Dowland: Away with these self-loving lads

This page lists all recordings of Away with these self-loving lads, by John Dowland (1563-1626) on CD & download (MP3 & FLAC). Generally, more recent releases are listed first, but with priority given to those that are in stock.

Recommendations

Top recommendation - Dowland Songs
January 2013

All recordings

Prices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.)
See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates.

Dowland: Tunes of Sad Despaire

Dowland: Tunes of Sad Despaire


 

Paduan

By John Dowland/Thomas Simpson

anon.:

My Lord of Dehims Lamentacio

Dowland:

Go Crystal tears

If my complaints could passions move

Sorrow, come

What If A Day

Poulton No. 79

Fine knacks for ladies

Go, nightly cares

In darkness let me dwell

In this trembling shadow cast

Away with these self-loving lads

Dr Case's Pavan

Poulton No. 12, diminutions for repeats by Eric Bellocq

From silent night

Come heavy sleep

All ye, whom Love or Fortune hath betray'd

Now, O now, I needs must part


Dominique Visse (countertenor)

Fretwork, Renaud Delaigue & Eric Bellocq

In the late 16th C, lute songs were known as ‘Ayres’ with John Dowland’s form of writing establishing a fashion of both composition and performance which was to last for 25 years.

The popularity of rhetoric and a fashion for melancholy spilled over to Dowland’s writing and he became one of the greatest advocates for this style.

This disc is a wonderful collection of his melancholic works (difficult to achieve as the composer himself never made a ‘collection’ as such), performed here by the fantastic Fretwork ensemble with countertenor Dominque Visse singing.

Dominque began his career at the age of 11 as a chorister in the Cathedral of Notre Dame and went on to study with Alfred Deller. He has since performed with other greats including more recently René Jacobs, Nigel Rogers and William Christie.

“In the final analysis, though in many ways infuriating, this is a brilliant and inspiring Dowland recital that cannot easily be ignored.” International Record Review

Released or re-released in last 6 months

Satirino - SR121

(CD)

$17.00

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Dowland in Dublin

Dowland in Dublin


Dowland:

Sleep, wayward thoughts

Now, O now, I needs must part

Behold a wonder here

Fine knacks for ladies

Say love if ever thou didst find

Away with these self-loving lads

Come again, sweet love doth now invite

Come heavy sleep

Lachrimae Pavan, P. 15

Time stands still

Me, me, and none but me

Kemp's Jig

Mrs Winter's Jump

Lady Hunsdon's Puffe

Clear or cloudy

O sweet woods

A Galliard

A Shepherd in a Shade

The First Booke of Songes: His golden locks time hath to silver turned


Michael Slattery (tenor), Sylvain Bergeron & Seán Dagher (direction & arrangements)

La Nef

Dowland dedicated his song From Silent Night “To my loving countryman, Mr. John Forster the younger, merchant of Dublin, in Ireland”, revealing his possible Irish origins. Working closely with the American tenor Michael Slattery, La Nef gives Dowland’s Ayres a simple celtic flavour. “…a talented and serious artist.” Gramophone.

“La Nef has pared down Dowland's complex accompaniments, aiming for a Celtic, folky feel. Dowland-lite it may be, but the recital is beautifully performed.” BBC Music Magazine, July 2012 ****

Atma - ACD22650

(CD)

$17.00

(also available to download from $10.50)

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Britten & Dowland - Lute Songs

Britten & Dowland - Lute Songs


Britten:

Nocturnal after John Dowland, Op. 70

guitar solo by Craig Ogden

Dowland:

Unquiet thoughts

Say love if ever thou didst find

Sorrow, stay

Away with these self-loving lads

Fantasia No. 7 from A Varietie of Lute Lessons

Come away, come, sweet love

Sleep, wayward thoughts

Come heavy sleep

Flow my teares (Lacrimæ)

I must complain

If my complaints could passions move

Captain Digorie Pipers Galliard

What if I never speed?

To ask for all thy love

Now, O now, I needs must part

In darkness let me dwell


Mark Padmore (tenor) & Elizabeth Kenny (lute)

“Padmore provides context by singing Dowland's original song before Craig Ogden steals in, alert to the Nocturnal's every nuance, and with a palette of colours both caressing and disquieting. Completing the frame, 'Flow my Tears' is beautifully inflected, though finer still is 'In Darkness let me Dwell' where in the final bars Padmore's enrapt engagement seems to conjure up the very chill of death.” BBC Music Magazine, February 2008 ****

“Mark Padmore again shows why he is one of today's finest tenors. The quicker songs, like "Away with these self-loving lads", gain in clarity from a semi-declamatory approach, while the slower are eerily viol-like.” Gramophone Magazine, Janurary 2008

“A simply brilliant disc. I can’t praise it enough. A bronze Liz Kenny should be on the empty plinth in Trafalgar Square, in my opinion” Early Music Today

“Since Emma Kirkby’s first recording in the late-1970s, we have known what to expect from Dowland’s lute songs. Some fine discs have followed, but not until Mark Padmore and Elizabeth Kenny’s new release has there been one as radical in its potential impact on our understanding of the music. With tonal purity intact, voice and lute add subtle decoration, rhythmic fluidity, drama and rich poetic sensibility to these songs” The Independent on Sunday

“... extraordinary diction and whispering chamber-like intimacy … [Mark Padmore] joy in conveying the emotional core of each situation” Gramophone Magazine

Building a Library

Top recommendation - Dowland Songs - January 2013

40% off selected Hyperion

Hyperion - CDA67648

(CD)

Normally: $16.75

Special: $10.05

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

John Dowland: Lute Songs

John Dowland: Lute Songs


Dowland:

Can she excuse my wrongs? (First Booke of Songes, 1597)

What Then Is Love but Mourning

Come away, come, sweet love

Sir John Smith, His Almain

Sorrow, stay

Burst forth my tears

Galliard to Lachrimae

Flow my teares (Lacrimæ)

The Eglantine Branche

A Shepherd in a Shade

Away with these self-loving lads

The Gilly Flower

Say love if ever thou didst find

Almain

Fine knacks for ladies

Awake, sweet love

I saw my Lady weepe

Mr Dowland's Midnight

Deare, if you change

Now, O now, I needs must part

Come heavy sleep


Damien Guillon (countertenor) & Eric Bellocq (lute)

Damien Guillon has chosen for his first solo recital disc a refined, subtle and melancholy repertoire, which he has gone on to explore in depth and polish in genuine chamber style with the lutenist Eric Bellocq, an expert in Renaissance music.

Eric Bellocq plays a liuto forte from André Burguete’s conception, an instrument which enables the player to develop a larger sound possibilities creating a true dialogue with the singer and a great freedom in improvisation. Damien Guillon started at an early age as a member of child’s choir Brittany, then at the Versailles Baroque Center while studying organ and harpsichord. In 2004, he was admitted to the countertenor Andreas Scholl’s class at the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis… He was soon spotted by such well-known conductors as Jordi Savall, Vincent Dumestre, Hervé Niquet, Jérôme Correas, Philippe Pierlot, Jean-Claude Malgoire, Christophe Rousset, William Christie, and Philippe Herreweghe. He has founded his own ensemble, Le Banquet Céleste, with which he has performed at Les Nuits Musicales d’Uzès and the Froville Festival. Their repertoire includes Vivaldi’s Nisi Dominus, Pergolesi’s Stabat Mater, and the cantatas for alto and obbligato organ of J. S. Bach, which will be Damien Guillon’s next recording project on Zig-Zag Territoires.

Zigzag - ZZT110102

(CD)

$17.00

Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days.

Orpheus in England

Orpheus in England


Dowland:

Disdain me still

Lend your eares to my sorrow good people

Come heavy sleep

Preludium

The Earl of Essex's Galliard

A Shepherd in a Shade

By a fountain where I lay

Away with these self-loving lads

Lachrimae Pavan, P. 15

Tarleton's Riserrectione

If that a sinner's sigh

A Fantasie

Toss not my soul

In darkness let me dwell

Purcell:

She loves and she confesses too, Z413

They tell us that your mighty powers, Z630

Trumpet Tune in C major, ZT 678, called the Cibell

Echo Dance of the Furies (from Dido & Aeneas)

Ritornello ‘The Grove’

Fly swift ye hours, Z369

O lead me to some peaceful gloom (from Bonduca or The British Heroine, Z574)

What a sad fate is mine, Z428

A New Irish Tune Z646

A New Irish Tune Z646

A New Scotch Tune Z 655

Hornpipe

A New Ground in E minor, Z. T682

From silent shades ('Bess of Bedlam') Z370

Music for a while, Z583


Emma Kirkby (soprano) & Jakob Lindberg (lute)

Emma Kirkby and Jakob Lindberg have devised a programme which takes in a wide spectrum of emotions: from the pastoral joyfulness of By a fountain and the melancholy of In darkness let me dwell, we are led via the desperation and drama of Bess of Bedlam to the conviction expressed in Music for a while that music has the power to vanquish even death. Interspersing the songs are lute solos, including Dowland’s immortal Lachrimae, but also Lindberg’s own transcriptions of Purcell pieces such as The Cibell and the Echo Dance of the Furies from Dido and Aeneas, performed on Lindberg’s unique four-hundred year old instrument. Kirkby and Lindberg are musical partners of long standing, with earlier collaborations on BIS including Musique and Sweet Poetrie (BISSACD1505), a survey of the lute song across Europe around the year 1600. ‘A grand tour conducted by a pair of ideal guides’ was how the reviewer in Gramophone described that disc, while his colleague in International Record Review found that the ‘undeniably glorious performances’ made the disc ‘a journey well worth making’.

“Supported with exceptional clarity by Jakob Lindberg, Kirkby conveys both intellectual appreciation and a deep emotional connection with the words in this recital...[her] 'Bess of Bedlam' is more sympathetic than most, and her 'Music for a While' is more enigmatic. The voice may be less beautiful than it was, but her singing is more beautiful than ever.” BBC Music Magazine, March 2011 ****

“Few singers are quite a compelling with only a lute for company: Kirkby's phrasing has impeccable light and shade, and her authoritative articulation of melancholic sentiments is simply first-class...her gripping interpretation [of In darkness let me dwell] is devoid of complacence; moreover, her intonation and technique in florid music has lost none of its sparkle and precision.” Gramophone Magazine, May 2011

“Kirkby embellishes with taste and discretion...Both [she] and Lindberg are especially good here in the last Dowland item, 'In darkness let me dwell'...the tempo well judged, the lute part a translucent garment draped over Kirkby's highly expressive delivery.” International Record Review, May 2011

BIS - BISCD1725

(CD)

$16.75

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days.

My Heart's Desire

My Heart's Desire

Love songs and ballads form the Elizabethan age


Byrd:

Voluntary for my Lady Nevell

Campion:

When Laura smiles

Dowland:

Rest awhile

Awake, sweet love

Away with these self-loving lads

Come again, sweet love doth now invite

What poor astronomers are they

Go Crystal tears

Holborne:

The Honie-suckle

The fruit of love

The image of Melancholly

The cradle

Muy linda

Rosseter:

My love hath vow'd

It fell on a summer's day


The Elizabethan Consort

Great romantic ballads and airs from sixteenth century England by Dowland, Campion, Rosseter and Holborne, accompanied by viols, lutes and recorders in an evocative programme full of feeling that brings the Tudor age to life

The Gift of Music - CCLCDG1060

(CD)

$11.50

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days.

Copyright © 2002-13 Presto Classical Limited, all rights reserved.