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Gramophone The Archive


March 2002 - page                                  
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Harmonice Musices Odhecaton 0 Agricola De tous biens playne. Si dedero Tandernaken Anonymous Dit le
Bourg,uygnon. Fortuna desperata. Je suis d'Alemagne. Numqua fue pena major. Se congie pris. La Spagna Brume! Fors seulement Busnois Le Serviteur Caron Helas que pourra devenir Ghiselin Favus distillans. Fors seulement Hayne van Ghizeghem De toils biens plaine Isaac Jay pris amours. La morra. Tartara Japart Vray dieu d'amours Josquin Desprez Adieu mes 'amours. Baisez moy, ma doulce amye. La Bernardina. De tous biens playne Lapicida Tandernaken Obrecht Fors seulement. J'ay pris amours. Otto Ave Maria.
Si sumpsero. Tsat een meskin Pinarol Fortuna clesperata Stappen Bead pacifici/De tons biens plaine Stokem Brunette
Fretwork (Richard Boothby, Richard
Campbell, Wendy Gillespie, Julia Hodgson, William Hunt, Susanna Pell viols) Harmonia Mundi HMU90 7291 (76 minutes: DDD)
A superbly programmed celebration of the birth of music printing, brilliantly played
PETRUCC swurtmet infirm 00H6CATON r !WM
A reviewer can pay few compliments more genuine than to return to a given recording again and again, for sheer pleasure. Having taken in 76 minutes of music at one sitting the first time 'A around, that's just what I've been doing with Fretwork's latest offering, which sees them delve earlier than ever into the repertory of early instrumental music. The occasion is the anniversary of the establishment in Venice 500 years ago of the first music-printing presses (as I write the date is still 2001 — just). This is certainly the most stylish of several recordings made in connection with Ottaviano Petrucci's epoch-making achievement.
To present a recital of these song arrangements and 'purely' instrumental. pieces exclusively on viols is a novelty worth commenting on. Most other recordings of this repertory uses mixed consort (David Munrow's 'Art of the Netherlands' is one of the most famous examples); part of the charm of this disc is that it seduces you into the belief that the music was actually intended for viols. Ghiselin's Fors settlement setting sounds for all the world like an Elizabethan In no-mine, and pieces like Agricola's Si dedero and its companion, Obrecht's Si sumpsero, sound as though they have 'chamber music' written all over them. (Incidentally, although the insert-notes are silent on the matter of instruments, the group plays on copies of late 16th-century instruments without soundposts, which significantly alters the sonority.) Fretwork's single-mindedness is further emphasised by their eschewal of a guest singer, an option that would have guaranteed more variety on the surface level, and allowed them perhaps a greater range of options. That they have not done so is admirable. Another strength of the recital is programming. Sheer generosity aside (there are 32 tracks), it is a treat to have so many of my favourite pieces here. The 15th century's hit-parade is also reflected, with no fewer than four settings of De teas biens plaint, three of Foss settlement, and two each of Fortuna desperata, Tay pris amours and Tandernaken. There are lesser-known pieces too, but always, it seems, the viols' advocacy of the music (and of their suitability to it) is uppermost. Caron's He/as que poutaw devenir has crossrhythms and syncopations that bristle with an energy born of perfect ensemble.
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Slight reservations (the occasional odd choice of ficta, or the general reluctance to ornament in a context that clearly lends itself to it) seem of little moment. Lovers of polyphony of all sorts, in all its abstraction and all its sensuousness, have something special in store. And lovers of chamber music of later periods will find themselves on surprisingly similar territory. Enough said: hats off. Fabrice Fitch

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