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Dragonlance Recording Session in Brooklyn Falls, Minnesota

Year: 
2007
Description: 

"You met one of the true celebrities from Lake Geneva to frequent our store.  We knew Margaret well.  She was also a strong supporter of the local wildlife rehabilitator that we sponsored, so we'd see her at their events frequently.  I think she ended up in LG because of TSR - the creators of Dungeons and Dragons - which was headquartered in LG until ~'98 when they moved to Seattle.  Margaret stayed behind and started writing and publishing her fantasy books. I think she now has her own line of role-playing fantasy games, ala D&D, which are based on her books.  Now movies, WOW! A very pleasant woman."
-Bryce Dreeszen, Wisconsin

Photos: 
Doc, Dee, and Alan with Karl Pruesser

Dragonlance composer, Karl Pruesser, flew to Ames in October of 2006 to discuss characteristics of Medieval and Renaissance instruments.  The animated film, based on Margaret Weis's first book in the Dragonlance series, is scheduled to be released in November of 2007.  From left: Alan Spohnheimer, Dr. Bleyle, Karl Pruesser, Dee Dreeszen

Margaret Weis

The Wisconsin author, Margaret Weis, visits with Carl Bleyle during a lunch break.

Doc with organetto

Sound technicians worked constantly to adjust microphones for best effect. Some instruments needed three mics. 

Dee with dulcimer

Dee found a spot to ready herself to record one of several numbers on her dulcimer. 
The recording studio was Winterland Studios

Steve with lute

Behind Stephen Kelleher in the primary recording room is the control box with sliders.  Wearing earphones while performing, each instrumentalist could control the volume of his own sound, the sound of the performers in the other three rooms, the midi track, and the click track.  Note the zink and small crumhorn on the floor.

The Red room

A view of the red room 

gemshorn played by Dee

Gemshorn work in the blue room 

Preparing to sample the percussion instruments

Preparing to sample the percussion instruments 

control booth overview

This view of the control booth shows only some of the equipment.  That's the composer, Karl Pruesser, in the foreground. 
Sometimes a window on the computer screen would show the animation coordinating with the music played.

Group ready to play the ensemble number

Preparation for an ensemble number; Dee on alto recorder, Alan on bass hirtenschalmei, Steve on bass gamba, Doc on percussion. 
Tenor gemshorn, bass crumhorn, alto shawm, and lute are visible in the background.

Steve resting

13 hours of recording can be exhausting! 

instrument in the studio lounge

Dordt College Performance

Year: 
2009
Photos: 
Doc driving

le pilot

Valerie navigating

le navigator

Dee smiling

Happy crew 

McDonalds stop

Armed with healthy food in preparation for a busy day

Working with Dordt College musicians

Working with Dordt College musicians 

Valerie teaches the dance steps

Valerie teaches the dance steps.

people dancing
People dancing

Official Branle used as a mixer

Antiqua observes students dancing
Doc talking to Dee and Steve

I think these students might be better than that of that other school! 

Doc giving instruction

Think of flagellation while singing this song.

Dordt musicians singing with Antiqua
Dee looking at music

I think we're ready. 

Doc in costume
Woman holding bladder pipe

Unusual construction material for a musical instrument 

Steve
Alan showing some women instruments
Alan talking to a crowd
Steve speaking with guest about the rebec

Speaking rebec

Small crowd examining instruments
Small group looks at instrument together
Doc conversing with guest

This might have been the first time Antiqua members greeted guests in the dressing room. 

Woman testing out instrument
Steve informs guest about instruments

Iowa State Center Matinee Performance

Year: 
2010
Description: 

Download the study guide for this performance. 

Photos: 
screenshot of the Iowa State Center website with Antiqua performance

Iowa State Center website. 

Valerie talking to kids

After the performances

Steve explaining
Dee with students
Doc speaking with a family
Students asking questions
Dee with instruments

Instruments needed for a school show. 

Doc with students

Muscatine Renaissance Fair Performance

Year: 
2010
Photos: 
muscatine art center

The Muscatine Art Center was among the sites used for the Winter Renaissance Fair. 

Dee and Doc

Wasn't our very first Iowa Arts Council performance in Muscatine?

Etsey player pipe organ

Musica Antiqua performed in the beautiful Music Room, where there was an Estey player pipe organ.

The Estey Organ was built in 1919 by the Estey Company of Brattleboro, Vermont.  the cost of the organ was $10,500.  A room approximately 18 by 11 feet, screened by a wooden grill behind the organ, houses 731 pipes, 11 manual ranks, 2 pedal ranks, plus chimes and an unusual glass harp.  The organ can be played both manually and automatically.  About 200 player rolls in the collection include classic and popular tunes of the 1920's and 30's.  The player mechanism is essentially a computer and runs on air pressure (from a bellows) generated in the basement beneath the organ.

The music room

The Music Room contained several hidden treasures, such as the 1890's Swiss music box under the painting. 

Audience participating

Audience participation

Audience participation
Audience listening to Doc
Children with recorders

The performances used eight sizes of recorders. 

Doc with a bladder pipe and young audience member

The bladder pipe is scary! 

Musica Antiqua visit to Boone Middle School

Year: 
2011
Description: 

MUSIC OF THE MIDDLE AGES 

Published: Thursday, May 12, 2011 6:38 PM CDT by Greg Eckstrom

Boone Middle School students have been learning about recorders, but the ones they’re used to aren't five feet long and wooden.  Alan Spohnheimer, center, and Dee Dreeszen, right, played a variety of antique instruments for Boone Middle School students on Tuesday, representing the group Musica Antiqua.

On Tuesday, the students learned about some of the instruments that pre-dated Bach and Beethoven from Dee Dreeszen and Alan Spohnheimer – two members of the Iowa State University group Musica Antiqua.

“Musica Antiqua…that word antique kind of means old, and it’s not meant to describe the players, it’s meant to describe the music we play,” Spohnheimer said. “The music we play is from the Middle Ages and the Renaissance.”  Spohnheimer is also a musician with the Iowa State University Alumni Band, where he plays the baritone horn.

Dreeszen, who played along with Spohnheimer for the students, is a handbell ringer, directs five choirs at her church and also plays the pipe organ.  “This is a group we started with in 1967 when we were both in college,” Dreeszen said. “It was a new class we were starting. We both had recorders and we thought, ‘Why not?’”

The recorders used by the group are replicas, made to imitate the ones used in the Middle Ages. Spohnheimer said the instruments were made to “match perfection.” “They had to emulate or copy perfection, and back then they thought perfection was shown in the human voice,” Spohnheimer said. “So just like the human voice has different flavors – alto, tenor, bass – likewise, recorders copy that.”

The two musicians introduced the students to several different types of instruments, including the crumhorn, rauschpfeife, gemshorn, and the recorder.

“This is a Renaissance style recorder,” Dreeszen said, holding the instrument next to a recorder the students have used. “The ones you’re playing probably have a little more definition to the shape, and those might be called a Baroque recorder. The difference between the classes of Renaissance and Baroque is in the use that they have for them. You’ll notice in these two, the bore, or the hole that goes down the center, is much larger in the Renaissance than it is in the Baroque.”

The two played several songs with the replica antique instruments for the students, including “Green Sleeves” and “Ring Around the Rosie.”

Photos: 
Alan and Dee at Boone Middle School
Alan showing students a soprano recorder
Alan and Dee playing for the students

Council Bluffs Faire of the Midlands

Photos: 
Group photo on the Purple Martin train

Aboard the Purple Martin on the way to the Council Bluffs Faire of the Midlands

Doc playing darts

Win a dragon with a game of darts! 

Alan on his bass krummhorn

Alan on his bass krummhorn

Doc in the stocks

The penalty for picking the wrong restaurant

Paul singing

Paul, about to meet a fair lass, singing Yellow Hose
Music Men in the background. 

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