A Mexican Christmas
Special Holiday Event
December 6, 7, 8, 2019
Meet the Artists by clicking on their photo
Tickets: $25 General Admission, $10 Student Tickets
Please note this is a SPECIAL EVENT and we are only selling tickets at the $25 General Admission price point. Seating is unassigned at all venues. If you require special accommodation, please contact us in advance at manager@newberryconsort.org and we will assist you.
To order season passes via mail, print & mail this form along with payment
reviews
Newberry Consort’s lively “Mexican Christmas” warms up a chilly night
The Newberry Consort brought a little Mexican warmth to a cold Chicago night with its annual concert “Mexican Christmas” program Friday night at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church in Evanston. Now in its 15th season, Chicago’s longest-running early music ensemble presented a program inspired by descriptions of 17th-century Mexican convents, where people would gather outside the cloister walls to hear the musically accomplished nuns sing, while villancico bands played outside the convent gates. These bands, made up of traditional musicians playing folk… Read more “Newberry Consort’s lively “Mexican Christmas” warms up a chilly night”
5.0 out of 5 stars Ethereally beautiful music from 17th century Mexico
The Newberry Consort is a vocal and instrumental ensemble devoted to historically informed performances of early music. They are in residence at the Newberry Library in Chicago, an extraordinary institution founded in 1887 and remaining one of the few surviving independent research libraries in the United States that is fully open to the public. In the early 1980s the Newberry took the first steps to take advantage of their collection of musical scores by starting a concert series modeled to… Read more “5.0 out of 5 stars Ethereally beautiful music from 17th century Mexico”
A Mexican Christmas 2019
“Newberry Consort’s A Mexican Christmas made the gorgeous St. John Cantius Church even more awe-inspiring by isolating polyphony singing to the choir loft while villancicos were sung near the altar. Whenever the two factions performed together, it felt like a dialogue between heaven and earth.” I Heard You Sing Editor’s Notes – Vocal Arts Chicago
The Empress: Margarita Teresa – Salomé Sandoval
“Leave it to local Queen of Early Music, Ellen Hargis — co-director of The Newberry Consort — to find the appropriate vehicle to showcase Sandoval in Chicago. Newberry Consort’s fall program The Empress: Margarita Teresa, cast Sandoval as a castanets-playing, dancing-on-the-way-to-hell Euridice in a comic Spanish-language intermezzo composed for Margarita Teresa by the Emperor Leopold I; and as a show-stealing Venus in the Judgement of Paris scenes from Antonio Cesti’s epic Il Pomo d’Oro. Cesti’s triumph aria for Venus after… Read more “The Empress: Margarita Teresa – Salomé Sandoval”
Newberry Consort mixes the sacred and secular with flair in “A Mexican Christmas”
If Baroque + Christmas = Handel in your mind, then Friday night’s concert at Grace Lutheran Church in River Forest would have been a welcome taste of less familiar fare. There the Newberry Consort teamed up with EnsAmble Ad-Hoc for the second year in a row for a Mexican Christmas concert. The premise was similar to last year’s event: juxtapose music that might have been performed in the 17th century on either side of the doors of the Convento de… Read more “Newberry Consort mixes the sacred and secular with flair in “A Mexican Christmas””
Newberry Consort wraps season with a delightful French Banquet
Chicago Classical Review – Lawrence A. Johnson – April 6, 2019 In a world where even high culture is increasingly coarsened by banality, vulgarity, and political acrimony, there is, fortunately, always the Newberry Consort. Chicago’s most venerable early music ensemble is closing its season this weekend with “Le Jardin de Melodies”—a program of secular French music of the 16th-century. Friday night’s delightful concert at the Newberry Library displayed the graceful mix of vibrant music-making and lightly-worn scholarship that has made… Read more “Newberry Consort wraps season with a delightful French Banquet”
In luminous concert, Newberry Consort recalls music of Spanish Jews in Renaissance tumult
In 1492, while Columbus was unveiling a new world far to the west across an uncharted ocean, the Jews were being thrown out of Spain. Those who would not convert to Catholicism were ordered, on pain of death, to leave a land that had been their home for a millennium and a half. This suddenly banished people, compelled to find new lives around the Mediterranean basin and across Europe, took with them, besides their faith and their learning, a long… Read more “In luminous concert, Newberry Consort recalls music of Spanish Jews in Renaissance tumult”
Review: Consort, Josefowicz seize the musical road less traveled
The mass diaspora that resulted from the infamous edict by Spanish monarchs Ferdinand and Isabella (remember them?) in 1492 expelling all Spanish Jews who refused to renounce their faith and convert to Catholicism spread the Ladino tradition of the Sephardic Jews throughout the Mediterranean. These highly evocative songs of the Sephardim later took root in the soil of more hospitable cultures, especially that of the Ottoman Empire, thereby preserving for posterity music that existed only in oral form and would… Read more “Review: Consort, Josefowicz seize the musical road less traveled”
Early Sephardic music proves timeless in Newberry Consort program
Last year marked the Newberry Consort’s 30th anniversary season. The city’s oldest early music ensemble—and the nation’s second oldest—showed no sign of losing momentum as they embarked on their fourth decade of scholarly music-making this weekend with a series of concerts entitled “Sacred Love: Songs of the Sephardim.” Guest curated by soprano Nell Snaidas, Saturday night’s performance at the University of Chicago’s Logan Center was an engaging examination of 16th-century songs that, as always with Newberry, came across as highly… Read more “Early Sephardic music proves timeless in Newberry Consort program”
Recommended Chicago-area classical concerts (excerpt)
Newberry Consort: Chicago’s flagship early music ensemble begins its 31st anniversary season with “Sacred Love,” music of faith and longing from Renaissance Spain and the Ladino oral tradition of the Sephardic Jews. 8 p.m. Friday, Galvin Recital Hall, Northwestern University, 70 Arts Circle Drive, Evanston; 8 p.m. Saturday, Logan Center for the Arts, University of Chicago, 915 E. 60th St.; and 3 p.m. Sunday, Spertus Institute for Jewish Learning and Leadership, 610 S. Michigan Ave.; www.newberryconsort.org Read full article
Newberry Consort to perform early Sephardic music at the Logan Center
The Newberry Consort will kick off its 2017-18 season with the first of a three-part series of concerts. The three themes for this season are: “Sacred Love,” “Forbidden Love,” and “Dangerous Love.” The second performance in the “Sacred Love” series will be held on Saturday, Nov. 4 at the Logan Center for the Arts, 915 E. 60th St. at 8 p.m. “Sacred Love,” the first installment in the series, will focus on the music of Sephardic Jews in Renaissance Spain.… Read more “Newberry Consort to perform early Sephardic music at the Logan Center”
Music of Sephardic Jews comes to Chicago
The Newberry Consort will present the music of the Sephardic Jews in Renaissance Spain at their first concert of the season, taking place Nov. 3 to 5 at Northwestern University in Evanston, the Logan Center for the Arts at the University of Chicago and at Spertus Institute for Jewish Learning and Leadership. NELL SNAIDAS, SOPRANO Entitled “Sacred Love – Songs of the Sephardim” the program will include traditional songs of the Sephardic Jews at the time when they were exiled from Spain… Read more “Music of Sephardic Jews comes to Chicago”
Newberry Consort closes season with a tribute to a singular Swedish queen
The Newberry Consort enjoys an honored place in Chicago’s musical landscape, pioneering local early music performance on period instruments. The Consort is closing its 30th anniversary season this weekend with a typically offbeat program centered on Queen Christina of Sweden–a patroness of the arts who had a remarkable amount of music either inspired by her or dedicated to her. Friday night’s concert at the Newberry Library’s Ruggles Hall showed the graceful blend of scholarship and superb musical values that have… Read more “Newberry Consort closes season with a tribute to a singular Swedish queen”
Review: A diverse and surprising program was devoted to the obscure music of 15th-century Austrian Oswald von Wolkenstein.
By Kyle MacMillan, Submitted by Lawrence B. Johnson While some unexplored or at least under-explored crannies of Baroque, Romantic or even modern composition can still be found, the music of the Middle Ages remains filled with buried treasure. For a set of concerts that ran Jan. 13-15, the ever-intrepid, ever-imaginative Newberry Consort delved into this rich period and hit pay dirt with a transporting and absorbing program devoted entirely to the little-known music of Oswald von Wolkenstein. The early 15th-century bard… Read more “Review: A diverse and surprising program was devoted to the obscure music of 15th-century Austrian Oswald von Wolkenstein.”
Review: Newberry Consort pays homage to the versatile Count von Wolkenstein
Sat Jan 14, 2017 at 1:49 pm By Tim Sawyier The Newberry Consort performed music of Count von Wolkenstein Friday night at the Newberry Library. The Newberry Consort presented the second program of their 30th anniversary season Friday night at the Newberry Library’s Ruggles Hall. Entitled “The Count,” the concert was devoted to music of Count Oswald von Wolkenstein (1376-1445), a peripatetic nobleman with the singular pastime of recording his personal exploits and musings in song. The performance successfully overcame the… Read more “Review: Newberry Consort pays homage to the versatile Count von Wolkenstein”
Evening of scholarly clowning opens 30th year for early-music masters the Newberry Consort
Review: A program of bawdy Elizabethan amusements performed by the Newberry Consort and period comedian Steven Player. By Lawrence B. Johnson For the perennially devoted followers of the Newberry Consort, which this season celebrates its 30th anniversary of presenting concerts of music from the Middle Ages to the Baroque, the concert experience is a beguiling paradox: entertainment that’s very old and yet at the same time quite new. “For us, and we believe for our audience, this music is essentially about… Read more “Evening of scholarly clowning opens 30th year for early-music masters the Newberry Consort”
Newberry Consort opens 30th season with delightful “stage jigs”
Tim Sawyier – Chicago Classical Review above – Steven Player performed in the Newberry Consort’s season-opening program Friday night at Ruggles Hall. Friday night in Ruggles Hall the Newberry Library hosted the opening performance of its eponymous Consort’s 30th anniversary season. The program, entitled “The Clown: Kemp’s Jig,” compellingly explored late 16- and early 17-century stage jigs as part of the Library’s commemoration of the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death this year. A “stage jig” is not an isolated dance but a… Read more “Newberry Consort opens 30th season with delightful “stage jigs””
Newberry Consort sings the bawdy electric in spirited season opener
Early music groups come and go in Chicago, but the ensemble that started it all continues to thrive, setting an example of artistic integrity and sound management for the groups that have followed in its wake. Having survived a serious funding crisis in 1997 and the retirement of founder Mary Springfels, the Newberry Consort soldiered on, wisely staying small, flexible and true to its musical mission, dusting off forgotten but worthwhile preclassical instrumental and vocal works and presenting them in… Read more “Newberry Consort sings the bawdy electric in spirited season opener”
NEWBERRY CONSORT REVEALS SOARING MUSIC FROM MEXICAN CHOIR BOOKS
The Newberry Consort is completing its season this weekend by returning to the Newberry Library’s collection of choir books from the Convent of Our Lady of the Incarnation in Mexico City for a program of vespers music by Mexican Baroque composer Juan de Lienas. To say he is little-known is an understatement. Beyond the Newberry choirbooks, his music is found in only one other Mexican source, and no facts have emerged about his life. Apart from the music — an… Read more “NEWBERRY CONSORT REVEALS SOARING MUSIC FROM MEXICAN CHOIR BOOKS”
A SPLENDID EVENING WITH THE NEWBERRY CONSORT
Lots of concerts are presented under an umbrella title that attempts to both accurately describe the links among the various works performed and offers an appealing concept to the public. But usually the concept is over-broad (“Love and War”) with the music unable to effectively support the dramatic idea. The Newberry Consort, on the other hand, offered a concept concert here in Hyde Park Saturday night at the Logan Center which was an entertaining story told in instrumental music, solo… Read more “A SPLENDID EVENING WITH THE NEWBERRY CONSORT”
Newberry Consort brings scholarship and horse sense to delightful “Le roman de Fauvel”
The Newberry Consort brought the medieval Le Roman de Fauvel (“The Tale of Fauvel”) to life in a stellar production at the Logan Center for the Arts on Saturday night. The evening’s fourteenth-century romp was a showcase of rarified musicianship, meticulous scholarship, and humor running the gamut from genteel to obscene. Le Roman de Fauvel, something of a morality play, has come down to us in a fourteenth-century manuscript housed at the Bibliothèque nationale de France. The title character is… Read more “Newberry Consort brings scholarship and horse sense to delightful “Le roman de Fauvel””
Ten New Classical Albums
Featuring Chicago Talent Newberry’s nuns highlight recent classical albums “Musica Celestial from the Covent of the Encarnacion.” (Newberry Consort): The manuscript source of this attractive program of Renaissance and baroque rarities for women’s voices, organ and other instruments is six valuable choir books preserved at Chicago’s Newberry Library. Written for the singing nuns of the Order of the Immaculate Conception in Mexico City, the pieces suggest the richly diverse musical culture that was enshrined in the convents. Performances under the… Read more “Ten New Classical Albums”
The Newberry Consort Unveils Rare Spanish Treasures for BEMF
In certain medieval manuscripts, music and image combine to evoke powerful religious feelings. Take, for example, the sources for the Cantigas de Santa Maria, where colorful drawings of musicians, saints, and nobles frame music and poetry that tell of miracles performed by the Virgin Mary. Gazing at the manuscript, one can catch a glimpse of the celebratory religious culture the authors were trying to convey from across the centuries. Friday night at the First Church in Cambridge, the Chicago-based Newberry… Read more “The Newberry Consort Unveils Rare Spanish Treasures for BEMF”
Newberry Consort full of spirit, polish with program of rediscoveries
Two decades ago this month the Newberry Consort was among the first historically informed performing groups in the United States to revive the music of Baroque composer Johann Rosenmuller. But some artists successful in their own time nonetheless require periodic revival thereafter, and as consort co-director David Douglass said at Friday night’s concert opening the season at Newberry Library, “Rosenmuller is rediscovered every five years.” The all-Rosenmuller program drew heavily on the group’s 1995 compact disc, presenting five selections from… Read more “Newberry Consort full of spirit, polish with program of rediscoveries”
Smooth control of the phrasing and fine communication with the singers, effects that seemed to lay each song in a feathery bed of accompaniment
In certain medieval manuscripts, music and image combine to evoke powerful religious feelings. Take, for example, the sources for the Cantigas de Santa Maria, where colorful drawings of musicians, saints, and nobles frame music and poetry that tell of miracles performed by the Virgin Mary. Gazing at the manuscript, one can catch a glimpse of the celebratory religious culture the authors were trying to convey from across the centuries. Friday night at the First Church in Cambridge, the Chicago-based Newberry… Read more “Smooth control of the phrasing and fine communication with the singers, effects that seemed to lay each song in a feathery bed of accompaniment”
Sounds of autumn: A 2014 music preview
The Newberry Consort, affiliated with the Newberry Library Center for Renaissance Studies, draws on the library’s vast music collection and assembles local and international artists to perform music from the 13th to the 18th centuries. The Consort also serves as an ensemble-in-residence at both the University of Chicago and Northwestern University. It has been a part the Chicago music scene for nearly three decades and is co-directed by violinist David Douglass and soprano Ellen Hargis. In November they present “¡Música… Read more “Sounds of autumn: A 2014 music preview”
Newberry Consort’s Singing Nuns
Choral music from an earlier period and of a far more specialized sort made up the season finale of the Newberry Consort. Co-director Ellen Hargis and colleagues presented the second in a series of programs devoted to music from the trove of musical manuscripts at the Newberry Library known as the Mexican choirbooks. These priceless volumes include works by Old World and New World Spanish and Mexican composers, written for the use of nuns singing the mass and worship services… Read more “Newberry Consort’s Singing Nuns”
Chicago Tribune: Review Feast of the Pheasant
Friday night at the Newberry Library the Newberry Consort celebrated one of the most spectacular and outlandish banquets in history. Almost 460 years to the day, the ensemble presented a 90-minute program of music, projections and narration to commemorate the Feast of the Oath of the Pheasant. This party, given by Philip, Duke of Burgundy, was to urge a crusade against the Ottoman Turks who nine months before had taken the holy city of Constantinople. The early-music community has for… Read more “Chicago Tribune: Review Feast of the Pheasant”
Feast of the Pheasant
“…spiritedly played and sung… early music at its committed best.”
Early Music America – Fall 2013
A highlight of the (BEMF) festival was a superb multimedia presentation by the Newberry Consort in Jordan Hall on Thursday afternoon drawn from the 13th-century Cantigas de Santa Maria,a manuscript attributed to Spanish ruler and arts patron Alfonso X. This stellar Chicago ensemble, directed by David Douglass (vielle and rebec) and Ellen Hargis (soprano), performed a dozen richly multicultural cantigas, while projecting the brightly colored illustrations that originally accompanied them onto an overhead screen, along with translations of the lyrics.… Read more “Early Music America – Fall 2013”
“Celestial Sirens” at the Church of the Covenant
The overlapping musical talents and resources of Cleveland’s early music community were in full multi-tasking mode at the Church of the Covenant last week — with some help from Chicago and Tennessee. The occasion was one event in celebration of the church’s magnificent new tracker organ, modeled on north German 17th-century organs. The organ was built by the Tennessee firm of Richards, Fowkes and Company and installed only this January. It replaces a small gallery organ in the back of… Read more ““Celestial Sirens” at the Church of the Covenant”
‘Cantigas’ Bloom Like Roses at Boston Festival
There are few places on earth where an audience can enjoy a purely magical performance of Medieval song in a glorious hall. The Boston Early Music Festival is on that short list. The music: Cantigas de Santa Maria, by Alfonso X. The performers: the Newberry Consort with the vocal ensemble Exsultemus. The place: New England Conservatory’s Jordan Hall. The Cantigas de Santa Maria consists of 420 poems set to music, attributed to Alfonso X, King of Castile, Leon, and Galicia during the 13th century. Alfonso was known as El Sabio,… Read more “‘Cantigas’ Bloom Like Roses at Boston Festival”