All recordingsPrices 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
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 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Byrd & Dowland: Ye Sacred MusesComplaintes, élégies et chansons
Jean-Michel Fumas (countertenor) Eliza Consort Jean-Michel Fumas has studied piano, organ and singing and specialised in baroque music at the Studio Baroque Opera de Versailles. He has performed early music with the most celebrated French ensembles, including La Fenice and Il seminario Musicales and has become established as a concert soloist. He excels in Dowland’s Elizabethan airs. This CD illustrates his artistry, beautifully accompanied by the Eliza Consort. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Dowland in Dublin
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 **** | | | (also available to download from $10.75) | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Andreas Scholl: The Voice 2
anon.: | King Henry O Death Rock me Asleep | Bach, J S: | Cantata BWV35 'Geist und Seele wird verwirret' Cantata BWV170 'Vergnügte Ruh, beliebte Seelenlust' | Bennet: | Venus' birds whose mournful tunes | Campion: | My sweetest Lesbia I care not for these ladies My love hath vow'd | Dowland: | Behold a wonder here All ye, whom Love or Fortune hath betray'd I saw my Lady weepe Can she excuse my wrongs? (First Booke of Songes, 1597) Go Crystal tears Now, O now, I needs must part Come heavy sleep | Ferrabosco, A II: | Four-note pavan | Handel: | Amarilli vezzosa, HWV 82 | Johnson, R: | Have you seen the bright lily grow? Full fathom five | Mando: | Like as the day | trad.: | O Waly, Waly ('The Water is Wide') I will give my love an apple | Wolkenstein: | Ach, senleicher leiden Nu rue mit sorgen Kom liebster man |
“Whether Scholl’s voice at all resembles that of the great original [Senesino] we cannot know, but it is wonderfully pure and moves with marvellous flexibility. He has the art of making recitative sound spontaneous and of catching the rhythmic impulse as though native to his body.” John Steane, Opera Now | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Ars BritannicaOld Hall Manuscript, Madrigals & Lute Songs
Byrd: | Come, woeful Orpheus | Campion: | Never weather-beaten sail Jacke and Jone they think no ill A Secret Love Or Two | Chirbury: | Agnus Dei | Cooke, John: | Alma proles | Damett: | Salve porta paradisi | Dowland: | A Shepherd in a Shade Fine knacks for ladies Where sin sore wounding I must complain Sweet stay awhile Mr Dowland's Midnight Now, O now, I needs must part | Dunstaple: | Crux fidelis O crux gloriosa Gaude virgo salutata Albanus roseo rutilat | Ford, T: | Since first I saw your face There is a Ladie | Forest: | Qualis est dilectus | Jones, Robert: | Thinkst thou Kate | Morley: | Hark, jolly shepherds Die now, my heart You black bright stars | Pilkington: | Care for thy soul Diaphenia Down-a-down | Power, L: | Credo | Pycard: | Gloria | Tomkins: | O let me die for true love Oyez! Has any found a lad? | Ward, J: | Retire, my troubled soul O my thoughts surcease | Weelkes: | Those sweet delightful lilies Some men desire spouses Come sirrah Jack ho! Come, let's begin to revel't out | Wilbye: | Lady when I behold As matchless beauty Weep, weep, mine eyes |
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| |  | Crystal Tears (+free dvd)John Dowland & his contemporaries
There are few pleasures more delightful than musical melancholy, especially when it flows from the pen of the finest Elizabethan poets and a composer whose name will be forever associated with that emotion: John Dowland. His lute songs and consort songs form the backbone of Andreas Scholl's latest recital. The countertenor has gathered his favourite partners around him in the service of this sublime vocal art, elegantly distilling its fragile instants of grace.The songs are adroitly interspersed with instrumental pieces by Dowland's contemporaries. Bonus DVD NTSC: a performance of the song 'Venus' birds' and a documentary on the making of this recording.Trailers available on harmoniamundi.com & Youtube. Since it was founded in Basel in 1989, Concerto di Viole has played as a permanent ensemble. Its four members all studied at the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis and each individual brings to it rich musical experience with well-known international ensembles.They have recorded a number of CDs including German Baroque cantatas with Andreas Scholl for harmonia mundi in 1998. “There is surely no voice more ethereal-sounding among contemporary falsettists than Scholl’s, and he lavishes a ravishingly beautiful sound on the Dowland “hits”: Go, crystal tears; Now, oh now, I needs must part; From silent night; Come, heavy sleep. The danger of monotony is averted with the interspersing of viol Fantasias by John Ward and Richard Mico, and of Dowland’s lute solos, Semper Dowland, Semper Dolens, The Lady Rich, Her Galliard and A Fancy, exquisitely played by Julian Behr. For fans of both Dowland and Scholl, this is a collector’s item.” Sunday Times, 29th June 2008 Disc of the Week “Since this is a collection dominated by John Dowland's consort songs, sobs and melancholy lie at its heart. But with Scholl's alto brand of counter-tenor floating the lines, polishing the vowels so beautifully, the sorrow never quite feels real. Occasionally he's too loud and hooty, and more than once monotonous. But Venus Birds is irresistible, he dies very nicely in Oh Death, Rock Me to Sleep, and he is always surrounded by succulent sounds from the lutenist Julian Behr. Even with the whistling and instrumental tracks, the variety of mood and texture remains limited - but who goes to Dowland to frolic?” The Times, 7th June 2008 *** “The exquisite melancholy pervading the disc, and its companion DVD, is the perfect balm to beguile you through a wistful summer evening” The Observer, 25th May 2008 “There is some magical singing here, and Scholl is supported by instrumental playing of rare subtlety and real finesse.” BBC Music Magazine, July 2008 **** “Scholl's technique is unimpeachable, his tone polished beyond doubt…” Gramophone Magazine, September 2008 “Inevitably, Andreas Scholl gets the headline treatment, though the man himself seems very much a team player. And though there are a few quibbles with his approach to this repertory, his interaction with Concerto di Viole and lutenist Julian Behr carries great conviction. The choice of Dowland songs holds few surprises. Although Scholl's technique is unimpeachable, his tone polished beyond doubt, there's a surprising diffidence. Dowland's melancholy may have been a genuine personality trait but the Elizabethan penchant for this most intractable of humours was also (as Scholl acknowledges) a wider social phenomenon, a fashionable affectation; and from an artist of Scholl's accomplishment, a tauter balance between demure reserve and theatricality would have been welcome. Otherwise, one runs the risk of a one–dimensional Dowland, and Scholl doesn't entirely avoids it here. That said, the first track, 'Go crystal tears', makes for a fine opening, and in 'Go nightly cares' the dialogue between voice and viols is very impressive. The whistling in the refrain of John Bennett's 'Venus' birds' seems the wrong sort of affectation, and the portamenti in the refrain of Byrd's 'Though Amaryllis dance in green' are likewise overdone. The gems here are the pieces by lesser–known composers, in which Scholl's reserve is perhaps less of an issue: Robert Johnson's 'Have you seen the bright lily grow?' is particularly moving, and movingly conveyed, with something of the languor of the air de cour. Concerto di Viole's contributions are stylish, and Behr is both a sensitive accompanist and a distinguished soloist (in 'Semper Dowland semper dolens'). On a bonus DVD there's a short documentary that faithfully captures the atmosphere of a recording session, in which Scholl comes across as a down-to-earth, reflective and genuinely charming person.” Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Britten & Dowland - Lute Songs
“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 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Shepherd's Hey - Gems for Piano
“Grainger‘s gems are poetry for Thwaites...her own individual style is marked by a genuine clarity and beauty of tone.” The Melbourne Age | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Dowland: Lachrimae
Ruby Hugues (soprano), Reinoud Van Mechelen (tenor) & Thomas Dunford (lute) Alpha is particularly pleased to present this first disc devoted to the lutenist Thomas Dunford. The programme combines lute pieces by Dowland with lute songs for several voices. These songs are certainly among the most frequently recorded works of the Elizabethan era. However, the four-part polyphonic texture is generally reduced to a single voice with lute accompaniment. The approach adopted on this disc has been to realise the songs in several voices, thus reverting to the practice, widespread at the time, of an intimate ‘chamber’ performance of these pieces. Thus the inspired playing of Thomas Dunford is answered by exceptionally rich polyphony, with the combination of the two offering a Dowland of unprecedented colour and energy. | 
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| |  | Infernum In ParadiseConsort Songs & Music
Eugénie Warnier (soprano) Musicall Humors, Julien Léonard (direction) "Beer and the viola da gamba both arrived in England in the space of a year, in the reign of King Henry VII”, wrote Henry Peacham. And yet it was not until the following reign, that of Henry VIII, that the latter instrument gained its noble status. The high point, however, occurred in the long reign of Elizabeth I (1558-1603). The consort song had its origin partly in the theatre, partly in madrigals inspired by the Italians, then very much in vogue. Fashionable English composers write songs, airs and dance pieces that would embody this uniquely English phenomenon; among them John Dowland and Anthony Holborne, who feature prominently on this disc, both leading figures in Elizabethan music. With his ensemble Musicall Humors, Julien Léonard has managed to create a viol consort of astonishing homogeneity, offset by the delicate presence at times of a lute, at times of a cittern, a harpsichord, the virginals or organ. The sonorities are round, warm, velvety, and for her first solo disc, the voice of Eugénie Warnier lies with unforced delicacy upon this instrumental duvet. “This is an attractive and well-contrasted recital of Elizabethan and Jacobean viol consort music and songs...All are played with a rare warmth and intimacy.” Sunday Times, 18th November 2012 “A seductively programmed and sumptuously realised anthology of music for viol consort and voice that conveys the Elizabethan psyche in all its melancholy and amorous playfulness. Pity the words are often indistinct.” BBC Music Magazine, April 2013 *** | | | Usually despatched in 3 - 4 working days. |
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