On the Way to Bethlehem (Music of the Medieval Pilgrim)
Facts
|
On the Way to Bethlehem (Music of the Medieval Pilgrim)
Music Price: You save 11%! As of Dec 4 21:40 EST (details)
|
| Studio | Naxos |
| Release Date | March 26, 1996 |
| UPC Code | 730099413220 |
| Buy this item | $7.99 at Amazon.com As of Dec 4 21:40 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, |
Tracks
- Dinaresade
- Edi be thu, Heven-Queene
- Nevestinko oro
- Beata progenies
- Mari stanko
- Sei willekommen Herre Christ
- Bog se rodi va Betleme
- Koleda na Bozic
- Kod Betlehema
- Koleda na Bozic
- Angelus ad virginem
- Düdül
- Quinte Estampie real
- Urbs Beata Ierusalem
- Mevlâna
Similar CDs
| The Black Madonna | Codex Faenza: Instrumental Music of the Early 15th Century | Music Of The Crusades | From Byzantium to Andalusia: Medieval Music and Poetry | Carmina Burana |
User Reviews
Average user review:| Medieaval with a Mideastern Flair |
The Mari Stanko track with it's changing tempos and vocal ululations is unusually haunting, even by medieval standards. It is the haunting quality of the genre which I'm finding simultaneously stimulating and soothing. Music from the period is inherently mysterious, not only because of its typically spiritual themes and lyrics (after all, how much medieval Latin can I really pick-out), but also because we're really not sure what it originally sounded like. This gives a certain amount of license to the artists to interpret, as well as to perform. Medieval music performance is therefore as much reenactment as it is replaying. May 9, 2008
| Superb blend of Western and Middle Eastern Early Music |
The third track provides another lively woodwind tune with a Hellenistic mood. "Mari stanko" (traditional Bulgarian), the 5th track, is particularily interesting with long, slow female melodies that are interspersed with very rapid dance-like interludes. "Sei willekommen Herre Christ" provides a peaceful breather for the next track.
The next several tracks are short traditional Croation songs, ranging from chanting, chant-response, to renaissance-style dance music. The traditional Sufi track (Mevlana) makes a fitting close to the disc.
All in all, the middle-eastern influence is more prominent than the western-European influence (which may be why I like it so much). If you like early music, especially with the mystic sounds that Mediterranean music provides, then pick this disc up. (You can't beat the price either!) August 4, 2007
| MUSIC OF THE MEDIEVAL PILGRIM |
| Exotic, exciting and fun! |
| Exotic jams |
Instead, the record wishes to envisage a journey of mediæval pilgrims, beginning in Western Europe, and moving through the Balkans towards the Holy Land. As such, the disk contains a mixture of Western European, Balkan, and Islamic melodies.
The strength of Ensemble Unicorn and Oni Wytars is their ability to use early music as the basis for extended jam sessions. This recording is framed by two such jams, each more than twelve minutes in length, the opening -Dinaresade- and the closing -Mevlana-. Based on Middle Eastern themes, these are excellent performances, rich in atmosphere. Fans of contemporary groups who make use of similar material, from Loreena McKennitt to Dead can Dance, may find this record interesting, and well worth the Naxos price.
FWIW, Ensemble Unicorn and Oni Wytars also collaborate on the -Black Madonna- recording, another Naxos release I can highly recommend. February 26, 2001
More reviews at Amazon.com ...
