SDG . . .
We are often asked what the name of our ensemble means, so
we explain that SDG stands for Soli Deo Gloria—“to God alone the glory”—and was the epigraph used by J. S. Bach
(among other composers) at the end of many of his sacred works. But we chose the name not only because
it represents Bach but also because it represents our approach to music and
life. Music, as a vehicle of
beauty and a means of human expression, is a gift of God, as is the ability to
make music as either a creative (composing) or re-creative (performing)
artist. As we present the gift of
music to our audiences, we hope our performance reveals a glimpse of God’s
glory as the giver of that gift.
God himself deserves the best work that we can offer as beneficiaries of
the gift. We therefore strive for
excellence in our instrumental technique, integrity in our historical
understanding, and effectiveness in our musical communication.
Offering our best to God, however, is about more than high
musical standards. God created us,
redeemed us through the death and resurrection of his son Jesus, and sends his
Spirit to strengthen us in faith.
It is, then, our duty—and our delight—to make music to God’s glory as part of a life of faith and thankfulness.
What we do
We share with many musicians across
the world an intense enthusiasm for “historically informed performance” of
early music. The number of
individuals and performing ensembles specializing in early music is
staggering. One finds among these
performers a wide range of interpretive approaches, such that listeners can
hear the same work performed in vastly different
ways. It is stimulating for us
to be a part of such an active culture.
Our responsibility to the composers whose music we study and
re-create includes working out our own technique and interpretive orientation
to fit the particular historical time and place in which those musicians
worked. We have done our best to
adapt our playing to period-specific models that we find described in treatises
and depicted in iconography. We
cannot be sure how close we come to something that one of our composers would
recognize, but we do know that our undertaking has resulted in a greatly
expanded musical awareness. For
example, a slur might become more logical for a keyboardist when a particular
fingering is used, or differences in national styles might become more
pronounced when a violinist holds the bow in a certain way.
One of the features of many of our programs is the inclusion
of extensive program notes (which listeners may or may not choose to
read!). In our notes we attempt to
provide historical and cultural context for the works we perform and to
acquaint listeners with some aspects of the repertoire’s musical syntax that
might not be immediately apparent.
We want to bring the audience as close as we can to encountering the
music as a living entity rather than as a relic. Music that is thoughtfully conceived by a master composer
has the same potential to move the hearts of today’s audiences as it did in its
time, even though the difference in culture undeniably interferes with the
particulars of the original intention.
Audiences in eighteenth-century England, when criticizing vapid
performances, used the cliché “it is better to be moved than to be
amazed.” Despite the high-mindedness
that props up that phrase, Ensemble SDG does hope that our audience will be
moved—caught up in musical energy, drawn in with expressive subtlety, even
sensing a moment of divine grace—even though we cannot predict when or how that
might happen.
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