Johnson, R: Have you seen the bright lily grow?

This page lists all recordings of Have you seen the bright lily grow?, by Robert Johnson (c.1583-1633) on CD & SACD. Generally, more recent releases are listed first, but with priority given to those that are in stock.

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

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)

$14.00

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)

$17.25

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Tears of Joy

Tears of Joy

English Lute Songs and Consort Music


anon.:

Shall I weep or shall I sing?

Have I caught my heav'nly jewel

Drewries accordes

My ladies careys dump

Tobacco

Scolares convenite

Kurja, paha syntinen

In vernali tempore

Tant ai mon cor

Bartlet:

Of all the Birds that I do know

Bologna:

O cieco mondo

Brewer, T:

Mistake me not, I am as cold as hot

Campion:

It fell on a summer's day

Despres:

O admirabile commercium

Dowland:

Time stands still

Gabrieli, A:

Saranda volde

Harst, D:

Mille quingentis

Gloria: Et in terra pax

Hume, T:

Tobacco, tobacco

Johnson, R:

With endless tears

The Flat Pavan - Galliard

Have you seen the bright lily grow?

Laethem:

La gola

Lawes, H:

Slide soft, you silver floods

Locke:

Pavane

Malvezzi:

Dolcissime sirene

Merckx:

L'uelh del vesent

Morley:

Thirsis and Milla

She straight her light green silken coats

Ortiz, D:

Recercada

Padovano:

Benedetta el gregaria

Pilkington:

Rest sweet Nimphs

Ramsey, R:

Go perjur'd man! And if you e'er return

Ravenscroft, T:

Martin Said To His Man

A Round of three country dances in one

Riquier:

No'm sai d'amor

Robinson, T:

A Song to the Cittern - 'Now Cupid, look about thee'

trad.:

Butterfly (jig)

Ai la bono fourtuno

Bressarello

Webb, W:

Pow'rful Morpheus, let thy charms

Willaert:

Dulce padrun


Zefiro Torna

Founded in 1996 and consisting of musicians who have performed in ensembles such as Collegium Vocale and Capilla Flamenca, their CD De Fragiltate (KTC4023) was awarded the prestigious Diapason d’Or. Here they perform songs by Locke, Morley, Campion, Lawes, Ravenscroft and others. Included is a 15th anniversary Zefiro Torna CD.

Etcetera - KTC4038

(CD - 2 discs)

$17.00

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days.

Not Just Dowland

Not Just Dowland


anon.:

Galliarda

Caccini, G:

Amarilli mia bella

Dowland:

Fortune my foe

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

In darkness let me dwell

Ferrabosco, A I:

Pavan IV

Grandi:

O quam tu pulchra es

Johnson, R:

Away delights

Oh, let us howl

Care-charming sleep

Pavan in C minor

Have you seen the bright lily grow?

encore

Kapsberger:

Kapsberger

Toccata arpeggiata (1604)

Merula:

Canzonetta spirituale sopra alla nanna 'Hor ch'è il tempo di dormire'

Monteverdi:

Quel sguardo sdegnosetto

Piccinini:

Toccata XIII

Rosseter:

Prelude


Carolyn Sampson (soprano) & Matthew Wadsworth (lute & theorbo)

The programme, entitled ‘Not Just Dowland’ sets the father of English song alongside his contemporary Robert Johnson, who notably composed for the plays of Shakespeare, and the Italians Monteverdi, Grandi, Piccinini, Caccini and Merula. There are also instrumental items by Johnson, Ferrabosco, Rosseter and Kabsberger.

“Everything was so perfect, the evening seemed to pass in a flash,” was The Independent’s verdict on the Wigmore Hall recital in December 2008 by soprano Carolyn Sampson and lutenist Matthew Wadsworth. “The soprano Carolyn Sampson is blessed with a lovely voice …and the lutenist Matthew Wadsworth … really is a class apart among exponents of this increasingly popular musical instrument.”

“Carolyn Sampson’s pure soprano cossets the words, savouring their expressive implications, relishing their shifts of rhythm and subtly sighing with bliss, yearning or heartache, depending on the circumstances.” The Telegraph, 29th January 2010 ****

“One of the chief delights... is the opportunity to hear the theorbo at close quarters...in the skilled hands of Matthew Wadsworth it takes centre stage, both as a solo instrument and as an exquisite companion to Carolyn Sampson's sweet, lyrical soprano...a ravishing programme of beguiling melancholia.” The Observer, 7th February 2010

“Wadsworth's lute and theorbo...craft a seamless expressive narrative...Sampson is careful never to over-egg the grief, always keeping in reserve extremities of emotion for the very darkest moments - and she never distorts the musical line by over-dramatisation.” BBC Music Magazine, May 2010 *****

“Carolyn Sampson and lutenist Matthew Wadsworth are well matched protagonists and in the main they cope equally well with both repertories. Sampson's diction is especially clear in the English selections, which come across very naturally.” Gramophone Magazine, September 2010

“Both artists respond with dark-shaded tones to a music that is touched by the aching melancholy of its time and place.” Sunday Times, 12th December 2010 ***

Wigmore Hall Live - WHLIVE0034

(CD)

$11.50

Usually despatched in 3 - 4 working days.

Endless Teares

Endless Teares


Gaultier, J:

Courante

Volte

Cloches

Humfrey:

Cupid once, when weary grown

Oh! That I had but a fine man

O Love, if e’er thou’lt ease a heart

How severe is forgetful old age

Johnson, R:

Have you seen the bright lily grow?

Woods, rocks and mountains

With endless tears

Come hither, you that love

Come, heavy sleep

Almain

The Prince’s Almain

Lanier:

The Marigold (Mark How the Blushful Morn)

I wish no more

No more shall meads be deck’d with flowers

Lawes, H:

Amarillis, by a spring

Amintor’s Welladay

Sleep soft, you cold clay cinders

Chloris dead, lamented by Amintor

Ariadne’s Lament

Purcell:

If grief has any pow'r to kill, Z378

When first Amintas sued for a kiss, Z430

Music for a while, Z583

Farewell, all joys Z368


Johannette Zomer (soprano), Fred Jacobs (theorbo)

Beautiful miniatures full of English melancholy.

Purcell’s famous ‘Music for a while’ crowns a century of extraordinary song writing.

Wonderful togetherness of Johannette Zomer and Fred Jacobs.

Johannette Zomer and Fred Jacobs started recording a series of programmes devoted to 17th Century monody for which their research has unveiled many hidden treasures. This recording brings beautiful miniatures, full of English melancholy and humor, including Purcells’s famous ‘Music for a while’. Their previous recordings in this series - ‘Splendore di Roma’, ‘Nuove Musiche’ and ‘l’Esprit Galant’- received great international acclaim.

“There's a brightness to the voice which pinpoints open-eyed wonder...That Zomer knows how to float a line and respond to its musical contours is never in doubt” BBC Music Magazine, June 2010 ***

Super Audio CD

Format:

Hybrid Multi-channel

25% off Channel Classics

Channel - CCSSA26609

(SACD)

Normally: $16.50

Special: $12.37

Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days.

Ye Sacred Muses

Ye Sacred Muses

Music from the House of Tudor


anon.:

Consort XXI

What first did break thee

Of all jolly pastimes

Sing aloud harmonious spheres

Bassano, A:

Pavan and Gailiard

Bassano, J:

Fantasia à 5 No. 2

Fantasia à 5 No. 1

Byrd:

La Volta

Wolsey's Wilde

Pavan

The Hunt's up

Browning (The Leaves be Green)

Ye sacred muses - an elegy for Thomas Tallis

Dowland:

Pavan

Go, nightly cares

Henry VIII:

Gentil duc de Lorainne

Gentil prince de renom

En vray amoure

Helas madam

Adew madam et ma mastres

Taunder naken

Holborne:

The funerals (Pavan)

Heigh ho holiday

Johnson, R:

Have you seen the bright lily grow?

Pattrick:

Climb not too high

Simpson, T:

Bonny Sweet Robin, ricercar from Taffel-consort (1621)

Alman


Franz Vitzthum, Andrea Cordula Baur & Katrin Krauss

Flautando Köln

A wonderful collection of songs and dances that includes works by Dowland, Byrd, Holborne, Johnson and King Henry VIII himself. Performed by Flautando Köln with guests.

Carus - CARUS83433

(CD)

$17.50

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days.

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