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The Echoing Air The Music Of Henry Purcell - Sylvia McNair, The Academy Of Ancient Music, Christopher Hogwood (1995) [FLAC]
Artist: Sylvia McNair, The Academy of Ancient Music, Christopher Hogwood
Title: The Echoing Air: The Music of Henry Purcell
Year Of Release: 1995
Label: Philips
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 01:02:42
Total Size: 316 Mb
Tracklist:
Part I
1. Staircase: Overture
2. If Music Be The Food Of Love
3. Cebell
4. To Arms, To Arms, Heroic Prince
5. To Arms
6. Tell Me, Some Pitying Angel
7. Slow Air
Part II
8. We Come To Sing
9. Oh! Lead Me To Some Peaceful Gloom
10. O Solitude
11. Hark! Hark! The Echoing Air
12. Trumpet Tune
Part III
13. Sweeter Than Roses
14. Fairest Isle
15. She That Would Gain A Faithful Lover
16. Cupid, The Slyest Rogue Alive
17. I Attempt From Love's Sickness To Fly
18. Jig
Part IV
19. Music For A While
20. The Fatal Hour Comes On Apace
21. Hear, Mighty Love
22. Plainte: O, Let Me Weep
23. Chacony In G Minor
Performers:
Sylvia McNair (soprano)
The Academy of Ancient Music
Christopher Hogwood
Henry Purcell's music receives a sumptuous presentation on Sylvia McNair's 1994 CD The Echoing Air. Arranged in four parts following the scheme of Baroque entertainment, the concert features both vocal and instrumental pieces. Opening with a vibrant performance of the Staircase Overture, an early piece full of youthful vitality, the program is drawn from a variety of stage works and incidental music, most of which were randomly compiled in Orpheus Britannicus shortly after the composer's death. McNair's pleasant, unaffected voice is perfectly suited to Purcell's pristine lines, and her rhythmic articulations and ornaments are immaculate. Especially noteworthy are her accuracy and sensitivity in bringing off poignant cross relations, a striking feature in many of Purcell's laments. But all the songs benefit from her pure tone and tasteful phrasing. Christopher Hogwood and the Academy of Ancient Music perform on period instruments, and their sound is clear and subtly shaded to set the appropriate mood for each number. Along with Laurence Dreyfus on cello, Hogwood provides an understated continuo on harpsichord and organ, though Paul O'Dette also plays accompaniment on the archlute. Recorded at St. John's, Smith Square, London, the building's live acoustic lends resonance to McNair's clear, ringing tones and the strings' silvery timbre.