Adoramus Te - Motets, songs and
consort music
Track listing below review
Clare Wilkinson (mezzo)*
Rose Consort of Viols (Ibi Aziz, John Bryan, Alison Crum, Andrew Kerr, Roy Marks, Peter Wendland)
rec. 19 - 21 November 2012, Forde Abbey, Dorset, UK. DDD
DEUX-ELLES DXL1155 [72:41]
This disc brings together two composers who were contemporaries,
although of different generations: Philips was probably a pupil of Byrd
for some time. The main thing they had in common was that they were
both staunch Catholics at a time when England was dominated by Protestantism.
They dealt with this situation differently. Byrd spent his entire life
in his home country, whereas Philips moved to the continent. He first
spent some years in Rome, and then worked in the southern Netherlands
which were under Spanish rule. His years in Rome had considerable influence
on his style of composing. There are strong traces of the Italian style
of his time, for instance that of Luca Marenzio who was one of the leading
composers of madrigals.
Byrd also wrote secular music, but no madrigals and certainly nothing
on Italian texts. It was especially the genre of the consort song which
is well represented in his oeuvre. This disc includes several specimens.
Some were written for a specific occasion, such as Wretched Albinus
which is connected to the death of the Earl of Essex. It is one of the
pieces in which Byrd's religious and political position shines
through. The interesting thing about this disc is that several of Byrd's
motets are performed here with one voice and a consort of viols. This
practice was not uncommon at the time and reflects the domestic use
of religious music. It could well be closer to the way Byrd's
religious music was performed in his own time than modern interpretations
by, for instance, cathedral choirs. Byrd's sacred works were
mostly performed in secret Catholic services, probably rather small
venues, and possibly by only a few singers. There is also evidence for
such performances in Byrd's oeuvre: in Adoramus te, Christe
only one of the parts has a text. Atollite portas seems a little
less suitable to this approach as it mainly consists of duets, meaning
that here the voice is paired to an instrument.
Philips is represented with some of his best instrumental pieces. The
Pavana which opens the programme was included in the Fitzwilliam
Virginal Book and called "the first that Philips made".
It is transcribed for viol consort here by Andrew Kerr following many
examples from the composer's own time. It was very common to
combine a pavan and a galliard; that is also the case here, but the
galliard is thematically not related to the pavan. That is different
with the Pavana & Galiarda Dolorosa which is remarkable
for its harmonic progressions. One of the most popular forms of consort
music was the fantasia, mostly called fancy. It seems that
Philips never composed any fantasias. The two recorded here are in fact
transcriptions of sections from an Italian madrigal. That comes to the
fore in their lively rhythms. The programme includes two trios
which are taken from a treatise published in Germany in 1615. They were
included in that book to illustrate the then common theories about the
characters of the different modes. Here they are performed as introductions
to the respective motets which follow them. These bear the traces of
the Italian influence in his oeuvre and include some madrigalisms, but
they are more modest in this respect than some other motets he has written.
One interesting aspect of these performances is the use of a historical
pronunciation. I use the indefinite article on purpose, because there
was no single pronunciation at the time. I have heard recordings where
it was different in some respects. Here it is not restricted to the
pieces in English, but also to the Latin items. The opening of Haec
dicit Dominus sounds very different from what we are used to. One
could argue that this is probably less appropriate in Philips'
motets as they were published in Antwerp. However, there is evidence
that his music was performed back home, and that could justify this
practice. Obviously the use of historical pronunciation is especially
important in songs where words are supposed to rhyme and where they
only do in historical pronunciation. However, it seems to me that it
is of general importance as I can't see any reason why one should
bother about historical instruments and ways of playing and singing
and at the same time ignore the way words were pronounced.
This is just one aspect which makes this disc a real asset. The second
is the different way motets are performed. We know most of them pretty
well in recordings by choirs and vocal ensembles, but here we hear them
differently. It not only sheds light on a lesser-known aspect of the
performance practice of the decades around 1600, but also makes us listen
to these works anew. The interpretations are pretty much ideal. Clare
Wilkinson has the perfect voice for this repertoire. She sings without
vibrato, in an almost instrumental way, and her voice blends perfectly
with the viols. In this music the singer is not so much a soloist but
rather one instrument in the ensemble, and that is exactly how Ms Wilkinson
sings. The Rose Consort of Viols plays excellently; the two pairs of
pavans and galliards are just two fine examples of their art.
All things considered, this disc deserves special attention and that
justifies it to be named Recording of the Month.
Johan van Veen
www.musica-dei-donum.org
twitter.com/johanvanveen
Track listing
Peter PHILIPS (c1560-1628)
Pavana & Galliardo (arr. Andrew Kerr) [3:35]
William BYRD (c1540-1623)
Ah silly soul* [3:53]
Haec dicit Dominus* [4:46]
Peter PHILIPS
Passamezzo Pavan [6:30]
Viae Sion lugent* [2:59]
Trio in the 3rd mode [2:30]
Ego sum panis/Et panis quem* [4:15]
William BYRD
Attollite portas* [4:07]
Constant Penelope* [2:37]
How vain the toils* [2:59]
Peter PHILIPS
Fantazia No. 1 a 6 [2:42]
Fantazia No. 2 a 6 [2:32]
William BYRD
Domine secundum actum meum* [6:51]
Peter PHILIPS
Pavana & Galiarda Dolorosa [6:22]
William BYRD
Wretched Albinus* [2:59]
With lilies white* [5:43]
Adoramus te, Christe* [1:42]
Peter PHILIPS
Trio in the 1st mode [3:00]
Pater noster* [3:02]