Between Constantinople and Jerusalem: Music and Sacred Ritual in Medieval Slavia Orthodoxa November 24, 2015 By Event Details Date: Thursday, Dec 3rd, 2015, 4:00 pm Venue: Quadrangle Building 170, Founders Room Categories: Lecture, Scholar Presentation Tags: Anna Levy, Constantine, Gregory Myers, Jerusalem, music Along with the written word, music and sacred ritual have given form and content to the Slavic-speaking world from the time of their Christianization in the 9th century down to the present day. For the Slavs, the period from the end of the 12th to the beginning of the 14th century was a time of transition in their religious life. Marked by historical upheavals, this time witnessed the last flowering of the archaic rituals they received from Byzantium against a backdrop of change, witnessing the all-important confluence of two great liturgical traditions, Constantinopolitan and emergent Jerusalem. Music, whose role in the services was organic, served as a barometer for the imminent transition. This lecture explores some of these rituals through their music from this time of monumental change. Reception begins at 3:30pm in Quad 170, Founders Room. Free and open to the public. Gregory Myers holds a MLIS and a PhD. in historical musicology degrees from the University of British Columbia. An independent scholar, publisher, translator and bibliographer, he currently holds the Dietrich Reinhart, OSB, Fellowship in Eastern Christian Manuscript Studies at the Hill Museum & Manuscript Library, Saint John’s University, in Minnesota. Myers is a specialist in the music of Eastern Europe, specifically Russia and the Balkans, and researches, publishes extensively and lectures on issues of medieval music (Byzantium and the Slavs) and the post-World War II musical developments of these countries. Myers has held research fellowships at the Moscow State Tchaikovsky Conservatory, the Dumbarton Oaks Research Library in Washington DC, Ohio State University, the University of Illinois, Champagne-Urbana and recently, the Center for Advanced Study in Sofia, Bulgaria. A native of Sofia, Bulgaria, pianist and musicologist Anna Levy received her Doctor of Musical Arts from the Moscow Conservatory in 1990. On immigrating to Canada she has appeared both as a soloist and chamber musician championing contemporary music in North America and Europe. She has appeared as soloist at Princeton University, Ohio State University, the University of Illinois, University of British Columbia, and Simon Fraser University, in performances of the music of Scriabin, Alfred Schnittke, Nikolai Korndorf, and numerous Canadian composers. In 2003 she formed the Yarilo Music Ensemble in collaboration with fellow pianist Jane Hayes, and the ensemble has been featured in CBC broadcasts. Noted for her innovative approaches to performance, Levy recently toured Europe where she performed on stages in Zurich, the Scriabin Museum in Moscow, and the Felicia Blumenthal Center in Tel Aviv, Israel. She also participated in the Sofia Music Weeks International Festival, where she was broadcast on Bulgarian television. Watch the lecture: