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CONSORT SONGS

AMSTERDAM LOEKI STARDUST QUARTET / CONNOR BURROWES

CD   1 disc(s)   01-01-1996
Kamermuziek / Chamber Music

Verwachte levertijd (in NL): 1 - 3 werkdagen

€ 14.95 Stock: 2 ex. (OP=OP)
Staat: Nieuw
Extra info: Connor Burrowes (Boy Soprano)/Amsterdam Loeki Stardust
Maatschappij: Outhere
Label: Channel classics
Barcode: 0723385919629
Suffix - prefix: 9196 CCS

Connor Burrowes (boy soprano) & Amsterdam Loeki Stardust Quartet

Consort Songs Teares or Lamentacions of a sorrowfull Soule is the publication where Sir William Leighton uses the term consort song for the first time. During the reign of Queen Elizabeth, the genre of the consort song already appeared in certain collections from the 1580s, which contain several examples of a song-form for a high solo voice accompanied by four instruments. A few early four-part consort songs survive, but five-part texture seems to have become standard almost from the inception of this form. The consort song emerged from the assimilation and expansion of the English ayre and the highly popular Italian madrigale. To the simpler and ingratiating manner of the lute ayre, a more contrapuntal and expressive style of the madrigal was added. The musical importance of the consort song rests largely upon its development by the composer William Byrd, who regarded it as the standard means of setting vernacular poetry. In his songs almost every vocal phrase is anticipated, supported and imitated by a dense stream of notes that flows round it. Although Byrd presented most items in his published collections as fully vocal compositions, about half of them are in fact consort songs, which Byrd stated as being originally made for instruments to express the harmony, and one voice to pronounce the ditty. There will always remain an attractive amount of uncertainty when trying to reveal the beauty of a composition in all its colours. Searching for a favourable lighting means experimenting with historic tone colours and adding or omitting elements. Both the recorder and the soprano voice of a boy are known to have been established during the time of publication of consort songs, and the vocal part always lies within the range of a boys voice, either treble or mean (alto). Naturally these songs have had performances in more than one appropriate rendering, according to availability of different voices and instruments.

anon.:
 Complain with tears
 How can the tree (fromThe Parradise of Dainty Devices)
 This Merry Pleasant Spring
 When May is in his prime

Byrd:
 With lilies white, consort song for voice & 4 viols
 Wretched Albinus, consort song for voice & 4 viols

Cobbold:
 Ye mortal wights

Dowland:
 Aria (instrumental)
 Coranto, P100
 Courant
 Sorrow, come

Ferrabosco, A II:
 Four-note pavan

Jenkins, J:
 Fantasia VII

Mando:
 Like as the day

Nicholson, R:
 In a Merry May Morn, for voice & 4 instruments

Simpson, T:
 Male Content
 Paduana
 Volta (fromTaffel-Consort)

Tallis:
 When shall my sorrowful sighing slake, partsong for 4 voices

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