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320k 166.8MB $8.49

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WMA 16bit 44.1kHz 273.1MB $10.99

CD Quality

CD Quality Downloads

Gimell CD Quality Downloads offer identical quality to the original Compact Discs. Before you place an order please use our Test Files to check compatibility with your system.

You can burn these files to CD or play them from your computer but we strongly recommend that you listen using a Network Music Player connected to your Hi-fi system.

PCs - Our CD Quality WMA Downloads can be imported into Windows Media Player and into the Windows version of iTunes. iTunes will convert the files when you import them; to avoid loss of quality please select 'Import using Apple Lossless Format' in the iTunes menu at 'Edit - Preferences - Advanced -  Importing'.

MACs - Apple will not allow us to sell Downloads in the Apple Lossless format. The only Gimell Downloads that will import directly into iTunes on a Mac are MP3s, however other programmes are available for the Mac that will reproduce our CD Quality, Studio Master and Studio Master Pro FLAC Downloads. If you have access to a PC you can convert our WMA files into Apple Lossless using the Windows version of iTunes and then copy the files to your MAC. Alternatively you can use Soundfile Conversion Software such as Switch to convert our FLAC files to the Apple Lossless format.

FLAC 16bit 44.1kHz 277.9MB $10.99

Tracks to Sample and Download

Track Time Listen Price
1

Hark, all ye lovely saints

Hark, all ye lovely saints

Composer Thomas Weelkes (1576-1623)
Conductor Peter Phillips
3:46 Play $1.59
2

Hark! Alleluia

Hark! Alleluia

Composer Thomas Morley (1558-1602)
Conductor Peter Phillips
1:52 Play $1.59
3

Phyllis, I fain would die now

Phyllis, I fain would die now

Composer Thomas Morley (1558-1602)
Conductor Peter Phillips
5:31 Play $3.18
4

Cruel Madame

Cruel Madame

Composer Thomas Vautor (fl.1600-1620)
Conductor Peter Phillips
4:24 Play $1.59
5

Ah dear heart

Ah dear heart

Composer Orlando Gibbons (1583-1625)
Conductor Peter Phillips
2:09 Play $1.59
6

Draw on sweet night

Draw on sweet night

Composer John Wilbye (1574-1638)
Conductor Peter Phillips
5:49 Play $3.18
7

All creatures now

All creatures now

Composer John Bennet (1570-1615)
Conductor Peter Phillips
2:25 Play $1.59
8

Sleep, fleshly birth

Sleep, fleshly birth

Composer Robert Ramsey (fl.c.1612-1644)
Conductor Peter Phillips
6:18 Play $3.18
9

Carters, now cast down

Carters, now cast down

Composer Giles Farnaby (c.1563-1640)
Conductor Peter Phillips
1:54 Play $1.59
10

Woe is me (Secular version)

Woe is me (Secular version)

Composer Thomas Tomkins (1572-1656)
Conductor Peter Phillips
4:07 Play $1.59
11

Though Amaryllis dance

Though Amaryllis dance

Composer William Byrd (1543-1623)
Conductor Peter Phillips
4:53 Play $1.59
12

The silver swan

The silver swan

Composer Orlando Gibbons (1583-1625)
Conductor Peter Phillips
1:50 Play $1.59
13

When David Heard

When David Heard

Composer Thomas Tomkins (1572-1656)
Conductor Peter Phillips
4:26 Play $1.59
14

Then David mourned

Then David mourned

Composer Thomas Tomkins (1572-1656)
Conductor Peter Phillips
2:59 Play $1.59
15

Almighty God, the fountain of all wisdom

Almighty God, the fountain of all wisdom

Composer Thomas Tomkins (1572-1656)
Conductor Peter Phillips
5:36 Play $3.18
16

Woe is me (Sacred version)

Woe is me (Sacred version)

Composer Thomas Tomkins (1572-1656)
Conductor Peter Phillips
4:13 Play $1.59
17

Be strong and of a good courage

Be strong and of a good courage

Composer Thomas Tomkins (1572-1656)
Conductor Peter Phillips
2:34 Play $1.59
18

O sing unto the Lord a new song

O sing unto the Lord a new song

Composer Thomas Tomkins (1572-1656)
Conductor Peter Phillips
3:43 Play $1.59
19

O God, the proud are risen against me

O God, the proud are risen against me

Composer Thomas Tomkins (1572-1656)
Conductor Peter Phillips
4:14 Play $1.59
Total Playing Time  72:50 Purchase all tracks  $10.99

English Madrigals (25th Anniversary Edition)

The Tallis Scholars

GIMSE 403

Total Playing Time 72:50

This unique album, the only recording by The Tallis Scholars of English Madrigals and their first-ever digital recording, was made in the Great Hall at Deene Park, Northamptonshire, on April 23rd, 24th and 25th, 1982. There are also 7 bonus tracks featuring English Anthems by Thomas Tomkins recorded in Salle Church, Norfolk, on July 18th, 19th and 20th, 1988.

"Originally released on the Classic for Pleasure label, the issuing of this CD will mark the first time these tracks have been commercially available for over 20 years. The twelve madrigals presented here were deliberately chosen to show off the scope of the best English madrigal writing around the year 1600. Do I regret not having done more of this repertoire in the intervening years? I would, if there hadn't been so much first-rate sacred music to explore." Peter Phillips


In 1980 The Tallis Scholars made a record of music by Allegri, Palestrina and William Mundy for the black-vinyl budget label Classics for Pleasure. It sold so well that we were asked to make a follow-up, with the stipulation that the repertoire should be as popular as on the first disc. This didn't give me much scope within what was known of sacred polyphony in those days so that, out of a number of suggestions, it was finally decided to record secular music. The madrigals which follow were duly recorded in the Great Hall of Deene Park, Northamptonshire, in April 1982. This was the first and only time we have ever recorded such repertoire; and the issuing of this CD will mark the first time these tracks have been commercially available for over twenty years.

When we made this recording no one was in any doubt as to the quality of the music. My subsequent hesitations in programming secular items in concert have been entirely to do with the sound-world which they require: one voice to a part with the interpretative attention focused on the words and not in the first instance on the group sound, which is what The Tallis Scholars have subsequently specialized in. For this recording we placed the singers in a large room which had little reverberance, where they could hear each other clearly and so react to the way each was using the words to expressive ends, yet the singers in question were experienced in choral work and knew instinctively how to fit their voices into a group. The result, as was said at the time of its release, was a recording which tried to bridge the gap between vocal ensembles which specialized in madrigal singing and a fully choral approach. I am struck now by how legitimate that approach was. Obviously it is most successful in items which have a quasi-sacred message, like Morley's Hark! Alleluia or Tomkins' Woe is me (which interestingly we recorded some years later as a sacred piece and include here in the bonus tracks that follow the madrigals); but it works as well in the lighter numbers, like Bennet's All creatures now. Do I regret not having done more of this repertoire in the intervening years? I would, if there hadn't been so much first-rate sacred music to explore.

The twelve madrigals presented here were deliberately chosen to show off the scope of the best English madrigal-writing around the year 1600. My own penchant was for the more contemplative items, with their longer lines and more plangent part-writing: Wilbye's Draw on sweet night; Gibbons's Ah dear heart and The silver swan; Ramsey's Sleep, fleshly birth; and the Tomkins mentioned above. At the other end of the spectrum are the so-called balletts and canzonets, sometimes sporting characteristic ‘fa la las': Weelkes's Hark, all ye lovely saints; Bennet's All creatures now; Farnaby's Carters, now cast down; Vautor's anguished but not at all churchy Cruel Madame; and Byrd's Though Amaryllis dance offering a more musically intricate contribution to the pastoral tradition. (The cross rhythms in this piece so excited E H Fellowes that he likened them to Brahms's compositional style.) In between, and most original of all in many ways, are the two pieces by Thomas Morley: Hark! Alleluia, which comes as close to representing the music of the spheres as any piece I know; and Phyllis, I fain would die now, a dialogue between Phyllis (sung by three women in ballett-style) and Amintas, her lover (sung by four men in sacred polyphonic style). Only at the end do all the seven voices sing together.

The closest The Tallis Scholars normally come to singing madrigals in concert is in the anthems of the early Stuart composers: Tomkins, Weelkes and Gibbons in particular. In 1988 The Tallis Scholars made a recording of Anglican music by Thomas Tomkins, who, by choosing texts which had obvious opportunities for word-painting, was as adept as anybody at marrying sacred with secular style. In fact in one or two cases in Tomkins' output - Woe is me and When David heard among them - the same piece is to be found both in a published collection of madrigals (the set of 1622) and in the anthology called Musica Deo Sacra, of sacred music, which Thomas's son Nathaniel published after his father's death in 1668. These pieces have become known as ‘sacred madrigals' (they might as well have been called ‘secular anthems'), a title which encouraged me eventually to record Woe is me in both formats. The listener can decide which he or she prefers: the long lines and sustained dissonances suggest choral textures, while the intimacy of the complaint goes well on solo voices.

But madrigalian touches are never far from the surface of Tomkins' church music: O God, the proud are risen against me uses its eight voices to build up an unforgettable wall of complaint in the opening passage; while Almighty God, the fountain of all wisdom spends several minutes sounding like the most staid Anglican service setting in the repertoire until without warning, just before the Amen, all hell seems to break loose. Whether you call the dissonant harmony and whole-tone phrases which follow madrigalian or just experimental, they seem to take Tomkins' music out of the Renaissance period altogether.

© 2007 Peter Phillips

Deene Park was built and restored over a long period. There are remnants of stone-work from c.1300; but the Great Hall was finished in 1572 and it was there, under a fine hammberbeam roof and in front of the portrait of the man who built it - Sir Edmund Brudenell - that this recording was made. The style of the architecture, in common with several Elizabethan houses in Northamptonshire, is strongly Italianate. This very much suits a musical repertoire which found its inspiration in Italy, but which was so effectively Anglicized. For further information see www.deenepark.com.

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BBC Music Magazine
5 Stars
This sole recording of secular music by the Tallis Scholars makes one wish for more.
more >>

14 May 2008
England
Saint Edmundsbury Cathedral, Bury St Edmunds

Palestrina Laudate pueri dominum; Magnificat for Double Choir
Ingegneri Missa Laudate pueri Dominum
Victoria Lamentations for Maundy Thursday
Jackson O Doctor optime
Tavener Song for Athene
New Composition from a Festival Competition



20 May 2008
Italy
Chiesa di San Marcellino, Cremona
Palestrina Laudate Pueri Dominum
Ingegneri Missa Laudate Pueri Dominum
Cavalli Requiem

23 May 2008
England
Beverley Minster, Beverley
Palestrina Laudate pueri dominum; Magnificat for Double Choir
Ingegneri Missa Laudate pueri Dominum
Victoria Lamentations for Maundy Thursday
Jackson O Doctor optime
Tavener Song for Athene
New Composition from a Festival Competition

11 June 2008
France
Chapelle de la Trinité, Lyon

Palestrina Laudate pueri dominum; Stabat Mater; Magnificat and Nunc Dimittis for Double Choir
Ingegneri Missa Laudate pueri dominum
Allegri Miserere



12 June 2008
France
Chapelle de la Trinité, Lyon
Palestrina Stabat Mater; Magnificat for Double Choir
Ingegneri Missa Laudate pueri dominum
Allegri Miserere

28 June 2008
Spain
Catedral de Girona, Girona
Victoria Requiem; Vidi speciosam; Nigra sum; Salve regina (a 8)
Guerrero Hei domine, domine
Willaert Ave virgo
Obrecht Salve regina

22 July 2008
England
Royal Albert Hall, London
BBC Proms

Concert commences at 10pm.
Box office 020 7589 8212.
Promoter's website

Obrecht Missa 'Malheur me bat'
Josquin Missa 'Malheur me bat'



The Tallis Scholars directed by Peter Phillips

ENGLISH MADRIGALS

Soprano

Alison Gough (1,3-8,10,11); Emily van Evera (1-4,6-12)

Alto

Margaret Philpot (1-12); Michael Chance (3,6)

Tenor

Rufus Müller (2-5,7-9,11); Andrew King (1-3,5,6,8,10,12)

Bass

Julian Walker (2,5-7,9-12); Francis Steele (1-4,8,10,12)

Recorded by Mike Clements in the Great Hall at Deene Park, Northamptonshire, England, on April 23rd, 24th and 25th, 1982.

 

ANTHEMS & SACRED MADRIGALS

Soprano

Sally Dunkley (13-19); Deborah Roberts (13-19); Tessa Bonner (14,16-19); Ruth Holton (14,16-19)

Alto

Robert Harre-Jones (13-19); Michael Lees (13-19); Nigel Short (13-19); Caroline Trevor (13-19)

Tenor

Charles Daniels (13-19); Richard Edgar-Wilson (13-19); Angus Smith (19); Andrew Tusa (19)

Bass

Donald Greig (13-19); Francis Steele (13-19); Stephen Charlesworth (16-19); Jonathan Markham (16-19)

Recorded by Chris Eyres and Sean Lewis in the Church of St Peter and St Paul, Salle, Norfolk, England, on July 18th,19th and 20th, 1988.

 

Produced by Steve C Smith and Peter Phillips for Gimell Records.

Peter Phillips prepared all the musical editions for Gimell Records except for Tomkins' Be strong and of a good courage which was prepared for Gimell Records by Francis Knights.

Cover picture: Portrait of a girl (probably Venetia Stanley, later Lady Digby) by Peter Oliver (c.1594-1647). © Victoria & Albert Museum, London, UK / The Bridgeman Art Library.

The copyright in this sound recording and in its accompanying sleeve notes, translations and visual designs, is owned by Gimell Records.

This compilation (P) 2007 Original sound recording made by Gimell Records.
© 2007 Gimell Records




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