Carolyn Surrick & Ronn McFarlane - Fermi's Paradox (2020) [Hi-Res]
BAND/ARTIST: Carolyn Surrick, Ronn McFarlane
- Title: Fermi's Paradox
- Year Of Release: 2020
- Label: Sono Luminus
- Genre: Classical
- Quality: flac lossless / flac 24bits - 192.0kHz / DSD64 +Booklet
- Total Time: 01:00:31
- Total Size: 298 mb / 2.17 / 2.45 gb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
01. Fermi's Paradox
02. She Moved Through the Fair - John Barleycorn (Arr. for Lute, Viola da gamba & Bodhrán)
03. Gånglåt efter Hammare - The Last Day - Suite No. 1 in D Minor: VI. Gigue la petite (Arr. for Lute & Viola da gamba)
04. Down by Blackwaterside (Arr. R. McFarlane for Lute & Viola da gamba)
05. The Rose of Raby (Arr. for Lute, Viola da gamba & Bodhrán)
06. Amazing Grace (Arr. C. Surrick for Lute & Viola da gamba)
07. Daniel's Chaconne
08. Trinity Grove
09. Viola da gamba Sonata in E Minor, TWV 41:e5: I. Cantabile - III. Recitativo - Arioso
10. Dowland's Adieu for Master Oliver Cromwell, P. 13
11. O Sacred Head, Now Wounded (Harmonized by J.S. Bach) [Arr. C. Surrick for Lute & Viola da gamba]
12. Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing - Sjungar-lars visa (Arr. for Lute & Viola da gamba)
13. Little Martha (Arr. R. McFarlane for Lute & Viola da gamba)
14. Planxty O'Rourke, 2nd Air (Arr. for Lute & Viola da gamba)
15. Ave Maria, CG 89a (After Bach's BWV 846) [Arr. C. Surrick for Lute & Viola da gamba]
We had all the time in the world. We had three months. Our Saturday rehearsals turned into Saturdays and Sundays. Week after week we scoured our memories, stacks of books, piles of sheet music, and beloved recordings for pieces we might include on this CD.
Ronn brought tunes that have been part of his life since he was a young man – music he loves and had arranged for the lute. He arranged them again for the lute and viola da gamba. He asked, “Do you know Little Martha? It was originally recorded by the Allman Brothers.” I did not. Blackwater Side is a traditional Irish tune arranged by Bert Jansch. John Barleycorn fit perfectly with She Moved Through the Fair, an Irish tune I had never heard. It was a new song to be sung by my instrument. We both love Turlough O’Carolan and neither of us had ever recorded Planxty O’Rourke, Second Air with
its mysterious blend of Irish and Italian sensibilities (tunefulness and raw emotion) so that made the short list. The Rose of Raby had been on my mind for years. This was the time and place.
It seemed ridiculous to even consider a recording for lute and gamba without something by John Dowland. It turned out just one of his compositions was for the two instruments – so we recorded it. If there’s Dowland, then there must be Marin Marais, one of the greatest composers for the viol who ever lived. If the gamba is going to sing a traditional Irish tune, why not a recitative and aria by Telemann? If she’s going to sing something by Telemann, why not an Ave Maria, written by Gounod and based on thematic material belonging to Bach?
If we loved it, the answer was, “Yes.”
As the pandemic increased in its fierce destruction, I sat alone, practicing. Some of us play from memory, some with the music in front of us. One night I began Amazing Grace. I had always played it in G major – there are lots of double stops easily available (playing more than one string at a time) and the instrument is super resonant in that key, but this time I tried
C major. There was a kind of openness and freedom that had been hidden from me. I’ve played that piece for decades, but I had never heard it like that before. I sent a recording to Lindsey. I called Ronn. We had to include it.
I worked on the Bach harmonization of O Sacred Head using all the resources of the instrument – and then we added the lute. We paired another hymn, Come Thou Fount with the Swedish tune Sjungar-Lars Visa and fell in love with the two together.
Ronn and I both compose, usually inspired by people or places. His Trinity Grove and Daniel’s Chaconne are both tributes to dear friends. For me, The Last Day speaks of the weight of deep losses. And then, there’s Fermi’s Paradox. I love this story.
The brilliant Italian physicist Enrico Fermi was walking with friends at work one morning and said something like this, “It is mathematically impossible to imagine that there is not intelligent life out there in the universe.” When they were sitting in the cafeteria later that day, out of the blue, he said, “So, where are they?” All of his friends knew exactly what he was talking about.
01. Fermi's Paradox
02. She Moved Through the Fair - John Barleycorn (Arr. for Lute, Viola da gamba & Bodhrán)
03. Gånglåt efter Hammare - The Last Day - Suite No. 1 in D Minor: VI. Gigue la petite (Arr. for Lute & Viola da gamba)
04. Down by Blackwaterside (Arr. R. McFarlane for Lute & Viola da gamba)
05. The Rose of Raby (Arr. for Lute, Viola da gamba & Bodhrán)
06. Amazing Grace (Arr. C. Surrick for Lute & Viola da gamba)
07. Daniel's Chaconne
08. Trinity Grove
09. Viola da gamba Sonata in E Minor, TWV 41:e5: I. Cantabile - III. Recitativo - Arioso
10. Dowland's Adieu for Master Oliver Cromwell, P. 13
11. O Sacred Head, Now Wounded (Harmonized by J.S. Bach) [Arr. C. Surrick for Lute & Viola da gamba]
12. Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing - Sjungar-lars visa (Arr. for Lute & Viola da gamba)
13. Little Martha (Arr. R. McFarlane for Lute & Viola da gamba)
14. Planxty O'Rourke, 2nd Air (Arr. for Lute & Viola da gamba)
15. Ave Maria, CG 89a (After Bach's BWV 846) [Arr. C. Surrick for Lute & Viola da gamba]
We had all the time in the world. We had three months. Our Saturday rehearsals turned into Saturdays and Sundays. Week after week we scoured our memories, stacks of books, piles of sheet music, and beloved recordings for pieces we might include on this CD.
Ronn brought tunes that have been part of his life since he was a young man – music he loves and had arranged for the lute. He arranged them again for the lute and viola da gamba. He asked, “Do you know Little Martha? It was originally recorded by the Allman Brothers.” I did not. Blackwater Side is a traditional Irish tune arranged by Bert Jansch. John Barleycorn fit perfectly with She Moved Through the Fair, an Irish tune I had never heard. It was a new song to be sung by my instrument. We both love Turlough O’Carolan and neither of us had ever recorded Planxty O’Rourke, Second Air with
its mysterious blend of Irish and Italian sensibilities (tunefulness and raw emotion) so that made the short list. The Rose of Raby had been on my mind for years. This was the time and place.
It seemed ridiculous to even consider a recording for lute and gamba without something by John Dowland. It turned out just one of his compositions was for the two instruments – so we recorded it. If there’s Dowland, then there must be Marin Marais, one of the greatest composers for the viol who ever lived. If the gamba is going to sing a traditional Irish tune, why not a recitative and aria by Telemann? If she’s going to sing something by Telemann, why not an Ave Maria, written by Gounod and based on thematic material belonging to Bach?
If we loved it, the answer was, “Yes.”
As the pandemic increased in its fierce destruction, I sat alone, practicing. Some of us play from memory, some with the music in front of us. One night I began Amazing Grace. I had always played it in G major – there are lots of double stops easily available (playing more than one string at a time) and the instrument is super resonant in that key, but this time I tried
C major. There was a kind of openness and freedom that had been hidden from me. I’ve played that piece for decades, but I had never heard it like that before. I sent a recording to Lindsey. I called Ronn. We had to include it.
I worked on the Bach harmonization of O Sacred Head using all the resources of the instrument – and then we added the lute. We paired another hymn, Come Thou Fount with the Swedish tune Sjungar-Lars Visa and fell in love with the two together.
Ronn and I both compose, usually inspired by people or places. His Trinity Grove and Daniel’s Chaconne are both tributes to dear friends. For me, The Last Day speaks of the weight of deep losses. And then, there’s Fermi’s Paradox. I love this story.
The brilliant Italian physicist Enrico Fermi was walking with friends at work one morning and said something like this, “It is mathematically impossible to imagine that there is not intelligent life out there in the universe.” When they were sitting in the cafeteria later that day, out of the blue, he said, “So, where are they?” All of his friends knew exactly what he was talking about.
Year 2020 | Classical | FLAC / APE | HD & Vinyl
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