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The Consort of Musicke & Anthony Rooley - Walter Porter: Madrigales and Ayres, 1632 (2018)

The Consort of Musicke & Anthony Rooley - Walter Porter: Madrigales and Ayres, 1632 (2018)
  • Title: Walter Porter: Madrigales and Ayres, 1632
  • Year Of Release: 2018
  • Label: Cantus Records
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: flac lossless
  • Total Time: 01:15:59
  • Total Size: 312 mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist
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01. O Praise the Lord
02. Sleep All My Joys
03. Who Hath a Human Soul
04. Sitting Once Rapt with Delight
05. 'Tis But a Frown
06. Look on Me Ever
07. Old Poets That in Cupid's Hand
08. Thus Sung Orpheus
09. When First I Saw Thee
10. End Now My Life
11. Farewell Once My Delight
12. In Celia's Face
13. Love in Thy Youth
14. Hail, Cloris, Hail!
15. Young Thirsis Lay
16. Thy Face and Eyes
17. I Saw Fair Cloris Walk Alone
18. Like the Rash and Giddy Fly
19. Wake, Sorrow, Wake!

Anthony Rooley: It is so typical of the English to have ignored almost completely the only native musician known to have studied with Claudio Monteverdi. Perhaps only two or three pieces from Porter’s collection have been made available in modern editions until very recently, the rest was condemned to oblivion. And yet the English manner here approaches most directly that of the late mannerist flowering of the Italian. No invidious comparison between Porter and Monteverdi needs to be made, for this is a uniquely English voice, yet one that has clearly benefited from a close association with Italian sensuality. For the first time the greater part of the collection can now be heard (rather than studied on paper), and the wit, charm, variety and craftsmanship can be enjoyed in their own right. For anyone with a culturally outward-bound spirit, there is much to discover here.
In his introduction Porter clearly acknowledges the Italian influence on his work, but what is so astonishing about this collection is the remarkable variety of forms and styles it contains: we find a verse anthem in which the florid vocal lines of Caccini and Monteverdi appear for the first time in an English anthem (O praise the Lord [1]), an elaborate solo aria with chorus (Farewell once my delight [11]), duets, trios, madrigals in a conservative style, madrigals with dialogue, and continuo madrigals for two, three and five voices. In place of the equal-voiced polyphony of the English madrigal school we find a more treble-dominated style, and in his harmonies Porter avoids the more daring experiments of Italians like Gesualdo. A clear sense of tonality emerges. Instrumentally, the violins move frequently in parallel thirds in the Monteverdian manner over an independent bass line. In short, he has absorbed the latest Italian fashions while at the same time preserving his English identity.
Porter reveals his English background in his response to the English language, being sensitive to vowels, diphthongs and English multiple consonants (as in Sitting once rapt with delight [4], and the skittish Like the rash and giddy fly [18]), and indulges in the occasional ‘word-painting’ (as in ‘let him to hell to howl’, in Who hath a human soul [3]). The alternation of passages for solo voice and chorus in many of the pieces is a typical English procedure.
The literary themes in the collection are as varied as the musical styles represented. There are pastoral tales (I saw fair Cloris [17]), philosophical reflections on life (End now my life [10]), songs of love (Young Thyrsis lay [15]) and songs of mourning, of which the finest example – it was also probably the first song in the collection to be written – is Wake, sorrow, wake! [19], an elegy on the death of Lady Arabella Stewart who died in 1615..
How can we sum up his achievements? Was he merely an imitator, a borrower of other men’s ideas, or a composer with a mind of his own? In an age of musical uncertainty he pointed English music in a new direction. He grafted the new styles and techniques of Italian music on to the old stem of the English madrigal tradition. Although he was no English Monteverdi, his best pieces stand up well alongside the work of his illustrious predecessor. He is an English Orpheus seeking his Euridice in a foreign land. His music is worthy of our attention.
Once again, The Consort of Musicke offers us glorious performances, both in the purely vocal and in the instrumental contributions. Vocally, it is impressive when a group capable of such polished consort singing as Rooley’s can split up to provide solo interpretations of this quality, interpretations which take each piece seriously and look for whatever strengths it may contain, although when you look at the list of their members you can understand why. Likewise, the instrumental renditions of both the violins and the rich basso continuo is precise, beautiful and transparent, finely recreating these unknown jewels of the best English music. A major discovery that no one should miss…



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  •  wrote in 20:52
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gracias...