Musica Secreta | |
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Origin | London, England |
Genres | Early music, Renaissance music, Baroque music |
Years active | 1991–present |
Labels | Amon Ra, Linn, Divine Art, Obsidian |
Members |
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Past members |
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Website | www |
Musica Secreta is a British vocal ensemble that was founded in 1991 by soprano Deborah Roberts [1] to explore music written by and for women in the 16th and 17th centuries. In 2000, musicologist Laurie Stras [2] joined the ensemble as a co-director. The group has made several award-winning albums. They collaborated with novelist Sarah Dunant in a musical dramatization of Dunant's novel Sacred Hearts which ran between 2009 and 2012. [3]
Their album Lucrezia Borgia's Daughter (2017) is a recording of the earliest known published music intended for performance by nuns. [4] The recording features motets printed in the anonymous Musica quinque vocum motteta materna lingua vocata printed in 1543; some may have been written by Eleonora d'Este, the only surviving daughter of Lucrezia Borgia and Alfonso I d'Este, Duke of Ferrara. [5]
The original members of the group were Roberts, Tessa Bonner, [6] Mary Nichols, [7] and harpsichordist John Toll. [8]
Group members have sung with the Tallis Scholars, the Consort of Musicke, The Sixteen, I Fagiolini, Tenebrae, and Magnificat. Collaborators have included Suzie LeBlanc (The Secret Music of Luzzasco Luzzaschi), Emily Van Evera (Dangerous Graces), Catherine King (Songs of Ecstasy and Devotion, Dialogues with Heaven, Dangerous Graces), and Clare Wilkinson (Sacred Hearts, Secret Music). Featured instrumentalists include Paula Chateauneuf, David Miller and Lynda Sayce (lute, theorbo, and chitarrone); Frances Kelly (harp); Mark Levy and Kinga Gáborjáni (viol); Matthew Halls and Nicholas Parle (organ and harpsichord). The instrumental team is Claire Williams and Alison Kinder.
Roberts and Stras also co-direct an amateur female-voice choir, Celestial Sirens. [9] Musica Secreta and Celestial Sirens first performed together at the Brighton Early Music Festival in 2006. [3] Stras's work with Celestial Sirens was recognised by the National Coordinating Centre for Public Engagement in 2014, for Best Individually-Led Project in the Engage Awards 2014. [10]
Lucrezia Borgia was an Italian noblewoman of the House of Borgia who was the illegitimate daughter of Pope Alexander VI and Vannozza dei Cattanei. She reigned as the governor of Spoleto, a position usually held by cardinals, in her own right.
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