Product Details

Cambridge Singers: Flora Gave Me Fairest Flowers



 
Song Name   Composer
Hark, all ye lovely saints above    Thomas Weelkes
Though Amaryllis dance in green   William Byrd
Round about in a fair ring    John Bennet
Adieu, ye city-prisoning towers    Thomas Tomkins
Flora gave me fairest flowers    John Wilbye
Sweet Suffolk owl    Thomas Vautor
As Vesta was from Latmos hill descending    Thomas Weelkes
Lullabye    William Byrd
This sweet and merry month of May    William Byrd
Now is the month of maying    Thomas Morley
A little pretty bonny lass    John Farmer
Fyer, fyer!    Thomas Morley
Too much I once lamented    Thomas Tomkins
My bonny lass she smileth    Thomas Morley
Ha ha! This world doth pass    Thomas Weelkes
Quick, quick, away, dispatch!    Michael East
Dainty fine bird    Orlando Gibbons
Come again! Sweet love doth now invite    John Dowland
Mother, I Will have a husband    Thomas Vautor
Draw on, sweet night    John Wilbye
Sleep, fleshly birth   Robert Ramsey
Weep, weep, mine eyes    John Wilbye
Death hath deprived me    Thomas Weelkes
The silver swan    Orlando Gibbons
Adieu, sweet Amaryllis    John Wilbye

Directed by John Rutter

The sixteenth-century madrigal was an Italian form. The term 'madrigal' was loosely applied to a wide variety of music, but generally denoted a polyphonic setting for four or more voices of an amorous or pastoral text which was closely depicted in the music. Thomas Morely transplanted the form into England in the 1590s; this marked the beginning of the brief but brilliant flowering of the English madrigal. Between the 1590s and the early 1620s, twenty composers published a total of 36 books of madrigals, after which the form virtually disappeared. Some of these composers, such as Morely and Weelkes, followed the Italian model closely; others, such as Byrd and Gibbons, mostly stayed with the simpler English form of the consort song, where the tune remains in one voice, word-painting is not used, and strophic form is preferred to the continuous structure of the madrigal proper. Among the twenty-one items selected for this recording there are examples of several types of piece, ranging from true Italianate madrigals such as Too much I once lamented, via more popular 'balletts' such as Fyer, fyer!, to the simple part-songs like A little pretty bonny lass. The variety, imagination, and inspired blending of poetry and music characteristic of the best of the 'English Madrigal School' afford a particular kind of delight in performance, shared equally by singer and listener.

6976 CD $11.98   Mixed | Chorus | England

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