NORDIC MOODS & BAROQUE ECHOES
The Marais Project & Duo Langborn/Wendel
Move Records MCD 656
Not the longest of CDs, this one comes in under 40 minutes. Marais Project regulars - Susie Bishop (violin and voice), Tommie Andersson (guitar and theorbo), Jennifer Eriksson (viola da gamba) - collaborate with the duo of Catalina Langborn (violin [baroque violin]) and Olof Wendel (cimbalom).
As for their music, it's an eclectic combination, as you'd expect from the Marais organization. For the oldest serious music, they have lighted on Charpentier: his Sans frayeur which is an amiable chanson of unrequited love that might have something to do with Corneille's play Melite. There's a little bit from their eponymous hero: three movements from his opera Alcione. As well, we hear a sonata for violin and continuo by Johan Heinrich Roman, a Swedish composer from the first half of the 18th century. This four-movement work I can only find in print as an oboe sonata but the composer was a professional player of both instruments and, let's face it: we're talking about the Baroque where anything goes, doesn't it?
A little closer to our time is Pavane: Thoughts of a Septuagenarian by Esbjorn Svensson who was a formidable jazz pianist and composer before his unfortunate death through a swimming accident in 2006. This is a homage/arrangement by Andersson, who also worked with Wendel in re-scoring the three Marais opera scraps.
The CD begins with a traditional Swedish song, Death of the beloved, which eventually transmogrified into the country's unofficial national anthem. It ends with another Swedish lyric: The crystal so fine. Both of these have been arranged by Wendel - the first for everybody, the second for his own duo. More from Wendel comes in his composition A leaf falls, which involves both ensembles, and there are two works by Eriksson: the first simply called Anna, written for a sick friend; the second a kind of binary product called Marais Echoes & Nordic Moods which initially takes the French viol master's La Mariee and a Menuet as a jumping off point before yet another Swedish folksong arrangement, The flowers of joy, that the composer-arranger thinks has some resonances with the second Marais dance.
As you can see, this is a miscellany with several bearings on the CD's title. As with most collections, some segments work well, while others struggle to find a relevant place in the mix. The opening track sets a sombre tone, as it describes the process of a young man riding home to find that his wife is dead. Bishop handles the insistent, march-suggestive vocal line with excellent clarity of output and a persuasive directness of emotion. The result is suggestive of Scottish or English folk-songs with a morbid bent; perhaps not as bloody-minded as The twa corbies, nor as eerie as the Lyke-Wake Dirge but running along similar tragic lines to Mary Hamilton. Wendel's cimbalom makes a striking colour contribution to the keening, trudging accompaniment.
Anna unfolds over a ground bass and could have been written in the late Renaissance or early Baroque. Each of the five instrumentalists enjoys a solo (the composer pairing her violin with Langborn's, Andersson continuing with his guitar) as the work unfolds in a sequence of predictable progressions, yet it lives up to the proposed semi-descriptor of echoing the Baroque. The real thing follows in the Menuet, Prelude and Gigue from Marais' opera; the first of these concludes Act IV, the second introduces Act 3, and the third I can't find anywhere, although it's jaunty enough to come out of the sailors' scene as well as being unexpected enough to form part of the final chaconne. All these scraps repeat their material several times and their content is charming and plain-speaking - unlike compositions by the composer's better-known operatic contemporaries. Eriksson and Langborn make finely-matched upper lines, while cimbalom and theorbo reinforce each other with admirable discretion.
Svensson's slow dance moves gently past, with just enough exposure for all in the quintet even if the violins are favoured. The composer sustains a quiet, nostalgic atmosphere across his blues-suggestive piece which follows an orthodox modulatory chain and ends with a quiet, mildly regretful four-bar coda that contrives to encapsulate the downward-heading nature of the pavane with the resigned consolation of reaching the title's specified age; a pity that the composer only made it to his mid-forties.
La Mariee comes from Marais' Book 5 of lute pieces and is an amiable bouree-of-sorts, here given to Erikkson (of course) in partnership with Wendel's cimbalom and (I think) Andersson in a reinforcing bass role. The brief Menuet seems to feature the Marais Project personnel only; Andersson on theorbo, if those resonant bass notes are any guide. The version offered here of The flowers of joy is in three sections: the first an outline of the tune from Duo Langborn/Wendel, then a stanza sung by Bishop with Andersson's guitar, finally an everybody-in with two violins and Andersson (I think) back on theorbo. All three pieces are presented as a harmonic compatibility but you'd be struggling to find much other connection between the Marais pieces and the folk song - in mood or melodic shape. Also, in other readings of The flowers of joy you hear a good many more stanzas, but I'm thankful for the timbral variety offered here.
Langborn plays the top line in Roman's pleasant G minor sonata with Eriksson's viol and Andersson's theorbo serving as joint continuo. Across the opening Largo, the violinist was happy to cut a few notes short and not sustain others which led to a somewhat erratic output. The movement's first part comprising 7 bars was repeated; the second section, 12 bars long, was not. Neither half of the following Allegro was repeated, but the jerkiness that interrupted the first movement's second part was here more evident with several over-curt phrase endings.
Luckily, Roman's Intermezzo is only 16 bars long, so both halves enjoyed repeats for an evenly distributed reading of this placid, courtly E flat Major interlude. A recurrence of the curtailed note-length practice emerged in the final Allegro which sounded more brusque than necessary, e.g. the truncated minims in bars 5 to 8. It might have been that the executants were trusting in the considerable echo that prevailed in their noticeably resonant recording situation at Atlantis Studios, Stockholm last July. Whatever the case, Roman's score came across as spasmodic in its fast even-numbered movements.
Wendel's melancholy autumn-scape brings in the whole ensemble, Andersson moving to his guitar. There isn't much to this piece which has an appealing central figure and a prominent cimbalom solo. But the composer sustains his aural ambience well enough, right up to the last leaf's settling, Perhaps the landscape has a touch of the Orient rather than the maudlin world projected by Joseph Kosma and Johnny Mercer that falling leaves always bring to mind. Still, you might just take it as a straightforward illustration of a Nordic mood. It partners neatly with Charpentier's bouncy chaconne that begins and ends with Andersson's theorbo setting out and finishing off the constant bass line. Bishop's light soprano is a treasure in this mobile construct for which the instrumental lines are lithe and restrained, especially Langborn's sinuous violin.
The last track features the guest duo in a specially soulful instrumental setting of a song about longing for a girl from the singer's village. But he also addresses her as 'most noble rose and golden chest of treasure'; she is also 'outstanding in virtue', which to me puts the beloved on a Marian level. The melody as outlined by Langborn is wrenchingly sad, like all the best love songs, with the cimbalom offering a decorative, original backdrop. So this CD ends in a minor key and suggests a bare physical and emotional world where hope is grounded in disappointment. Not exactly Nordic noir but, as a musical equivalent, coming close. Thanks to all for those extracts from the flashy Baroque - a fortunate complement/antidote.
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