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About Convivium Musicum
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Listen
to some Convivium performances |
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Convivium Musicum, a Boston-based Renaissance choir of 20 singers,
has been praised by the Boston Globe for "the
almost dancing lift given to the rhythms, both musical and verbal." Convivium's
adventurous programming ranges from Josquin and Mouton to Sweelinck and Le
Jeune, from Peñalosa to Victoria, from the Song of Songs to Dido's lament, and
from Europe to New Spain, including masterworks by Byrd, Guerrero, Praetorius,
and many other lesser-known composers.
Over the past fifteen years our programs have ranged from the earliest polyphony
to the 1991 world premiere of Richard St. Clair’s Missa Syllabica. We
have brought this music to concert series, benefits and special events such as First
Night Boston and the Boston
Early Music Festival.
Convivium is proud to be a corporation run by its singers,
who serve on the Board of Directors, manage the
group's business affairs, design its programs and publicity materials, and seek
out opportunities to perform Renaissance polyphony for new audiences.
The group traces its origins to the Longy Chorus for Early Music, founded
in 1982 by Andrew Waldo. The Chorus separated from the
Longy School in 1987 and embarked upon an independent existence.
Working with many conductors, including some drawn from its own ranks, the
group performed throughout the Boston area under the name Ars Canticorum.
In 1990 the choir became a non-profit corporation and adopted its current name.
Since 1990, we have had the opportunity to work with several of Boston’s most
talented conductors, including David Hodgkins, David Tiedman, Scott Metcalfe, and effective Summer 2007, Michael Barrett.
Convivium Musicum has released Song of Songs: Music of Renaissance Spain
and the New World , a CD with pieces based on texts from the Song
of Songs, and has plans to release another CD in the near future.
Contact Us for more information.
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