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Introducing
New Guest Artist & Teacher
Grant Herreid originally a jazz and classical trumpeter in Portland,
Oregon, Grant Herreid has become a versatile musician/director/teacher
in the early music scene. He has toured much of the world as a singer
and multi-instrumentalist on early reeds, brass, strings and voice with
Hesperus, Piffaro, Early Music New York, the Newberry Consort, and My
Lord Chamberlain's Consort, and he plays theorbo and lute with the baroque
ensemble ARTEK and New York City Opera. He has also been a featured guest
artist with such groups as the Kings Noyse, Tapestry, the Folger
Consort, and Apollos Fire.
Active as an educator and coach, he teaches classes in Renaissance music
and 17th century song at Mannes College of Music in New York City, and
directs the New York Continuo Collective, a 30-member group exploring
the performance of 17th century continuo song. He performs and teaches
at many workshops, including Amherst Early Music Festival, Madison Early
Music Festival, the Longy Medieval Institute, San Francisco Early Music
Societys Medieval/Renaissance workshop, and the Western Wind Workshops
in A Capella Singing at Smith College.
Grant is a stage director and musical coach for the Seattle Academy of
Opera workshop with Stephen Stubbs; recent opera work on theorbo, lute
and baroque guitar includes Chicago Opera Theaters production of
Monteverdis Ritorno dUlisse, and Aspen Music Festivals
production of Cavallis Eliogabalo, both conducted by Jane Glover;
Handels Rodalinda at Portland Opera, the Handel and Haydn Society,
and the Yale Baroque Opera Project production of Monteverdis Orfeo.
Now teaching at Yale University, he was music director of the Yale Baroque
Opera Projects 2009 productions of Cavallis Giasone, and Le
Tre Stagioni, a pastiche of operatic works by Handel. Now its Artistic
Director, he also musically directed their 2010 American premiere of Sacratis
La Finta Pazza. Grant is co-director of the Yale Collegium Musicum, and
he has also performed with the opera programs of Julliard and the Curtis
Institute. He has created and directed several theatrical early music
shows, including a production featuring Monteverdis Ballo dellIngrate,
in collaboration with Andrew Lawrence-King. The two also collaborated
on a production of La Purpura de la Rosa, the first opera performed in
the New World. Other staged productions he has created include: Desperate
Housewives of Shakespeares England: A Lute Song Cabaret; Il Caffe
dAmore (music of Luigi Rossi, Monteverdi, Merula, and others); A
Day at the Faire (Elizabethan); Triomphi: Petrarchs Triumphs Expressed
in Music of the Italian Renaissance; Guillaume de Machaut and the Fountain
of Love.
Grant devotes much of his time to exploring the esoteric unwritten traditions
of medieval and early Renaissance music as a founding member Ex Umbris
and Ensemble Viscera, and has recorded for Archiv, Dorian, Koch, Maggie's
Music, Ex Cathedra, Lyrichord, Musical Heritage Society and Newport Classics,
among others.
Grant Herreid has toured much of the world as a singer and multi-instrumentalist
on early reeds, brass, strings and voice. He has also been a featured
guest artist with such groups as the Kings Noyse, Tapestry, the
Folger Consort, and Apollos Fire and teaches at Yale University.
Grant devotes much of his time to exploring the esoteric unwritten traditions
of medieval and early Renaissance music.
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