John Dowland +…

/ 2013 / … John Dowland: Tarleton’s Resurrection;
David Tayler, archlute
One of Dowland’s early works, Tarleton’s Resurrection, performed on the archlute by David Tayler. Tarleton’s Reconstruction: Dowland’s original music does not survive, and the later sources present only the outside lines of what would have been a four or five part composition. Dowland’s lute solos invariably have room in the polyphonic web for a tenor or alto part, and here I have created a tenor part for the last section in the style of Dowland, using an inverted counterpoint of the melody divided along the hexachord. Dowland’s solo remained popular well into the early 17th century. Richard Tarleton: Tarleton was the favorite jester of Queen Elizabeth I, and he died in 1588, the same year that Dowland received his degree from Oxford. Dowland was very much interested in a court position, and may have written the work as a gesture to the Queen. An accomplished comedic actor, Tarleton was also a playwright and fencing master who could improvise pentameter as part of the play or to spar with unruly audience members. One of the few known representations of Tarleton shows him playing a pipe and tabor. The title of the work is often given as “rissurection,” “riserrectionne” or “riserrectione;” the spelling variants are the result of the Latin and Italian forms of the word. As Dowland was justifiably proud of his skills in Latin translation, I have used the Latin form of the word, and this spelling, resurrection, was by far the most common form in the time of Queen Elizabeth I. Respectfully dedicated to Desmond Dupré (1916-1974). As a young music student, I listened to the recordings of Alfred Deller and the lutenist Desmond Dupré; Dupré taught himself to play the viol, then the lute, and made his debut in Wigmore hall with Deller in 1951: he was also the first president of the lute society.
/ 2013 / … Nigel North, lute John Dowland (1563–1626) Fancy (5) In nomine Fantasie Forlorne Hope Fancy Boston Guitarfest 2013 Friday, June 21, 2013 Jordan Hall at New England Conservatory
/ 2015 / … Christopher Morrongiello performs “Lachrimae” (ca. 1590s) by John Dowland (1563–1626), Cambridge University Library manuscript DD.2.11. Filmed in the Chapel from Le Château de la Bastie d’Urfé at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Featured Instrument: Attributed to Wendelin Tieffenbrucker (German, active 1570–1610). Lute, late 16th century. Padua, Italy. Yew, spruce, ebony, maple. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Purchase, Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Freedman, by exchange, 1989 (1989.13)
/ 2021 / … Evangelina Mascardi plays Dowland & contemporaries on the Renaissance Lute with Frédéric Zigante.
00:00 Anonimo – A ground John Dowland (1563 – 1626)
02:53 A Fancy 04:15 Mrs. Clifton’s Almain
06:06 The right Honourable The Lady Clifton’s Spirit
08:45 Robin
11:18 Forlorn Hope Fancy Thomas Robinson (c. 1560 – 1610)
14:43 A plaine Song
17:03 Anonimo – La Rosignoll
/ 2014 / … John Dowland (1563-1626) Come, Heavy Sleep (from The First Booke of Songs or Ayres) Emily Gradowski, soprano Nathan Cornelius, guitar Recorded live in Hamilton Recital Hall Newman Center for the Performing Arts Denver, Colorado Come, heavy Sleep, the image of true Death, And close up these my weary weeping eyes, Whose spring of tears doth stop my vital breath, And tears my heart with Sorrow’s sigh-swoll’n cries; Come and possess my tired, thought-worn soul, That living dies, till thou on me be stole. Come, shadow of my end, and shape of rest, Allied to Death, child to his black-fac’d Night; Come thou and charm these rebels in my breast, Whose waking fancies do my mind affright. O come, sweet Sleep, come or I die forever; Come ere my last sleep comes, or come never.

/ 2011 / … John Dowland (1563-1626): The Earle of Essex Galiard [a5]
The Royal Wind Music
Live performance at the Kunsthalle, Lingen (Germany) April 10, 2011 Arrangement: Paul Leenhouts Diminutions: María Martínez Ayerza The Royal Wind Music Petri Arvo, Stephanie Brandt, Ruth Dyson, Arwieke Glas, Hester Groenleer, Karin Hageneder, Marco Paulo Alves Magalhães, María Martínez Ayerza, Filipa Margarida Pereira, Anna Stegmannyoutube.com   2:15   16 years ago…   
Cont…