Robert Sadin has had an eclectic career as a conductor in both the classical and jazz worlds; a member of the faculty at Princeton; and an arranger, instrumentalist, and Grammy Award-winning producer.
Art of Love: Music of Machaut uses a variety of his talents; he conceived, produced, and served as mixer for the album and arranged the music and texts of the songs by Guillaume de Machaut, as well as singing and playing clarinet and organ on some of the tracks. Although they were certainly meant to be accompanied, the melodies and lyrics are all that remain of Machaut's 14th century songs, and virtually nothing is known about how exactly they were meant to be performed.
Sadin brings an unambiguously modern sensibility to his arrangements, which include both vocal performances and instrumentals, and even though the arrangements and improvisations use a variety of jazz techniques and styles, on almost every track he presents the melodies themselves absolutely faithfully. He assembles an array of outstanding performers from numerous traditions to collaborate on the pieces, including singers
Milton Nascimento,
Natalie Merchant, and
Madeleine Peyroux (who recites rather than sings the lyrics); John Ellis on winds; guitarist
Romero Lubambo; violinist
Mark Feldman; cellist and guitarist
Charles Curtis; pianist
Brad Mehldau; and percussionist
Cyro Baptista. Improvisation plays a major role on every track; for "Force of Love,"
Sadin provided
Curtis,
Mehldau, and
Baptista only with the melody, giving them complete freedom to develop the piece. The performers tend to emphasize the melancholy longing of Machaut's modal melodies, so the general tone of the album is gently evocative, but at the same time many of the arrangements have an Afro-Brazilian rhythmic undercurrent. Every track effectively provides a distinctive setting for Machaut's music, which is sometimes heard straightforwardly and sometimes woven subtly into a rich improvisatory fabric. Each of the songs featuring
Nascimento is exceptional for its depth of feeling, and other standouts include
Merchant's wordless vocalese; "Doux Visage" with singer Celena Shafer; and the dancelike "Douce Dame," perhaps Machaut's most familiar tune, and the album's perkiest piece. The album includes two tracks by other composers, "Brad's Interlude,"
Mehldau's improvisation on a tune by Solage, a contemporary of Machaut's, and "Evocation," a soulful original vocal solo by
Nascimento. Deutsche Grammophon's sound is immaculate with a warm intimacy. This beautifully executed CD should appeal to fans of jazz-classical crossover. ~ Stephen Eddins