Ama - We, the Basques 
	   Coro Easo directed by Xalba
	  Rallo Sagarazu
 Coro Easo directed by Xalba
	  Rallo Sagarazu 
	   96 page hardback book and
	  CD
 96 page hardback book and
	  CD 
	  ISBN 2-913542-06-9 / OPUS III OPS 30-271 [62:53]
	  
	  Crotchet
	   Amazon
	  UK  Amazon USA
	  
	   
	  
	  Like Opus III's Naples: City of Celebrations from the 14th
	  to the 19th, this is another hybrid book/CD release, though
	  this time a single disc packaged inside the back cover of a hardback marginally
	  larger than a conventional CD jewel-case. The book is a copiously illustrated
	  account of the Basque people, divided into four chapters on History, Today,
	  Culture & Music, together with the texts of the 19 songs and a useful
	  outline of the development of the Easo Choir. As with the previous book,
	  the text is multilingual, this time in English, French and Spanish, helpfully
	  colour-coded so that English-speakers can happily avoid anything that isn't
	  printed in green - except the back cover, where the English is in red and
	  the Spanish green. This is a beautifully produced package, infinitely better
	  than the standard flimsily booklet in plastic box, and gives the encouraging
	  impression that someone really cares about the release.
	  
	  There are 19 songs written by mainly 20th century composers. The
	  earliest was born in 1828 (J.B. Elizamburu), the latest in 1935 (T.
	  Aragüés Bernad). I would imagine that the names of the song-writers
	  will be without exception unfamiliar to virtually all the readers of Classical
	  Music on the Web, so suffice to say that collectively this album documents
	  a body of work in the folk tradition, with songs that either address the
	  universal themes of love, sorrow, nature and the vagaries of existence, or
	  alternatively paint little scenes from daily life.
	  
	  Formed in San Sebastian in 1937, by men returning from the Spanish Civil
	  War, who due to their politics were unable to join the existing choirs, the
	  Easo Choir has developed over the years into something much more extensive.
	  Originally a choir of bass voices, the intention has been to maintain and
	  develop the Basque tradition of choir music and a cappella singing. More
	  recently the choir started recruiting children from the schools of San Sebastian,
	  establishing the Easo Txiki (Small Easo), a religious choir. In 1995 a Gregorian
	  chapel choir was added, and now there is also a juvenile choir and a chamber
	  music choir. Thus musical director Xalba Rallo Sagarazu actually has five
	  choirs dedicated to various aspects of music under his control. However,
	  on this disc we hear the original male choir, long since expanded to include
	  the full range of voices from bass to tenor.
	  
	  The programme is clearly designed as a showcase, offering songs of great
	  diversity. A thread of melancholy seems to run through both music and words,
	  a clear pastoral poetic spirit greatly in evidence. There are parallels with
	  Welsh choral singing, and moments which recall Vaughan-Williams hymn settings,
	  yet of course this is a very different choral world to that of English song.
	  A mournful tenor voice laments against a soft choral backdrop on 'Eagles
	  Over the Mountains', a warning against "perfidious love", while 'My Home'
	  is a tribute to the joys of "a little white house", a lullaby melody which
	  leads to the title song. Ama means 'mother', a song of homesickness and longing
	  to return. Against these a group of 'Basque Songs' offer tributes to a bird
	  in an apple tree and a cuckoo in an oak, while 'The Old Ladies' is a jovial
	  a cappella number about spinsters seeking a husband.
	  
	  It may be that unfamiliarity results in a certain distance, and I found this
	  programme easier to appreciate than to wholeheartedly enjoy. The singing
	  is unquestionably excellent, as is the recorded sound, which produces a natural,
	  warm sound-stage in a rather reverberate acoustic. Lovers of choral music
	  and folk music may find this a most welcome change from more familiar material,
	  and there is no doubt that the programme serves it's purpose of introducing
	  both Basque song and something of the culture in an elegantly presented and
	  most accessible way.
	  
	  Reviewer
	  
	   Gary S. Dalkin
	  
	  