
Early music group La Mer Consort performs Sunday in Manhattan Beach
What if you could delight in a freshly painted Botticelli, leaf through a crisp new edition of Boccaccio, and swoon to the latest music by Telemann and Palestrina?
But you can’t, because the heyday of the Renaissance was 500 years ago and you’re stuck in the age of Jeff Koons, John Grisham, and Snoop Dogg. The boat you long for is, well, long gone. Or is it?

In 1983, La Mer Consort made its concert home at Trinity Lutheran Church in Manhattan Beach, where they’ve given two performances a year, during the Easter and Christmas holidays.
Meanwhile, Zuehlke, with the steadfastness of a Medici prince, ran the class and oversaw the concerts until she retired in 2007 at the age of 92. And that was when Brenda Bittner stepped up to assume the baton.
“I was a student of hers for some 30-odd years,” Bittner says. “I joined the class in ‘77.”
In 2015, however, Mira Costa turned off the lights when the South Bay Adult School cancelled its Wednesday evening classes. Had the Dark Ages returned? Was Recorders Plus about to become history? Or would they re-establish themselves elsewhere?
When the old becomes the new
“I have some very long-term people whose Wednesday nights have belonged to La Mer for longer than I’ve been there, 40 years or so,” Bittner says, “so I really felt like I couldn’t change nights. So I went to the Manhattan Beach Parks and Recreation and they welcomed us there, where we have been now for four years.”
Recorders Plus meets from 6:30 to 9 p.m. each Wednesday in the building next to the Art Center on Manhattan Beach Blvd., across from Polliwog Park.
“I do half an hour of technique,” Bittner says, “and then the rest of the time, two hours, is spent on the music that we’re going to perform.” They’ve played at the Joslyn Center, plus senior centers and libraries, usually four to eight concerts a year.
As an early music group, that means no Chuck Berry or Little Richard. For that matter, no Mozart or Beethoven either. The cutoff point (although there could be exceptions) is 1750, or the year of the death of Johann Sebastian Bach.
“I like Renaissance music,” Bittner says, “because a lot of the music has very interesting parts for alto, soprano, tenor, bass, and when you get to the Baroque there’s sometimes a virtuosic instrument on top and then everybody else just kind of plods along.”
“Anyway, I have two sets of recorders. Everybody in the class plays at least one, and many play all the recorders, the C and F fingerings in both treble and bass clefs.
“The recorder is a good instrument for people who have played in the past (perhaps in band, while in high school) and want to get back into music,” Bittner continues. An embouchure (or mouthpiece) isn’t required as it is for a reed or brass instrument, and thus one doesn’t need the same degree of lip control that one does for those instruments. Which is another way of saying that playing in this group can be satisfying (and fun) without being demanding.
The only prerequisite is that the musician be able to read music. Apparently what isn’t a prerequisite is being able to sing or dance, although there is a limited amount of both in what is otherwise an instrumental ensemble.
“Much of the music we play was originally vocal music,” Bittner says. “The range is good for our instruments and is often in four or five parts.” However, “We do occasionally sing because we want to show how the music goes, and we also dance, because again we’re trying to show what the music was used for. But I welcome singers; it would be wonderful to have a good group of singers.”
Then maybe we could hear tantalizing excerpts from Monteverdi’s operas and not just a madrigal from time to time.
For the record, the concert this Sunday features a short dance, one of those dating back to the Inns of Court in London, which were danced by lawyers in the fall or winter, every week for over 100 years.
“It was considered a requirement for a gentleman to know how to dance these particular dances,” Bittner explains. “The law students actually got fined if they didn’t show up for the dances. We’re going to do just one dance out of the eight sequences that they did.”
The repertoire of extant Renaissance music may seem limited, especially in that many compositions have been lost, but “new” old works are still coming to light, and in a manner that might have been unthinkable less than 25 years ago.
“The internet is a wonderful resource,” Bittner replies when asked if she’s still making discoveries. “There is music going up all the time and I’m forever finding new things, new composers. It’s very exciting. The music is well done and there’s a lot of it. People just don’t realize there’s all this music out there.”

Bittner currently lives in the Hollywood Riviera section of Redondo Beach, but maybe I should be careful before writing this. Oops, too late. “It’s actually in the city limits of Torrance, but the mailing address is Redondo Beach. If you put Torrance on the envelope they won’t deliver it, but Torrance wants me to pay taxes.”
Like most of us, Bittner wandered in from somewhere else.

It served her well, and eventually she and her significant other joined Zuehlke’s group. “She was 63 when I joined the class,” Bittner says of La Mer’s founder, “and I was 64 when I took over the class.
“The class size runs from 15 to 18, and most of my students have stayed with me over long periods of time.” About half male, half female, they range in age from 55 to 83, which might suggest that a few of them were actually born during the Renaissance. On the other hand, Recorders Plus is certainly not an elitist or closed group. Far from it.
“We’re always looking for new people,” Bittner says. “Class starts back up the second week of January and we’d be delighted to have anybody join us.”
And why should anyone sign up to become a belated Renaissance musician?
“First of all, I want the students to enjoy playing,” Bittner replies. “It’s focused on the students. Also, the reason we do the performances is that we want people in the community to know this music exists. It’s beautiful music, and it’s really quite varied.”
Plus you get to dress in cool outfits which lends an added touch to each of their concerts.
And speaking of which, there’s one coming up that not only includes the dance from the Inns of Court, but three variations (of the more than 40 that survive) of the tune “L’homme arme” (The Armed Man) from the 1400s, music by Busnois, Palestrina, and the Flemish composer Philip van Wilder, who was influential in the court of Henry VIII, as well as two Christmas pieces from the later Renaissance. “It’s kind of a little bit of everything,” Bittner says.
La Mer Consort, directed by Brenda Bittner, performs Medieval and Renaissance music for the holidays at 4 p.m. on Sunday at Trinity Lutheran Church, Eleventh and Rowell, Manhattan Beach. Free will offering. (310) 378-8750. (For information about the Recorders Plus class, which meets Wednesday evenings from 6:30 to 9 p.m., starting again in January, go to the Manhattan Beach Parks and Recreation Website or call (310) 802-5448) ER