Categories
Recording

Cifras Imaginarias

Música para tañer a dos vihuelas
Ariel Abramovich, Jacob Heringman
53:21
Arcana A 428
Cabezón, Crequillon, Josquin, da Milano, da Modena, Palero, Vasquez, Verdelot, Willaert & Cancionero de Uppsala

[dropcap]A[/dropcap]riel Abramovich and Jacob Heringman have joined forces to produce an interesting and varied anthology of music from the 15th and 16th centuries arranged by them for two vihuelas. Very little music survives for this combination – a mere 17 pieces arranged by Enríquez de Valderrábano for vihuelas tuned at the unison, or a minor third, a fourth, or a fifth apart – but, as John Griffiths argues in his liner notes, vihuelas were almost certainly played together in a variety of social contexts, and the present CD gives an idea of what this lost repertory may have been like. The players use two vihuelas by Martin Haycock, both tuned to g’, and they take it in turns to play a bass vihuela in d’ by Marcus Wesche. The word “Cifras” in the title, literally means “figures”, and refers to the numbers used in tablature, and by association tablature or music notated in tablature.

The first track, Josquin’s Illibata Dei Virgo nutrix, shows how the five voices are distributed between the two vihuelas: Abramovich (vihuela in g’) plays voices I and IV, while Heringman (vihuela in d’) plays voices II, III and V. This is similar to how Valdarrábano distributes voices, and it works well here. (Some other intabulators, for example Phalèse, arranging music for two lutes, have each lute doubling the bass, which creates a fuller texture, but loses clarity of line.) The first six bars are played by Abramovich alone, followed by Heringman alone for the next six. In bars 57-65 there is interplay between pairs of voices: short phrases of four, five and six notes for voices II and V on the bass vihuela, are echoed by similar phrases for voices I and IV on the other instrument. Having two vihuelas enables polyphonic lines to be preserved, for example, in bars 13-14, where voices IV and V cross over each other. If this passage were played on a single instrument, the two melodic lines would be reduced to a meaningless repetition of chords. Other pieces by Josquin are Dulces exuviae, Pater Noster, and Ave Maria, all timeless and sublime. I assume the divisions in these pieces are the players’ own, because they are idiomatic and tasteful, enhance the music, and help maintain forward movement; many 16th-century intabulations have an excess of divisions, which almost become an end in themselves. Although Antonio de Cabezón describes his keyboard music as being “obras de musica para tecla, arpa y vihuela”, it is impossible to play most of it on a single vihuela: the overall range is too wide, and having divisions for both hands on the keyboard creates technical problems for a vihuelist. However, it does fit remarkably well on two vihuelas tuned a fourth apart for Thomas Créquillon’s Un gay bergier, a “Pavana Italiana”, and Claudin de Sermisy’s Dont vient cela. There are two pieces attributed to Juan Vasquez. The first, Dizen a mi que los amores he, is the five-part setting from the Uppsala manuscript. It has quite a few false relations, including a particularly squelchy one at bar 22. The duo have concocted their own ending of fast chords, which I don’t think enhances the overall mood of the piece. The second is the well-known De los álamos vengo, madre, played with invigorating gusto. I enjoyed listening to the CD – they play well together, and capture a variety of moods. The only frustrating thing was trying to navigate my way through the CD on my computer – the track numbers and titles are given in some curious eastern alphabet which is totally incomprehensible to me.

Stewart McCoy

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Categories
Recording

Obrecht: Missa Grecorum & motets

The Brabant Ensemble, Stephen Rice
74:13
Hyperion CDA68216
+ Agnus Dei (attrib.), Cuius sacrata viscera, O beate Basili, Mater Patris, Salve regina a6, Sancta Dei genitrix

[dropcap]T[/dropcap]hanks to a stunningly vivid portrait by Hans Memling, Jacob Obrecht is one of the very few early church composers we can put a face to. This is particularly pertinent in the case of Obrecht, whose distinctive music makes his stand out anyway in the generation of Josquin. Mainly represented by some 26 masses, a considerable total for the period, Obrecht also composed many motets, four of which are represented here, along with an isolated motet attributed to him by Rob Wegman.

Like his older contemporary Ockeghem, he seems to delight in mathematical complexity, and in the Missa Grecorum  the unidentified cantus undergoes a particularly tortuous series of treatments. Also like Ockeghem, Obrecht is capable of writing music of surpassing lyricism, but just occasionally I feel both men get a little bogged down in their own cleverness. This is certainly the case with the present mass, and it has to be said the performance by the Brabant Ensemble also doesn’t seem to be quite up to their normal transcendent standard. Whether by design or lack of it, extended passages of the mass seem to be sung without much passion or expression and there are uncharacteristic moments of dodgy intonation. I would be interested to read Rob Wegman’s reasons for attributing the anonymous Wroclaw Codex Agnus Dei  to Obrecht – it sounds rather formulaic and frankly too dull to me to be by a composer of the first rank such as Obrecht. I am normally a huge Brabant Ensemble fan, admiring the passionate and illuminating performances they have given in the past of often wholly neglected material, but I’m afraid this recording didn’t entirely do it for me.

D. James Ross

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Categories
Recording

Nuptiæ factæ sunt – musica ad Urbino al tempo di Raffaello

Ensemble Bella Gerit
69:00
Bella Gerit BG0207
Music by Brumel, Elimot, De La Fage, Festa, Jacotin, Josquin, Lupus, Moulu, Mouton, Richafort, De Silva & Willaert

[dropcap]T[/dropcap]his CD juxtaposes music by ‘big names’ such as Willaert, Brumel, Festa, Josquin and Mouton with less familiar masters such as de Silva, Richafort and Moulu and the even more obscure, such as Brunet, Jacotin, de la Fage and Elimot. The male voices of the ensemble are joined by gamba, bombard, organ, lute and sackbuts for generally effective performances of this mainly early 16th-century polyphony from the Medici Codex of 1518, the property of Lorenzo, lesser grandson of his Magnificent namesake. Painted by Raffaello and carved in marble by Michelangelo, it is hardly surprising that Lorenzo attracted the finest musicians to his opulent Court, and the fine fruits of their genius are to be found in the Medici Codex. The ensemble Bella Gerit produce a generally rich and impressive sound, except where male alto Alessandro Ciofini is forced into the soprano range and he sounds tentative and strained, as unfortunately in the second track on the CD, Brumel’s “Sicut Lilium”. There are imaginative instrumentations, including effectively strident accounts for tenor voice, bombard, sackbuts and drum of Mouton’s “Exalta Regina Galliae” and “Domine, salvum fac regem” and versions of some motets for solo voice and organ. Less successful is Josquin’s lament “Nimphes des Bois”, which sounds a bit lumpy. There is the odd infelicity in the English translation of the booklet – there would appear to be a ready living to be made translating Italian programme notes into English – but nothing which renders it incomprehensible, and full texts of the motets and translations are supplied. This new fashion of comprehensively exploring a specific choirbook provides a very useful picture of music-making in one place and at one point in time, allowing for close comparison between the works of composers, who often knew one another and worked together.

D. James Ross

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