Guest Artist Master Class

Ruckus

Early Music Group

Ruckus

2:30pm
Stude Concert Hall at Alice Pratt Brown Hall
Cost: Free


Tickets Required

Before leading a master class with Shepherd School students, Ruckus will perform for approximately 15 minutes. 

Free, tickets required

Repertoire

Ruckus performs selections from G.F. Handel and Ignatius Sancho
Emi Ferguson, flute
Rachell Ellen Wong, violin
Elliot Figg, harpsichord
Evan Premo, bass
Coleman Itzkoff, cello*
Paul Holmes Morton, guitar
Dušan Balarin, guitar and lute
Clay Zeller-Townson, bassoon
*Shepherd School of Music alumnus

Bach: A Minor Sonata for Violin 
     Grave
     Fugue
Jasmine Lin, violin 

Handel: “Credete al mio dolore” from Alcina
Yining Xie, soprano
Juliana Moroz, cello
Ben Rodriguez, cello continuo
Kevin Fink, bass continuo
Bethany Self, harpsichord continuo

Artists

Ruckus

Ruckus is a shapeshifting, collaborative baroque ensemble with a visceral and playful approach to early music. Described as “the world’s only period-instrument rock band” (San Francisco Classical Voice), Ruckus’ core is a continuo group, the baroque equivalent of a jazz rhythm section: guitars, keyboards, cello, bassoon and bass. The NYC-based ensemble aims to fuse the early-music movement’s questing, creative spirit with the grit, groove and jangle of American roots music, creating a unique sound of “rough-edged intensity” (New Yorker) that’s “achingly delicate one moment, incisive and punchy the next” (New York Times). The group’s members are among the most creative and virtuosic performers in North American early music. 

Ruckus’ debut album, Fly the Coop, a collaboration with flutist Emi Ferguson, was Billboard’s #2 Classical album upon its release. Performances of Fly the Coop have been described as “a fizzing, daring display of personality and imagination” (New York Times). The Boston Musical Intelligencer describes the group as taking continuo playing to “not simply a new level, but a revelatory new dimension of dynamism altogether… an eruption of pure, pulsing hoedown joy.”

Location

Stude Concert Hall at Alice Pratt Brown Hall