Johnson, R: Full fathom five

This page lists all recordings of Full fathom five, by Robert Johnson (c.1583-1633) on CD, SACD & download (MP3 & FLAC). Generally, more recent releases are listed first, but with priority given to those that are in stock.

Recommendations

Re-issue of the Month
July 2009

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Andreas Scholl: The Voice 2

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


Andreas Scholl (countertenor), Andreas Martin (lute), Julian Behr (lute), Hélène Guilmette (soprano), Marcel Ponseele (oboe) & Markus Märkl (organ)

Accademia Bizantina & Orchestre du Collegium Vocale, Ottavio Dantone & Philippe Herreweghe

“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

Harmonia Mundi Initiales - HMX2908458/59

(CD - 2 discs)

$14.50

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Crystal Tears (+free dvd)

Crystal Tears (+free dvd)

John Dowland & his contemporaries


anon.:

O Death Rock me Asleep

Bennet:

Venus' birds whose mournful tunes

Byrd:

Though Amaryllis dance in green

Dowland:

Go Crystal tears

Now, O now, I needs must part

Go, nightly cares

Sorrow, come

Semper Dowland Semper Dolens

Lady Rich, her Galliard

A Fancy

Time stands still

From silent night

Come heavy sleep

Ferrabosco, A II:

Four-note pavan

Johnson, R:

Have you seen the bright lily grow?

Full fathom five

Care-charming sleep

Mando:

Like as the day

Mico:

Fantasia No. 13

Ward, J:

Fantasia No. 4

Fantasia No. 3


Andreas Scholl (countertenor), Julian Behr (lute)

Concerto di Viole

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

Harmonia Mundi - HMC901993

(CD)

$18.00

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

The Very Best of English Song

The Very Best of English Song


anon.:

Willow song

Balfe:

Come into the garden, Maud

Bishop, H R:

Home, Sweet Home

Brahe:

Bless this House

Butterworth, G:

Loveliest of Trees

Byrd:

Lullaby, my sweet little baby

Ye sacred muses - an elegy for Thomas Tallis

Carter, S:

Down Below

Dibdin:

Tom Bowling

Dowland:

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

Sorrow, stay

Awake, sweet love

Woeful heart

Shall I sue?

Me, me, and none but me

Flow my teares (Lacrimæ)

Finzi:

Since we loved

Rollicum-rorum

Gurney:

Down by the Salley Gardens

Black Stitchel

Ireland:

The Salley Gardens

Sea Fever

Johnson, R:

Where the bee sucks

Full fathom five

Keel:

Trade Winds (No. 2 from Three Salt-Water Ballads)

Morley:

It was a lover and his lass

O mistress mine

Mortimer:

The Smuggler's Song

Parry:

O mistress mine

Peel:

In Summertime on Bredon

Purcell:

Fairest Isle (from King Arthur)

Music for a while, Z583

I attempt from love's sickness to fly in vain (from The Indian Queen)

If music be the food of love, Z379

An Evening Hymn 'Now that the sun hath veiled his light', Z193

Quilter:

Love's Philosophy, Op. 3 No. 1 (Shelley)

Now sleeps the crimson petal, Op. 3 No. 2 (Tennyson)

Come away, death

Shield:

The Plough Boy

Stanford:

Drake's Drum

The Old Superb

Swann, D:

The Hippopotamus Song (Mud, mud, glorious mud)

A Transport of Delight (The Omnibus)

The Wart Hog

trad.:

The Foggy, Foggy Dew

Greensleeves

Vaughan Williams:

Linden Lea

The Lamb

The Shepherd

Silent Noon

Walton:

Popular Song from 'Façade'

Warlock:

Yarmouth Fair

My Own Country

Passing By

Pretty Ring Time

Balulalow

Woodforde-Finden:

Kashmiri Song


EMI - The Very Best of... - 5759262

(CD - 2 discs)

$11.50

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Shakespeare Songs

Shakespeare Songs


anon.:

Willow song

How should I your true love know

We be soldiers three

When griping griefs

Callino Casturame

Then they for sudden joy did weep

Bonny Sweet Robin

When that I was

Kemp's jigg (for lute)

Greensleeves

He that will an alehouse keep

Byrd:

Non nobis Domine

Cutting:

Walshingham variations

Johnson, R:

Where the bee sucks

Full fathom five

Morley:

It was a lover and his lass

O mistress mine

Weelkes:

Strike it up, Tabor

Wilson, John:

Take, O take those lips away


Desmond Dupré (lute)

Deller Consort, Alfred Deller

Harmonia Mundi Musique d'Abord - HMA195202

(CD)

$9.25

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Purcell: Love’s Madness

Purcell: Love’s Madness


Johnson, R:

As I walked forth

Full fathom five

Locke:

Curtain Tune from The Tempest

Purcell:

Tis women make us love

Then mad, very mad let us be (from The Richmond Heiress or A Woman Once in the Right, Z608)

Fantasia: three parts on a ground, for three recorders & b.c

I'll sail upon the dog-star (from A Fool's Preferment or The Three Dukes of Dunstable, Z571)

Jack, thou'rt a Toper - a catch (from Bonduca, Z574)

Dido and Aeneas: The Triumphing Dance

Prophetess or The History of Dioclesian, Z627: Oh the sweet delights of love

O solitude, my sweetest choice, Z406

Prophetess or The History of Dioclesian, Z627: Dance of the Bacchanals

Fantazia Upon One Note in F major, Z. 745

Sing, sing ye druids from Bonduca Z574

Oft she visits (from Dido and Aeneas)

Distressed Innocence, Z577: Rondo

Beneath a poplar's shadow (from Sophonisba or Hannibal's Overthrow, Z590)

From silent shades ('Bess of Bedlam') Z370

Tell me, some pitying angel (The Blessed Virgin's Expostulation), Z196

Once, twice, thrice, Z265

Prophetess or The History of Dioclesian, Z627: Charon the peaceful shade invites

Ground

When I am laid in earth (from Dido and Aeneas)

With Drooping Wings (from Dido and Aeneas)

Ravenscroft, T:

The Three Ravens

trad.:

Bedlam Boys

Grim King of the Ghosts (broadside ballad)

The Cruel Mother

William and Margret

Willow Song

Ophelia's mad song


Dorothee Mields (soprano)

Lautten Compagney Berlin, Wolfgang Katschner

Following her previous very successful release of Love Songs by Purcell (CARUS83435), Dorothee Mields now turns her attention to a darker side of life. Reminiscences of Shakespeare, melancholy and madness are evident throughout this collection.

“…marvellously expressive throughout…” International Record Review

“Mields has a fine, conventional voice for this kind of music - pure, pretty and with clear, largely correct English - and she enters into the spirit to the point of the odd deranged cackle, sob or moan...Ultimately they seem more like the kind of adaptations you might hear in a modern staging of a Restoration play than a reflection of the 17th-century sound world.” Gramophone Magazine, September 2012

“Most effective are the ballads and lighter, folksy numbers, where Mields's agile voice enchants...Purists may fgind the ensemble takes a few too many liberties, orchestrating these pieces wioth a battery of percussion, wind and stringed instruments, but there's no denying that it's all done with terrific style and bravura.” BBC Music Magazine, September 2012 ****

Carus - CARUS83371

(CD)

$18.25

(also available to download from $10.75)

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.)

Shakespeare - Come Again Sweet Love

Shakespeare - Come Again Sweet Love


anon.:

Willow song

Bennet:

Weep, O Mine Eyes

Dowland:

Come again, sweet love doth now invite

Galliard

If my complaints could passions move

Semper Dowland Semper Dolens

Gibbons, O:

The Silver Swan

Hume, T:

The Virgins Muse

Johnson, E:

Come againe, sweet Nature's treasure

Come againe, sweet Nature's treasure

reprise

Johnson, R:

Full fathom five

Where the bee sucks

Jones, Robert:

Now what is love?

Sweet Kate

Farewell Dear Love

Morley:

Sweet nymph, come to thy lover

It was a lover and his lass

Purcell:

By beauteous softness (from Now does the glorious day appear, Z332)

If music be the food of love, Z379

Robinson, T:

Fantasie & Toye

Wilson, John:

Take, O take those lips away


Daniel Taylor (countertenor), Carolyn Sampson, Emma Kirkby (sopranos), Charles Daniels (tenor)

Shakespeare – Come again sweet love is a haunting collection of songs and madrigals by some of the great masters of the Renaissance period, including Purcell, Dowland and Gibbons. The theme of the album is “love” in all its many forms, expressed through the poetry of the Shakespearian Era and the music it inspired.

Daniel Taylor is joined on the album by the Theatre of Early Music (founded and conducted by Daniel Taylor) and famous soloists Dame Emma Kirkby, Carolyn Sampson, Michael Chance and Charles Daniels.

Daniel and the Theatre of Early Music appear in some 30 concerts every year. The ensemble consists of a choir and orchestra that are dedicated to sustain the heritage of magnificent yet neglected choral and instrumental repertoire from four centuries. Their recent performance could be seen on stages in France, England, Argentina, Brazil and China.

Daniel Taylor is a prolific recording artist who has worked on numerous albums including Sakamoto’s pop-opera Life with the Dalai Lama and Salman Rushdie, Renaissance duets with actor Ralph Fiennes, and Bach recitals with the Theatre of Early Music to name only a few.

“Vocal leads and arrangements are shared: the results include a four-part madrigal setting of Gibbons' "The Silver Swan"; solo pieces accompanied by theorbo, such as Taylor's poised expression of a woman who "with such sweetness and such justice reigns" in Purcell's "By Beauteous Softness"; and tenor Charles Daniels's extended swoon of ardour through Dowland's "Come Again, Sweet Love Doth Now Invite".” The Independent, 24th June 2011 ***

“This is deluxe casting, allowing combinations from unaccompanied lute songs to an a cappella duet, and lute solos to five-part madrigals...Taylor - with one of the loveliest countertenor voices in the business - is on nine [tracks], happy it seems to let others into the spotlight, with every other singer getting at least one solo spot.” Gramophone Magazine, Awards Issue 2011

RCA - 88697727222

(CD)

$18.00

Usually despatched in 3 - 4 working days.

English Lute Songs

English Lute Songs


anon.:

The Last of the Queenes Maskes - lute solo

Banister:

Come unto these yellow sands

Where the bee sucks

Dry those eyes

Full fathom five

Give me my lute

Blow:

Lovely Selina

Campion:

Fair, if you expect admiring

Danyel:

Rosa - lute solo

Can doleful notes?

Dowland:

In darkness let me dwell

Time stands still

Behold a wonder here

Johnson, R:

Full fathom five

Where the bee sucks

Fantasia - lute solo

Lawes, W:

Why so pale and wan, fond lover?

He that will not love (Persuasions not to Love)

I'm sick of love (To Sycamores)

Gather ye rosebuds while ye may

Locke:

The delights of the bottle

Purcell:

Riggadoon, Z653

Lute solo

Song Tune ['Ah how pleasant 'tis to love', Z353] - lute solo

A New Irish Tune Z646

Lute solo

Tis Nature's voice (from Hail, Bright Cecilia, Z328)

Be welcome then, great Sir

Song Tune ['Still I'm wishing', Z627] - lute solo

Sefauchi's Farewell, Z656

By beauteous softness (from Now does the glorious day appear, Z332)

Reggio:

Arise, ye subterranean Winds


Robin Blaze (countertenor) & Elizabeth Kenny (lute)

English Lute Songs covers a variety of styles by composers such as Blow, Dowland, Campion, Lawes and Purcell; some for voice and lute and some for lute alone. It is a disc which aims to look beyond the standard repertoire for countertenor and lute and hopefully introduce listeners to some lesser known pieces which will delight and enthrall.

Robin Blaze and Liz Kenny have performed these works together on the concert platform to great acclaim.

“Can be recommended without reservation … the wonderful By beauteous softness, from Queen Mary’s Birthday Ode of 1689, given this performance, I could quite easily listen to for ever … there’s a remarkable technical ease and innate literary intelligence about Blaze’s singing which together with the astounding beauty of his voice makes this one of the most outstanding recitals of its kind on disc” BBC Music Magazine

“Robin Blaze has the special ingredients to transcend any latent prejudice [of countertenors], especially in a recital as wide-ranging and intelligently programmed as this. Blaze has the means to colour his texts, not just with superior diction, but timbral variation to keep the listener hearing each song afresh … there are too many highlights to list … superb. Another fine achievement from two of Britain’s brightest and best” Gramophone Magazine

“Robin Blaze has the versatility and range of nuances needed to encompass such an eclectic repertoire and the precision of focus in his limpid countertenor makes even a trifle like The delights of the bottle an invigorating experience … an enterprising recital disc” International Record Review

Helios - CDH55249

(CD)

$8.75

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days.

Songs for William Shakespeare

Songs for William Shakespeare


anon.:

Willow song

Kemp's jigg (for lute)

Light O'Love

Callinoe

Passamezzo Pavan

Sink a Pace

Packington's Pound

Bergamasca

Sellenger's Round

Ring out your bells

Fortune my Foe

Fortune

The Arraignment of John Flodder

The Hunt's Up

The Poor Peoples' Complaint

The Sick Tune

Peg a Ramsey

The Cushion Dance

The Rat Catcher

Dowland:

Tarleton's Riserrectione

Johnson, R:

Where the bee sucks

Full fathom five

Hark! hark! the lark

Jones, Robert:

Farewell Dear Love

Morley:

O mistress mine

It was a lover and his lass

trad.:

Greensleeves

Wilson, John:

Take, O take those lips away


Sara Stowe (soprano), Matthew Spring (lute, cittern, hurdy-gurdy), Sharon Lindo (Renaissance violin, recorder, pipe, tabor)

The Gift of Music - CCLCDG1006

(CD)

$11.75

(also available to download from $10.75)

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.)

All The World's A Stage

All The World's A Stage

Music and dances for Williams Shakespeare


anon.:

The Fairey Masque

Witches Dance I

The second Witches dance

Greensleeves to a Ground

Strawberry Leaves

Arne:

When daisies pied (from Love's Labours Lost)

Byrd:

Galliard

Pavan

Chilcot:

Orpheus with his lute

Dibdin:

Country Dances and Cotillions: Mrs Quickly

Country Dances and Cotillions: As You Like It

Country Dances and Cotillions: The Taming of the Shrew

Country Dances and Cotillions: Alls Well That Ends Well

Johnson, R:

Full fathom five

Where the bee sucks

Locke:

Orpheus with his lute

Let's have a dance upon the heath

Suite from The Tempest

Morley:

O mistress mine

It was a lover and his lass

Passymeasures Pavan

Purcell:

Suite from the Fairy Queen


Musica Donum Dei

Music from the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries composed for Shakespeare's plays or to celebrate his work. A wide range of instrumental sounds and some splendid singing create a fascinating programme of dynamic and cheerful English music, performed by one of Britain's leading ensembles.

The Gift of Music - CCLCDG1110

(CD)

$11.75

(also available to download from $10.75)

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.)

Shakespeare's Englande

Shakespeare's Englande

Music of his Plays & People


anon.:

O, mistress mine

Greensleeves

Kemp's jigg (for lute)

Willow song

Love, love, nothing but love

Heartease

Byrd:

Fantasia a 5

Campion:

It fell on a summer's day

Dowland:

Tarleton's Riserrectione

Farnaby, G:

Jog On

Gibbons, O:

Fantazia

Johnson, R:

Where the bee sucks

Full fathom five

Care-charming sleep

Lawes, W:

Almain & ayre

Pavane

Lupo, T:

Ayre in C

Morley:

It was a lover and his lass

Nicholson, R:

No more, good herdsman

Wigthorpe:

I am not I, of such belief

Wilbye:

Ne reminiscaris


James Griffett (tenor), Brian Wright (lute)

English Consort of Viols, Nicholas McGegan

Griffin - GCCD4036

(CD)

$11.25

Usually despatched in 8 - 10 working days.

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