In 
                  France, as elsewhere, there was a tension during the Baroque 
                  period - and not only then - between, on the one hand, a desire 
                  to encourage a distinctive national style and, on the other, 
                  to react to, and even to welcome, foreign presences and influences 
                  in the form both of performers/composers and ideas. At different 
                  times one or other of these impulses held sway, though neither 
                  ever quite disappeared. In the period to which this present 
                  disc is devoted, there was a considerable openness to foreign 
                  models.
                
Henry 
                  IV, king from 1589 to 1610, encouraged a more tolerant and varied 
                  cultural life than most of his predecessors; Cardinal Mazarin 
                  (himself Italian born), when minister of France from 1642 used 
                  his power and wealth to bring many Italian musicians – including 
                  at least three of the composers represented on this disc, Bartolotti, 
                  Corbetta and Rossi – to France. Other, sometimes more popular 
                  musical, influences included the dances of Spain, which became intermittently very fashionable. 
                
Earlier 
                  recordings by Private Musicke, under their director Pierre Pizl, 
                  have seen them performing music by Italian composers, such as 
                  Frescobaldi and Marini; by Spanish composers such as José Marin 
                  and Juan Hidalgo, as well as work by such French luminaries 
                  as Marais and Forqueray. They are, in short, well suited to 
                  explore the ‘international’ repertoire to be heard in Paris in the first half 
                  of the Seventeenth Century. In undertaking such an exploration 
                  they are joined by the excellent and experienced tenor Stephan 
                  van Dyck. 
                
The 
                  programme is very well devised and delightfully various, mixing 
                  vocal and instrumental items and varying the instrumentation 
                  from track to track in a way that ensures that mind and ear 
                  alike are constantly stimulated and enticed. 
                
Some 
                  of the composers here are rather obscure figures. Nothing seems 
                  to be known, for example, of Luis de Briceno, save that in 1626 
                  a collection of his compositions, containing some sixty pieces, 
                  both songs and music for guitar, was published in Paris. Yet the piece played here – Carvanda Ciacona – is a quite 
                  splendid confection, nimbly played by three guitars and the 
                  colascione (a relation of the long-necked lute). It is the kind 
                  of infectious piece which has one tapping one’s foot irresistibly. 
                  It is typical of the careful programming of this CD that it 
                  should be succeeded by a very different mood, created by the 
                  elegantly dignified Symphonie of the far better-known Louis 
                  Couperin, played by a trio of violas da gamba. 
                
The 
                  guitarist-composer Angelo Michele Bartolotti seems to have been 
                  one of the many Italian musicians of the period who travelled 
                  Europe from one patron to another. His early compositions were published 
                  in Florence; he turned up later at the Swedish court and at Innsbruck; he came to the 
                  French court at the invitation (instruction?) of Mazarin, working 
                  in both royal chapel and theatre as guitarist and player of 
                  the theorbo. The three pieces by him, played by Pierre Pitzl 
                  on a 5-course guitar are subtle and intriguing. The Prélude 
                  seems to register his awareness of French practices, and a willingness 
                  to accommodate himself to them, being in the stile brisé, 
                  while his Courant and Canarie are less obviously French in manner. 
                  Foscarini’s Folia and Zarabanda detta la favorita are striking 
                  pieces, especially Folia, a sophisticated piece which yet goes 
                  some way towards explaining why Foscarini was sometimes known 
                  as “il Furioso”. 
                
Of 
                  the native French composers, Guédron is a figure of some substance, 
                  both singer and composer of airs and ballets de cour. 
                  Has there yet been a full CD devoted to his airs? If so, I have 
                  missed it – and the quality of his three contributions here 
                  is clear evidence that his work would reward more extensive 
                  exposure. The work of Michel Lambert has perhaps benefited from 
                  a wider appreciation – as, for example, in René Jacobs collection 
                  of Airs de Cour on Harmonia Mundi HMX 2901061. 
                
              
In 
                short, this is an enterprising, informative and – most importantly 
                – richly enjoyable anthology (not limited to the Love Songs of 
                its subtitle), well played and sung and recorded in a vivid, but 
                not over bright, sound. All with an interest in the music of the 
                early baroque will surely find it of enduring interest.  
                
                
                Glyn Pursglove