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Christopher Wolverton and Vox named
2006 winners of the Noah Greenberg award for "Extreme Singing: The La Rue
Requiem and other Extreme works."
The CD is now available for purchase!
Christopher Wolverton and Vox, along with University
of Rochester and Eastman School of Music professor Honey Meconi, were named as
recipients of the American Musicological Society's prestigious 2006
Noah Greenberg Award.
The
Greenberg Award, given for distinguished contributions to historical performing
practices, recognized Wolverton and Meconi for the two-part project titled
"Extreme Singing." The project, which
focuses on Renaissance music composed and performed in very low registers,
involves a forthcoming CD (click here for purchasing
information and sound clips) by Vox. The
CD will include Pierre de la Rue's Requiem, one of the lowest-pitched
pieces of music for a cappella voices. The
La Rue Requiem was written at such a low pitch that many scholars have deemed
this work as "unperformable" at its written pitch. In September
2006, Vox shattered this myth by becoming the first modern ensemble in the world
to record the Requiem at its written pitch. In addition to the
Requiem the recording will include the world-premiere of several other
"extreme" works.
Meconi
has also written an article, titled "Extreme Singing," that points out
evidence confirming the performance of such pieces at written pitch rather than
transposed to a higher range. The award committee described the project as
"a marvelous integration of work in music history, theory, performance, and
performance practice, with spectacular results."
The
Noah Greenberg Award was established by the Trustees of the New York Pro Musica
Antiqua in memory of their founder and first director and is intended to
stimulate active cooperation between scholars and performers by recognizing and
fostering outstanding contributions to historical performing practices.
The
American Musicological Society, the premiere scholarly organization in the music
field, was founded in 1934 as a non-profit organization to advance research in
the various fields of music.
Previous
winners of the Greenberg Award include early music luminaries as: Phillip
Cave and Sally Dunkley, Juliane Baird, Louise Stein, Jeannette Sorrell and
Apollo’s Fire, Alexander Blachly, Phillip Brett, The Orlando Consort,
Ross Duffin and Richard Taruskin.
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