Invitation to the Consort
In more ways than one, something old is new again. Of the 36 tracks, 13 are new (although the pair of entries from Ronn McFarlane, “Sycamore” and “Indigo Road” can now be found on his solo CD, cross-reference below) and the remainder cover more than a quarter of a century of The Baltimore Consort’s recordings.
A most welcome addition is the back cover photo and instrument legend—a boon for neophyte’s who may think that a cittern has more to do with plumbing than art. The bulk of the fresh tunes feature Mindy Rosenfeld on flute and fifes. Her work with McFarlane (“Celtic Flute”) demonstrates admirable control and great balance, but further subtleties of
dynamics—particularly in “Clare Jig”—could only add to the enjoyment.
The Renaissance Italy trio of takes features ethereal, skillfully controlled melodic lines (“Bianco Fiore”), perfectly rendered dotted rhythm (“Catena d’amore”) and a need for a microscopic punctuation between sections to eliminate the breathless result.
Rhythm also figures prominently in the opening numbers where nearly-unanimous unisons slightly detract from the otherwise engaging-at-every-turn “Scotch Gap,” ideally placed and sculpted phrase endings (“Galliard d’écosse”), the nickel-short-of-perfection “Laroque Galliard” and the Yee ha! fun of the crumhorn-rich “Alemande de Liège.”
Other notable moments abound in An English Country Ball (the flute/recorder tonguing is especially fine, the dynamic contrast in the “cuckoo” tune is most welcome, Mark Cudek’s cittern—with deft inner voices—is a constant delight [“John Come Kiss Me Now”] and the contrasting orchestration of the verses leaves nary a bar dull).
The appearance of counterpoint in Musick’s Silver Sound sets the table for the Baroque era and the sudden pulse shifts (“Green Garters”) are excellent at every shift. Another degree of full agreement as to the weight and centre of the beat would secure “Galliard” a nomination to the Renaissance Hall of Fame.
The final set (Scotland’s Native Airs) is a marvellous medley that reverberates with drums and rattling strings, melts into the meeting of the wires (“Remember Me at Evening”) before the crumhorns add excitement and a single pitch links the band into “A Scot’s Tune” where the ensemble is first-rate and ye can hear the pipes!
For those who’ve ever wondered what consorts are all about, this disk is an ideal way to learn. 
Performers:
Mary Anne Ballard,
Mark Cudek,
Larry Lipkis,
Ronn McFarlane, Chris Norman,
Mindy Rosenfeld,
William Simms, guest artist
Edwin George, guest artist
Composers:
Various
Tracks: |
1. Scotch Cap
2. Galliard d'escosse
3. Laroque Galliard
4. Alemande de Liege
5. Doun in yon bank
6. The Canaries
7. Canaries
8. All in a Garden Green
9. Parsons Farewell
10. Beggar Boy
11. John Come Kiss Me Now
12. Newcastle
13. Branle double
14. Branle de Montirade
15. Branle de la torche
16. Johnny Faa
17. Chanter's Song
18. O'Keefe's Slide |
19. Sixpenny Money
20. Ten Penny Bit
21. Clare Jig
22. Sycamore
23. Indigo Road
24. My Lord of Oxenford's Maske
25. The Queen's Treble
26. Bianco Fiore
27. Catena d'amore
28. So ben mi ch'ha bon tempo
29. Joyne Hands
30. Paven
31. Galliard
32. Green Garters
33. Pentland Hills
34. Whip my Toudie
35. Remember me at Evening
36. A Scot's Tune |
Cross Reference: Indigo Road
For information on other recordings: Dorian Records