Purcell (The) Food of Love
Purcell performances from a fine ensemble that approach perfection
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Henry Purcell, Francesco Corbetta, Robert de Visée, Christopher Simpson
Genre:
Vocal
Label: Ambroisie
Magazine Review Date: 2/2010
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 0
Mastering:
Stereo
Catalogue Number: AM185
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
If music be the food of love |
Henry Purcell, Composer
Henry Purcell, Composer Paul Agnew, Tenor |
Corinna is divinely fair |
Henry Purcell, Composer
Henry Purcell, Composer Paul Agnew, Tenor |
Tyrannic Love, Movement: Ah! how sweet it is to love (song) |
Henry Purcell, Composer
Henry Purcell, Composer Paul Agnew, Tenor |
What a sad fate is mine |
Henry Purcell, Composer
Henry Purcell, Composer Paul Agnew, Tenor |
Aureng-Zebe |
Henry Purcell, Composer
Henry Purcell, Composer Paul Agnew, Tenor |
Caprice di ciacona |
Francesco Corbetta, Composer
Elizabeth Kenny, Guitar Francesco Corbetta, Composer |
O Solitude! my sweetest choice |
Henry Purcell, Composer
Henry Purcell, Composer Paul Agnew, Tenor |
Oedipus, Movement: Music for a while (song) |
Henry Purcell, Composer
Henry Purcell, Composer Paul Agnew, Tenor |
(4) Grounds, Movement: C minor, T D221 (spurious, by ?Croft) |
Henry Purcell, Composer
Blandine Rannou, Harpsichord Henry Purcell, Composer |
O! fair Cederia, hide those eyes |
Henry Purcell, Composer
Henry Purcell, Composer Paul Agnew, Tenor |
(The) Mock Marriage, Movement: Man is for woman made (song) |
Henry Purcell, Composer
Henry Purcell, Composer Paul Agnew, Tenor |
Not all my torments can your pity move |
Henry Purcell, Composer
Henry Purcell, Composer Paul Agnew, Tenor |
On the brow of Richmond Hill |
Henry Purcell, Composer
Henry Purcell, Composer Paul Agnew, Tenor |
Pious Celinda goes to prayers |
Henry Purcell, Composer
Henry Purcell, Composer Paul Agnew, Tenor |
(The History of) Dioclesian, or The Prophetess, Movement: When first I saw (song: tenor) |
Henry Purcell, Composer
Henry Purcell, Composer Paul Agnew, Tenor |
Preludes from 'The Division Viol', Movement: D |
Christopher Simpson, Composer
Anne-Marie Lasla, Bass viol Christopher Simpson, Composer |
Timon of Athens, Movement: The cares of lovers |
Henry Purcell, Composer
Henry Purcell, Composer Paul Agnew, Tenor |
(The) Fatal hour comes on apace |
Henry Purcell, Composer
Henry Purcell, Composer Paul Agnew, Tenor |
I lov'd fair Celia |
Henry Purcell, Composer
Henry Purcell, Composer Paul Agnew, Tenor |
When her languishing eyes said 'love' |
Henry Purcell, Composer
Henry Purcell, Composer Paul Agnew, Tenor |
Suite, Movement: Prélude |
Robert de Visée, Composer
Elizabeth Kenny, Guitar Robert de Visée, Composer |
(A) Morning Hymn, 'Thou wakeful shepherd' |
Henry Purcell, Composer
Henry Purcell, Composer Paul Agnew, Tenor |
Preludes from 'The Division Viol', Movement: E |
Christopher Simpson, Composer
Anne-Marie Lasla, Bass viol Christopher Simpson, Composer |
(The) Earth trembled |
Henry Purcell, Composer
Henry Purcell, Composer Paul Agnew, Tenor |
(An) Evening Hymn on a Ground, 'Now that the sun hath veil'd his light' |
Henry Purcell, Composer
Henry Purcell, Composer Paul Agnew, Tenor |
Author: Richard Lawrence
The programme – and it is a programme, which can be enjoyed at a sitting – begins with one version of “If music be the food of love” and ends with another: not Shakespeare, but Colonel Henry Heveningham. As you might expect, several songs employ a favourite device of Purcell’s, the ground bass. “O solitude”, exquisitely shaded though it is, comes across as rather too austere with nothing between the bass viol and the voice; but in the introduction to “Music for a while”, the viol starts and is joined in turn by theorbo and harpsichord, to excellent effect.
If the tone is predominantly sombre, there’s relief in “Man is for the woman made”, Agnew’s cheerful delivery perfectly complemented by a strumming guitar. The Evening Hymn – another ground – ends with a string of “Hallelujahs” that Agnew sings with an appropriate inwardness; it’s aptly preceded by the lesser-known and very different Morning Hymn. A pity that the original French of “O solitude” isn’t printed; and one eyebrow twitched at the booklet’s suggestion that Purcell was practically an honorary Frenchman – “The fatal hour”, for instance, is indebted to those “fam’d Italian Masters” – but it’s the performances that count: magnificent.
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