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2025 SALISH SEA EARLY MUSIC FESTIVAL

by WhidbeyLocal 30th April 2025

~ early chamber music on period instruments on Whidbey Island  and around the Northwest ~

                                  
WHAT:     Louis XIV’s Musicians  2025 Salish Sea Early Music Festivall on Whidbey Island
WHEN:     Sunday evening, May 4 at 7:30 PM:
WHERE:   Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Whidbey Island  at 20103 State Route 525 in Freeland ADMISSION:   suggested donation: $20 to $30 (a free will offering), 18 & under free.
MORE INFO: please see  www.salishseafestival.org/whidbey
                   

On May 4 in Freeland the 2025 Salish Sea Early Music Festival presents its fifth of eight programs at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation through July of early chamber music performed on period instruments entitled Louis XIV’s Musicians and featuring viola da gambist Caroline Nicolas from New York City, baroque guitarist William Simms from Baltimore and baroque flutist Jeffrey Cohan.



This program features music by prominent soloists, all composers, who frequently played for Louis XIV, including the king’s guitar instructor Robert De Visée and his Italian predecessor Francesco Corbetta, along with a favorite viola da gambist at the court, Marin Marais and his teacher Monsieur de Sainte-Colombe, as well as Élisabeth Jacquet de La Guerre, a young harpsichordist and one of the few famous female musicians of her time whose playing and compositions Louis deeply admired and subsidized. The program will include the earliest known French solo specifically for the transverse flute by the king’s court music librarian André Danican Philidor L'Aisné, which is not to be heard elsewhere as Jeffrey Cohan discovered it in a relatively unknown and as yet unpublished manuscript in the Library of Congress, alongside solos performed by Caroline Nicolas and William Simms for viola da gamba and guitar.


The concert, presented in collaboration with the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Whidbey Island, takes place on Sunday evening, May 4 at 7:30 PM at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Whidbey Island at 20103 State Route 525 in Freeland. Admission is by suggested donation (a free will offering) of $20 to $30. Those 18 & under are free.  All are welcome regardless of donation. For additional information please see  www.salishseafestival.org/whidbey.  


Please see our complete schedule below of all 2025 performances at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation in Freeland this season through early July.



More information about this program:


The ever present music at the court of Louis XIV reflected the emotional and spiritual life of louis XIV and his contemporaries which resonates with us today, but it also served as a powerful political tool affirming the king's authority, prestige and status in France and internationally. Louis XIV’s Le Musique de la Chambre, which he had inherited from François I in the early 16th century, generated much of the almost constant musical activity, both on a grand scale including vocalists, and extremely intimate with just a few musicians, as is to be the focus in this program, which features several of the illustrious soloist/composers of the court.



The French musical perspective emulated reason and moderation, with sensory perception serving comprehension. French musicians aspired to thrill the senses via the intellect, in a continual search for grace and elegance. Dance was viewed as the consummate expression of the mastery of body and mind and the epitome of aristocratic art, and Louis XIV took daily dance lessons for 20 years alongside his frequent guitar lessons. Every French court and church musician reflected their determination to depict refinement and true sentiments, while dispensing with excessive turbulence and contrast. All of this contrasted greatly with the Italian focus on the direct expression of emotions via their virtuoso and flamboyant approach, which certainly was admired in some circles in France.


Our guest musicians:

 


Noted for her “eloquent artistry and rich, vibrant sound” (Gainesville Times), viola da gambist CAROLINE NICOLAS has been praised as “one of the finest gambists working today” (Gotham Early Music Scene). Ensembles she has worked with include the English Concert, Trinity Baroque Orchestra, Mercury Chamber Orchestra, Ars Lyrica Houston, Juilliard Baroque, Harmonia Stellarum, Philharmonia Baroque, Pacific MusicWorks, Kammerorchester Basel, New World Symphony, and Sinfonieorchester Liechtenstein. Notable venues include the KKL Luzern, Berliner Philharmonie, Alice Tully Hall, Carnegie Hall, and Benaroya Hall. Distinctions include having been selected as a fellow of The English Concert in America, an award given to young musicians “who appear likely to make significant contributions to the field of early music.”  More information is available at www.carolinenicolas.com.

 

 


WILLIAM SIMMS, lute, theorbo & guitar, appears regularly with the Bach Sinfonia and performs with Apollo's Fire, Harmonious Blacksmith, Olde Friends Concert Artists and the Baroque Chamber Orchestra of Colorado. He has performed numerous operas, canatatas and oratorios with such ensembles as Cleveland Opera, the Baltimore Consort, Opera Lafayette, Opera Vivente, American Opera Theatre and the Washington National Opera. Venues include The National Cathedral, Museum of Fine Arts Boston, The Library of Congress, The Corcoran Gallery, Wolftrap and The Kennedy Center. He serves on the faculties of Towson University, Mt. St. Mary's University, Interlochen Arts Camp as well as Hood College, where he is founder and director of the Hood College Early Music Ensemble. He has recorded for the Dorian, Centaur and Eclectra labels.

 



Flutist JEFFREY COHAN has performed as soloist in 25 countries as one of the foremost specialists on all transverse flutes from the Renaissance through the present.  He is the only person to win both the Erwin Bodky Award in Boston and the highest prize awarded in the Flanders Festival International Concours Musica Antiqua in Brugge, Belgium.  He has performed throughout Europe, Australia, New Zealand and the United States, and worldwide for the USIA Arts America Program.  He has recorded for national radio and television in the United States and throughout Europe.  Many works have been written for and premiered by him.  He is artistic director of the Capitol Hill Chamber Music Festival in Washington, DC, the Black Hawk Chamber Music Festival in Illinois and Iowa, and the Salish Sea Early Music Festival.
 

      



       
COMPLETE REMAINING SCHEDULE for the 2025 Salish Sea Early Music Festival on Whidbey Island, all at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation:
                              
       Sunday, May 4 at 7:30 PM:
       — The MUSIQUE DE LA CHAMBRE of LOUIS XIV
          · Caroline Nicolas, viola da gamba  
          · William Simms, theorbo & baroque guitar
          · Jeffrey Cohan, baroque and renaissance flutes
                 The King's court musical establishment is to be represented by Jean-Baptiste Lully, Élisabeth Jacquet de La Guerre, Marin Marais, Jacques Hotteterre, etc., including music designated for the king's bedtime, evening concerts and banquets, with guests from New York and Baltimore.
       
       Thursday, May 15 at 7:00 PM (please note new details, rescheduled from May 25):
       — CONCERTI from the COURT of FREDERICK THE GREAT
          · David Schrader, harpsichord   
          · Jeffrey Cohan, baroque flute
          · Elizabeth Phelps, baroque violin
          · Courtney Kuroda, baroque violin
          · Christine Moran, baroque viola
          · Susie Napper, baroque cello
                 A completely new assortment of concerti for harpsichord and flute from the illustrious members of the musical establishment of flutist Frederick the Great, King of Prussia, including CPE Bach, Johann Joachim Quantz, and the king himself.
       
Sunday, June 8 at 7:30 PM :
— FOLK SONG FROM THREE CENTURIES II
   · Oleg TImofeyev, renaissance lute, English guitar & 7­ string guitar (made in 1820)
   · Jeffrey Cohan, renaissance, baroque & 8­keyed flutes (London, 1820)

Renaissance Psalms (~1620), Irish and Scottish baroque (~1720) and folk music as interpreted
during Beethoven's lifetime (~1820) in a new program of highly experimental renditions of popular
music from three centuries performed on 5 transverse flutes and three plucked instruments.

Sunday, July 13 at 7:30 PM:
       — JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH
          · Irene Roldàn, harpsichord
          · Jeffrey Cohan, baroque flute
                 Spanish harpsichordist Irene Roldàn from Basel and Jeffrey interpret Bach's phenomenal music for flute and harpsichord.
       
       To be rescheduled when Olena’s visa is approved!:
       — EUROPEAN TOUR 1690-1790
          · Olena Zhukova, harpsichord
          · Jeffrey Cohan, baroque flute
                 An excursion through a century of transformation and diversity by decade and culture within the baroque and classical periods, through the perspective of composers for harpsichord and flute from France, Italy, Scotland, Germany and Ukraine.

Posted by WhidbeyLocal
30th April 2025 12:06 pm.
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