CDs of English madrigals have been exceedingly thin on the ground
of late so it is with much pleasure that I welcome this disc.
It seems to me that one of the greatest periods in English musical
history (c.1580-1625) has been under-represented for a long
time. The Italian madrigalists are more fully reflected in the
catalogue and so they should be, but the English madrigalists
remain undervalued. As I write it is still not possible to hear
all of the two madrigal collections of John Wilbye, surely as
significant a figure as any Italian and one of the country’s
greatest composers. Even Byrd’s complete madrigals, perhaps
not his best pieces (but almost everything else is recorded)
are not available let alone collections by Weelkes, whose church
music is much recorded, Francis Pilkington, Giles Farnaby and
Thomas Bateson all very worthy figures generally only found
in anthology recordings. True we have Vautor, Gibbons, Tomkins,
some of Ravenscroft and most of Morley but there are many missing
names. John Ward has not really been missing from the catalogue
but, to amateur singers, his music may be quite unknown. This
is probably because in the easily available editions of madrigals
by Penguin (‘Upon a Bank’) or Oxford (‘Come
sable night’ and ‘Out of the Vale’) or in
Stainer and Bell’s worthy but dated ‘Invitation
to Madrigals’ (‘In Health and ease’) he is
hardly represented at all. Another reason is that some writers,
for example Joseph Kerman in his ground-breaking ‘The
Elizabethan Madrigal’ (American Musicological Society
1962), found that Ward “lacked imagination and especially
when coming from the work of his model John Wilbye one finds
his music sententious and always a little uninteresting”.
On the contrary Anthony Rooley and his dozen singers who first
sang though every published madrigal book, when they came to
Ward’s single book (despite its title) allotted almost
everything three stars even the four part ones which Edmund
Fellows (The English Madrigal Composers OUP 1921) says is the
“least interesting part of the book”. He obviously
hadn’t heard the searching chromaticisms of “How
long shall I with mournful music stain”, or indeed the
Fantasia III, something quite rare in Ward’s music which
generally aims more for the overall mood of the text rather
than its individual moments. Ward indulges in word-painting
in most madrigals. Especially good examples can be heard in
the great madrigal “If the deep sighs” in the section
“I hear the echoes wondering to and fro” and later
in “But as new showers, increase the rising flood”.
It was in 1980 that Rooley made his major excursion into the
madrigals. A BBC series gave us a chance to hear a short selection
from each of the 36 published and extant volumes by composers
some of whom were quite unknown. For the first time we heard
music by Henry Youll and Henry Lichfield. And at that time Rooley
gained a grant to record Ward’s entire Book for Decca.
For some reason, in 1985, he re-recorded some for Hyperion and
added an extra three madrigals that were only found in manuscript
(CDA66258). Perhaps after five years the singers had melded
and the sense of ensemble and blend is certainly more assured.
However the freshness found in these 1980 recordings was not
recaptured and the voices remain younger and brighter than on
Hyperion.
The Book is divided into three, four, five and six part settings
and it’s tempting to see the ones in three and to a certain
extent in four parts almost as apprentice pieces. These latter
were written over the previous decade or even longer, possibly
in the more frivolous days of ‘Good Queen Bess’.
With the five and six parters we reach works of far greater
proportion and power. They evince a composer grown in confidence
and ability. These latter pieces are some of the finest ever
composed and are typical of the darker and more uncertain world
of the Jacobeans, the age of Shakespeare’s great Tragedies
and later Romances. It seems apt that the last piece “Weep
forth your tears’ should be ‘In memory of Prince
Henry’.
Another way in which Ward’s book stands apart from many
others is in his choice of poets and texts. For instance we
start with two by Sir Philip Sydney; Michael Drayton appears
regularly. Only Richard Carleton, a composer-priest from Norfolk
of moderate ability, chose such fine poets. However most madrigal
texts are anonymous. Perhaps the composers themselves wrote
them; by the poetic standard of most that would not be too surprising.
Like Wilbye at Hengrave Hall in Suffolk (now only used for chic
weddings by the way), Ward was not just a household musician.
Working for Sir Henry Fanshawe in Essex he was also responsible
for administrative affairs so that his musical life was probably
confined to his spare moments. One wonders if the performance
of all secular music was mainly at night as both composers enjoy
texts which concern the evening and night-time: ‘Come
sable night’, ‘Retire my troubled soul’ or
Wilbye’s ‘Sweet Night draw on’ and ‘Softly,
o softly drop mine eyes’. But Ward also wrote some church
music (rarely heard) and several Fantasias for viols. They have
been recorded complete by the Rose Consort and by Phantasm.
Here however we have just four, nicely dividing up the book
and played with consummate beauty by the consort’s viol
players. They are really instrumental madrigals and sport some
some memorable ideas. The viols are also used to accompany the
first and last madrigals of the set, with two sopranos as in
‘apt for voices and viols’.
I have absolutely no doubt that the decision to record Ward
complete was a good one and can only hope that some of the other
Decca/Rooley enterprises, originally out on LP in the early
1980s will also emerge on CD. To hear such expressive singing
and to encounter Emma Kirkby and Evelyn Tubb as well as Joseph
Cornwell and Richard Wistreich in their prime and freshness
is unbeatable. Anthony Rooley’s own contribution cannot
be underestimated.
Gary Higginson
Track listing
My true love hath my heart (1stPart)
[1.54]
His heart his wound received (2ndPart)
[2.06]
O say, dear life [1.29]
In Health and ease am I [1.44]
Go, wailing accents [1.46]
Fly not so fast [1.45]
Fantasia XIV [3.20]
A satyr once did run away [1.34]
O my thoughts surcease [1.38]
Sweet Pity wake [2.12]
Love is a dainty [2.03]
Free from Love’s bonds [1.54]
How long shall I [2.35]
Fantasia IV [3.27]
Sweet Philomel (1stPart) [2.20]
Ye Sylvan nymphs (2nd part) [3.03]
Flora, fair nymph [2.12]
Phyllis the bright [2.22]
Hope of my heart [3.02]
Upon a bank of roses [2.43]
Fantasia III [3.37]
Retire, my troubled soul [3.37]
Oft have I tendered [4.30]
Out from the Vale [3.11]
O divine Love [3.44]
Fantasia VIII [3.25]
If the deep sighs [4.55]
There’s not a grove -second part [5.01]
Die not, fond man [3.25]
I have entreated [4.22]
Come, sable night [4.56]
Weep forth your tears [5.15]