Iestyn Davies: Flow My Tears

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Thomas Dunford, John Danyel, Tobias Hume, John Dowland, Robert II Johnson, Thomas Campion, Nico Muhly

Genre:

Chamber

Label: Wigmore Hall Live

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 76

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: WHLIVE0074

WHLIVE0074. Flow My Tears

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Have you seen the bright lily grow? Robert II Johnson, Composer
Iestyn Davies, Countertenor
Jonathan Manson, Viol
Robert II Johnson, Composer
Thomas Dunford, Composer
Care-charming sleep Robert II Johnson, Composer
Iestyn Davies, Countertenor
Jonathan Manson, Viol
Robert II Johnson, Composer
Thomas Dunford, Composer
From the famous peak of Derby Robert II Johnson, Composer
Iestyn Davies, Countertenor
Jonathan Manson, Viol
Robert II Johnson, Composer
Thomas Dunford, Composer
Preludium John Dowland, Composer
Iestyn Davies, Countertenor
John Dowland, Composer
Jonathan Manson, Viol
Thomas Dunford, Composer
(A) Fancy John Dowland, Composer
Iestyn Davies, Countertenor
John Dowland, Composer
Jonathan Manson, Viol
Thomas Dunford, Composer
Griefe keepe within- First part John Danyel, Composer
Iestyn Davies, Countertenor
John Danyel, Composer
Jonathan Manson, Viol
Thomas Dunford, Composer
Drop not mine Eies- Second part John Danyel, Composer
Iestyn Davies, Countertenor
John Danyel, Composer
Jonathan Manson, Viol
Thomas Dunford, Composer
Have all our passions- Third part John Danyel, Composer
Iestyn Davies, Countertenor
John Danyel, Composer
Jonathan Manson, Viol
Thomas Dunford, Composer
Why canst thou not John Danyel, Composer
Iestyn Davies, Countertenor
John Danyel, Composer
Jonathan Manson, Viol
Thomas Dunford, Composer
Can dolefull notes- First part John Danyel, Composer
Iestyn Davies, Countertenor
John Danyel, Composer
Jonathan Manson, Viol
Thomas Dunford, Composer
No, let Chromatique tunes- Second part John Danyel, Composer
Iestyn Davies, Countertenor
John Danyel, Composer
Jonathan Manson, Viol
Thomas Dunford, Composer
Uncertaine certaine turnes- Third part John Danyel, Composer
Iestyn Davies, Countertenor
John Danyel, Composer
Jonathan Manson, Viol
Thomas Dunford, Composer
Never weather-beaten saile more willing bent to shore Thomas Campion, Composer
Iestyn Davies, Countertenor
Jonathan Manson, Viol
Thomas Campion, Composer
Thomas Dunford, Composer
Old Bones Nico Muhly, Composer
Iestyn Davies, Countertenor
Jonathan Manson, Viol
Nico Muhly, Composer
Thomas Dunford, Composer
A souldiers Galiard Tobias Hume, Composer
Iestyn Davies, Countertenor
Jonathan Manson, Viol
Thomas Dunford, Composer
Tobias Hume, Composer
Love's farewell Tobias Hume, Composer
Iestyn Davies, Countertenor
Jonathan Manson, Viol
Thomas Dunford, Composer
Tobias Hume, Composer
(A) Soldier's Resolution Tobias Hume, Composer
Iestyn Davies, Countertenor
Jonathan Manson, Viol
Thomas Dunford, Composer
Tobias Hume, Composer
Come again, sweet love doth now invite John Dowland, Composer
Iestyn Davies, Countertenor
John Dowland, Composer
Jonathan Manson, Viol
Thomas Dunford, Composer
In darknesse let mee dwell John Dowland, Composer
Iestyn Davies, Countertenor
John Dowland, Composer
Jonathan Manson, Viol
Thomas Dunford, Composer
Can she excuse John Dowland, Composer
Iestyn Davies, Countertenor
John Dowland, Composer
Jonathan Manson, Viol
Thomas Dunford, Composer
Flow my Teares, 'Second Book of Ayres' No 2 John Dowland, Composer
Iestyn Davies, Countertenor
John Dowland, Composer
Jonathan Manson, Viol
Thomas Dunford, Composer
Frog Galliard John Dowland, Composer
Iestyn Davies, Countertenor
John Dowland, Composer
Jonathan Manson, Viol
Thomas Dunford, Composer
I care not for these ladies Thomas Campion, Composer
Iestyn Davies, Countertenor
Jonathan Manson, Viol
Thomas Campion, Composer
Thomas Dunford, Composer
Launched with 2014’s ‘The Art of Melancholy’ (Hyperion, 7/14), the partnership between young lutenist Thomas Dunford and countertenor Iestyn Davies is an exciting one – each matching and challenging the virtuosity of the other, and bringing youthful new life to the genre. But while ‘The Art of Melancholy’ focused solely on Dowland, Davies’s latest disc (and his third for Wigmore Hall Live) takes a broader look at the repertoire, taking in music by Robert Johnson, John Danyel and Thomas Campion.

Inevitably there are some overlaps; five tracks (some quarter of ‘Melancholy’) are duplicated here in live performances, recorded with all the clarity and colour we now expect from the Wigmore’s engineers. The Hyperion disc edges it for poise (with some slightly more measured tempi), but there’s an urgency to the Wigmore recordings that will appeal to some, as well as a performance of ‘Flow my tears’ that’s up with the very finest on disc – cobweb-fragile but with the same tensile strength through its melodic strands.

Though the mood is dominantly (and predictably) sombre, chiefly thanks to a sequence of John Danyel songs, their harmonies tortured and twisted into Gesualdo-like contortions, there are some sunnier moments. The opener – Robert Johnson’s ‘Have you seen the bright lily grow?’ – is exquisite, and his ‘From the famous peak of Derby’ brings some welcome irreverence to proceedings, while Dunford’s solos give this instinctive, expressive musician a chance to show his mettle.

The highlight, however – reason alone to buy the disc – is the world premiere recording of Nico Muhly’s Old Bones. Inspired by the discovery of Richard III’s skeleton, and written for Davies, the song has an elegiac, Brittenish quality, uniting its collage of texts with a flow of quasi-conversational melody that sits somewhere between recitative and song. It’s music that haunts the ear and lingers in the mind – the best PR Richard III has had in a long time.

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