HIP à l’outrance

didokirkbyAnd so we come to the third in our historical sequence of recordings of Purcell’s Dido and Aeneas.  We are talking about Andrew Parrott’s recording with the Taverner Players and Choir recorded at Rosslyn Hill Chapel in 1981.  It’s a record that I bought when it first came out and has been a point of reference for me ever since.

It’s a consciously academic affair in some ways.  It was produced in conjunction with an Open University course ; “Seventeenth Century England: A Changing Culture”.  It’s also musicologically rooted in scholarship.  The album booklet even lists the provenance of the instruments used; mostly modern copies of 17th century models and we are told that the work is performed at pitch A=403.  The band and chorus are realistically sized; six violins, two violas, bass violin with bass viol, archlute and harpsichord continuo.  A guitar is used in some of the dance numbers.  The chorus is six sopranos; some of whom do double duty as witches, the Sailor and the Spirit, four tenors and two basses.

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Equilibrium Requiem

Last night’s TSO concert was a collaboration with Barbara Hannigan’s Equilibrium Young Artists project with EQ providing the quartet of soloists for Mozart’s Requiem.  But before we got to the Requiem there was a performance of Mozart’s Symphony no. 39 in E-flat Major.  It was enjoyable.  A somewhat reduced scale TSO played as well as they usually do when Sir Andrew Davis is on the podium and he took us through an irreproachable reading of the works essential tuneful and easy to listen to four movements.  It made a pleasant “overture”.

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