There was a time the sound of historical instruments like recorder, 
                viola da gamba, clavichord and virginal was new to both musicians 
                and music lovers. Those instruments were preserved in museums, 
                but never played, let alone used for concerts and recordings. 
                In our time performances of music of the past on the instruments 
                for which it was written are common practice. But as real historical 
                instruments are often too precious or too fragile to use them 
                on the concert platform most of the time modern copies are played. 
                And even in recordings historical instruments are seldom used. 
                Therefore discs like these are still interesting to listen to, 
                as they document the sound of the original instruments. But they 
                should not create the illusion we hear the instruments exactly 
                as they sounded when they were built. Many instruments have been 
                restored in order to make them playable again, and there is no 
                guarantee this hasn't changed their sound to some extent.
                
The instruments played by John Kitchen are 
                  all part of the Raymond Russell Collection of Early Keyboard 
                  Instruments in Edinburgh. Raymond Russell (1922 - 1964) began 
                  to collect historical keyboard instruments shortly after World 
                  War II and published a book on harpsichord and clavichord in 
                  1959, which included pictures of instruments that are part of 
                  the collection. After his death the collection was made available 
                  to the University of Edinburgh for study purposes. In 1968 instruments 
                  from the collection were presented to the public for the first 
                  time, in the same venue where these recordings have been made. 
                  Since Russell's death more instruments have been added to the 
                  collection. These two discs present only a small selection of 
                  the instruments in the collection, but they show its whole compass, 
                  from late 16th-century virginals to early 19th-century fortepianos.
                
The instruments are demonstrated here with 
                  music which suits them. I am formulating it this way - not the 
                  other way round. The instruments are in the centre here: the 
                  music chosen could have been played on these instruments, but 
                  probably wasn't specifically composed for them. For example 
                  the overture to Handel's opera Rodelinda (Vol. 1) was published 
                  in a keyboard arrangement by John Walsh in 1755. Therefore it 
                  was not intended to be played on the kind of harpsichord John 
                  Broadwood built in 1793, and which is used here. But, considering 
                  the continuing popularity of Handel's music in England after 
                  his death there can be no doubt that a piece like this overture 
                  will have been played on this particular instrument. Even so 
                  I would have preferred a piece which is more suited to take 
                  advantage of one of the features of this instrument, the Venetian 
                  swell mechanism. This was used to make the instrument able to 
                  deal with the crescendo and diminuendo effects many keyboard 
                  pieces of the late 18th century asked for.
                
Also the two sonatas by Domenico Scarlatti 
                  (Vol. 1) were definitely not intended to be played on the Hitchcock 
                  spinet of around 1728 on which they are played here, but as 
                  Scarlatti was very popular in England there can be little doubt 
                  that his sonatas were played at home on an instrument like this. 
                  Spinets were instruments for domestic use, which is one of the 
                  reasons they are seldom used, both on the concert platform and 
                  in recordings.
                
The instruments vary in regard to temperament 
                  and pitch, although one wonders to which extent they are the 
                  same as they originally were, as both can be easily changed. 
                  Something that I found especially interesting is the enharmonic 
                  instruments which appear on both discs. The Toccata VII by Michelangelo 
                  Rossi is played on an 'enharmonic virginal', built around 1620 
                  in Venice. This instrument has two 'black keys' in every octave 
                  split into two halves. This means that D sharp and E flat - 
                  which have one key on modern keyboard instruments - have their 
                  own key on this virginal. The same is the case for G sharp and 
                  A flat. Instruments like this are rare, and it seems they were 
                  only built and used in Italy in the first half of the 17th century. 
                  Therefore it is remarkable that the first volume presents a 
                  chamber organ, built by Thomas Parker in London as late as around 
                  1765, which is based on the same principle. "It is equipped 
                  with two levers that operate extra pipes for the enharmonic 
                  equivalents of all the accidental notes except for F sharp: 
                  C sharp/D flat, D sharp/E flat, G sharp/A flat and A sharp/B 
                  flat".
                
As far as the repertoire on these discs is 
                  concerned, apart from some well-known pieces, like the compositions 
                  by Sweelinck, Scarlatti, Bach and Forqueray, there are also 
                  little-known pieces, for instance anonymous compositions from 
                  several collections. It is here where John Kitchen's playing 
                  is most satisfying. Generally I am less impressed by his interpretations 
                  of larger works, by the likes of Handel and Forqueray. There 
                  is too much legato playing, which makes some pieces sound too 
                  massive (Forqueray), and sometimes the phrasing is unsatisfying 
                  (Sweelinck). Some works by English virginalists are a little 
                  wooden and lack contrast. Byrd's Pavana The Earle of Salisbury 
                  (Vol. 1) is too slow: at that time the pavan wasn't the slow 
                  dance it was to become in the 18th century. Michelangelo Rossi's 
                  Toccata VII isn't very exciting here: the interpretation is 
                  too straightforward. But there are also good performances of 
                  the organ pieces, the sonata by Clementi and the suite by Greene. 
                  In the second volume the pieces by Purcell (played on the spinet) 
                  and the 'Musikalische Nebenstunden' by Johann Christoph Friedrich 
                  Bach, played on a beautiful clavichord by Hubert (1784), are 
                  also played quite well.
                
              
To sum up: the main 
                significance of these discs is the demonstration of the sound 
                of these precious instruments with music which explores their 
                characteristics. From that perspective I recommend them, and I 
                sincerely hope that these instruments shall be used sometime in 
                other recordings which concentrate on the music rather than the 
                instruments. 
                
                Johan van Veen
                
                see also Reviews by Philip Scowcroft (Volume 
                1) and Jonathan Woolf (Volume 
                2)