Benevolent Order for Music of the Baroque's 2001-2002 Season
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The Concerts Preseason & Special Events Where and How Much? Back to the Baroque Northwest main page. Coming Up Next! May 11 & 12, 2002 June 2, 2002 J. S. Bach's Mass in B-minor In a collaborative effort with the Northwest Chamber Chorus the two groups present Bach's choral and orchestral masterpiece on period instruments. Steven Demorest directs the NWCC and B.O.M.B. band in this amazing piece. This concert takes place at Plymouth Congregational Church, 6th & University, Seattle. The season so far: OCTOBER 20 & 21, 2001 The Gauntlet: The Ultimate Chamber Music Challenge Join the B.O.M.B squad of Kim Pineda, David Wilson, Stephen Creswell, William Skeen, Corey Jamason, and Ronn Fullerton as they tackle some of the most demanding chamber music from the 17th and 18th centuries, culminating in Johann Sebastian Bach's exciting, dazzling, and mind-bending Brandenburg Concerto 5. |
December 15 & 16, 2001 B.O.M.B.'s Holiday Blast Celebrate the season with our eclectic blend of Medieval, Renaissance, and Baroque music for voices and instruments. Linda Strandberg joins the holiday band and what can we say? It's a blast! February 23 & 24, 2002 The Son of Smoke & Blisters: Our Annual Concerto Extravaganza. This year we pit the "younger" generation of Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach and Giussepe Tartini against the "old guard" of J S Bach, Vivaldi, and the ubiquitous Telemann. Not to be missed, this concert features the U.S. Premier on period instruments of Tartini's action-packed Concerto for Viola da gamba and orchestra, as well as CPE Bach's Concerto in a, for Flute and strings, JS Bach's Violin Concerto in E, Vivaldi's Concerto in g for 2 cellos plus a couple of surprises. Featuring Ronn Fullerton, viola da gamba, David Wilson, violin, Elisabeth Reed and Joanna Blendulf, cello, and Kim Pineda, transverse flute. May 11 & 12, 2002 Extra-Strength, Double-Barreled, High-Octane B.O.M.B. Our season finale presents a wide variety of instense chamber music for smaller forces from the 16th-, 17th-, and 18th centuries. Watch as everyone plays at least two different instruments! Back to the 2001-02 Season |