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Reviewer: Jonathan Freeman-Attwood
Herreweghe 's devotion to Purcell was captured memorably when he said, during an interview (8/93), that he would " give the whole of Lully for two bars of Purcell ". At that stage, he had recorded very little Purcell, most notably a coolly received disc of miscellaneous church music in which the dialect of the music seemed strangely remote (Harmonia Mundi, 2/94). If that is a euphemistic way of saying 'not English enough', then that was part of it, though Purcell's discography shows that you do not have to be English to illuminate his expressive world. The two famous St Cecilian Odes reflect a remarkable polarity in the composer's creative priorities: the shorter of the two, Welcome to all the pleasures, is a supreme amalgamation of Fishburn's words and Purcell 's music, bursting with contained subtlety and enchantment. There is also a unique sense of conveying something novel, in this case an inaugural tribute on November 22nd, 1683, to the patron saint of music, henceforth annually celebrating " this divine Science" . Hail, bright Cecilia from 1692 is three times longer and explores all the startling orchestral sounds which changed English music towards something approaching a Handelian palette. It is also truly fin de siècle (some might say Newtonian) in ambition and the imagery is as breathtakingly splendid now as it was when the Victorians first revered it for its boldness and scale.
Such qualities clearly animate Herreweghe and he shapes this music with a
rapture and precision strangely missing from his recent recording of Bach's Mass
in B minor (Harmonia Mundi , 5/98). This is , for the most part, a compendium of
his most persuasive musical attributes; if there are " two bars of Purcell"
which melt marble then "one perfect harmony" at the close of "Soul of the world"
reveals an intrinsic care in Collegium Vocale's exquisitely conceived vocal
line, a blooming legato where Herreweghe inspires passion from - in homeopathic
terms - the power of the minimum dose. The long opening instrumental music is
contained and noble, juxtaposing light-footed articulation with intimate asides.
The whole is infectiously fresh and never rushed. If not as brilliant or a s
full as McCreesh, Herreweghe is rather more sensitive to the nuances which
irradiate from Purcell 's colouring of words. He largely uses English voices,
though the booklet is unclear who, among the countertenors, actually sings the
respective airs. The beguiling high tenor or Mark Padmore is also confusingly
labelled 'A' for alto . " Hark! hark! each tree" boasts the versatile and
effortless alto of Robin Blaze who, with the assured Peter Harvey, achieves a
delightfully naturalistic lilt. If Parrott's voices are the most universally
well suited to the texts, this new version certainly rivals McCreesh (for whom
Peter Harvey also sings "Wondrous machine" splendidly) for elevated
characterization. One blip here is the piping soprano in "Thou tun'st this
world" (Susan Hamilton) where the voice seems technically and expressively
limited. King probably has the edge in Welcome to all the pleasures, if
only for James Bowman's "Here the deities approve". For beauty of sound , then ,
Herreweghe is your man. For dramatic immediacy and excitement , look no further
than McCreesh.
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