Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Hesperion XXI Review - A Glorious Medieval Melting Pot Of Music

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Hesperion XXI Review - A Glorious Medieval Melting Pot Of Music

    HESPERION XXI REVIEW - A GLORIOUS MEDIEVAL MELTING POT OF MUSIC

    Sir Jack Lyons concert hall, York
    Jordi Savall's early music ensemble connects three great ancient
    musical cultures - Jewish, Islamic and Christian

    Alfred Hickling The Guardian, Tuesday 15 July 2014 15.18 BST

    Tending the early music flame ... Jordi Savall of Hespèrion XXI.

    Photograph: Lionel Bonaventure/AFP/Getty Images

    Centuries of trade and conflict between the Christian and Arab-Islamic
    worlds brought textiles, spices and bowed stringed instruments to
    Europe. No one knows precisely when the violin's middle-eastern
    ancestors first infiltrated the Mediterranean; though there does not
    appear to be one of them that the great Catalan viol player Jordi
    Savallhas not been able to master.

    Since founding the early music ensemble Hespèrion XX in 1974 (the
    group gained an additional numeral at the turn of the millennium),
    Savall has been one of the world's greatest exponents of the viol
    de gamba and its variants. For this opening concert of the 2014 York
    early music festival, he focused on a family of instruments including
    the cello-likerubab and its smaller cousin the lira, that were first
    depicted in 10th-century manuscripts.

    The programme demonstrated how - until the expulsion of the Jews in
    the 15th century - the Iberian peninsula formed the nub of three
    great medieval cultures, Jewish, Islamic and Christian, in which
    Provencal troubadour song, Sephardic ceremonial music and Arabic maqam
    blended in a glorious musical melting pot. Presented as a continuous
    improvisation, the music was the product of mercurial virtuosity and
    scholarly guesswork, as very little secular instrumental music from
    the middle ages was written down. It also indicated how fluid the
    definition of early music has become, as some of the rhythmic figures
    and microtonal inflections might strike an Armenian traditional
    musician as entirely contemporary. As an encore, Savall prefaced a
    Kurdish dance from Syria with a prayer for peace in the region. Savall
    carries the title of official Unesco goodwill ambassador; and though
    his music may not be sufficient to quell the conflict, he can at
    least tend the flame of one of the world's oldest civilisations.

    * Listen again on BBC iPlayer until 17 July. The York early music
    festivalcontinues until 19 July.

    http://www.theguardian.com/music/2014/jul/15/hesperion-xxi-early-music-festival-review-york-savall

Working...
X