
Balsom’s real point, however, is that it was the valveless
trumpet’s vocal quality, its ‘human characteristic’ that informed its
music and it is this above all that she demonstrates through her choice
of music for this album. For it is not fanfares and tattoos that
dominate, nor even concertos, but a smartly selected sequence of trumpet
cameos from the theatre scores and elegant social music of Purcell and
Handel. Some are real, including symphonies from Purcell’s semi-operas
or Handel’s Eternal source of light divine; in some, such as
Purcell’s ‘Plaint’ and Handel’s Oboe Concerto No 1, she borrows other
instruments’ lines; and others see her literally slip into the singer’s
place, most strikingly in Purcell’s ‘Fairest Isle’ and ‘Sound the
trumpet’.
And it all works. This is rattling good music, and so easily does the
trumpet fit into it that often it is hard to recall what the original
scorings were anyway. Balsom, too, sounds utterly at home, whether
intertwining coolly spun traceries with oboe and violin in the wondrous
Symphony from King Arthur or merrily disporting in Handel’s Water Piece.
She’s ably partnered by two of the finest young Baroque singers in the
business (Lucy Crowe especially impressive in ‘The Plaint’) and
wonderfully backed by the English Concert and the bright natural
musicianship of Trevor Pinnock. Never mind the whys and wherefores –
just sit back and enjoy! (Lindsay Kemp / Gramophone)
thank you very much.
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