Sophie Yates - Purcell: Harpsichord (1995)

  • 02 Jun, 08:50
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Artist:
Title: Purcell: Harpsichord
Year Of Release: 1995
Label: Chandos Records
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 01:09:35
Total Size: 475 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

Suite No. 1 Z 660 in G major:
1. Prelude
2. Almand
3. Corrant
4. Minuet
5. Ground in Gamut Z 645: Ground in Gamut
Suite No. 2 Z 661 in G minor:
6. Prelude
7. Almand
8. Corant
9. Saraband
10. Prelude in G minor: Prelude
11. Chacone Z T680 in G minor: Chacone Z T680
Suite of lessons Z 665:
12. Prelude
13. Almond
14. Jigg
Suite No. 3 Z 662:
15. Prelude
16. Almand
17. Parcell Harpsichord: Courante
18. A New Ground Z T 682
Suite No. 4 Z 663:
19. Prelude
20. Almand
21. Corante
22. Saraband
23. Sara with Division Z 654: Saraband With Division
Suite No. 5 Z 665:
24. Prelude
25. Almand
26. Corant
27. Saraband
28. Ground Z D221in C minor: Ground Z D221
Suite No. 5 Z 667 in D major:
29. Prelude
30. Almand
31. Hornpipe
32. Ground Z D222 in D minor
Suite No. 7 Z 668:
33. Almand
34. Corant
35. Hornpipe
Suite No. 8 Z 669:
36. Prelude
37. Almand
38. Courante
39. Minuet
40. Round O Z T684

Performers:
Sophie Yates (harpsichord)

For all the celebrations to mark the tercentenary of Purcell’s death last year, his keyboard music has remained very much in the shadow of his works for the theatre and Church; yet the simplicity and grace of these more intimate pieces make them immediately appealing. Several of them are, in fact, transcriptions of earlier vocal works, and therein lies the key to their interpretation. Of the two performers, Olivier Baumont is the more flamboyant, invariably choosing faster tempi than Sophie Yates, and playing with fluidity, panache and humour. But Yates’s guileless approach really captures the music’s ingenuousness, even if she occasionally sounds a little too strait-laced. Her harpsichord (a copy by Andrew Garlich of an instrument made in 1681 by Jean-Antoine Vaudry, now in London’s Victoria & Albert Museum) could hardly be better suited to the music, with its sweet, warm sound, beautifully reproduced by the Chandos engineers, who don’t make the all too frequent mistake of recording the instrument too close. Baumont’s harpsichord has a sharper tang, and he also uses a virginals for the Grounds and individual lessons. Both artists have much to offer, and the final choice will depend on whether you prefer your Purcell plain (Yates) or piquant (Baumont). Kate Bolton