DOWLAND: Lachrimae - Norwegian Baroque Orchestra - (SACD)

EAN/UPC/ISBN Code 604043201921

Brand Linn Records

Manufacture Zc Music Inc.

John Dowland (?1563-1826) Lachrimae Norsk Barokkorkester Norwegian Baroque Orchestra Rolf Lislevand, lute, leader Randi Stene, Mezzo-soprano Seven Tears figured in seven Passionate Pavans together with six songs of Tears and Weeping This title is a Stereo Super Audio CD. As a Hybrid disc, it will play back on all CD players. The SACD layer can be accessed by compatible source components. Recorded at Uranienborgkirke, Oslo 6 - 10 January 2002 " … though the title doth promise tears, unfit guests in these joyful times, yet no doubt pleasant are the teares which musick weeps, neither are tears shed always in sorrow, but sometimes in joy and gladness. Vouchsafe then your gracious protection to these showers of harmony, lest if you frown on them, they be metamorphosed into true tears." John Dowland (?1563-1626) was in many ways the most outstanding musician of Elizabethan England. And his Lachrimae cycle of pavans represents some of the most outstanding music of his time, and, indeed since, the music evoking a profound emotional and spiritual journey. Perhaps uniquely in tune with his time, his art found perfect musical expression in the "Cult of Melancholy" that ran deeply through 16th-century art, literature and music. The pavans have their origin in a lute solo that grew into Dowland"s best-known and best-loved song, for which Dowland himself probably wrote the words, "Flow my tears". Last to emerge was the set of seven pavans instrumental based on the same 24-bar pavan-song. Though the exact date of composition is not known, it first appears on a London copyright register in 1604. In them the lute continues to occupy a central part of the instrumental texture, written with the mastery only a virtuoso of Dowland"s stature could have achieved. Although Dowland published the seven pavans as a continuous set of instrumental music, the pavans are for this recording interspersed with other songs that highlight the different shades of introspection and melancholy Dowland so delighted in. His biographer, Diana Poulton, sees his genius most exemplary in his late songs, most affected by the operatic invention of early 16th-century Italian opera. Of his "In darkness let me dwell" she cites his "strange and beautiful melody, rising from the words, with a sense of inevitablity…expressing an emotional intensity unsurpassed in any other song at that time". But the seven pavans are likewise music of great originality. They are played on this disc on fretless instruments, and not on the more familiar consort of viols. The justification for this need not go further than the preface to Dowland"s own publication of the Lachrimae which specifies that the music can be played on ‘viols or violons’, the latter being unspecified fretless instruments of the violin family. In keeping with common practice for larger musical ensembles until the 19th-century, the instrumental forces in this performance are divided into two groups: one of soloists and a second, larger ‘replenishing’ consort. This formula lends itself particularly well to the formulaic pavans each 24 bars long, and each in three 8-bar phrases, with repetitions. It is not known where the pavans were written, but they may well have their origin during Dowland’s residence at the court of Christian IV in Denmark between 1598 - 1606, during which time the composer made some 37 visits northwest, to Christiania (Oslo) and to what is now Norway, making a fitting precedent for the contemporary early music performers on this disc to be exploring this repertory. But Dowland, as his ‘Lasso vita mia’ in its Monteverdian style would suggest, was a total European, with roots not only in Elizabethan London and in Scandinavia, but in the new operatic lyricism of his day emerging from the Italian peninsula, that was to change the course of vocal music to follow. Indeed, at a formative time in hi