BBC Music Magazine

Broken Branches

Britten: Songs from the Chinese; plus songs by Caccini, Chaker, Darwish, Dowland, J Harvey, Monteverdi, Takemitsu et al

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Karim Sulayman (tenor),

Sean Shibe (guitar)

Pentatone PTC 5187 031 51:16 mins

This reflective album from tenor Karim Sulayman and guitarist

Sean Shibe explores ideas of home, statehood and identity as expressed (or indeed complicate­d) by music. Both performers have roots in more than one cultural tradition – Sulayman is a firstgener­ation Lebanese-american, while Edinburgh-raised Shibe was born to an English father and Japanese mother – and the album is at once a journey and a conversati­on, traversing time and geography through repertoire to unpick how music can both stabilise and unsettle us.

The programme ranges from Monteverdi’s borrowed ‘Eastern’ modalities in ‘La mia turca’ to a new arrangemen­t of the traditiona­l Sephardic song ‘La Prima Vez’. Subverting the customary flow of musical ‘borrowing’, the album also includes an appealing rendition of Lebanese singer Fairuz’s 1984 ballad ‘Li Beirut’, a song which takes as its melody the iconic slowmoveme­nt theme from Rodrigo’s

Concierto de Aranjuez. The album’s prevailing mood of meditation and lamentatio­n is expressed most profoundly in the new commission ‘A Butterfly in New York’ by Layale Chaker which draws on both Western and Arabic soundworld­s to trace the splinterin­g of a family tree into the global diaspora.

Shibe brings a lively charisma and a vibrant array of musical colour to the album, conjuring everything from 17th-century lute to Arabic oud across this widereachi­ng programme. Sulayman’s performanc­e at times feels too restrained, but his interpreta­tion of Britten’s Songs from the Chinese has a wonderful piquancy and dynamism, and brings this thoughtful release to a rewarding close. Kate Wakeling PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★

 ?? ?? Reflective album: tenor Karim Sulayman is piquant and dynamic in Broken Branches
Reflective album: tenor Karim Sulayman is piquant and dynamic in Broken Branches
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