  | 
            | 
         
         
          |     
            
   
            
 alternatively 
              CD: MDT 
              AmazonUK 
              AmazonUS 
              Sound 
              Samples & Downloads  
                            
             
          
              | 
            Francesca 
              CACCINI (1587-c.1640)  
              O vive rose [3:04]  
              Non sò se quel sorriso [3:29]  
              Rendi alle mie speranze il verde [4:05]  
              Io veggio i campi verdeggiar fecondi [3:30]  
              Se muove [3:15]  
              Dolce Maria [3:01]  
              Lasciatemi [5:54]  
              S’io men vo [2:23]  
              Regina celi [2:23]  
              Dov’io credea le mie speranze vere [4:22]  
              Ch’Amor sia nudo [2:35]  
              O chiome belle [2:44]  
              Io mi distruggo [4:41]  
              Te lucis ante terminum [2:57]  
              La pastorella [3:14]  
              Su le piume de’ venti trionfator [3:40]  
              Fresche aurette [1:32]  
              Giulio CACCINI (1551-1618)  
              ‘Quattro Canzoni di mio padre’ [4:09]  
                
              Shannon Mercer (soprano), Luc Beauséjour (harpsichord, organ), Sylvain 
              Bergeron (guitar, theorbo), Amanda Keesmaat (cello)  
              rec. 2-4 November 2009, Église Saint-Augustin de Mirabel, Quebec 
               
              Texts and Translations of Italian (but not Latin) songs available 
              online. 
               
                
              ANALEKTA AN 2 9966 [61:54]  
             
           | 
         
         
          |  
            
           | 
         
         
           
             
               
                  
                Interest in Francesca Caccini and her music has deservedly 
                  grown a good deal in recent years, in terms of scholarship, 
                  public performances and recordings alike. 2009 saw the publication 
                  of a major monograph, Francesca Caccini at the Medici Court: 
                  Music and the Circulation of Power, by Suzanne G. Cusick. 
                  Gradually, perception of Francesca Caccini has, as it were, 
                  liberated her from the shadow of her father Giulio, a process 
                  Cusick brings, for the moment, to a fulfilment, providing a 
                  fascinating account of Caccini’s life in a male-dominated world. 
                  She recounts how Caccini negotiated the particular demands which 
                  those circumstances placed upon her, as well describing her 
                  considerable achievement as a composer in her own right. Caccini’s 
                  fame as a singer has sometimes distracted eyes and ears from 
                  her work as a composer. This new CD joins others which have 
                  already made available some of her music and it deserves a place 
                  of honour in their company.  
                     
                  Shannon Mercer’s recital - which is interspersed with some purely 
                  instrumental items - draws on both secular and religious songs 
                  from Caccini’s Il primo libro delle musiche, published 
                  in 1618 and dedicated to Cardinal Charles de Medici. The collection 
                  is made up of 32 solo songs and four duets for soprano and bass; 
                  it contained what was at the time the most sizeable collection 
                  of solo songs by a single composer yet to be published. Mercer 
                  proves herself to be a very accomplished interpreter of these 
                  songs, subtle in expression without ever being merely mannered, 
                  her voice having both agility and an attractive weight. Ornamentation 
                  feels unforced and apt, the breath-control - Caccini writes 
                  some very long phrases - admirable. The instrumental work of 
                  Beauséjour, Bergeron and Keesmaat is exemplary, and the four 
                  combine so well that one is loath to describe their musical 
                  relationship simply in terms of singer and ‘accompanists’.  
                     
                  Caccini’s writing is constantly inventive and she is not frightened 
                  to use dissonance and unexpected harmonies expressively. In, 
                  for example, ‘Dolce Maria’, a Latin madrigal in praise of the 
                  Virgin as Our Lady of Consolation, the relationship of musical 
                  phrase to verbal text is perfectly calculated - though it sounds 
                  too ‘natural’ for one to be entirely comfortable about the use 
                  of a concept like calculation here. The simplicity of the continuo 
                  beautiful complements the melismatic passages in the vocal writing. 
                  In song after song Caccini’s respect for the phrase patterns 
                  of Italian speech is married to a thoroughly musical attention 
                  to melody and harmony. Amongst the most memorable pieces are 
                  ‘Regina Celi’ which includes some ravishing alleluias. ‘O vive 
                  rose’ is sung with splendid vivacity and agility. ‘Lasciatemi 
                  qui solo’ is a sustained lament, exquisitely sung by Mercer, 
                  in which it isn’t hard to hear affinities with Monteverdi and 
                  which serves to remind one that Caccini was the first recorded 
                  woman to write operas. In ‘S’io men vò, morirò’, the troubled 
                  emotions are very well realised in this performance. There is, 
                  though, something unavoidably invidious in selecting individual 
                  tracks for praise – the whole is excellent.  
                     
                  The purely instrumental items are equally satisfying: Amanda 
                  Keesmaat is foregrounded in a moving performance of ‘Io veggio 
                  i campi verdeggiar fecondi’ and Luc Luc Beauséjour plays ‘Te 
                  lucis ante terminum’ with pleasing dignity - and without the 
                  slightest inappropriate ponderousness. Caccini père makes 
                  an appearance in Sylvain Bergeron’s performance, on baroque 
                  guitar, of his own arrangement of four brief songs, under the 
                  whimsical title of ‘Quattro Canzoni di mio padre’, as if the 
                  arrangement were by Francesca herself! And very pleasant they 
                  are too.  
                     
                  Since the 1960s (at least) feminist scholarship and criticism 
                  have led to the rediscovery or rehabilitation of many female 
                  poets, painters and composers. It isn’t unreasonable to think 
                  that in some cases those rediscovered have been as overpraised 
                  as they were previously unjustly neglected. The music of Francesca 
                  Caccini, however, is one of the most significant treasures to 
                  whose worth we have thus been alerted. She was surely a composer 
                  on a par, at least, with her father, and is one of the most 
                  interesting figures of her age – a contention for which this 
                  present CD provides eloquent evidence.  
                     
                Glyn Pursglove 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                     
              
  
             
           | 
         
       
     
     | 
     
      
     |