Lucie Skeaping presents a concert from the 2016 York Early Music Festival, which features lutenist Thomas Dunford alongside Persian percussionist and zarb player Kevyan Chemirani.
York Early Music: EMS 17 July
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Richard Tarleton
Bit of a mixed bag. An interesting one-off, not sure I'd want to live with it.
The zarb [? percussion instrument] worked OK in the sprightlier Dowland dance rhythms (Mrs Winter, King of Denmark) but generally surplus to requirements I thought. Does Lucie really find the Frog Galliard "uncharacteristically jolly"? It's not just the words to the intensely sad song whose tune it is (Now O now), the tune itself is infused with gentle melancholy - here's a mixture of the two (I've posted this before, but it's lovely). It might have helped not knowing the pieces (but everyone there would have known them....). The Purcell singularly unsuccessful. I enjoyed TD's solo lute pieces - I like his playing - and ditto the hammered dulcimer, could have done with more of that. Close but no cigar.
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De Lassus
Richard Tarleton, thanks so much for the link to Les Canards Chantants youtube. It is indeed lovely.
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Richard Tarleton
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostBit of a mixed bag. An interesting one-off, not sure I'd want to live with it.
The zarb [? percussion instrument] worked OK in the sprightlier Dowland dance rhythms (Mrs Winter, King of Denmark) but generally surplus to requirements I thought. Does Lucie really find the Frog Galliard "uncharacteristically jolly"? It's not just the words to the intensely sad song whose tune it is (Now O now), the tune itself is infused with gentle melancholy - here's a mixture of the two (I've posted this before, but it's lovely). It might have helped not knowing the pieces (but everyone there would have known them....). The Purcell singularly unsuccessful. I enjoyed TD's solo lute pieces - I like his playing - and ditto the hammered dulcimer, could have done with more of that. Close but no cigar.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostBit of a mixed bag. An interesting one-off, not sure I'd want to live with it.
The zarb [? percussion instrument] worked OK in the sprightlier Dowland dance rhythms (Mrs Winter, King of Denmark) but generally surplus to requirements I thought. Does Lucie really find the Frog Galliard "uncharacteristically jolly"? It's not just the words to the intensely sad song whose tune it is (Now O now), the tune itself is infused with gentle melancholy - here's a mixture of the two (I've posted this before, but it's lovely). It might have helped not knowing the pieces (but everyone there would have known them....). The Purcell singularly unsuccessful. I enjoyed TD's solo lute pieces - I like his playing - and ditto the hammered dulcimer, could have done with more of that. Close but no cigar.
- Purcell singularly unsuccessful
- I enjoyed TD's solo lute pieces
- the hammered dulcimer, could have done with more of that
I very much agree with all these. The idea and its sound of this concert wasn’t anything terribly original..Early/Baroque music with exotic percussions has been done, I think, more interestingly by a group like L'Arpeggiata although some of their project have gone far too far to my taste.
Still, it was a nice change.
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