AEMF13

Paul Van Loey

Paul Van Loey is a recorder virtuoso. Historical performance practice of renaissance and baroque music is very important to him, but as a member of the Flanders Recorder Quartet he also plays a great deal of contemporary music.

Nina Stern

Nina Stern is one of North America’s leading performers of the recorder and classical clarinet. In recent years she is also hailed as an innovator in teaching school-age children to be fine young musicians. A native New Yorker, Ms.

Bart Spanhove

Bart Spanhove is a member of the Flanders Recorder Quartet, or "Vier op ’n Rij". He has written a book about the techniques used in ensemble playing, "The Finishing Touch of Ensemble playing", which has been published in Japanese, German and Chinese.

Lawrence Rosenwald

Lawrence Rosenwald is the Anne Pierce Rogers Professor of American Literature at Wellesley College, where he has been teaching since 1980. He has written extensively on American literary multilingualism, on translation, on nonviolence, and on diaries, and has done numerous translations from several languages.

Nigel North

Nigel North was initially inspired into music, at age 7, by the early 60's instrumental pop group "The Shadows". Nigel studied classical music through the violin and guitar, eventually discovering his real path in life, the lute, when he was 15.

Na'ama Lion

Na'ama Lion has performed solo and chamber music recitals in Israel, Europe and the United States. She has performed with several orchestras and ensembles, including the Handel and Haydn Society Orchestra, Boston Baroque, and Sequentia, an ensemble for medieval music. Ms.

Daniel Johnson

Award-winning director, international performer, and recording artist Daniel Johnson has been the artistic director of the Texas Early Music Project since its inception in 1987.

Grant Herreid

Originally a trumpet player from Portland, Grant Herreid is now a versatile musician/director/teacher on the early music scene.

Adam Gilbert

Adam Gilbert, music history, recorder and historical double reeds, is currently the director of the early music program at USC's Thornton School of Music in Los Angeles. Adam grew up in Columbia, South Carolina.
Syndicate content