She is gifted at finding and recognizing talent and always brings wonderful groups to the stage.”
Hispanic Heritage Series: The Kingdoms of Castille
The season opens with Grammy-nominated ensemble El Mundo. Directed by guitarist and lutenist Richard Savino, the ensemble will play music of the 17th and 18th centuries from Spain and her Latin American colonies. A very active music scene in cathedrals and the courtly life, combined with the participation of the local populations and their folk music, produced a delightful intersection of elegance and simplicity. In “The Kingdoms of Castille,” the ensemble uses voices, violins, lute, percussion and harpsichord to create sounds ranging from folk-like to sublimely sensual.
“Richard Savino is a world-renowned performer, and we’re honored to have him come back to Houston for this concert,” Candler said.
The concert is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 12 at Salem Evangelical Lutheran Church. A pre-concert talk with ensemble members starts at 6:45 p.m.
Wassail, Wassail!
On Tuesday, Dec. 11, the Baltimore Consort will ring in the holiday season.
“We’ve presented them before, and they’ve always been one of our most popular concerts,” Candler said. “The Baltimore Consort brings the joy of the season and of music to our city.”
The ensemble has toured the United States, Canada and Europe for more than 30 seasons. This year, the dynamic group’s performance entitled “Wassail, Wassail!” will feature voices and a festive variety of instruments – lute, cittern, viols, crumhorns, recorders, rebec and percussion – and a mélange of old carols and dance tunes from the British Isles, Germany, France, Spain and the New World.
The Yuletide celebration will start at 7:30 p.m. at Christ Church Cathedral. A pre-concert talk with ensemble members begins at 6:45 p.m
Emerging Artists Series: Udite Amanti – Lovers Beware!
Texas-based Armonia Celeste is an up-and-coming group specializing in rarely heard music from the Italian Renaissance and early Baroque eras. The ensemble is comprised of three distinct female voices accompanied by period instruments: lute, theorbo, guitar and Baroque triple harp.
Each of the five members is an exciting solo performer in their own right, and together, the musicians create an unforgettable combination of vocal and instrumental notes, ornamented with a noticeable passion for the group’s repertoire.
The program, “Udite Amanti – Lovers Beware!,” highlights Roman composers of the mid-17th-century, when the Barberini family was a great supporter of vocal chamber music. Featured composers include Rossi, Carissimi and Cesti. To complete the historical picture, a copy of the famous Barberini harp, made for this prestigious family in 1635, will be played in this concert.
The event is scheduled for 7:30 p.m., Tuesday, Feb. 12, 2013 at Palmer Memorial Episcopal Church. A pre-concert talk with ensemble members begins at 6:45 p.m.
Venezia
The season continues with a performance produced in collaboration with Da Camera of Houston. At 8 p.m. on Saturday, March 9, 2013, the French ensemble La Poème Harmonique will take the stage at Cullen Theater, in the Wortham Theater Center, for its Houston debut.
The French ensemble was founded in 1998 and recaptures the poetry of early music, particularly of the late Renaissance and early Baroque eras. Semi-staged in candlelight, the program “Venezia” features works by Claudio Monteverdi, Biagio Marini, Francesco Manelli and Benedetto Ferrari. The evening will be a celebration of Venice in the Golden Age, when art music and popular forms came together and mingled, before emotion and language were restrained by rules and codes.
The Black Dragon: music from the time of Vlad Dracula
The season closes with Cançonier, a San Francisco-based ensemble devoted to medieval repertoire from the 12th to 15th centuries and traditional music from Scandinavia, the Balkans, and the Middle East.
“The Black Dragon: music from the time of Vlad Dracula” features 15th-century music from the time of the infamous Vlad the Impaler, whose tyrannical rule shocked Europe.
Ensemble member Shira Kammen is known for her early-music performances in Houston on medieval fiddle and harp. The program features the “Lamentation for the Fall of Constantinople” by Dufay, French and Italian dance music, German songs and Balkan folk songs.
“The audience will enjoy this ensemble’s creative presentation and unusual repertoire,” said Candler.
The event is set for 7:30 p.m. on Friday, April 26, 2013, at Palmer Memorial Episcopal Church. A pre-concert talk with ensemble members begins at 6:45 p.m.
Full season subscriptions to theHouston Early Music 2012-2013 season are available now and can be purchased at HoustonEarlyMusic.org. A mini-pass option is also offered. For more information, e-mail info@HoustonEarlyMusic.org or call 281-846-4222.

SEASON OVERVIEW:
Friday, October 12, 2012, 7:30 p.m.
HISPANIC HERITAGE SERIES
EL MUNDO, RICHARD SAVINOThe Kingdoms of Castille
Salem Evangelical Lutheran Church
4930 West Bellfort
Houston, TX 77035

Tuesday, December 11, 2012, 7:30 p.m.
BALTIMORE CONSORT — Wassail, Wassail!
Christ Church Cathedral
1117 Texas Ave.
Houston, Texas 77002

Tuesday, February 12, 2013, 7:30 p.m.
EMERGING ARTISTS SERIES
ARMONIA CELESTE — Udite Amanti — Lovers Beware!
Palmer Memorial Episcopal Church
6221 Main Street
Houston, Texas 77030

Saturday, March 9, 2013, 8:00 p.m.
IN COLLABORATION WITH DA CAMERA OF HOUSTON
LA POÈME HARMONIQUE — Venezia
Cullen Theatre, Wortham Theater Center, 8:00pm
501 Texas Avenue
Houston, TX 77002
Houston Early Music season ticket subscribers will get a significant discount on premium seating for this concert. Individual tickets for this concert will be available through Da Camera of Houston, www.dacamera.com, 713-524-7601.

Friday, April 26, 2013, 7:30 p.m.
CANÇONIER — The Black Dragon: music from the time of Vlad Dracula
Palmer Memorial Episcopal Church
6221 Main Street
Houston, TX 77030
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 and growing 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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Monday, September 17, 2012

Houston Early Music

HOUSTON, TX – July 5, 2012 – Houston Early Music, premier presenter of the world’s finest period ensembles and soloists, is introducing something new to audiences this year.
For its 2012-2013 season, Houston Early Music will debut its Emerging Artists Series, adding to its usual line-up of world-class performers.

Nancy Ellis, artistic director, said the new series will make for an especially exciting season. “We always search to bring first-class ensembles and soloists to Houston audiences,” Ellis said. “This year, we searched some of the most interesting emerging artists to put a new twist on our season.”
Magali Suárez Candler, Houston Early Music Board member, said the Emerging Artists Series distinguishes the organization. “It is something we can truly be proud to offer,” she said. “Nancy Ellis is excellent at discovering new artists and new groups. She is gifted at finding and recognizing talent and always brings wonderful groups to the stage.” 
Hispanic Heritage Series: The Kingdoms of Castille
The season opens with Grammy-nominated ensemble El Mundo. Directed by guitarist and lutenist Richard Savino, the ensemble will play music of the 17th and 18th centuries from Spain and her Latin American colonies. A very active music scene in cathedrals and the courtly life, combined with the participation of the local populations and their folk music, produced a delightful intersection of elegance and simplicity. In “The Kingdoms of Castille,” the ensemble uses voices, violins, lute, percussion and harpsichord to create sounds ranging from folk-like to sublimely sensual.
“Richard Savino is a world-renowned performer, and we’re honored to have him come back to Houston for this concert,” Candler said.
The concert is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 12 at Salem Evangelical Lutheran Church. A pre-concert talk with ensemble members starts at 6:45 p.m. 
Wassail, Wassail! 
On Tuesday, Dec. 11, the Baltimore Consort will ring in the holiday season.
“We’ve presented them before, and they’ve always been one of our most popular concerts,” Candler said. “The Baltimore Consort brings the joy of the season and of music to our city.”
The ensemble has toured the United States, Canada and Europe for more than 30 seasons. This year, the dynamic group’s performance entitled “Wassail, Wassail!” will feature voices and a festive variety of instruments – lute, cittern, viols, crumhorns, recorders, rebec and percussion – and a mélange of old carols and dance tunes from the British Isles, Germany, France, Spain and the New World.
The Yuletide celebration will start at 7:30 p.m. at Christ Church Cathedral. A pre-concert talk with ensemble members begins at 6:45 p.m
Emerging Artists Series: Udite Amanti – Lovers Beware! 
Texas-based Armonia Celeste is an up-and-coming group specializing in rarely heard music from the Italian Renaissance and early Baroque eras. The ensemble is comprised of three distinct female voices accompanied by period instruments: lute, theorbo, guitar and Baroque triple harp.
Each of the five members is an exciting solo performer in their own right, and together, the musicians create an unforgettable combination of vocal and instrumental notes, ornamented with a noticeable passion for the group’s repertoire.
The program, “Udite Amanti – Lovers Beware!,” highlights Roman composers of the mid-17th-century, when the Barberini family was a great supporter of vocal chamber music. Featured composers include Rossi, Carissimi and Cesti. To complete the historical picture, a copy of the famous Barberini harp, made for this prestigious family in 1635, will be played in this concert.
The event is scheduled for 7:30 p.m., Tuesday, Feb. 12, 2013 at Palmer Memorial Episcopal Church. A pre-concert talk with ensemble members begins at 6:45 p.m.
Venezia
The season continues with a performance produced in collaboration with Da Camera of Houston.  At 8 p.m. on Saturday, March 9, 2013, the French ensemble La Poème Harmonique will take the stage at Cullen Theater, in the Wortham Theater Center, for its Houston debut.
The French ensemble was founded in 1998 and recaptures the poetry of early music, particularly of the late Renaissance and early Baroque eras. Semi-staged in candlelight, the program “Venezia” features works by Claudio Monteverdi, Biagio Marini, Francesco Manelli and Benedetto Ferrari. The evening will be a celebration of Venice in the Golden Age, when art music and popular forms came together and mingled, before emotion and language were restrained by rules and codes.
The Black Dragon: music from the time of Vlad Dracula
The season closes with Cançonier, a San Francisco-based ensemble devoted to medieval repertoire from the 12th to 15th centuries and traditional music from Scandinavia, the Balkans, and the Middle East.
“The Black Dragon: music from the time of Vlad Dracula” features 15th-century music from the time of the infamous Vlad the Impaler, whose tyrannical rule shocked Europe.
Ensemble member Shira Kammen is known for her early-music performances in Houston on medieval fiddle and harp. The program features the “Lamentation for the Fall of Constantinople” by Dufay, French and Italian dance music, German songs and Balkan folk songs.
“The audience will enjoy this ensemble’s creative presentation and unusual repertoire,” said Candler.
The event is set for 7:30 p.m. on Friday, April 26, 2013, at Palmer Memorial Episcopal Church. A pre-concert talk with ensemble members begins at 6:45 p.m.
Full season subscriptions to theHouston Early Music 2012-2013 season are available now and can be purchased at HoustonEarlyMusic.org. A mini-pass option is also offered. For more information, e-mail info@HoustonEarlyMusic.org or call 281-846-4222.

SEASON OVERVIEW:
Friday, October 12, 2012, 7:30 p.m.
HISPANIC HERITAGE SERIES
EL MUNDO, RICHARD SAVINOThe Kingdoms of Castille
Salem Evangelical Lutheran Church
4930 West Bellfort
Houston, TX 77035

Tuesday, December 11, 2012, 7:30 p.m.
BALTIMORE CONSORT — Wassail, Wassail!
Christ Church Cathedral
1117 Texas Ave.
Houston, Texas 77002

Tuesday, February 12, 2013, 7:30 p.m.
EMERGING ARTISTS SERIES
ARMONIA CELESTE — Udite Amanti — Lovers Beware!
Palmer Memorial Episcopal Church
6221 Main Street
Houston, Texas 77030

Saturday, March 9, 2013, 8:00 p.m.
IN COLLABORATION WITH DA CAMERA OF HOUSTON
LA POÈME HARMONIQUE — Venezia
Cullen Theatre, Wortham Theater Center, 8:00pm
501 Texas Avenue
Houston, TX 77002
Houston Early Music season ticket subscribers will get a significant discount on premium seating for this concert. Individual tickets for this concert will be available through Da Camera of Houston, www.dacamera.com, 713-524-7601.

Friday, April 26, 2013, 7:30 p.m.
CANÇONIER — The Black Dragon: music from the time of Vlad Dracula
Palmer Memorial Episcopal Church
6221 Main Street
Houston, TX 77030
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 and growing 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:
 
Houston Early Music’s 2012-2013 season includes the debut of its Emerging Artists Series with a performance by Texas-based Armonia Celeste, an up-and-coming group specializing in rarely heard music from the Italian Renaissance and early Baroque eras. To view the full line-up for the season and to purchase tickets, visit HoustonEarlyMusic.org or call 281-846-4222.
Photo by Les Wollam
 
Media contact:
Susan Love Fitts
Susan Love Fitts Communications Inc.
936-597-8825
susan@susanlovefitts.com

Saturday, September 8, 2012

HOUSTON BALLET ANNOUNCES TOURING SCHEDULE

Houston Ballet Makes Second Appearance at The Chicago Dancing Festival on August 25th 2012
Houston Ballet returns to Ottawa, Canada October 18-20th, 2012
Houston Ballet II Invited to perform in Switzerland in February 2013 
Houston, TX - Houston Ballet Artistic Director Stanton Welch announced touring plans for both the company and second company's 2012-2013 season today. Over the next year, touring engagements will take Houston Ballet from Chicago to Switzerland.
The company begins its touring in August 2012 with an appearance at the Chicago Dancing Festival on Saturday, August 25 at Millennium Park in Chicago, Illinois, performing Mark Morris', Drink to Me Only With Thine Eyes on a program with the Martha Graham Dance Company, Keigwin + Company, Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, and stars of New York City Ballet and San Francisco Ballet. Houston Ballet made its debut at the Chicago Dancing Festival in August 2009, performing William Forsythe's The Vertiginous Thrill of Exactitude, which dance critic Hedy Weiss of The Chicago Sun Times called "a fiendishly difficult work set to a bombastic Schubert symphony and brilliantly performed by members of Houston Ballet. The ballet's title says it all, as three women in hooplike tutus of chartreuse (Jaquel Andrews, Melody Herrera and Sara Webb) and two male dancers (Connor Walsh and Joseph Walsh) - shooting stars, all - moved through choreography of exceptional difficulty and quirkiness at unimaginable velocities. The whole thing had an almost giddy-making effect because the five dancers were not just models of perfection, but met every challenge with that sense of sheer fun that comes with sublime skill and buoyant confidence." For additional information, visit www.chicagodancingfestival.com.
From October 18-20 2012, Houston Ballet will perform Marie, a three-act narrative ballet choreographed by Stanton Welch and inspired by the life of the legendary French queen, Marie Antoinette, at Canada's National Arts Centre in Ottawa. The company last appeared in Ottawa in May 2006, performing a mixed program featuring Mr. Welch's Nosotros and Divergence, and Julia Adam's The Accidental. Tickets may be purchased on the National Arts Centre website at www.nac-cna.ca.
Houston Ballet II has been invited to perform in Switzerland in conjunction with 25 featured guests on a showcase performance on February 2, 2013. The dancers of Houston Ballet II are coached by the internationally recognized Claudio Munoz, ballet master for Houston Ballet II; Sabrina Lenzi, ballet mistress for Houston Ballet II; Houston Ballet Artistic Director Stanton Welch; and Houston Ballet's artistic staff. In recent seasons, Houston Ballet II has traveled to the Organizacion Para Las Artes in Guatemala City, Guatemala and Folly Theater in Kansas City, Missouri in October 2010; Budapest (International Youth Festival in October 2008 and 2011); and to New York's prestigious City Center for Music & Dance (in January 2007). 
About Houston Ballet
On February 17, 1969 a troupe of 15 young dancers made its stage debut at Sam Houston State Teacher's College in Huntsville, Texas. Since that time, Houston Ballet has evolved into a company of 55 dancers with a budget of $20.5 million (making it the United States' fourth largest ballet company by number of dancers), a state-of-the-art performance space built especially for the company, Wortham Theater Center, the largest professional dance facility in America, Houston Ballet's $46.6 million Center for Dance which opened in April 2011, and an endowment of just over $57.6 million (as of May 2011).
Australian choreographer Stanton Welch has served as artistic director of Houston Ballet since 2003, raising the level of the company's classical technique and commissioning many new works from dance makers such as Christopher Bruce, Jorma Elo, James Kudelka, Julia Adam, Natalie Weir and Nicolo Fonte. James Nelson serves as the administrative leader of the company, assuming the position of executive director of Houston Ballet in February 2012 after serving as the company's general manager for over a decade.
Houston Ballet has toured extensively both nationally and internationally. Since 2000, the company has appeared in London at Sadler's Wells, at the Bolshoi Theater in Moscow, Ottawa, in six cities in Spain, in Montréal, at The Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., in New York at City Center and The Joyce Theater, and in cities large and small across the United States. Houston Ballet has emerged as a leader in the expensive, labor-intensive task of nurturing the creation and development of new full-length narrative ballets.
Writing in The Dancing Times in June 2012, dance critic Margaret Willis praised Houston Ballet "The synchronization, agility, presentation and sheer gusto from each member of the company would, if ballet were an Olympic sport, see them well on the way to achieving gold."
Houston Ballet Orchestra was established in the late 1970s and currently consists of 61 professional musicians who play all ballet performances at Wortham Theater Center under music director Ermanno Florio.
Houston Ballet's Education and Outreach Program has reached 20,500 Houston area students (as of the 2011-2012 season). Houston Ballet's Academy has 509 students and has had four academy students win prizes at the prestigious international ballet competition the Prix de Lausanne, with one student winning the overall competition in 2010. For more information on Houston Ballet visit www.houstonballet.org.
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HOUSTON BALLET
2012-2013 TOURING
FACT SHEET

Houston Ballet Touring
Houston Ballet's touring engagements are supported in part by the Fayez Sarofim & Co. Touring Fund.
August 25, 2012: Chicago, Illinois - Houston Ballet at The Chicago Dancing Festival. For additional information, visit www.chicagodancingfestival.com.
October 18-20, 2012: Ottawa, Canada - Houston Ballet at Canada's National Arts Centre in Ottawa. For additional information, visit www.nac-cna.ca/en/