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Music from the Reign of King James I | Hyperion CDA67858

Music from the Reign of King James I

£13.60

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Label: Hyperion

Cat No: CDA67858

Barcode: 0034571178585

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 1

Release Date: 31st January 2011

Contents

Works

Tomkins
Be strong and of a good courage

Tomkins
O sing unto the Lord a new song

Tomkins
When David heard

Tomkins
Then David mourned

Gibbons
Great king of gods

Gibbons
O all true faithful hearts

Gibbons
Fancy in C fa ut

Gibbons
Fancy in Gamutt flatt

Gibbons
See, see, the Word is incarnate

Gibbons
Fantazia of foure parts

Gibbons
Hosanna to the Son of David

Gibbons
O Lord, in thy wrath rebuke me not

Gibbons
Almighty and everlasting God

Gibbons
Preludium

Gibbons
O clap your hands

Hooper
Great Service

Ramsey
How are the mighty fallen

Artists

Robert Quinney (organ)
Westminster Abbey Choir

Conductor

James O’Donnell

Works

Tomkins
Be strong and of a good courage

Tomkins
O sing unto the Lord a new song

Tomkins
When David heard

Tomkins
Then David mourned

Gibbons
Great king of gods

Gibbons
O all true faithful hearts

Gibbons
Fancy in C fa ut

Gibbons
Fancy in Gamutt flatt

Gibbons
See, see, the Word is incarnate

Gibbons
Fantazia of foure parts

Gibbons
Hosanna to the Son of David

Gibbons
O Lord, in thy wrath rebuke me not

Gibbons
Almighty and everlasting God

Gibbons
Preludium

Gibbons
O clap your hands

Hooper
Great Service

Ramsey
How are the mighty fallen

Artists

Robert Quinney (organ)
Westminster Abbey Choir

Conductor

James O’Donnell

About

Westminster Abbey has been the focus of British royal occasions for centuries, and the early seventeenth century saw the most dazzling musicians of the age writing music for the Court in all its various incarnations. This fascinating disc presents a selection of works from the reign of King James I.

The most celebrated name on this disc is that of Orlando Gibbons, and some of his most masterly works are presented here, including the gloriously contrapuntal O clap your hands and the startlingly original verse anthem See, see, the Word is incarnate, setting an extraordinary text which covers the whole of the liturgical year.

The most eloquent and emotionally intense music recorded here was most likely never intended for performance in the Abbey, or any other church, but has a particularly Royal relevance. The laments of King David were set by many composers of this period. These moving texts have no place in the liturgy, being neither part of the Ordinary of Psalms and canticles, nor able to furnish a seasonally appropriate or devotional anthem. Their composition seems therefore to have been a response to the death in November 1612 of the Prince of Wales, Prince Henry.

These are courtly laments, in which the composers give voice – and perhaps vied to give voice most eloquently – to the grief of the King (in the settings of David’s lament for his son Absalom) and Prince Charles (in the ‘Jonathan’ pieces, in which the king describes his friend as ‘my brother’).

Included is the best known of all the ‘Absalom’ pieces, Tomkins’ When David heard, together with his equally moving ‘Jonathan’ setting, Then David mourned.

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