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专辑名称: William Byrd & John Bull: The Visionaries of Piano Music
创作艺人: [Kit Armstrong]
音乐流派: Classical|古典
专辑规格: 1碟33首
出品公司: Deutsche Grammophon (DG)
发行时间: 2021/7/9
官方标价: ¥132.00 (会员免费下载)
域名语言: [en] (AI检测)


曲目介绍:

Byrd: Prelude (Parthenia 1; MB 27/1)
Byrd: Pavan “Sir William Petre” (Parthenia 2; MB 27/3a)
Byrd: Galliard (Parthenia 3; MB 27/3b)
The Flute and the Drum
Byrd: The Woods so Wild – 14 Variations (Fitzwilliam 67; MB 28/85)
Byrd: The Maiden's Song – 8 Variations (Fitzwilliam 126; Nevell 28; MB 28/82)
Byrd: John Come Kiss Me Now – 16 Variations (Fitzwilliam 10; MB 28/81)
Bull: Fantasia (Fitzwilliam 108)
Bull: Fantastic Pavan (Fitzwilliam 34; MB 19/86a)
Bull: Fantastic Galliard (Fitzwilliam 35; MB 19/86b)
Bull: Canons 51 – 48 – 39 – 7 – 15 – 114 (ÖNB Mus. Hs. 17771)
Bull: Prelude "Laet ons met herten reijne" (MB 14/56; BL Add. MS 23623 f. 65)
Bull: Carol "Laet ons met herten reijne" (MB 14/56; BL Add. MS 23623 f. 65)
Bull: Les Buffons – 15 Variations (MB 19/101; BL Add. MS 23623 f. 22)
Bull: Walsingham – 30 Variations (Fitzwilliam 1; MB 19/85)
Byrd: Pavan “The Earl of Salisbury” (Parthenia 6; MB 27/15a)
Byrd: Galliard (Parthenia 7; MB 27/15b)
Byrd: Second Galliard “Mris Marye Brownlo” (Parthenia 8; MB 27/15c)
Byrd: The Bells (Fitzwilliam 69; MB 27/38)
Bull: Queen Elizabeth’s (Chromatic) Pavan (MB 19/87a)
Bull: My Grief (Fitzwilliam 190; MB 19/139)
Byrd: O Mistress Mine – 6 Variations (Fitzwilliam 66; MB 28/83)
Byrd: The Second Ground – 16 Variations (Nevell 30; MB 27/42)
Bull: Prelude (Fitzwilliam 43)
Bull: Melancholy Pavan (MB 19/67a)
Byrd: The Earl of Oxford’s March (Fitzwilliam 259; Nevell 3; MB 28/93)
Byrd: Ut, re, mi, fa, sol, la – Fantasia (Fitzwilliam 101; Nevell 9; MB 28/64)
Byrd: Ut, mi, re – Fantasia (Fitzwilliam 102; MB 28/65)
Bull: Canons 68 – 78 – 79 – 65 – 3 – 53 (ÖNB Mus. Hs. 17771)
Byrd: Walsingham – 22 Variations (Fitzwilliam 68; Nevell 31; MB 27/8)
Byrd: Sellinger's Round – 9 Variations (Fitzwilliam 64; Nevell 37; MB 28/84)
Bull: Fantasia on a Fugue of Sweelinck (MB 14/4; BL Add. MS 23623 f. 52)
Bull: Telluris ingens conditor: Nos. 1, 2, 3, 6, 7 (MB 14/47; BL Add. Ms 23623 f. 170)


详细介绍:

This double-album recital from young US pianist Kit Armstrong must rank as one of the more unexpected recent keyboard releases of recent years. The English virginal music of William Byrd (1540-1623) and John Bull (1562-1628) performed on a modern concert grand? Can that even work? Well, the short answer is yes.

It’s a great pairing of composers for starters. Sober-minded William Byrd, whose keyboard music strove for balance and eloquent understatement through ambitious fusings of song, dance, complex counterpoint, and the occasional subtle reference to his predicament as a closet Catholic in Protestant England; then renegade John Bull, another Catholic, but this time one who fled English shores in 1613 and ended up as cathedral organist in Antwerp (although not necessarily just for religious persecution, when even the Archbishop of Canterbury wrote of him, “The man hath more music than honesty”), whose English-period music at least is often of a bold, emotionally visceral, semi-chaos. Plus, Armstrong’s running order makes it deliciously plain where the first hop from Byrd to Bull appears, Bull’s Fantasia from the Fitzwilliam Virginal Book shouting his presence with its left hand’s rebellious dissonance and off-kilter metre.

Still, ultimately it’s not the programming but Armstrong’s thoughtful translation of this music onto the modern piano that makes this recital such a sonic feast. Firstly, anyone expecting the clipped articulation we take as the standard “period” approach these days will be in for a surprise, because while the textures are as lucidly airy and unpedalled as you’d want, he also sustains his notes for as long as they’re written in the manuscripts – his argument, outlined in his own erudite and extensive sleeve note, being the “manifold instances of note lengths painstakingly notated”. He has also largely emulated the virginal’s inability to modulate its dynamics, trusting instead in the composers’ original recourse to simply increase or decrease the number of notes being played; and even when he does genuinely apply a little more pressure, it’s so subtly done that the overall impression is still more of a shift of colour than of dynamic. And talking of colour and intelligent rule-breaking, he does also occasionally enlist the piano’s capabilities, such as the pedal blurs he brings to his ear-prickingly evocative The Flute and the Drum.

Then there’s the ear-popping virtuosity continually on display over the sorts of pieces that Charles Burney summed up in his 1776 A General History of Music as “so difficult, that it would hardly be possible to find a master in Europe who would undertake to play one of them at the end of a month’s practice”: the jewelled clarity and technical control of Armstrong’s articulation; the sparkling flow of his rapid passagework; his ability to make a line dance or sing; the delicacy of his ornamentations; the way he can draw your ear to one or more exquisitely phrased voice from amid a sea of surrounding runs; and all this technical and musical brilliance so lightly worn. For a wonderful example of all this, listen to Byrd’s John Come Kiss Me Now variations.

Finally, I’ve already mentioned Armstrong’s self-written sleeve notes, but I want to emphasise what essential reading they are. Beyond his thoughts on the musical personalities and legacy of Byrd and Bull, and his scholarly arguments for his various performance decisions (including, by the way, on his satisfyingly idiomatic tempo choices), the story they tell of loving, intensely musical, forensically probing exploration demonstrates exactly why this programme and set of interpretations has ended up feeling so ground-breaking and unmissable.
© Charlotte Gardner/Qobuz


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