Cappella Murensis & Les Cornets Noirs


Biography Cappella Murensis & Les Cornets Noirs


Cappella Murensis
The Cappella Murensis was founded by Johannes Strobl in 2002 as the professional vocal ensemble of the Abbey Church of Muri. According to the musical task in hand, the Cappella Murensis performs as an ensemble of vocal soloists, a chamber choir, or a Gregorian choir. One of the main focuses of Johannes Strobl and the Cappella Murensis is church music of the 16th to the 18th centuries, which is particularly suited to performance in the Abbey Church of Muri. In this period, the contribution of his- torical organs belongs of course de facto to the musical practice: alongside all forms of polychorality, particular attention is devoted to the connection between organ music and Gregorian chant that forms part of the Benedictine heritage of the Abbey Church of Muri.

With the Cappella Murensis, Johannes Strobl regularly organises performances of liturgical compositions that have been re-discovered in Swiss monasteries, which are also documented in radio recordings. Thus the ensemble has performed at the Festi- val international des musiques sacreés in Fribourg, at the International Bach Festival in Schaffhausen, in the banqueting hall of the monastery at Einsiedeln, in St. Gallen Cathedral, and at the Early Music Festival in Utrecht.

In collaboration with Thilo Hirsch and the ensemble arcimboldo, the Cappella Murensis has previously issued a recording of Johann Valentin Rathgeber’s “Missa solennis in D” op. 12/12 with audite. A second SACD, “Polychoral Splendour”, with polychoral works by Heinrich Schütz and Giovanni Gabrieli, was awarded the distinc- tion of the International Classical Music Award 2013.

Les Cornets Noirs
In recent years the instrumental ensemble Les Cornets Noirs, which specialises in Italian and German Early Baroque music, has made a name for itself internationally. Founded in 1997 by Gebhard David and Bork-Frithjof Smith, the main interest of the group lies in solo and ensemble literature for the cornett (It. cornetto, Fr. cornet – also called “black cornett” because of its leather covering), which experienced its hey-day from the middle of the 16th to the late 17th century north and south of the Alps.

Les Cornets Noirs were prize winners in the concours musica antiqua at the Festival van Vlaanderen Brugge 2000. Since then, the ensemble has performed at festivals in Switzerland, Austria, Germany, the Czech Republic, Poland, France, Luxemburg, Italy, and Portugal, both with their own programmes and in collaboration with vocal groups for the performance of large-scale Early Baroque works by Giovanni Gabrieli, Heinrich Schütz, Claudio Monteverdi, Georg Muffat, Heinrich Ignaz Franz Biber, and their contemporaries.

Les Cornets Noirs have also already issued two successful recordings with audite („Echo & Risposta“ and „Polychoral Splendour“).

Johannes Strobl
The Austrian-born musician Johannes Strobl received his rst piano and organ lessons at the music school of Spittal an der Drau with Hermann Zeyß. He graduated from the Hochschule für Musik und Darstellende Kunst “Mozarteum” in Salzburg with Heribert Metzger and was awarded distinctions in both his teaching and soloist di- ploma in organ and his advanced degree in Catholic Church Music. This was followed by comprehensive studies in Early Music at the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis with Jean-Claude Zehnder (organ), Jörg-Andreas Bötticher (harpsichord), Jesper Chris- tensen ( gured bass) and Rudolf Lutz (improvisation), and additional masterclasses with Michael Radulescu, Luigi Ferdinando Tagliavini, Harald Vogel, Almut Rössler and James David Christie.

Johannes Strobl was a prize winner at the Paul Hofhaimer competition in Innsbruck in 1998. His musical activities as a soloist and ensemble player have taken him to many European countries and further a eld to Israel, Japan, the US, Brasil, and Argentina.

Since 2001, Johannes Strobl has been employed as Director of Music of the Catholic parish of Muri in the Swiss canton of Aargau. In this role, he oversees the important historical organs of the church of the former Benedictine monastery and is artistic director of a distinguished concert series. He also teaches Improvisation and Liturgical Organ Playing at the Hochschule Luzern in the music faculty’s department of church music.

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