Friday 26 August 2005   8:00 pm

Court, City, Country – a Musical Tour of Britain 400 Years Ago

Orlando GibbonsThis is the record of John
Richard AlisonThe Sacred choir of angels sings
Thomas TomkinsWhen David heard that Absalom was slain
Above the stars my saviour dwells
Alfonso Ferrabosco IIPavan and Alman in C major
Thomas RavenscroftThe Painter’s Song of London
Richard DeringThe City Cries
Orlando GibbonsDo not repine, fair sun
William ByrdMy mistress had a little dog
Thomas RavenscroftThe Rustic Wedding
William ByrdBrowning a 5
Thomas RavenscroftThe Three Ravens
Richard DeringThe Country Cries
Thomas RavenscroftA Belman’s Song
  • Claire Tomlin soprano
  • Jennie Cassidy alto
  • Patrick McCarthy tenor
  • Psalmody
  • SVF Consort of Viols
  • directed by Peter Holman

With composers such as William Byrd, Orlando Gibbons and Thomas Tomkins at the height of their powers, the reign of James I was a golden age for English music.

This programme is a musical tour of Britain, starting at the court of Whitehall with some of the sublime anthems written for the Chapel Royal, including Gibbons’s ‘This is the record of John’ and Tomkins’s ‘When David heard that Absalom was slain’, written on the death of Prince Henry in 1613. Travelling through the crowded and noisy streets of London, where we hear extraordinary elaborations of street cries by Richard Dering and Thomas Ravenscroft, we visit Norfolk (Byrd’s elegy for a pet dog at Appleton House), Scotland (an anthem for James’s visit to Holyrood in 1617) and the West Country (Ravenscroft’s vivid description of a rustic wedding).

A high point of the tour is Dering’s Country Cries, an evocation of rustic life that includes farmyard animals, a swarm of bees and a whistling carter.