JEFFREYS 'Lost Majesty - Sacred Songs and Anthems'

Record and Artist Details

Genre:

Vocal

Label: Prospero Classical

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 85

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: PROSP0086

PROSP0086. JEFFREYS 'Lost Majesty - Sacred Songs and Anthems'

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Hark, shepherd swains George Jeffreys, Composer
Solomon's Knot
Busy time this day George Jeffreys, Composer
Solomon's Knot
Brightest of days George Jeffreys, Composer
Solomon's Knot
Whisper it easily George Jeffreys, Composer
Solomon's Knot
Rise, heart, thy Lord is risen George Jeffreys, Composer
Solomon's Knot
Look up, all eyes George Jeffreys, Composer
Solomon's Knot
The Lord in thy adversity George Jeffreys, Composer
Solomon's Knot
A Music Strange George Jeffreys, Composer
Solomon's Knot
What praise can reach thy clemency George Jeffreys, Composer
Solomon's Knot
Turn thee again George Jeffreys, Composer
Solomon's Knot
Awake my soul George Jeffreys, Composer
Solomon's Knot
How wretched is the state George Jeffreys, Composer
Solomon's Knot
In the midst of life George Jeffreys, Composer
Solomon's Knot
Turn thou us, O good Lord George Jeffreys, Composer
Solomon's Knot
Great and marvellous are thy works George Jeffreys, Composer
Solomon's Knot
He beheld the city George Jeffreys, Composer
Solomon's Knot

If you have ever stopped to wonder about that awkward musical gap between William Byrd and Henry Purcell in traditional music history books, then this double album will open your ears to the early arrival of new Italian styles in England during the Civil War. Formed from the happy union of Jonathan Wainwright’s new volume for Musica Britannica and the passion of organist William Whitehead, early music specialists Solomon’s Knot tap into an extraordinary forgotten composer, George Jeffreys (c1610-1685), and the results are absolutely fascinating. The recordings took place at Kirby Hall near Corby, Northamptonshire, one of England’s most enchanting Elizabethan manor houses, now partly abandoned to the elements, which infuses the recording with a generous acoustic, perfect for four- and five-voice works with continuo.

We know nothing about Jeffreys before 1631, when he made contact with the Hatton family, for whom he worked over the following years in a ‘secretarial capacity’ while also composing. Copies of the latest Italian music in Jeffreys’s hand demonstrate that he closely followed continental developments, which filter through to his own music: expressive dissonance and chromaticism, contrasting sections of homophony and polyphony, virtuosic writing, declamatory passages and many delicious harmonic progressions – quite different from the late polyphonic styles that preceded him. One huge advantage Solomon’s Knot have in this type of music is the unrelenting beauty of their individual voices: listen for the cascading phrases in the four-voice work What praise can reach thy clemency.

The headline piece here is In the midst of life, a funeral text set by Jeffreys during his own life-threatening illness. This is bold music that conjures strange harmonies and ends with a minor-key alleluia, and it is sung with sensitivity and confidence. Similarly, The Lord in thy adversity, a paraphrase by George Sandys of Psalm 20, strikes a delicious balance between fragility and sure-footed navigation of multiple harmonic twists. Listen for the delicate opening and delightful word-painting on ‘perfume’: this is highly nuanced music, for sure, but Solomon’s Knot clearly have the measure of it.

What praise can reach thy clemency – another text by George Sandys, this time a paraphrase of Isaiah 38 – has many beautiful moments that these performers relish, especially ‘I therefore to the warbling string / His praise will sing’. Finally, there are vocal contrasts as well: consider Turn thee again from Psalm 80, richly performed by lower voices, who lean into the wonderful harmony at ‘and giv’st them plenteousness of tears to drink’ and find many colours in a particular luscious passage on the words ‘Thou has brought a vine out of Egypt’.

I’m apt to agree with the marketing copy that this recording will ‘undoubtedly show that [Jeffreys] is the great “forgotten” composer of the English 17th century’. Certainly these excellent performances will help.

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