The rather awkwardly 
                named Catacoustic Consort is an American 
                ensemble consisting of three instrumentalists 
                and a singer. They specialise in Renaissance 
                vocal and instrumental music. Formed 
                in 2001 they are a relatively young 
                group and won the Naxos/Early Music 
                America recording competition in 2003. 
                Their debut recording with Naxos is 
                a programme of 17th Italian 
                dramatic laments. 
              
 
              
At the head of the 
                programme, naturally, is the sole remaining 
                fragment from Monteverdi’s opera ‘L’Arianna’, 
                the Lamento d’Arianna. The opera 
                was enormously popular in its time but 
                the manuscript has been lost and we 
                have just this lament. Here it receives 
                a fine dramatic reading from soprano 
                Catherine Webster. Her diction is admirable 
                and her soprano has a fine, focused 
                silvery tone. Perhaps she does not yet 
                have quite a feel for the words comparable 
                with Emma Kirkby’s, but this is an impressive 
                debut. 
              
 
              
The group follow this 
                with a short piece by Jacopo Peri, who 
                probably wrote the music for the first 
                real opera La Dafne. His setting 
                of Al fonte al prato (To the 
                spring, to the meadow) is a lively, 
                dancing piece which receives a charming 
                performance from the ensemble. 
              
 
              
They follow this with 
                a pair of instrumental pieces by the 
                great theorbo player Giovanni Girolamo 
                Kapsberger; first a slowish set of variations 
                over a ground bass and then a more lively 
                dance, over a ground bass again. 
              
 
              
Peri’s Lungi dal 
                vostro lume (Far from your light), 
                given in a wonderfully long-breathed 
                performance, is followed by a Vedro’l 
                mio sol by another operatic pioneer 
                Giulio Caccini. Caccini wrote another 
                early opera, L’Euridice; probably 
                the earliest complete opera to survive. 
              
 
              
Peri’s Se tu parti 
                da me (If you leave me) is a setting 
                of a sonnet by Michelangelo Buonarotti. 
                This is a substantial piece, but like 
                many of the laments on this disc by 
                Monteverdi’s contemporaries, Peri fails 
                to reach the depths of intensity that 
                Monteverdi does. It helps therefore 
                that the Catacoustic Consort are such 
                a finely balanced group with a good 
                sense of ensemble playing. Their notes 
                make much of the idea that they improvise 
                their performances. Whilst I did not 
                feel these performances sound improvised, 
                they do have a spontaneity and charm 
                which is entirely appealing. Monteverdi 
                himself reappears with the lovely Si 
                dolce e il tormento (So sweet is 
                the torment). 
              
 
              
Though the consort 
                varies the instrumentation somewhat, 
                they make a particularly distinctive 
                sound due to the timbre of the lira 
                viol which artistic director Annalisa 
                Pappano often plays. The resulting sound 
                has an appealingly sombre quality. The 
                magic of these performances is the chamber 
                music interplay between the performers 
                rather than any gaudy Technicolor instrumentation. 
              
 
              
A further instrumental 
                item follows; a Kapsberger’s Passacaglia 
                is a long, wonderfully contemplative 
                piece. 
              
 
              
Then the other well 
                known piece on the disc, Caccini’s Amarilli; 
                known in a variety of incarnations, 
                the consort give it a charming, unhackneyed 
                performance with Webster gradually increasing 
                the intensity of vocal decoration as 
                the piece progresses. This is followed 
                by a further instrumental piece by a 
                name new to me: Richardo Rogniono. 
              
 
              
Peri’s Uccidimi 
                dolore (Slay me, grief) is another 
                substantial lament; a dramatic recitative 
                which receive a big dramatic performance 
                from Caroline Webster. Finally the group 
                conclude with the charming Amor ch’attendi 
                (Love what are you waiting for) 
                by Caccini. 
              
 
              
If you want the song 
                texts and translations for this release 
                then you must visit Naxos’s web site; 
                understandable perhaps given the budget 
                nature of this release. The CD liner 
                notes include an article introducing 
                the genre and the composers, but they 
                fail to provide detailed background 
                information on the individual items, 
                which is a lost opportunity I think. 
                If I have a complaint about the recital 
                programme, it is that they could perhaps 
                have explored some further by-ways of 
                the vocal repertoire and reduced the 
                number of instrumental items. But many 
                will enjoy the disc’s mix of vocal and 
                instrumental. 
              
 
              
This is repertoire 
                which has been traversed many times 
                by a number of groups, starting with 
                Antony Rooley and the Consort of Musicke. 
                Perhaps the Catacoustic Consort does 
                not have the sheer perfection that Rooley 
                and Emma Kirkby bring to this repertoire. 
                What the Catacoustic Consort does display 
                is a fine sense of spontaneity and they 
                convey a fine sense of four artists 
                playing chamber music in a responsive 
                manner. I hope to hear more of them. 
              
 
               
              
Robert Hugill