Members of Armonia Nova Baroque performed a program of 16th- and 17th-century Spanish music called Con Ecos de Esplendor. (Most of the participants will also be featured later this month in the Washington Early Music Festival.) The singer was mezzo-soprano Barbara Hollinshead, who has impressed me before at other concerts (Washington Bach Consort and Opera Lafayette) with her pure and velvety voice. One of the tropes this summer—and a nice rediscovery for me—has been the music of Juan del Encina (see my reviews of the Baltimore Consort and Hesperus). Hollinshead, a professor of voice at American University as well as a busy performer, sang two of his pieces from the Cancionero de Palacio, which framed the concert as first and last piece. Her voice seemed best suited to the three Sephardic songs she sang with superlative lutenist Howard Bass, who announced quite rightly that these transcriptions may not have all that much to do with 15th-century Spain (a point I made in my review of the Baltimore Consort). However, the texts in Ladino and the folksy subjects give a certain flavor, however removed, of Sephardic culture in Spain. Yo m'enamori d'un air was particularly fine, with Hollinshead's evocative handling of the sighing melismas ("Tra la la").
Harpsichordist Atsuko Ikeda played well, if somewhat timidly, on her solo piece, the Gallardas de primero tono de todo gusto by Juan Cabanilles (1644–1712), with its sections of increasing difficulty (the source, I assume, of "all pleasure" seen in the title). The instrument she played is the same I have seen around town this year (most recently, a concert by Penelope Crawford at the National Gallery of Art, where I took the photograph shown here). This 1984 William Dowd instrument from Boston is rented out for concerts by its owner, whom I met at intermission. (He even offered to let me play it after the concert, an opportunity I passed up because I had to leave quickly afterward.) Constance Whiteside, a specialist on historical harps, provide continuo color and a few charming solo dance pieces. All the instruments together, including Douglas Wolters on viola da gamba, played Diego Ortiz's Recercada Secunda (which I also heard from the Baltimore Consort), a charming variation set. The French dance pieces in Spanish style, by Michael Praetorius and Elisabeth-Claude Jacquet de la Guerre—originally intended to accompany Baroque dancing by Cheryl Stafford (who had led a workshop on Baroque dance at St. Paul's Center earlier in the day)—were cancelled because of the lack of appropriate floor space in the church. Tant pis pour nous.
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