This is the second volume of Nigel North's planned recording
                    of all of John Dowland's solo lute music (see review
                    of Volume 1). Of course, other lutenists have recorded complete Dowland
                    sets
                    but these
                    have
                    a habit of slipping out of the catalogue; then, there is
                    the issue of price. Even at full price, North's playing would
                    be worth having and at bargain price you certainly can't
                    go wrong.
                
                 
                
                
                In volume 1, North organised his recital into alternating
                    groups of dance-like pieces and free-form works of a profound
                    nature. On this disc, North shows similar imagination in
                    the construction of a programme so that not only are we getting
                    Dowland's complete lute works but we are also experiencing
                    a series of well put together recitals.
                
                 
                
                Here he plays pairs of Pavans and Galliards. Though this was a 
			  traditional pairing of works, Dowland did not strictly write any 
			  pairs. Instead, North starts with Dowland's Lachrimae
                    Pavan and uses this to set the tone of the recital. The Lachimae
                    Pavan is paired with the Galliard to Lachrimae,
                    which was probably written later. A further two Pavans are
                    based on the Lachrimae model and these North has paired with
                    suitable galliards.
                
                 
                
                There is a flexible traffic between Dowland's songs
                    and his lute solos. North extends this with his solo 
			  Dowland's
                    tears, his own arrangement of the lovely song I saw
                    my Lady weep. This is paired with Sir Henry Umpton's
                    Funeral, a pavan whose opening is very similar to that
                    of the song.
                
                 
                
                Inevitably North pairs Sir John Langton's Pavan with Langton's
                      Galliard. Though the two are not thematically linked
                      they make a good pairing; the joyful pavan being followed
                      by the wonderfully interesting galliard with its use of
                      hemiolas.
                
                 
                
                North plays the final pairing in reverse order, feeling
                    that they work better that way - as they do; a lovely piece
                    of musicality triumphing over dogmatism.
                
                 
                
                North seems to be using different lutes for each volume.
                    On volume 1 he played an eight-course and a nine course.
                    On this disc he plays a ten course lute by Canadian luthier,
                    Ray Nurse. North has made his own performing editions of
                    all the music and contributed the illuminating booklet essay
                    that touches in greater detail on the Elizabethan feeling
                    for melancholy.
                
                 
                
                The melancholy lachrimae threads its way through this
                    recital, though North has been careful to include a variety
                    of other emotions. But melancholy was one of the most fashionable
                    of Elizabethan humours and this recital is a very apt and
                    beautiful tribute to it. So it is entirely fitting that North
                    closes with Semper Dowland, Semper Dolens, a harmonically
                    restless pavan which quotes from the Lachimae Pavan and
                    other of Dowland's melancholy songs. North also includes
                    an alternative version of the Lachrimae Pavan with
                    divisions probably not by Dowland himself.
                
                 
                
                North's playing is not noted for its showiness or brilliancy.
                    Instead he reveals playing of great charm with a notable
                    sense of fantasy; he mines the depths of these pieces, never
                    glossing over the slighter ones. In his Gramophone review
                    of volume 1, William Yeoward described North as 'veteran
                    lutenist'. In fact North was born in 1954 and so I hope he
                    has many more years of playing to come, but his playing is
                    wonderfully mature and, dare I say it, civilised. 
                
                
    There is only one thing to say about this wonderful recital: buy it!
                
                 
                
                Robert Hugill