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Garden of Early Delights is a truly apt title for this charming collection of Elizabethan recorder and harp pieces, and the musicians, Pamela Thorby and Andrew Lawrence-King, form an ideal collaboration. The opening work, Recercada segunda de tenore by Ortiz was written in 1553. It demonstrates the astounding virtuosity of the recorder and is particularly impressive in the embellishment and complex ornamentation that is so exquisitely executed by internationally-renowned Thorby. The sleeve notes introduce the idea that the recorder is historically symbolised as a woman’s instrument associated with pastoral scenes, singing birds and played by angels etc whilst the Italian harp’s seventeenth century image is distinctly masculine, connected to images of King David and love scenes. The two instruments certainly fall into their roles in the first work. The composer intended the use of free invention and indeed Thorby is a master of this. The glissandi (called glosa) give the feeling of jazz improvisation in places, which is what the composer intended for his Trattado. The recorder is not just represented in a virtuosic light. Schop’s Lachrime Pavaen written in 1646 shows the melancholy side of the instrument and here Thorby plays the tenor instrument which has a deeper timbre and is less frilly. This is followed by Weep you no more by Dowland and offers a chance to hear delicate Baroque triple harp by itself. An added bonus (for me at least) is the beautiful front cover and informative sleeve notes. The disc was recorded at the National Centre for Early Music in York.
Reviewed by Dawn Cooke