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Marc Vanscheeuwijck
(541) 346-5655
marcovan@uoregon.edu
Marc Vanscheeuwijck is a baroque cellist and an associate professor
of musicology at the University of Oregon. Vanscheeuwijck teaches
the undergraduate and graduate music history surveys of the Renaissance,
Baroque, and Classical periods, Performance Practice, Baroque
Cello, and directs the Collegium Musicum ensemble, which specializes
in early music.
Graduate seminar topics have included Monteverdi,
Bach’s Sacred Cantatas, Organology, Baroque Culture, Latin
American Baroque Music, Seventeenth-Century Italian Sacred Music,
and Boccherini. He also teaches a course on Styles in History
in the Humanities program. As a teacher and guest lecturer he
regularly offers seminars and master classes on various topics
in music and performance practice of the Baroque period at the
Conservatories of Brussels, Ghent, The Hague, and Amsterdam, and
at the University of Alcalà de Henares and the Museo della
Musica in Bologna. He often teaches baroque cello at the annual
baroque music summer workshop of the San Francisco Early Music
Society in San Rafael.
Vanscheeuwijck is a frequent performer
and recording artist with European early music ensembles, including
the Cappella Musicale di San Petronio (Bologna), More Maiorum
and Les Muffatti (Belgium), and with such American ensembles as
Arcangeli Baroque Strings (Berkeley), and New York State Baroque
(Ithaca, NY).
Vanscheeuwijck studied cello and chamber music at
the Bruges and Ghent Conservatories and baroque cello with Wouter
Möller; he holds degrees in art history, Romance languages,
and pedagogy, and a doctorate in musicology from the University
of Ghent (1995). His current research focuses on late 17th-century
music in Bologna and on the history and repertoire of bass violins.
He has published articles in Musica Antiqua (1985-91), in La
Cappella Musicale nell’Italia della Controriforma (1993), in Performance
Practice Review (1995-96), in the Alamire
Yearbook (1998/2000),
in La Figura e l’opera di Antonio Cesti nel Seicento
europeo (2003), and in the yearbooks of the Orpheus Institute and of the
A.M.I.S. (2007). Several articles he revised on Bolognese composers
appeared in the New Grove Dictionary of Music
and Musicians (2001)
and in Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart (1994-2007). Vanscheeuwijck’s
book titled The Cappella Musicale of San
Petronio in Bologna under Giovanni Paolo Colonna (1674-1695):
History-Organization-Repertoire was published in 2003 by the Belgian Historical Institute in Rome.
His work as a musicologist includes the writing of liner notes
and program notes for a variety of CD companies and early music
festivals, and the publication of critical facsimiles and editions.
Already available (from Forni in Bologna) are the facsimiles of
Domenico Gabrielli’s complete works for cello solo and with
basso continuo (1998), Giuseppe Jacchini’s Opus 1 (2001),
and Giovanni Battista degli Antonii’s Opus 1 (2007).
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