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Ensemble for the Seicento : Forbidden Dance - Dances and Diminutions of the Italian Baroque
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EFS's unique and imaginative instrumental palette (voice, percussion, gamba, Renaissance harp, baroque guitar, harpsichord & recorder)gives rise to lively, fresh, dynamic interpretations of music from a time of transition between Renaissance and Baroque.
Genre: Classical: Traditional
Release Date: 2002
Forbidden Dance - Dances and Diminutions of the Italian Baroque Record Label: Musicians Showcase Recordings
  • Buy CD - $16.00
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
Chacona - Improvisation/Juan Aranes (d.c. 1649) 2:36 Album Only
Aria di Romanesca - Girolamo Frescobaldi (1583-1643) 3:26 Album Only
Capona/Recercada Settima Sobre la Romanesca - Improvisation/Dieg 3:42 Album Only
Recercada Segunda sobre el Passamezzo Moderno - Diego Ortiz 1:32 Album Only
Aria di Passacaglia - Girolamo Frescobaldi 3:12 Album Only
Toccata del Signor Oratio Bassani - Attributed to Oratio Bassani 2:46 Album Only
Folia di Spagna - Improvisation 2:31 Album Only
Passacaglia -Ciaconna/Cantata a Voce Sopra la Passacaglia - Impr 9:28 Album Only
Recercada Primera sobre el Passamezzo Antiguo - Diego Ortiz 2:02 Album Only
Lauda Spirituale/Folias di Spagna - Matteo Coferati (fl. 1689)/I 7:41 Album Only
Ancor che col Partire - After Cipriano da Rore (c. 15515-1565); 3:47 Album Only
Ancor che col Partire - After Cipriano da Rore; Diminutions by G 3:46 Album Only
Cantata a Voce sopra la Ciaconna - Benedetto Ferrari (c. 1603-16 5:49 Album Only
preview all songs

Album Notes

ENSEMBLE FOR THE SEICENTO

Melissa Fogarty - soprano and baroque guitar
Beverly Au - viola da gamba
Michael Eisenberg - harpsichord and Renaissance harp
Mauricio Molina - tambourine, tabor, Renaissance side drum, jew's harp, castanets, recorder


CD REVIEW - Forbidden Dance:

[ENSEMBLE FOR THE SEICENTO's new CD, Forbidden Dance,] delivers a delightful lineup of 13 songs and improvisations taken from the ciacona (Spanish by way of the Americas), folia (Portuguese), and passacalle (Spanish) dance forms - collectively, the Lambada of their day. These dances were once considered so erotic and scandalous that the church banned them under penalty of flogging. But when Italian composers got hold of then (in the late 16th and early 17th centuries), they used their rhythmic schemes to compose wildly romantic love songs, stripping out some of the crudeness but losing none of the exciting syncopation, boldness, and vitality of the scandalous originals.

Ensemble for the Seicento(finalists in the 2000 Dorian/Early Music America Recording Competition) handles this music with brio. Melissa Fogarty's singing is at once emotional and cavalier as she switches effortlessly from heartsick lover to romantic cynic. She is joined by spirited playing all around. Most of the music is Spanish in character, with loving attention paid to the complex rhythms. Crackling castanets, snappy palmas, finger snaps, and driving drums are joined by some wicked guitar strumming that would make George Harrison gently weep. It's a pleasure to hear an ensemble that's not afraid to rock when the music warrants it. All the brightness and spirit are vividly captured in a recording that has a detailed but very natural sound. In all, this is exciting music you could play at your next party.

- Early Music America Magazine


MORE RAVES FOR ENSEMBLE FOR THE SEICENTO:

"The various tonal colors of the ensemble unfolded in a rich tapestry of Renaissance sound....[T]hese performers are proof...that historic performance can take its rightful place at the table of music, an equal partner in providing pleasure for the discriminating concertgoer and listener. The Ensemble for the Seicento offered a pleasure that any music lover could cherish." - The Southhampton Press

"[Ensemble for the Seicento] join[s] the ranks of the most exciting early music groups in the world today!"
- Early Music America

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REVIEWS