The causes of the Reformation in England are many and
complex and sometimes misunderstood. What
can be grasped is that
the music of the pre-reformed church continued to feed into the polyphony
of the period after 1540. John Baldwin collected and copied about 170 works
between 1575 and 1581 whilst he was a lay clerk in Windsor. He later became
a singer at the Chapel Royal and clearly knew Byrd. He died four hundred years
ago in 1615. Some of these pieces lie in tantalising fragments but in general
the collection is well preserved.
His manuscript is a significant treasure as it contains several works not
in any other source. These include the extraordinary
Media Vita
of Sheppard and Tallis’s (troped)
Nunc Dimittis.
Indeed much of Sheppard would be lost to us, as would some of the work of
Robert Parsons, a considerable talent cut short by a drowning accident, if
it were not for the work of John Baldwin.
This disc has been called Volume 1 and it has the theme of death and mortality.
This is exhibited through texts like those found in the Requiem Mass (Parsons'
Libera me) and various penitential psalms like
Quemadmodum
by Taverner.
You will also note that Sheppard, Parsons and Taverner were all composing
in either the pre-Reformation or in its immediate more favourable (to Catholics
anyway) aftermath in the reign of Queen Mary. Even so Byrd, Tallis and Mundy
regularly set texts in Latin and were allowed to continue to do so through
the reign of Elizabeth I.
Unfortunately the tenor part-book is lost but as in most cases the line tends
to be the plainchant melody reconstruction is quite feasible.
Media
Vita is one such reconstructed work.
Two settings of
Sive vigilem are included (Whether I am awake
or asleep,/…. I always hear the sound of the trumpet”) referring
to judgement day. One is by a rare figure Dericke Gerarde who was Flemish
and who worked in England. It is an expansive and expressive setting whereas
that by Mundy is more imitative and focused. It was also recorded by The Sixteen
(Hyperion CDA 66319) on a CD devoted to Mundy’s Latin and English sacred
works. You can follow the
superius line by looking at page 15 in
the booklet which gives you some idea of Baldwin’s clear handwriting
and the care he generally took over text underlay.
Baldwin acknowledged that Byrd ‘Whose greater skill and knowledge dothe
excelle all at this time” but it's fascinating how Byrd compares
with these other figures. The wonderful work of Robert Parsons, a gentleman
of the Chapel Royal himself,
Peccantem me qotidie
quotes, in the words ‘Miserere mei deus’, the simple rising and
falling semi-tonal figure from Josquin’s justifiably famous setting
of the
Miserere (Psalm 50). It follows this “with an impassioned
musical outburst to highlight the final words of the text ‘et salve
me’ (save me) richly scored for six voices”. I quote here from
Owen Rees’s excellent booklet notes. The three motets by Parsons are
quite a highlight as also is the wonderfully glowing
Media Vita
–“In the Midst of Life we are in death/Whom can we seek as our
helper except you”. I have a recording of this work by The Tallis Scholars
on Gimell (CDGIM016) but for me this performance stands out. Indeed the sound
made by Contrapunctus, the freshness, the balance and clarity of text and
the understanding of the text demonstrated by detailed expressive singing,
is outstanding. It is here most beautifully captured in the Oxford church,
which I think is in Summertown.
Owen Rees, in 1993, made a mark on my listening with a disc of Portuguese
Polyphony on Herald HAVPCD 155 and went on to record more of this repertoire.
If you know that disc you will know what he can achieve. So this is a fine
CD and I wait impatiently for its follow-up.
Gary HigginsonPrevious review:
Brian Wilson