"This
disc celebrates the titans John Dowland and Henry Purcell, who stand as colossal
bookends at opposite ends of the 17th century. While their individual
backgrounds and careers differed, their achievement in the realm of accompanied
solo song is strikingly similar... Each of these songs is a little jewel,
expressed succinctly, with elegance, beauty, and refinement... Mercurial Love
explores the full gamut of life's most complex emotion: love's exhilaration and
frustration, volatility and fickleness, tenderness, despair, and myriad other
qualities... The instrumental solos interspersed among the songs extend the mood
to a more abstract realm, expressing the emotional state where the poetry and
the melody lead the listener... Neither Dowland nor Purcell leaves the singer
any place to hide [and] Ms. Jandrokovi confronts this nakedness, exposing
private feelings, thoughts and experiences through her sensuous, unique voice"
Amazon Editorial Review
"...she
has a beautiful voice, light and sweet."
American Record Guide
~ September / October 2008
"Jandrokovic
[has a] pure, attractive voice... The programme is nicely varied... Right from
the opening track, one is immediately made aware of Jandrokovic's concern for
the words and their expression. Weaver and Stober are equally judicious in their
accompaniments... both Jandrokovic and vinikour delight in the expressive
possibilities afforded by Purcell's writing...[this is a] thoroughly enjoyable
recital that in many ways provides an excellent introduction of the music of
thee two fine composers."
International Record Review
~ September 2008
"vivacious
performance…pearly tone…sung by Jandroković with a twinkling relish of
potential pleasures…"
MusicWeb International
~ September 2008
"Jama
Jandrokovic...is in possession of a light, lyrical, sweetly subtle voice that
suits these songs very well...From [Dowland to Purcell] there are simply no
finer tunes that have ever floated through the air...the soprano has her way
with these composers to excellent effect."
Audiophile
Audition ~ July 2008
"From
Jāma Jandroković... comes an offering as unexpected as it is purely
delightful. In repertoire that we’ve been used to hearing sung by either a
countertenor or a tenor with a distinctively "white" vocal quality,
Ms. Jandroković’s light lyric soprano and seamlessly flawless vocal
production seems to float over some of the most formidable obstacles in the
literature with deceptive ease. She is also a very sensitive interpreter of a
song text. Her noticeable passion for poetry is a vital requisite for songs
written in a great period of the English lyric."
Atlanta Audio Society ~ July 2008
Imagine
a culture in which persons with even a modest education not only knew poets and
musicians by name, but could also quote passages of poetry from memory. In our
world, such erudition is largely the province of academic scholars. The average
audience member at a concert of vocal music depends on program notes and song
texts to enhance appreciation of the performance.
England
in the 17th century was a different story. In addition to the aristocracy, many
members of the middle class were well acquainted with both poetry and music.
English composers capitalized on this knowledge, exploring ways to meld the
messages of text and sound in ways that heightened sensory impact.
Elizabethan
and Jacobean England boasted the finest musicians in the western world and a
stable of stellar composers equal to those of any other country. This disc
celebrates the titans John Dowland and Henry Purcell, who stand as colossal
bookends at opposite ends of the 17th century. While their individual
backgrounds and careers differed, their achievement in the realm of accompanied
solo song is strikingly similar. Soprano Jāma Jandroković,
harpsichordist Jory Vinikour, lutenist Charles Weaver and viola da gambist
Carlene Stober have recreated an evening of music-making in a civilized and
cultured household, presenting accompanied vocal music and instrumental solos.
Each
of these songs is a little jewel, expressed succinctly, with elegance, beauty,
and refinement: a Fabergé egg, two centuries ahead of that concept. ‘Mercurial
Love’ explores the full gamut of life’s most complex emotion: love’s
exhilaration and frustration, volatility and fickleness, tenderness, despair,
and myriad other qualities. "Sometimes several aspects occur within a
single song," observes Ms. Jandrokovic. For example, Dowland’s ‘Come
again’ presents eager anticipation in the first stanza, mourning and weeping
in the second, and ends with despair. Similarly, but with the inverse
trajectory, ‘Sweeter than Roses’ is chameleon-like. It first yearns, then
becomes passionate, then languorous, and finally triumphant. The instrumental
solos interspersed among the songs extend the mood to a more abstract realm,
expressing the emotional state where the poetry and the melody lead the
listener.
*
* *
Jāma
Jandroković
Soprano
Jāma Jandroković has charmed audiences and critics with her clear,
pure soprano voice and engaging stage presence. A versatile interpreter of song,
she is equally at ease in early music, new music, Lieder and Broadway. Native to
the wind-swept plains of Wyoming, she has appeared in major international
concert halls including Konzerthaus Berlin, Munich's Gasteig für Kultur and New
York's Alice Tully Hall and Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall. Critics and
audiences have thrilled to her artistry, delighting in her "lovely lyric
soprano and gift for poetry" [New York Newsday] and praising her
"appealingly sweet" [Opera News] and "clear and wonderful
voice" [Glamour Magazine Germany].
Ms.
Jandroković has a passion for poetry which guides her singing. She is most
at home in the recital literature and has worked with the celebrated art song
composer Lori Laitman and the Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Paul Moravec. This
collaboration prompted Opera News critic Joanne Sydney Lesser to applaud
"her genuine desire to collaborate and communicate, as well as her
commendable commitment to new music." The New York Times has observed,
"Give this soprano credit for putting herself on the line." She has
done so again with this CD which explores her interest in early music. Neither
Dowland nor Purcell leaves the singer any place to hide. Ms. Jandroković
confronts this nakedness, exposing private feelings, thoughts and experiences
through her sensuous, unique voice.
Jory
Vinikour Harpsichord
Jory
Vinikour is recognized as one of the outstanding harpsichordists of his
generation. A highly diversified career brings him to the world’s most
important festivals and concert halls as recital and concerto soloist,
partner to several of today’s finest singers, and as one of the most
visible continuo performers. Born in Chicago, Jory came to Paris in 1990 on
a scholarship from the Fulbright Foundation to study with Huguette Dreyfus and
Kenneth Gilbert. First Prizes in the International Harpsichord Competitions of
Warsaw (1993) and the Prague Spring Festival (1994) brought him to the
public’s attention, and he has since appeared in festivals and concert series
throughout much of the world.
A concerto soloist with a repertoire ranging from Bach to Nyman, he has
performed as soloist with leading orchestras including
Rotterdam Philharmonic, Flanders Opera Orchestra, L’Orchestre de la
Suisse Romande, Lausanne Chamber Orchestra, Philharmonic of Radio
France, Ensemble Orchestral de Paris, and Moscow Chamber Orchestra
with conductors such as Armin Jordan, Marc Minkowski, Constantine Orbelian,
John Nelson and Fabio Luisi. He has participated in a recording of Frank
Martin’s Petite Symphonie Concertante with the Lausanne Chamber Orchestra
under the direction of Armin Jordan (OSR, 2005), and also performed the
Harpsichord Concerto by the same composer with the Symphony Orchestra of the MDR
in Leipzig’s Gewandhaus under the direction of Martin Haselböck in
January 2003.
Increasingly known as an accompanist, he has appeared extensively
in recital with artists such as David Daniels, Hélène Delavault,
Magdalena Kozena, Annick Massis, Marijana Mijanovic and others. He has
accompanied legendary Swedish mezzo-soprano Anne Sofie von Otter in recitals in
Sweden, Norway, Spain and Paris and at La Scala in Milan. With luthenist
Jakob Lindberg, a programme of English and Italian music of the 17th century,
entitled Music for a While was released by Deutsche Grammophon.
Charles
Weaver Lute
Charles
Weaver plays lute and theorbo with the early music ensembles ARTEK and Repast.
He has also performed with Hesperus, Piffaro, St. Luke’s, and the Yale
collegium. His main interests are accompanying baroque opera and working
with the New York Continuo Collective, a group that explores the tradition
of reciting Italian poetry to music in the 17th century. With his duo partner,
soprano Elizabeth Baber, he has created programs of 16th and 17th-century
song praised for their "imagination in programming." The
Washington Post has described his performances as "captivating"
and "splendid."
Carlene
Stober Viola da Gamba
Carlene
Stober is a member of early music ensembles Empire Viols and the Grenser Trio
and is continuo cellist for the celebrated Bach Vespers series at New York City’s
Holy Trinity Church. In addition to performing with many ensembles, she has
appeared at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, on Prairie Home Companion, with the
Utah Shakespearean Festival and Theatre for a New Audience. On modern cello, she
served as principal cellist of the Tucson Symphony Orchestra and is a member of
the Lake George Opera Festival Orchestra.