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             Christopher GIBBONS (1615-1676) 
               
              Motets, Anthems, Fantasias and Voluntaries 
              Track Listing below review 
                
              Philippa Hyde (soprano), Jacqueline Connell (mezzo), Charmian Bedford 
              (soprano), Richard Latham (bass), Alastair Ross (organ)  
              Choir of the Academy of Ancient Music; Academy of Ancient Music/Richard 
              Egarr (organ)  
              rec. All Hallows Church, Gospel Oak, London, November 2010. DDD/DSD. 
               
              ¼ comma meantone tuning.  
              Booklet with English and Latin texts, French and German translations 
              included.  
                
              HARMONIA MUNDI   
              HMU807551 [62:27]  
             
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                  Where have they been hiding the music of Christopher Gibbons 
                  all this time? Before hearing this recording I had come across 
                  him only as a collaborator with Matthew Locke in the semi-masque 
                  Cupid and Death. That was on a recording - no longer 
                  available - on the Deutsche Harmonia Mundi label.  
                     
                  Sceptical of the claims that I had seen made for this recording 
                  in various quarters and early for an appointment in central 
                  London, I couldn’t resist popping into the HMV store in 
                  Oxford Street. This was rather than wait - as I could have - 
                  to obtain a review download free from classicsonline.com. Not 
                  having been in the store for some time - reviewers tend to have 
                  more than enough CDs already - I was sorry to see the classical 
                  department reduced to a shadow of its former self - quantum 
                  mutatus ab illo - but pleased to see three copies of the 
                  CD sitting on the shelf.  
                     
                  From the very opening of the first work, Not unto us, O Lord, 
                  I was enthralled. This is no mere run-of-the mill stuff; the 
                  discouraging appearance of the composer in his D.Mus. robes 
                  on the cover of the booklet belies the music’s inventiveness 
                  and I’m not sure that I shan’t be returning to this 
                  more often even than to the music of his father, Orlando Gibbons, 
                  himself now recognised as a major figure in taking up and developing 
                  the English church music of Tallis and Byrd.  
                     
                  It’s apparent that the demure portrait conceals a composer 
                  as much renowned for high jinks and dissolute lifestyle as Purcell. 
                  There’s often a discrepancy between portraits, especially 
                  those in doctoral gown, and the music, as witness the dour portraits 
                  of William Boyce and Maurice Greene on the covers of their respective 
                  albums from New College Oxford on the CRD label (CRD3483 and 
                  CRD3484 respectively). Even William Croft (CRD3491) looks only 
                  marginally more human.  
                     
                  As Richard Egarr writes (‘Discovering Christopher Gibbons’) 
                  in the excellent booklet, Gibbons junior now emerges as the 
                  missing link between the pre-Commonwealth world of William Lawes 
                  and the restoration baroquerie - his word - of Henry Purcell. 
                  The 16th-century polyphonic composers would have 
                  recognised the format, especially of the Latin-texted O bone 
                  Jesu - a text often set in the early 16th century, 
                  e.g. by Robert Carver (Coro COR16051), Robert Fayrfax (ASV CDGAU184) 
                  and Robert Parsons (Hyperion CDA67874 or Coro COR16056) - but 
                  would have been amazed at the bold approach. The unequal-temperament 
                  tuning employed for the recording serves only to emphasise that 
                  boldness.  
                     
                  It’s the motets and anthems that I found most appealing 
                  - the latter a peculiarly Anglican form that was being developed 
                  in the late 16th and early 17th centuries 
                  until it found official recognition in a quaint rubric at the 
                  end of Mattins and Evensong in the Restoration Prayer Book of 
                  1662: ‘in Quires and Places where they sing here followeth 
                  the Anthem’. There’s an attractive verse anthem 
                  setting of the anonymous text Above the stars my Saviour 
                  dwells by Thomas Tomkins (Hyperion Helios CDH55066, tr.4 
                  or, with viol accompaniment, Naxos 8.550602, tr.4) but Christopher 
                  Gibbons’ setting (tr.3) is more extended and much more 
                  intimate, especially in the final appeal to ‘come Lord 
                  Jesus, come away’. The keyboard works appear to have been 
                  most admired by Gibbons’ contemporaries, Samuel Pepys 
                  in particular, and it’s good to have these interspersed 
                  among the vocal items.  
                     
                  There’s real variety here, then: keyboard works with and 
                  without viols, full anthems and verse anthems and motets, enough 
                  to confirm Richard Egarr’s belief that Gibbons’ 
                  is ‘an extraordinary and unique voice’ and a ‘true 
                  English musical treasure’.  
                     
                  The performances are equally treasurable for the most part; 
                  I’m sure that Gibbons would have been pleased with them, 
                  though he would have been surprised at the employment of female 
                  voices. Some reviewers have commented adversely on the quality 
                  of the voices; I agree that the singing is not ideal - some 
                  of the minor discords are not of Gibbons’ making - but 
                  I was not greatly troubled by this; I wonder how good were the 
                  boys’ voices that Gibbons would have had at his disposal. 
                  I have no benchmark against which to judge this recording, but 
                  I’d be very surprised if anything better comes along. 
                  Some of the scores of Christopher Gibbons’ music, including 
                  the Voluntary for double organ, can be found in the online Werner 
                  Icking Archive - here. 
                   
                     
                  I do hope that others will now turn to the music of this composer 
                  - and it goes without saying that I hope for more from The Academy 
                  of Ancient Music and Richard Egarr; he has already demonstrated 
                  his affection for the music of Orlando Gibbons with an album 
                  of keyboard works on the Globe label (GLO5468). There seems 
                  to be at least enough left for one more recording.  
                     
                  The CD layer of the recording is first rate. It’s possible 
                  to download this recording but, good as classicsonline.com’s 
                  mp3 transfers are - always at the full bit-rate of 320kb/s - 
                  an additional reason to buy the disc and not the download is 
                  the availability of the SACD layer and that gives an added dimension, 
                  even played in stereo. Though the glossy booklet comes with 
                  the download deal, it’s 40 pages long and bulky to print 
                  out. It is, in fact, too large to fit inside the jewel case 
                  - just a 4-page insert is included there - and has to be housed 
                  inside an outer cardboard cover. That’s something of a 
                  nuisance, since it means that the disc won’t slot into 
                  a CD drawer, but it’s difficult to see how the problem 
                  could have been avoided.  
                     
                  If you like the music of Orlando Gibbons and that of Henry Purcell, 
                  you should not hesitate to place your order for this major discovery 
                  whose music bridges their two worlds.  
                     
                  Brian Wilson   
                   
                  Track Listing 
                  Not unto us, O Lord [4:58]  
                  Voluntarie in C [4:09]  
                  Above the stars my Saviour dwells [6:29]  
                  Fantasy-Suite in d minor [6:57]  
                  Ah, my soul, why so dismayed? [2:38]  
                  Organ Voluntary in C [2:22]  
                  O bone Jesu [3:26]  
                  A Voluntary for ye Duble Organ in a minor [5:40] 
                   
                  Fantasia [4:37]  
                  The Lord said unto my lord [5:02]  
                  Verse for the Double Organn in d minor [4:20]  
                  Fantasy-suite in F [11:49]  
                  
                 
                 
                 
             
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