Label: Globe
Format: CD
Barcode: 8711525527508
Catalog number: GLO 5275
Releasedate: 07-02-20
Format: CD
Barcode: 8711525527508
Catalog number: GLO 5275
Releasedate: 07-02-20
- The All About Love program will be played on tour at least 7 times in 2020, more dates will be added to the schedule shortly
- BRISK is the only remaining recorder quartet in the Benelux
- This album is made in a hand numbered limited edition of 600 copies
Always About Love's opening track J’ay pris amours a ma devise (I have chosen love as my device) is the motto for the album with songs about longing and happiness, sadness and saying farewell. BRISK and Amaryllis Dieltiens have created a programme with music from various different styles and periods on these timeless themes. The poetry is the starting point for the various sections. The instrumental pieces are also all connected to this content, and could be listened to as instrumental poetry, as songs without words.
Alongside 16th and 17th century music from England, France and Germany, the sound of more recent times should not be lacking on this album. The quartet has arranged versions by Cecil Sharp and Benjamin Britten of the English folksong O Waly Waly. “Love is handsome, love is kind”, but love may fade away like the morning dew. Dawn is also used as a metaphor for the beloved in Max Knigge’s Ochtendbede, based on a sonnet by Jacques Perk. Hans Koolmees has written two songs about earthly and heavenly love, based on texts by the medieval mystic Hadewijch and the modern Flemish poet Eva Cox, and finally Walther Stuhlmacher has composed a wordless farewell.
However different these worlds may seem, it is always all about love!
https://youtu.be/tuauJMIU7N4
Alongside 16th and 17th century music from England, France and Germany, the sound of more recent times should not be lacking on this album. The quartet has arranged versions by Cecil Sharp and Benjamin Britten of the English folksong O Waly Waly. “Love is handsome, love is kind”, but love may fade away like the morning dew. Dawn is also used as a metaphor for the beloved in Max Knigge’s Ochtendbede, based on a sonnet by Jacques Perk. Hans Koolmees has written two songs about earthly and heavenly love, based on texts by the medieval mystic Hadewijch and the modern Flemish poet Eva Cox, and finally Walther Stuhlmacher has composed a wordless farewell.
However different these worlds may seem, it is always all about love!
https://youtu.be/tuauJMIU7N4
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1J’ay pris amours a ma devise01:45
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2Ostinato vo seguire02:41
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3Io mi son giovinetta03:06
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4Venus’ birds02:27
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5Joan, quoth John03:51
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6Galiard01:35
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7Ochtendbede06:52
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8Entre vous filles01:53
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9Canzon Francesa deta Frais & Gaillard04:00
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10Love Song - Tierelantijntje05:32
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11Tota pulchra es amica mea03:58
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12Love Song - Visioen07:38
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13Dont vient cela / Basse dance Dont vient cela05:20
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14Ach, weh des Leiden02:44
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15Bonny sweet Robin03:04
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16O Waly, Waly03:34
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17Abschied03:06