The Royal Wind Music, Paul Leenhouts - Sweete Musicke of Sundrie Kindes (2014)
BAND/ARTIST: The Royal Wind Music, Paul Leenhouts
- Title: Sweete Musicke of Sundrie Kindes
- Year Of Release: 2014
- Label: Lindoro
- Genre: Classical
- Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
- Total Time: 00:58:53
- Total Size: 190 mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
01. Miserere
02. A Songe Called Trumpetts
03. Untitled - Fantasía
04. Coperario, or Gray's Inn, the First
05. Alas, it is I that wot not what to say
06. When Shall my Sorrowful sighing Slack?
07. Galliard
08. Galliard
09. Semper Dowland Semper Dolens
10. M. Buctons Galliard
11. Susanna Galliard
12. A Fancy
13. In Nomine
14. Browning
15. Hackney
16. Pavan the Image of Melancholly
17. Galliard Heigh Ho Holiday
18. William's Love
19. The Bull Masque
20. The Cupid's Dance
21. The Maypole
22. Anti-Masque
In the 1530s the Bassano brothers of Venice were recommended to the court of King Henry VIII (1491- 1547) as musicians, composers and instrument makers. In correspondence with the English court Henry VIII’s Venetian ambassador Edmund Harvel (d. ca.1550) wrote:
‘They are four brethren, all excellent and esteemed above all others in this city in their virtue. Whereby I hope they shall be very grateful to the King’s Highness and to Your Lordship who is also delighting in good music, not vulgarly nor in vulgar music, as I understood. Besides, it shall be no small honour to His Majesty to have music comparable with any other prince or perchance better and more variable. And because these men are poor and could not set forwards in so costly a journey without help of money as well for their own costs as for conveyance of their instruments and other necessaries, I have delivered them 160 crowns of gold …’.
King Henry VIII himself showed a live-lasting passion for music and was particularly accomplished on instruments including lute, harpsichord, recorder, flute and virginals, and would often entertain the court by singing and performing his own compositions.
It is difficult to track the exact year that the Bassano brothers first arrived at Henry’s Court in London. They seem to have travelled back and forth starting in 1531 before finally settling in England in 1539. The Bassanos founded a consort of five recorders, being joined in 1550 by Augustine Bassano (d.1604) to form a six-member consort that was manned principally by their offspring until the unification of wind consorts into one group in the 1630s.
The repertory of this ‘royal recorder consort’ consisted of fantasias as well as dances and instrumental arrangements of motets and madrigals. The consort, as Augustine Bassano specified in a document from 1564, was ‘bounden to give daily attendance upon the Queen’s Majesty’. Consorts provided entertainment and music for a wide variety of court activities, and provided occupation for many professional musicians and composers.
In the theatre, where consort music was frequently performed, instrumentation would often be used according to symbolic associations of particular instruments. Strings, including viols and violins, represented harmony, unity or agreement; reed instruments had magical associations and were regularly involved in evil acts; the soft and sweet sound of flutes or recorders, occasionally referred to as ‘still music’, suggested to symbolise scenes linked to supernatural events or sometimes death.
In his allegorical epic poem The Faerie Queene, written in praise of Queen Elizabeth I between 1590 and 1596, the English poet Edmund Spenser (ca.1552-1599) in- cludes the following verse:
And all the while sweete Musicke did apply
Her curious skill, the warbling notes to play,
To driue away the dull Melancholy;
The whiles one sung a song of loue and iollity.
During the late renaissance English musicians and writers did all agree upon the sweetness of choral singing, organ and consort playing; ‘sweetness’ was considered to be a principal quality measure of a musical performance. Proof of the quality of English cathedral music comes from the journal of Lieutenant Hammond, a military officer from Norwich who made a tour of twenty-six counties in 1634-35. Time after time in his visits to cathedrals he reports on hearing wonderful singing and incomparable playing of organs and other instruments, whereby all ‘tunable voices made a melodious and heavenly harmony, able to ravish the hearer’s ears’.
01. Miserere
02. A Songe Called Trumpetts
03. Untitled - Fantasía
04. Coperario, or Gray's Inn, the First
05. Alas, it is I that wot not what to say
06. When Shall my Sorrowful sighing Slack?
07. Galliard
08. Galliard
09. Semper Dowland Semper Dolens
10. M. Buctons Galliard
11. Susanna Galliard
12. A Fancy
13. In Nomine
14. Browning
15. Hackney
16. Pavan the Image of Melancholly
17. Galliard Heigh Ho Holiday
18. William's Love
19. The Bull Masque
20. The Cupid's Dance
21. The Maypole
22. Anti-Masque
In the 1530s the Bassano brothers of Venice were recommended to the court of King Henry VIII (1491- 1547) as musicians, composers and instrument makers. In correspondence with the English court Henry VIII’s Venetian ambassador Edmund Harvel (d. ca.1550) wrote:
‘They are four brethren, all excellent and esteemed above all others in this city in their virtue. Whereby I hope they shall be very grateful to the King’s Highness and to Your Lordship who is also delighting in good music, not vulgarly nor in vulgar music, as I understood. Besides, it shall be no small honour to His Majesty to have music comparable with any other prince or perchance better and more variable. And because these men are poor and could not set forwards in so costly a journey without help of money as well for their own costs as for conveyance of their instruments and other necessaries, I have delivered them 160 crowns of gold …’.
King Henry VIII himself showed a live-lasting passion for music and was particularly accomplished on instruments including lute, harpsichord, recorder, flute and virginals, and would often entertain the court by singing and performing his own compositions.
It is difficult to track the exact year that the Bassano brothers first arrived at Henry’s Court in London. They seem to have travelled back and forth starting in 1531 before finally settling in England in 1539. The Bassanos founded a consort of five recorders, being joined in 1550 by Augustine Bassano (d.1604) to form a six-member consort that was manned principally by their offspring until the unification of wind consorts into one group in the 1630s.
The repertory of this ‘royal recorder consort’ consisted of fantasias as well as dances and instrumental arrangements of motets and madrigals. The consort, as Augustine Bassano specified in a document from 1564, was ‘bounden to give daily attendance upon the Queen’s Majesty’. Consorts provided entertainment and music for a wide variety of court activities, and provided occupation for many professional musicians and composers.
In the theatre, where consort music was frequently performed, instrumentation would often be used according to symbolic associations of particular instruments. Strings, including viols and violins, represented harmony, unity or agreement; reed instruments had magical associations and were regularly involved in evil acts; the soft and sweet sound of flutes or recorders, occasionally referred to as ‘still music’, suggested to symbolise scenes linked to supernatural events or sometimes death.
In his allegorical epic poem The Faerie Queene, written in praise of Queen Elizabeth I between 1590 and 1596, the English poet Edmund Spenser (ca.1552-1599) in- cludes the following verse:
And all the while sweete Musicke did apply
Her curious skill, the warbling notes to play,
To driue away the dull Melancholy;
The whiles one sung a song of loue and iollity.
During the late renaissance English musicians and writers did all agree upon the sweetness of choral singing, organ and consort playing; ‘sweetness’ was considered to be a principal quality measure of a musical performance. Proof of the quality of English cathedral music comes from the journal of Lieutenant Hammond, a military officer from Norwich who made a tour of twenty-six counties in 1634-35. Time after time in his visits to cathedrals he reports on hearing wonderful singing and incomparable playing of organs and other instruments, whereby all ‘tunable voices made a melodious and heavenly harmony, able to ravish the hearer’s ears’.
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