MURFREESBORO — The
MTSU Honors College will welcome countertenor and lutenist Mark Rimple and
soprano Julie Ferris as they perform songs in praise of love across four
centuries of Western music.
The concert, titled “Beauté Parfaite” (perfect beauty), will
be held at 4:15 p.m. Monday, Nov. 25, in the Paul W. Martin Sr. Honors Building
amphitheater (Room 106) on campus. The concert is free and open to the public.
A printable campus map can be found at http://tinyurl.com/MTSUParkingMap13-14.
The concert is part of the Honors College Fall Lecture
Series and will follow Rimple’s 3 p.m. presentation, “Returning the Soul:
Concepts of Beauty in Expressionist Music, Art, and Literature.” The lecture
also is open to the public.
Rimple, who is a professor of
music theory and composition at West Chester University of Pennsylvania, also
serves as the director of the Collegium Musicum, a chamber ensemble
specializing in the use of authentic instruments and performance techniques in
the music of the Medieval, Renaissance and Baroque eras.
“As director of the Collegium
Musicum, I try to find music that both educates the student about larger
historical trends and styles of music and that reveals a bit of the hidden
treasures of our past,” said Rimple, who is a skilled composer and performer
and frequently appears with the musical groups Trefoil and The Newberry
Consort.
Ferris, who will perform with Rimple, was born and raised in
Murfreesboro. She lives in southeastern Pennsylvania and sings with the
vocal ensemble Musica Humana. Ferris also has performed as a soloist with early
music ensembles such as New York Collegium and The Folger Consort. She
studied voice as an undergraduate at Northwestern University and completed a
master of music history degree at Temple University
Ferris also has extensive experience as a professional
church soloist in the Chicago and Philadelphia areas. Her father, Norman
Ferris, served as an MTSU history professor for about 35 years before retiring
in 1997. Norman Ferris and other family members plan to attend.
Rimple and Ferris will present
love songs from Machaut’s Remede de
Fortune and from the lute ayre collections
of Thomas Campion, John Dowland, Francis Pilkington and Alfonso Ferrabosco, a
collaborator in Ben Jonson’s masques.
Rimple will perform several solo
lute compositions by Francesco da Milano, Valentin Bakfark and John Dowland,
and will also perform several selections from the small corpus of surviving
medieval dance works on the gittern, a precursor of the European Lute.
No comments:
Post a Comment