Anne Azéma et Shira Kammen ont offert un voyage riche et varié à leur public
Thibaut de Champagne, that is, Count of Champagne, King of Navarra, crusader, and wonderful trouvère/songwriter. The recital by Anne Azéma and Shira Kammen was a brilliant tour de force, and saluted as such by the press: “Rich and varied…light and gracious…music filled with joy and hope…a vielle full of energy…a clear and pearly voice…Bravo and thanks!”

The concert, number two in Camerata’s series of five commissions from Reims, was given in the Count of Champagne’s residency — just about the best location imaginable. And the post-concert bubbly, provided by old Thibaut’s modern descendants (the famous Taittinger brand) rounded off everything to a T (bad pun, sorry).

Our residency is at full steam, with three more programs to go. You can read the review of the Thibaut concert here.

Anne and the Camerata musicians rehearse in the Reims cathedral
The honor was great indeed, as the Reims Festival invited an American ensemble (us) to celebrate the 800th anniversary of its mind-boggling cathedral with a series of five different musical programs.

And the awe and humility we felt was intense as we filed into the cathedral choir, five singers, two sackbuts, and director Anne Azéma, to sing the monumental Messe de Notre Dame, written circa 1365 for the cathedral by that greatest of geniuses, Guillaume de Machaut.

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PORTRAIT
Anne Azéma, à claire-voix

Vocaliste lumineuse et directrice charismatique de la Boston Camerata, Anne Azéma a conçu, pour les Flâneries Musicales, une véritable fresque sonore autour du patrimoine musical et littéraire médiéval de la région. Un programme sur mesure avec une série de cinq concerts, tour à tour grandioses ou intimistes, qui offrent une nouvelle perspective sur cette période souvent méconnue et pourtant si riche de l’Histoire.
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Michael Collver delivers a lecture to the Junior League
…gushed the Boston Globe reviewer after he attended Camerata’s “Roman de Fauvel” concert at the Boston Early Music Festival. And who are we (says Fauvel, slyly, with just a hint of a whinny) to disagree?

Thanks to our wonderful Fauvel cast: Azéma, Collver, Barret, Cohen, Kammen, and Lundahl, and to our brave volunteers, and to tech wizard David Griesinger, for a riotous feast of imagery, medieval music, and horsey jokes. The audience responded to the mix with a standing ovation, and cheers, and whistles.

And now, out-of-Boston friends and presenters, why not invite Fauvel into your living room, stable, or concert hall? We guarantee to leave traces…

The full text of the review is here.

Our photo: Michael Collver delivers a lecture to the Junior League.

her_way_boston_globe_headline
For those of you who never listen to a song composed after Guillaume de Machaut’s passing in 1377 (we have met a few of you on more than one occasion), the headline in the Monday Globe about Anne Azéma (“HER WAY”) is a nudge-and-wink citation of Frank Sinatra 1969 hit, “My Way” (yes, we know, the tune was also recorded by the Sex Pistols, but that’s neither here nor there).

Ahem. Back to the subject. Yes, Anne has indeed been doing it her way, and her way has become, very happily, the Boston Camerata’s way. We were pleased by David Perkin’s sensitive and perceptive reporting, and by the paper’s timing of the article to coincide with the upcoming March 19 Camerata concert (nudge nudge wink wink). You can give the story a closer look here.

And, once you have finished reading, we look forward to seeing you at Old West Church in a few days. Anne and Susanne Ansorg will be giving Old Blue Eyes a run for his money — their way.

Thanks, Le Monde, for these words of appreciation of our Americana program at the Cité de la Musique, Paris. To be honest with you, we weren’t totally convinced ahead of time that it was going to be the triumph it turned out to be.

Our misgivings started when the Cité’s senior management took Anne Azéma aside and whispered to her that her concert plan would never fly with a French audience. “You’ll never get an audience here to square dance after a concert,” quoth the senior panjandrum. “This is Paris, babe.” (We are paraphrasing his exact words, of course.)

But Anne, who remembers the wonderful post-concert celebration in November, 2008, that kicked off her tenure as Artistic Director, remained unfazed. And so, at concert’s end at the oh-so-official-and-prestigious Cité, Camerata’s musicians, entoning an irreverent Yankee Doodle, led the audience out of the hall and into the foyer, where guest caller Cecile Laye skilfully led instruments and dancers through some lively and liberating moves — a “Shaker rave party,” said Le Monde the next day, sacrificing accuracy for literary effect, as the French are occasionally inclined to do.

It was, indeed, a blast, and the Cité’s skepticism about our crazy American ideas evaporated in the wake of the participants’ pleasure, and of the rave review in the next day’s paper. Prior to the dancing, Camerata singers and players, via An American Pantheon, led the Parisian public through a rapid Cook’s tour of American values and ideals in music; texts spoke of freedom, liberty, and the rights of man even as current events in the Middle East and elsewhere reminded everyone in the hall of how relevant such words and sounds continue to be! Thanks Robert, Jesse, Tim, Don, and Joel F., for your superb work.

Next Camerata appearances in Europe: Ten performances of Borrowed Light in Germany, Finland, Holland, and France, in May. Stay tuned!