The Harmonia Gourmet: Food, Feasts, and Festivities There was - TopicsExpress



          

The Harmonia Gourmet: Food, Feasts, and Festivities There was no dearth of delicious foods in London’s marketplaces during the early 17th Century. Richard Derin composed The City Cries based on the cries of street vendors selling everything from rock salt to fruit pies. The song was popular at the time. Composer Matthias Greiter wrote a rhapsody lauding eggs of every kind, perhaps alluding to the dreams of a “starving artist.” The ode to is ova prepared in every possible way: “broiled eggs, fried eggs, baked [eggs], spangled eggs, stuffed eggs…” While sometimes a cigar is just a cigar, anyone who’s seen the film “Tom Jones” knows that an apple or a leg of turkey can mean much more. The particular vegetable mentioned in this song is common in Europe, and looks like a large stalk of celery. “Ladies, we are master growers of cardoons, which in our gardens grow big and good.” During the Middle Ages, Europe was rediscovering the ancient wisdom of the Greeks (adopting the practice of Gaston Phébus, the 14th-century Count of Foix and Beam) of prescribing certain foods for better health and soothing music to help you digest the food. For many of us, an essential component of a great dinner party is great wine. In composing a nostalgic list of things he would miss as he prepared to leave home for a new job, Guillaume Dufay did not begin with close friends nor the lass he would leave behind, but with the excellent local wines. The Unicorn Ensemble performs Dufay’s ode to his village’s greatest vintages on the release from Naxos, Dufay: Chansons. When Henry Purcell and his pals gathered to have fun on their days off, they wrote songs not of wines but of the local ale. While the vision of Purcell, John Blow and other luminaries of the London music scene belting these out over a pint may seem strange to fans of Purcell’s “Dido and Aeneas,” it does remind us that, after all, they were humans, too. Hunting parties were popular from the Middle Ages on and the courtly culture of recreational hunting produced special clothing, breeds of horses and dogs, paintings, stories, and music. In the 15th and 16th centuries especially, the musical reprise of the hunt was a popular entertainment. The Spaniard Juan del Encina composed music that urges all to eat, drink and make merry during a carnival. What better way to finish off our musical meal than with a nice hot cup of coffee? Europe was introduced to the drink around 1600 by Venetian traders, but it wasn’t until 1732 that J.S. Bach wrote his tribute to the beverage in the form of a cantata. https://youtube/watch?v=f2WW9PtF4Do
Posted on: Sun, 28 Sep 2014 07:06:27 +0000

Trending Topics



Recently Viewed Topics




© 2015