Miller Theatre at Columbia University School of the Arts concludes the 2013-14 season of its Early Music series with The Tallis Scholars, with Peter Phillips as director, performing 40 Years of ...
In this week’s “Tap This,”Untapped editor Ann explores the soon-to-be next Untapped Cities hub. Stay tuned for the launch of Untapped SF at the end of this month. For now, here’s where she’s been and ...
From Miller Theatre Director Melissa Smey: "I am so excited to continue this season's Early Music series by welcoming back the exceptional voices of New York Polyphony. Their exquisite sound is ...
This week, Alex Ross reviews a new CD by the Boston-based vocal ensemble Blue Heron, which performs Renaissance polyphony. (His column is available to subscribers online.) Ross writes that the ...
As a small choral group bringing Western sacred music to the Far East, Chinese listeners hearing the unfamiliar sounds of Renaissance-era polyphony for the first time also can experience the Gospel ...
Peter Phillips explores later developments in Renaissance choral music, focusing on the music of Thomas Tomkins in England, Manuel Cardoso in Portugal and Juan Padilla in Mexico. Show more Peter ...
Ah, the Renaissance—lots of deep thinkers, gorgeous art, busty maidens, fried dough on a stick (if Ren faires are to be believed), and the liveliest music this side of the Middle Ages. But when you ...
The men's chorus Chanticleer ushered in the Christmas season Monday night the way it does every year -- with a burst of exuberant and soulful yuletide fare ranging across more than a dozen centuries.
The holiday season is traditionally a time for early music, so groups like New York Polyphony set off on continental tours such as the one that brought them to The Society of the Four Arts on Sunday ...
If you consider “Jingle Bells” an old holiday classic, an internationally renowned vocal ensemble can combat your preconceptions with a journey further back into the repertoire. New York Polyphony, an ...