BBC Music Magazine

Purcell

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Strike the Viol; Hornpipe; Pavan in G minor; Fairest Isle; Air, etc

Tim Mead (counterten­or);

Les Musiciens de Saint-julien/ François Lazarevitc­h

Alpha Classics ALPHA 419 66:10 mins Tim Mead and François Lazarevitc­h are very experience­d performers of Baroque music, though they came to the repertory via rather different routes. Mead began as a choral scholar in England and is known for his clear diction and vocal poise, while Lazarevitc­h studied in Paris and Brussels, and has an eclectic approach to instrument­al performanc­e, drawing on popular and ‘folk’ styles.

At one level the combinatio­n works well. Vocal pieces such as ‘May her blest example chase’ are given a halo of imaginativ­e instrument­al colour, and the freestandi­ng instrument­al dances and fantasias are vividly painted. In some works, however (eg the Pavane in G minor), the added embellishm­ents overwhelm the delicate, chromatic false relations of Purcell’s original textures. Encrustati­on seems to be mistaken for adornment, even if we wish to take the music not as a text but a pretext for free improvisat­ion. Tim Mead is more restrained in his use of ornamentat­ion, though what he adds is tastefully done (as in ‘Strike the Viol’), and he captures well the popular tone of ‘’Twas Within a Furlong of Edinboro’

Town’ (incidental­ly, probably not by Purcell). ★e might have been a little freer with the beat in the recitative-like ‘’Tis Nature’s Voice’, and in ‘O Solitude’, although he negotiates the angular lines with poise, he does not quite match the personalis­ed meaning given to it by Andreas Scholl on Decca. In short, this is an enjoyable disc but one

that sometimes raises unsettling questions regarding interpreta­tion. Anthony Pryer

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★★

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 ??  ?? High-flying:Valer Sabadus pays homage to Farinelli
High-flying:Valer Sabadus pays homage to Farinelli

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