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Paul Hillier, Andrew Lawrence-King - Bitter Ballads: Ancient and Modern Poetry Sung to Medieval and Traditional Melodies (2007)

Paul Hillier, Andrew Lawrence-King - Bitter Ballads: Ancient and Modern Poetry Sung to Medieval and Traditional Melodies (2007)
  • Title: Bitter Ballads: Ancient and Modern Poetry Sung to Medieval and Traditional Melodies
  • Year Of Release: 2007
  • Label: harmonia mundi
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
  • Total Time: 01:17:31
  • Total Size: 305 mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist

01. Clever Tom Clinch Going to be Hanged
02. The Roundhead
03. London is a Fine Town
04. London
05. The Fine Old English Gentleman
06. The Great Testament
07. Highland Dance #1
08. Kiltory
09. Highland Dance #2
10. Shallow-Water Warning
11. Song for a Sea Tower
12. The Ballad of Marie Farrar
13. Senza Licenza
14. Invention
15. Fine Flowers in the Valley
16. Sappho - Fragment
17. The Keel Row I
18. It Was Summer Now
19. The Keel Row II
20. Disillusionment
21. The Cockfight
22. Sailing to Byzantium
23. Brigg Fair
24. Coda from Brigg-Flatts

On the surface, BITTER BALLADS appears to be a collection of Medieval or Renaissance songs: Paul Hillier and Andrew Lawrence-King are known early-music performers, the disc title has a Renaissance sound to it, and even the sound of the performances brings to mind English ballads. You may even recognize Bernart de Ventadorn's "Can vei la lauzeta" or Oswald von Wolkenstein's "Es fügt sich."

The catch here is that of the sixteen poems sung, only five of the melodies were composed to match them. For the rest, Hillier and Lawrence-King have taken existing tunes and matched them to different words. Thus, Ventadorn's song is sung here with words by Bertolt Brecht, and a poem by Charles Dickens finds itself with a traditional tune which might be quite at home in 16th- or 17th-century England.

The performances here are earthy and natural. Some of the songs are accompanied, others are not, as Hillier originally matched Brecht with Ventadorn to demonstrate that troubadour songs could--and probably were--performed as often without accompaniment as with. Lawrence-King is a sensitive partner to the singer and a skilled soloist in the transcribed Howard Skempton works.

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