This disc from the 
                      Swedish mediaeval band, Falsobordone, presents a selection 
                      of songs and dances from mediaeval Europe. These would have been performed at feasts. Comprising 
                      fairly familiar works, it includes music form composers 
                      as well known as Alfonso X and de Machaut, as well as anonymous 
                      compositions. The disc insert includes recipes, reconstructed 
                      by archaeologists, for dishes that might have featured at 
                      such banquets. The one reservation I have about this disc 
                      concerns these notes, which, whilst giving many tasty details 
                      about the food, say next to nothing about the music. This 
                      detracts from the importance of the works themselves, I 
                      feel; for example, words to the songs would have been appreciated!
                    The pieces are extremely 
                      well-performed, and are pleasantly raucous and riotous. 
                      I was particularly drawn to the deeply appealing Alfonso 
                      X’s Muito faz grand’ero, and the enchanting anonymous 
                      Sia laudato san Francesco and Alfonso’s Laudar 
                      vollio per amore, with their male voice drone.  The 
                      voices are all suited to this kind of music – the female 
                      voices are sweet and clear, whilst remaining strong and 
                      robust – Karin Strinnholm Lagergren, for example, has a 
                      particularly sweet and beautiful voice, rich and mature.
                    One perhaps might look 
                      for a touch more wildness and stridency. This is, after 
                      all, feast music, and while these performances do not lack 
                      joy or passion, I feel they could be slightly less controlled 
                      and more unhinged – as, indeed, one imagines, they may have 
                      been at the time! This is otherwise a thoroughly enjoyable 
                      disc. It is not, however, an entirely novel idea; in 2001, 
                      Harmonia Mundi brought out a CD/book entitled Food, wine 
                      and song. This covers the same period and countries 
                      – even, on occasion, the same composer (de Machaut), although 
                      they don’t cover the same songs. The Harmonia Mundi publication, 
                      with the Orlando Consort, gives a 120-page disc-size booklet 
                      given over not just to the recipes - formulated by famous 
                      British cooks - but also to scholarly notes on the food, 
                      composers, music in general. It includes the texts for the 
                      songs as well. In the present case the marriage of food 
                      and music is taken a step further by each recipe being allied 
                      to a particular piece of music. The music-making is, naturally, 
                      of a high standard. If it came to a choice between the two 
                      discs, I would automatically opt for the Harmonia Mundi 
                      disc – if only because it is better presented, and includes 
                      so much extra information and material. However, I wouldn’t 
                      hesitate to recommend the Falsobordone disc to any lover 
                      of medieval music, the more omniphagous the better ...
                    Em Marshall