Description: | | On Sunday, September 30th at 4:00 p.m., the USF School of Music will feature a faculty/guest recital
by the Bay Baroque Ensemble, the leading Baroque ensemble in the Tampa Bay area. Organized by
long-time USF faculty member Dr. John Robison, the concert will feature USF professor Kathie
Aagaard (viola), USF adjunct professor Anne Marie Scotto (harpsichord), guest artists Patrick Baran
and Nicole Wendl (violins) and Theresa Villani (viola da gamba), and guest soprano Maggie
Coleman; John Robison will perform on several instruments, including Baroque oboe and recorder.
The faculty/guest event will feature music by some of the finest Baroque composers from the late
seventeenth to mid-eighteenth centuries, including Johann Sebastian Bach, George Philipp
Telemann, Alessandro Scarlatti, and Tomaso Albinoni. Included on the program will be one of
Albinoni’s finest concertos for oboe and strings, Scarlatti’s intriguing Sonata in C major for recorder,
strings and continuo, Telemann’s Trio Sonata in A minor for recorder, violin, and continuo, and one of
Bach’s finest sacred cantatas, Cantata no. 199 (“Mein Herze schwimmt im Blut”) for soprano, oboe,
strings and continuo. Bach’s Cantata no. 199, which is a highly distinctive sacred cantata since it
focuses only on a solo soprano voice without a choir, attracted the composer’s attention for an entire
decade. Originally composed in 1714, Bach revised it twice (in 1720 and 1723), and seemed
particularly attracted to the unusual text of the cantata, which focuses on God’s forgiveness of our
sins. The Bay Baroque Ensemble, which is the only group in the Tampa Bay area to consistently play
on replicas of historical instruments at one of the most common Baroque pitches (A = 409), performs
on replicas of the early eighteenth-century two-keyed oboe, the recorder, viola da gamba, and an
Italian-style harpsichord. |