ARTISTIC DIRECTORS
  2008-2009 GUEST ARTISTS
  2007-2008 GUEST ARTISTS
  PREVIOUS GUEST ARTISTS
 
Rochelle Bard, soprano
  Charles Blandy, tenor
  Rebecca Boggs, lecturer
  Jessica Bowers, mezzo-soprano
  Heinrich Christensen, organ
  Jesse Clark, baritone
  Susan Consoli, soprano
  Jessica Cooper, soprano
  Caprice Corona, soprano
  Pamela Dellal, mezzo-soprano
  Amanda Forsythe, soprano
  Angela Gooch, soprano
  Gerald Gray, tenor
  Martha Guth, soprano
  John Harbison, composer
  Anne Harley, soprano
  Martin Hennessy, composer
  Jane Hershey, viola da gamba and violone
  Heather Holland, mezzo-soprano
  Kayo Iwama, piano
  Elizabeth Keusch, soprano
  Sheila Kibbe, piano
  Aaron Larget-Caplan, guitar
  Libby Larsen, composer
  Sabrina Learman, soprano
  Catherine Liddell, theorbo and baroque guitar
  John McDonald, piano
  Lynne McMurtry, mezzo-soprano
  Jason McStoots, tenor
  Christopher Morongiello, lute
  Lior Navok, composer
  Scott Nicholas, piano
  Linda Osborn-Blaschke, piano
  Sarah Pelletier, soprano
  Daniel Pinkham, composer
  Sandra Piques-Eddy, mezzo-soprano
  Drew Poling, baritone
  Paul Preusser, composer
  Deborah Rentz-Moore, mezzo-soprano
  Krista River, mezzo-soprano
  Ned Rorem, composer
  Elena Ruehr, composer
  Alan Schneider, tenor
  Michael Sponseller, harpsichord
  Sumner Thompson, baritone
  Dana Whiteside, baritone
  Ross Wood, organ

 

Michael Sponseller, harpsichord

Michael Sponseller, harpsichordMr. Sponseller has appeared throughout Europe and North America with critical acclaim as a soloist, conductor, and chamber musician. Winner of the American Bach Soloists Competition (1998) and the Jurow International Harpsichord Competition (2002), he holds the distinction of being a two-time prizewinner at the Festival of Flanders International Harpsichord Competition (Bruges), as well as taking prizes in Montréal and Kalamazoo.

His recitals, which favor the French “clavecinists” and English virginal repertoire, have been heard at the Smithsonian Institution, Saint Cecilia’s Hall, Alliance Française and at festivals such as Boston, Berkeley, and Edinburgh.

Following his return to the US in 1999, Mr. Sponseller has performed and recorded frequently with the Handel and Haydn Society, Smithsonian Chamber Players, American Bach Soloists, New York Collegium, and Apollo’s Fire. Michael Sponseller performs in partnership with leading artists such as Catherine Turocy, Emyln Ngai, Derek Lee Ragin, Malia Bendi Merad, and Sarah Freiburg and performs with numerous ensembles such as La Luna, Aradia, and Rhetoric. In addition to holding degrees from the Oberlin Conservatory of Music and the Royal Conservatory of Music in The Hague, Mr. Sponseller was a teacher of harpsichord at the Baldwin Wallace Conservatory of Music.

Mr. Sponseller's passionate interest in 17th and 18th century opera led to making his conducting debut in 2000 with Dido and Aeneas of Henry Purcell. Since then he has performed and been assistant conductor in a wide range of repertoire, including Castor et Pollux, Ariodante, Amadigi, Alcina, Cephale et Procris, and Les Arts Florissants. In 2000, he became a research assistant at the Centre de Musique Baroque de Versailles, working with Lisa Goode Crawford on the operas of Joseph Nicolas Pancrace Royer (1705-1755). This work culminated in 2002 in the modern-day premiere of Royer’s Le Pouvoir de l’Amour with the New York Baroque Dance Company, Oberlin College, and the Centre de Musique Baroque de Versailles, which received recognition and praise from the New York Times, Wall Street Journal and Opera News. Mr. Sponseller can also be heard on several recordings from Electra, Vanguard Classics, Naxos and Centaur.

Since 2002, he has be part of the famed Bach cantata cycle at Emmanuel Church in Boston, in which has performed nearly 50 cantatas. With that ensemble, he also also performed in Peter Sellars' stagings of Bach cantatas for the late Lorraine Hunt Lieberson on tour in 2005, and Mark Morris' production of Handel's L'Allegro, Il Moderato, e Il Penseroso. In 2006, Sponseller was recently named Lorraine Hunt Lieberson Fellow by Emmanuel Music, in recognition of his achievements as emerging young artist.

 

 

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