For their recital of organ solos and religious monody accompanied by organ, tenor Dominique Vellard and organist Jean-Pierre Leguay have limited themselves to works of the seventeenth and twenty first centuries. As the title suggests, the works are interlaced throughout the recording, with the intent that the juxtapositions and musical cross references will allow the listener to hear the pieces with fresh insight. The early works, by Monteverdi, Frescobaldi, and Schütz, are varied in style, highlighting the diversity of ...
Read More
For their recital of organ solos and religious monody accompanied by organ, tenor Dominique Vellard and organist Jean-Pierre Leguay have limited themselves to works of the seventeenth and twenty first centuries. As the title suggests, the works are interlaced throughout the recording, with the intent that the juxtapositions and musical cross references will allow the listener to hear the pieces with fresh insight. The early works, by Monteverdi, Frescobaldi, and Schütz, are varied in style, highlighting the diversity of musical voices in the early Baroque, from the florid and virtuosic vocal writing of some of the Monteverdi to the plain and repetitive but hauntingly evocative Messa della Madonna of Frescobaldi. The pieces by organist Leguay are comparably diverse, from the austere simplicity of the Pater Noster to his quirkily jaunty Alleluia to the expansiveness of his 20-minute motet, Secundum Matthaeum, and are clearly the work of a fine musical imagination. Vellard, who has made a career...
Read Less