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Reviewer: William Yeoman In his somewhat philosophical booklet note, Smith claims that his ‘naming of unnamed pieces … can be seen as a natural extension’ of the ‘many types of extemporisation’ that results from the fluency which develops when one grows ‘into a repertoire and ingests its language and freedoms’. In compiling such a collection of these and other pieces, he says he is also following the Elizabethan example of assembling in a single manuscript ‘works by various composers … sometimes from different periods and styles copied by various scribes’. The programme comprises works by John Dowland and his contemporaries, as well as music by a preceding generation of lute composers who counted among their number the great John Johnson and Anthony Holborne. But whether in a pavan like Ward’s Repose (Smith’s title, a tribute to a former teacher), one of the many galliards whose triple time belies their profundity or a grave, imitative fantasy like Dowland’s after Gregorio Huwet, Smith’s approach is the same: locate the soul of each piece through the most sophisticated and subtle use of extemporised embellishment you’ll ever hear. Yes, it’s that good. |
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