Map of the World: Music from 13th- and 15th-Century Spain (2013): Difference between revisions

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Evocative Spanish music of the 13th and 15th centuries, including Spanish dances, history’s first song cycle — the ''Seven Songs of Love'' by Gallician Martin Codax, and a mass by Juan Cornago were performed with vocalists, fiddles, winds, lutes, and psalteries in [[Folger Consort]]'s ''Map of the World: Music from 13th- and 15th-Century Spain. The Consort performed ''Map of the World'' from September 27 to September 29, 2013.
Evocative Spanish music of the 13th and 15th centuries, including Spanish dances, history’s first song cycle — the ''Seven Songs of Love'' by Gallician Martin Codax, and a mass by Juan Cornago were performed with vocalists, fiddles, winds, lutes, and psalteries in [[Folger Consort]]'s ''Map of the World: Music from 13th- and 15th-Century Spain''. The Consort performed ''Map of the World'' from September 27 to September 29, 2013.


==Artists==
==Artists==

Revision as of 09:09, 16 June 2014

Evocative Spanish music of the 13th and 15th centuries, including Spanish dances, history’s first song cycle — the Seven Songs of Love by Gallician Martin Codax, and a mass by Juan Cornago were performed with vocalists, fiddles, winds, lutes, and psalteries in Folger Consort's Map of the World: Music from 13th- and 15th-Century Spain. The Consort performed Map of the World from September 27 to September 29, 2013.

Artists

Folger Consort

Artistic Directors

  • Robert Eisenstein: vielle, viol, recorder
  • Christopher Kendall: citrole, lute

Guest artists

  • Amy Domingues: viol
  • Richard Giarusso: baritone
  • Martin Near: countertenor
  • Emily Noel: soprano
  • Aaron Sheehan: harpsichord, organ
  • Tom Zajac: recorder, flute, bagpipe, harp, percussion