
The ensemble's three instrumentalists show remarkable versatility (not to mention virtuosity) in deploying all manner of instruments: winds, bowed and plucked strings, percussion. The results are mixed (I must admit that the bagpipe solo had me reaching for the volume control), but can hardly be accused of lacking definition. As a whole, however, the recital seems a shade unfocused, partly (again) because the individual performances are so variable; set against the urgent delivery of Amour m'a le cuer, for instance, is the disappointment of Senleches's La harpe de melodie for which Alla Francesca has used the deficient reading of the Codex Chantilly (which the Ferrara Ensemble also used in their otherwise admirable 'En doulz castel de Pavie', Harmonia Mundi, 8/98). It is a great pity that the only satisfactory recording of this wonderful piece (on the Medieval Ensemble of London's 'Ce diabolic chant' on Decca) remains unavailable. On a more positive note, one must applaud Alla Francesca's determination to assemble a sizeable corpus of late-medieval song. This is a repertoire where the discography lags far behind both scholarly endeavour and concert performance. (Fabrice Fitch / Gramophone)
thank you. -a.v.
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