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William BYRD (c.1540-1623)
The Great Service (ed. James Wrightson) [30:16]
Second Preces and Psalms: Psalm XXIV. ‘Lift Up Your Heads’ [5:06]
First Preces [1:15]
Psalm XLVII. ‘O Clap Your Hands’ [3:13]
The Great Service [13:59]
Preces and Responses [5:38]
O Lord, make thy servant Elizabeth [2:43]
Sing joyfully [2:46]
Richard Farnes (organ)
Choir of King’s College Cambridge/Stephen Cleobury
rec. 13-14 December 1985, King's College Chapel, Cambridge
First released as CDC747771-2. Texts not included.
WARNER CLASSICS 9029532656 [64:56]

Released as an inexpensive download at the end of October 2019, to commemorate Stephen Cleobury’s retirement as director of King’s College Choir, this now joins the college’s own label’s releases of Evensong 2019 (KGS0038 – review) and the 2018 Lessons and Carols (KGS0036: Recommended – review) as his epitaph. It comes without a booklet, but the texts of the Book of Common Prayer Mattins and Evensong are not hard to come by, and the price is certainly attractive (target price for lossless sound £6, for mp3 £4). NB: the purchase links are to downloads.

The original release, in June 1987, coincided with Gimell’s of The Tallis Scholars in the Great Service and Anthems (CDGIM011, now most economically obtained on 2-for-1 Tallis Scholars sing William Byrd, CDGIM208). Much as I love the Scholars’ Tallis and certainly would not wish to be without their recording – Tallis Scholars at 30 – it’s with a Hyperion recording of The Great Service from Westminster Abbey that this King’s recording should be compared: both have boys’ voices on the top line, which Byrd would have expected.

Though we can’t be sure in the case of his Latin music, which had to be sung hugger-mugger, with whatever singers could be obtained at his Essex hide-out, boys would have been de rigueur in Elizabeth’s Chapel Royal, where the music was almost certainly sung. We can be less sure of the date; the music was not published in Byrd’s lifetime, so anything from the 1580s to the 1610s has been postulated. Nor is it possible to be dogmatic about the use of the organ in this music: King’s and Westminster employ it, The Tallis Scholars don’t. In any case, Richard Farnes’ organ is not intrusive on the Cleobury recording. Cornets and sackbuts on a Chandos recording definitely are intrusive and I liked this rather less than my colleague, despite its attempt to place the music in liturgical context in the Chapel Royal (CHAN0789 – review DL Roundup May 2012/2).

Em Marshall thought the Westminster Abbey recording, directed by James O’Donnell, second only to the King’s (CDA67533 – review). It’s a very close call for me, even ignoring some fine recordings by mixed choirs, including another Hyperion album from the Cardinall’s Musick (CDA67937 – DL Roundup 2012/19) and a recent Linn release from the Odyssean Ensemble (CKD608 – Spring 2019/1).

There are not many other recordings with boys’ voices that merit consideration, but King’s earlier (1960) offering from the days of David Willcocks is more than a historical curiosity (evening canticles: Alto ALC1182, budget price, with Gibbons, or Decca 4789524, with 5-part Mass, download only, no booklet). An older recording of the evening canticles, from Jesus College, Cambridge, the provenance of which I am uncertain of, is surprisingly good. It comes as part of a very inexpensive four-hour collection entitled The Rise of English Music, which also includes the same Byrd canticles from Hereford Cathedral, also worth hearing. With lots of Byrd, Tallis, Morley and Gibbons, this would make a very good starter for anyone just becoming interested in the music of this period. The Musical Concepts download from Qobuz costs £6.39. They also offer a similar, shorter (2-hour) collection The Rise of English Polyphony.

If you have the Tallis Scholars’ recording in one of its Gimell manifestations – well worth obtaining for the recordings of the three Masses on CD1 – you may wish to consider either the Westminster (Hyperion) or the reissued King’s/Cleobury recording as an example of a different way with Byrd’s music. If you don’t have a recording of the Great Service – music in its own kind as valuable as his better-known Latin works – my first recommendation now becomes the download of the Cleobury. If you are not yet ‘into’ downloading, screw your courage to the sticking place and go for this reissue. And don’t forget that once you’ve mastered downloading, both of the Hyperion recordings and the Gimell can be downloaded from the Hyperion website, with booklet, for less than the physical product – and with the option of superior 24-bit sound for the Cardinall’s Musick. (CDA67533, Westminster Abbey – here; CDA67937, Cardinall’s Musick – here; CDGIM208, Tallis scholars – here).

Lovers of Byrd should have at least one recording of the Great Service – and the one that I now expect to return to most in future is this Cleobury reissue. With the two King’s own-label recordings recently released, it makes a very fine tribute to his memory.

Brian Wilson



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