Baroque Music Workshop June 26-July 2, 2011
Faculty Biographical Sketches
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Frances Blaker, Recorders
Frances Blaker performs on recorders of all types and sizes with the Farallon
Recorder Quartet and Tibia Recorder Duo. As a member of Ensemble Vermillian
she explores, transcribes, and performs chamber music of the 17th and 18th
centuries. She has performed as soloist with the Atlanta Baroque Orchestra,
Ensemble Vita Nova, and numerous other groups in the US, Denmark, England,
France, Italy, and the Netherlands. She is conductor and music director of
BABO (Bay Area Baroque Orchestra), a community orchestra for accomplished
amateur players. Ms. Blaker received her Music Pedagogical and Performance
degrees in recorder from the Royal Danish Conservatory of Music in Copenhagen,
where she studied with Eva Legêne. She also studied with Marion Verbruggen
in the Netherlands. As
co-director of Tibia Adventures in Music, she organizes
workshops for small groups of adult students in the US, France, and Italy,
with Cornwall to be added soon. She is co-director
with Kathleen Kraft of the
SFEMS Baroque workshop and is an assistant director of the Amherst Early Music
Festival, Inc. She teaches private recorder lessons both in person and long
distance via Skype and is a sought after instructor at workshops all around
the US. Ms. Blaker is the author of The Recorder Player's Companion and the
"Opening Measures" column in the American Recorder and is a collaborator and
performer on the Disc Continuo series of play-along recordings.
As a composer, she has been awarded month-long residencies focusing on
music composition at the Sitka Center for Art and Ecology in Otis, Oregon,
in April 2003 and 2006. Her compositions have been published by PRB Productions
and Lost in Time Press.
Ms. Blaker can be heard on Ensemble Vermillian's two-volume survey of
German 17th century chamber music centering around Buxtehude's opus 1,
Stolen Jewels and Buried Treasure, and with the Farallon Recorder Quartet
on Ludwig Senfl: Lieder, Motets, and Instrumental Works and the newly
released recording of music from England, From Albion's Shores.
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Sand Dalton, Baroque Oboe
Sand Dalton began playing the Baroque oboe in 1975 after graduating from the
California Institute of the Arts, where he studied modern oboe with
Alan Vogel. A year later he made his first instrument and began an
extensive and on-going study of historical oboes. Concurrently, he has
pursued an active career as a performer and teacher. Over the years he
has performed and recorded with many ensembles, including the Philharmonia
Baroque Orchestra, Boston Baroque, the Handel and Hayden Society, Magnificat,
Portland Baroque Orchestra, Seattle Baroque, and the Pacific Baroque Orchestra
of Vancouver, B.C. Sand was described by CBC Radio as "one of the leading
Baroque oboists in North America, whose fine instruments are played around
the world." His long experience playing Baroque orchestral and chamber music
has provided him with an ideal "laboratory" in which to test and refine his
ideas about making good musical instruments.
Sand has been on the faculties of the New England Conservatory, the
University of British Columbia, and Longy School of Music and has taught
as well at the summer workshops for the San Francisco Early Music Society,
Vancouver Early Music Program, Amherst Early Music, and the International
Baroque Institute at Longy. In 2007- 2008, while living in Italy, Sand
exhibited his instruments and performed throughout Europe.
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Kathleen Kraft, Baroque Flute
Kathleen Kraft completed studies in flute with Frans Vester at the Royal
Conservatory of Music in the Hague, the Netherlands, where she began
specializing in Baroque flute with Frans Bruggen. She has performed extensively
as a soloist and chamber musician, including concerts for the San Francisco
Early Music Society, the J. Paul Getty Museum, the National Flute Convention,
the Locronan Festival de Musique in France, and Tage Alte Musik in Regensburg.
She has performed with Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra, the CBC Vancouver
Orchestra, American Bach Soloists, Concerto Amabile, Sonoma Baroque, and
Pacific Baroque Orchestra in Vancouver. She teaches privately in Sonoma county
and Berkeley and is co-director of the San Francisco Early Music
Society's
Baroque Workshop at Sonoma State University. Ms. Kraft has recorded with
Concerto Amabile and American Bach Soloists. She lives in a secluded paradise
in the coastal hills outside of Occidental, California. An expert on California
native grasslands, she is active in watershed restoration and native coastal
prairie conservation projects.
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Kati Kyme, Baroque Violin
Kati Kyme has been a frequent leader and soloist with both Philharmonia
Baroque Orchestra and American Bach Soloists since the inaugural seasons of
each. An avid chamber music player, she has played in the acclaimed Artaria
Quartet, the Sierra String Quartet, and, currently, with the New
Esterházy Quartet, which has just finished performing and
recording all sixty-eight of Haydn's string quartets. Her many recordings
can be heard on the Bayer, harmonia mundi, and Koch International record
labels. Kati has held faculty positions at the University of Puget Sound,
the Cornish Institute of Allied Arts, and Sonoma State University.
Currently she conducts the two levels of the California Youth Symphony's
String Prep Division, where talented string players from all over the
San Francisco Bay Area, ages 7-15, gather for fiery and fun music making.
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Rita Lilly, Soprano
Rita Lilly is familiar to audiences in oratorio, recital, and opera, but most
notably for her performances of early music. A native New Yorker, she has
appeared as a featured soloist with the American Boychoir, American Classical
Orchestra, American Symphony Orchestra, ARTEK, Bachworks, Bach Aria Group,
Clarion Music Society, Collegium Antiquum, Concert Royal, REBEL, and the
New York Consort of Viols, among others. As the soprano soloist of the
Waverly Consort, she toured throughout the US and abroad. She has been
featured on live broadcasts on New York's WNYC, WNCN, National Public Radio,
and Radio-Canada. She made her N.Y. Weill Recital Hall debut in Pergolesi's
Stabat Mater with Collegium Antiquum and has toured with harpsichordist
Anthony Newman.
Since coming to the San Francisco Bay Area, Ms. Lilly has been a soloist with
AVE, American Bach Soloists, Bay Choral Guild, Berkeley Early Music Festival,
California Bach Society, Chora Nova, City Concert Opera, Magnificat Baroque
Ensemble, MusicSources, New Music Works in Santa Cruz, S.F. Concert Chorale,
S.F. Renaissance Voices, and Sacramento Baroque. Her recordings include
three with the Waverly Consort on EMI, Handel and Vivaldi's Dixit Dominus with
the American Boychoir on Musical Heritage, Scarlatti's St. Cecilia Mass on
Newport Classic, Sowerby's Medieval Poem on Naxos, a German Baroque Christmas
with American Classical Orchestra on Musicmasters, and Orff's Carmina Burana
with the S.F. Concert Chorale.
Critics' reviews:
"The performance by soloist Rita Lilly was most notable for its strength, clarity
and virtuosity:…….Robert Haskins (Chorus Magazine)
"Rita Lilly's performance was excellent. Her personality blossomed in contrasting sets of
lyric songs…with coloratura all beautifully rendered"….….James R. Oestereich (NY Times)
"The best songs were the simplest and quietest, especially the plaintive solos
by The Waverly Consort's soprano, Rita Lilly"……..Richard Taruskin (NY Times)
"Rita Lilly deserves to be singled out: She is a soprano of strong voice and a fine bell-like
tone."……..David Bratman (SF Chronicle)
"Rita Lilly gave special pleasure in the Vaillant"……..Bernard Holland (NY Times)
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Anna Marsh, Baroque Bassoon
Anna Marsh owns five bassoons and likes to play them. She has appeared with
Tafelmusik, Indianapolis Baroque Orchestra, Opera Atelier, Seattle Baroque,
The National Cathedral, Opera Lafayette, Washington Bach Consort, Ensemble
Voltaire, Apollo's Fire, Foundling Orchestra, Americantiga, Chicago Opera
Theater, the Hollywood Bowl, Banff Centre for the Arts, Musica nel Chiostro,
the Bloomington Early Music Festival, Sante Fe Pro Musica, Aradia Ensemble,
Indianapolis Museum of Art, and others. Anna has also taught or given master
classes at the Hawaii Performing Arts Festival, the Eastman School of Music,
the Los Angeles Music and Art School, the Albuquerque Double Reed Workshop
(now the Western Baroque Music Festival); she also teaches privately.
She co-directs the group Ensemble Lipzodes, which toured Brazil in 2008
and Ecuador in 2010, and has recorded two CDs. She also enjoys playing with
Circa 1800, a classical woodwind quintet, and From the Depths, a group devoted
to music and literature. Anna has been a concerto soloist with the Foundling
Orchestra, Americantiga Orchestra, the USC Early Music Ensemble, and the
Indiana University Baroque Orchestra. Anna has also worked in the library
and/or in administration at the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the Washington
National Gallery of Art, Museum of the City of New York , and the Weyerhauser
Technology Center. She has recorded for Centaur, Avie, Naxos, the Super Bowl,
and Musica Omnia record labels.
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David Newman, Baritone
American baritone David Newman enjoys an active and varied concert career
throughout North America. Hailed as "electrifying" by the Washington Post and
noted by the Sacramento Bee for his "rather perfect oratorio voice," he is in
particular demand as a Baroque specialist. He has performed Messiah with
Tafelmusik, Portland Baroque Orchestra, Jacksonville Symphony, and with
Masterwork Chorus in Carnegie Hall; St. John Passion with the American Bach
Soloists, Carmel Bach Festival, Chorale Delaware, and the Bach Chamber
Orchestra of Honolulu; and St. Matthew Passion with the Bach Society of St.
Louis, Baroque Choral Guild, San Francisco Bach Choir, and on a national tour
with the combined forces of Santa Fe Pro Musica and the Smithsonian Chamber
Players.
In his debut with the Washington Bach Consort, Mr. Newman was noted by the
Baltimore Sun for his "exquisitely phrased, velvet-toned Mache dich, mein Herz."
Other notable appearances include Bach's B Minor Mass and
Christmas Oratorio
with The Bethlehem Bach Choir, Coffee Cantata, Easter Oratorio,
and Christmas
Oratorio with the Santa Fe Bach Festival, and Haydn's Creation with the
Honolulu Symphony. He was also a featured soloist in the Sorbonne's 2003
Festival Berlioz in Paris with the UC Davis Symphony Orchestra.
David has appeared regularly as a guest artist with the Four Nations
Ensemble, including performances in Lincoln Center and Merkin Hall, and has
also performed with the Spoleto Festival, Opera Company of Philadelphia,
Metropolitan Opera Guild, Opera Birmingham, Philadelphia Orchestra, and the
Russian National Orchestra. His recording of Alexander's Feast with the Bach
Sinfonia was recently released on the Dorian label. Mr. Newman teaches voice
at James Madison University.
davidnewman.info
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William Skeen, Baroque Cello
William Skeen joined Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra in 2003 and often serves as
continuo cellist. He is an integral member of the American Bach Soloists as
well as principal cellist of Musica Angelica in Los Angeles and the Bach
Collegium-San Diego. Summers are spent with family in Carmel, where William is
viola da gamba soloist and associate principal cellist of the Carmel Bach
Festival. William also performs with Portland Baroque, the San Francisco Bach
Choir, and other period ensembles. Most of William's time is spent, however,
playing chamber music with his excellent colleagues in the New Esterházy
Quartet, Voices of Music, La Monica, El Mundo, and Galanterie.
William earned a bachelor of music from the Cleveland Institute of Music, where
he studied with famed pedagogue Alan Harris. After leaving Cleveland, he headed
to Los Angeles to work with L.A. Philharmonic Principal Cellist Ronald Leonard
at the University of Southern California. While pursuing a master of music
degree, Skeen was invited by Leonard to be a teaching assistant at USC. Since
2000, William has lectured in Baroque cello and viola da gamba at USC and given
master classes at UCLA and the Colburn School. Mr. Skeen's pupils have gone
on to perform with Philharmonia Baroque, American Bach Soloists, Carmel Bach
Festival, and Musica Angelica.
Skeen was associate principal cellist of the Stockton Symphony for many years,
continuo cellist for San Diego Opera, and principal cellist of the Young
Musicians Foundation Debut Orchestra. He has performed over fifteen different
concertos with orchestra and has performed solo recitals in the San Francisco
Bay Area, Los Angeles, Carmel, Cleveland, Miami, and New York City. William
has recorded over thirty discs, for Koch, Delos, BIS, Hannsler, Sono Luminus,
and Pandore records. He lives in Wildcat Canyon in San Francisco's East Bay
with his wife Ondine Young and their two young children, Talia and Liam.
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Mary Springfels, Viola da Gamba
For most of her adult life, Mary Springfels has devoted herself to the
performance and teaching of early music repertoires. She earned her
stripes performing with many influential pioneering ensembles,
including the New York Pro Musica, the Elizabethan Enterprise, concert
Royal, and the Waverly consort. For 20 years she directed the
innovative Newberry Consort, and can be heard on dozens of recordings.
In 2006, Mary moved to the mountains of New Mexico, where she is
active in the formation of an intentional community called the Wit's
End Coop. She continues to teach and perform extensively. The past
year's highlights include appearances with the Folger Consort, the
Tallis Scholars, and concerts of medieval music at the Dallas Museum
of Fine Art, and in London, at Old St. Bartholomew's Church. This
summer, she will be teaching and lecturing at the Texas Toot, the San
Francisco Early Music Society, The Viola da Gamba Society of America,
Amherst Early Music, and the Pinewoods Early Music Week.
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Peter Sykes, Harpsichord
Peter Sykes performs widely on the organ, harpsichord, clavichord, and
fortepiano as a soloist and as an ensemble musician. With Christa Rakich he
created "Tuesdays With Sebastian," an independent two-year benefit concert
series in which he and Ms. Rakich performed the entire keyboard works of Johann
Sebastian Bach for the organ, harpsichord, and clavichord in thirty-four
recitals in five Boston-area locations in the 2003-04 and 2004-05 concert
seasons. He appears regularly in concert and on recordings with Boston Baroque.
In March 2004 he was given the honor of performing the dedication recital on
the newly restored 1800 Tannenberg organ in Old Salem, North Carolina, a
performance featured on the nationally broadcast television show
"CBS Sunday Morning." In November 2005 he performed the inaugural recital on
the newly restored 1866 Koehnken organ in the Isaac Wise Temple in Cincinnati.
Sykes's solo recordings include J.S. Bach's complete Leipzig Chorales recorded
on the Noack organ of the Langholtskirkja in Reykjavik, Iceland, and music of
Reger recorded on a Steinmeyer organ in Altoona, Pennsylvania. His recording
of his organ transcription of Holst's orchestral suite The Planets was named
Best of 1996 by Audio Review, called a "Super CD" by Absolute Sound in 1999,
and garnered accolades in every review. He appears on the Cambridge Bach
Ensemble recording The Muses of Zion, performing organ works of Tunder and
Buxtehude on the Fisk meantone organ of Wellesley College; on the Music from
Aston Magna recording of Handel's oratorio The Triumph of Time and Truth,
containing Handel's first known organ concerto; on a recording of the organ
concerto Cymbale of Julian Wachner; and on the Grammy-nominated Boston Baroque
recordings of Handel's Messiah, Bach's B-Minor Mass, and
Monteverdi's Vespers.
Soon to appear will be a recording of Bach's harpsichord partitas on the
Centaur label.
As an ensemble musician Skyes has performed with Musica Antiqua Köln, Ensemble
Project Ars Nova, the King's Noyse, the New England Bach Festival,
Winsor Chamber Music, Mistral, Aston Magna Festival, Chameleon Ensemble, the
Van Swieten and Borromeo Quartets, Cantata Singers, New England String Ensemble,
and the Portland Chamber Music Festival. He was a member of the continuo team
for the Boston Early Music Festival opera productions of Cavalli's Ercole
Amante, Conradi's Ariadne, and Lully's Thesée and
Psyché.
He holds degrees from the New England Conservatory, where he studied with
Gabriel Chodos, Blanche Winogron, Mireille Lagacé, Robert Schuneman, and
Yuko Hayashi, and Concordia University in Montreal, where he studied with
Bernard Lagacé. In 1978 he was winner of the Chadwick Medal from the
New England Conservatory for outstanding undergraduate achievement. He was the
1993 laureate of the Erwin Bodky Award for excellence in early music
performance. In May 2005 he received the Outstanding Alumni award from the
New England Conservatory for career achievement since graduation.
He is Associate Professor of Music and Chair of the Historical Performance
Department at Boston University, Director of Music at First Church in
Cambridge, Congregational, a member of the faculties of the Longy School of
Music and the New England Conservatory, and a founding board member and current
president of the Boston Clavichord Society.
www.petersykes.com
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Marion Verbruggen, Recorders
Amsterdam-born recorder player Marion Verbruggen is one of the most
extraordinary virtuosos of her generation. Famed for her high-spirited,
technically dazzling performances, she has earned an international reputation
as a master of style on her instrument throughout North America, Europe,
Africa, Japan, and Australia. Enamored of the recorder at an early age, she
studied at the Amsterdam Conservatory in The Hague with Frans Bruggen. Upon
completing her diplomas cum laude, she was invited to join the faculty at the
Royal Conservatory. Her prizes include the first International Recorder
Competition in Bruges, the Nicolai Prize for the Performances of Contemporary
Dutch Music, and the Erwin Bodky Award for Early Music. As a soloist Marion
Verbruggen plays with prestigious ensembles including Musica Antiqua Köln,
Akademie fur Ancient Musick Berlin, the Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra,
Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra, the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, and
Tafelmusick Orchestra. She performs in chamber music ensembles with other
renowned early music artists including harpsichordists Gustav Leonhardt, Bob
Van Asperen, and Ton Koopman, gambist Wieland Kuijken, Baroque cellist
Jaap ter Linden, and violinist Lucy van Dael. Her early music festival
appearances include Utrecht, Berkeley, Berlin, Boston, and Tel Aviv.
Marion Verbruggen also plays solo recitals throughout the world. She
guest teaches at the Royal Conservatory in The Hague and gives
master classes and workshops around the world. Her diverse discography
includes music ranging from 17th century Spanish songs and theater music to
her own transcriptions of the JS Bach Cello Suites. Marion Verbruggen
has recorded for
BMG, EMI Erato, harmonia mundi usa, Ricercar, Sony, Titanic, and Accent.
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Last updated 2/25/2011.
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