Orlando Gibbons - Poems
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English Madrigal School
THE ENGLISH MADRIGAL SCHOOL Transcribed, Scored and Edited by REV. EDMUND HORACE FELLOWES M.A., Mus.Bac, Oxon. VOL. V. ORLANDO GIBBONS First Set of MADRIGALS AND MOTETS OF FIVE PARTS (Published in 1612) LONDON: STAINER AND BELL, LTD., 58, BERNERS STREET, OXFORD STREET, W. 1914 THE^ENGLISH MADRIGAL SCHOOL. LIST OF SUBSCRIBERS To VOLUMES V.-VIII. Dr. Guido Adler, Proressor of Musical Research in Percy C. Buck, Esq., Mus.Doc, Professor of Music in Vienna University. Trinity College, Dublin ; Director of Music, Harrow W. G. Alcock, Esq., M.V.O., Mus.Doc, Organist and School. Composer to His Majesty's Chapels Royal. F. C. Butcher, Esq., Mus.Bac, Organist and Music B, C. Allchin, Esq., Organist of Hertford College, Master, Hoosac School, New York, U.S.A. Oxford. L. S. R. Byrne, Esq. Hugh P. Allen, Esq., Mus.Doc, Choragus of Oxford University, Organist and Fellow of New College, Capt. Maurice Caillard. Oxford. Sir Vincent H. P. Caillard. The Right Hon. Viscount Alverstone, G.C.M.G., Cardiff University College Library. D.C.L., formerly Lord Chief Justice of England. F. Clive Carey, Esq. (2 copies). E. Amphlett, Esq. Rev. T. B. Carter. W. Anstice, Esq. Sir Francis Champneys, Bart., M.D. Mrs. Argles. The City Glee Club. Godfrey E. P. Arkwright, Esq. J. B. Clark, Esq. Miss Marian Arkwright, Mus. Doc. Rev. Allan Coates. Frl. Amaiie Arnheim. Mrs. Somers V. Cocks. Franck Arnold, Esq. H. C. Colles, Esq., Mus.Bac. Miss R. Baines. The Hon. Mrs. Henn Collins. E. L. Bainton, Esq. Mrs. A. S. Commeline. E. C. -
Gibbons US 6/8/06 11:30 AM Page 16
557681 bk Gibbons US 6/8/06 11:30 AM Page 16 1 Prelude ™ The First Song of Moses (Gibbons arr. A. Pitts) [Song 1] 0:46 (Gibbons arr. A. Pitts) [Song 1] 2:07 2 A Song of Joy / Christmas Day £ Lord, who by Thy Resurrection (Gibbons arr. A. Pitts) [Songs 47/46] 3:34 (A. Pitts) 1:05 GIBBONS 3 The Song of Angels ¢ The Song of Hannah (Gibbons arr. A. Pitts) [Song 34] 0:45 (Gibbons arr. A. Pitts) [Song 4] 2:14 4 Interlude ∞ The Song of Deborah (Gibbons) [Song 13] 0:23 (Gibbons arr. A. Pitts) [Song 3] 2:21 Hymns and Songs of the Church 5 Thine for ever! § O Lord Most High (A. Pitts) 1:29 (Richard James Pitts) 2:40 6 Amen 0:17 ¶ Amen 0:19 7 The First Canticle • Veni Creator TONUS PEREGRINUS (Gibbons arr. A. Pitts) [Song 9] 2:23 (Gibbons arr. A. Pitts) [Song 44] 2:28 8 The Fifth Canticle ª St Matthias (Gibbons arr. A. Pitts) [Song 13] 2:47 (Gibbons arr. A. Pitts) [Song 67] 0:57 9 The Sixth Canticle º Veni Creator (Gibbons arr. A. Pitts) [Song 14] 4:11 (Gibbons arr. A. Pitts) [Song 44] 1:08 0 The Tenth Canticle ⁄ We are of Thee (Gibbons arr. A. Pitts) [Song 18] 1:30 (Gibbons arr. A. Pitts) [Song 1] 1:40 ! Thy way, not mine ¤ Hark, my soul! (John Michael Pitts) 2:02 (A. Pitts) 2:07 @ Amen 0:18 ‹ Amen 0:20 # There is a green hill far away › Come unto Me (A. -
The English Anthem Project the Past Century and a Half, St
Special thanks to St. John’s staff for their help with promotions and program printing: Mair Alsgaard, Organist; Charlotte Jacqmain, Parish Secretary; and Ministry Coordinator, Carol The Rev. Ken Hitch, Rector Sullivan. Thanks also to Tim and Gloria Stark for their help in preparing the performance and reception spaces. To commemorate the first Episcopal worship service in Midland, MI 150 years ago, and in appreciation for community support over The English Anthem Project the past century and a half, St. John's and Holy Family Episcopal Churches are "Celebrating In Community" with 16th and 17th Centuries events like today’s concert. We hope you are able to share in future sesquicentennial celebration events we have planned for later this summer: www.sjec-midland.org/150 Exultate Deo Chamber Choir Weekly Worship Schedule SUNDAYS Saturday, June 24, 2017 8:00 AM - Holy Eucharist Traditional Worship, Spoken Service 4:00 p.m. 10:00 AM - Holy Eucharist Traditional Worship with Music, St. John’s Episcopal Church Nursery, Children's Ministry 405 N. Saginaw Road WEDNESDAYS Midland, MI 48640 12:00 PM - Holy Eucharist Quiet, Contemplative Worship 405 N. Saginaw Rd / Midland, MI 48640 This concert is offered as one of (989) 631-2260 / [email protected] several ‘Celebrating in Community’ www.sjec-midland.org events marking 150 years of All 8 Are Welcome. The Episcopal Church in Midland, MI The English Anthem Project William Byrd (c1540-1623) worked first in Lincoln Cathedral then became a member of the Chapel Royal, where for a time he and Tallis 16th and 17th Centuries were joint organists. -
Direction 2. Ile Fantaisies
CD I Josquin DESPREZ 1. Nymphes des bois Josquin Desprez 4’46 Vox Luminis Lionel Meunier: direction 2. Ile Fantaisies Josquin Desprez 2’49 Ensemble Leones Baptiste Romain: fiddle Elisabeth Rumsey: viola d’arco Uri Smilansky: viola d’arco Marc Lewon: direction 3. Illibata dei Virgo a 5 Josquin Desprez 8’48 Cappella Pratensis Rebecca Stewart: direction 4. Allégez moy a 6 Josquin Desprez 1’07 5. Faulte d’argent a 5 Josquin Desprez 2’06 Ensemble Clément Janequin Dominique Visse: direction 6. La Spagna Josquin Desprez 2’50 Syntagma Amici Elsa Frank & Jérémie Papasergio: shawms Simen Van Mechelen: trombone Patrick Denecker & Bernhard Stilz: crumhorns 7. El Grillo Josquin Desprez 1’36 Ensemble Clément Janequin Dominique Visse: direction Missa Lesse faire a mi: Josquin Desprez 8. Sanctus 7’22 9. Agnus Dei 4’39 Cappella Pratensis Rebecca Stewart: direction 10. Mille regretz Josquin Desprez 2’03 Vox Luminis Lionel Meunier: direction 11. Mille regretz Luys de Narvaez 2’20 Rolf Lislevand: vihuela 2: © CHRISTOPHORUS, CHR 77348 5 & 7: © HARMONIA MUNDI, HMC 901279 102 ITALY: Secular music (from the Frottole to the Madrigal) 12. Giù per la mala via (Lauda) Anonymous 6’53 EnsembleDaedalus Roberto Festa: direction 13. Spero haver felice (Frottola) Anonymous 2’24 Giovanne tutte siano (Frottola) Vincent Bouchot: baritone Frédéric Martin: lira da braccio 14. Fammi una gratia amore Heinrich Isaac 4’36 15. Donna di dentro Heinrich Isaac 1’49 16. Quis dabit capiti meo aquam? Heinrich Isaac 5’06 Capilla Flamenca Dirk Snellings: direction 17. Cor mio volunturioso (Strambotto) Anonymous 4’50 Ensemble Daedalus Roberto Festa: direction 18. -
Keyboard Playing and the Mechanization of Polyphony in Italian Music, Circa 1600
Keyboard Playing and the Mechanization of Polyphony in Italian Music, Circa 1600 By Leon Chisholm A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Music in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in charge: Professor Kate van Orden, Co-Chair Professor James Q. Davies, Co-Chair Professor Mary Ann Smart Professor Massimo Mazzotti Summer 2015 Keyboard Playing and the Mechanization of Polyphony in Italian Music, Circa 1600 Copyright 2015 by Leon Chisholm Abstract Keyboard Playing and the Mechanization of Polyphony in Italian Music, Circa 1600 by Leon Chisholm Doctor of Philosophy in Music University of California, Berkeley Professor Kate van Orden, Co-Chair Professor James Q. Davies, Co-Chair Keyboard instruments are ubiquitous in the history of European music. Despite the centrality of keyboards to everyday music making, their influence over the ways in which musicians have conceptualized music and, consequently, the music that they have created has received little attention. This dissertation explores how keyboard playing fits into revolutionary developments in music around 1600 – a period which roughly coincided with the emergence of the keyboard as the multipurpose instrument that has served musicians ever since. During the sixteenth century, keyboard playing became an increasingly common mode of experiencing polyphonic music, challenging the longstanding status of ensemble singing as the paradigmatic vehicle for the art of counterpoint – and ultimately replacing it in the eighteenth century. The competing paradigms differed radically: whereas ensemble singing comprised a group of musicians using their bodies as instruments, keyboard playing involved a lone musician operating a machine with her hands. -
Music for a While’ (For Component 3: Appraising)
H Purcell: ‘Music for a While’ (For component 3: Appraising) Background information and performance circumstances Henry Purcell (1659–95) was an English Baroque composer and is widely regarded as being one of the most influential English composers throughout the history of music. A pupil of John Blow, Purcell succeeded his teacher as organist at Westminster Abbey from 1679, becoming organist at the Chapel Royal in 1682 and holding both posts simultaneously. He started composing at a young age and in his short life, dying at the early age of 36, he wrote a vast amount of music both sacred and secular. His compositional output includes anthems, hymns, services, incidental music, operas and instrumental music such as trio sonatas. He is probably best known for writing the opera Dido and Aeneas (1689). Other well-known compositions include the semi-operas King Arthur (1691), The Fairy Queen (1692) (an adaptation of Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream) and The Tempest (1695). ‘Music for a While’ is the second of four movements written as incidental music for John Dryden’s play based on the story of Sophocles’ Oedipus. Dryden was also the author of the libretto for King Arthur and The Indian Queen and he and Purcell made a strong musical/dramatic pairing. In 1692 Purcell set parts of this play to music and ‘Music for a While’ is one of his most renowned pieces. The Oedipus legend comes from Greek mythology and is a tragic story about the title character killing his father to marry his mother before committing suicide in a gruesome manner. -
PROGRAM NOTES Henry Purcell
PROGRAM NOTES by Phillip Huscher Henry Purcell - Suite from King Arthur Born sometime in 1659, place unknown. Died November 21, 1695, London, England. Suite from King Arthur Purcell composed his semi-opera King Arthur, with texts by John Dryden, in 1691. The first performance was given at the Dorset Garden Theatre in London in May of that year. The orchestra for this suite of instrumental excerpts consists of two oboes and english horn, two trumpets, timpani, and strings, with continuo provided by bassoon and harpsichord. Performance time is approximately twenty minutes. The Chicago Symphony Orchestra has performed music from Purcell's King Arthur (Trumpet Tune, "Ye blust'ring brethren of the skies," with Charles W. Clark as soloist, and Grand Dance: Chaconne) only once previously, on subscription concerts at the Auditorium Theatre on December 13 and 14, 1901, with Theodore Thomas conducting. Henry Purcell is the one composer who lived and worked before J. S. Bach who has found a place in the symphonic repertory. The Chicago Symphony played Purcell's music as early as 1901, when it programmed three selections from King Arthur on the first of its new "historical" programs designed to "illustrate the development of the orchestra and its literature, from the earliest times down to the present day." Purcell still stands at the very beginning of the modern orchestra's repertory, although he is best known to today's audiences for the cameo appearance his music makes in Benjamin Britten's twentieth- century classic, the Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra. Purcell is regularly described as the finest English composer before Edward Elgar, if not as the greatest English composer of all. -
AEM ONLINE Saturday, April 25, and Sunday, April 26, 2020
AEM ONLINE Saturday, April 25, and Sunday, April 26, 2020 Join us for AEM ONLINE! Four online class sessions are offered using the Zoom meeting app, or your web browser. Register for any number of sessions, $25 per session. Instructors will be in touch ahead of time with music, Zoom meeting links will be sent out on Friday after registration has closed. All sessions run 90 minutes, with the first 15 minutes for introductions. If for any reason the session doesn’t work for you, we’ll refund your money. Tish Berlin will hold a Zoom tutorial on Friday, April 24, at 4:00 p.m. Eastern/1:00 p.m. Pacific time for any participants who would like help with Zoom. She will send out a meeting link Friday morning to all participants but only those who are new to Zoom or who need a refresher need to join the meeting. If you are an old hand by now you can ignore the invitation. Registration deadline for all classes is Friday by 9:00 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time. SCHEDULE (Eastern Daylight Time) Saturday, April 25, 2020 1:00 p.m. (10:00 a.m. PT) Viol Duets with Ros Morley 3:00 p.m. (12:00 p.m. PT) Introduction to Baroque Opera with Dylan Sauerwald Sunday, April 26, 2020 1:00 p.m. (10:00 a.m. PT) An English Banquet of Song with Emily Eagen 3:00 p.m. (12:00 p.m. PT) Recorder Technique with Aldo Abreu CLASSES: Viol Duets: a tasting menu with Ros Morley Saturday, April 25, 1:00 p.m. -
The Harpsichord Master of 1697
The Harpsichord Master of 1697 and its relationship to contemporary instruction & playing by Maria Boxall The earliest known attempt (in England) to transmit and help to them, Entituled, An Introduction to knowledge concerning the playing of keyboard the Skill of Musick, which doth direct them to instruments by means of the printed word was understand the Gamut, and by it the places and made exactly a century before the publication of the names of their Notes, &c. But as for the true Harpsichord Master 1. In that year (1597) there was Fingering and severall graces used in the licensed to be printed by one William Haskins 'A playing of this Instrument, it cannot be set down playne and perfect Instruction for learnynge to play in words, but is to be obtained by the help and on ye virginalles by hand or by booke both by Directions of Skilfull Teachers, and the constant notes and letters or Tabliture never heretofore sett practice of the learner, for it is the Practick part out . .'. Such a book would almost certainly have crowns the Work.' included some music. If so, the claim of the famous However a later, further expanded edition of Parthenia of 1612/13 to be 'the first musicke that ever 1678 has a different subtitle: 'New lessons and was printed for the virginalls' could not have been Instructions for the virginals or harpsychord' and in correct 2. It seems probable, however, that Haskins the preface we read: never made use of his licence, for although the 'It has ever been my opinion ,that if a man made any book would undoubtedly have been popular, and discovery, by which an Art or Science might be the playing technique it presumably described - that learnt with less expence of Time and Travel, he was of the English virginalists (as can be reconstructed obliged in common Duty to communicate the from their manuscripts) - did not become seriously knowledge thereof to others ...' 'Many of those who outmoded during the following century, no copies bought the former impression of Musicks Hand- survive. -
Appendix: Catalogue of Restoration Music Manuscripts Bibliography
Musical Creativity in Restoration England REBECCA HERISSONE Appendix: Catalogue of Restoration Music Manuscripts Bibliography Secondary Sources Ashbee, Andrew, ‘The Transmission of Consort Music in Some Seventeenth-Century English Manuscripts’, in Andrew Ashbee and Peter Holman (eds.), John Jenkins and his Time: Studies in English Consort Music (Oxford: Clarendon, 1996), 243–70. Ashbee, Andrew, Robert Thompson and Jonathan Wainwright, The Viola da Gamba Society Index of Manuscripts Containing Consort Music, 2 vols. (Aldershot and Burlington: Ashgate, 2001–8). Bailey, Candace, ‘Keyboard Music in the Hands of Edward Lowe and Richard Goodson I: Oxford, Christ Church Mus. 1176 and Mus. 1177’, Royal Musical Association Research Chronicle, 32 (1999), 119–35. ‘New York Public Library Drexel MS 5611: English Keyboard Music of the Early Restoration’, Fontes artis musicae, 47 (2000), 51–67. Seventeenth-Century British Keyboard Sources, Detroit Studies in Music Bibliography, 83 (Warren: Harmonie Park Press, 2003). ‘William Ellis and the Transmission of Continental Keyboard Music in Restoration England’, Journal of Musicological Research, 20 (2001), 211–42. Banks, Chris, ‘British Library Ms. Mus. 1: A Recently Discovered Manuscript of Keyboard Music by Henry Purcell and Giovanni Battista Draghi’, Brio, 32 (1995), 87–93. Baruch, James Charles, ‘Seventeenth-Century English Vocal Music as reflected in British Library Additional Manuscript 11608’, unpublished PhD dissertation, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (1979). Beechey, Gwilym, ‘A New Source of Seventeenth-Century Keyboard Music’, Music & Letters, 50 (1969), 278–89. Bellingham, Bruce, ‘The Musical Circle of Anthony Wood in Oxford during the Commonwealth and Restoration’, Journal of the Viola da Gamba Society of America, 19 (1982), 6–71. -
Table of Contents Introduction Vii Editorial Notes Ix Texts and Notes Xi
Table of Contents Introduction vii Editorial notes ix Texts and notes x i Select bibliography x x v ii i Ayres for voice & lute 1. Lyk e as the lark Anonymous, Tottle’s Miscellany 3 2 a . Lost is my lyberty Anonymous, Ballet Lute Book 4 2b. My L of Dehims lamentation Anonymous, CUL Dd. 2.11 5 3. In angels weed William Byrd 6 4. My mind to me a kingdom is William Byrd 8 5. Pavana Bray Byrd / Francis Cutting 1 0 6. Galliard Mr Birde William Byrd 1 2 7. Susanna faire William Byrd 1 4 8. O deere life when shall it be William Byrd 16 9. O deere life when shall it be Anon / R. Dowland 18 10. O de a re l y fe Anon / Marsh Lute Book 19 11 a . Sidneys lamentation Anonymous, CUL Dd. 2.11 2 0 1 1b . Mein junges Leben hat ein end Sweelinck 21 1 2 . Author of light Thomas Campion 2 2 1 3 . Sypres curtain of the night Thomas Campion 23 1 4 . G alliard Edward Collard 24 1 5 . Tyme cruell tyme John Danyel 26 1 6 . Ouer these brookes Robert Jones 28 1 7 . Cradle pavan Holborne / CUL Dd. 2.11 3 0 1 8 . Sweete stay a while Dowland, 1612 3 2 19 a . Sweete stay a while (original) Anon / c.1626 3 4 19 b. Sweete stay a while (lower) Anon / c.1626 3 5 2 0 . Ah deere hart Orlando Gibbons 3 6 2 1 . The S il u er S wan ne Orlando Gibbons 3 7 2 2 a . -
The Journal of the Viola Da Gamba Society
The Journal of the Viola da Gamba Society Text has been scanned with OCR and is therefore searchable. The format on screen does not conform with the printed Chelys. The original page numbers have been inserted within square brackets: e.g. [23]. Where necessary footnotes here run in sequence through the whole article rather than page by page and replace endnotes. The pages labelled ‘The Viola da Gamba Society Provisional Index of Viol Music’ in some early volumes are omitted here since they are up-dated as necessary as The Viola da Gamba Society Thematic Index of Music for Viols, ed. Gordon Dodd and Andrew Ashbee, 1982-, available on-line at www.vdgs.org.uk or on CD-ROM. Each item has been bookmarked: go to the ‘bookmark’ tab on the left. To avoid problems with copyright, some photographs have been omitted. Contents of Volume 12 (1983) Editorial Chelys, vol. 12 (1983), p. 2 John Harper article 1 The Distribution of the Consort Music of Orlando Gibbons in Seventeenth-Century Sources Chelys, vol. 12 (1983), pp. 5-18 John M. Jennings article 2 Thomas Lupo Revisited - Is Key the Key to hisLater Music Chelys, vol. 12 (1983), pp. 19-22 Lynn Hulse article 3 John Hingeston Chelys, vol. 12 (1983), pp. 23-42 Gordon Dodd article 4 Tablature Without Tears? Chelys, vol. 12 (1983), pp. 43-46 Hazelle Miloradovitch article 5 Eighteenth-Century Manuscript Transcriptions for Viols of Music by Corelli & Marais in the Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris: Sonatas and ‘Pièces de Viole’ Chelys, vol. 12 (1983), pp. 47-73 Reviews Clifford Bartlett Orlando Gibbons: new publications of the consort music review 1 Gordon Dodd John Coprario: ‘The Six-part Consorts and Madrigals review 2 Gordon Dodd Richard Charteris: ‘A Catalogue of the printed Book on Music, Printed Music and Music Manuscripts in Archbishop Marsh’s Library, Dublin’ review 3 [extract on] Thomas Gainsborough R.A.