Celebrate the origins of Yuletide traditions when the Lake Michigan College Mendel Center welcomes the Baltimore Consort at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 1 in Grand Upton Hall.
With its festive cornucopia of instruments – lute, cittern, viols, crumhorns, recorders, rebec, and percussion – the Baltimore Consort offers old carols and dance tunes from the British Isles, Germany, France, Spain, and the New World during their presentation of Wassail, Wassail! Music for the Yuletide Season.
Founded in 1980 to perform the instrumental music of Shakespeare’s time, the Baltimore Consort has explored early English, Scottish, and French popular music, focusing on the relationship between folk and art, song and dance. An interest in early music of English/Scottish heritage has also led these world-class musicians to delve into the rich trove of traditional music preserved in North America.
Recordings on the Dorian label have earned the Baltimore Consort recognition as Top Classical-Crossover Artist of the Year (Billboard), as well as rave reviews elsewhere. Besides touring in the U.S. and abroad, the group has often performed on such syndicated radio broadcasts as “St. Paul Sunday,” “Performance Today,” “Harmonia,” and the CBC’s “OnStage.”
The origins of wassail
Wassail comes to us through the centuries with more than one meaning. Among them are: a toast to good health, a holiday beverage, and a predecessor to modern-day caroling. Its origins are felt to be traced to the Anglo-Saxon words “waes hael,” often used as a toast meaning “to your health.”
As traditions and practices surrounding the darkest days of winter evolved, a hard cider-based beverage used for toasting on Twelfth Night (most closely approximating our New Year’s Eve) grew to be known as wassail. In wealthier households of the time, wassail wasn’t only saved for one day. It was routinely enjoyed each day of the 12-day Yule festival – from the winter solstice through the early days of January.
At the same time, peasants would revel in the streets, going from one wealthy home to the next asking for food and libations in exchange for a song. This became known as wassailing.
Eventually, the Twelfth Night tradition evolved into the feast of Epiphany, traditionally celebrating the arrival of the Magi to see the newborn baby Jesus. The practice of wassailing was spruced up in the 19th century by authors like Charles Dickens, being recast as the wholesome practice known today as caroling.
As part of the Mendel Center’s holiday season celebration, a special mix of Mendel Center Wassail, made with Lake Michigan Vintners cider, will be served as part of the cash bar.
Tickets for the Baltimore Consort presents Wassail, Wassail! Music for the Yuletide Season are $40 for theatre-style seating and $60 for table seating. They may be purchased at www.TheMendelCenter.com/events. On the day of the Baltimore Consort performance, the box office will be open in the Grand Upton Hall lobby.
Patrons who purchase tickets at the same time to this performance and to the Dec. 8 presentation of Christmas in Killarney: An Irish Christmas Celebration will receive 25 percent off regular prices when the code JINGLE25 is used at checkout. Not applicable on Club Mendel seating.
This activity is supported in part by the Michigan Arts and Culture Council.
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Mendel Center 2023-2024 Season Sponsor
Stage Side Sponsors: Meijer, Sturgis Bank, TPC Technologies, Wales Wealth Management Group,
Platinum Sponsor: CK Catering, Forte Coffee
Media Partners: 97.5 Y Country, 98.3 The Coast, The Herald Palladium, The Lake 95.7 MailMax, News/Talk 94.9 WSJM, Rock 107 WIRX, SuperHits 103.7
Preferred Partner Hotel: The Boulevard Inn & Bistro
Artistic Partners: Southwest Michigan Symphony Orchestra, Twin City Players
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About the Lake Michigan College Mendel Center
The Lake Michigan College Mendel Center raised the curtain on its first Mendel Center season performance in the fall of 1992. Since then, it has presented performances and guest speakers to more than half a million patrons in the 1,559-seat Mendel Center Mainstage Theatre. Grand Upton Hall, first opened in 1979 and fully renovated in 2019, is a 13,700-square-foot venue serving the community as the host site for meetings, banquets, trade shows, weddings, and other celebrations. The 229-seat Hanson Theatre, which was renovated in 2020, hosts numerous Lake Michigan College Visual & Performing Arts Department performances as well as a variety of Mendel Center and community events.
The Mendel Center is 30 minutes from Niles and 40 minutes from the Kalamazoo and South Bend areas. It is located on the Lake Michigan College campus at 2755 E. Napier Avenue, Benton Harbor, Michigan, one mile east of I-94 (Exit 30) and one mile west of the US 31 Bypass (exit 24). Its GPS mapping address is 1100 Yore Avenue, Benton Harbor, MI.
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Posted October 26, 2023
Box Office
Tickets are available through the website
Email boxoffice@lakemichigancollege.edu
for questions or more information
Box Office Hours
90 minutes before performances
Lake Michigan College Mendel Center
2755 E. Napier Avenue
Benton Harbor, MI 49022