Alison Melville, Lucas Harris, Nadina Mackie Jackson, Joelle Morton, Borys Medicky - The Business of Angels: English Recorder Music from the Stuart Era (2011) Hi-Res

  • 28 Feb, 16:54
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Artist:
Title: The Business of Angels: English Recorder Music from the Stuart Era
Year Of Release: 2011
Label: Pipistrelle Music
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC 24bit-44.1kHz / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 57:08
Total Size: 654 / 337 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

Rinaldo, HWV 7 (Georg Friedrich Händel)
1 Overture (Arr. for Recorder & Ensemble) 05:46
Flute Solo No. 2 (Version for Recorder & Bass) (Daniel Purcell)
2 I. Vivace 01:02
3 II. Largo 01:02
4 III. Allegro 01:10
5 IV. Adagio 00:40
6 V. Allegro 00:38
The Division Flute, Book 1
7 No. 8, Division on a Ground "Bellamira" 02:27
Recorder Sonata No. 6, Op. 2 (Luis Mercy)
8 I. Adagio 02:02
9 II. Ciaccone Allegro 03:16
The Genteel Companion (Compiled by S. Humphrey)
10 A Song, Sence Other Beautys Charmes Your Hart 00:49
11 Now the Toryes the Gloryes 00:43
The Complete Flute Master (William Pearson)
12 Minuet 01:00
Recorder Sonata in D Minor (Bibliotheque Nationale de France, Res. Vma. Ms. 700, No. 6) (James Paisible)
13 I. Prelude 01:11
14 II. Presto 01:08
15 III. Grave - Adagio 02:49
16 IV. Presto 01:09
The Division Flute, Book 1
17 No. 2, Paul's Steeple 02:24
The Musical Inventory
18 Brisk Ayre 00:53
The Complete Instructor to the Flute, Book 2
19 By M. Eccles in Henry Ye Fourth 01:27
Recorder Sonata No. 4 in G minor, Op. 3 (Gottfried Finger)
20 I. Adagio 00:57
21 II. Vivace 00:51
22 III. Adagio 01:02
23 IV. Presto 00:44
Recorder Sonata No. 2, Op. 2 (William Topham)
24 I. Grave 01:13
25 II. Vivace 01:08
26 III. Adagio 01:36
27 IV. Allegro 01:06
The Division Flute, Book 1
28 No. 5, Tollet's Ground 03:18
The Complete Flute Master
29 Jigg 00:34
The Musical Inventory
30 Slow Ayre 01:53
Recorder Sonata, Op. 5 No. 12 "La Follia" (Arr. for Recorder & Ensemble) (Arcangelo Corelli)
31 Recorder Sonata, Op. 5 No. 12 "La Follia" (Arr. for Recorder & Ensemble) 11:10

Performers:
Lucas Harris (baroque guitar)
Borys Medicky (harpsichord)
Joelle Morton (bass viol)
Nadina Mackie Jackson (baroque bassoon)
Alison Melville (recorder)
Lucas Harris (archlute)

The recorder, so named for an obsolete sense of the verb "record" as meaning "to practice," was for many early music enthusiasts an initial introduction to the whole world of historical performance. But performances that re-create the world of the recorder in detail have been fairly rare. This fine release by Toronto-based recorder player Alison Melville fills a big gap with its generous selection of recorder music that an English player might have known around 1700. Such a player would have been attuned to the powerful new virtuosic currents of music coming from Italy, and it is especially noteworthy that Corelli's Violin Sonata Op. 5, No. 12 ("La follia"), was published in a recorder arrangement in London in 1702, barely two years after the Roman publication of the violin version. Melville handles the technical challenges elegantly, both here and in the Recorder Sonata Op. 2/2, of William Topham, one of Corelli's earliest English imitators. Yet the recorder was not just about virtuosity, and what makes this recording special is the way virtuoso pieces are mixed in with teaching works and pieces of what would now be called more of a mass-market nature. Handel's overture to Rinaldo was arranged for recorder simply as a way of getting the music affordably into the hands of fans, just as operatic pieces would quickly be made into piano or quartet versions a century later. The piece called Solo No. 2 by Daniel Purcell, Henry Purcell's much-neglected younger brother, is in fact a sonata-like piece for recorder and the nicely flexible continuo group Melville assembles here. The single pieces here are true solo pieces, drawn from instruction books, and they uniformly offer testimony to the fertile imagination of the mostly forgotten group of composers represented here: a group with international origins that nevertheless cohered into something characteristically English. Best of all, the sound from the small Pipistrelle label is as thoroughly pleasant as the music and Melville's playing. An essential purchase for recorder fans that will also make a few new ones.