|
Musical Opinion, no. 1443, Nov-Dec 2004
This is the tenth record Charivari Agréable has made for Signum
and like its predecessors this one combines joyful playing with didactic
intent. As Kah-Ming Ng, the groups keyboard player explains in the
disc booklet, the aim this time is to show how the cornett often complemented
and substituted for the violin. The recording expresses the groups
robust views about instrumentation, arrangement and even pastiche; the
disc includes two suites collating fragments by various composers. Charivari
Agréable makes a convincing argument that the cornett was a respected
solo instrument well beyond its traditionally assigned Golden Age of the
first half of the 17th-century. That argument is eloquently put by Jamie
Savans cornett playing. The creamy texture of his sound is equally
at home in a
toe-tapping Masque by Gregorio Strozzi, the virtuosic flourishes of Cavallis
Canzon à 3 and the cantabile demands of Bassanos Diminutions
on Palestrinas Veni veni, dilecte mi - an extraordinary piece worth
resurrecting by anyone.
But praise goes, too, to the inventiveness and harmonic sense of the regular
ensemble members. Stradellas Sinfonia No 22, which is comett-less,
still grabs attention with its weird and wonderful textures. The taut
ensemble and enthusiasm conveyed by the players must widen the market
for early music.
Philip Sommerich
|
|
The Sunday Times, 16 Jan 2005
The scholar-performer Kah-Ming Ng, who plays keyboard continuo here, locates
these works in the overlap of repertory for the cornett and the
violin. At the dawn of the baroque age, both instruments were seen
as substitutes for the human voice; and hearing the gorgeous sounds on
this disc, one can imagine why. In instrumental music, cornetts and violins
were more or less interchangeable, and often effectively contrasted or
paired in the same piece, as here in a Sonata a tre by Cima (1610) and
a Canzon a tre by Cavalli (1656). These works, with others by little-known
figures such as Strozzi, Pollarolo and Farina, make for a recital of ornate,
inventive delights, to which are added Ngs clever pastiches of ciaccone
and bergamasche.
Stephen Pettitt
|
|
|
http://www.daskulturradio.de/_/auslese/beitrag_jsp/activeid=32/key=tipp_533875.html
Radio Brandenburg Berlin, das Kultur Radio
CD Recommendation
Rating: 5-star Großartig (trans. splendid, marvellous)
|
|
BBC Music Magazine, March 2005-02-02
Music to chase the clouds away
Dont be put off behind the title from a musicology Festschrift
and mail-order heritage catalogue cover lurks an outstanding disc. Its
not easy to concoct a 60-minute non-stop listen from 17th-century Italian
chamber music but I shouldnt have been surprised that Charivari
Agréable makes it such a breeze: ever since signing to Signum some
years back it has been planning and playing some peerless programmes.
The subtitle, A Ray of Sunshine Piercing the Shadows, was
contemporary French polymath Mersennes verdict on Charivaris
guest star, the cornett. As a diehard fellow-fancier, Ive rarely
heard mellifluous swing to match cornettist Jamie Savans. In the
accompanying booklet keyboard player Kah-Ming Ng makes a persuasive case
for the novel combos. Ngs superbly strutting style in a 1620s Polaccha
by Picchi had me dreaming of Hessian boots and a pelisse. And his ingenious
medleys on popular grounds of the period give a new slant to fusion
though this is no short-order snack but a feast, with substantial
servings from Stradella and Cavalli proving they werent solely vocal
geniuses. Sound is a little distant and coloured but this is a recital
to shaft any shadow.
Nick Morgan
|
|
Oxford Today, Hilary Term 2005
For music-making joyfully alive you can rely on Oxfords Charivari
Agréable, whose fabulous back-catalogue increases by two CDs yearly.
The latest, Harmonia Caelestis (SIGCD049) is as good as anything theyve
done. The disc is built round the contrasting sounds of violin and cornett,
that extraordinary leather-clad marriage of brass mouthpiece and woodwind
tube, which generates curiously vocal inflections. Its conventionally
played with similar instruments, but ever-inquisitive, Charivari follow
an Italian recommendation of 1628 to mix it with strings.
This soundworld alone would recommend the disc, but as usual Charivari
cleverly ring changes in texture. Heres a guitar chaconne imitating
the gait of a true Spanish capon (perhaps a castrato singer?)
and there is Picchis Ballo alla Polacha, a stomping dance performed
with wild flair on the harpsichord, with the other instruments joining
the fray for a final whirl. The groups philosophy, of treating the
written remains of early music with the known freedoms of early musicians,
brings two dance medleys. The Bergamascas include several tunes well-known
from Respighis C20 orchestral makeovers: hearing them here is like
hearing agreat unplugged version of Queens Bohemian
Rhapsody.
Graham Topping
|
The Telegraph, Monday 7 Feb
2005
The title might not give the clearest idea of the contents of this delectable
programme of 17th-century Italian chamber music featuring cornett and violin,
but the combination certainly proves to be a partnership made in heaven.
The cornett's lustrous, golden tone described by one contemporary
writer as a ray of sunshine piercing the shadows coupled
with its clarity and agility in virtuoso passagework make it easy to understand
why it was esteemed as one of those instruments that most closely mimicked
the sound of the human voice.
These qualities are heard to especial advantage in Giovanni Bassanos
arrangement of a Palestrina motet, where each long, slow cantabile line
gradually develops into an exuberant efflorescence of ornamentation, and
in Giovanni Paolo Cima's spirited trio sonata, whose playful imitative writing
proves that anything the violin can do, the cornett can follow with equal
panache.
Charivari Agréables sparkling performances make for irresistibly
enjoyable listening; their cornettist Jamie Savans superb technique
and truly singing tone do indeed produce a glorious ray of musical sunshine.
Elizabeth Roche
|
|
Early Music Review, February 2005
The continuo group Charivari Agréable is joined by Jamie Savan
another of the fine clutch of young British cornettists and Oliver
Webber (violin) to illustrate a range of 17th-century Italian music. Jamie
Savan has an airy lightness and easy facility which rests well on the
ears, and Oliver Webber is a sparky violinist. In a couple of pieces the
violins duet partner is Charivaris regular violist, Susanne
Heinrich. The Stradella Sinfonia is a fine example of this, building a
mix of tension and easy conversation between the two, and a very successful
tonal match. Two of the pieces are pastiches by Kah-Ming Ng. The Ciaccona
in particular visits new realmswhich are well worth visitingand
stands as a new piece as much as a pastiche. The continue in some of the
more standard repertoire can be a litde monochrome I wish that
a little more of the playfulness and inventiveness in the best of the
performance had leaked into the standard fare, particularly in a programme
whose subtitle includes the words caprice and conceit. However, these
are small quibbles and I would heartily commend the disc to anyone interested
in this repertoire.
Stephen Cassidy
|