Johnson, R Lute Solos and Songs
Stylish playing and singing can make sadness so beguiling
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Robert II Johnson
Genre:
Vocal
Label: Avie
Magazine Review Date: 1/2005
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 65
Mastering:
Stereo
DDD
Catalogue Number: AV2053
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Fantasia |
Robert II Johnson, Composer
Matthew Wadsworth, Lute Robert II Johnson, Composer |
As I walked forth |
Robert II Johnson, Composer
Carolyn Sampson, Soprano Matthew Wadsworth, Lute Robert II Johnson, Composer |
Where the bee sucks |
Robert II Johnson, Composer
Carolyn Sampson, Soprano Mark Levy, Bass viol Matthew Wadsworth, Lute Robert II Johnson, Composer |
Galliard |
Robert II Johnson, Composer
Matthew Wadsworth, Lute Robert II Johnson, Composer |
Woods, rocks and mountains |
Robert II Johnson, Composer
Carolyn Sampson, Soprano Matthew Wadsworth, Lute Robert II Johnson, Composer |
Come hither, you that love |
Robert II Johnson, Composer
Carolyn Sampson, Soprano Matthew Wadsworth, Lute Robert II Johnson, Composer |
Tell me dearest |
Robert II Johnson, Composer
Carolyn Sampson, Soprano Matthew Wadsworth, Lute Robert II Johnson, Composer |
Pavans, Movement: F minor |
Robert II Johnson, Composer
Matthew Wadsworth, Lute Robert II Johnson, Composer |
Pavans, Movement: C minor (x 2) |
Robert II Johnson, Composer
Matthew Wadsworth, Lute Robert II Johnson, Composer |
Almain I |
Robert II Johnson, Composer
Matthew Wadsworth, Lute Robert II Johnson, Composer |
Almain II |
Robert II Johnson, Composer
Matthew Wadsworth, Lute Robert II Johnson, Composer |
Hark, hark! the lark |
Robert II Johnson, Composer
Carolyn Sampson, Soprano Matthew Wadsworth, Lute Robert II Johnson, Composer |
Away delights |
Robert II Johnson, Composer
Carolyn Sampson, Soprano Matthew Wadsworth, Lute Robert II Johnson, Composer |
O let us howl |
Robert II Johnson, Composer
Carolyn Sampson, Soprano Mark Levy, Bass viol Matthew Wadsworth, Lute Robert II Johnson, Composer |
How wretched is the state |
Robert II Johnson, Composer
Carolyn Sampson, Soprano Mark Levy, Bass viol Matthew Wadsworth, Lute Robert II Johnson, Composer |
Have you seen the bright lily grow? |
Robert II Johnson, Composer
Carolyn Sampson, Soprano Matthew Wadsworth, Lute Robert II Johnson, Composer |
Care-charming sleep |
Robert II Johnson, Composer
Carolyn Sampson, Soprano Matthew Wadsworth, Lute Robert II Johnson, Composer |
Come, heavy sleep |
Robert II Johnson, Composer
Carolyn Sampson, Soprano Mark Levy, Bass viol Matthew Wadsworth, Lute Robert II Johnson, Composer |
With endless tears |
Robert II Johnson, Composer
Carolyn Sampson, Soprano Mark Levy, Bass viol Matthew Wadsworth, Lute Robert II Johnson, Composer |
Gypies Metamorphosed |
Robert II Johnson, Composer
Matthew Wadsworth, Lute Robert II Johnson, Composer |
Almans |
Robert II Johnson, Composer
Matthew Wadsworth, Lute Robert II Johnson, Composer |
Author: William Yeoman
Robert Johnson was lutenist to both James I and Charles I; he was also engaged by The King’s Men to provide music not only for Shakespeare’s plays but also those by Webster, Fletcher and Middleton. This new disc easily confirms Johnson’s status as a composer equal to that of John Dowland.
But there’s a hidden music here as well: a beautifully crafted programme and restrained, crystalline performances allow lute, voice and viol to become players in a strange theatre of sound, which lends the music a modern sensibility while paradoxically resulting in a more persuasive ‘authenticity’ than the overtly theatrical (and more liberally ornamented) approach taken by Anthony Rooley with Emma Kirkby and David Thomas on a Virgin collection (4/94, nla). There’s an element of strangeness which throws you hard against reality.
Carolyn Sampson’s voice is flexible and sensuous, her legato line never spoiled by, although still subordinated to, the poetry’s metrical exigencies, resulting in a gentle declamatory style. And the expressive rhetoric of Johnson’s solo music is thoroughly explored by Wadsworth – the pavans and almains which punctuate the recital are transformed by stylish, insightful playing into beautiful meditations.
Here are lost loves, madness and death. A beautiful pall over your evening’s listening.
But there’s a hidden music here as well: a beautifully crafted programme and restrained, crystalline performances allow lute, voice and viol to become players in a strange theatre of sound, which lends the music a modern sensibility while paradoxically resulting in a more persuasive ‘authenticity’ than the overtly theatrical (and more liberally ornamented) approach taken by Anthony Rooley with Emma Kirkby and David Thomas on a Virgin collection (4/94, nla). There’s an element of strangeness which throws you hard against reality.
Carolyn Sampson’s voice is flexible and sensuous, her legato line never spoiled by, although still subordinated to, the poetry’s metrical exigencies, resulting in a gentle declamatory style. And the expressive rhetoric of Johnson’s solo music is thoroughly explored by Wadsworth – the pavans and almains which punctuate the recital are transformed by stylish, insightful playing into beautiful meditations.
Here are lost loves, madness and death. A beautiful pall over your evening’s listening.
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