Not quite a jazz album, this exquisite performance for voice, harp and period fiddles joins Susanna Wallumrød's light-touch singing and the evocative, interweaving lines and stately enunciation of Henry Purcell's 17th-century church and theatre music, some Wallumrød originals, two Leonard Cohen songs and Nick Drake's Which Will. It's a unique and audacious collaboration with baroque harpist Giovanna Pessi that has the makings of an unlikely cross-genre hit.
Wallumrød's subtle delivery of contemporary lyrics such as "Who by barbiturate/ Who in these realms of love/ Who shall I say is calling" from Cohen's Who by Fire, or his chilling call-of-fate lines in You Know Who I Am, have an astonishing impact when set against the steady turns and rolls of Pessi's harp, Marco Ambrosini's keyed-fiddle nyckelharpa and Jane Achtman's viola de gamba. The latter has a cello's resonance at times, the harp a guitar's, and the quiet force of Wallumrød's personality within such a formal early-music structure is mesmerising.
Recorded in three days in Lugano, November 2010, "If Grief Could Wait" is an intimate album of very special character. Given impetus also by the nyckelharpa of Marco Ambrosini and Jane Achtman's viola da gamba, the project has Pessi's arrangements of Henry Purcell songs at its core. It begins with "The Plaint" (from The Fairy Queen of 1692) and continues with "If Grief Has Any Pow'r To Kill", and "O Solitude" (from The Theatre of Musick), as well as "Music For a While" (from Oedipus) and "An Evening Hymn" (from Harmonia Sacra) But Purcell's music has never been heard quite like this. Threaded between his songs and instrumental pieces here are works of singer-songwriters Leonard Cohen and Nick Drake, as well as songs by Susanna Wallumrød herself.
"If Grief Could Wait" is neither a project that adheres rigorously to ideals of historical performance practice, nor one that strives self-consciously to "cross over". Pessi and Wallumrød offer music that they love, and all of it is played with commitment by the participating musicians. Purcell and Cohen are respected on their own terms, and Susanna's pure voice and Giovanna's subtle and evocative arrangements bring continuity to the repertoire. And, as Pessi points out, Cohen and Drake songs from the last century are also, from a contemporary perspective, `old music'.
Giovani Pessi + Susanna Wallumrød • If Grief Could Wait • ECM • 2011*****
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