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Reviewer: William Yeoman
Waking from a
troubling dream late one night, I looked to lutenist Matthew Wadsworth’s
exquisite new recording for solace. It was an extraordinary experience,
listening to the music of long-dead masters of an archaic instrument – Rosseter,
Dowland, Johnson, Piccinini and Kapsberger – in that languid, half-awake state
where fancy reigns. But it is the music of one very much alive master, guitarist
and composer Stephen Goss, that holds the key to entering that same state,
regardless of time and mood. Commissioned by guitarist John Williams for
Wadsworth, Goss’s The Miller’s Tale for solo theorbo was completed in
2015 and received its premiere by Wadsworth earlier this year. Despite the
antiquity and ribald nature of its inspiration, one of the most well-loved
stories in Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales, its mood is one of wistful
melancholy; its language too is closer to that of the latter two Baroque
composers mentioned above. The playing in this little theatre of shadows is of course ravishing throughout, with Wadsworth again demonstrating his appreciation of the lute’s propensity for subtle gradations of tone and timbre. That he ends with two of Dowland’s most profound utterances, thus making us end where we began, is further testament to his refined sensibility. |
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