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 alternativelyCD: MDT
   
             
 | Anthony HOLBORNE 
              (c.1545-1602) Pavans and Galliards, 1599
 Pavan (11) [03:26]
 Galliard (12) [00:59]
 Heres Paternus (33) [04:47]
 Muy Linda (34) [01:11]
 Infernum (21) [03:58]
 Galliard (22) [01:11]
 Paradizo (17) [02:35]
 Sighes (18) [01:32]
 The Image of Melancholy (27) [04:44]
 Ecce quam bonum (28) [01:20]
 Sic semper soleo (50) [01:23]
 The Funerals (31) [04:32]
 Galliard (32) [01:15]
 Almayne (56) [01:03]
 The Honiesuckle (60) [01:13]
 As it fell on a holie eve (64) [00:57]
 Heigh ho holiday (65) [01:02]
 
  The Guildhall Waits, The Consort of Musicke/Trevor Jones, Anthony 
              Rooley rec. April 1980, Decca Studios, West Hampstead, London, UK. ADD
 
  DECCA ELOQUENCE 480 1802 [42:38]   |   
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                The 1970s and early 1980s were an exciting time for lovers of 
                  early music in period instrument performances. Historical performance 
                  practice was still in its formative years, and recordings with 
                  authentic instruments were not all that common. So every new 
                  initiative was welcomed with eagerness and curiosity. One such 
                  which met great interest was L'Oiseau Lyre’s 'Florilegium' series. 
                  Anthony Rooley and his Consort of Musicke were one of the pillars 
                  of this series. Many recordings were released which put composers 
                  on the map who until then were hardly more than names in a dictionary. 
                  Some of them were included in concerts with music of the renaissance, 
                  but John Dowland was probably the only composer of the English 
                  renaissance to whom complete discs were devoted. That all changed 
                  drastically with the emergence of the 'Florilegium' series. 
                  Thanks to the Consort of Musicke complete collections of motets, 
                  madrigals and consort music were released. All of a sudden the 
                  likes of Thomas Morley, Thomas Tomkins, John Ward, John Jenkins 
                  and Anthony Holborne became household names. The rich musical 
                  heritage of the golden era in English music history - which 
                  we now call the 'Elizabethan' and the 'Jacobean' eras - was 
                  brought to life.
 
 It can only be welcomed that these recordings are being reissued 
                  again. I am not sure how many of them will appear, but many 
                  deserve to be brought to the attention of music-lovers again. 
                  Surprisingly some of the composers Rooley and his colleagues 
                  paid attention to are still not frequently performed and recorded. 
                  This disc is devoted to one of the most important publications 
                  of instrumental music of the decades around 1600: the Pavans 
                  and Galliards of 1599 by Anthony Holborne. In his foreword to 
                  this reissue Anthony Rooley states that this recording "remains 
                  the only integral recording of this important publication". 
                  I find this rather puzzling: this disc is no "integral" 
                  recording. Holborne's collection contains 65 pieces, and here 
                  only 18 are selected. And since this recording was first released 
                  several other recordings with music by Holborne have appeared. 
                  As far as I know there is no recording of the complete collection.
 
 Holborne's collection of Pavans and Galliards is well worth 
                  being recorded in its entirety. It is very fine music, and typical 
                  of its time. As Anthony Rooley writes various pieces reflect 
                  no less the fashionable melancholy of the time than Dowland's 
                  more famous oeuvre. In this collection it is in particular the 
                  pavans which express this mood, as the titles indicate: The 
                  Image of Melancholy, Pavana Ploravit (the Latin verb "plorare" 
                  means "to weep"), and The Funerals. They are 
                  usually followed by a more light-hearted galliard. The pavan 
                  and the galliard, mostly written in pairs, were the most popular 
                  dance-forms in England in Holborne's time. In this recording 
                  they are always played in pairs, and the numbers between brackets 
                  show that the connection between them is by Holborne himself.
 
 The Consort of Musicke performs these pieces with two various 
                  ensembles. Firstly the most common at the time: the consort 
                  of viols. Secondly the consort of violins, which was mainly 
                  the product of Italian musicians entering the country, and bringing 
                  their violins with them. In addition, some pieces, among them 
                  the last four, which are of a more joyful nature, are played 
                  by The Guildhall Waits, a consort of cornetts and sackbuts, 
                  with an additional curtal - an instrument which was called 
                  dulcian in Italy. This combination of instruments was 
                  usually used for outdoor performances, and it is not hard to 
                  imagine that some of the more extraverted dances in the programme 
                  may have been performed in the open air.
 
 Since 1980 other recordings with pieces from this collection 
                  have been released. One of them is the one by Hespèrion XX, 
                  directed by Jordi Savall (Alia Vox, 2000). These performances 
                  are more extraverted, and the sound of the viols is richer and 
                  more colourful. But that recording is marred by questionable 
                  scoring, for example the frequent addition of harpsichord and 
                  even percussion. And taking into consideration that the present 
                  recording is 30 years old it sounds remarkably fresh. All the 
                  more reason to welcome it: the music is great and the interpretation 
                  has survived the passage of time pretty well.
 
 Fortunately the liner-notes of the original release have been 
                  reprinted. Unfortunately the names of the musicians have been 
                  omitted, although there was plenty of space in the booklet. 
                  It seems to me a matter of justice to list them here: the violins 
                  are played by Monica Huggett, Polly Waterfield, Trevor Jones, 
                  Mark Caudle and Richard Webb, the viols by Trevor Jones, Alison 
                  Crum, Oliver Hirsh, Gregor Anthony and Piet Stryckers, the virginals 
                  and the lute (sparingly added to some items) by Alan Wilson 
                  and Anthony Rooley respectively. The Guildhall Waits comprise 
                  Jeremy West and Jonathan Morgan (cornett), Andrew Watts (curtal) 
                  and Paul Niemann and Martin Pope (sackbut).
 
 I sincerely hope more treasures from the old 'Florilegium' archive 
                  are going to be reissued in the near future. This disc surely 
                  whets the appetite.
 
 Johan van Veen
     
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