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TRACK LIST:
1. Ricketts Hornpipe/Fisher's Hornpipe
(2:30)
2. Maiden Lane/Jack O' Lent/Chestnut/Bonny Broom (5:02)
3. Parting Friends/Primrose (4:22)
4. Flowers of Edinburgh/East Neuke of Fife (2:16)
5. Prelude/La Catherine (3:15)
6. Planxty Browne/Planxty Burke (1:46)
7. Cutie Clat Her (2:41)
8. John Come Kiss me Now (2:58)
9. Scots Tune (1:39)
10. Carolan's Farewell to Music (2:56)
11. A Port (1:37)
12. Yeil, Yeil (2:42)
13. Kedron/Saint's Delight/Promised Land (2:34)
14. Gird the Logie (2:38)
15. La Belle Cavalier (1:33)
16. La Luxillier/La Balanje (2:31)
17. Federal Overture (7:51)
18. Death & Life (6:44)
About Hesperus
From the stage of Lincoln Center to Germany, Bolivia &
Singapore-Hesperus is a group with a vision, performing eight
centuries of music from four continents. With impressive credentials
in early music, its members are some of the nation's first
and most important performers of "chamber folk"
music, bringing the energy and spirit of traditional music
to virtuoso performances on an impressive array of folk and
early music instruments. Appearing frequently at the Smithsonian's
National Museum of American History (where it was a resident
ensemble from 1989-1996), Hesperus can be heard on TV, film
and radio, most recently in the films Sleepy Hollow and Reluctant
Saint: Francis of Assisi. The group has received multiple
WAMMIEs from the Washington Area Music Association, the Baltimore
Chamber Music Award, the Music and Humanity Award (Gretna,
PA), the Elizabeth Campbell award from the AAUW, and the Logan
Chamber Music Award for Outstanding Educational Programming.
TINA CHANCEY, a founding
member and co-director of Hesperus, plays early and traditional
bowed strings, from medieval rebec to blues fiddle. She is
a specialist on the 18th c. pardessus de viole, performing
at the Kennedy Center and Carnegie Hall. Dr. Chancey's articles
on early music appear in scholarly and popular publications,
and she has recorded and produced CDs for a score of labels
from Arabesque to Windham Hill.
GRANT HERREID is a multi-instrumentalist
and singer who performs withHesperus, Piffaro, and Artek.
He also teaches at Mannes College of Musicand directs the
New York Continuo Collective. Grant has created and directed
several theatrical early music shows featuring German alchemy,
English gypsies, French fools, Italian zanies, and Death.
But mostly he devotes his time to exploring the esoteric unwritten
traditions of early Renaissance music with the group Ex Umbris.
SCOTT REISS, founder
and Co-director of HESPERUS, was also founding member/co-director
of the Folger Consort for 21 years. His articles appear in
Continuo, American Recorder, Early Music America and Tibia.
Earthwatch funded his research on Celtic music, which formed
the basis for his chapter in Celticisms: from Center to Fringe
(Scarecrow Press, 2003). Scott also directs SoundCatcher workshops,
teaching the skills of playing by ear. His most recent solo
recording is The Banshee's Wail.
From the CD Booklet:
The English Colonies in America were a
patchwork-not just of territories whose boundaries became
state lines, but of people from different places and classes
with widely different values and experiences. This recording
presents music from that patchwork; from England, the Colonial
homeland;
Scotland and Ireland, the homes of the largest groups of immigrants
outside England; and France, the ally of the Patriots. We
round out our presentation with music written in the United
States from the early years of the Republic. While English
music was the meat and potatoes of Colonial American musical
culture, Scots-Irish music flavored the broth with an herbal
bouquet of tunes that live on today. The French music is some
of the most charming, and we can trace its influence in the
American cotillions of the next century, whose wit, grace
and style, merged with a particularly American buoyancy, prove
them to be apt successors to the tradition.
1. Ricketts Hornpipe/Fisher's Hornpipe
- The hornpipe was
originally a sailor's dance, as is apparent from its jaunty
rhythm. These two tunes are standards in the American folk
tradition; indeed, you may find that Fisher's
has something of an Appalachian feel.
2. A Set of English Country Dance
Tunes: Maiden Lane, Jack O'Lent, Chestnut, Bonny Broom
- The visionary London music publisher John Playford first
published his English Dancing Master in 1651. It was reprinted
18 times over the next 77 years and is still popular today.
Grant conceived and arranged this set.
3. Parting Friends/Primrose - These tunes have
come down to us in choral arrangements called shape-note hymns
(see #13). In Parting Friends, we treat the haunting melody
as a drone-tune with the viol providing the sustained bass,
changing with the mood and tonality of the melody. To extend
the piece, we play the arrangement of Primrose three ways.
4. Flowers of Edinburgh/The East
Neuk of Fife - Flowers and East Neuk appear in
a plethora of 18th-c Scottish and American sources. The second
time through, we use East Neuk as an improvisation vehicle.
5. Prelude/La Catherine
- This elegant courante (a 17th-c dance) and the proud Belle
Cavalier come from John Playford's 1669 collection of dance
and theater music Apollo's Banquet, re-published by his son
Henry in 1690-91. We have preceded La Catherine by a moody,
anonymous French lute prelude from 1730, laced with distant
afternoon thunder.
6. Planxty Brown/Planxty Burke
- The planxty was a dedicatory pieces for patrons; these two
by O'Carolan are rather sophisticated jigs.
7. Cutie Clat Her - We found this piece in the 1733 collection of
tunes for Northumbrian pipes by William Dixon, Nine Notes That
Shook the World.The title translates from the Scottish (not
Gallic, but the dialect of
English spoken in Scotland) as "the kitty clawed her."
8. John Come Kiss Me Now - From another Playford
collection, The Division Violin (1684), this piece is a set
of divisions on a ground, or
improvisational variations over a repeating bass line with
chords.
9. A Scots Tune (Straloch Lute Book,
1627) & A Port (Rowallan Lute Book, 1620) -
Some of the earliest written Scottish music was preserved
in 17th-c lute manuscripts. Aristocratic lutenists in Renaissance
England often borrowed the music of the lower-class harpers
or pipers. A port, like a planxty, was a commemorative piece
written for a patron.
10. Carolan's Farewell to Music - The blind harper Turloch O'Carolan
(1670-1738) was one of the last members of the great bardic
harping
tradition that dated back to the Norman
conquest, when each harper, or
filleadh, served a particular king or warlord. In the middle
ages, filleadh
were very powerful, enjoyed a high social
station and were even feared as
magicians. Carolan's Farewell to Music fits into no category;
his own
eloquent epitaph.
11. A Port - see #9
12. Yeil, Yeil - Another perennially popular Scottish tune
from the
collection of Neil Gow.
13. Kedron/The Saint's Delight/The
Promised Land - The shape note hymn is one of the
most uniquely American forms of music. To make music reading
easier, note heads were written as squares, diamonds, ovals
and triangles (although musicians today may not understand
the benefit of this practice). Written with the conscious
intention of breaking with European traditions, shape note
(or sacred harp) hymns often have glaring dissonances, awkward
melodic lines and odd phrasing, but many also possess a stark
beauty. We perform these on recorders to simulate an all-vocal
scoring. They were taken from the collection Southern Harmony,
first printed in 1835.
14. Gird the Logie - Also
from Nine Notes, Gird is played by Tina, who adds drones and
double stops on the viol.
15. La Belle Cavalier (sic)-see
# 5
16. La Luxilier/La Balanje-The
French brought cotillions to America during the Revolution.
Like the square dances that they evolved into, cotillions
were danced in sets of 2-4 couples. La Luxilier is from The
Cotillion Party's Assistant (Boston, 1817); La Balanje from
A Collection of the Most Favorite Cottillions [sic] (Philadelphia,
1810). Many cotillions had French titles (La Balanje means
'the banjo'). But others had quintessentially American names:
The Swallow, The Colly Flower, and New Jersey.
17. The Federal Overture - In 1794 Benjamin Carr set out to write a
piece that would unite the citizens of the new Republic who
disagreed about a political issue that still remains hot
today: should the states or the federal government have more
power? Each faction had tunes associated with its cause.
Carr's attempt to present a balance of each side's tunes was
initially a failure, and the first performance ended in a
riot. However, he
re-worked the piece,
and it was finally accepted by the public. How
enlightened to use music to help reconcile political issues!
18. Death & Life -
In 1605 the retired sea captain and amateur composer Tobias
Hume wrote for the viola da gamba as if it were a bowed lute,
playing both harmony and melody. This pair of renaissance
dances, a pavan and a galliard, is moving as Hume intended;
in Death he required the performer to play the refrain 'passionate
after every section.'
-- Scott Reiss
Credits:
Produced by Tina Chancey.
Recorded and mixed by Christopher Drummond. Mastered at Opera
Dog Studios for Carmen Productions, Leesburg, VA. Executive
Producer: Maggie Sansone, Maggie's Music. Graphic Artist:
Jennifer Johnson. Art Director: Maggie Sansone. Cover photo:
Dick Bond. Tray card and group photo: Thomas Radcliffe, Point
of View Studios.
The Washington Post Review
(2003)...HESPERUS "Colonial America"
An argument could be made that Hesperus, in addition to
being an award-winning early music ensemble, is in the travel
business, transporting listeners across time zones that reach
into the distant and murky past. "Colonial America," the
trio's latest CD, supports that view with verve, charm and
finesse. Its 18 tracks form a patchwork portrait of a budding
Republic vividly influenced by English, Irish, Scottish and
French musical traditions. Well known for making delightfully
evocative use of period instruments, Hesperus deftly conjures
another time and place time and again, resurrecting Celtic
hornpipes, jigs and odes, English country dances and French
cotillions along the way.
Not all the music is imported. Shape note hymns, played on
recorders, point to the birth of a genuinely American genre
and create a harmonically tart and resonant interlude. As for
the common thread running though this musical quilt, it's easy
enough to spot, thanks to the finely honed artistry and
rapport consistently displayed by Tina Chancey (fiddle, viola
da gamba and recorder), Scott Reiss (recorders and
pennywhistle) and Grant Herried (lute, guitar, theorbo and
recorder). - Mike Joyce
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