Editorial Board
MusicWeb International
Founding Editor Rob Barnett Editor in Chief
John Quinn Contributing Editor Ralph Moore Webmaster
David Barker Postmaster
Jonathan Woolf MusicWeb Founder Len Mullenger
The Dowland Project - Romaria ANON
Got schepfer aller dingen (early 13th century) [4:34];
Veris dulcis (Carmina Burana manuscript, c.1320) [5:14];
Pulcherrima rosa (Franus codex, late 15th century)
[5:31]; Ora pro nobis (anon. Aquitaine, 12th century)
[4:13]; La lume (Trad. Iberian) [4:22]; Dulce solum (Carmina Burana manuscript) [6:53]; Oswald von WOLKENSTEIN(c.1377-1445) Der
oben swebt [4:59]; O Beata infanta (Gregorian fragment)
[3:35]; O Rosa (Trad Iberian) [4:48]; Saudade (Valent/Surman/Stubbs)
[6:18]; Josquin DESPREZ(c.1450/55-1521) In flagellis[3:52]; Sanctus Tu solus qui facis
[4:30]; Firminus CARON (fl. c.1460-75)
Kyrie, Jesu autem transiens [3:30]; ANON
O Beata infanta(Gregorian)[3:53]; Orlando di LASSO(1532-1594) CredoLaudate dominum [3:57];
Hans NEUSIDLER(1508-1583) Ein gut Preamble [0:57]; Ein iberisch Postamble (Valent/Surman/Stubbs)
[5:48]
The Dowland
Project (John Potter (tenor); Milos Valent (violin, viola); John
Surman (soprano saxophone, bass clarinet, tenor and bass recorders);
Stephen Stubbs (baroque guitar, vihuela))
rec. Propstei St. Gerold, January 2006 ECM NEW SERIES
1970 4765780
[77:03]
This is the third outing for John Potter’s group The Dowland Project
on Manfred Eicher’s adventurous ECM label. While the personnel
has changed slightly - Barry Guy (double bass) and Maya Homburger
out, Milos Valent in – the basic ethos remains the same. There
is none of Dowland’s music this time, but lots of other very early
repertoire that is re-thought, re-worked and generally realized
for a modern audience through experimentation and free improvisation.
I know purists that balk slightly at this approach but, as many
early music practitioners have pointed out, we really don’t know
exactly how this music sounded, what forces it was written for
or, indeed, very much at all about its performance practice. John
Potter’s eloquent liner-note covers similar territory, talking
of ‘freeing the music of its historical context’ and reminding
us that ‘musicians have always done this … done what they could
with whatever material comes to hand’. What we do know is that
in an age before the composer’s word became law on paper, the
performer was king, and improvisation was vital to the music.
If, like me, you’re
not an early music specialist or practitioner – or even if
you are – there is a great deal of enjoyment and almost sensual
pleasure in the results on this new disc. Much of the music
is minor-mode, rather melancholy in feeling, and is possibly
best sampled in short bursts rather than straight through.
But there is atmosphere in spades here, and the performers
bring their many and varied areas of expertise to bear to
produce washes of magical textures. John Surman’s sax, recorder
and bass clarinet waft in and out like an ethereal vocalise,
truly complementing Potter’s highly experienced tenor, which
is light of timbre and vibrato, enunciating beautifully the
given texts, which are included in the booklet. Distinguished
lutenist Stephen Stubbs’s baroque guitar and vihuela provide
much of the harmonic texture of the realizations, and Milos
Valent’s violin and viola provide yet another melodic strand
to the whole, weaving mellifluously with the other lines.
The Gregorian fragment ‘O beata infantia’ (tr. 8) is an excellent
example.
I really knew
nothing about repertoire of this period, and hate to use that
dreaded word ‘crossover’, but ECM have become experts in this
sort of probing, intelligent approach to music of the distant
past – Officium became an international bestseller – and it
strikes me as being as persuasive as any in bringing it to
life for new listeners. It is much to be applauded, especially
given the demonstration sound quality and superb packaging.
Reviews
from previous months Join the mailing list and receive a hyperlinked weekly update on the
discs reviewed. details We welcome feedback on our reviews. Please use the Bulletin
Board
Please paste in the first line of your comments the URL of the review to
which you refer.