Campion: Though you are young and I am old

This page lists all recordings of Though you are young and I am old, by Thomas Campion (1567-1620) on CD. Generally, more recent CDs are listed first, but with priority given to items that are in stock.

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Dowland: His golden locks, etc.

Campion:

Though you are young and I am old

Come, cheerful day

Danyel:

Time, cruel Time

He whose desires are still abroad

Dowland:

His golden locks

It was a time

Far from triumphing Court

Flow not so fast, ye fountains

from the Third Book of Songs

Time stands still

from the Third Book of Songs

Ferrabosco, A I:

Pavan

Ford, T:

Go, passions, to the cruel fair

Lawes, W:

Gather your rosebuds

Rosseter:

What then is love but mourning?

from A Book of Ayres


Emma Kirkby (soprano), Anthony Rooley (lute)

'A fine recital that adds a few welcome items to the recorded repertory of the lute-song, engineered close to perfection' (Gramophone)

Hyperion Early Vocal Music - CDA66186

(CD)

$17.49

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days.

Thomas Campion: Lute Songs

Thomas Campion: Lute Songs


Campion:

Come let us sound with melody

Tune thy music to thy heart

Come you pretty false-ey'd wanton

There is none, O none but you

Sweet exclude Me not

I care not for these ladies

Though you are young and I am old

Fire! Fire! Fire! Fire!

Shall I come, sweet love, to thee?

Beauty, since you so much desire

What is it all that men possesse

The cypress curtain of the night

Jacke and Jone they think no ill

It fell on a summer's day

When to her lute Corinna sings

My sweetest Lesbia

Her Rosie Cheekes

Fair, if you expect admiring

There is a Garden in her face

Author of Light

Never weather-beaten sail

Most sweet and pleasing are thy wayes

To Musicke bent is my retyred minde

Thou joy'st, fond boy

Turne all thy thoughts to eyes

Vaile, love, mine eyes

Rosseter:

What then is love but mourning?


Dorothy Linell (lute), Steven Rickards (counter-tenor)

"Like Nicholas Lanier, his younger contemporary, Thomas Campion (1567-1620) is another of those remarkably versatile figures who played a major role in the flourishing secular arts of the Elizabethan and Jacobean eras. ... The American countertenor Steven Rickards has here chosen 28 of [Campion's] songs, a well-varied selection ranging from religious moralities to the charmingly insouciant Jacke and Joane, a panegyric in praise of simple country life. Campion's approach to the subject of love is in general considerably more light hearted than that of Dowland, and Rickards is particularly successful at brining out the sly insinuation in a song like It fell upon a sommers daie. But his singing is distinguished throughout by a freshness and lack of artifice that admirably suits Campion's direct, uncomplicated style. Diction is very good, too. The lute parts, by no means as complex or demanding as those of Dowland, are sympathetically performed. It would in fact be idle to suggest Campion's lute songs approach those of his greater contemporary, but the high quality of his poetry, easy melodic appeal, and often humorous approach make them a very appealing antidote to the near-unremitting seriousness of Dowland. Yet another excellent bargain from Naxos." - Early Music Magazine (Brian Robins), August 1999

Naxos Early Music Collection - 8553380

(CD)

$6.99

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days.

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