Quicksilver Baroque Ensemble plays extravagant early-music sonatas in concert, March 21
Ahead of the Early Music Vancouver presentation, Alexander Weimann leads a chat with accomplished violinist Robert Mealy, the group’s codirector

Quicksilver Baroque Ensemble. Photo by Teresa Tam
Early Music Vancouver presents Quicksilver: The Early Moderns at St. Andrew’s–Wesley United Church on March 21 at 7:30 pm
VIOLINIST ROBERT MEALY has been honing his Baroque music skills from a young age.
While still in high school, the American artist trained at the University of California, Berkeley, and London’s Royal College of Music. He then pursued his undergraduate degree at Harvard College, during which time he was invited to join the acclaimed Canadian Baroque orchestra Tafelmusik.
In the years since, Mealy has performed with the France-based Baroque ensemble Les Arts Florissants, taught at the Yale School of Music, and toured with the Mark Morris Dance Group. He has been director of the Boston Early Music Festival’s orchestra since 2004 (which won a Grammy Award for a recording of Marc-Antoine Charpentier’s “La Descente d’Orphée aux Enfers” under his leadership) and director of the historical performance program at the Juilliard School since 2012. His career is remarkably wide-ranging, such that the New York Times once wrote that he “seems to foster excellence wherever he goes.”
Mealy also serves as codirector of the Quicksilver Baroque Ensemble, alongside fellow violinist Julie Andrijeski. Vancouver audiences can catch the U.S.-based group when it returns to the city for an Early Music Vancouver concert at St. Andrew’s–Wesley United Church on March 21.
For Quicksilver’s concert here, Mealy and Andrijeski will be joined by dulcian player Dominic Teresi, viola da gamba player David Morris, guitarist and lutenist Charles Weaver, and harpsichordist and organist Avi Stein. The musicians will be highlighting the early-modern period of the 17th century with a program dedicated to extravagant sonatas. Expect to hear works by several of the era’s influential Italian and German composers, including Matthias Weckmann, Dario Castello, Carolus Hacquart, Johann Caspar Kerll, and beyond.
Folks hoping to learn a bit more about Quicksilver before the ensemble plays can drop by for a pre-concert chat with Mealy at 7 pm, hosted by conductor and harpsichordist Alexander Weimann. The music will begin at 7:30 pm.
Stir editorial assistant Emily Lyth is a Vancouver-based writer and editor who graduated from Langara College’s Journalism program. Her decade of dance training and passion for all things food-related are the foundation of her love for telling arts, culture, and community stories.
Related Articles
From an indie garage-pop concert by Twin River to a plant pot–decorating workshop, here are just a few of the free offerings in store
Vancouver-based Drew Tarves takes his music out of the bedroom and across the country
Ontario-based aficionados of vintage gear and saucy slang bring Prohibition-era daring to this year’s event
Ahead of her Vancouver Folk Music Festival sets, the award-winning singer-songwriter reflects on the power of performing in her Nation’s language and representing her community
Headlining at this year’s Vancouver Folk Music Festival, the electrifying Marrakesh-born outfit plugs in traditional instruments and rocks out
Free events will take place in seven Vancouver parks from August 6 to 16
Event’s artistic director recommends under-the-radar discoveries, from Tanzanian polyphony to a smashing trad Irish trio
Performances take place Thursdays at 5 pm, featuring co-presentations with Indian Summer Festival, Vancouver Folk Music Festival, and more
The premiere of a Dorothy Chang composition and a guest appearance by harpist Rita Costanzi are among the highlights
At this year’s Indian Summer Festival, the sarod virtuoso draws on generations of musical mastery to create improvisations that reflect everything from audience response to the time of day
Bassist-vocalist will be joined by a special group of musicians to play tracks off her past albums and forthcoming project
Music director Jacques Lacombe leads the Vancouver Opera Orchestra in an evening of Italian arias and duets
Audience members will hear tracks off her latest album Odyssey, which honours her reignited love for composing
Performance of the legendary work features the Pacific Baroque Orchestra, Vancouver Cantata Singers, and four vocal soloists
Marking 400 years since the death of Ōmori Sōkun, shakuhachi master Alcvin Ryūzen Ramos leads a series of programs about an instrument making a quiet return
Headliner at Khatsahlano Street Party’s Burrard Stage takes a decidedly modern approach to getting its music out into the world
Performances by the Wild Moccasin Dancers, jazz trumpeter Feven Kidane, party band Dr. Strangelove, and plenty more artists are in store
Flowing from a rich mix of ancestries, the duo’s electronic-based sound points to forgotten but ever-present connections to the natural world
Nostalgic activities planned for the 10-block music event include a Scavenger Hunt, a Donut Chomp Challenge, and so much more
Pianist brings his expressive playing to Performance Works alongside bassist André Lachance, drummer Joe Poole, and trumpeter Brad Turner
The Pacific Baroque Orchestra led by Alexander Weimann joins the acclaimed Montreal-based Baroque dance company for a spellbinding show