Download 
                  News 2012/22
                  
                  Brian Wilson 
                
The previous Download News, 2012/21 is here. 
                  Previous roundups are indexed here.
                  
                  Recording of the 
                  Month
                  
                  Johann Sebastian BACH (1685-1750) 
                  Harpsichord Concertos
                  Concerto No.VI in F, BWV1057 [16:11]
                  Concerto in g minor, BWV1058 [13:09]
                  Concerto No.I in d minor, BWV1052 [21:09]
                  Concerto No.IV in A, BWV1055 [13:22]
                  Retrospect Ensemble/Matthew Halls  rec. St Georges 
                  Church, Chesterton, Cambridge, 
                  27 29 September 2011. DSD
                  Pdf booklet included
                  LINN RECORDS CKD410 [64:24]  from linnrecords.com 
                  (SACD, mp3, 16 and 24-bit lossless)
                  
                  
Like 
                  all recent Linn recordings, this one is available in hybrid 
                  SACD form or as downloads from linnrecords.com in a variety 
                  of formats  mp3, CD-quality lossless and Studio Master 
                  24/96 and 24/192 quality. 
                  
                  Several recent Linn releases  Corelli Concerti Grossi, 
                  Op.6 (CKD411: Avison Ensemble  review), 
                  Zelenka Sonatas (CKD415  review), 
                  and music by Parsons, White and Byrd from Magnificat (CKD417) 
                   vied with this for the Recording of the Month, as did 
                  the latest Bach release from BIS and Suzuki: Volume 52 of their 
                  Cantata series containing BWV140, 112 and 29 (below).
                  
                  From the opening of BWV1057, Bachs own recycling of the 
                  material from the Brandenburg Concerto No.4, I knew that this 
                  was an instant winner  but anything that Matthew Halls 
                  and the Retrospect Ensemble touch seems to turn to gold. There 
                  are other, larger-scale performances of these concertos and 
                  I shall turn to them from time to time still, not least to the 
                  vintage Trevor Pinnock set on DG and Angela Hewitt (piano) and 
                  Richard Tognetti on Hyperion*. Despite my general aversion to 
                  Bach on the piano, Angela Hewitt is the exception, but its 
                  to this more intimate Linn recording that Im most likely 
                  to revert. You just need to accept that Angela Hewitts 
                  and Matthew Halls takes on the music are both excellent 
                  but quite different. This is music-making on the same scale 
                  as those original performances in the Leipzig coffee shop where 
                  the works were first performed.
                  
                  Scholarship concerning pitch (415Hz) and temperament (1/6 comma 
                  meantone) meets sheer musical enjoyment here. The music goes 
                  with a swing without sounding mechanical and the recording is 
                  excellent  I listened to the SACD and to the 24/96 flac 
                  from the range on offer. The pdf booklet is first-class, too. 
                  I seem to be criticising Linn covers this month  the Corelli 
                  is far too funereal for such wonderful music and performances 
                   and I wasnt too keen on this Bach cover, but thats 
                  the only reservation that I can muster.
                  
                  I reviewed Matthew Halls recording of Bachs Goldberg 
                  Variations some time ago (Linn CKD356: my only doubt 
                  was whether most listeners would want the full 91 minutes with 
                  all repeats taken  see March 2010 Roundup), 
                  so the high quality of this recording of the concertos comes 
                  as no surprise, and Ive enjoyed the other recordings that 
                  hes made with the Retrospect Ensemble and the Kings 
                  Consort:
  Purcell Ten Sonatas 
                  in four parts (Linn CKD332  see May 2009 Download 
                  Roundup 
                  and June 2009 Download 
                  Roundup) and Twelve Sonatas in three parts (Linn CKD374 
                   see October 2011/2 Download Roundup) 
                  
                   Bach Easter and Ascension Oratorios (Linn CKD373 
                   see May 2011/1 Download Roundup)
                   Handel Parnasso in festa (Hyperion CDA67701/2: 
                   Recording of the Month  review)
                
 The CD layer of the recording is excellent 
                  but the SACD layer and the 24-bit download both add that little 
                  extra that makes them worth the cost, which is not exorbitant 
                  with even the 24/96 and 24/192 versions costing only £18. 
                  The SACD comes at £12 direct from linnrecords.com and 
                  possibly for slightly less than that from some online suppliers.
                  
                  Gawain Glentons notes in the booklet are not the least 
                  of the virtues of this new recording.
                  
                  Now may we have the other keyboard concertos including those 
                  for two, three and four solo instruments from these performers? 
                  Unless and until we do and for those who cant wait, theres 
                  one other set of performances on much the same scale as those 
                  of the Retrospect Ensemble that contains the solo keyboard concertos 
                  BWV1052, 1055 and 1056 on a 6-CD set from Alpha with the concertos 
                  for two three and four-keyboards, the Brandenburg 
                  Concertos, Orchestral Suites and Violin Concertos (ALPHA811 
                   see my April 2012/1 Download Roundup).
 * Volume 1 on CDA30003 should 
                  be your starter on mid-price CD or download (mp3 and lossless) 
                
  Discoveries 
                  of the Month
                  
                  Ralph VAUGHAN WILLIAMS (1872-1958) Early and Late Works
                  Folk Songs of the Four Seasons Suite (1949) edited by Roy 
                  DOUGLAS (1952) [14:06]
                  Bucolic Suite (1900/1) [19:28]
                  Dark Pastoral for cello and orchestra (1942/3, orch. 
                  and completed David MATTHEWS 
                  2009) [10:55]
                  Serenade in a minor (1898, ed Julian 
                  RUSHTON, 2011) [26:25] 
                  Guy Johnston (cello); Royal Scottish National Orchestra/Martin 
                  Yates  rec. May 2012. DDD.
                  Premiere recordings
                  DUTTON EPOCH CDLX7289 [71:09]  from hmvdigital.com 
                  (mp3 and m4a)
                  
                  
Dutton 
                  have once again done what they  and Chandos and Hyperion 
                   are so good at, bringing us recordings of English music 
                  thats out of the run of the mill. Only the Folk Songs 
                  have been recorded before  a 2009 premiere version of 
                  the complete set on Albion ALB010  review; 
                  this recording features the orchestral suite which Roy Douglas 
                  made with VWs approval. There are no undiscovered masterpieces 
                  here but all the music is well worth getting to know and performances 
                  and recording do it justice. Its a treasure for lovers 
                  of VW, not least because it includes a reconstruction of the 
                  only extant parts of the Cello Concerto that was intended for 
                  Casals but never completed, here given the appropriate title 
                  Dark Pastoral.
                  
                  Of the available sources for downloading this recording  
                  iTunes, to which the Dutton web-site will direct you  
                  amazon.co.uk and hmvdigital.com, now absorbed into 7-digital, 
                  the last named provides the best compromise between price (£7.49) 
                  and quality (320kb/s mp3 or m4a). As well as the opportunity 
                  to download, you can now play your purchases via the 7-digital 
                  library. Brief notes are available from the Dutton web-site 
                  here.
                  
                  The Australian Voices
                  William BARTON (b.1981) Kalkadunga 
                  Yurdu [3.04]
                  Lisa YOUNG (b.1959) Other 
                  Plans [3.57]
                  Gordon HAMILTON (b.1982) 
                  To an Early-Flowering Almond [3.39]; Diana [9.19]; We Are Children 
                  [3.36]
                  Sergey RACHMANINOV (1873-1943) 
                  Bogoroditse Devo [2.43]
                  Franz BIEBL (1906-2001) 
                  Ave Maria [5.23]
                  Nicholas NG (b.1979) Stellar 
                  Mansions [3.34]
                  J A FREYLINGHAUSEN (1670-1739) 
                  (arr. Gordon HAMILTON) Macht hoch die Thür, 
                  die Thor macht weit [4.15]
                  Traditional (arr. Gordon HAMILTON) Maria durch 
                  ein Dornwald ging [3.09]
                  Franz Xaver GRUBER (1787-1863) 
                  (arr. Gordon HAMILTON) Silent Night [3.11]
                  Amber EVANS (b.1993) To 
                  the Evening Star [2.51]
                  Robert DAVIDSON (b.1965) We 
                  Apologise [6.44]
                  Peter CLARK (b.1991) Pessoa 
                  Chorus I [2.52]
                  Gordon HAMILTON Toy Story 
                  3 = Awesome! [4.21]
                  Australian Voices/Gordon Hamilton  rec. 2011-2012. DDD.
                  WARNER CLASSICS 2564654860 [63:37]  from amazon.co.uk 
                  (mp3)
                  
                  
Im 
                  indebted to the press pack for information about this recording 
                  of music entirely written or arranged by Australian composers, 
                  with one exception:
                  
                  "It is with a distinctive, fresh sound and high artistic 
                  energy that The Australian Voices commission, perform and record 
                  the music of Australian composers. Since 1993 the ensemble has 
                  championed an astonishing flourishing of new Australian vocal 
                  music, having commissioned hundreds of new works. The ensemble 
                  tours internationally each year and has been recognised by many 
                  international awards, including multiple gold medals at the 
                  World Choir Games (2006) and first prizes at the Llangollen 
                  International Musical Eisteddfod (2001). In 2012 the ensemble 
                  gave twenty performances at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe and 
                  a live in-studio broadcast on BBC3 in London. Recently they 
                  have created new works specifically intended for "performance" 
                  on YouTube. Gordon Hamiltons composition Toy Story 3 = 
                  Awesome! has been viewed over 100,000 times. Other clips, such 
                  as Tra$h Ma$h and We Apologise, have created controversy, forging 
                  new directions in choral music. Hamilton has been Artistic Director 
                  since 2009 and is considered one of Australias most exciting 
                  young conductors and composers." Theres a good mix 
                  of vigorous and quieter music.
                  
                  Allowing for a degree of advertising hype, that describes the 
                  package pretty well. My review access came with a booklet of 
                  notes and texts but I havent been able to discover any 
                  download site which offers the booklet; as some of the texts 
                  and the raisons dêtre behind some of the 
                  compositions are somewhat complex, you may well prefer on this 
                  occasion to go for the physical CD.
                  
                  
Advent, 
                  Christmas and Epiphany
                  
                  A Tudor Christmas 
                  HENRY VIII (King of England) 
                  Pastime with good company [1:50 ]
                  Traditional Coventry Carol [3:46]
                  William BYRD Rorate coeli 
                  [4:30]
                  HENRY VIII Consort No. 3 
                  [1:05]
                  John TAVERNER Christe 
                  Jesu pastor bone [3:33] 
                  HENRY VIIIConsort No. 3 
                  [1:05]
                  Orlando GIBBONS This is 
                  the record of John [4:11]
                  Robert PARSONS Ave Maria 
                  [4:27]
                  Thomas RAVENSCROFT Remember, 
                  O Thou Man [5:05]
                  HENRY VIII Consort No. 12 
                  [1:25]
                  Christopher TYE While shepherds 
                  watched [2:59]
                  William BYRD From Virgin 
                  pure this day did spring [3:12 ]
                  HENRY VIII Consort No. 2 
                  [1:33]
                  Christopher TYE Laudate 
                  Nomen [2:09]
                  Thomas TALLIS O nata 
                  lux de lumine [1:45]
                  John SHEPPARD Magnificat 
                  a 4 [5:58]
                  Anonymous Sweet Was the Song the Virgin Sung [1:55]
                  Richard PYGOTT Quid petis 
                  O fili [9:16]
                  HENRY VIII  Consort No. 
                  13 [1:41]
                  Thomas WEELKES Hosanna to 
                  the Son of David [1:55]
                  Victoria Davies (harp)
                  Christ Church Oxford Cathedral Choir/Stephen Darlington
                  THE GIFT OF MUSIC CCLCDG1098 [63:20]  from classicsonline.com 
                  (mp3) or stream from Naxos Music Library
                  
                  
Late 
                  medieval and renaissance English music for the Christmas season 
                  is here interspersed with instrumental music by Henry VIII. 
                  The concept of Christmas music for the Tudors is, however, a 
                  little stretched by the last piece, a setting of words appropriate 
                  to Palm Sunday by a composer who is mainly associated with the 
                  Stuart period. Carping apart, however, the quality of the music 
                   from a golden age of English composition and mostly not 
                  staled by endless repetition  singing and recording make 
                  this a recommendable collection at an attractive price (£4.99 
                  from classicsonline.com). The lack of texts is a minor problem.
                  
                  Another Oxford Choir, that of Magdalen conducted by Bill Ives, 
                  and others offer A Victorian Christmas on CCLCDG1004. 
                  As the Victorians invented, or re-invented Christmas this, too, 
                  is well worth considering.
                  
                  Youll find a great deal more Christmas music on the Gift 
                  of Music label. eclassical.com (mp3 and lossless) and classicsonline.com 
                  (mp3) both have Christmas Impressions: Musical Footsteps 
                  in the Snow (CCLCDG1174), also available for 
                  streaming from Naxos Music Library and classicsonline.com and 
                  Naxos Music Library have several other collections  check 
                  them out from the classicsonline.com Gift of Music index here. 
                  The selection ranges from plainchant on Christmas Vespers 
                  from the monks of St Frideswides (CCLCDG1042) to 
                  the music of contemporary composer Bob Chilcott on Christmas 
                  Impressions and The Christmas Story (CCLCDG1101).
                  
                  Francesco DURANTE (1684-1755) 
                  Neapolitan Christmas II
                  Cito pastores (arr. L. ODA) [18:57] 
                  Laudate pueri (detto il Grottesco) in G (1732, 
                  arr. L. ODA) [6:54 ]
                  Litanie a due voci con Violini: Kyrie eleison (arr. M.A. 
                  WILLENS) [9:10] 
                  Missa in afflictionis tempore in F (1749, arr. M.A. 
                  WILLENS) [35:16]
                  Thilo Dahlmann; Alberto terDoest; Ursula Eittinger; Christina 
                  Kuhne; Monica Piccinini; Kölner Akademie/Michael Alexander 
                  Willens
                  CPO 777734-2 [60:15]  from classicsonline.com 
                  or stream from Naxos Music Library
                  
                  
Before 
                  I encountered the CPO Volume I of the Christmas music of Durante 
                  (777571-2  see December 2011/1 Roundup), 
                  he was known to me only as the actual composer of a mass spuriously 
                  attributed to Bach (BWVAnh.26  recorded on CPO 999834-2). 
                  I enjoyed Volume I but must urge a degree of caution about Volume 
                  II; unless the notes, to which I dont currently have access 
                   the booklet that comes with the download 
                  is just a cut-down 4-page affair  make a Christmas connection 
                  for the Missa in afflictionis tempore, I cant see 
                  how a mass in time of affliction makes its way onto a Christmas-themed 
                  programme.
                  
                  Volume 1 is now available in mp3 and lossless sound from eclassical.com 
                   an attractive proposition for lossless, but classicsonline.com 
                  remains the less expensive download for mp3 only. Johann van 
                  Veen has recently reviewed both volumes  review.
                  
                  Johann Sebastian BACH (1685-1750) 
                  Cantatas Volume 52: Leipzig 1730s-40s ( I )
                  Wachet auf, ruft uns die Stimme, BWV 140 [26:09]
                  Kantate zum 27. Sonntag nach Trinitatis (Sunday before Advent, 
                  25 November, 1731)
                  Der Herr ist mein getreuer Hirt, BWV 112 [12:59]
                  Kantate zum Sonntag Misericordias Domini (2nd Sunday 
                  after Easter, 8 April, 1731)
                  Wir danken dir, Gott, wir danken dir, BWV 29 [23:27]
                  Kantate zum Ratswechsel, Leipzig 1731 (Council election, 27 
                  August, 1731)
                  Hana Blaíková (soprano); Robin Blaze (counter-tenor); 
                  Gerd Türk (tenor); Peter Kooij (bass); Masamitsu Sannomiya 
                  (oboe and oboe damore); Natsumi Wakamatsu (violino piccolo 
                  and violin); Masato Suzuki (organ)
                  Bach Collegium Japan/Masaaki Suzuki  rec. September 2011. 
                  DSD.
                  Pdf booklet with texts and translations included
                  BIS-SACD-1981 [63:29]  from eclassical.com 
                  (mp3, 16 and 24-bit lossless)
                  
                  
Strictly 
                  speaking, this is out of place here  only one of the three 
                  cantatas has anything to anything to do with the season, BWV140, 
                  and thats for the Sunday last before Advent rather than 
                  for Advent itself when, as in Lent, there was no music in the 
                  churches at Leipzig. That last Sunday after Trinity, however, 
                  is traditionally associated with the season that was about to 
                  start  the collect for the day, beginning Stir up, 
                  O Lord led to the association in England with preparing 
                  the Christmas pudding at that time.
                  
                  As for the performances, they are everything we have come to 
                  expect from this combination  I think weve all run 
                  out of new superlatives to describe them  and the recording 
                  (24-bit for the same price as 16-bit and mp3 as a brief introductory 
                  offer) and notes also maintain the high standards.
                  
                  Pyotr Ilyich TCHAIKOVSKY (1840-1893) 
                  
                  The Nutcracker (Casse-Noisette / Shchelkunchik) 
                  Op.71 Complete Ballet [90:39]
                  From Swan Lake (Le Lac des Cygnes) Op. 20: Pas 
                  de deux (Appendix)
                  Introduction (orch. Vissarion SHEBALIN) [4:37]
                  Variation 1 (orch. Vissarion SHEBALIN) [0:53]
                  Variation 2 (orch. by the composer) [0:52]
                  Coda (orch. Vissarion SHEBALIN) [2:24]
                  From Eugene Onegin Op. 24: Polonaise (Act 3) [5:00]
                  Childrens Choir of the Bolshoi Theatre
                  Orchestra of the Bolshoi Theatre Moscow/Alexander Vedernikov 
                   rec. Moscow, February 2006. DSD.
                  PENTATONE PTC5186 091 [47:22 + 57:17]  from eclassical.com 
                  (mp3, 16 and 24-bit lossless)
                  
                  
We 
                  dont seem to have reviewed this when it was released, 
                  though Dan Morgan gave it a very favourable mention when reviewing 
                  the most recent reissue of André Previns classic 
                  recording  here. 
                  That Previn version remains one of my favourites  as well 
                  as the CfP download from classicsonline.com which I recommended 
                  some time ago, its available in its newest garb, the version 
                  which Dan reviewed, for just £2.99 from sainsburysentertainment.com, 
                  which has to be a bargain in anyones book.
                  
                  Nevertheless, Id back the PentaTone against all comers, 
                  with details that I dont hear on other recordings  
                  and Ive heard a few, with the classic Ernest Ansermet 
                  recording among the best of them (Decca Eloquence 480 0557 
                  or Brilliant Classics 94031, 6 CDs for around £16).
                  
                  Like the performance, the recording is notable for bringing 
                  out inner detail that I hadnt noticed before. The sound 
                  trades a small degree of clarity for a full-spread stereo sound 
                  picture; I think the trade-off is worthwhile. The mp3 and 16-bit 
                  lossless version come at the same reasonable price, $18.78, 
                  but the 24-bit is rather steep at almost twice the price, $34.43, 
                  so I listened to the mp3 and 16-bit versions  once youve 
                  downloaded the lossless for home listening, you can return for 
                  the mp3 to play on your mp3 player or in the car. With the mp3 
                  there are a couple of awkward gaps between tracks, but they 
                  arent a major problem; in most cases theres a pause 
                  in the music between tracks. The lossless version, if played 
                  via the right player from your PC or burned to CDR obviates 
                  any inter-track gap problems. I compared the mp3 disc which 
                  I burned with the 16-bit on the same system and was surprised 
                  that the mp3 reproduced almost as well as the lossless.
                  
                  A Winters Light: A Christmas Collection
                  Bob CHILCOTT (b.1955) This 
                  is the truth* [3:24]
                  Trad arr. Jonathan RATHBONE (b.1957) 
                  Gabriels Message [1:45]
                  Jan SWEELINCK (1562-1621) 
                  Hodie Christus natus est [3:46]
                  Michael PRÆTORIUS (c.1671-1621) 
                  arr. Jan SANDSTRÖM Es ist ein Ros entsprungen 
                  [4:03]
                  Herbert HOWELLS (1892-1983) 
                  Sing Lullaby [3:31]
                  Pierre VILLETTE (1926-1998) 
                  Hymne à la Vierge [3:58]
                  Bob CHILCOTTSweet was the 
                  song* [4:15]
                  David WILLCOCKS (b.1919) Of 
                  the Fathers heart begotten* [3:03]
                  Giovanni GABRIELI (c.1555-1621) 
                  Hodie Christus natus est [4:17]
                  Bob CHILCOTT Rejoice and 
                  be merry* [1:50]
                  Walford DAVIES (1869-1941) 
                  O little town of Bethlehem* [5:30]
                  C Armstrong GIBBS (1889-1960) 
                  The Stable Door [2:29]
                  Adophe ADAM (1803-1856) 
                  arr. J.E. WEST O Holy Night* [5:40]
                  Harold DARKE (1888-1976) 
                  In the bleak mid-winter* [4:43]
                  Gabriel JACKSON (b.1962) 
                  The Christ-child [5:02]
                  John RUTTER (b.1945) Nativity 
                  Carol* [4:26]
                  James Lord PIERPOINT (1822-1893) 
                  arr. B. PARRY Jingle Bells [2:45]
                  Bob CHILCOTT Christmas-tide 
                  [3:08]
                  Greg LAKE (b.1947) arr. 
                  Jonathan RATHBONE  I believe 
                  in Father Christmas [3:17]
                  Jonathan RATHBONE (b.1947) 
                  Carol Medley* [3:14]
                  Martin Ford (organ)*
                  Vasari Singers/Jeremy Backhouse 
                  rec. Tonbridge School Chapel, Tonbridge, Kent, UK, 10-12 February, 
                  2012. DDD
                  Pdf booklet with sung texts, which may also be accessed at www.naxos.com/libretti/573030.htm
                  NAXOS 8.573030 [73:48]  from classicsonline.com 
                  (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library
                  
                  
As 
                  with the Resonus Classics release from Worcester College Oxford 
                  which I reviewed in the 2012/21 News, the emphasis here is on 
                  music written or arranged by contemporary composers, though 
                  none of it difficult and theres more traditional 
                  fare too. Extracts from Bob Chilcotts On Christmas Night 
                  have the lions share, attractive music, but for me the 
                  highlight is a peaceful and ethereal arrangement by Jan Sandström 
                  of the Prætorius setting of Es ist ein Ros entsprungen. 
                  Even traditionalists cant complain about the arrangement 
                   the music and words pre-date even Prætorius, who 
                  himself was making an arrangement. Theres plenty of variety, 
                  too, with the more solemn mood giving way to secular fun at 
                  the end. Jonathan Rathbones piece is largely borrowed 
                  from Prokofievs Lieutenant Kijé but none 
                  the worse for that. With the Vasari Singers delivering it all 
                  and Naxos providing a good recording this will be regularly 
                  on my menu this Christmas.
                  
                  Christmas with Mandolins
                  Turlogh OCAROLAN (1670-1738) 
                  Planxty OCarolan  Irish Suite for Flute, 
                  Percussions and Mandolin Orchestra [9:50]
                  Francesco PICCONE (XVII Century) 
                  Pastorale for Mandola and Continuo [2:52]
                  Giuseppe VALENTINI (1681-1753) 
                  Sonata per il SS. Natale, anno 1716, for Mandola and 
                  Lute [6:19] 
                  G. Battista GERVASIO (?) (XVIII 
                  Century) Pastorale for two Mandolins and Continuo [2:30]
                  Ignazio BITELLI (1890?-1956) 
                  E arrivato il Messia (The Messiah has come)  
                  Pastorale for Guitar [3:06]
                  LAlbero di Natale (The Christmas Tree)  Pastorale 
                  for Mandolin and Guitar [3:02]
                  Benvenuto TERZI (1892-1980) 
                  Nevicata  Pastorale for Guitar [5:22]
                  Giuseppe PETTINE (1876-1966) 
                  Christmas Song for Mandolin [2:28]
                  G. Alberto GHIGNOTTI (XIX Century) 
                  La Notte di Natale (Christmas Eve)  Pastorale for 
                  Mandolins and Guitar [3:35]
                  Simone SALVETTI (1870-1950) 
                  La Notte di Betlemme (Bethlehems Night)  
                  Pastorale and Preghiera for Mandolins and Guitars [4:06]
                  Giuseppe MILANESI (1851-1950) 
                  Visioni Natalizie (Christmas Visions)  Pastorale 
                  for Mandolin Quintet [4:33]
                  Giacomo SARTORI (1878-1947) 
                  Notte di Natale (Christmas Eve)  Pastorale 
                  for Mandolin Orchestra [5:36]
                  Amedeo AMADEI (1866-1935) 
                  Impressioni di Natale (Christmas Impressions) for Mandolin 
                  and Guitar [6:35]
                  Notte di Natale (Christmas Eve) Little Suite for Orchestra 
                  [9:28]
                  Lorenzo BIANCHI (1958-1996) 
                  Natale! Kleine Weihnacht Ouverture  for Mandolin 
                  Orchestra [5:29]
                  Ugo Orlandi, Marina Ferrari, Sergio Zigiotti, Maria Cleofe Miotti 
                  (Mandolins and Mandolas), Alessandro Bono (Guitar)
                  Quintetto a Plettro R.Calace
                  Orchestra di Mandolini e Chitarre Città di Brescia/Claudio 
                  Mandonico  rec.1998. DDD.
                  Pdf booklet included
                  ARTS CROSSING 49005-2 [73:52]  from classicsonline.com 
                  (mp3) or stream from Naxos Music Library
                  
                  
This 
                  is a fun recording which can be played with enjoyment at any 
                  time of the year  the opening Suite from an eighteenth-century 
                  Irish composer is not specially linked to Christmas and only 
                  those with a detailed knowledge of renaissance and baroque Italian 
                  Christmas music are likely to pick out the seasonal hints in 
                  the other compositions, mostly to be found in the Pastorale 
                  sections, where its difficult not to hear the word pastores 
                  (shepherds) in the background.
                  
                  Capstone 
                  collection from Ravello
                  
                  In the previous Download News I mentioned some of the recordings 
                  in this series; here are a couple more which may interest you.
                  
                  Daniel ADAMS (b.1956) Shadow 
                  on Mist
                  Isorhythmic Concerto for percussion solo and symphonic wind 
                  ensemble (1998) [12:51]
                  Robert McCormick (soloist); New Music Tampa Wind Ensemble/Dr. 
                  William Wiedrich  rec. live, Tampa Bay Performing Arts 
                  Center, 30 March, 1999
                  Three Movements of unaccompanied Marimba* (1979) [7:33]
                  Alloy for percussion trio** (1990) [7:26].
                  Ambience for percussion septet** (1988) [8:17]
                  Lignumvitae for percussion trio** (1995) [5:10]
                  Shadow on Mist for percussion quintet with flute**/*** 
                  (1999) [8:58]
                  Stratum** (1981) [5:25]
                  Two Antiphonal Portraits for twelve percussionists** (2000) 
                  [4:14+7:24]
                  * Robert McCormick (soloist); ** The McCormick Percussion Ensemble; 
                  *** Kim McCormick (flute)
                  2-page pdf booklet included
                  RAVELLO RECORDS RR7824 [67:18]  from classicsonline.com 
                  (mp3) or stream from Naxos Music Library
                  
                  
As 
                  with some of the material that I reviewed last time, the opening 
                  work and some of the other tracks here lie outside my admittedly 
                  somewhat conservative comfort zone, but I enjoyed the soloists 
                  gymnastics in the Three Movements for unaccompanied marimba, 
                  the virtuosity of all concerned in the title track, and the 
                  sheer urgency of the close of Antiphonal Portrait 2, 
                  and not just for the agility of the playing. Those of a more 
                  adventurous spirit are recommended to give the album a try.
                  
                  Though a booklet is included, it contains no notes; 
                  youll find some details on the composer here, 
                  whence the following information is derived: 
                  
                  Third prize winner in the 2000 PAS Composition Contest, Isorhythmic 
                  Concerto is scored for the three families of non-pitched 
                  percussion; wood, metal and skins. Lignumvitae (tree 
                  of life) uses only wooden percussion instruments. A serious, 
                  highly effective, pointillistic work, Lignumvitae demands 
                  tight ensemble playing and well-developed listening skills from 
                  the players. 
                  
                  The work which gives its name to the album, Shadow on Mist, 
                  was composed for flautist Kim McCormick and the University of 
                  South Florida Percussion Ensemble under the direction of Robert 
                  McCormick. It was inspired by the pictorial imagery of South 
                  Florida. The flautist alternates between C-flute, alto, flute, 
                  and piccolo. 
                  
                  Theres more percussion music by Daniel Adams and 
                  other composers on Ravello Classics RR7804, from classicsonline.com 
                  (mp3), eclassical.com (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos 
                  Music Library.
                  
                  Even if you dont have access to Naxos Music Library where 
                  you can preview all these recordings  indeed, the whole 
                  Ravello catalogue  it will cost you only £4.99 ($7.99 
                  in the USA, I believe) to try them for yourself from classicsonline.com. 
                  
                
 ***
                
 Where late the sweet birds sang: Latin 
                  Music from Tudor England
                  William BYRD (c.1540  1623) 
                  Christe qui lux es et dies [5:05]
                  Robert WHITE (c.1538  
                  1574) Lamentations a5 [22:48]
                  Robert PARSONS (c.1535  
                  1572) Ave Maria [4:50]
                  William BYRDDomine, quis 
                  habitabit [9:30]
                  Robert PARSONS Domine, 
                  quis habitabit [4:37]
                  William BYRD Quomodo 
                  cantabimus [8:35]
                  William BYRD De lamentatione 
                  [12:26]
                  Robert WHITE Christe 
                  qui lux es et dies (IV) [6:50]
                  Magnificat/Philip Cave
                  rec. St Georges, Chesterton, Cambridge, UK, 23 26 
                  Jan 2012. DSD
                  Texts and translations included  as pdf booklet with download
                  LINN RECORDS SACD CKD417 [75.31]  SACD and mp3, 
                  16 and 24-bit lossless downloads from linnrecords.com.
                  
                  
The 
                  title is a quotation from Shakespeares Sonnet 73 in which 
                  he compares his winter mood to Bare ruind choirs 
                  where late the sweet birds sang. Since Empsons Seven 
                  Types of Ambiguity this has usually been taken to refer 
                  to the remains of the abbeys which were dissolved under Henry 
                  VIII and which had mostly fallen into ruin by his time, the 
                  stone having been removed for building, and the singing of the 
                  sweet birds to the plainer style, setting English not Latin 
                  words, which had replaced the late (former) elaborate 
                  polyphony of the earlier half of the sixteenth century.
                  
                  The interpretation is not universally accepted  some prefer 
                  to regard the image as one of avenues of leafless trees in winter 
                   and, indeed, given the richness of Shakespeares 
                  imagery its possible that he wanted to evoke both images. 
                  As a peg on which to hang a short selection of Latin-texted 
                  music from the latter half of the century, however, it will 
                  serve very nicely.
                  
                  About William Byrds loyalty to the Roman church there 
                  can be no doubt, though his beliefs appear to have been tolerated 
                  at court, where he composed in English and Latin for Queen Elizabeths 
                  Chapel Royal, but the tenor of the two texts which are included 
                  here  how shall we sing the Lords song in a strange 
                  land? and part of the Lamentations of Jeremiah, bewailing 
                  the fate that has overtaken Jerusalem  shows how much 
                  he regretted what had been lost. There is, indeed, a series 
                  of settings by Byrd and his Catholic contemporaries that seem 
                  to have been intended as a kind of dialogue, often on the theme 
                  of loss: these collaborations with Palestrina, Victoria, Peter 
                  Philips and Giovanni Gabrieli are included on a valuable and 
                  inexpensive Classics for Pleasure recording from Kings 
                  College Cambridge, directed by David Willcocks (5860482). 
                  You can obtain that Kings recording on disc for around 
                  £5 and as a download for around £3.50 and none of 
                  the items overlap with the new Linn recording; its a different 
                  manner of singing Byrd, but well worth having.
                  
                  Nor are there any overlaps between the Byrd on the new recording 
                  and another inexpensive recording which Id recommend as 
                  the starting point for anyone looking to begin a collection 
                  of his music: The Tallis Scholars sing William Byrd (Gimell 
                  2-for-1 CDGIM208, containing the three masses, the Great 
                  Service and a selection of shorter works in Latin and English 
                   see The 
                  Tallis Scholars at 30).
                  
                  Theres another recording which contains quomodo cantabimus? 
                  and places it specifically within the setting of Byrds 
                  Catholicism. On a collection entitled The caged Byrd (Chandos 
                  Chaconne CHAN0609  see October 2008 Download Roundup) 
                  I Fagiolini pair the work with one by the continental composer 
                  Philippe de Monte which sets the first part of that psalm (137): 
                  Super flumina Babylon, by the waters of Babylon we sat 
                  down and wept, to which Byrds setting of quomodo cantabimus? 
                  how shall we sing the Lords song in a strange land? may 
                  be seen as a response, the Lords song being the Latin 
                  Mass and the strange land Elizabeths England.
                  
                  Its a measure of the quality of Magnificat that I can 
                  mention their singing of the four Byrd works on the new recordings 
                  in the same terms as Kings and the Tallis Scholars. That 
                  comes as no surprise in view of the number of fine recordings 
                  that they have already made for Linn; Im running out of 
                  superlatives to describe them:
  The Golden Age  
                  Volume 1: Europe CKD052  September 2009 Download 
                  Roundup
                   Palestrina: Song of Songs CKD174  
                  October 2009 Download Roundup
                   Rogier: Missa ego sum qui sum CKD109 
                   January 2009 Download Roundup
                   Rogier: Music from the Missæ sex 
                  CKD387  November 2011/2 Download Roundup
                   Rogier: Polychoral works CKD348  
                  March 2011/1 Download Roundup
                   Tallis: Spem in alium CKD233  
                  September 2009 Download Roundup
                   Victoria: Requiem  Officium defunctorum 
                  CKD060
                
 If Byrds Latin-texted music was mostly 
                  written for the recusant community to which he belonged, it 
                  remains something of a mystery why other composers such as Parsons 
                  and White also composed music with Latin texts. It may be that 
                  it was intended for the Chapel Royal, where the queen favoured 
                  a conservative order, or for collegiate churches where Latin 
                  was permitted if it was understanded of the people, 
                  as the Act of Uniformity puts it. There was, as the notes in 
                  the booklet point out, a Latin version of the Book of Common 
                  Prayer, intended for the universities  the Eucharist from 
                  that book is still celebrated at the start of full term in the 
                  Oxford University church  and for those parts of Wales 
                  and Ireland where English was not spoken, so it may well be 
                  that Parsons and White intended their music for Oxford and Cambridge, 
                  or it may just be that old habits die hard.
                  
                  One such habit, the performance of the Lamentations of Jeremiah 
                  at Mattins for the latter part of Holy Week, is perpetuated 
                  by the settings here of both White and Byrd. Though prescribed 
                  in the 1549 book, the 1552 and 1559 Prayer Book had moved these 
                  readings away from Holy Week; they werent restored until 
                  1662 and then only at the beginning of the week, so its 
                  unlikely that either setting was intended for a liturgical context, 
                  though Whites setting could have been intended as an anthem 
                  at the end of Mattins or Evensong. Indeed, White seems to have 
                  made something of a speciality of settings of Lamentations; 
                  there are several other recordings of this 5-part set but there 
                  is also a 6-part setting (sung by Gallicantus, with other music 
                  by White on Signum SIGCD134  review 
                   and a setting of the lections from Lamentations for Good 
                  Friday on a recording of similar settings by Gesualdo, Palestrina 
                  and Victoria sung by Nordic Voices on Chandos Chaconne CHAN0763: 
                   Recording of the Month  review 
                   and November 2009 Download Roundup).
                  
                  Parsons setting of Ave Maria seems clearly not 
                  to have been intended for use within the Roman rite, since he 
                  sets only the biblical greeting and omits the traditional ending 
                  in which Mary is asked to pray for sinners, reflecting the reformers 
                  belief in Jesus as mans only mediator and advocate.
                  
                  What all the music here has in common is a tendency to move 
                  away from the more florid style of polyphony that characterised 
                  earlier Tudor church music to a one note per syllable system. 
                  Thats common not just to English music of the period; 
                  the Council of Trent enjoined a similar principle on composers 
                  for the Roman rite and paradoxically Byrds Great Service 
                  of music for Anglican use contains some music more elaborate 
                  than any of the works here. Emphatically, however, less florid 
                  does not mean less interesting.
                  
                  Magnificat, who have shown themselves to be ideal interpreters 
                  of the more elaborate style, are just at home with this plainer 
                  music; their performances are restrained and intimate without 
                  in any way under-valuing what they sing.
                  
                  This is one of three recent Linn releases which they have kindly 
                  provided for me in both SACD and 24/96 download format  
                  both the CD and SACD 2.0 layers and the download sound excellent.
                  
                  An excellent release is made even more so by the first-rate 
                  notes from Sally Dunkley, who was responsible for editing the 
                  music here, and a further note from Philip Cave on pitch. Since 
                  Ive criticised some of Linns recent cover shots, 
                  let me add that the one for this recording is particularly eye-catching. 
                  There are some minor niggles about the translations: you 
                  
 speak to us of the heavenly Light is not quite 
                  the same as lumen beatum prædicans  giving us a 
                  foretaste of the blessed light.
                  
                  Those very minor grumbles apart, this is another triumph for 
                  Magnificat and Linn. 
                  
                  Footnote: as I was converting this Download News to html 
                  I noticed that Signum have just recorded Gallicantus in the 
                  paired motets by de Monte and Byrd to which I have referred 
                  (The word unspoken, SIGCD295: Recording of the 
                  Month - review.)
                  
                  Claudio MONTEVERDI (1567-1643)
                  Missa In illo tempore [26:26]
                  Vespro della Beata Vergine (Vespers, 1610) [82:05]
                  Magnificat (II) a 6 voci [16:02]
                  Midori Suzuki, Yukari Nonoshita, Yoshie Hida (sopranos), Mutsumi 
                  Hatano (mezzo), Gerd Türk, Stephan Van Dyck, Yosuke Taniguchi 
                  (tenors), Stephan MacLeod, Yoshitaka Ogasawara (basses) 
                  Bach Collegium Japan and Chorus/Masaaki Suzuki
                  BIS-CD-1071/2 [124:33]  from eclassical.com 
                  (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library
                  
                  
Just 
                  when you think its safe to assert that there are two solid 
                  recommendations for a particular work, something new appears 
                  or you remind yourself that youve overlooked an earlier 
                  recording. In the case of the Vespers of 1610 I thought 
                  I had it all sewn up: the Kings Consort on Hyperion at 
                  full price or Andrew Parrott on Virgin (without libretto) at 
                  super-budget price and (with libretto) on EMI Great Recordings 
                  at mid price. Then eclassical.com decided to make this available 
                  as a reduced price bonus alongside the latest volume in their 
                  Suzuki Bach cycle (see above); lo and behold, its another 
                  very strong contender. Even at the regular price of $19.19 thats 
                  less expensive than classicsonline.coms price for this 
                  download in mp3 only; at the temporarily reduced price of $13.43 
                  its a snip.
                  
                  Like Hyperion, BIS offer all the music contained in the 1610 
                  publication. Its a shame that the booklet is not offered 
                  with the download  classicsonline.com and Naxos Music 
                  Library dont have it either  but the texts of the 
                  Mass and Vespers are not hard to find online; Hyperion offer 
                  the de luxe booklet that comes with their Kings Consort 
                  recording free to all comers. Like King on Hyperion, the BIS 
                  recording comes in very good lossless flac at the same competitive 
                  price as the mp3.
                  
                  Arcangelo CORELLI (1653-1713) 
                  Concerti Grossi, Opus 6
                  CD1
                  Concerto Grosso in D, No.1 [11:17]
                  Concerto Grosso in F, No.2 [10:40]
                  Concerto Grosso in c minor, No.3 [10:52]
                  Concerto Grosso in D, No.4 [9:23]
                  Concerto Grosso in B-flat, No.5 [10:25]
                  Concerto Grosso in F, No.6 [11:56]
                  CD2
                  Concerto Grosso in D, No.7 [9:02]
                  Concerto Grosso in g minor, No.8 [14:18]
                  Concerto Grosso in F, No.9 [7:53]
                  Concerto Grosso in C, No.10 [12:30]
                  Concerto Grosso in B-flat, No.11 [9:30]
                  Concerto Grosso in F, No.12 [9:53]
                  The Avison Ensemble/Pavlo Beznosiuk  rec. July 2011. DSD
                  Pdf booklet of notes included.
                  LINN SACD CKD411 [2 SACDs: 65:10 + 64:27]  SACD, 
                  mp3, 16 and 24-bit lossless from linnrecords.com
                  
                  [This review has already appeared on the main pages of MusicWeb 
                  International]
                  
                  
Corellis 
                  Op.6 Concerti grossi were effectively the model for Vivaldi 
                  and his other successors. My introduction to these concerti, 
                  some fifty years ago from a Supraphon LP of five or six of them 
                  played (as I recall) by Ars Rediviva, a group who, despite their 
                  impressive Latinate title, were much less in tune with the music 
                  of this period than the Avison Ensemble, nevertheless came as 
                  much of an epiphany moment, like Keats looking into Chapmans 
                  Homer, as my earlier introduction to Bachs Brandenburg 
                  Concertos. Its no reflection on that Czech ensemble to 
                  describe their performances as heavy  at the time we were 
                  listening to meaty performances of Bach and Vivaldi from the 
                  Stuttgart Chamber Orchestra and Karl Münchinger and thinking 
                  how clever we were to be enjoying such rare early 
                  music as the Brandenburg Concertos and Four Seasons. 
                  Autre temps 
                  
                  Since then theres been a revolution in playing the music 
                  of this period and we have had some fine performances of these 
                  concerti grossi, notably on period instruments:
  The English Concert and 
                  Trevor Pinnock, currently on a 2-CD DG set at mid price, 
                  474 9072 
                   Nicholas McGegan with the Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra 
                  (Harmonia Mundi HCX3957014/5  see review, 
                  now available as download only)
                   Roy Goodman and the Brandenburg Consort on a 2-for-1 
                  Hyperion Dyad set (CDD22011). 
                   Nos.4, 8, 11 and 12 with Sonata a Quattro in g 
                  minor and Fuga a Quattro voci: Chamber Orchestra of the 
                  New Dutch Academy/Simon Murphy (PentaTone PTC5186031)
                   No.4 on London calling: Music by Handel and his contemporaries 
                  (BIS-SACD-1997: Barokksolistene/Bjarke Eike  see 
                  review 
                  and May 2012/1 Download Roundup)
                   Europa Galante/Fabio Biondi (currently unavailable in 
                  the UK: Nos.1-6 only available for download on Opus 111 OP30147 
                  from classicsonline.com).
                
 Even if period instruments dont appeal, 
                  Neville Marriner adopts a light touch with the Academy of St 
                  Martin in the Fields on Double Decca 443 8622, two CDs available 
                  for around £9. Also in the budget category and light-ish 
                  in touch are performances on Naxos from Capella Istropolitana 
                  and Jaroslav Kr(e)cek (Nos. 1-6 on 8.550402 and 7-12 
                  on 8.550403. No.8 is also available on a CD of Christmas Concerti, 
                  Naxos 8.550567).
                  
                  Now along comes the latest release from the Avison Ensemble 
                  whose performances of the music of their namesake on the Divine 
                  Art label and subsequent appearances in Handel and Vivaldi on 
                  Linn have also received high praise, not least from me:
  CKD362: Handel Concerti 
                  Grossi, Op.6/1-12  Download of the Month: July 2010 Download 
                  Roundup
                   CKD365: Vivaldi Concerti, Op.8/1-12  see 
                  October 2011/2 Download Roundup
                
 On opening my latest parcel of review discs, 
                  then, I had the highest expectations on seeing the set of Corellis 
                  Op.6, housed in a gatefold triptych and, as I see, offered at 
                  an attractive price  effectively 2-for-1 or even less 
                  from some online suppliers. In brief, if you dont yet 
                  have a set of these ground-breaking works, or even if you have, 
                  perhaps, No.8, the Christmas Concerto, in a collection 
                  of similar works, you wont regret buying any of the versions 
                  which Ive named; the new recording from the Avisons, who 
                  have a strong claim to offer the lightest and airiest accounts 
                  that Ive heard is not least among them. If you want SACD 
                  into the bargain, then you can forget about choice and plump 
                  for the new Linn set.
                  
                  We have grown used to some very fast tempi for music of this 
                  period, especially from Italian ensembles. While Pavlo Beznosiuk 
                  is no slouch, hes certainly no speed merchant either; 
                  the adagio sections of the first movement of No.7, for 
                  example, seem to be taken more slowly than is normal nowadays 
                  yet, at 2:27 the time for this movement overall is equal to 
                  that on the Marriner recording and surprisingly faster than 
                  Pinnock who takes 2:38. For some really airy playing try the 
                  finale of this concerto at 1:11, exactly the same time as on 
                  the Pinnock recording.
                  
                  No.8, fatto per una note di Natale, the beautiful Christmas 
                  concerto, is the best known of the set. In the adagio-allegro-adagio 
                  movement of No.8 Beznosiuk adopts a faster overall tempo than 
                  Pinnock, Krcek or Marriner, though I never felt any sense of 
                  undue haste and the opening adagio is given due weight. 
                  Again in the pastorale: largo where the shepherds of 
                  the Nativity are evoked, the new recording doesnt hang 
                  around but the mood is well evoked without heavy underlining. 
                  You will, I think be disappointed with that tempo only if youre 
                  inseparably wedded to the ponderous way that these movements 
                  used to be treated, most notoriously by Herbert von Karajan 
                  (DG E419 4132 or 419 0462, with different Christmas 
                  music couplings). Karajan takes 5:04 for the pastorale, 
                  Marriner and McGegan are a shade too fast perhaps at 2:22 and 
                  2:45 respectively; Beznosiuk happily splits the difference at 
                  3:42, with Goodman in close agreement at 3:43 and Pinnock is 
                  a shade slower at 4:06. Compromise isnt always the right 
                  answer but Im with Beznosiuk, Goodman and Pinnock here.
                  
                  The PentaTone recording from the New Dutch Academy is the most 
                  difficult to classify: in some ways the sound is weightier than 
                  we are used to from period performances and tempi sometimes 
                  seem a little on the slow side without being heavy, but in the 
                  pastorale of No.8 they really let fly with a combined 
                  time for the allegro and largo (on one track) 
                  of 4:41. That means that they take less time for the two combined 
                  than Karajan for the largo alone and more than a minute 
                  less than Beznosiuk or Goodman. The allegro section is 
                  fair enough at their tempo but the largo is surely too 
                  fast, though it came as less of a surprise the second time that 
                  I heard it. Nevertheless the PentaTone set is well worth exploring, 
                  especially as the Op.6 concerti were first published in Holland; 
                  try it from the Naxos Music Library if you can.
                  
                  Youll also find there a complete recording of Op.6 from 
                  Cantilena (Chandos CHAN6663 (2)); it has some interesting 
                  qualities and comes inexpensively in their Collect series at 
                  around £10.50, but its better to spend a little 
                  more on the new Linn recording or the Hyperion twofer. The separate 
                  movements are not tracked but Cantilenas time for the 
                  largo of No.8 is around five minutes, almost as slow 
                  as Karajan, though far less heavy.
                  
                  The Linn recording is good  truthful without trying to 
                  be spectacular  and the booklet of notes does justice 
                  to Corellis music. The SACD stereo layer adds greater 
                  depth to the sound picture without adding heaviness. Linn have 
                  recently kindly supplied me with both SACD and 24/96 download 
                  versions of three of their recent recording and, though this 
                  Corelli set was not among them, and Ive heard only the 
                  SACD, I have no doubt that the downloads, especially the 24-bit 
                  versions, are equally recommendable.
                  
                  The best news of all is that this is apparently the harbinger 
                  of a complete series of Corellis chamber music from the 
                  Avison Ensemble. I look forward with anticipation to what is 
                  to follow.
                  
                  I have just one small grumble about the presentation: after 
                  the attractive cover pictures on the Handel and Vivaldi recordings, 
                  the graveyard angel surely sets the wrong tone for these life-giving 
                  works. Dont let it put you off.
                  
                  Hitherto Pinnock and McGegan have been my prime recommendations 
                  for these concertos and if price is a consideration Goodman 
                  is also very good; without wishing to desert them, The new set 
                  stands as a strong alternative for those looking for SACD.
                  
                  Jan Dismas ZELENKA (1679-1745) 
                  Sonatas (c.1722/3)
                  Sonata V in F, ZWV181/5 [16:14]
                  Sonata III in B-flat, ZWV181/3 [15:11]
                  Sonata VI in c minor ZWV181/6 [14:52]
                  Andante from Simphonie à 8 Concertanti in a minor, ZWV189 
                  [2:58]
                  Ensemble Marsyas (Josep Domènech Lafont, Molly Marsh 
                  (oboe); Peter Whelan (bassoon); Thomas Dunford (theorbo); Philippe 
                  Grisvard (harpsichord/organ); Christine Sticher (violone)) with 
                  Monica Huggett (violin)  rec. August 2011. DSD
                  Pdf booklet included
                  LINN RECORDS CKD415 [49:43]  from 
                  linnrecords.com (mp3, 16 and 24-bit lossless)
                  
                  
Dominy 
                  Clements has already reviewed this recording  here 
                   and its also received high praise in other quarters, 
                  so I can be quite brief.
                  
                  The only instrumental music by Zelenka that Id encountered 
                  previously to this recording comes on an elderly Teldec CD from 
                  the Concentus Musicus Wien and Nikolaus Harnoncourt, now on 
                  2564697648. The best known music on that CD is the oddly 
                  named Hipondrie  yes, it does mean hypochondria, 
                  but no-one seems to know why its so called  and 
                  its the name that has probably maintained that work in 
                  the repertoire, together, perhaps, with the fact that apart 
                  from Zemlinsky the composer is just about the last in alphabetical 
                  order.
                  
                  That doesnt mean that the music is not worth hearing  
                  far from it; though its good second-rate rather than first-rate
                  
                  The Harnoncourt recording contains an account of the Sonata 
                  in g minor, ZWV181/2 for two oboes, bassoon and continuo, so 
                  its complementary to the new Linn which contains three 
                  other sonatas from that series. These works are witty, enjoyable, 
                  enterprising and challenging and they receive performances here 
                  at least as good as from Concentus Musicus, with the same blend 
                  of scholarship (pitch = 415Hz and Silbermann II temperament) 
                  and musicality that the older recording displays, together with 
                  the fruits of more modern scholarship. 
                  
                  Indeed, having been recorded at the York Early Music Festival, 
                  they seem to have captured some of the magic which surrounds 
                  that event. I hadnt encountered Ensemble Marsyas before. 
                  Their namesake challenged Apollo to a musical contest, which 
                  is pretty apt as an indication of the high calibre of their 
                  playing, but I hope that they dont share his fate of being 
                  flayed alive for his impertinence  not for nothing does 
                  Apollos name derive from the Greek verb to destroy. 
                  
                  With excellent recording  Ive listened to both the 
                  SACD and 24/96 download  and a booklet of notes that wouldnt 
                  shame even Hyperion, I have only one grumble. I refrained from 
                  complaining about the short playing time on the second CD when 
                  I reviewed the Accent recording of Zelenkas funeral music 
                  (see below) on the grounds that any fill-up would have seemed 
                  irrelevant, but that doesnt prevent my pointing out that 
                  50 minutes on the new Linn recording is very short value when 
                  we could have been given more of the sonatas from ZWV181.
                  
                  For those seeking more Zelenka, Hyperion have two very worthwhile 
                  recordings of his sacred music:
  Lamentations (CDH55106) 
                   see March 2010 Roundup
                   Litaniæ de venerabili altaris sacramento, 
                  etc. (CDH55424)  see January 2012/1 Roundup
                
 and theres the Offficium defunctorum 
                  and Requiem on Accent (ACC24244)  also January 
                  2012/1 Roundup.
                  
                  Dominy Clements compared the new Linn recordings with those 
                  on a complete set on Accent ACC30048 and preferred the 
                  Marsyas Ensemble. I havent yet heard the Accent recordings 
                  but I hope to visit them for a future Download News  you 
                  can try them for yourself if you have access to the Naxos Music 
                  Library  but I doubt if they offer much if any improvement 
                  over the performances and recording on the Linn release  
                  good second-rate music made to sound almost first-rate by these 
                  performances  except for that short playing time, and 
                  even the Accent set is not over-generous, with 111 minutes spread 
                  over two discs.
                  
                  Joseph HAYDN (1732-1809)
                  Symphony No. 85 in B flat, La Reine [25:48]
                  Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-91)
                  Exsultate, jubilate, K165 [15:40]
                  Mass in C, K317, Coronation [25:51]
                  Teresa Wakim (soprano)
                  Paula Murrihy (mezzo)
                  Thomas Cooley (tenor)
                  Sumner Thompson (baritone)
                  Handel and Haydn Society Orchestra/Harry Christophers  
                  rec. April 2012. DDD
                  Pdf booklet included
                  CORO COR16104 [67:27]  from thesixteendigital.com 
                  (mp3, aac and 24-bit lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library. 
                  
                  
                  
Weve 
                  had to wait slightly longer for this recent Coro release to 
                  appear as a download: weve already had Handels Saul 
                  (COR16103) and Volume 2 of The Sixteens Palestrina 
                  (COR16105) and Ive welcomed both. Harry Christophers 
                  has already recorded that mighty skeleton Mozarts Mass 
                  in c minor (COR16084  download in mp3 from classicsonline.com) 
                  and his Requiem (COR16093  see October 2011/2 
                  Roundup), 
                  so I had high expectations of this new Coronation Mass.
                  
                  The Handel and Haydn Society are the USAs oldest early-music 
                  specialists so its hardly surprising that their performance 
                  of the best-known of Haydns Paris symphonies, which opens 
                  the programme, should challenge existing recommendations. With 
                  the first-movement repeats included and generally quite leisurely 
                  tempi, it challenges the fairly recent DHM set from Nikolaus 
                  Harnoncourt  except, of course, that Haydn specialists 
                  are likely to want to have that or another complete set of these 
                  wonderful symphonies.
                  
                  Thats just the starter, however, and its followed 
                  by another appetiser in the form of Exsultate jubilate. 
                  It would take a superb off-planet performance to oust Emma Kirbys 
                  performance for me (Decca Oiseau Lyre 411 8332 or Eloquence 
                  476 7460) and this is not quite that. Reviewing the Kirkby 
                  recording alongside Carolyn Sampson in the November 2010 Roundup, 
                  I thought that the latter sounded a little plummy by comparison; 
                  here the problem is reversed  I thought Tessa Wakim, though 
                  sweet-voiced, just a little too small in tone and slightly subdued 
                  by comparison, though by no means was I put off by that from 
                  moving on to the main course.
                  
                  If Wakims singing in Exsultate is a little lacking 
                  in power, the Kyrie of the Coronation Mass opens 
                  forcefully from all concerned; here again I thought Wakims 
                  tone a little too soft and sweet  shes slightly 
                  outsung by her fellow soloists  but its not something 
                  that I want to over-emphasise. In the Coronation Mass 
                  its Emma Kirkby and her fellow performers again who hold 
                  the field for me (Decca 436 5852  January 2010 
                  Roundup), 
                  but you may well prefer the couplings on the new Coro recording 
                  to the Vesperæ solemnes de confessore on that Hogwood-directed 
                  recording.
                  
                  Others may well be more impressed than I was by Ms Wakims 
                  voice and she shines brightly in the Agnus Dei of the 
                  Mass, a piece so redolent for me of the Countesss remembrance 
                  of better times in Figaro, than she does elsewhere. Though 
                  I cant imagine that anyone wouldnt go overboard 
                  for Ms Kirkby, this movement alone, with all concerned capturing 
                  the sheer exuberance of its final section, would sell the new 
                  Coro recording at least as a very fine runner-up.
                  
                  The Coro recording is good, especially as heard in 24-bit lossless 
                  flac  the acoustic is just a little thick in places but 
                  not to any serious extent. The quality of the Coro booklet is 
                  an added advantage; I dont know of any download site that 
                  provides a booklet with either of the Kirkby recordings.
                  
                  For the recent Chandos recording of the Coronation Mass, 
                  Exsultate jubilate, Missa Brevis, Ave verum 
                  corpus and two Epistle sonatas, from St Johns, Cambridge 
                  (CHAN0786), see March 2012/1 Roundup.
                  
                  Carl Maria von WEBER (1786-1826) 
                  Wind Concertos
                  Clarinet Concerto No. 1 in f minor, Op. 73, J.114 [20:24]
                  Bassoon Concerto in F, Op. 75, J.127 [18:13]
                  Horn Concertino in e minor, Op. 45, J.188 [16:09]
                  Concertino for Clarinet and Orchestra in c minor/E-flat, Op. 
                  26, J.109 [9:14]
                  Maximiliano Martín (clarinet)
                  Peter Whelan (bassoon)
                  Alec Frank-Gemmill (horn)
                  Scottish Chamber Orchestra/Alexander Janiczek
                  rec. Usher Hall, Edinburgh, 5-9 September 2011. DSD.
                  Pdf booklet included with download
                  LINN RECORDS CKD409 [64:31]  SACD, mp3, 16 
                  and 24-bit lossless downloads from linnrecords.com.
                  
                  
The 
                  Scottish Chamber Orchestra are going from strength to strength 
                  in their recordings for Linn; some have come very close for 
                  me to being definitive, and this is as successful as any to 
                  date. I liked the SCO with Robin Ticciati in Berlioz Symphonie 
                  Fantastique  others were even more enthusiastic, with 
                  Dan Morgan and Simon Thompson both making it Recording 
                  of the Month  review 
                  and review. 
                  
                  
                  Their Mozart symphony recordings with Sir Charles Mackerras 
                  were an all-round success: Nos.38-41, CKD308: Recording 
                  of the Month  review 
                   and February 2009 Download Roundup; 
                  Nos.29, 31-2, 35-6, CKD350  review 
                  and April 2010 Download Roundup 
                   Recording of the Month. With Alexander 
                  Janiczek at the helm I greatly enjoyed their performance of 
                  Mozarts Colloredo Serenade and Divertimento K521 on my 
                  first encounter with them (CKD320  January 2009 
                  Download Roundup), 
                  so its hardly surprising that the new recording is such 
                  a delight.
                  
                  Another reason for my lack of surprise at placing this new Linn 
                  recording at the top of the tree is that Im by no means 
                  the first to sing its praises  its already received 
                  top rating or something very close from at least three reviewers 
                  in music magazines and one radio CD review.
                  
                  The only reason that I can think why this wouldnt feature 
                  as a top choice for anyone in search of Webers concertos 
                  for wind instruments would be a preference for the Chandos album 
                  which features the second clarinet concerto in place of the 
                  bassoon concerto, with Michael Collins playing the clarinet 
                  and conducting and Stephen Stirling as horn soloist, which Michael 
                  Cookson thought a fine release (CHAN10702  see 
                  review). 
                  Weber completists may like to note that Chandos have just squared 
                  the circle as it were by offering the bassoon concerto, with 
                  Karen Geoghegan as soloist, on a release which offers the two 
                  Symphonies and Berlioz orchestration of the Invitation 
                  to the Dance. (CHAN10748: BBCPO/Juan Menja).
                  
                  I began with the expectation of comparing the new recordings 
                  of the two clarinet works with Collins on Chandos and with what 
                  have come to be generally regarded as the two benchmarks for 
                  these works, offering both clarinet concertos, the concertino 
                  and the orchestrated version of the Clarinet Quintet: Sabine 
                  Meyer (EMI Great Recordings 5679882  review 
                  and review 
                   or Sabine Meyer spielt Weber, identically coupled 
                  on EMI Electrola Collection 6020962, both mid-price) 
                  and Martin Fröst (BIS BIS-SACD-1523  review). 
                  These remain the top choices for anyone requiring Webers 
                  complete output for the clarinet concertante and I hope 
                  to get round to reviewing them in a future Download News: the 
                  Meyer is especially good value as a download in 320kb/s mp3 
                  from sainsburysentertainment.co.uk 
                  at just £4.99 for the Electrola reissue, while the Fröst 
                  comes in mp3, 16 and 24-bit sound from eclassical.com 
                  as well as on SACD. 
                  
                  Maximiliano Martíns performances, however, of the 
                  first clarinet concerto and the concertino are so good and hes 
                  so well supported by the SCO and Alexander Janiczek as to stand 
                  their ground against all comers. They capture both the sheer 
                  fun of the music  theres plenty of that  and 
                  the more reflective moods; I hope that Martín will also 
                  give us the second clarinet concerto and the quintet or its 
                  orchestrated version soon.
                  
                  Much as Id have liked to have had those other two clarinet 
                  works, I certainly cant complain about the performances 
                  of the bassoon and horn works which separate the clarinet concerto 
                  and concertino here. Not even Richard Strauss comes closer than 
                  Weber to rivalling the Mozart horn concertos and Alec Frank-Gemmill 
                  makes a very strong case for Weber, showing us what Flanders 
                  and Swann might have made into another success, while Peter 
                  Whelan makes an equally strong case for the bassoon concerto 
                  as a rival to Mozarts. (A good question for a quiz night: 
                  name any composer other than Vivaldi, Mozart and Weber who wrote 
                  a solo bassoon concerto.) I cant think of the word bassoon 
                  without thinking buffoon and theres plenty 
                  of buffoonery here, especially in the perky finale, but Whelan 
                  also brings out the reflective, rather plangent mood of the 
                  slow movement, too.
                  
                  The Scottish Chamber Orchestra and Alexander Janiczek offer 
                  ideal accompaniment throughout and the recording is equally 
                  recommendable.
                  
                  Both those Chandos recordings come in CD form and as a download 
                  in mp3, 16-bit and 24/96, giving the Linn recording the edge 
                  in that the physical disc is available as an SACD and as up 
                  to 24/192 Studio Master download format. As I dont yet 
                  have a DAC that can cope with 24/192, I listened to the recording 
                  in better-than-CD 24/96 format. That should give a fair indication 
                  of what to expect from the SACD stereo layer of the equivalent 
                  disc  Ive been able to compare some recent Linn 
                  releases, though not this one, in both formats  and its 
                  very good indeed.
                  
                  David Kettles notes in the booklet, which comes as a pdf 
                  document for downloaders, are very valuable. They round off 
                  an excellent release, strongly recommended to all but those 
                  seeking all the clarinet concertante works on one disc; 
                  they will need to turn to Meyer or Fröst, with Meyer clearly 
                  replacing as bargain of choice the worthy performances of the 
                  two clarinet concertos and concertino on Naxos 8.550378.
                  
                  Igor STRAVINSKY (1882-1971)
                  LOiseau de feu (The Firebird) 1910 Ballet Score 
                  (Fairy-tale ballet in two tableaux for orchestra) 
                  [47:03]
                  Pyotr Ilyich TCHAIKOVSKY (1840-93) 
                  arr. Igor STRAVINSKY
                  Pas-de-Deux (LOiseau bleu  Bluebird; 
                  from the ballet The Sleeping Beauty) [5:09]
                  Jean SIBELIUS (1865-1957) arr. 
                  Igor STRAVINSKY Canzonetta, Op. 62a for two clarinets, 
                  four horns, harp, and double bass [3:24]
                  Fryderyk CHOPIN (1810-49) 
                  orch. Igor STRAVINSKY
                  Nocturne in A flat, Op. 32 No. 1 [7:31]
                  Grande Valse Brillante, Op. 18 [6:07]
                  Igor STRAVINSKY Greeting 
                  Prelude for the 80th birthday of Pierre Monteux [0:51]
                  Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra/Andrew Litton  rec. October 
                  2009, June 2010. DSD
                  Pdf booklet included
                  BIS-SACD-1874 [71:40]  from eclassical.com 
                  (mp3, 16 and 24-bit lossless) or stream from Naxos 
                  Music Library
                  
                  [If you want a stunning treat and a Firebird which will 
                  last you for the next decade or so, this is the place. 
                  See review 
                  by Dominy Clements.]
                  
                  Theres very strong competition for any new version of 
                  the Firebird; to name just those that I own, have owned 
                  or reviewed:
 Stravinsky�s own recording 
                  on a mid-price release with the Rite of Spring (Sony 
                  SMK89875) or as part of the multi-disc set
                   Yakov Kreizberg in Monte Carlo with Petrushka, 
                  the Rite of Spring and Pulcinella (OPMC001, 
                  3 budget-price CDs � Recording of the Month: review)
                   Simon Rattle on a budget twofer with the Rite 
                  of Spring, Petrushka and Apollo (EMI 9677112 
                  � review)
                   Ernest Ansermet (Decca Eloquence 480 3780 
                  with NPO or 1955 recording with OSR from classicsonline.com 
                  for just �1.99)
                   Antal Dor�ti (Mercury � download from hmvdigital.com. 
                
 
Id 
                  hate to plump for any one of these at the expense of the others 
                  but the new BIS recording can hold its own against them and 
                  in one important respect it wins by being available in SACD 
                  or in 24-bit lossless sound; only Iván Fischers 
                  recording of the Firebird Suite, with the Rite of 
                  Spring and Scherzo à la Russe on Channel CCSSA32112 
                  can beat that, with mp3, 24/44.1, 24/96, 24/192 and even DSD 
                  on offer  SACD review 
                  and March 2012/1 Roundup. 
                  
                  
                  The Litton performance brings out the more reflective side of 
                  the music than most but theres plenty of energy at the 
                  climaxes. Rattle and Stravinsky himself offer tremendous bargains; 
                  their couplings are more to the point than the bitty additions 
                  to the new BIS  this is really a one-work recording for 
                  me  and I wouldnt want to be with the composers 
                  own recording in particular, but Litton makes a strongly recommended 
                  alternative or addition.
                  
                  I played this recording first late at night with the volume 
                  low to avoid disturbing the neighbours and it seemed lacking 
                  in energy; at normal listening levels its a very different 
                  picture. 
                  
                  Naxos have just reissued Gerard Schwarzs Seattle recording 
                  from 1986, formerly on Delos, where its still available 
                  with commentary by Natalia Makarova (DE6005). A first 
                  hearing via the Naxos Music Library establishes this, too, as 
                  a strong contender, especially as a download from classicsonline.com, 
                  but the attractive price is somewhat offset by the short value 
                   just The Firebird and Fireworks, a total 
                  playing time of 52 minutes. (Naxos 8.571221).
                  
                  Sergei PROKOFIEV (1891-1953)
                  Piano Concerto No. 1 in D flat, Op.10* (1912) [16:05]
                  Piano Concerto No. 4 in B flat, Op. 53* (left hand, 1931) [23:13]	
                  
                  Piano Concerto No. 5 in G, Op.55* (1932) [24:07] 
                  Piano Concerto No. 2 in g minor, Op.16 (1913)** [31:03] 
                  Piano Concerto No. 3 in C, Op.26 (1921)** [27:17]
                  Boris Berman (piano)*; Horacio Gutierrez (piano)**; Royal Concertgebouw 
                  Orchestra/Neeme Jarvi  rec. 8-12 May 1989 and 7, 8, 11-12 
                  May 1990. DDD.
                  Pdf booklet included
                  CHANDOS CHAN8938 [2CDs: 121:14]  from theclassicalshop.net 
                  (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library
                  
                  [Nos. 1, 4 and 5 also available separately on CHAN8791 
                  [63:13] ]
                  
                  Piano Concerto No. 2 in g minor, Op. 16 (1913) [31:45]
                  Piano Sonata No. 2 in d minor, Op. 14 (1912) [18:26]
                  Piano Concerto No. 3 in C, Op. 26 (1921) [29:16]
                  Freddy Kempf (piano); Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra/Andrew Litton
                   rec. Bergen and Stockholm, July-August, 2008. DDD.
                  Pdf booklet included
                  BIS-SACD-1820 [80:48]  from eclassical.com 
                  (mp3 16 and 24-bit lossless) or stream from Naxos Music 
                  Library
                  
                  
I 
                  recently recommended the Chandos complete set of the Prokofiev 
                  Symphonies, so their complete Piano Concertos set makes for 
                  a logical next step, especially as its available as a 
                  2-for-1 offer. (Dont choose the more recent 2009 reissue 
                  on CHAN10522 which, though less expensive on CD than 
                  its separate components, is more expensive as a download than 
                  CHAN8398. Sort out the logic of that if you can! If, 
                  however, you only want mp3, hmvdigital.com offer CHAN10522 
                  for just £7.49.) Ive listed the separate catalogue 
                  number for Nos. 1, 4 and 5 for those who already have the Freddy 
                  Kempf recording of Nos. 2 and 3 and dont wish to have 
                  two versions of those works, though the single disc costs as 
                  much as the 2-CD set.
                  
                  
In 
                  the June 2010 Roundup 
                  I briefly endorsed Dominy Clements enthusiastic review 
                  of the Freddy Kempf/Andrew Litton recording on BIS. Im 
                  still of the opinion that it deserves high praise and Ive 
                  included it here as a reminder of its merits and to point out 
                  that its no longer available from passionato.com, who 
                  no longer do downloads, but in mp3 and 16-bit lossless from 
                  eclassical.com and, for a little more, in 24-bit sound.
                  
                  The classic Sviatoslav Richter version of No.5 seems to have 
                  reverted to full price on CD but the less expensive DG Originals 
                  release, coupled with Piano Sonata No.8, remains available as 
                  a download from hmvdigital.com. 
                  The Martha Argerich/Charles Dutoit recording of Nos. 1 and 3 
                  is available from a number of sources; the best match of 320kb/s 
                  sound and price (£4.99) is to be found at sainsburysnetertainment.com. 
                  The only reason against buying these two recordings would be 
                  that while there is no overlap between them, it leaves you without 
                  Nos. 2 and 4.
                
                Sergei PROKOFIEV
                  Romeo and Juliet: Suite No. 1, Op. 64bis (1936); 
                  Suite No. 2, Op. 64ter (1936)
                  Suite No. 3, Op. 101 (1946) (performed in the order the music 
                  appears in the ballet score)
                  Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra/Andrew Litton  rec. June 
                  2005. DSD.
                  Pdf booklet included
                  BIS-SACD-1301 [72:14]  from eclassical.com 
                  (mp3, 16-and 24-bit lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library
                  
                  
Ideally, 
                  I recommend the complete ballet  from Previn (EMI, coupled 
                  with Raymonda in its latest reissue, 9677012) 
                  or Ashkenazy (Decca, reissued last year, 478 3100), both 
                  available inexpensively, but if you think the complete score 
                  is a bit too much, this recording represents an ideal compromise 
                   the music from all three suites played in the order that 
                  it appears in the ballet. It covers more ground than the Supraphon 
                  recording conducted by Karel Ančerl from which I got to 
                  know this work  now coupled with Peter and the Wolf 
                  on SU36762  but it lacks just a little of the sheer 
                  energy that Ančerl conveys. The only download of the Ančerl 
                  that Ive been able to find, from hmvdigital.com, will 
                  save you one penny over the price of the CD from MDT.
                  
                  This recording needs to be played at a higher than usual volume 
                  level to make its full impact  at normal levels it sounds 
                  surprisingly tame.
                  
                  Steve REICH (b.1936)
                  Triple Quartet (1999) [14:45]
                  Duet (1994) [5:14]
                  Different Trains (1988) [27:14]
                  The Smith Quartet  rec. 2005. DDD
                  Pdf booklet included
                  SIGNUM CLASSICS SIGCD064 [46:59]  download from 
                  theclassicalshop.net 
                  (mp3 and lossless, with booklet) or stream from Naxos Music 
                  Library (no booklet)
                  
                  [One could make the case for this disc as the near-ideal 
                  representation of Reichs considerable contribution to 
                  the string quartet genre. If youre into Reich, dont 
                  hesitate. See review 
                  by Tony Haywood.]
                  
                  To Tony Haywoods review I need only add my own appreciation 
                  of the music  Im a great fan of all the so-called 
                  minimalists  and performances and to add that the download 
                  is in good quality, even in mp3 format.
                  
                  In lighter 
                  mood
                  
                  English Country Dances
                  The Lord Zouches Maske
                  Pavan
                  The Long Dance
                  Branle des Sabots
                  Pinagay
                  Branle de lOfficial
                  Branle des Lavandieres
                  Nowels Galliard
                  The Earl of Essex Measures
                  Gathering Peascods
                  Millisons Jegge
                  The Ould Almaine
                  Quadran Pavin
                  Can She Excuse (The Earl of Essex Galliard)
                  Branle de la Guerre
                  Branle des Chevaulx
                  Branle[s] dEscosse
                  The Queens Almaine
                  Coranto
                  Il Canario
                  Bassa Pompilia
                  Jenny Pluck Pears
                  Drive the Cold Winter Away
                  Graies Inne Maske
                  The Broadside Band/Jeremy Barlow  rec. 2003. DDD.
                  Pdf booklet from classicsonline.com or Naxos Music Library
                  THE GIFT OF MUSIC CCLCDG1246 [69:20]  from eclassical.com 
                  (mp3 and lossless) or classicsonline.com 
                  (mp3) or stream from Naxos Music Library
                  
                  
Let 
                  me quote the blurb: Cheery English dances from the 
                  sixteenth and seventeenth centuries in vibrant arrangements 
                  from The Broadside Band. From the Long Dance to the Country 
                  Dance, the bands shawms and sackbuts, recorders and hurdy-gurdies 
                  present a series of tuneful, rhythmic pavanes and galliards, 
                  branles and canarios. 
                  
                  I need only to apply one corrective  English 
                  is a bit misleading here, as can be seen from the music with 
                  French titles, actually taken from Thoinot Arbeaus Orchésographie, 
                  a 1589 collection of late-medieval and renaissance French 
                  court dances. (Facsimile online here.) 
                  Only a small percentage of the music comes from Playfords 
                  English collection, but that doesnt make the Arbeau pieces 
                  any less enjoyable; theres even a tenuous Christmas connection 
                  in that the branle de lofficial (tr.6) provides 
                  the tune of the well-known carol Ding dong merrily on high, 
                  though before it came to have any such association.
                  
                  Theres a trade-off between the downloads: eclassical.com 
                  offer lossless sound as well as mp3 at but classicsonline.com, 
                  in decent mp3 only, also offer the booklet and charge only £4.99. 
                  If you want lossless, the eclassical.com price of $12.48 is 
                  certainly not exorbitant  its a little less than 
                  buying the CD direct from The Gift of Music  and if you 
                  have access to the Naxos Music Library its possible to 
                  download the booklet there. One way or the other, the booklet 
                  is worth having for its brief descriptions of the various dances.
                  
                  Thoinot Arbeaus real name was Jehan Tabourot  he 
                  simply rearranged the order of the letters, probably because 
                  he was a priest and didnt wish his identity to be known, 
                  even though the title page claims respectability for lhonneste 
                  exercise des dances. Youll find reviews of more of 
                  his music on Alto ALC1076 (June 2011/1 Roundup) 
                  and Musica Rediviva MRCD001 and MRCD005 (May 2012/2 
                  Roundup) 
                  and more from Playfords Dancing Master on Chandos 
                  CHAN9446 (March 2011/2 Roundup).
                  
                  
Yet 
                  more mainly light music from this period can be found on Elizabethan 
                  and Jacobean Consort Music  excellent performances 
                  from Catherine Bott and Michael George with the New London Consort 
                  and Philip Pickett (CKD011 [56 minutes]  from linnrecords.com 
                  (mp3 and lossless)). There are inevitably overlaps with similar 
                  collections, but none, so far as I can see from a quick check, 
                  with the Gift of Music recording. Delightful, though not very 
                  Christmas-y: the programme opens with Now is the month of 
                  Maying, though you may wish to down a jar or two of Mother 
                  Watkins Ale, the penultimate track, perhaps seasoned 
                  with Nutmeg and Ginger, the final track, during the festive 
                  season.
                  
                  Dont overlook the companion recording of earlier Music 
                  from the time of Columbus on Linn CKD007 which I 
                  mentioned in the January 2009 Roundup 
                  and the September 2012/1 Roundup.
                  
                  Mozart on 
                  DVD 
                  
                  Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791) 
                  Die Zauberflöte, K620
                  Kathleen Battle (soprano)  Pamina
                  Francisco Araiza (tenor)  Tamino
                  Manfred Hemm (baritone)  Papageno
                  Luciana Serra (soprano)  Queen of the Night
                  Heinz Zednik (tenor)  Monostatos
                  Kurt Moll (bass)  Sarastro
                  Andreas Schmidt (Speaker)
                  Barbara Kilduff (soprano)  Papagena
                  Metropolitan Opera Orchestra and Chorus/James Levine  
                  rec. 1991. DSD.
                  Direction: Brian Large
                  Design: David Hockney 
                  NTSC. All regions. Picture 4:3. PCM stereo.
                  DEUTSCHE GRAMMOPHON DVD 0730039 [169:00]
                  
                  
Ive 
                  already declared my preferences for Die Zauberflöte 
                  without dialogue on CD  hence my allegiance to Otto Klemperer 
                  (EMI 9667932) and the 1950 Herbert von Karajan (EMI Historical 
                  3367692, a bargain for around £8) and the Past 
                  Classics download of the Ferenc Fricsay*  but on DVD its 
                  a different matter: what seems merely tedious when heard makes 
                  sense in the context of the pictures. Spectacle, too, is important, 
                  which is where my choice of this NY Met production** with designs 
                  by David Hockney scores, even though its recorded in narrow 
                  4:3 format rather than 16:9. Your television probably has a 
                  setting which will convert 4:3 to 16:9 without distortion but 
                  with loss of a little of the picture top and bottom. This is 
                  less expensive than the other James Levine DVD set on TDK; even 
                  though there are some grounds for preferring the performance 
                  there, it, too, comes in 4:3 format.
                  
                  Some casting weaknesses there are, but they concern the minor 
                  parts; the Three Ladies could hardly be expected to match Klemperers 
                  star line-up but they also fall short of Fricsays team. 
                  Slightly more seriously, Francisco Araiza is a little less than 
                  heroic as Tamino in vocal and acting terms, but not so as to 
                  spoil my enjoyment; its only by comparison with the likes 
                  of Anton Dermota (Karajan, 1950), Nicolai Gedda (Klemperer) 
                  or Ernst Haefliger (Fricsay) that hes a little wanting.
                  
                  * June 2012/1 Roundup. 
                  For those who prefer Fricsay with dialogue, theres a Naxos 
                  Classical Archive download (9.80720/1 
                   September 2012/1 Roundup).
                  
                  ** not to be confused with Levines abridged English-language 
                  performances at the Met or his German version for children from 
                  Salzburg.