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When I began the
group now known as Emmanuel Music in 1970, it was for
the performance of Bach Cantatas. It was only nearing
the end of the first cycle of cantatas when it occurred
to me that we should try to perform all of the cantatas
at Emmanuel Church, in a liturgical setting as they were
originally intended. Initially, there was no idea of
completeness. One piece after another would simply occur
to me as interesting to perform. The cantatas are like
that, all of them fascinating, nearly all of them masterpieces.
As great as they are individually, there is something
else to be learned by doing them all; they are greater
than the sum of their parts. This philosophy guided Emmanuel
Music through its initial years.
Since then, we have expanded
our detailed studies of a composer's entire body of
work to perform a majority of the sacred works of Schütz,
all of the Lieder of Schumann, all of the vocal, chamber,
and piano works of Debussy and Brahms, completed a
seven-year, fifty-one-concert Schubert chamber series,
and are embarking this year upon a daring foray into
the new musical arena of contemporary music with John
Harbison and His World.
Artists of the sort of Schubert,
Bach, Schumann, and for that matter all of the composers
that have been the subjects of our surveys have changed
the course of history. If one believes in the arts
as an important, integral part of our culture, then
a relatively small list of people has changed the way
we are, the way we think. Imagine what our world would
be like if the twenty greatest composers, writers,
artists, poets, playwrights, and sculptors had never
existed.
In the summer of 2000, when
six Emmanuel musicians coached young professionals
in the arias and ensembles of Bach at the Tanglewood
Festival, it quickly became apparent that even without
extensive discussion the Emmanuel coaches were in unusual
agreement about the meaning and the shape of the music.
Our text-driven interest in the overtly expressive
nature of the music and our interest in projecting
the meaning of the music, as well as the performance,
dominates all musical activities at Emmanuel.
The sheer number of performances
of Bach, Mozart, Handel, Schütz, and others by
our small core group of performers has made for our
unusual unanimity of viewpoint and synergetic rapport.
This group of musicians, who have been together for
so long, has created an "Emmanuel style" that
is recognizably different from the usual sight-reading
of the music.
In creating a nurturing environment
for artistic development, Emmanuel Music has always
crossed generational lines, with young musicians rubbing
shoulders in rehearsal and performance with more experienced
players and singers. Over the years, we realized that
the works of Bach in particular are the best training
for the musician's technique and soul.
Barely an Emmanuel performance
goes by that does not have some kind of major discovery
-- a work that I had seen in a catalogue, had read
through briefly at the piano, but never fully digested,
never figured out what it meant – that is fleshed
out in a fine performance by Emmanuel musicians.
Our musicians are in this journey
with me: they are giving us the results of their exploration
and wrestling with this often difficult material. In
the world of classical music, many of the concerts
we hear are familiar works rehashed. By the very nature
of our projects, that does not and will not happen
here. Every Emmanuel performer's life is enriched by
the exploration of music this great. Every audience
member is in kind changed by this exploration of the
literature.
– Craig Smith © 2000 |