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Firenze 1616

Le Poème Harmonique, Vincent Dumestre
58:43
Alpha 321
Music by Belli, Giulio Caccini & Saracini

[dropcap]T[/dropcap]he centerpiece of this 2007 recording, re-released as part of the Alpha retrospective series, is Domenico Belli’s opera Orfeo Dolente, a composer and a work entirely unknown to me even by reputation. Dumetre and his Alpha label specialize in ‘the alternative’, and in this CD they are exploring the Florentine music and composers who came to be overshadowed by Monteverdi. As so often our focus on prime composers and works proves to be counterproductive, is this case eclipsing music of considerable merit and beauty. Like Monteverdi’s account of the Orpheus story, Belli’s is a court opera, modest in the resources it requires and highly refined in style. Dumestre has assembled a galaxy of superb young singers and instrumentalists who fully mine the unexpected treasures in this unknown masterpiece. To a great extent though it is the instrumental accompaniment, dark and harmonically unexpected, which is the particular strength of Belli’s remarkable setting. The opera is preceded by two equally intriguing sequences of instrumental and vocal music on related themes featuring works by Saracini, Caccini and Malvezzi. I admire immensely the courage of performers who research the unfamiliar backwaters of a period to unearth neglected treasures – it is so much more difficult, time-consuming and challenging than simply producing yet another recording of already familiar material, but so much more informative and valuable.

D. James Ross

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Maria Weiss: favola in musica

New old music
51:16
1607 Records RC171114
Music by Bach, Caldara, Durón, Handel, Kapsberger, Machaut, Mitterer , Monteverdi, Purcell & Vivaldi

[dropcap]O[/dropcap]ne outcome of the fragmentation of the Classical record industry has been the rise of artist-driven recording projects. Often highly personal, sometimes crowd-funded, I suppose they are the equivalent of so-called ‘vanity publishing’. Yet at their best such recordings can provide thought-provoking new insights into the music we listen to. This CD from the Austrian mezzo and actress Maria Weiss certainly falls into that category. To start with, it looks good, being superbly presented in a 216-page hardcover book that includes German and English texts in addition to dozens of sumptuous colour photographs of the singer’s native Carinthia and the artists. EMR readers will recognise the title of the CD as the subtitle of Monteverdi’s Orfeo, ‘a fable (or as Weiss prefers, ‘fairy tale’) in music, and this is indeed Maria Weiss’ own story in music.

Her voice is distinctive, a beautifully burnished and rounded mezzo that at the same time remains fundamentally pure in tone, vibrato being sparingly used for expressive purpose. All this can be heard on the opening track Machaut’s famous unaccompanied virelai ‘Foy porter’, which is perfectly pitched throughout and sung with arresting attention to the sense of the words. This close attention to text, doubtless a spin off from the singer’s other career as an actress, is a feature of the whole disc, on which Weiss sings in no fewer than six languages. Given that, it is hardly surprising that diction is not always perfectly clear.

Much of the repertoire is familiar, in this category tracks that deserve special mention including a well projected and appropriately ornamented account of La Musica’s Prologue to Orfeo  and an elegantly shaped ‘Qui d’Amor’ from Handel’s Ariodante  (though both here and certainly in the da capo  of ‘Cara speme’ (Giulio Cesare) I’d ideally have liked a few more ornaments and sadly Weiss does not appear to own to a trill.) The ‘Qui d’Amor’, by the way, is also included on an evocatively filmed video bonus, though I had problems finding it on my PC. There is also a touching account of Bach’s ‘Bist du bei mir’.

‘New old music’ is represented by premiere recordings of three extracts from Sebastian Durón’s Italianate zarzuela El imposible mayor en amor, le vence Amor  (1710), Jupiter’s arietta ‘Otro adora’ being a real charmer, especially when sung in such beguiling fashion as it is here. Finally there are two items by the contemporary composer Wolfgang Mitterer that take their inspiration from early music and Maria Weiss’ voice. The first, ‘Remember Me’ is a take on Dido’s Lament (which Weiss also sings in Purcell’s version), uses a range of instrumental and electronic devices against the voice singing (largely) the original vocal line to create an impression of ever-growing melancholy and fragmentation. The effect is curiously compelling. But the second, ‘Niemand falle’ – which takes text from act 2 of Orfeo  rendered by Weiss in what I in my old-fashioned innocence would call Sprechgesang, but which I gather from the notes is an example of hip hop – left me struggling, I fear.

Adept accompaniments are provided by the rather tortuously named Milleseicentosette, from among whom theorbist Rasario Conte emerges to give intimate and technically proficient performances of two Kapsberger pieces. The whole CD is somehow immensely compelling in an at times ethereal way, drawing the listener into a sense of the other-worldly only enhanced by the church acoustic. It is certainly different and despite the rather short playing time I urge readers to hear it.

Brian Robins

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Haydn: Violin Concertos

Isabelle Faust, Münchener Kammerorchester, Christoph Poppen
61:41
Pan Classics PC 10353

[dropcap]T[/dropcap]his is a re-release of a 1997 recording and, if Isabelle Faust’s playing is meticulous (who would expect anything else from one of the world’s best?), the Münchener Kammerorchester are a trifle leaden-footed in their role of accompanist; essentially it comes back to the old question of articulating by different bow strokes rather than giving notes a little breathing space, especially in the bass department. The rather pathetic distant harpsichord would have been better left out altogether. So hats off to Ms. Faust for genuinely impressive renditions of these three fine pieces, but wouldn’t it be nice if she would re-visit them with a classical orchestra as her partner…

Brian Clark

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Bernhard Romberg: Cello Concertos 1 & 5

Davit Melkonyan cello, Kölner Akademie, Michael Alexander Willens
58:36
cpo 777 969-2

[dropcap]R[/dropcap]omberg is a name one reads over and over again in histories of music – of course, Bernhard of that ilk was but one of many – but this is the first time I have knowingly heard music by any of them; and what an experience! These are two beautiful cello concertos, both in three movements (one in B flat major, the other in the even less cello-friendly key of F sharp minor) and both oozing gorgeous melodies and virtuoso writing in buckets for the soloist, which Davit Melkonyan despatches with apparent ease. This is, of course, just the latest in a long line of hits from Willens & Co., with their signature approach to discovering great music off the beaten track; it takes a leap of faith to thinking that there must be a reason why someone’s name keeps popping up to actually performing and recording the music, but cpo and especially this orchestra have shown time and again that there are many absolute jewels awaiting re-discovery, among them these two gems. More strength to their elbow!

Brian Clark

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The Deer’s Call: Arvo Pärt / William Byrd

The Sixteen, Harry Christophers
66:52
CORO COR16140
+ Tallis

[dropcap]E[/dropcap]very year The Sixteen sets off on a Choral Pilgrimage around the cathedrals and major churches and chapels of Britain, spread over several months. And every year a compact disc is released which consists of the (predominantly) Renaissance music being performed on the Pilgrimage. My admittedly not comprehensive experience of attending concerts and listening to discs has been that the discs have tended to sound like smoother, even watered down, versions of the concerts. However, the current Choral Pilgrimage disc is such that this is unlikely to be the case in 2016.

Each Pilgrimage is built round a theme, and this year it juxtaposes the music of William Byrd and Arvo Pärt. The best Renaissance choral music lends itself well to being performed beside modern or even avant-garde and although Pärt’s music could hardly be described as cutting edge or revolutionary, it has nonetheless a profoundly late 20th-early / 21st century sensibility that, on its own terms, is radical, Pärt having re-thought his musical style from the roots, and in so doing influenced many other gifted composers in different countries, such as Eric Whitacre and Paul Mealor. It is an excellent idea to place him beside Byrd, as the more vertical style of the one sets the more horizontal style of the other in mutually advantageous perspective. That said, the first two tracks are pieces by Byrd that could, in these terms, be described as vertical: the remarkable canonic Diliges Dominum  the intricacies of which are beautifully described by John Milsom in his fine sleevenotes, and Christe qui lux; usually the inclusion of Byrd’s almost gimmicky setting of this homophonic hymn is a wasted opportunity when one of his more profound pieces could have been selected, but The Sixteen’s version has a claim to be the best on disc, as they sing it with a warmth and engagement absent from the other dozen or more recordings. This warmth and engagement in performance extends to the following track by Byrd, Emendemus in melius. Particularly since Joseph Kerman’s heralding it as a significant piece in Byrd’s oeuvre it seems to have been sung on disc with a degree of inhibited reverence, but The Sixteen respond to the urgency of the text without hamming, and again theirs has a claim to be the best of the dozen commercial recordings of this motet.

On a personal level I am interested that Miserere nostri  is being touted as a composition jointly by Tallis (to whom it is usually attributed) and Byrd. Back in the early 1990s when I was coediting Byrd Studies  (CUP, 1992) I suggested to one of our contributors that his contribution should be a consideration of whether Byrd had a hand in the composition of this work; the contributor went on to submit another proposal which led to a fine and most acceptable essay, so I am intrigued that, in the light of John Milsom’s recent edition of the Cantiones sacrae  of 1575 to which Tallis and Byrd each contributed what boils down to seventeen items, this line of research is seeing the light of day. This and Byrd’s own related Miserere mihi  – both virtuoso canonic works but still delightful music – receive warm (that word again) performances from The Sixteen, and the disc ends with a barnstorming rendition of Byrd’s tripartite Tribue Domine.

However, the outstanding performance and the dominating piece of music is Byrd’s enormous eight-part, ten-minute Ad Dominum cum tribularer  placed appropriately at the centre of the running order. This version is forty seconds quicker than The Sixteen’s previous recording from 1989. Mainly this is explained by Harry Christophers’ dramatic acceleration at the words “Sagittae potentis acutae” (Sharp arrows of the mighty). This passage also illustrates in microcosm the wider decorum of the repertory on this disc: a homophonic passage within a predominantly polyphonic structure reflecting what I described above as the more vertical pieces by Pärt set beside the more horizontal works by Byrd. Ad Dominum  also illustrates the debt which Byrd owes to his Franco-Flemish predecessors, those composers such as Gombert and Clemens from the so-called Lost Generation between Josquin and Palestrina whose works are only now becoming known and appreciated, and whose influence on English composers is only just beginning to be recognised. In the case of Byrd’s motet, he seems to have taken his theme for the opening of the second half of the motet, at the words “Heu mihi” (Woe is me), from the same point in the work titled Quemadmodum  which is attributed to Taverner and survives in sources which would have been known to Byrd. It is an astonishingly progressive piece if it is indeed by Taverner, magnificent in its own right but heavily influenced by the Continentals mentioned above, so much so that an attribution to either Gombert or Clemens might well raise fewer eyebrows than the existing one to Taverner. Also, in the same passage “Heu mihi”, Byrd uses is a descending melismatic motif repeated in the inner parts which is identical to one used in a very similar way in the Kyrie of Clemens’ Missa Pastores quidnam vidistis  and to an extent elsewhere in Clemens’ mass, which survives in a source also known to Byrd. It is a moot point as to whether the acceleration adds much to an already committed performance. Harry again sticks to the original manuscript source and has his second sopranos sing an E natural in the word “conclamabant” in the concluding bars, where most editors and choirs employ a flat. The natural certainly provides a further flash of exoticism in an already passionate piece of writing by a probably still relatively young Byrd. Possibly the recording by I Fagiolini has the edge over The Sixteen by sounding – no pun intended – edgier, but of the many fine recordings (now up to at least half a dozen) of this remarkable and challenging motet, this version has a claim to be the best of the rest, and is yet another reason for recommending this excellently sung and planned recording.

Richard Turbet

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Luther: Ein feste Burg ist unser Gott

Chorales, Motets and Sacred Concertos
Kammerchor der Frauenkirche Dresden, Instrumenta Musica, Matthias Grünert
69:01
Rondeau Productions ROP6074

[dropcap]T[/dropcap]his fine CD presents six of Luther’s most important poetic texts in a variety of settings (organ and choral hymn tunes, motets, sacred concertos, amongst others): Nun komm der Heiden Heiland, Vom Himmel hoch, Gelobet seist du Jesus Christ, Christ lag in Todesbanden, Komm heiliger Geist, Vater unser in Himmelreich and the title piece, Ein feste Burg. Prominent amongst the sources are the Görlitzer Tablaturbuch (organ settings by Scheidt) and Musae Sioniae by Michael Praetorius. Other composers include Schein, Hassler, Pachelbel, Hammerschmidt, Eccard, Franck and Schütz. Each section is rounded off by a dance from Terpsichore.

Most of the 42 tracks are under two minutes, with only three tracks lasting longer than twice that length; many are extracts from larger works, but the prominence of the chorale melody throughout gives the recital a satisfying overall shape. The chamber choir of the Dresden Frauenkirche sing well, and Instrumenta Musica (recorder, cornetto, strings, trumpets, trombones, and continuo) lend stylish support throughout. Two different organs based on historical models are used for the keyboard material. As we approach the anniversary of the Reformation in 2017, this CD is a fine illustration of the widespread musical influence of Luther.

Brian Clark

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Cherubini/Cambini: String Trios

Trio Hegel
64:30
Tactus TC740001

[dropcap]T[/dropcap]hese two composers’ music could scarcely be more different; Giuseppe Maria Cambini’s three trios, op. 2, are easy-going pieces, the first pair consisting of two movements while the third adds a slow movement to the pattern, while Cherubini’s “string trios” are, in fact, nothing of the sort – rather they are instrumental performances of solfeggi  written for the composer’s singing students at the Paris Conservatoire! While the former are aimed at amateur performers (and audiences), the latter must have filled Cherubini’s pupils with dread, such are the demands, in terms of both range and contrapuntal complexity.

The present performers are, let us say, more comfortable in the Cambini than the Cherubini – the String Trio is an unforgiving medium, with even the slightest slip instantly brought to note, and regretfully there are quite a few to endure; these really are extremely virtuoso chamber concertos with the technical demands spread across the board.

Brian Clark

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Haydn: Symphonies

Scottish Chamber Orchestra, Robin Ticciati
77:00
Linn CKD 500
Symphonies 31, 70, 101

Haydn: Symphonies
Royal Northern Sinfonia, Rebecca Miller
69:54
Signum Classics SIGCD 434
Symphonies 52, 53, 59

[dropcap]E[/dropcap]ven modest exposure to Haydn’s music (and I’ve also been assessing a new Creation) is liable to recall to mind the old adage that he remains the most neglected of all the great composers. Among the six symphonies on these two CDs, most of them little known, there are constant reminders of his quite astonishing originality, whether it be in the amazing C alto horn parts of Symphony No. 31, ‘The Hornsignal’, the wit of Symphony No 70. in D, the passion and drama of No. 52 in C minor or the irresistably good-humoured maturity of No. 101 in D, ‘The Clock’. This is a group of works that spans much of Haydn’s creative life, ranging from 1765 (No. 31), four years after he entered the service of the Esterházy court up until ‘The Clock’ of 1794, a work composed for Haydn’s triumphant concert series in London. A couple of textural points: in the finale of No. 70 Ticciati employs the timpani and trumpet parts later added by Haydn and missing from most editions (mine included) until rediscovered by H. C. Robbins Landon, while Miller’s performance of No. 59, ‘The Imperial’ includes both finales, the operatic overture originally used by Haydn and the movement marked Capriccio with which he later replaced it.

The two discs containing these works start with much in common. Both feature highly regarded chamber orchestras playing modern rather than period instruments, though the Scottish Chamber Orchestra does field natural horns and trumpets along with, I suspect, hard-headed timpani sticks. The string forces are identical at 8-6-4-4-2, rather too large for the Easterházy symphonies, but appropriate for ‘The Clock’. Both opt for keyboard continuo – still a controversial topic – Ticciati a sometimes hyperactive fortepiano, Miller a barely audible harpsichord. The two sets of performances also have much in common. Repeats are universally observed, perhaps rather too assiduously for some tastes by Ticciati, who observes not only exposition repeats but all double-bar repeats, even those of the recapitulation of minuets. There is much to commend. Tempos are throughout largely unexceptionable and it is good to find minuets taken at a sensible, forward moving speed and andantes that nowhere drag. Only in the case of the Adagio of No. 31 did I feel a greater sense of forward movement might have been preferable, but that may have as much to do with all those repeats as actual tempo. The playing of both orchestras is exemplary, with fresh, well-balanced woodwinds and splendidly articulated strings; happily gone are the days when modern strings smothered articulation in vibrato, a measure of the influence the HIP movement has had on modern players. Ticciati’s natural horns are also expertly played, but that brings me to a major caveat about these discs. It seems to me pointless to have natural horns braying brazenly, only to have their boisterously outdoor effect vitiated by effete-sounding modern strings. Few composers suffer more from the sound of such string playing than Haydn. To remove the greater, more robust and earthier character of period strings is to deprive his music of much of its muscular strength and energy. Or to put more colourfully, it is to brush off the country dust and clean the mud from his boots in favour of polite, inappropriate gentility.

As already noted, there is much to praise here and my major reservation will have varying (or no) significance according to taste, though I suspect most readers of a specialized early music review will understand the point being made.

Brian Robins

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