Veteran early music keyboardist (and conductor) Ewald Demeyere here creates a really unusual program of 17th century keyboard music, unified by the general idea of the lament. Not every track on the album is a lament, but that's all to the good; Demeyere understands that even pieces with a specific memorial or merely melancholy function would sometimes have been played in the same suites and pairs that marked other kinds of keyboard music. Thus Demeyere puts together a group of dances to form a new Suite in F major by Louis ...
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Veteran early music keyboardist (and conductor) Ewald Demeyere here creates a really unusual program of 17th century keyboard music, unified by the general idea of the lament. Not every track on the album is a lament, but that's all to the good; Demeyere understands that even pieces with a specific memorial or merely melancholy function would sometimes have been played in the same suites and pairs that marked other kinds of keyboard music. Thus Demeyere puts together a group of dances to form a new Suite in F major by Louis Couperin, ending with a Tombeau de Mr de Blancrocher, a procedure that a harpsichordist of Couperin's time would have understood well. Another intriguing aspect of the program is that Demeyere crosses over the Renaissance-Baroque line, which has less importance for contrapuntal keyboard music that it does for other genres. From Byrd's masterly arrangement of John Dowland's Lachrimae Pavan the music goes forward in time, to Froberger and a later Pavan (or "Paduana Lagrima") by German...
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