Nicholas Phan
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 A PAINTED TALE

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A PAINTED TALE

SONGS BY BLOW, DOWLAND, FERRABOSCO, LANIER, & PURCELL

with Ann Marie Morgan, viola da gamba

Michael Leopold, lutes

Avie Records


 

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ABOUT THE ALBUM

My first exposure to early English song was as a teenager during my third summer as a camper at the prestigious Interlochen Arts Camp, where many a young musician, actor and artist has made many important discoveries about life and art over the years. During my third summer at the camp, I made a very important shift musically: rather than attend the camp as a violinist, as I had the previous two summers, I applied for and was successfully admitted into the camp’s rigorous musical theatre program, having been bitten by the drama bug the previous year. It was during these summer weeks of studying musical theatre in northern Michigan that I decided to become a classical singer, and leave behind my childhood dreams of playing in one of the world’s great orchestras.

One of the joys about being a camper at Interlochen in those days was that, regardless of your primary focus, or major (as the camp referred to it), students were also expected to take elective courses. Not wanting to abandon my instrumental background completely just yet, and curious about ‘early music’ after having sung a few Italian and English madrigals with my school choir, I elected to enrol in Interlochen’s Early Music course.

On the first day of class, after making it known that I was both a violinist and (now) a singer, the teachers decided that it would be best for me to study the viola da gamba. After hearing me sing a bit, one of the teachers, Ann Marie Morgan (who is also the violist da gamba on this recording), handed me a song by John Dowland, Flow My Tears. For this one and only project of the summer, Ann Marie asked me to sing with the class’s newly formed viol consort. After our first reading of the song, I was hooked. I’ve dreamt of putting together a program of early English songs ever since.

When thinking about this project, I found that I was confronted with one primary challenge: how to pick which songs to perform, as there are so many precious gems from which to choose. Sifting through the seemingly endless treasure trove of songs, it occurred to me that it might be possible to assemble a selection of them into a sort of pastiche song cycle, structuring them in an order that creates an imagined storyline that links them together. Taking Schubert’s Die schöne Müllerin as a model, the songs on this album are ordered so that they tell a story, a so-called ‘Painted Tale’ of a young man who falls in love with a young woman, and is destroyed by the heartbreak that ensues, choosing death as the only possible escape from his torment.

It was not hard to find songs that fit into this storyline, and the draw towards Schubert’s first epic song cycle as a model was a natural one. Much of the English Renaissance melancholia that was in style when these songs were composed (John Dowland’s motto was Semper Dowland, semper dolens or ‘always Dowland, always doleful’, after all) has many parallels with the German Romantics’ idolatry of the unrequited lover-hero whose unbearable pain from heartbreak causes him to turn to suicide in the model of Goethe’s tragic Werther, or Schubert and Wilhelm Müller’s young journeyman miller of Die schöne Müllerin. On top of this, I found that the object of many of these poets’ affections was coincidentally named ‘Celia’ – only in one instance have we had to change a ‘Sylvia’ to ‘Celia’ in order to keep our story cohesive.

What has drawn me so powerfully to sing this repertoire since I first encountered it in my teenage summer music camp days is its timelessness. Reading the poetry in these songs, I am fascinated by how little the human experience has changed over the centuries. By assembling these pieces into what I’m calling ‘a pastiche song cycle,’ I hope that creating a dramatic context for them will highlight how relevant they still are today.

 

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CRITICAL ACCLAIM

CHICAGO TRIBUNE

BEST CLASSICAL ALBUMS OF 2015

Those qualities that make Phan such an idiomatic interpreter of Benjamin Britten's songs guarantee him success in the early English vocal repertory that inspired Britten. He brings exquisite tonal purity and subtle expressive shadings to his thoughtful journey through lute songs by Dowland, Blow, Purcell and others.


GRAMOPHONE

EDITOR’S CHOICE FEBRUARY 2015

“The year has barely begun and already here’s a disc to remember come all those end-of-year round-ups.


OPERA NEWS

”Phan communicates with the immediacy of a contemporary singer-songwriter” (read more)


ALLMUSIC

Phan succeeds brilliantly in stripping away the conventions in the music and poetry and getting you to hear it with some of the directness its original audiences might have experienced…A major step in the interpretation of early English song, beautifully recorded”

 

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Special thanks to

Anonymous, Alan Fellowes, Albert Imperato, Leslie Ann Jones, Gorman Jones, Louis Phan & Sharlene Lim, Sem & Katherine Phan, Lisa Seischab, Simon Yates & Kevin Roon.

Many thanks also to the army of generous supporters who contributed to the production of this album, including:

John W. Adams, Paul Appleby, Lisa Arnsdorf, Fotine Assimos, Marlan Barry, Jamie Barton, Matthew Beck, Julie Bevan, Laura Bird, Matthew Borkowski & Rob Krafty, Christian Campos, Robert Caverly-Paxton, Adam Crane, Craig Cruz, Gabriel Di Gennaro, Lawrence Dunn, Judith Erb, Dr Daniel J.O. Evans, Alex Fletcher, Walter Frenk, Stanislaus Fung, Andrew Gillespie, Bruce Gillespie, Joseph Hallman, Stephanie Holtzman, Myra & Ed Huang, H.C. Leong, Jennifer Johnson, Elizabeth Kerr, Deborah Kim, Steve & Robin Kunkel, Yvonne Lam, Joe Law, William R. Leben, Mary Leger, Jane Marshall, Shannon McGinnis, David McKenna, Nancy Meacham, Lee Mills, Reginald Mobley, Dagmar Moore, James Morthland, Melanne Mueller, James Nacy, Graham Parker, James Parr, Jesse Parsons, Janet Pascal, Amy Pennington, Joseph Peters-Mathews, Juliet Petrus Laurenti, Timothy Pfaff, Kelli Phillips, James W. Plunkett, Ian Ritchie, Miguel A. Rodriguez, Maria Sampanis, Kindra Scharich, Amanda Sharp, Timothy Stewart-Winter, Ryan Strand, Kannan Thiruvengadam, Zachary Vanderburg, Xenia Varelas, Patrick Vaz, Frank Villella, Brendon Watson, Christopher Weimer, Kira Whiting, Lisa Williams, Emily Wilson-Tobin, Angelika Witt, Matt Young, & Anonymous.


A Painted Tale was part of Nicholas Phan's solo recording projects, which is a sponsored project of Fractured Atlas, a non-profit arts service organization.

Contributions for the charitable purposes of Nicholas Phan's solo recording projects must be made payable to “Fractured Atlas” only and are tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law.