Lucie Horsch: Origins

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Lucie Horsch, Bao Sissoko

Genre:

Orchestral

Label: Decca

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 62

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: 485 3192

485 3192. Lucie Horsch: Origins

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Ornithology Charlie Parker, Composer
Fuse Ensemble
Lucie Horsch, Composer
Libertango Astor Piazzolla, Composer
Carel Kraayenhof, Bandoneon
Lucie Horsch, Composer
Ludwig Orchestra
Farewell to Stromness Peter Maxwell Davies, Composer
Lucie Horsch, Composer
Ludwig Orchestra
Simple Gifts Traditional, Composer
Lucie Horsch, Composer
Ludwig Orchestra
Fuga y misterio Astor Piazzolla, Composer
Carel Kraayenhof, Bandoneon
Lucie Horsch, Composer
Ludwig Orchestra
(6) Romanian Folkdances Béla Bartók, Composer
Dani Luca, Cimbalom
Lucie Horsch, Composer
Syrinx Claude Debussy, Composer
Lucie Horsch, Composer
(3) Pieces for solo clarinet, Movement: No 1. Sempre piano e molto tranquillo Igor Stravinsky, Composer
Lucie Horsch, Composer
Chanson russe Igor Stravinsky, Composer
Lucie Horsch, Composer
Ludwig Orchestra
(3) Pieces for solo clarinet, Movement: No. 3 Igor Stravinsky, Composer
Lucie Horsch, Composer
Histoire du Tango, Movement: Café 1930 Astor Piazzolla, Composer
Lucie Horsch, Composer
Sean Shibe, Guitar
Pašona kolo Traditional, Composer
Lucie Horsch, Composer
Ludwig Orchestra
4 Chinesische Bilder, Movement: The Actor with the Monkey Isang Yun, Composer
Lucie Horsch, Composer
(3) Hungarian folksongs from the Csík district Béla Bartók, Composer
Dani Luca, Cimbalom
Lucie Horsch, Composer
She moved through the fair Traditional, Composer
Lucie Horsch, Composer
Londonderry Air Traditional, Composer
Lucie Horsch, Composer
Ludwig Orchestra
Tilibo Bao Sissoko, Composer
Lucie Horsch, Composer
Bao Sissoko, Composer
Lucie Horsch, Composer
Nyami Bao Sissoko, Composer
Lucie Horsch, Composer
Bao Sissoko, Composer
Lucie Horsch, Composer
(El) Diablo suelto Traditional, Composer
Lucie Horsch, Composer
Sean Shibe, Guitar
Tico-Tico Paz Abreu, Composer
Fuse Ensemble
Lucie Horsch, Composer

Charlie Parker’s Ornithology on the treble recorder? Surely not. But yes, this is exactly how Dutch recorder supremo Lucie Horsch has opened ‘Origins’, a globetrotting programme of specially commissioned arrangements and transcriptions celebrating the recorder’s connections to folk music, its repertoire ranging from classical to popular, supported by a host of energetic guest collaborators.

Horsch’s fellow musicians here are Amsterdam crossover sextet Fuse, and damn they’re good. It’s impossible not to be tapping your toes, lapping up their joyously insouciant swing and revelling in the tight interplay between the instruments. Most importantly of all, though, Horsch is in deep with them, not just slotting right into this interplay but adapting her delivery to slide into jazz style.

What’s most impressive about this album is the meticulous thought Horsch has given to each piece’s sound world – drawing on the ranges and tonal qualities of eight different recorder types but also consulting her collaborators on each genre’s finer stylistic points; and moments such as the surprising success of Piazzolla’s Libertango and Fuga y misterio with Dutch bandoneón player Carel Kraayenhof and Ludwig Orchestra are testament to the degree to which she’s clearly soaked up their direction like a sponge.

Personal favourites include Horsch’s own arrangements of Bartók’s Romanian Folk Dances, employing five different recorders to produce a panoply of colours, with the attentive partnering of Dani Luca on cimbalom; a rhythmically en pointe reading of Heraclio Fernández’s El diablo sueito (‘The Devil on the Loose’), for which guitarist Sean Shibe has hopped over from Pentatone, Horsch’s clean-toned lines spiced with cheeky flutter-tonguing; an effortless borrowing for the recorder – or smokily soft voiceflute, to be exact – of Debussy’s Syrinx; the blend of theatrical caprice and easy virtuosity she displays over another solo recorder number, Isang Yun’s The Actor with the Monkey, with its extended techniques; and the way the non-well-tempered clarity and power of a Renaissance tenor is set off by the delicate brightness of Bao Sissoko’s African kora in Nyami, the second of two improvisations on traditional Senegalese songs.

Conceptually enterprising, sparkily executed, spotlighting both Horsch’s formidable technical prowess and her inventive powers, ‘Origins’ is an unexpected and marvellous affair.

Explore the world’s largest classical music catalogue on Apple Music Classical.

Included with an Apple Music subscription. Download now.

Gramophone Print

  • Print Edition

From £6.67 / month

Subscribe

Gramophone Digital Club

  • Digital Edition
  • Digital Archive
  • Reviews Database
  • Full website access

From £8.75 / month

Subscribe

                              

If you are a library, university or other organisation that would be interested in an institutional subscription to Gramophone please click here for further information.