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The Lowest Trees Have Tops.

John Dowland’s setting of a poem by Edward Dyer.

From The Third and Last Booke of Songs or Aires, 1603

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JJYsfVJ1bdg&ab_channel=Passamezzo

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Michael Cavendish: Zephyrus Brings the Time

From 14 Ayres in Tabletorie to the , 1598.

Eleanor Cramer:

Christopher Goodwin: Lute

Alison Kinder: Bass Viol

Tamsin Lewis:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YypW-qKngJA

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My Little Sweet Darling
An anonymous Tudor lullaby (sometimes attributed to William Byrd.)
The song is found in multiple sources, and may originally have been sung in “A tragedy called Oedipus,” an Elizabethan translation of a Latin play by Seneca.

Sam Brown: lute
Eleanor Cramer: soprano

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UW8pcxXAtqk&ab_channel=Passamezzo

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Passamezzo , to histodon
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A English setting of 127, described as being suitable for or a .
From La Scala Santa Hugh Hare, Baron Coleraine, 1670.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6OJ3oi43J_Q&ab_channel=Passamezzo
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Some for :
Three anonymous wintry melodies from & Britain. In the fields in frost & snow - On the cold ground - Long cold nights.
Alison Kinder: bass ,
Eleanor Cramer: bass viol
Richard de Winter: drum
Tamsin Lewis: Renaissance
Richard Mackenzie:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=epun4iixbe4&ab_channel=Passamezzo
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Some remedies.
A set of and from the Masque of , where quack doctors vie with each other to sell cures every conceivable ailment...

This was performed twice in London in 1618. First at , and then at the Banqueting House in Whitehall for King James I.

Emily Atkinson:
Richard de Winter:
Robin Jeffrey:
Alison Kinder: bass
Tamsin Lewis:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DEwdS_V4s1s&ab_channel=Passamezzo

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It's bitterly cold today, so 17th Century broadside ballad describing how to Drive the Cold Winter Away seems appropriate...

Eleanor Cramer: bass viol
Richard de Winter: baritone
Alison Kinder: recorders
Tamsin Lewis: Renaissance violin
Richard Mackenzie: lute

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NnbUPnXIQSw&ab_channel=Passamezzo

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Something for
Detail from an Italian choirbook showing an illuminated letter C with playing the psaltery, with other female musicians playing & .
V&A Museum

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John Dowland: Sleep, wayward thoughts
from The First Booke of Songs or Ayres, 1597.

Richard de Winter: tenor
Robin Jeffrey: lute
Alison Kinder: bass viol

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H1-HkJGG0Vo&ab_channel=Passamezzo


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LK_Sass , (edited ) to poetry
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Tombeau for Bolesław Leśmian
by Roman Turovsky-Savchuk
Performed by Maciej Kończak (theorbo) https://youtu.be/hH7Zj2XJYOQ?si=g2UZxOPnXxc6W9uP

Haunting and gorgeous, as are most of Turovsky’s compositions.

Bolesław Leśmian was “the most eminent poet of his day and one of the most important Polish poets of the 20th century” More: https://culture.pl/en/artist/boleslaw-lesmian

ClassicalMusic @classicalmusic @poetry

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Today's video was one of the last things that we did before lockdown in March 2020... It was filmed in the Great Watching Chamber at Hampton Court Palace, while preparing a section on Elizabethan music for Historic Royal Palace's Futurelearn course on Tudor entertainment.

Augustine Bassano: Pavan
From Egerton MS 3665

Robin Jeffrey: lute
Tamsin Lewis: renaissance violin

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R0rC0gVr2ig&ab_channel=Passamezzo


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William Lawes: Think not I could absent myself this night

A dialogue between Eunomia (goddess of law) and Irene (goddess of peace) from James Shirley's court masque, The Triumph of Peace, 1634

Emily Atkinson: Eunomia (soprano)
Richard de Winter: Irene (tenor)
Peter Willcock: bass
Alison Kinder: bass viol
Tamsin Lewis: violin, alto
Keith McGowan: flute
Richard Mackenzie: lute

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M0wTjEWnaO8&ab_channel=Passamezzo



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Two anonymous 17th Century ballads describing the purported evil deeds of Richard III, the murder of the Princes in the Tower, and the Battle of Bosworth Field, which was fought in 1485.
A good example of Tudor propaganda.

A song of the Life and Death of King Richard the Third (to the tune of Who list to lead a soldier's life)
and
The most cruel murther of Edward the fifth, and his brother Duke of York, in the Tower; by their Uncle Richard Duke of Gloucester (to the tune of Fortune my foe)
From Richard Johnson's ballad miscellany, The Golden Garland of Princely Delights, 1620

Eleanor Cramer:
Richard de Winter:
Robin Jeffrey:
Alison KInder: bass

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eStjRK_gY-M&ab_channel=Passamezzo

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What meat eats the Spaniard?
An anonymous about eating too much fish!
From Blurt Master-Constable. Or The Spaniards night-walke.
[Attributed to] and 1602.

Emily Atkinson:
Richard de Winter:
Robin Jeffrey:
Alison Kinder: bass
Tamsin Lewis:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KVBraD9ZlOA&ab_channel=Passamezzo

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