Charles T. Downey, Boys choir Escolania de Montserrat keeps tradition alive at Strathmore
Washington Post, March 18, 2014
Virgen Morenata, Escolania i Capilla de Montserrat (VMS, 2008) |
Historically, boys choirs in Catholic churches were the training ground for many composers, from Guillaume Dufay in the 15th century to Puccini and Bruckner in the 19th. Schubert was a choirboy in Vienna in 1809, when he may have sung at the grand memorial service for Haydn, who had himself been a choirboy at the city’s cathedral in the previous century. The tradition is still going strong at the Escolania de Montserrat, a boys choir school in Spain that is making its first American tour, with a stop Sunday afternoon in the Music Center at Strathmore.Escolania de Montserrat
The boys, about 40 of them, normally sing for liturgical services in the Basilica of Montserrat, a Benedictine monastery in Catalonia. The concert opened with a meditative section of sacred music, including a Gregorian introit, “Germinans germinabit” and “Imperayritz de la ciutat ioyosa,” one of the pieces from the “Llibre vermell,” a 14th century codex of music composed for the pilgrims at Montserrat. [Continue reading]
Music Center at Strathmore
SEE ALSO:
Abbey of Montserrat
Llibre Vermell (for pilgrims at Montserrat)
Katherine Boyle, Escolania de Montserrat performs at Strathmore in boys choir’s first U.S. tour (Washington Post, March 15)
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