Journey: 200 Years of Harpsichord Music
		Antonio de CABEZÓN (c.1510-1566)
		Diferencias sobre ‘El canto del caballero’ [3:10]
		William BYRD (c.1540-1623)
		The Carman’s Whistle [3:58]
		Thomas TALLIS (c.1505-1585) 
		O ye tender babes [2:37]
		John BULL (1562/3-1628) 
		The King’s Hunt [3:25]
		Jan Pieterszoon SWEELINCK (1562-1621)
		Variations on Mein junges Leben hat ein End, SwWV 324 [6:10]
		Johann Sebastian BACH (1685-1750) 
		French Suite No.6 in E, BWV817 [1827]
		Girolamo FRESCOBALDI (1583-1643)
		Toccata Nona [4:32]
		Balletto primo e secondo [5:39]
		George Frideric HANDEL (1685-1759) 
		Chaconne in G, HWV 435 [6:36]
		Domenico SCARLATTI (1685-1757) Three 
		Sonatas in D, K. 490-492
		Sonata, K. 490: Cantabile [5:02]
		Sonata, K. 491: Allegro [4:57]
		Sonata, K. 492: Presto [4:17]
		Trevor Pinnock (harpsichord: meantone temperament and unequal 
		temperaments)
		rec. Colyer-Fergusson Concert Hall, University of Kent, Canterbury, 
		20-21 August 2014. DDD/DSD
		LINN CKD570 SACD 
		[68:50]
The journey in the title is twofold: inspired by the travels of 
		Antonio Cabezón, the sixteenth-century organist and composer whose 
		variations on a popular tune open the programme, Trevor Pinnock weaves a 
		path not only through Cabezón’s life but also through his own enviable 
		career.  Cabezón and Domenico Scarlatti bookend the album – from a 
		Spanish composer who travelled, to an Italian who settled in Spain – 
		with Sweelinck’s Variations on Mein junges Leben hat ein End at 
		its heart.  Cabezón’s journey was matched by a much shorter one for 
		the young Pinnock, to the house of pianist Ronald Smith and eventually 
		to his being tutored there by Smith’s sister, June.  Being born in 
		Canterbury certainly had its advantages.
		
I have already alluded to the Sweelinck in my recent review of the 
		Glossa 6-CD set of that composer’s complete keyboard music (GCD922410 –
		
		review).  As I noted there, it’s six of one and half-a-dozen of 
		the other in terms of performance.  Pieter Dirksen on Glossa has 
		the considerable advantage of our having heard the tune on which the 
		variations are based immediately before his performance, something which 
		would hardly have been feasible for Linn.  Pinnock also plays the 
		work noticeably faster but the chosen tempi suit the different 
		instruments: Dirksen on the more intimate virginal, Pinnock on the 
		harpsichord. 
		
Of necessity only one instrument is used throughout the programme but 
		it suits the very wide chronological range of the music very well, with 
		appropriate registration for the earlier music.  Re-tuning would 
		have been required at some stage: the earlier pieces are played in 
		meantone temperament and there’s a variety of unequal temperaments for 
		the rest of the programme.
		
It would be pointless to compare the performances with those on other 
		recordings: there’s no comparable programme and, even if there were, 
		many would want to have this SACD as a celebration of Pinnock’s 70th 
		birthday.  Maybe the Sweelinck work is significant in that we 
		septuagenarians cannot refer to our junges Leben anymore, but I 
		hope that it’s not the end of his journey – or mine.  I need hardly 
		say that the playing is as brilliant as ever it was: you would hardly 
		know that much of what we hear is technically very difficult and all the 
		performances are well suited to the tone of the music.  The 
		photographs on pages 8 and 14 show a much older Trevor Pinnock than of 
		yore but the first reminds us of his thoughtful approach to the music – 
		try the Bach – and the second of the sheer joie de vivre that 
		his playing can still evoke, as in the Scarlatti works which close the 
		recital. 
		
Trevor Pinnock refers in the notes to his friendship with Rafael 
		Puyana and, while I’m sure that his instrument is not the kind of 
		monster that Puyana used to play, his performance of the Scarlatti 
		reminds me of the sheer abandon of the latter’s playing without its 
		excesses.
		
The recording is very good, as heard from the stereo SACD layer, and 
		the notes are excellent.  As usual from me, a short review betokens 
		a strong recommendation.
		
Brian Wilson
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