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498 Collage YouTube Channel Performers as of 2015 02 06 ver 2

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Channel Thirteen's program SundayArts captures of the work of the city's most celebrated cultural institutions for public television audiences. View their music videos here.

Nils Neubert, tenor, sings the final bravura aria "Regne, Amour" of Jean-Philippe Rameau's Pygmalion with Underworld Productions Opera Ensemble, Gina Crusco, Artistic Director. Sinfonia New York performs under the leadership of Robert Mealy. Recorded live on May 13, 2010 at Leonard Nimoy Thalia Theatre at Peter Norton Symphony Space. Also appearing are Edgar Cortes (dancer, choreographer); Paige Cutrona (La Statue); and Casey Hutchinson (Amour). Directed by Gina Crusco.

PARTHENIA, a consort of viols, hailed by the New Yorker as "one of the brightest lights in New York's early-music scene" is a dynamic ensemble exploring the extraordinary repertory for viols from Tudor England to the court of Versailles and beyond. Here you can get a visual/audio idea of their most recent program exploring the rich culture of Elizabethan England, When Music & Sweet Poetry Agree with Paul Hecht, actor and Jacqueline Horner, soprano.

Since its founding in 1972, THE NEW YORK CONSORT OF VIOLS has championed the beauty and breadth of music written expressly for the viol. Their touring program, The Road from Valencia with guest narrator John Genke, follows the path of Sephardic musicians who, expelled from Spain in 1492, fled to Italy before being recruited for the English court.

The American medieval and renaissance ensemble ASTERIA (Sylvia Rhyne, soprano, and Eric Redlinger, lute and tenor) perform a love song from the Middle Ages, Quant la doulce jouvencelle live in the 14th century ducal palace of Prince Philip "the Bold" and Margeret of Flanders at Germolles, in Burgundy, France. Note the striking 'P' and 'M' insignias in the background (for Philip and Margeret), part of the original 14th century wall murals still preserved at the chateau de Germolles. Asteria is known for their intimate and sumptuous performance style and the emotional immediacy of their interpretations of French medieval and Renaissance music

ARTEK, founded by director Gwendolyn Toth in 1986, has gained a reputation for exciting, dramatic performances of baroque music. Here you see excerpts from their popular "I'll Never See the Stars Again" program, a post-modern semi-staged operatic interpretation of madrigals by Claudio Monteverdi.

 

GEMS is a non-profit corporation that supports and promotes the artists and organizations in New York devoted to early music — playing repertoire from the Medieval, Renaissance, Baroque, and early Classical periods.