Five Cities Ensemble Brings Baroque Music to Mt. Pulaski
 

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[November 13, 2024]    Music lovers were afforded a special treat in Mt. Pulaski on Sunday afternoon. The Mt. Pulaski Courthouse Foundation hosted the Five Cities Baroque Festival Foundation Ensemble in the courthouse where Abraham Lincoln practiced law.

Five Cities Ensemble presented a program of vocal and instrumental chamber works of the Baroque era which dates from approximately 1600 to the 1750s.

The ensemble was introduced by Artistic Director Nate Widelitz, who is also a tenor vocalist and conductor.

Along with Widelitz, the ensemble was comprised of Amanda Pond on flute, Evan Tammen on Oboe, Chet Lord-Remmert on cello, Ivan Jiang on keyboard, and Aubrey Hawkinson, mezzo-soprano.

The ensemble’s first selection was Johann Sebastian Bach’s “Trio Sonata in G Major” (BWV 1039) performed by Pond, Lord-Remmert, Jiang, and Tammen.

Widelitz joined the trio of Lord-Remmert, Jiang, and Tammen for their second Bach piece, “Ach senke doch den Geist de Freuden” from “Herr, wie du willt, so schick’s mit mir” (BMV 73).

Following Bach, the ensemble performed George Freidrich Handel’s “Forte e lieto a morte Andrei” from his opera Tamerlano (HMV 18), based on the historical figure Tamerlane, the brutal Turco-Mongal conqueror who clashed with the Ottoman Sultanate in the early 15th century.

For their next work, Pond rejoined the ensemble on flute for “Trio Sonata No. 2 in B-flat” by Elisabeth Jacquet de la Guerre, a French composer, harpsichordist, and musician who was well-known during her time. At an early age she enjoyed the patronage of King Louis XIV who heard her perform at Versailles at the age of five. She composed in a wide variety of forms and was the first French woman to write an opera.

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Hawkinson joined the ensemble for the next pieces by Barbara Strozzi, an Italian singer and composer of cantatas. Strozzi is notable for composing without assistance from the church or patrons as was common for male composers of the period. Her subject matter was generally love stories as exemplified by the three selections Hawkinson sang with the ensemble: “Il Romeo,” “Lilla crudele ad onta d’amore,” and “L’Amante Consolato.”

The ensemble concluded its performance with “Trio Sonata in E Minor” (TWV 42:e6) by Georg Phillipp Telemann. Telemann was one of the most prolific composers in history and was godfather and namesake to J.S. Bach’s second son.

VIDEO – Five Cities Baroque Foundation Ensemble

This performance marked Five Cities Baroque Foundation Ensemble’s Mt. Pulaski debut, however, the ensemble performs around central Illinois, particularly in Springfield and Champaign. Their concerts are always free and open to the public. A reception followed the performance on the ground floor of the courthouse to allow the appreciative audience to meet the musicians and congratulate them on an exceptionally beautiful performance.

[Stephanie Hall]

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