Credit: Gary Ventura

There was nothing cute about the Renaissance. As an
historical period, it was marked by bloodshed, plagues, and chaos. Fifteen
years ago, when classical guitarist Deborah Fox became fascinated by the era,
she admits she held a somewhat romanticized view of it. “I love its beauty and
aesthetics,” she says, “and especially the beauty of Renaissance music.”

At the time, the guitarist was
performing classical standards from the 19th and 20th centuries. But picking up
a lute one day, she realized something about her choice of instruments that
changed the trajectory of her career.

Usually, when she played the guitar
for any length of time, her fingers grew stiff and cold. But when she plucked
on the lute, a pear-shaped wooden instrument with a fretted neck and a deep,
round back, she noticed that her hands didn’t freeze. “It just felt like it
fit,” she says.

So Fox decided to specialize in
lute-playing and focus on Early Music. (The term can be a little confusing when
everything in classical music seems “early” compared to 50 Cent and Coldplay. Basically, Early Music refers to European
classical music before the time of J.S. Bach, roughly spanning the Middle Ages.)

Her decision to focus on lutes has
led her through the halls of the Eastman School to study with Paul O’Dette, to Europe and Australia where her skill is in
demand, and most recently, to the Rochester Academy of Medicine on East Avenue,
a mansion which is home to her own, newly organized concert series, Pegasus
Early Music.

At some point, Fox jokes, she forgot
that she ever played the guitar.

Like
her, thousands
of classical musicians find themselves particularly moved by
music older than the printing press. Over the last century, a wave of
enthusiasm for pre-Bach-era music has swept through conservatories and concert
halls. Today, sales of Early Music recordings equal those of all other
classical music recordings combined.

The widespread interest has created a
kind of cultural wormhole that affects musicians, audiences, and even living
composers.

“This isn’t a surprise,” says
musicologist and Eastman professor Ralph Locke.

The Early Music revival started with
the invention of recording devices, he says. Before LPs, CDs, radio stations,
and iPods, composers relied on actually hearing music
in person.

“Beethoven couldn’t respond to Early
Music,” says Locke, “since he never heard it performed and there were no
recordings in his day.” Beethoven could internalizemusic by Haydn and
Mozart, however, since he heard it played in concerts. Once hearing it, he took
off in new directions.

For composers, the invention of the
phonograph opened up a whole universe of ideas.

In the first few decades of the 20th
century, musicians began recording stuff they found in musty books and old
libraries. Previously unheard-of motets by Palestrina and de Victtoria were stamped out on LPs and distributed to wider
and wider audiences. By the middle of the 20th century, critics were raving
about the Early Music Revival.

At the same time, a lot of
20th-century music was achieving instant infamy.

Now that we’re into the 21st century,
Locke says, the vocabulary of Early Music has threaded itself through the works
of contemporary composers. Music by living, breathing guys like John Taverner and Arvo Part has been
described as “Neo-Medieval.” Rochester
composer David Liptak says he’s felt its influence,
too. “I don’t have intentional references to chant in my music,” he says, “but
over the years it’s seeped down into the bedrock of my imagination.”

Sitting
in the Orange Glory Café
on East Avenue,
lutenist Deborah Fox nibbles a lemon cookie and looks
thoughtful. “I don’t really know,” she says, “but
there’s a purity about this music and about almost any
contemporary music that is hard to put a finger on.”

Until recently, she was happy picking
up gigs in Baroque operas in Spain,
Australia, and
elsewhere. But running her own concert series, Pegasus Early Music, gives her
artistic control. This weekend, soprano Laura Heimes,
lutenist Richard Kolb, and harpsichordist James Bobb will join her in songs by John Dowland
and secular tunes by 17th century composers Barbara Strozzi
and Benedetto Ferrari.

Fox raves about music by Strozzi, a little-known Venetian composer (1619-1677) who
may have been a courtesan as well as a musician. “She has her own melodic and
harmonic structure,” Fox says. “There’s something about it that just twists my
heart a little bit.”

She also included music by two of the
greatest composers of the Baroque era, Henry Purcell and George Frederic
Handel, and audience members will hear songs collected in the notebooks of 19th-century
English novelist Jane Austen (not exactly Early Music, but Fox is in charge.)

In October, the first Pegasus Early
Music concerts sold out. Despite that success, Fox refuses to move to a bigger
venue. She says she wants listeners to experience the intimate beauty that
enchanted her 15 years ago.

“It offers everyone a chance to slow
down and be amazed.”

The Poetic Muse with Laura Heimes, soprano; Deborah Fox, lutes; Richard Kolb, lutes;
and James Bobb, harpsichord.
Saturday, January 28, at 8 p.m. and Sunday, January 29,
at 4 p.m. at the RochesterAcademy of Medicine, 1441
East Avenue.Pre-concert talks one hour before concert time.$15-$10 (seniors & students). 703-3990.
pegasusearlymusic.org

Brenda Tremblay is a producer and announcer
for WXXI. She hosts radio concerts by the Rochester
Philharmonic Orchestra on Classical 91.5.