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Florilegium’s latest CD, released autumn 08, is receiving excellent
4- and 5- star, reviews. Hugh Canning, writing in The Sunday Times,
chose it as his CD of the Week just 10 days before Christmas (review follows).
Also in December, the French monthly magazine, Diapason, awarded
the disc 5 stars (or their equivalent – 5 tuning forks!).
From The Sunday Times
CD OF THE WEEK
December 14, 2008
Bach, Telemann: Cantata, Non sa che sia dolore; Concerti - Lucy
Crowe, Florilegium
Hugh Canning
****
Florilegium’s discography of baroque chamber (and small-scale vocal)
music is already extensive, exploring the byways in preference to the
highways. It includes a disc devoted to Telemann’s Tafelmusik (some
of the finest ever written “on subscription”, intended for
accomplished and wealthy musical amateurs), and one to Bach cantatas.
Here the juxtaposition of Telemann and Bach — giants of the German
baroque who applied for the St Thomas cantor’s job in Leipzig in
1722-23 — works well as a “concert” programme, substantial
orchestral works by each composer framing a delightful performance by
Lucy Crowe of Bach’s enigmatic Italian cantata No sa che sia
dolore. This is a work of disputed authenticity that may be a pastiche
of other composers’ music, but the Bach “fingerprints”
— like Handel’s when he raided his colleagues’ ideas
— are there for all to hear. The solo flute, exquisitely played
by Ashley Solomon, is the linking thread between the cantata, Telemann’s
(chamber) Concerto in A (from Part One of the Tafelmusik) and Bach’s
Triple Concerto in A minor, in which Solomon’s co-soloists are the
virtuoso harpsichordist James Johnstone and the no less brilliant violinist
Rodolfo Richter. Ensemble values are paramount in these stylish and committed
performances.
Few can match Florilegium’s interpretative flair and technical
accomplishment in this repertoire, while Crowe’s brightly gleaming
soprano is an ever-improving instrument.
Channel Classics CCSSA27208
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