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56th Dubrovnik Summer Festival 2005 Croatia MUSICIANS OF THE GLOBE I Joanne Lunn soprano Adrian Chandler violin Philip Pickett recorder Arngeir Hauksson cittern Lynda Sayce lute Elizabeth Pallett bandora Catherine Finnis viol John Ballanger jester, actor, juggler Lovrjenac Fort 14 August 9.30 pm Songs from Shakespeare's plays, with music from the Elizabethan and Jacobean theatre: Anonimus: Strawberry leaves Thomas Morley (from First Booke of Ayres, 1600.): It was a lover Anonimus: Sellingers Round Anonimus: Walsingham, traditional ballad tune Anonimus: How should I your true love know (Hamlet)? Robert Johnson: Full Fathom five (/The Tempest) Robert Johnson: Where the bee sucks (/The Tempest) From Morley Consort Lessons, 1599.-1611.): Can she excuse my wrongs Robert Jones (from First Booke of Songes, 1600.): Farewell dear love (Twelfth Night) James Lauder – Anonimus: My Lord of Marche Pavan/ Galliard John Wilson: Take o take those lips (Measure for Measure) Robert Johnson (?): Hark hark the lark (Cymbeline) Anonimus: The poor soul sat sighing (Othello) Anonimus: Mother Watkin's Ale ***** From Morley Consort Lessons: O mistresse myne Thomas Morley: O mistresse myne (Twelfth Night) Anonimus (from Mulliner Book, c. 1560.) La bounette/ La doune cella/La shy myze Anonimus: Dulcina Richard Nicholson: The Jew's Daunce Anonimus: Daphne From Morley Consort Lessons: La Coranto From Morley Consort Lessons: La Volta Thomas Morley: Now is the month of Maying In 1993 Sam Wanamaker asked Philip Pickett to form an associate ensemble to carry the name and ethos of the Globe Theatre around the world through recordings, concerts and broadcasts. Determined to achieve the highest possible standards of musical performance, Pickett immediately formed the Musicians of the Globe from among the very best of England’s early music instrumentalists. As well as working with distinguished vocal soloists, the nucleus of the group (a broken consort of violin, recorder, cittern, lute, bandora and bass viol) can be expanded with trumpets, cornetts, sackbuts, shawms, recorders, curtals, violins, viols, keyboards and percussion; and for later repertoire the ensemble becomes a full Baroque, Classical or Romantic orchestra with soloists and choir. In consultation with such eminent musicologists and editors as Peter Holman, Andrew Pinnock, Michael Pilkington and Peter Downey the group has explored a wide repertoire ranging from the 16th to the 19th century, all of it English, and much of it inspired by Shakespeare. The Musicians of the Globe made their Purcell Room debut in March 1994. The concert was such a success that they were immediately invited to make three live broadcasts for BBC Radio 3 and to perform in the 1995 Purcell Room concert series. The group also appeared at the Seville, Aldeburgh and South Bank Centre Early Music Festivals. In June 1997 they began a summer concert series at the Globe, one of which was recorded for BBC Radio 3; and brass, wind and percussion players from the ensemble provided the music for Richard Olivier’s production of Henry V. Highlights of 1998/9 included The Merchant of Venice and four fully-staged performances of Blow’s opera Venus and Adonis at the Globe; a live broadcast for the BBC World Service; a live appearance on Brian Kay’s Sunday morning radio show; The Tempest for the City of London Festival; and concerts in Belgium, Italy, Sicily, at the BBC Proms, London’s Purcell Room and Queen Elizabeth Hall, Barcelona’s Palau de la Musica and Rome’s Accademia Filarmonica. More recently they have visited South America, toured Hungary and Japan (twice), returned to Rome, Barcelona, Bruges, London’s South Bank Centre and the City of London Festival (Dido & Aeneas), and appeared at the Antwerp, Turin, Ravenna, Sienna, Utrecht, York, Carinthian Summer and Prague Spring Festivals. The Musicians of the Globe have recorded 7 CDs for Philips Classics ranging from Shakespeare’s Musick through Purcell’s Fairy Queen and Linley’s Shakespeare Ode to Henry Rowley Bishop’s music for the early 19th-century Shakespeare revivals at Covent Garden. Their very first US release in 1997 was nominated for the coveted Grammy Award for Best Small Ensemble Performance. John Ballanger began his career as a comedy acrobat and has continued as actor/performer with such diverse companies as The New Vic, The Royal Opera House, The Medieval Players, Harrogate Theatre Company and Theatre Powys. He performed extensively in solo shows and was voted Jester of the Year 1990. John is director of Fools Paradise Theatre Company, founded in 1985 to provide period entertainment based on traditional performance skills, with which he has performed in Australia, Israel, Greece, Bahrain, Spain, Switzerland and Italy. With its commitment to high artistic standards, Fools Paradise has been invited to perform at the most prestigious festivals in Great Britain, Italy and Greece. Musical life in England probably reached its zenith during Elizabethan and early Jacobean times. A remarkable number of excellent composers wrote music of every description for dancing, singing, the home, the court, the theatre and the church – and they wrote for every kind of musical ensemble. The intense musical activity of the last twenty years of the 16th century carried on into the reigns of James I and Charles I, and much of the music now mistakenly regarded as Elizabethan was actually composed or printed long after 1603. The lute was the most popular plucked instrument of the Renaissance. The plucked instruments were mainly performed by amateur musicians, and playing the lute and viol were considered an essential part of a cultivated person’s upbringing. Instrumental music in the Elizabethan and Jacobean age consisted largely of fantasias, dances and arrangements of well-known sacred and secular vocal music for solos and ensembles. Composer and performer were very often one and the same. Music was a prominent feature also in the play production, yet only a few of the original song-settings survived. It is nowadays hard to tell which of the pieces preserved in printed and manuscript collections have a theatrical origin; and authorship of some of them is doubtful. Some of tonight’s songs were very well known such as O mistress mine, Full fathom five, Where the bee sucks, The poor soul sat sighing, It was a lover and his lass, and we know exactly where, and in which of Shakespeare's plays each of these belongs. Many of them were directly inspired by contemporary folk music and by the popular tunes of the day. In chamber ensembles of the time each instrument played a clearly defined role, which at times had to be adapted to the instruments available. English composer and music theoretician Thomas Morley (1557 – 1602), pupil of William Byrd, graduated from the Oxford University in 1588. He was organist of St Giles Church, and from 1591 organist of St Paul Cathedral in London. In 1952 he became a member of the Royal Chapel, and in 1598 was granted an exclusive licence for 21 years to print songbooks and all kinds of music paper. One of the major representatives of the Elizabethan period, he founded the madrigal school, and was its most prolific and most influential master. His collections of canzonets, madrigals and ballets (which he introduced to England) were republished in quick succession. One of his works A Plaine and Easie Introduction to Practicall Musicke is an important source of the 16th century music practice study. Written as a composition textbook, this tractate reveals Morley’s huge theoretical knowledge. English lutenist and composer John Wilson (1595 – 1674) was a theatre singer up to 1635, and then become a court musician. He lived in Oxford during the civil war, where he was a university professor of music from 1656 – 1661. In 1662 he become a member of Chapel Royal. A renowned singer and lutenist he was very good in composing music on the already existing texts, and was among the first composers to set Shakespeare’s songs. In addition to the collection Cheerfull Ayres or Ballads (1660), he composed many songs in the Collection of J. Playford (1652 - 1667), as well as Psalterium Carolinum for three voices and basso continuo (1657). English composer and lutenist Robert Johnson (1583 - 1633), the son of famous lutenist John, studied music at the court of Sir G. Careys, Lord Hunsdon II. From 1604 until death he was engaged as a court lutenist. Considered one of the best solo song composers of his generation (Carecharming sleep, Wood, rocks and mountains, etc.), he also composed music for many theatre plays. Twelve of his secular solo song collections have been preserved, as well as twelve lute pieces. His original scores are kept at the Folger Library. English lute virtuoso Robert (II) Jones (1577 - 1615) completed his music studies at the Oxford University (1597), and in 1610, i.e. 1615 was granted (together with Ph. Rossetereo) permission to build the first children’s school and later a children’s theatre in London. Before its completion, however, the authorities ordered the theatre to be demolished. Only nine of his madrigals have been preserved in their entirety. He is better known as composer of 105 dynamic and effective songs for lute. English lutenist and composer James Lauder (mentioned c. 1600) was engaged at the court of Spanish King James VI. The piece that will be performed tonight is his most popular and most often performed composition. English composer and pedagogue Richard Nicholson (1570 - 1639) was choirmaster at the Magdalen College, Oxford from 1595, and from 1627 the first professor of music at the Oxford University. He composed church music on Latin and English texts, and his secular vocal pieces include humorous, rather than melancholy details. He contributed in composing the famous Triumphs of Oriana. D. Detoni