Born in Turkey, but trained in France, musicologist
and soprano Chimène Seymen is perhaps better placed than
anyone to bring a comparative study of 17th-century
Ottoman and European music to vivid life on the concert
platform. This superb release features live performances
from two ensembles, La Turchescha & Cevher i Musiki,
both under the artistic direction of Seymen.
The
Ottoman music featured in the programme is drawn from a
collection (Mecmûa-i Sâz ü Söz), put together by Ali
Ufkî, a Pole who found himself in the service of the
Sultan of Constantinople.
Seymen has selected music by Isabella Leonarda,
Barbara Strozzi, Kapsberger, Merula, Calestani and Landi
to represent the Italian Baroque tradition.
The
programme opens with a mysterious-sounding taksim
performed by Kasif Demiröz on Ney (flute); this merges
quite magically with part of a sonata by Leonarda before
Seymen enters with Strozzi’s Lagrime mie. The effect is
startling, surreal and extraordinarily moving, with
Seymen and La Turchescha introducing subtle
Middle-Eastern inflections to their instrumental and
vocal lines.
A kaleidoscopic mix of songs and dances from East and
West then follows, allowing the listener to fully savour
both the similarities and differences between these two
rich traditions. It is also interesting to note that
Cevher i Musiki, after the fashion of Western early
music ensembles, uses copies of instruments that would
have been played during Ufkî’s time. The sounds of
Rebab, Santur, Bendir, Ney and Mazhar can thus be
pleasurably compared with those of La Turchescha’s viola
da gamba, theorbo, harp, cornett, recorder and
colascione. A ravishing release. WILLIAM
YEOMAN