Buyers should note this is not the
Carl Orff Carmina Burana, but the collection of medieval pieces that inspired
Orff; to call it a "medieval version," as the packaging here does, implies a closer relationship than that which actually exists. The
Carmina Burana are named for a manuscript at the Benediktbeuern abbey in Germany, where some of the medieval songs were found; the title means "songs of Beuern."
Orff set the texts of some of these songs in his famed choral work. The texts here, mixing Latin and Old French (sometimes in the same song), may be familiar, and their mixture of sexy fun and gloomy philosophy actually comes through better in these settings than in
Orff's; here they lack the monumental choral distraction. The performances by France's Ensemble Obsidienne, with singers accompanied by a rotating small ensemble of medieval wind instruments, are especially lively, with a drinking song like In taberna quando sumus (track 4) given a bit of the rollicking humor that gets lost in
Orff's settings. The performances are cleanly done, enthusiastic, and recommended for anyone interested in the Carmina Burana and where they came from.