Classical Net
Derek Adlam: harpsichord, organ,
muselar
Guild GMCD7233
Derek Adlam
proves his virtuosity here with a marvellous and characterful collection of
works for various instruments by the forgotten composers, John Bull and Giles
Farnaby. The long 'Walsingham' by Bull is splendidly done, this is nineteen
minutes of beauty and revered invention on all counts. 'In Nomine' and 'Salvator
Mundi' are also important pieces that demonstrate Bull's capacity for turning
out profound imagery in a miniaturist form. The muselar is used to excellent
effect in Giles Farnaby's 'Fantasy' whilst the harpsichord returns with 'Woody
Cock' by Farnaby and Bull's interesting 'Variations'. Finally there are more
pieces for muselar and others for harpsichord that also show Adlam as a
sympathetic interpreter of the wide variety of music on offer. The variation
of material is intriguing and also offers scope for further rediscoveries in
this area after Hyperion's monumental survey of Byrd's keyboard music. Guild
provides fine and readable notes and also include some useful diagrams of the
instruments used. A fine issue in the rather neglected English keyboard
repertoire.
Copyright © 2002,
Gerald Fenech
Music Web Friday January 10 03
The
Nightingale and the Sparrow: English Renaissance Keyboard music
John BULL (1562/3-1628)
Walsingham [19.32]
Fantasy [1.33]
In Nomine IV [4.55]
Salvator Mundi II [4.12]
Giles FARNABY (c1563-1640)
Fantasy [5.46]
Woody-cock [8.03]
John BULL (1562/3-1628)
Fantasy on Ut re me fa sol la I [6.23]
Giles FARNABY (c1563-1640)
Mal Sims [1.44]
Muscadin or Kempe's Morris [1.26]
The King's Hunt [2.46]
John BULL (1562/3-1628)
Chromatic Pavane (Queen Elizabeth's) [7.16]
Chromatic Galliard [3.48]
Prelude to the In Nomine [1.50]
In Nomine IX [8.35]
Derek
Adlam; harpsichord - organ - muselar
Rec.
March
2001 and August 2001, the north transept of the Priory Church of Our Lady and St
Cuthbert, Worksop, Nottinghamshire, England
GUILD
GMCD 7233 [78.21]
The
English renaissance is fairly well-trodden ground for recordings these days, but
it was an era of such tremendous fecundity that there is still much of interest
to be explored. Strangely, it is the secular music that has perhaps been less
recorded than the sacred choral repertoire. Of the keyboard music of that great
era, collections such as the famous Fitzwilliam Virginal Book or the huge
Byrd collection in My Ladye Neville's Book have become well known. This
interesting disc by Derek Adlam explores some of the major keyboard works of two
composers whose reputation has not become quite so great as that of the Byrds or
the Dowlands. John Bull and Giles Farnaby are, however, probably the most
innovative of the keyboard composers of their time. Both specialist composers of
keyboard music they managed to extend the existing genres of their era and
explore domestic keyboard music in all its guises without ever loosing the sense
of spectacle which makes this repertoire so enjoyable to listen to. John Bull,
in particular, is a composer well worth exploration, and this disc starts with
what must rate as one of the most remarkable keyboard compositions before the
time of Bach - Bull's giant fantasy variations on the popular tune As I went
to Walsingham. This little ditty was quite frequently used as a keyboard
model, but never to the extent that Bull manages. Adlam takes nearly 20 minutes
at no sluggish tempo to perform this masterpiece. In it, Bull contrives to
subject his material to every possible ornamental device using the practice of
division writing; replacing slower moving note values with strings of
ever shorter notes. The technical skill is undeniable, but the arrangement of
the 30 variations provides a large scale formal structure of great grandeur.
Adlam's pacing and sense of the unfolding of the architecture is very
convincing.
The
other large scale works of John Bull are better known; the Fantasy on Ut re
me fa sol la uses a simple scale as the main musical material while the
In Nomine IX uses a fragment of plainsong from the Benedictus section of a
mass by Taverner. This work is written in the odd time of 11/4 - an irregularity
which, combined with the dazzling technical writing, makes the work hugely
enjoyable. These are performed on stringed instruments from Derek Adlam's own
workshop, tuned in expressive unequal temperaments. This does give an unsettling
effect when first heard; there is a sense of parts being simply 'out of tune'
and yet it must be understood that this variation in tuning is all part of the
colourful world of this repertoire which we loose if we render everything into
the equal temperament of the modern piano. Tracks 2-4 use a small organ, of the
type that would have accompanied the choir in a large church, for performance of
another Bull In Nomine and a Salvator Mundi, the type of music
that could have filled parts of the service in church as well as being suitable
for domestic use. The organ is tuned in a different temperament to the
harpsichord creating a somewhat uncomfortable shift between tracks 1 and 2, but
the ear soon acclimatises to the different flavour.
Giles
Farnaby was the same age as Bull, but his training and career were very
different. He was largely self taught as a musician, being a joiner by trade. It
is possible that he was a builder of keyboard instruments. He may have been a
pupil of Bull at some stage, and is probably no coincidence that Farnaby was
admitted Bachelor of Music in the University of Oxford the same day in 1592 that
Bull became Doctor of Music in the same university. Derek Adlam's booklet notes
speak in slightly disparaging vein about the talent of Farnaby, alleging that
his "skill as a composer is limited, and his technical gifts slight" but then
declares that "his variations on the tune Woody-cock are one of the best
of all sets of English keyboard variations..." Farnaby's output may have been
less than that of Bull or Byrd, but to criticise him for not sounding like
either of those masters seems strange. Indeed, Adlam's performance of the
Woody-cock variations shows no sign of his not being convinced of Farnaby's
gifts. There is a broad nobility in the pace and a generous shaping of the
phrases and cadences that allows the essential grandeur of the simple tune to
come across. Similarly the virtuoso performances of Kempe's Morris and
The King's Hunt employing a muselar virginals (an instrument with the
strings plucked close to their ends, giving a characteristic flutey sound) with
rattling metal hooks attached to the bass strings in the former, show the sense
of verve that infuses a lot of Farnaby's music. Obviously Adlam has spent many
years with this repertoire and is well versed in the subtleties that bring out
its more human side. It has often been suggested that it is humanity which is
lacking from this technically demanding music, but in the hands of a sensitive
performer with intimate knowledge of the instruments for which the music was
written there is plenty to enjoy in this delicate, yet never lightweight,
repertoire.
Peter Wells
BBC Music Magazine - August 02
Derek Adlam
(harpsichord, organ, muselar)
Guild GMCD 7233 – 78:21
mins….£££
The marketing title of
this collection, “The Nightingale and the Sparrow”, attempts to capture the
distinction between two representatives of the English Virginal School – the
learned John Bull as elegant, technically brilliant and full of complexity, the
more modest Giles Farnaby as humorous, cheerful and direct. The contrast works
well and provides a nicely enjoyable mix of the dazzling, the delightful and the
doleful.
Best of all, though, are
these three lovely instruments – a Flemish-style virginal (Muselar) with
centrally plucked strings which produces a soft, flute-like glide of notes (as
in ‘Mal Sims’ by Farnaby), a harpsichord based on a Ruckers instrument of 1638
(full of crisp precision in Bull’s ‘Walsingham’ variations) and a cheerful,
puffy organ from c1540 (a natural medium for Bull’s ‘In nominee’ IV). Some
aspects of the performance, such as the awkward time changes in Farnaby’s
Fantasy or the lumpy phrasing in Bull’s ?In nominee? IX (written entirely in
11/4 time), suggest that Derek Adlam does not quite display the panache of
Christopher Hogwood in his 1981 recording of the Fitzwilliam Virginal Book, from
whence many of these pieces come. But he does, nonetheless, coax us into a
musical world of intimacy and surprising innovation.
Anthony Pryer
Performance
****
Sound ****
Classic Today.com -
May 2002
THE NIGHTINGALE & THE SPARROW
Page revised 23.06.03