From Ghetto to Cappella: Interfaith Exchanges in the Music of Baroque Italy

Jessica Gould, soprano & Noa Frenkel, contralto
Diego Cantalupi, lute
James Waldo, viola da gamba
Davide Pozzi, harpsichord

Most recently presented at the Teatro all’Antica di Sabbioneta and the Great Synagogue of Florence, Italy, we are honored to partner with Carnegie Hall’s La Serenissima Festival, the Temple Emanu-El Streicker Center, and NYU Casa Italiana Zerilli Marimò in presenting the third annual New York performance of From Ghetto to Cappella, commemorating the 500th anniversary of the creation of the Venetian Ghetto.

While the Inquisition raged throughout Counter-Reformation Italy, the ghetto walls that separated Gentile from Jew were more porous than impenetrable. A lively dialogue between Jewish and Catholic musical cultures traversed the forbidding walls and enriched the music of both Synagogue and Sanctuary at a time of great oppression.

An international ensemble performs works of Benedetto Marcello, Francesco Durante, Salomone Rossi, GF Handel and unaccompanied Hebrew chants – exquisite music that attests to a vibrant conversation that triumphed over ignorance and resounds with hope and beauty into our own time.











When: Thu., Feb. 16, 2017 at 8:00 pm - 9:30 pm
Where: Temple Emanu-El
1 E. 65th St.
888-718-4253
Price: $25–$100
Buy tickets/get more info now
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Jessica Gould, soprano & Noa Frenkel, contralto
Diego Cantalupi, lute
James Waldo, viola da gamba
Davide Pozzi, harpsichord

Most recently presented at the Teatro all’Antica di Sabbioneta and the Great Synagogue of Florence, Italy, we are honored to partner with Carnegie Hall’s La Serenissima Festival, the Temple Emanu-El Streicker Center, and NYU Casa Italiana Zerilli Marimò in presenting the third annual New York performance of From Ghetto to Cappella, commemorating the 500th anniversary of the creation of the Venetian Ghetto.

While the Inquisition raged throughout Counter-Reformation Italy, the ghetto walls that separated Gentile from Jew were more porous than impenetrable. A lively dialogue between Jewish and Catholic musical cultures traversed the forbidding walls and enriched the music of both Synagogue and Sanctuary at a time of great oppression.

An international ensemble performs works of Benedetto Marcello, Francesco Durante, Salomone Rossi, GF Handel and unaccompanied Hebrew chants – exquisite music that attests to a vibrant conversation that triumphed over ignorance and resounds with hope and beauty into our own time.

Buy tickets/get more info now