Blow tends to be one of those composers
                people know about rather than actually know. For lovers of Purcell,
                he was the great composer’s
                    master who stood aside to let his star pupil succeed him
                    as organist of Westminster Abbey, and then had the sorry
                    task of returning to the job after the younger man’s early
                    death. His short opera “Venus and Adonis” has been tried
                    as a companion for “Dido and Aeneas”; as early as 1954 a
                    recording under Anthony Lewis showed it had plenty to offer,
                    especially if comparisons of that kind didn’t have
                    to be made. Not many of his anthems remain in regular church
                    use, since with their florid solos and frequent string “symphonies” – sometimes
                    extended movements in their own right – they inevitably evoke
                    a period when services were long and leisurely and given
                    over to entertainment as much as to spiritual betterment.
                    This stricture assuredly does not apply to the succinct and
                    powerful “God is our hope and strength” which would still
                    be an inspiring aid to worship. “Turn thou unto me, O Lord” would
                    also make a welcome addition to the service where a good
                    soprano soloist is available.
                     
                 
                
                 
                By and large, then, these anthems stand or fall today by their ability
                    to make interesting concert works or recorded programmes.
                    There are around a hundred, so mathematics suggests that
                    about another seven double albums would be needed to finish
                    the job. I wonder if anyone ever will.
                                          
                     
                    The first item, “God spake sometime in visions”, leaves one feeling
                    that someone ought to. It was written for the coronation
                    of James II – the English and German booklet notes claim
                    James I, while it’s right in the French version. Not only
                    is this piece rich in contrasts, it has an overall grandeur
                    which we can now see was brought into British music by Blow,
                    taken up by Handel till it became the “English style”, then
                    rather lost sight of until revived by Parry in the later
                    19th century. Certainly, whatever the austere
                    beauty of the great Elizabethan composers, I can’t think
                    of any earlier composer who could produce this sort of extended
                    loftiness. Incidentally, since Blow was both master and successor
                    to Purcell, you should bear in mind that the earliest surviving
                    pieces by the latter date from 1680. Looking at the dates
                    above, therefore, you will see that about nine of the pieces
                    here predate any possible Purcellian influence. 
                                          
                     
                    For this piece the Parley of Instruments, which elsewhere
                    plays one-to-a-part, is augmented to 17; Peter Holman’s notes tell us that it
                    was played by the King’s complete “24 violins”. This may
                    sound confusing to the modern reader, since today 24 violins
                    would suggest violas and cellos and basses in proportion,
                    and so a string orchestra of around 50; or else literally
                    24 violins and just that. But these were days when the violin
                    family was taking over from the fatter-bellied viols and,
                    just as a chest of viols has the whole range from the higher
                    to the lower instruments, so “24 violins” meant 24 instruments
                    of the violin family, 24 strings in modern parlance.
                                          
                     
                    In a way, it is even more remarkable that Blow achieves this
                    same sense of scale on the shorter canvas of the already-mentioned “God
                    is our hope and strength”, which has only a continuo accompaniment.
                                          
                     
                    A completely different side of Blow – almost another composer – emerges
                    in the second piece where the influence would seem to be
                    the Italian cantata. The three soloists entwine their intense,
                    highly expressive lines in a work probably intended for private
                    devotion rather than public performance. Yet, while this
                    is the only anthem here where the choir does not sing at
                    all, for most of their length the other penitential pieces
                    such as “O Lord, I have sinned” and “Lord, thou hast searched
                    me” proceed in a similar manner, with fairly brief choral
                    interventions, sometimes only at the end. Blow was an inveterate
                    recycler of his works, so perhaps private devotional pieces
                    were transformed into anthems at a later date. 
                                          
                     
                    The introspective works invariably draw an impressive response
                    from Blow; I have already alluded to “Turn thee unto me, O Lord”.
                    This alternates solo and choral verses and the unidentified
                    boy soprano holds his line confidently against often extreme
                    chromatic harmonies.  
                     
                    The third piece, “The Lord is my shepherd” introduces an
                    aspect of Blow which is likely to prove more perplexing to
                    modern ears.
                    This is a tendency to trundle along pleasantly in a lolloping
                    three-time, almost a sort of 17th century waltz,
                    which Charles II apparently favoured because he could beat
                    time to it. Royal taste would appear, then, to have induced
                    a response to such a visionary text as “I beheld, and lo!
                    A great multitude” bordering on the frivolous. The multitude
                    sounds as if it had donned smocks and is dancing round the
                    maypole. Did Blow wish simply to illustrate the happiness
                    of the afterlife? Could the performance itself have inculcated
                    a more visionary character to the music? Possibly, but I
                    daresay such an attempt would be anachronistic and merely
                    weigh the music down by searching for something that is just
                    not there. Hill and Holman certainly do not sell Blow short
                    in his lofty or intimate moods, so I imagine they’ve made
                    the right decision here, too. All the same, I should be interested
                    to hear what some of the groups who have been amazing our
                    ears on Opus 111’s Vivaldi series might make of Blow.
                                          
                     
                    I hope I have made it plain that there is some very fine
                    music here, very well presented – that goes for the booklet
                    notes as well as the performances themselves. Perhaps the
                    lolloping
                    three-time sections will appeal to others more than they
                    did to me.
                                          
                     
                    I referred above to an “unidentified soloist”. In fact, the
                  soloists are all listed – some are taken from the choir, others
                  are professionals from outside. I didn’t add the information
                    to the header because a) we are not told who sings what and
                    b) there are two lists. One is on the back of the booklet,
                    the other is inside the jewel case, and there are considerable
                    differences between them. According to the former, for instance,
                    Stephen Varcoe is among the soloists; according to the latter
                    he is not. I seem to recognize him as the first soloist in “O
                    Lord thou hast searched me out”. I wonder if this could be
                    clarified?
                  (see footnote - Ed.)                    
                   
                  Incidentally, “The Lord is my shepherd” provided the theme for Bliss’s “Meditations
                    on a theme by John Blow” and I concluded my listening by
                    reminding myself of the old Lyrita LP of this. Now that Lyrita
                    are in business again, I hope this very fine disc – coupled
                    with “Music for Strings” – will be remembered. It is also
                    the sole documentation, as far as I know, of Hugo Rignold’s
                    tenure at Birmingham and strongly suggests it was not always
                    the provincial desert which admirers of maestros Frémaux
                    and Rattle have painted it.
                                          
                     
                    Christopher Howell
                     
                     
                     
                     
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              Footnote 
                Hyperion have informed us: 
               
              
                The disparity between the back cover of the booklet, inside of
                      the jewel              case and back of jewel case is as follows:
                   
                   
                  The back cover of the booklet names all soloists regardless
                      of their
                      provenance.              
                   
                   
                  The inside of the jewel case lists the members of the Cathedral
                      choir and
                      where they are soloists indicates the same with a star.                
                   
                   
                  The back of the jewel case states that the singers comprise
                      Winchester Cathedral Choir and adds that other soloists join
                      them, hence "Winchester Cathedral Choir with..."
                   
                   
                  The reason Stephen Varcoe is not listed on the inside of the
                      jewel case is 
                      because he is not a member of the Cathedral choir (ditto Robin
                      Blaze, Joseph
                    Cornwell, Stephen Alder).
                   
                   
                  As for the assignation per track of soloists, this information
                      is not always                helpful as it can involve putting
                      all bar one name of the soloists on a disc
                      against a given track. In this instance the decision was taken
                      in 1995 not
                      to include that level of detail and the re-issue follows this
                    lead.
                       
                    
               
             
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