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The Art of the Bawdy Song | Henry Aldrich, Anonymous, ... | One of the best CD's out there!
 
 


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 The Art of the Baw...  

The Art of the Bawdy Song
Henry Aldrich, Anonymous, ...

Dorian Recordings, 1993

average customer review:based on 14 reviews
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     highly recommended  highly recommended




Prelewd to Postlewd

The Baltimore Consort, an ensemble of six players, was founded in 1980 with the purpose of performing 'broken consort' pieces of Elizabethan origin. 'Broken' here refers to the instrumentation - treble viol/violin, flue/recorder, lute, cittern, bandore and bass viol. Their repertoire expanded beyond these beginnings to include broader British fare, as well as French and Italian music of the time. This is a happy expansion, as it made this disc of older, bawdy (for its time) music possible.

The Baltimore Consort play with life and vigour, with a good deal of improvisational flair, not being bound to texts and going through the production of notes as if mechanically. This is true to the spirit and nature of the early music, in which performers often had to 'play by ear', neither being able to read music nor having printed music even if they could. This is particularly true of the songs on this disc, where many are derivative of anonymous jokes and stories, and much of the music is likewise folk-tune and anonymously composed.

Some of the songs can be rather shocking. As Mary Anne Ballard writes in the accompanying notes, 'We must remember that in the days before indoor plumbing and pooper-scooper laws, everyday life was of an earthier flavour than it is today.... The men of the singing clubs and the ladies of stage poked fun at themselves and their companions with wit, pleasantry and contrivance.'

The names of many of the composers of these pieces have been lost to history, particularly the more folk-song oriented ones. However, some well-known composers are represented among the pieces here - Purcell, D'Urfey, Aldridge, and others.

The regular players include Mary Anne Ballard (viols), Mark Cudek (cittern, guitar, recorder and bass viol), Custer LaRue (vocalist/soprano), Larry Lipkis (recorder, viols), Ronn McFarlane (lute), Chris Norman (flutes), Webb Wiggins (tambourine and 'virginals'). Some artists are known from other Dorian productions, such as Ronn McFarlane on the lute in the collection 'Greensleeves'.

Added to the regular consort players are the Merry Companions, including Peter Becker (baritone), Alexander Blachly (baritone), Paul Shipper (bass, belch-canto), and James Weaver (baritone).

One more addition includes a guest artist, Lorenzo Labbrobacio, playing of all things, the 'fartophone', a rather mysterious instrument indeed. Labbrobacio defies identification on the internet other than references to this disc, and so the mystery deepens.

This is music that is interesting, truly fun to listen to, entertaining and has a quality about it that makes it a joy both in musical and humourous tones.



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One of the best CD's out there!

All ages and musical backgrounds love this CD. The Baltimore Consort are amazing. One really feels one is in a smoky pub in the 14oo's getting plastered with England's best musicians! Don't miss "Pox on You;" my kids absolutely howl with glee at the "bass fartophone." I haven't heard laughter like that come out of my little boy since he was a toddler. "Sweet Sir Walter" features one of the guys singing in a falsetto that sweeps lustily down into a Tim Curry-esque (think Dr. Frank-n-furter)gutteral guffaw of delight. So outrageously fun one forgets one is listening to Renaissance madrigals.


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Exquisite Naughtiness

The dulcet tones of The Merry Companions and The Baltimore Consort create a wonderful contrast to the dirty, scurvy content of these songs. Fart jokes, tributes to drunkenness, and every manner of sexual innuendo are included in this aptly titled collection. This is a delightful album with both artistry and bawdiness in abundance.


a voice teacher and early music fan

NOT TRUE BARROOM SINGING; BUT COMPRENDED NONETHELESS!!!!

These bawdy catches and ballads take us on a journey to the taverns and other social gathering places of the the real 'Merry Old England'. Some of us may be mildly shocked by the directness and earthiness of the text, but everyday life in the 17th century was much more 'down-to'earth- and forward. These texts-some blatant and other euphemistic-fully explore the spectrum of humor from the sly smirk to the back-slapping guffaw.


The singing of both ballads and catches belongs to a long and venerable tradition in England. The natural habitat of the catch was the tavern, while the ballad was known in a wider variety of social settings as well as the stage. By the end of the 17th century, ballads were collected by connoisseurs of popular culture and published in anthologies. The main source for this recording, 'The Catch Club, or 'Merry Companions', was printed in 1762.


A quote from the catch-philosopher (of 'Come, come let us drink') is offered by the Baltimore Consort: "...wine and good cheer will in spite of our fear inspire our hearts with mirth..the time we live, to wine let us give, since we all must turn to earth...."


This is an excellent collection of songs; quite interesting and varied. The instruments are played skillfully, and the voices, for the most part, are good quality. However, as with all 'folk-like' songs, the diction is not always clear, and that is very true of several of these on this disc. The female voices were more difficult to comprehend much of the time. The text is printed out, so ultimately familiararity will make them easier to understand.

I do like the disc, and think that it needed to be done. As to a previous criticism concerning the fact that it wasn't 'true' barroom singing. Of course, it's not!!!If it were, you would not understand any of it!!!!!Enough said.


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reviews: page 1, 2, 3



Tracks
Aniseed Robin | Cuckolds All A-Row | I Gave Her Cakes And I Gave Her Ale | Taking His Beer With Old Anacharsis | Fye, Nay, Prithee John | Cold And Raw | The Miller's Daughter | Will Said To His Mammy | The Old Fumbler | Walking In a Meadowe Greene | Celia Learning On The Spinnet | Tom the Taylor | My Lady's Coachman John | The Irish Jig Or The Night Ramble | Come Sirrah Jacke Hoe | Dainty Fine Aniseed Water | Most Men Do Love the Spanish Wine | Argreers | Gathering Peascods | My Lady And Her Maid | As Roger Last Night To Jenny Lay Close | Pox On You | Ladie Lie Near Me | 'Tis Women Makes Us Love | Sir Walter Enjoying His Damsel | My Thing Is My Own | Here Dwells a Pretty Maid | My Man John Had a Thing That Was Long | When First Amyntas Sued For a Kiss | More Palatino | Poor Owen | Where They Drank Their Wine | Come, Come, Let Us Drink



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