Full of joy and delightful discovery, this holiday program is one of Camerata’s most popular. It features a generous selection of carols, New England anthems, Southern folk hymns and religious ballads for the season from the early years of the American republic, and from a wide range of early tune books and manuscripts.
Cast: 6 musicians, with Anne Azéma; fuller version, with brass: 10 musicians and Anne Azéma
A commission of the French Consulate in Boston and premiered a few months after the 2019 fire which destroyed in part the Notre Dame cathedral, this program was again performed in 2022 to public and critical acclaim, toured domestically in April 2024, and is available for touring.
Medieval Paris was not only a center of learning, debate, art, and architecture: it was also a capital of musical creation and innovation, the most important in Europe. You will hear the magnificent vocal music sung within the walls of the great cathedral, as well as miracle tales, student songs, and minstrel turns performed in Notre Dame’s shadow, on either bank of the steadily flowing Seine. A feast!
Cast: 4 men, 3 women, and one instrumentalist (vielle and harp) This program welcomes the participation of an adjunct choir.
‘A power beyond words, elevating your heart with the music.’ – Milwaukee Mag
A glimpse of Christmas spirituality from Medieval France, Italy, England, Provence, including music of the church and songs of private devotion around the joyous theme of the Nativity. Included are songs to the Virgin Mary, processionals from Saint Martial of Limoges, hymns, lyrics, and miracle ballads, sung in Latin, Old French, Old Provençal, Saxon, interlaced with Medieval English texts of the Nativity.
“The [Camerata] ensemble takes you to a place of hope, redemption, and everlasting peace…Simply beautiful, and not just for Christmas.” – Der Spiegel (Germany)
“The singing is crisp, pure, yet with plenty of emotional heft… The accompaniments – on medieval fiddle, harp, bells and ancient winds – are lively and evocative.” – Limelight Magazine (Australia)
This program welcomes the participation of adjunct female or children ensembles.
“Effortlessly, at every step, the Torpey-Azéma mise en scène teased out the timeless from the historic, the general from the personal, the allegorical from the concrete. The Boston Camerata infused Henry Purcell’s most beloved masterpiece with new life, immediacy, and meaning. “Boston Musical Intelligencer, 2023
“A feast for the ears…Live-wire verve…early music with a performative flair.” – ArtsFuse, 2023
Camerata’s production of Purcell’s only true opera, born as a made-for-streaming video in late 2020, has now returned live and staged in 2023! Then as now, our Dido features live performance enhanced by lighting and media elements conceived by Peter Torpey. Artistic Director Anne Azéma leads our stellar cast, assisted by students or a local choir from your community.
The production, as currently envisioned, includes four principal singers: Dido, Aeneas, the Sorcerer, Belinda, and Mercury, plus a five-piece Baroque band, all supported by Peter Torpey’s deeply evocative lighting and projections. The other characters in the story (Second Woman, Sailor, chorus of Courtiers, Witches, Sailors) can be recruited among local students or choirs. This project could be the perfect residency project for your community, school, university, or choir.
Venue: to be determined; preferably rigged for stage lighting
Budgets: please be in touch with us. All logistical questions will be discussed and resolved according to your wishes and possibilities.
The magnificent musical play of Daniel, composed eight centuries ago in Beauvais, France, is the subject of a recent, acclaimed production by The Boston Camerata. Freshly transcribed from the original manuscript source, and powerfully staged for modern audiences by Anne Azéma, the new Daniel is available for touring during the Camerata’s 70th Anniversary season 2024-2025.
“A pure delight…Top 10” — Boston Classical Review
“Timeless spiritual message [conveyed] more convincingly than any Hollywood epic.” — The Boston Globe
“Unexpected energy and immediacy….immersive and subtle staging…hugely successful” — The Boston Musical Intelligencer
“Powerful…Impressive” — Chicago Classical Review
“Anne Azéma… one of the most intelligent, creative, and talented performers and directors not just of early music, but of any repertoire.” — Fanfare Magazine
This ambitious production combines old and new, bringing together music and movement, theater and liturgy, light and shadow, to retell the biblical story of the young prophet-in-exile. The underlying, still-contemporary themes of tyranny punished, and of redemption from bondage, are brilliantly served by Anne Azéma’s staging and by an extraordinary singing and playing cast.
The first part of the performance introduces the public to the liturgical world of Beauvais Cathedral circa 1200, with chants and songs of the New Year’s season, excerpted from the same manuscript that gives us the Daniel play.
The sacred chants segue into the Daniel play, as the liturgists become singing actors, employing simple costuming, movement and gesture in the service of the miracle tale.
The production, as currently envisioned, is made of: seven principal singers: Daniel, Belshazzar, Darius, two Envious Men, the Queen/Angel; one Courtier and the Narrator; two instrumentalists (performing on vielle, harp, and percussion); a dancer; all supported by Peter Torpey’s deeply evocative lighting and special effects.
Pedagogical Opportunities: Daniel was conceived in the Middle Ages as a student play, of and by young people; Camerata’s production incorporates and develops this basic idea. And so the other participants in the liturgy and the play (satraps, soldiers, queen and queen’s court/angels) can also be recruited among local students, choristers, children’s choir, and other musical participants in your community.
Preparing and performing The Play of Daniel touches on and involves a whole series of disciplines: musicology (history of music, paleography, musical notation, techniques of transcription); performance practice (vocal technique, different contemporary approaches to medieval music, questions of accompaniment); theology and liturgy (the relation of the play to the liturgical calendar; the place Daniel in the manuscript BL Egerton 2615); the history of theater (medieval plays and their place in ecclesiastical life; surviving documentation concerning staging and performance), the place of rejected and marginalized people. This project could be the perfect residency project for your community, school, university, church, choir.
Anne Azéma will guide the preparation of this project with local musicians and their directors in your community. Final rehearsal periods will be conducted later, with the Camerata musicians and crew, and on location.
The Concert will be held on October 5 at 8 PM in the Auditorium Cassin at Palais de la Musique et des Congrès. Tickets are free courtesy of the City of Strasbourg in celebration of its 60 year sister-city relationship with the City of Boston. Although free, tickets are limited and may be obtained at the Palais de la Musique et des Congrès prior to the concert.
Visit the Palais de la Musique et des Congres website for more information on tickets and parking.
Joel Cohen, Music Director Emeritus, has written an excellent account of the Camerata’s July tour in one of the most remote and least developed regions of Brazil: the sub-equatorial Nordeste.