ABOUT US

South Africa’s leading period instrument collective.

The Cape Town Baroque Orchestra (CTB) is the leading South African baroque ensemble playing on period instruments. It was founded by violinist Quentin Crida in July 2004 as Camerata Tinta Barocca. As of July 2021, the ensemble has adopted the name Cape Town Baroque Orchestra, carrying it into a new age of growth and artistic excellence. Members include some of South Africa’s finest musicians who embrace a historically informed performance approach. Mostly playing music from the 18th century, CTB has worked with international leaders in their respective fields, such as baroque violinists Antoinette Lohmann and Pauline Nobes; soprano Stefanie True; countertenors Lawrence Zazzo, Christopher Ainslie and Clint van der Linde; male soprano Philipp Mathmann; recorder players Stefan Temmingh, Erik Bosgraaf and Anna Fusek; baroque oboist and recorder player Carin van Heerden; traverso player Matthias Maute; and mandolin player Alon Sariel.

Apart from CTB’s annual concert series in St Andrew’s Presbyterian Church in Cape Town, the ensemble regularly accompanies opera and oratorio performances, performs in festivals throughout South Africa and has an active outreach and education programme. CTB’s concerts have been broadcast on Fine Music Radio and kykNET, and have received critical acclaim in the Cape Times and Die Burger.

Since 2011 CTB has gradually moved towards playing on period instruments. Currently, CTB is the only period ensemble in South Africa that regularly plays in orchestral format, performing all its annual concerts on period-appropriate instruments. CTB, in collaboration with the Cape Consort, gave the first South African period performance of Handel’s Messiah in 2013. During November 2016 CTB played for Cape Town Opera’s first production with a period instrument orchestra,  Monteverdi’s L’Orfeo, directed by Jaco Bouwer and conducted by Erik Dippenaar. In 2017 CTB launched the annual Cape Town Baroque Festival. CTB’s Handel at Home concert programme was awarded a Woordtrofee in 2022, as well as a kykNET Fiësta award in 2023.

Members of the Cape Town Baroque Orchestra will make their Canadian debut as part of the Montreal Baroque Festival in June 2024.

Dr Erik Dippenaar was appointed as Artistic Director of CTB in 2015.

THE TEAM

Erik Dippenaar – Artistic Director

In 2003 Erik Dippenaar obtained the degree BMus (cum laude) from Stellenbosch University, and was awarded a MMus (with distinction) by the Royal College of Music (RCM) in London in 2007, studying under Margaret Phillips (organ) and Robert Woolley (harpsichord). The following year he completed an Artist Diploma in Performance at the RCM under Jane Chapman (harpsichord) and Geoffrey Govier (fortepiano).

As a student in South Africa, Erik won most of the important music competitions, including the ABSA National Youth Music Competition (2000), UNISA National Organ Competition (2001), Mabel Quick Bursary Competition (2001), ATKV Musiq Competition (2002), the organ category of Distell Music Competition (2002) and the Unisa Overseas Bursary competition (2003).

From 2005 to 2011 Erik was based in London, where he played in various important early music festivals such as the Greenwich Early Music Festival, the London Handel Festival, the Brighton Early Music Festival and the Trigonale Festival der Alten Musik. His primary activity was chamber music and he has performed regularly with Florilegium, The London Handel Players, l’Avventura London, Amaranthos and Spirituoso. He also worked with the English Touring Opera, the Little Baroque Company and Ensemble Serse on a regular basis.

While in Londen, Erik gave regular solo recitals, which included a recital for the British Harpsichord Society, as well as regular broadcasts for BBC Radio 3. In 2010, with Florilegium, he made his debut in the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam. Erik was one of the official accompanists for the annual London Handel Singing Competition, and in March 2008 he was awarded the competition’s Accompanist’s Prize. He won the RCM Early Music Competition twice, and was a member of the group Musici Infaticabili, who won the Broadwood Early Keyboard Ensemble Competition in Fenton House in May 2008. During 2008/2009 Erik was appointed as Mills/Williams Junior Fellow at the RCM, and he taught harpsichord at the Centre for Young Musicians in London.

Erik is currently Artistic Director of the Cape Town Baroque Orchestra, Artistic Director of the annual Cape Town Baroque Festival, and an adjunct lecturer in organ and harpsichord performance, as well as Western music history and historical performance practice, at the University of Cape Town (UCT). His conducting highlights include the first South African period performance of Handel’s Messiah in 2013 (a reconstruction of the 1742 Dublin performance), as well as Cape Town Opera’s first production to use a period instrument orchestra: Monteverdi’s L’Orfeo in 2016.

Erik has recently been awarded a PhD in music by UCT, with a dissertation focussing on the role historical domestic keyboard instruments played in the colonisation process in Southern Africa.

Cheryl de Havilland – Outreach Coordinator

Cheryl de Havilland was born in London and began playing the cello at the age of 8. At 11 she won a bursary to study music at the Royal College of Music. Cheryl first came to South Africa for the inauguration of the Pretoria State Opera House, and then to Cape Town as co-principal cellist in the Capab Orchestra. Later she joined the CTSO and CTPO. She was cellist in the Cape Town String Quartet for many years and plays concerts regularly with the cello sextet, I Grandi Violoncellisti. Cheryl is also an established cello teacher in the Cape.

Trustees

Dr Erik Dippenaar
Dr Erik Dippenaar

See Erik’s bio above.

prof philippa nyakato tumubweinee
prof philippa nyakato tumubweinee

philippa nyakato tumubweinee, the youngest of six children to Hon Manzi Tumubweinee and Omubitokati Christine Nyarubona, graduated with a DPhil in Higher Education Studies from the University of the Free State (UFS) under the supervision of Prof Loyiso Jita (SANRAL Chair for Education and the Dean of Education at UFS) and Prof Thierry Luescher (Research Director: Education and Skills Development, HSRC) in 2019. Since then, she has held several roles in South Africa and internationally across teaching, research, and design and architectural practice.

An Associate Professor, philippa is the immediate past Chair of the Commonwealth Association for Architects (CAA) Validation Committee, and Head of School (HoS) at the School of Architecture, Planning & Geomatics (APG) at the University of Cape Town (UCT).

She is currently the convenor of the first year in the Bachelor of Architectural Studies at UCT, a researcher at the African Centre for Cities (ACC) at UCT, the Curator and strategic support for the UCT University of the Futures Project, and a practicing architect at Stewart & Partners (S&P) based in Cape Town.

Dr Wayne Muller
Dr Wayne Muller

Wayne Muller holds a PhD degree in Musicology from Stellenbosch University, after having completed both an Honours and Master’s Degree in Journalism as well as a BA degree in Sociology. His early career was spent as a journalist at the EikestadnuusGeorge Herald and Die Burger, where he wrote articles on topics from politics and business to travel and the arts. After working in the magazine industry as an editor of corporate magazines, he joined Die Burger in Cape Town in October 2007 as Assistant Arts Editor and specialist writer on not only classical music and opera, but also dance and theatre. He joined Stellenbosch University in 2011, and has been a Research Fellow of the Africa Open Institute for Music, Research and Innovation there since 2018.

As an academic in the field of opera studies, he has delivered research papers at the South African Society for Research in Music (SASRIM), as well as an international symposium in Bayreuth, Germany on opera production in post-apartheid South Africa. In 2023, he published his first monograph, Opera in Cape Town – The Critic’s Voice. He is also co-editor of the book Eoan – Our Story (2013), an oral history book on the opera activities of the Eoan Group of Cape Town.

He continues to write articles on and reviews of opera and classical music on a freelance basis for Die Burger, and has produced a documentary film, Behind the Music, about the Stellenbosch International Chamber Music Festival. He has served as a judge of classical music performances for the kykNET Fiësta Awards, Kanna Awards (KKNK), the Hans Gabor Belvedere International Singing Competition (media jury), as well as the Fleur du Cape Theatre Awards. Also, he has been a member of the programme selection committees of the arts festivals Suidoosterfees, KKNK, Aardklop, and Vrystaat Kunstefees.

Honorary Patrons

Antoinette Lohmann, Dr Barry Smith.