This is Robin Blaze 
                  and Elizabeth Kenny’s fourth celebration of English song for 
                  Hyperion. In 1999 they recorded ‘English lute songs’ (CDA 67126, 
                  no longer available), in 2001 a Campion recital and in 2003 
                  Byrd consort songs. Now they have chosen to focus on Henry Lawes, 
                  the most significant English songwriter of the mid-17th 
                  century, with 433 known songs and his younger brother William, 
                  who produced around 150 but is better known for his innovative 
                  consort music.
                
              
This disc begins with 
                William Lawes’ most popular song, a setting of Herrick with whom 
                at one time he shared lodgings, Gather your rosebuds while 
                you may (tr. 1). It is in its version for three voices, here 
                soprano, counter-tenor and bass. The performance is stylishly 
                vivacious and direct in progress, bright in melody and tone, florid 
                in light ornamental garnishing. On the other hand it has a quieter 
                and ever so slightly lingering touch on occasion for reflection, 
                as in the first stanza’s final word, ‘dying’ (0:22). This all 
                fits the sentiments of the poem: enjoy your youth because time 
                will soon take it. You can hear the whole performance on the Hyperion 
                website (link). 
              
I compared the 1984 
                  Hilliard Ensemble recording (Harmonia Mundi 1951153). Though 
                  one second shorter in timing it has less drive and variation 
                  in projection than on Hyperion. This is largely because of the 
                  different vocal forces. The Hilliard use counter-tenor, tenor 
                  and bass, are more smiling and refined, with more emphasis on 
                  euphony. This is the only other currently available recording 
                  of any song on the Hyperion disc.
                
I also compared 
                  the solo version, which uses the more familiar, I’d guess original, 
                  opening ‘Gather ye rosebuds’ which Robin Blaze recorded 
                  on Hyperion CDA 67126. The text is also a little different in 
                  the third stanza. This performance is the freshest and most 
                  animated of all, with a timing of 1:19, and also has that telling 
                  slight lingering on ‘dying’. 
                
For Henry Lawes’ 
                  most popular song, The Angler’s Song: Man’s life is but vain, 
                  for ’tis subject to pain , a setting of Izaak Walton, you 
                  have to skip to track 25. It’s a racy party piece: cast aside 
                  all your cares ‘and angle and angle again’. This is a strophic 
                  song, that is the two stanzas have the same music, so pacy the 
                  more upbeat second stanza is repeated in full before the refrain 
                  repeat so you don’t feel the song has finished before it began. 
                  Blaze and Kenny give it plenty of spirit but I can imagine it 
                  as a drinking chorus with the tune treated to considerable licence.
                
Neither of these 
                  popular settings is really typical. Sweet, stay awhile; why 
                  do you rise? (tr. 4) is a better example of Henry Lawes’ 
                  style. This is a setting of John Donne, decking out in poetic 
                  fancy the request that is basically ‘lie with me a little longer’. 
                  It’s also a strophic song and its melodic line in essence is 
                  comparable to the forlorn beauty of the earlier Dowland, though 
                  not quite as smooth. As performed here by Blaze and Kenny it’s 
                  quite sensuous and intense. Lawes matches the artifice of the 
                  poetry by making Italianate ornamentation inherent in the musical 
                  setting. So at ‘rise’ (0:11) there’s a rising glissando and 
                  similar treatment in the second stanza of ‘desire’ (1:51) and 
                  ‘joys’ (2:21). The refrain repeats of both stanzas are invitations 
                  for further ornamentation. This is the spirit of Lawes’ time 
                  and is impressive to hear. But the genius of Dowland is that 
                  his melodies are memorable and invite you, if you have anything 
                  approaching a voice, to sing along. You’ll really appreciate 
                  Blaze’s fine artistry and what technique and experience is required 
                  should you attempt to sing along to Lawes.
                
If you happened 
                  to listen to BBC Radio 3’s Early Music Show on 7 January 2007 
                  you’d have heard the tenor Michael Slattery sing this song with 
                  Jakob Lindberg at the lute. Their faster tempo, 2:37 against 
                  Blaze and Kenny’s 3:01, makes for a more ardent, if also more 
                  breathy, interpretation, with the leaps, for example to ‘joys’ 
                  in the second stanza, more evocative. I liked Slattery’s rolling 
                  of the ‘r’ on ‘raise desire’ in the second stanza. But 
                  Blaze’s melisma on ‘rise’ in the first stanza is more stylish 
                  and also pristine. His closing ‘perish’ fades, like the poet’s 
                  joy, into nothingness. However, although Lawes was himself described 
                  as a counter-tenor, it’s good to be reminded these songs are 
                  suitable for any high voice.
                
A Tale out of 
                  Anacreon (tr. 2), the Greek poet, is a scena or dramatic 
                  monologue, so it’s through-composed, that is with continuously 
                  new music, softer in outline than, say, Monteverdi but with 
                  similar characteristics. It’s a visitation by a child whose 
                  true identity isn’t realized until it’s too late. A sultry theorbo 
                  introduction leads to the voice setting a nocturne but all quickens 
                  from 0:46 with the start of the action. It’s this variation 
                  of pace and reaction, stylishly accomplished by Blaze and Kenny, 
                  that makes the piece. In turn we get a simple plea (1:06), flood 
                  of emotion (1:12), a Britten-like response to beauty (1:38), 
                  graphic ornamentation to depict chafing hands (2:14) and dripping 
                  hair (2:33) before a pacy climax in which the notes fly forth.
                
Oh, that joy 
                  so soon should waste (tr. 3) is a setting of 
                  Ben Jonson, trying to prolong the experience of a kiss. You 
                  admire the way the music savours the aspects the poetry does 
                  and in the refrain the ornamentation becomes extravagant to 
                  match the exuberant fancy of the close.
                
From time to time 
                  on this CD comes the agreeable contrast of a lute solo. The 
                  first of these, Monsieur Saman his Coranto (tr. 5) Kenny 
                  makes a happy, easy-flowing idealization of the dance, as much 
                  nymph-like as courtly. And we stay in a kind of wonderland for 
                  Henry Lawes’ next song, Amarillis, by a spring (tr. 6), 
                  another setting of Herrick. The sleeping Amarillis is thought 
                  dead by a robin who tenderly makes funeral preparations then 
                  finds they’re unnecessary. Lawes’ music has a melting sensitivity, 
                  sometimes in the soulful contemplative aura of the opening of 
                  sections, as at the beginning of the piece and later, of the 
                  refrain, ‘Poor Robin-redbreast’ (1:51), sometimes expressed 
                  in shivers of vocal ornaments, for example a fluttering ‘fled’ 
                  (0:28), shimmering ‘flames’ (1:18) and eager ‘chirped’ (2:06). 
                  Our singer Robin also chirps vividly but he earlier forgets 
                  the poet’s robin is also male, incorrectly at 0:56 singing ‘she’ 
                  rather than ‘he saw her stir’.
                
Oh, let me still 
                  and silent lie (tr. 7) is the first solo song by William 
                  Lawes to feature. It’s a dramatic arioso in which the rejected 
                  lover argues against remaining involved. The swooning theorbo 
                  introduction descends to the depths where, for the first stanza, 
                  the singer proudly languishes, with a tellingly illustrative 
                  ornament on ‘sorrow’ (0:39) along the way. In the second stanza 
                  the temperature and intensity rises, recalling ‘her cruelty’ 
                  (1:22). Hotter still is ‘the dispatching rage’ (1:54) in the 
                  third stanza, after which there’s an absorbed gaze on ‘thy secret 
                  fires’ (2:11). The final stanza is more resigned but not before 
                  a poignant moment, a repeated ‘aye me’ (2:47) remembering past 
                  happiness when the possibility of love again is broached. As 
                  in Henry Lawes’ A Tale out of Anacreon the variation 
                  of pace is impressive, but here the cast is altogether more 
                  morose. 
                
Oh, my Clarissa, 
                  thou cruel fair (tr. 8) is a strophic song with a memorable 
                  tune which, Elizabeth Kenny’s scholarly booklet notes state, 
                  appeared as a popular Sarabande in Playford’s Court Ayres 
                  of 1655. The music’s firm directness rather makes a gallant 
                  pose of what is potentially a desperate plea for a positive 
                  response from one who has fallen in love. This artistic distancing 
                  is furthered by the use in this performance of interpolated 
                  ‘stanzas’ for instruments alone after the second and fourth 
                  sung stanzas, on the first occasion emphasising the artistry 
                  in the expression of the sentiment and delivery of the tune, 
                  on the second providing a more reflective interlude. 
                
With regard to vocal 
                  expression, the tune accommodates, and gets from Blaze, a great 
                  variety of presentation. The first stanza refrain features more 
                  skipping ornamentation in its repeat (0:25). The second stanza 
                  has exuberant ornamentation, for instance on ‘lightning’ (0:51) 
                  and especially in the refrain repeat on ‘feel’ (1:13). However, 
                  in the third stanza the refrain repeat is plainer, a straighter, 
                  though varied, melodic line and the same practice, again with 
                  melodic variation, serves the fourth stanza. In the fifth stanza 
                  more ornamentation is applied again, notes inégales, 
                  that is a stylized dotted rhythm, the concentration required 
                  for this being such that Blaze fluffs his words in the refrain 
                  repeat, where ‘bowers’ comes out as ‘hours’ (4:06). In the sixth 
                  and final stanza the delivery has some flourishes but is generally 
                  more even again, making for a strong conclusion. 
                
From the heav’ns 
                  now I fly (tr. 9) by Henry Lawes is a setting of Milton 
                  from the masque Comus. As Kenny’s note points out “He 
                  rearranged lines which Milton had intended for the end of the 
                  piece to give himself a glamorous and dramatic entrance.” It’s 
                  certainly that, as performed by Blaze and Kenny. The poetry 
                  paints an extravagant idyllic picture of the heavens. The music 
                  varies between the exuberant confidence of radiant light and 
                  the seductive ease of luscious plenty. This means that there 
                  are opportunities which Blaze takes to show both golden tone 
                  and vivacious line. Notable are the little peal with which the 
                  three daughters of Hesperus ‘sing’ (1:01) and the drawn-out 
                  ornament on ‘soft’ (1:49) which almost counts the many cherubs 
                  described. Yes, it’s over the top, but so is the poetry. And 
                  the easeful luxury side of it continues in the Corant from 
                  William Lawes’ Royall Consort in an arrangement for lute, theorbo 
                  and harp (tr. 10) which glides along gracefully, almost seamless.
                
Sweet Echo, sweetest 
                  nymph that liv’st unseen (tr. 11) is another Henry Lawes 
                  song from Comus, this time to anonymous words and sung 
                  by the soprano Rebecca Outram because a soprano sang it originally. 
                  It’s good to have the contrast of more rarefied, thinner, drier 
                  tone than Blaze’s counter-tenor and thereby a more intimate 
                  manner of performance which is appropriate to this portrait 
                  of the reclusive Echo. Appreciable here is the gentle but effective 
                  broadening out of line at ‘her sad song mourneth well’ (0:48) 
                  and the growingly intense appeal to Echo.
                
William Lawes’ Country 
                  Dance (tr. 12) is a solo version from Playford’s Courtly 
                  Masquing Ayres of 1662 of the Morris in his D major consort. 
                  It’s a playful, sunny tune and Kenny deftly negotiates the intricacies 
                  of its lute clothing.
                
Henry Lawes’ Oh 
                  sweet woods, the delight of solitariness (tr. 13), a setting 
                  of Sidney, continues the Sweet Echo theme in praise of 
                  the reclusive life, intensely projected by Blaze with particularly 
                  vehement rejection at ‘from love’s delight retired’ (0:38). 
                  Also memorably affecting is the high tessitura opening of the 
                  refrain ‘To birds, to trees, to earth’ (1:25).
                
Now comes a novelty: 
                  a 17th century Anna Russell. Tavola: In quell 
                  gelata core una voce (tr. 14) is Henry Lawes setting part 
                  of the contents list of Antonio Cifra’s Scherzi ed Arie 
                  of 1614 to show he can be as expressive as the Italians. The 
                  opening is bright and chipper, all display and dazzle. At 0:46 
                  you can just hear a sparrow chirping in the background, perhaps 
                  attracted by it. Then from ‘O sempre’ (0:49) plunging into melancholy, 
                  heatedly reliving scorn (1:03) and ‘woe is me’ (1:19). But the 
                  final section, ‘Cosi mia vita’ (1:37) takes us to soft, beguiling 
                  love-song. So the satire ends with a kind of affection.
                
              
Loves Sweet Repose: 
                Amidst the myrtles as I walk (tr. 15) is a strophic song setting 
                of Herrick, a poetic dialogue between Love and the forsaken lover 
                which provides plenty of opportunity for fond recollection but 
                at the end soberly shuts the door on any permanence. The melody 
                is unusually strong for Henry Lawes with two bright, high tessitura 
                opening lines, a characteristically contrasted gaunter, dusky 
                third one before a resolving fourth. This performance begins with 
                three instrumental ‘stanzas’ for theorbo, lute and harp, the first 
                two working out the tune, the third presenting it fully formed 
                with its refrain repeat. There’s another instrumental ‘stanza’ 
                after the third sung stanza and a further one after the final 
                sung stanza in which the theme fragments, even more than at the 
                beginning, thus illustrating the moral of impermanence. Blaze’s 
                vocal performance is a model of the tasteful gradual application 
                of ornamentation, for example a suitable display at ‘enameled 
                fancy’ (2:28), a ‘curious eye’ (2:36) which tremors vividly 
                and ‘streams’ (2:59) with an inbuilt realistic current. You can 
                hear this entire song on the Hyperion website (link). 
              
No Reprieve: 
                  Now, now Lucasia, now make haste (tr. 16) is a strophic 
                  song with a recurring refrain. A lover who can take no more 
                  rejection hovers on the edge of death. It’s cumulatively effective 
                  because of the repetition of the music yet variation in its 
                  performance, the mounting extravagance of the dying refrain 
                  Blaze creates, a song clearly enjoyable to sing and to listen 
                  to. The first stanza is presented plainly enough in the verse 
                  but the refrain is immediately more expansive. The second stanza 
                  is more urgent. The third stanza, ‘Look in my wound’ (1:40) 
                  has become expansive in tempo and ornamentation. The tempo picks 
                  up again for the fourth stanza and there’s a particularly enjoyable 
                  fanfare made of ‘shout’ (2:56) and flourish for the final refrain’s 
                  ‘die’ (3:24) before the voice just fades away.
                
Cuthbert Hely, Kenny’s 
                  note tells us, was an obscure lute teacher who wrote “tortured 
                  interior music”. His Fantasia (tr. 17) has a brooding low register 
                  start, an environment from which the melody rises yet remains 
                  of a predominantly sad, reflective cast. At the same time, however, 
                  it is spurred on, somewhat erratically, by a nervous energy. 
                  By way of an unintended but more natural contrast, some birdsong 
                  can be heard in the background at the beginning and end of the 
                  piece.
                
Slide soft, you 
                  silver floods (tr. 18) is a strophic song of stark, angular 
                  line of wide compass and contrast of upper and lower register, 
                  evoking nature to overturn it because ‘I weeping bid my love 
                  farewell’. The musical setting catches the poem’s mounting violence. 
                  Blaze gives an achingly expressive performance with intelligent 
                  variation of pace and degree of demonstrative ornamentation 
                  and is, as ever, well supported by Kenny. Noteworthy is the 
                  catch, almost stammer in the voice at ‘silence on each 
                  dale’ (0:35) which holds your attention. Similarly ‘heavy murmurs’ 
                  (1:48) are finely evoked by a guttural, low-lying theorbo. Next 
                  Cuthbert Hely features again, this time with a Saraband (tr. 
                  19) of blithe outlook yet still a quietly musing nature in its 
                  emphasis on internal repetitions and cross references.
                
When shall I 
                  see my captive heart? (tr. 20) is an unusual strophic setting 
                  in that each of the 2 stanzas consists of 2 sets of 4 lines, 
                  both of which are repeated, so the effect is of a double refrain. 
                  The structure suits this philosophic piece whose message is 
                  hope might be wishful thinking but it’s also a remedy. Blaze 
                  begins in plain presentation of smilingly reflective fashion, 
                  the first repeat (0:29) with trippingly playful ornamentation 
                  added. The second repeat (1:16) is similarly treated, with a 
                  slight increase in elaboration. The second stanza opening (1:43) 
                  is more floridly presented, its first repeat still more so. 
                  In the second part there’s profuse display at ‘banish all 
                  despair’ (2:39), but thereafter for the repeat a sensitive degree 
                  of toning down with more gentle appoggiaturas than shakes. 
                
There’s more evidence 
                  now of William Lawes’ prowess at instrumental music in 3 sunny, 
                  benign, untroubled lute duets. The Alman (tr. 21) is intimate 
                  and graceful in its progress, the two lutes complementing each 
                  other in gently rippling manner. The Corant (tr. 22) is a little 
                  more forthright, as if with something of a wish to go places. 
                  Another Corant (tr. 24) is brighter, more outgoing in melody 
                  yet more content in itself. 
                
In the mean time, 
                  a second change of voice with William Lawes’ A Dreame: I 
                  laid me down upon a pillow soft (tr. 23) delivered 
                  by the warm, rich bass of Robert Macdonald. A different sort 
                  of full tone from Blaze’s, not as dramatic in effect nor as 
                  agile in ornamentation, though this dream the loved one agrees 
                  to advances only for the lover wake up, doesn’t require high 
                  passion. He’s just as effective in varying pace and the song’s 
                  fine combination of reflection and action is as vivid as any 
                  dream in both voice and theorbo.
                
A total change of 
                  mood for the closing two items shows both brothers in serious 
                  vein. First William’s When man for sin thy judgment feels 
                  (tr. 26) is a passionate strophic song pleading for spiritual 
                  strength after first stripping away all artifice, ‘Man is all 
                  vanity’ (1:54) illustrated by profuse ornamentation. What haunts 
                  you is the refrain and the extreme leap from ‘strength’ (2:24) 
                  virtually in the bass register to ‘before I die’ in coloratura 
                  orbit. The second stanza presentation (3:00) is somewhat plainer 
                  and humbler as befits the text but the refrain has the same 
                  stark melodic contour. This performance begins with an instrumental 
                  ‘stanza’ on theorbo which suggests a more reflective piece so 
                  the vocalization comes as even more of a surprise. 
                
Finally Henry’s 
                  A Pastoral Elegie to the memory of my deare Brother: Cease 
                  you jolly shepherds (tr. 27) in which three voices evoke 
                  nature’s variety and profusion, then natural phenomena which 
                  William could calm before the recognition he has gone for ever, 
                  killed on active service for the King at the siege of Chester 
                  in 1645. It is generally in strict, close imitation with the 
                  harmony becoming more exotic at ‘with saddest notes’ 
                  (0:51) through to a poised eliding, a natural smoothing out, 
                  into ‘to mourn’ (1:09). A beaming bass ‘calme’ in upper register 
                  (2:14) is offset by a snappily dotted rhythm descent by the 
                  counter-tenor for ‘the fury of the mind’. For ‘hid from us’ 
                  (2:46) a descent to basso profundo to usher in the sequence 
                  of tragic descending phrases ‘and never must returne’ (2:52) 
                  including a very expressive final sob and slide in the counter-tenor 
                  (3:20) before a classic resolution in the soprano (3:23). One 
                  can only hope creating such an artistic closure assisted personal 
                  acceptance.
                
What struck me hearing 
                  these songs together is that the Lawes brothers belonged to 
                  an age of rhetoric, glancing at rather than embracing and probing 
                  profound feelings like Dowland did earlier. This was an age 
                  more worldly and materialistic but without the assurance we 
                  associate with the later Restoration and Purcell. What they 
                  were in tune with was the poetry of the time, in particular 
                  its inner pulse and progression as well as its attitudes. Melody 
                  in itself tended not to be so dominant, so you don’t find yourself 
                  remembering the tunes and the sentiments as you do with Dowland 
                  and Purcell. What this disc unquestionably does is bring to 
                  life English song in the early-mid 17th century because 
                  it requires you to come to terms with its distinctive manner 
                  and style of performance. In this the skill and, more importantly, 
                  the variation in ornamentation brought to bear by Blaze and 
                  Kenny’s are exemplary.
                
              
Michael Greenhalgh