In the late 1990s Arcana issued a recording of 
                  John Dowland’s music performed by Nigel North.  That recording 
                  (AR36) is still available; though it was labelled in hope ‘Volume 
                  1’, the project seems to have fizzled out at that stage.  Since 
                  then North has made further Dowland recordings for Linn (CKD097 
                  and SACD CKD176), all of which have been well received.  In 
                  2006 Naxos issued the first CD in what was again billed as the 
                  first of a complete series and, so far, Naxos have kept faith 
                  with the project – as, indeed, they have kept faith with every 
                  project that they have begun. 
                
              
This third CD in the series concentrates on the 
                three principal dances of the time, the Pavan, Galliard and Almain.  
                Having purchased Volume 1 (8.557586: Fancyes, Dreams and Spirits) 
                on the basis of favourable reviews, not least that of fellow MusicWeb 
                reviewer Jonathan 
                Woolf – “It’s very pleasurable listening. An auspicious start.” 
                – I had high expectations of the new recording and was not disappointed.  
                At some stage, too, I intend to follow Robert 
                Hugill’s advice concerning Volume 2 : “There is only one thing 
                to say about this wonderful recital: buy it!”.  
              
Nigel North has arranged the pieces for variety 
                  in groups of three, i.e. pavan – galliard – almain, as he imagines 
                  Dowland himself might have arranged them had he composed a collection 
                  in the manner of Anthony Holborne’s 1599 publication entitled 
                  Pavans, Galliards and Almains.  The uncertain manner in 
                  which Dowland’s music has been transmitted justifies such a 
                  speculative arrangement.  Thus each group of three tracks progresses 
                  from the stately pavan, via the galliard to the more lively 
                  almain.  Only if you are expecting some of the dances to be 
                  as lively as those found in Prętorius’s Terpischore will 
                  you be disappointed. The wonderful New London Consort/Philip 
                  Picket version of Terpsichore has just been reissued 
                  on Oiseau-Lyre 475 9101.  David Munrow’s equally fine pioneering 
                  recording is also still available on a 2-CD set, with works 
                  by Morley and Susato, Virgin 3 50003 2.  Both sell for 
                  around £8.50 in the UK. 
                
The booklet which accompanies Volume 1 makes it 
                  clear that all the music has been edited by North himself; I 
                  take this to be true of the present volume, too.  The P numbers 
                  attached to some of the pieces refer to the edition by Poulton 
                  and Lam (1974). 
                
Dowland is likely to have begun composing for and 
                  playing on a six-course lute but would have played a nine- or 
                  ten-course instrument later.  North himself uses an eight-course 
                  and a nine-course instrument on the first volume in the series, 
                  both of them modern lutes copied from 17th.-century 
                  originals.  On this new CD he employs a different nine-course 
                  lute made by Lars Jönsson after a 16th-Century instrument 
                  by Hans Frei, tuned to a’=400. 
                
Melancholy was fashionable in the late 16th-Century 
                  and Dowland was well placed to be in the fashion: his name almost 
                  cries out for the Latin pun which he placed upon it – Semper 
                  Dowland, semper dolens, Dowland is forever doleful.  Among 
                  his best known pieces are the song and the consort music both 
                  entitled Lachrymę, tears; a song which appealed to Benjamin 
                  Britten so much that he wrote a set of variations on it.  Two 
                  versions of the Lachrimę Pavan, the Galliard to the 
                  Lachrimę Pavan, Dowland’s Tears and Semper Dowland 
                  Semper Dolens are included on Volume 2 of this Naxos series 
                  (8.557862), making the use of the famous Hilliard miniature 
                  of the melancholy young man almost mandatory for the cover of 
                  that CD. 
                
On this new recording the Pavana Doulant 
                  employs the same pun, in French this time rather than in Latin 
                  – the ‘doleful pavan’.  This is a problematic work, published 
                  in a collection which includes other undoubted Dowland works, 
                  but in a form which cannot be as it left the composer’s hand.  
                  When played as well as it is here, in a version edited by North 
                  himself, it is a very effective piece; one certainly would like 
                  it to be by Dowland.  In his performance of it North does not 
                  exaggerate the doulant element which, in any case, largely 
                  amounts to fashionable posturing.  In general the programme 
                  on this recording is well balanced; as Nigel North notes in 
                  the booklet, there is more to Dowland than just the melancholic.  
                  Even in Volume 2 he contrived to keep it in its place – and 
                  where it does occur, as in the Pavana Doulant, he deals 
                  with it pretty objectively. 
                
The other unusual piece in this collection is the 
                  Galliard on a Galliard of Bachelar, where Dowland takes 
                  the opening four bars of an original dance by one of his contemporaries, 
                  now all but forgotten, and branches off into what the booklet 
                  describes as “its own world of great variety and fantasy.”  
                  Fantasy or ‘fancie’ was another popular buzz-word of the time 
                  (cf. Shakespeare’s “Tell me where does fancy dwell”) and Dowland 
                  wrote a number of pieces to which he gave this title, several 
                  of them included on Volume 1.  They are essentially free forms, 
                  in which the composer literally follows his own fancy or imagination: 
                  “when a musician taketh a point at his pleasure and wresteth 
                  and turneth it as he list”, as the composer Thomas Morley puts 
                  it.  As in the fancies on the earlier volume, North is particularly 
                  effective in bringing out the qualities of this piece. 
                
Like most people of my 
                  generation, my introduction to the lute music of Dowland and 
                  his contemporaries was provided by Julian Bream, abetted in 
                  the lute songs by Peter Pears.  I shall not be throwing out 
                  any of my Bream CDs, from the RCA Julian Bream Collection – 
                  and not just for reasons of sentimental attachment – but Nigel 
                  North’s recordings make an excellent complement to them.  Sadly, 
                  only one Dowland recording from RCA’s Bream Edition seems to 
                  be available – a recording of Lute Songs with Peter Pears reissued 
                  to coincide with Sting’s Songs of the Labyrinth.  When 
                  the Sting nine-day-wonder has passed, no doubt the Bream CD 
                  will again be deleted (RCA 8869704927 2).
                
Bream had to start virtually from nowhere in teaching 
                  himself how to play the lute, whereas younger players like North, 
                  building on the base which he created, have been able to develop 
                  phenomenal technique.  Thus, for example, though it is impossible 
                  to play the lute without some extraneous noise, one hears much 
                  less in North’s recordings than in Bream’s. 
                
There is little for me to add to what has already 
                  been said about the style of North’s playing by my colleagues 
                  about Volumes 1 and 2.  His technique is excellent, but that 
                  technique is always placed at the disposal of the music, which 
                  is allowed to speak for itself. 
                
As on the previous volumes the recording is just 
                  right – close and analytical but not too close and with a nice 
                  ambience.
                
Only those with a positive aversion to lute music 
                  in general and Dowland’s in particular are likely not to be 
                  won over by this CD.  And if you dislike Dowland, you probably 
                  don’t like the lute at all for, as Richard Barnfield puts it, 
                  the lute was almost synonymous with Dowland for his contemporaries:
                
Dowland 
                  to thee is deare; whose heauenly tuch
                Vpon the Lute, doeth rauish humaine sense:
                [The Passionate Pilgrim, 1598 – for the complete poem see 
                the 
                Opensource website] 
              
We don’t know what 
                Dowland’s own playing sounded like: we must take Barnfield’s words 
                about the heavenly touch on trust.  Though there is no evidence 
                that he knew Dowland, he was at least expressing the current opinion. 
                There could be no more fitting description of Nigel North’s playing 
                in this series than to copy Barnfield’s words: “[it] doeth rauish 
                humaine sense.” 
              
The notes, by Nigel 
                North himself, are excellent.  They include his reasons for accepting 
                the Pavana Douland as probably authentic but with necessary 
                revisions.  The artwork is, as usual with Naxos, tasteful, though 
                the cover painting of a court ball with music provided by a lute 
                consort is not quite appropriate for a solo lute recital.
                
                Brian Wilson