****** - Verified Buyer
4.5
Excellent performance by a truly great genius. Has never heard anything so vivid, so special. Not even close.I am a fan of 'period' music - actually many periods, but esp. the older ones such as Medieval, Renaissance, and Baroque. Many good examples in these 2 CD's and all are well done. I have special fondness for the sound of the Recorder Consort (4, 5 and sometimes even 6 instruments in different ranges). Not much in demand these days, but I am one of the fanatics who still loves to listen to it. The David Munrow Recorder Consort (5 instruments) does an excellent job with this music. I was introduced to the recorder consort in music school in the 1950's (when the sounds of period music were making a 'comeback.') Still love to listen to it and still find it to be a wonderful sound.It's nice to finally have this on CD replacing my well worn vinyl version, box set. Some of his finest work and highly recommend. Not only that, the mastering is outstanding.David Munrow is often credited as an essential force in the revival of old instruments for modern performance; while many felt that this would be a passing fad, old instrument performance seems as strong as ever today, some 30 years later. I first obtained an LP set of "The Art of the Recorder" in 1980; it immediately became and has remained one of my favorites. I've been waiting for a CD reissue of since I got my first CD player. In its LP form, the audio textures were novel and enrapturing to me even in its 1970's audio, and Testament has carefully transferred the EMI recording to compact disc.Speaking as a music lover, the repertoire in "The Art of the Recorder" went a long way to feed my interest in early music, spanning from medieval to 20th century works, solo recorders to ensembles that represent all the musical instruments, including vocal selections from the late baroque. The performance practices may seem a bit dated now (perhaps the baroque era more than others), but it's played with liveliness and conviction from start to finish.The CD set also includes 36 tracks from Munrow's "Instruments of the Middle Ages". In the LP form where I first knew it, Munrow narrates with descriptions of the instruments; the narration is unfortunately absent, and the audio transfer sounds fuzzy compared with my memory of the LP. But it's still nice to have if you want to hear a gittern contrasted with a citole.If you collect period instrument recordings, I heartily recommend "The Art of the Recorder" for your library.The price. That is the question! I was lucky to buy this 2-CD set in 2007 or 2008 when it "only" cost about $42. It is a truly rare CD that is worth the high price.This set is a great introduction to early music and its special instruments. It also contains some of the wonderfully spirited recorder playing of the late great David Munrow. Did he play with the technical perfection of others like Frans Bruggen? No but there is a joy in his playing that IMHO Bruggen never achieved before abandoning the instrument.In a collection this size, there are a few clunkers, of course. But in this age of the MP3 player, we can pick and choose our favorites. Of the top 25 played items on my iPod, five come from this set.Great interpretation on this tribute to magnificient Early music player as David Munrow, superb! principally at the CD number one! thanks...The musicianship here is absolutely faultless, magical, first-rate... An essential part of any recorder fan's collection, or any Early Music fan's. Beautiful phrasing. Wonderfully crisp yet expressive playing. Can listen to it over and over and never tire, always find some lovely new nuance at each hearing!Excellent performances that are both entertaining and informative.Perfection!Brilliant example of David Munrow's genius and a beautiful and delightful collection of early music.