The music on this album does not really include transcriptions as that word is used in English. What you get are three pieces by
Machaut himself, performed in straightforward vocal versions by the
Hilliard Ensemble, and six compositions by
Heinz Holliger (known to average classical listeners as a Swiss virtuoso oboist, but increasingly active as a composer) that are designated as "nach
Machaut" ("after
Machaut"). All the
Holliger pieces are for three violas. The first three of these are based on the
Machaut pieces that precede them on the program, while the last three depart to a greater degree from
Machaut: one adds parts to a monophonic lai; one is a free fantasy called "In(ter)ventio"; and the grand 15-minute finale brings the voices and instruments together in a reworking of a section of the epic poem La remède de fortune.
Holliger's musical language gradually stretches that of
Machaut until the link consists of little more than intervals and sonorities, but the final piece is still recognizably
Machaut-derived; the use of the syncopation-like device of hocket is retained. Whatever you think of this whole thing, two contentions would be hard to argue with: first,
Holliger has devised a neo-medieval language that is very much like nothing anybody else has done before; and second, it would be hard to find an engineering team more suited to the enterprise than that at the ECM label. Many possessors of good sound equipment will want this release purely for the almost frightening detail and clarity in the contrast of the vocal and viola groups, brought together by
Holliger for a slam-bang finale. An unusually satisfying experiment involving the music of a composer whose legacy has still hardly been explored creatively.