This is a delicious disk, full of the most interesting and unusual 
                things. It’s a tribute to the two players that such a fascinating 
                and varied recital could be planned for it seems to be quite a 
                miracle that the music has survived for information on many of 
                the composers is so scant.  
              
Just 
                    imagine that you write a great set of madrigals, they’re published 
                    but in 400 years no–one really knows where or when you were 
                    born and died, and were it not for that solitary publication 
                    nobody, today, would have heard of you. So it is with some 
                    of these composers. I did a little research on each of the 
                    composers represented on this disk and the phrase which occurred 
                    in almost every source I consulted was “very little is known 
                    about his life”. 
                  
Despite 
                    our lack of knowledge, we do have the music – and what we 
                    have here is glorious in its variety, and to make the recital 
                    even more interesting there are solo pieces interspersed with 
                    the duo works. 
                  
So 
                    what of this music? Ortiz was Spanish by birth and there is 
                    a real Spanish feel to his music. He published 
                    two books of music: Tratado de Glosas in 1553 and Musices 
                    liber primus in 1565. The three works in this collection 
                    all come from the first book. 
                  
Recercada 
                    No.2 is a very jolly dance, requiring 
                    some virtuosity on the part of the recorder player, while 
                    Recercada segunda de canto Ilano, a stately piece, 
                    and Recercada prima sobre doulce mémoire 
                    a movement of grave nobility are for psaltry alone. 
                  
Jacob 
                    van Eyck was Dutch and, amongst his many 
                    accomplishments, he was a virtuoso recorder player. Der 
                    Fluyten Lust-hof (The Flute’s Garden of Delights, or perhaps, Pleasure Garden) 
                    is a collection of pieces – folk songs, dance tunes and contemporary 
                    songs – for soprano recorder which rerquire some dexterity 
                    from the player. Derde, Doen Daphne d'over is a particularly 
                    beautiful lament for the solo instrument, Amarilli Mia 
                    Bella is an arrangement for recorder and psaltery of a 
                    piece by Giulio Caccini and van Eyck’s 
                    other two pieces are up–tempo dance numbers. 
                  
 
                  
There 
                    are absolutely no biographical details whatsoever about Dario 
                    Castello. Did he work at St Mark’s in Venice when Monteverdi 
                    was  maestro di capella? It’s 
                    thought that he might have died in the great plague of 1630 
                    for he published no music after that date. Only 29 compositions 
                    survive and this Sonata Seconda 
                    is a very challenging work for the players, written in a variety 
                    of contrasting sections. 
                  
 
                  
We 
                    probably know about the life of John Dowland than of most 
                    of the other composers here, but there are still gaps in our 
                    knowledge of him. There is a special melancholy in Dowland’s 
                    music and the two songs presented here, and played by solo 
                    psaltery, are full; of that wistfulness. 
                  
 
                  
Johann 
                    Schop is a totally new name to me. In 
                    1756 Leopold Mozart made comment on the difficulty of a trill 
                    in one of Schop’s works! This Lachrime Pavaen is one of the most serious 
                    compositions on this disk and it has a depth of feeling which 
                    goes far beyond the mere few minutes playing time.
                  
 
                  
Giovanni Bassano was a cornettist employed from 1576 in various posts 
                    at St Mark's, Venice, including, from 1601, conductor of the 
                    orchestra. His 1591 he published a collection of ornamented 
                    versions of motets and madrigals by leading composers such 
                    as Palestrina, Lassus and Rore. His two works heard here are 
                    alternately slow and reflective and dance–like – the Divisions 
                    on Frais et Gaillard makes a fabulously joyous conclusion 
                    to the whole recital.
                  
Giovanni 
                    Battista Fontana is known solely for one, posthumous, publication 
                    which consists of six sonatas for violin and bass and six 
                    more for two violins and bass. A note states that he came 
                    from Brescia and worked in various cities in Italy, but that 
                    seems to be the sum of our knowledge of him. The Sonatas in 
                    this publication contain some of the earliest works in that 
                    form, and the bass is more independent than was usual for 
                    that time. They are designed to be played by many different 
                    combinations and these Sonatas work very well for recorder 
                    and chitarrone. The Sonata sesta is a lighter work 
                    than its companion, the Sonata Seconda, which contains 
                    a particularly striking dance section in the middle. 
                  
Biagio 
                    Marini was a virtuoso violinist and his compositions were 
                    published and known throughout the European musical world. 
                    He traveled throughout his life, and occupied many posts in 
                    Europe. It seems that he married three times and had five 
                    children. As befits a virtuoso of the violin his works contirbuted 
                    to the development of string playing by expanding the repertoire 
                    of both solo and accompanied violin and incorporating the 
                    slur, double and triple stopping. He used the very first notated 
                    tremolando in his music. Sadly none of this is in evidence 
                    in his Passacalio which is another stately processional. 
                  
This 
                    is a fascinating and most enjoyable recital of music which, 
                    under normal circumstances, I would have ignored. It is easy 
                    to forget just what a wealth and variety of music was being 
                    created during the 150 years before the birth of J S Bach 
                    and we are to be grateful to Pamela Thorby, Andrew Lawrence–King 
                    and Linn Records for bringing this work to our attention. 
                    I am saddened that there is only one solo for the recorder, 
                    when there are several for the harp and psaltery but I must 
                    not carp, this is a sheer delight. Andrew Lawrence–King’s 
                    essay in the booklet is fascinating and the recording is bright 
                    and clear, but with little reverberation, and an astonishing 
                    dynamic range. 
                  
              
Bob 
                Briggs