| Reviews
Horses Brawl at Norwich Arts Centre 7th January 2006
The Recorder Magazine by Eli Fosbrooke-Brown
"Horses Brawl is a fairly recently-formed trio - Laura Cannell,
Adrian Lever, and Jonathan Manton, playing recorders, crumhorns,
violins, guitars, and 'cello. They bring a fresh and entertaining
light to European mediaeval tunes and melodies, founded on scholarship
and a serious knowledge of the music but with the addition of creativity
and humour. On Saturday I went to see them at Norwich Arts Centre.
The programme began with a hopping dance, as Laura told us, adding
"There's another one later, and it would really make me happy
if anyone would have a hop during it"; and indeed three people
did so, to their own round of applause. Laura created a drone-sound
by playing two recorders at once. I had wondered how a repertoire
based on mediaeval music, mainly dance tunes, would work on primarily
modern instruments and without percussion. The answer is that they
do have percussion. Guitar used percussively I've met before, but
a 'cello used as a drum? Fear not for the safety of the lovely cello,
though - Jon has stuck on a bright green taxdisc holder to protect
the wood from his thumping.
They use the instruments in innovative ways to produce sounds which
are reminiscient of mediaeval instruments - for example, the part
that sounds so much like a hurdygurdy is in fact a violin played
with the bow outside and around it. In one piece the guitar is bowed,
too (Adrian's preparation is an amusing piece of stage business,
entailing rather more rosin and squeaking strings than may be musically
necessary). The cello is hit, slapped, tweaked, plucked, and slithered,
as well as conventionally bowed; Jon even uses a plectrum at times.
The result is an astounding range of textures.
Of course, it helps that all three are superb musicians, with the
accurate and warm ensemble that brings out the best in dance tunes.
They have to tune between almost every piece - not because of the
environment or dodgy strings, but because their arrangements call
for so many different and unusual tunings. To pass the time while
tuning, they make little jokes about needing to be rich enough to
have a suite of guitars and 'cellos ready-prepared, and handed to
them by attendants. Laura: "You'll miss all our tuning when
we stop!" Jon: "Yes, and there's no tuning on the CD".
The mood varies from toe-tappingly jolly to sensually languorous
and even to the strange and almost disturbing, as in the first part
of Galliard (Branle des Chevaux); from traditional to Machaut to
their own composed works. Most are neatly-paired tunes (in the style
of folk-dance music), from various parts of Europe, as far as Istanbul.
This is historical performance brought into our times, giving us
some feel for what the music must have been like for the original
listeners. The hour passed very swiftly! You can read more about
them on their website and order their first CD, released through
their very own record company Brawl Records
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Quick
quotes
"It's great stuff.....an early music group to keepan eye on"
BBC RADIO 3
"Foot-tapping folk rhythms and baroque ornamentation".
THE TELEGRAPH
"Highly experimental, technically
wonderful....a fantastic and vibrant performance"
TRADITION Magazine
"Deeply entwined in the sound of medieval and traditional folk,
Horses Brawl are giving a 21st century makeover to the dance music
of the past"
BBC Norfolk
"Horses Brawl's music is vibrant, engaging and completely spellbinding.....I
love it, one of the most exciting bands around"
Steafan Hannigan
"A fascinating progression from formal dance music to semi-improvisation
that had the packed audience roaring for more"
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