Recordings
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Purcell: Odes, Vol. 4 – Ye tuneful Muses
CDA66456
Archive Service; also available on CDS44031/8
Download currently discounted
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Purcell: The Complete Odes & Welcome Songs
CDS44031/8
8CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
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Purcell: Mr Henry Purcell's Most Admirable Composures
CDH55303
Helios (Hyperion's budget label)
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Details
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Movement 1: Symphony
Track 1 on CDS44031/8
CD4 [3'26]
8CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
Movement 2: Ye tuneful Muses, raise your heads
Movement 3: Be lively then and gay
Movement 4: In his just praise your noblest songs let fall
Movement 5: From the rattling of drums and the trumpet's loud sounds
Movement 6: To music's softer but yet kind
Movement 7: With him he brings the partner of his throne
Movement 8: Happy in a mutual love
Movement 9: Whilst in music and verse our duty we show
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The fine opening Symphony is in the conventional two-section French style (which had itself originated in Italy), with the opening dotted section followed by a faster imitative triple-time movement. Two basses follow this with a rich duet, full of word-painting, linked to the first chorus by a short string ritornello. The section ‘Be lively then and gay’ is ingeniously based on the popular song ‘Hey boys, up go we’, and Purcell used its tune (to be found in The Dancing Master, 16th edition, 1686) first as the bass to the tenor solo, then as a counterpoint in the violins to the chorus, and then again as the bass to the dancing string ritornello which concludes the section. It is not known who was the bass singer for ‘In his just praise’ but he must have had a remarkable range of over two octaves which Purcell exploited to the full. The composer’s good humour continues, for in the next section the upper strings furiously play on all four of their open strings in response to the chorus’s exhortation ‘Tune all your strings’. The musical allegories continue in ‘From the rattling of drums and the trumpet’s loud sounds’ before we enter into a more gentle section ‘To music’s softer but yet kind and pleasing melody’ which is accompanied by two recorders. This leads into the jewel of the Ode ‘With him he brings’, sung at the first performance by the famous countertenor (and fine composer) William Turner. Over a wonderful four-bar ground bass the Queen’s beauty is praised, with especially delightful writing for ‘There beauty its whole artillery tries’, before the ground bass modulates up a fifth, and Purcell provides (as he does in so many of the Odes) a delicious string ritornello. The soprano duet ‘Happy in a mutual love’ which follows is delightful too, and the work ends with a lilting solo and elegantly harmonized chorus ‘Whilst in music and verse’.
from notes by Robert King © 2010