The works heard here were published in Naples in 1576 and offer examples of the early genres of keyboard music that emerged at the end of the sixteenth century: dances and variations (which were, one learns, linked in their earliest incarnations by the increasingly energetic movements of a dancer), adaptations of vocal polyphony, and the recercata, an independently conceived polyphonic piece that evolved into the ricercar and later the fugue. The music was designated an intavolatura di cimbalo or intabulation for harpsichord, but performer
Francesco Cera plays some of the recercata on a small organ -- probably helpful for the listener in varying the texture and setting them apart from the other selections. Valente, a blind musician, was an organist himself. It might have been nice to see an example of the unique notation
Cera explains in his booklet notes -- apparently it consisted entirely of numbers. And it takes a listener really enamored of the idea of searching out the roots of instrumental music to love this stuff; the average buyer may end up like the organist pictured in the Titian painting on the cover, looking over his shoulder at the more interesting nude behind him. Nevertheless, collections strong in Renaissance or early keyboard music should make room for this disc.
Cera is an exciting player, with plenty of rhythmic vigor in the dances and a sense of how to evoke the improvisatory roots of the polyphonic pieces without overdoing the freedom. The harpsichord, spinet, and organ used, copies of examples from the middle sixteenth century, are powerful instruments suited to
Cera's style, although the harpsichord tends to overemphasize the left-hand accompaniments in the dances. The music heard here contained the keyboard genres of the Baroque in basic but not simple form, and performers like
Cera, who give the music a strong physical presence, are bringing it back to life as more than just a page in the history books.