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Madame d'Amours
Music for Henry VIII's Six Wives
 

Musica Antiqua
Philip Thorby


 

"everything sung and played to perfection"

Early Music Scotland

  "This delightful anthology brings together music reflecting many aspects of the lives of Henry and his wives: the collection looks at the musical interests sand associations of Henry's queens in turn, sharing with us a rich tapestry of music spanning the 38 years of the king's long reign." 

The Consort - Vol 62

    "Madame D'Amours can seduce, but not with words. Aided by scholarship, this disc re-imagines the music presence of each queen at the court of Henry VIII. Musica Antiqua of London's command of diverse repertoires, instruments and interpretive approaches allows it to flaunt differences between the music of Henry's various consorts. Humour, cerebral sophistication and tenderness each find their proper expression in the knitting together of counterpoint and in the delicate rhythmic shading by the players. Particularly pleasing in the robust tone and freedom of line of Jacob Heringman's lute solos"

BBC Music Magazine

     "Listen to this disc and you will be treated to a Tudor banquet of music and song. Jennie Cassidy's pure mezzo-soprano voice is a joy, while Philip Thorby's Musica Antiqua of London provides superbly enthusiastic accompaniements. It's worth taking time to read the comprehensive booklet notes, which explain the important part music played in the lives of Henry's wives. A well thought-out and presented project."

Classic FM Magazine

 

Signum Classics is proud to present Musica Antiqua's seventh disc - Madame d;Amours; Songs, dances and consort music for the six wives of Henry VIII

Henry VIII is the most instantly recognisable of English kings: the heavy, square face with its fringe of beard, the massive torso, arms akimbo, feet planted firmly on the ground. His character, too, is familiar: ‘Bluff King Hal’, gorging himself at the table, flagrantly promiscuous, cynically manipulating the Church to suit his marital aims, the very archetype of chauvinism.

But scholarship reveals a very different Henry. Larger than life, certainly (six feet two inches tall, a colossal height for the time); but, as a young man, clean-shaven and with a halo of red hair, his waist was a mere 35 inches and his chest 42 inches. His table manners were refined to the point of being finicky, and the conduct of his sexual liaisons was (according to the French ambassador) almost excessively discreet.

An irresistible figure to the twentieth century early–music revival, Henry is shown by numerous hyperbolic contemporary accounts to have been an expert singer (with a clear tenor voice and able to sing at sight); a player of lute, flute, recorder, cornett and virginals; and a composer of sacred and secular music. Inventories made at the time of his death show him as an avid collector of instruments (including recorders, flutes, cornetts, viols and bagpipes). And two musical sources, one sacred (The Eton Choirbook), the other secular (The Henry VIII Ms), proved rich in music as dramatic, colourful and exotic as the king himself.

But there is more to Henry’s music than ‘Pastime with Good Company’ and the splendours of Eton’s polyphony. Henry inherited a modest musical establishment from his father, but bequeathed a large ‘Kynge’s Musicke’ to his heirs.

Henry’s queens were no mere observers of the development of music at his court. Catherine of Aragon and Anne Boleyn both owned song–books which show a strong Franco–Flemish presence in Tudor music; Anne of Cleves augmented her small band of minstrels by borrowing players from Prince Edward’s household; improper relationships with musicians were cited in the cases against both executed queens; Jane Seymour’s royal wedding was celebrated with shawms and sackbuts; and Catherine Parr danced to her own consort of viols. In chapel and chamber, whether dancing, worshipping, singing, playing or listening, music was an important counterpoint to the lives (and sometimes deaths) of all of Henry’s six wives.

This disc does not set out to offer a comprehensive survey of music under Henry and his queens: rather it is a subjective selection of music from many contemporary sources inspired by, and, we hope, illustrative of six extraordinary lives.

 

 

Title Page
Programme Notes
    Texts
Reviews
Credits
Musica Antiqua
Release date: January 2005
Order code: SIGCD044
Barcode: 635212004425
 

I Catherine of Aragon
1 Danza Alta - Francisco de la Torre [2.09]
2 Whilles Lyfe or Breth - William Cornyshe [7.26]
3 My Lady Wynkefylds Rownde - anon [1.33]
4 Nigra sum - Matthieu de Gascongne [4.59]
5 Adew le companye - anon [1.09]
II Anne Boleyn
6 Blow thi horne - William Cornyshe [2.23]
7 My Lady Carey's dompe - anon [2.21]
8 Adiutorium nostrum - Antoine de Fevin [2.53]
9 La Gamba - anon [0.59]
10 Blame not my lute - anon [3.53]
III Jane Seymour
11 Gentil Prince - anon [0.41]
12 En vray amoure - anon [1.39]
13 Kyng Harry VIII pavyn - anon [1.49]
14 Madame d'Amours - anon [4.59]
15 Ricercar - Vincenzo Capirola [3.25]
16 Duke of Somersett's dompe - anon [2.22]
IV Anne of Cleves
17 Ainxi bon Youre - anon (n) [1.35]
18 Een vroulic wesen - Jacques Barbireau [1.21]
19 La Danse de Cleves - anon [1.43]
V Catherine Howard
20 Time to pas with goodly sport - Henry VIII [2.18]
21 Prince Edwarde's pavyn - anon [2.21]
22 Quam pulchra es - attrib Henry VIII [6.14]
23 The Kynges marke - anon [1.16]
24 Adew madame - anon [1.43]
VI Catherine Parr
25 Pavyn of Albart - anon
[1.37]
26 Galliard - anon [1.25]
27 A virgine and a mother - John Marbecke
[5.36]
28 Ashton's maske - Hugh Ashton [5.36]
 
Total running time: [74:59]

 

 

 

 

[images/index.htm] 02 August 2008