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	Comments on: Miss Lucy Havens requests	</title>
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	<description>Baroque music ensemble</description>
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		By: Neville Olliffe		</title>
		<link>https://thoroughbass.com.au/product/miss-lucy-havens-requests/#comment-391</link>

		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Neville Olliffe]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Jun 2021 03:54:25 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[Neville Olliffe, Early Music Assoc. May 2021

Miss Lucy Havens requests…. Danielle Grant, soprano; Tara Hashambhoy, violin; Angus Ryan &amp; Lucy Cormack, celli; Diana Weston, square piano &amp; harpsichord. Wirripang CD, WIR 110

Note…. The setting for this disk is outside the EMA&#039;s adopted timeframe for Early Music. Our interest and comment lies in the uncovering of our own musical history in the early years of settlement.

 The full title, &quot;Miss Lucy Havens requests the pleasure of your company,&quot; and the content description, &quot;Music making in the homes of early Australian settlers,&quot; suitably sets the scene for the disk.

Miss Lucy Havens was born in Scotland in 1804 and migrated to Sydney with her family in 1839. How serious a musician was Miss Havens is unclear but her surviving printed music collection of around 2,500 items has a piano focus which, in her circumstances, was the square piano, the popular instrument used by well-to-do ladies of the colony for both personal enjoyment and home entertainment. Her collection, now in the safe keeping of Sydney Living Museums, is a valuable indicator of the music that would have been imported at the time. Piano works and sonatas, plus songs and dances with a noticeable Celtic affection, form the bulk of the collection.

 The disk opens with Sonata in G Major from &#039;Six Sonatas for the Piano Forte or Harpsichord with an Accompaniment for a Flute or Violin and Violincello&#039; by Austrian, Ignace (Ignaz) Pleyel (1757-1831), a popular composer whose music was accessible, melodic and practical where resources were limited. In this affectionate performance, piano and violin deliver flowing Allegro and Allegro Molto movements around a serious but lovely Adagio.

 &#039;An Admired Scottish Air arranged with variations for the Piano Forte&#039; by John Ross, and later, &#039;Three short waltzes from Collection of Waltzes for the Piano Forte,&#039; delightfully performed, and with hand integration to illustrate the Square Piano&#039;s characteristic where the farther ends of the keyboard represent separate instruments.

 A medley of Gaelic dances involve three tracks with strings beckoning us to skip to Reels, march to Strathspeys, then waltz, and Rope Dance.

 Four &#039;Scotch Songs&#039; here performed, were enhanced with violin obbligato by local composer, Ann Carr-Boyd. Up in the morning early, Gloomy Winter&#039;s now awa’, Within a mile of Edinburgh, and Robin Adair are a sampling of the vocal music that would have been imported at the time. The songs are rendered with attention to vocal ornamentation, but &quot;period-spotters&quot; possibly won&#039;t be comfortable with the vocal vibrato.

 As the disk winds down, the piano retires and harpsichord joins the strings and voice for a couple of selections from &#039;The Gaelic Old Smuggler Hotch-Potch&#039;. The tinge of sadness in these pieces is abruptly dispatched by a bouncing rendition of The Reel of Tulloch.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Neville Olliffe, Early Music Assoc. May 2021</p>
<p>Miss Lucy Havens requests…. Danielle Grant, soprano; Tara Hashambhoy, violin; Angus Ryan &#038; Lucy Cormack, celli; Diana Weston, square piano &#038; harpsichord. Wirripang CD, WIR 110</p>
<p>Note…. The setting for this disk is outside the EMA&#8217;s adopted timeframe for Early Music. Our interest and comment lies in the uncovering of our own musical history in the early years of settlement.</p>
<p> The full title, &#8220;Miss Lucy Havens requests the pleasure of your company,&#8221; and the content description, &#8220;Music making in the homes of early Australian settlers,&#8221; suitably sets the scene for the disk.</p>
<p>Miss Lucy Havens was born in Scotland in 1804 and migrated to Sydney with her family in 1839. How serious a musician was Miss Havens is unclear but her surviving printed music collection of around 2,500 items has a piano focus which, in her circumstances, was the square piano, the popular instrument used by well-to-do ladies of the colony for both personal enjoyment and home entertainment. Her collection, now in the safe keeping of Sydney Living Museums, is a valuable indicator of the music that would have been imported at the time. Piano works and sonatas, plus songs and dances with a noticeable Celtic affection, form the bulk of the collection.</p>
<p> The disk opens with Sonata in G Major from &#8216;Six Sonatas for the Piano Forte or Harpsichord with an Accompaniment for a Flute or Violin and Violincello&#8217; by Austrian, Ignace (Ignaz) Pleyel (1757-1831), a popular composer whose music was accessible, melodic and practical where resources were limited. In this affectionate performance, piano and violin deliver flowing Allegro and Allegro Molto movements around a serious but lovely Adagio.</p>
<p> &#8216;An Admired Scottish Air arranged with variations for the Piano Forte&#8217; by John Ross, and later, &#8216;Three short waltzes from Collection of Waltzes for the Piano Forte,&#8217; delightfully performed, and with hand integration to illustrate the Square Piano&#8217;s characteristic where the farther ends of the keyboard represent separate instruments.</p>
<p> A medley of Gaelic dances involve three tracks with strings beckoning us to skip to Reels, march to Strathspeys, then waltz, and Rope Dance.</p>
<p> Four &#8216;Scotch Songs&#8217; here performed, were enhanced with violin obbligato by local composer, Ann Carr-Boyd. Up in the morning early, Gloomy Winter&#8217;s now awa’, Within a mile of Edinburgh, and Robin Adair are a sampling of the vocal music that would have been imported at the time. The songs are rendered with attention to vocal ornamentation, but &#8220;period-spotters&#8221; possibly won&#8217;t be comfortable with the vocal vibrato.</p>
<p> As the disk winds down, the piano retires and harpsichord joins the strings and voice for a couple of selections from &#8216;The Gaelic Old Smuggler Hotch-Potch&#8217;. The tinge of sadness in these pieces is abruptly dispatched by a bouncing rendition of The Reel of Tulloch.</p>
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