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Many Fretwork recordings can be ordered from Fretwork Publishing.
Fretwork Guesting
Above the Stars
Thomas Tomkins
 "Excellent...The ever-dependable Fretwork prove once again that they have no peers in this repertoire."
*****
The Independent
"Utterly captivating. A most rewarding disc."
BBC Music Magazine, June 2003
Fretwork's considerable experience in this kind of repertoire shows in these faultlessly assured performances. In the five- and six-part pieces they relish the music's swelling sonorities, while in the three-part fantasies there is a beguiling sense of relaxed conversation; the canonic opening of Fantasia No. 14 has an almost jazzy nonchalance. The line-up of singers looks rather like an ad hoc version of Red Byrd, and they bring some of that group's performance ethics with them, including an evident desire to escape the 'traditional' English early music vocal sound. Succulent 'historical' pronunciation is part of that, but it is refreshing, too, to hear familiar voices altering their sound for the cause. A clear and attractive recorded sound completes a most accomplished release.
Lindsay Kemp
Gramophone
"Long recognized as the world's premier viol consort, the British groups Fretwork reaffirms its status with this disc of works by Renaissance composer and organist Thomas Tomkins... The consort's carefully crafted interpretations and flawless ensemble playing are both soothing and compelling. Vocally, tenor Charles Daniels provides a tender counterpoint to the strings with his effortless reading of "Lord, Lett Me Knowe Myne End." He is finely partnered by soprano Emma Kirkby in the title track, "Above the Starrs My Saviour Dwells." Alto Catherine King's voice melts at times into the timbre of the viols; her gentle sorrow in "Woe Is Me" is simply heartbreaking... first-rate album, appropriate for both the novice and the well-versed listener."
Ben Finane
Time Out New York: August 2003
Superb performances by some of the outstanding singers of our time, the premier consort of viols, and Tomkins himself, provide over 70 minutes of marvellous music. The music requires this level of performer, but also this level of ensemble excellence - a rare combination, to be snapped up.
Robert Oliver
Early Music Review
Tomkins (1572-1656) takes advantage of the viol's softer, yet deeper timbres. Likewise, Fretwork's tonal colors and swelling phrases ripen each piece like some blushing peach! For all the luxurious sound, what really stands out is Tomkins' mastery of composition. He strikes a balanced tension between tightly crafted phrases, harmonies that turn from creamy to pungent to supple, and rapturous melodies that are shaped with a finely detailed sense of proportion. For the choral anthem selections, the guest vocalists are simply ravishing. "Lord, let me know mine end" is almost sacrilegious in its sensuality, swimming in Harmonia Mundi's opulent acoustic that still has plenty of presence. Enthralling.
Performance: (5 stars)
Sound: (5 stars)
Nebraska Public Radio/Wet Paint
"Combine six of England's finest early music singers, that country's premiere viol consort, and the exquisite music of Thomas Tomkins and one has every reason to expect an extraordinary delight. This recording amply fulfills that expectation. The playing of Fretworks is nothing short of a revelation. There is nothing dry or academic here. The phrases spring to life like breathing organisms. Animation, serenity, introspection - all are in evidence as the music requires. Even genres like the In Nomine and the hexachord fantasia that were regarded as old-fashioned in Tomkins's day emerge here with irresistible freshness. I suppose it is possible for lesser players to make this music sound boring, but here it is engaging and vital."
American Record Guide September/October 2003
"Un album extraordinario para melomanos - An extraordinary album for music lovers"
Harbers Bazaar October 2003
Harmonia Mundi USA | HMU907320 | 2003 | current
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