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Hyperion Records

Salve maris stella
composer
1470s or 1480s
author of text
Recordings
Cover of 'Dufay: Missa Puisque je vis & other works' (CDA67368)
Details
Track 9 on CDA67368 [7'50] To be superseded by CDH55423
Salve maris stella
EnglishFrançaisDeutsch
The transition from general veneration to specific plea for intercession that shaped the text of Omnium bonorum plena and so many other Marian motets also characterizes Salve maris stella. The cryptic words of this motet pray for Mary’s mediation on behalf of a ‘true hero’ named as ‘Charolus’ (in the tenor and bass) and ‘Henricus’ (in the top part) whose plea, to judge from references in the text, has some association with the sea and safe maritime travel. While the motet may have originated as a prayer for safe passage on a pilgrimage, Rob Wegman has suggested to me a more specific possible scenario in the person of Henry Tudor, the future Henry VII of England, and the occasion of his invasion of England in 1485. Since Henry had been living in Brittany for some years, his assault on his intended kingdom involved the crossing of the English Channel, the putative source of the seafaring motifs in the text of the motet. His ultimately successful venture (ending in the death of Richard III on Bosworth Field) was preceded by an abortive one two years previously, when stormy seas had thwarted his attack, as recounted by the contemporary chronicler Polydore Vergil (I thank Professor Wegman for this material; I have modernized the English):

…Henry…had prepared an army of 5,000 Bretons and furnished a navy of 15 ships [which] began to sail with prosperous wind the 6th ides of October in the year of health [1483]…But a little before [a] sudden tempest arose, with which he was so afflicted that his ships were constrained by force of a cruel gale of wind to turn their course [to] one way [and] another; [some] of them were blown back into Normandy, others into Brittany. The ship [in which] Henry was, with one other, tossed all the night long with the waves, came at the last very early in the morning, when the wind grew calm, upon the south coast of [England] … From here Earl Henry, viewing afar off all the shore beset with soldiers, which King Richard … had everywhere [placed], gave open commandment that not one man of them all should [land] before the [remainder] of the ships should come together … But … after that he [saw] none of his own ships within view, [he] hoisted up sail, and with prosperous wind came into Normandy, so that a man may think the very blast of the wind drove him back from danger. (Polydore Vergil, Anglia Historia (London: J B Nichols, 1846), p 210-11)

Such an experience would certainly have provided ample motivation, on the occasion of Henry’s next attempt, for a prayer to the Virgin to ‘Pray to [her] son that … he may drive away the reproaches that the sea of the world now heaps up’ and lead the would-be king to ‘safe shores’. If such was indeed the motet’s aim, then it would seem its prayers were answered: Vergil informs us that:

… after he had made his prayers to God that he might have a happy and prosperous journey, he [set sail] from the mouth of the Seine with [just] two thousand armed men and a few ships, the calends of August, and with a soft southern wind. (p 216)

This hypothesis does nothing, of course, to explain the presence of the name ‘Charolus’ in two of the voice parts, though this could reflect, as Wegman has proposed, an attempt to adapt the motet for another magnate, for example the contemporary Charles VIII of France.

from notes by Andrew Kirkman © 2003

Track-specific metadata
Details for CDA67368 track 9
Artists
ISRC
GB-AJY-03-00008
Duration
7'50
Recording date
26 July 2002
Recording venue
All Saints, Tooting, United Kingdom
Recording producer
Mark Brown
Recording engineer
Neil Hutchinson
Hyperion usage
  1. Dufay: Missa Puisque je vis & other works (CDA67368)
    Disc 1 Track 9
    Release date: June 2003
    Deletion date: March 2010
    To be superseded by CDH55423
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