It’s the year 2020 and Ensemble Leonarda is celebrating the 400th anniversary of Isabella Leonarda, the Italian Ursuline nun / composer (born 1620), our namesake. We have a very special concert on Monday, March 2, 2020 at Marc A. Scorca Hall at The National Opera Center, entitled “Wonder Women”!

Elisabeth Jacquet de la Guerre was a contemporary of Francois Couperin; among her works were pieces for harpsichord, instrumental sonatas and 3 books of cantatas. She played for Louis XIV at a young age and was accepted at the French court, and her education supervised by Madame de Montespan. The cantata “Le Sommeil d’Ulisse” will be performed, with artwork by Victor Varnado (cartoonist for The New Yorker).

We are also pleased to collaborate with composer Elizabeth Brown in a preview performance of her new work for baroque band, voice, and shamisen. This piece, “A Glimpse at Dawn” will feature shamisen player & vocalist Yoko Reikano Kimura.

What is a shamisen? you may well ask. It is a traditional Japanese 3-stringed instrument. Did you know? Its strings are made of silk, which are dyed with turmeric. Also, it is played with a plectrum called a bachi.

Wonder Women of the Baroque…& beyond!

Wonder Women of the Baroque…& beyond!

Come see for yourself on March 2nd !

Mon. March 2, 2020 at 8pm, Marc A. Scorca Hall at The National Opera Center, 330 Seventh Avenue, NYC

Tickets: $20/ $15

April 28, 2019: We teamed up with artist Victor Varnado, cartoonist for The New Yorker magazine to present Elisabeth Jacquet de la Guerre’s cantata, “Le Sommeil d’Ulisse” (“Slumber of Ulysses”).

Who the heck was Ulisses? There were the ancient Greek myths, with their own roster of gods, and then the ancient Romans with THEIR roster. So the Greeks had Zeus and Hera, and the Romans had Jupiter and Juno, Athena (get it ATHENS / Athena) became the Roman Minerva, and Odysseus became Ulysses (you say “poh-tay-toe” and I say “poh-tah-toe”)

Synopsis: Frat boy Ulysses & his men, hijinks on the open sea, blinds the Cyclops Polyphemus (son of the god, Neptune). Neptune is pissed off, and sends a tempest. Cut to commercial, the goddess Minerva intervenes and puts Ulysses into a magical sleep, where he dreams about his glorious future. Et voilà ! an HEA (Happily Ever After). Susan Graham, flute; Claire Bermingham, violin; Ana Kim, cello; Nancy Kito, harpsichord; Christina Kay, soprano; artist Victor Varnado (cartoonist, the New Yorker).

Watch the tempest scene here: