Orlando Gibbons was
a composer of high reputation, as is
shown by the jobs which were given to
him. Having been a chorister at King's
College in Cambridge he was mainly active
as a keyboard player. From 1603 until
his death in 1625 he acted as musician
in the Chapel Royal. In 1617 he became
one of the 17 musicians in the private
chapel of Charles, Prince of Wales.
And in 1619 he was appointed virginalist
in the royal privy chamber. In 1625
his death after a short illness was
widely mourned, in particular in Court
circles.
Not only as a player
but also as a composer he was mostly
known for his keyboard music. Some of
his pieces were published in collections
with compositions by renowned masters
of the keyboard, like Byrd and Bull.
He also composed sacred
and secular vocal music. In particular
in the sacred works he showed great
mastery of polyphony and was keen to
express the words in the music.
His music for consort
is far less known. None of this was
published during his lifetime. And although
some of the pieces on this disc have
been recorded before this is the first
recording which is entirely devoted
to Gibbons' consort music.
Laurence Dreyfus, the
leader of Phantasm, has the unique ability
to communicate his enthusiasm for the
music he performs. His liner notes show
his passionate belief in the consort
music of Orlando Gibbons. He tries to
convince the listener that the six Fantasias
which open this disc are masterpieces,
and he succeeds. Like a tourist guide
he points to the things the listener
should pay attention to, like the rhythmic
irregularities of the Fantasia V, or
the melancholic character of the opening
passages of Fantasias III and VI. And
by persuading his audience that unusual
things are happening, they discover
things he doesn't mention, like the
extraordinary harmonic development in
Fantasia V.
There are more pieces
here which deserve to be considered
masterpieces. One of them is the second
setting of In Nomine. It creates the
picture of a river, quietly streaming
at its source, than gradually becoming
stronger and wilder, and finally coming
to rest in the sea.
Apart from the pieces
Gibbons composed for viol consort Phantasm
has also recorded keyboard music, a
madrigal and two anthems. In the case
of the madrigal 'The Silver Swan' Laurence
Dreyfus refers to the title of the collection
it comes from (Madrigals and Motets,
1612) which says they are "apt for voices
or viols". It works very well in a performance
with viols, and this short piece is
another masterwork. The anthems also
come across quite well, in particular
the reflective 'O Lord, in thy wrath
rebuke me not'. By the way, it had been
a good idea to print the texts of the
vocal items in the booklet.
The first keyboard
work, 'Peascod Time', which is a musical
picture of a hunt, doesn't work for
me. The 'running' melodic lines, with
their long sequences of short notes,
don't sound very natural on viols. But
the second item, 'Pavan Lord Salisbury',
with its many dissonances, gets a moving
performance here.
The programme ends
on a lighter note, with a pavan and
galliard, and variations on the song
'Go from my window'.
The virtue of this
brilliant recording by Phantasm is that
it points out Gibbons's consort music
belongs to the best of its kind. Its
playing is a vivid and eloquent underpinning
of the passionate plea of its leader
in the booklet.
Johan van Veen