Tomkins Book of Songs
A welcome recording of part-songs by one of the last great English madrigalists
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Thomas Tomkins
Genre:
Vocal
Label: Chandos
Magazine Review Date: 2/2003
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 77
Mastering:
Stereo
DDD
Catalogue Number: CHAN0680

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: Adue, ye citty prisoning towers (5vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: Cloris, when as I woe (5vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: Come, shepheards, sing with me (5vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: Fond men that doe so highly prize (3vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: Fusca, in thy starry eyes (5vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: How great delight (3vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: It is my wel-loveds voice (6vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: Love, cease tormenting (3vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: Musicke devine (6vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: No more I will thy love importune (3vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: Oft did I marle (6vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: O let me live for true love (4vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: Our hasty life awat doth post (3vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: O yes, has any found a lad (4vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: Phillis, now cease to move me (5vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: Phillis, yet see him dying (5vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: See, see, the shepheards queens (5vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: Sure there is god of love (3vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: Too much I once lamented (5vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: To the shady woods (5vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: Turne unto the Lord (6vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: Was ever wretch tormented (4vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: Weepe no more, thou sorry boy (4vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: When David heard (5vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: When I observe (6vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Songs of Three - Six Parts, Movement: Woe is me (6vv) |
Thomas Tomkins, Composer
I Fagiolini Thomas Tomkins, Composer |
Author: Lindsay Kemp
Thomas Tomkins’s collection of Songs of 3, 4, 5 & 6 Parts, published in 1622, is one of the last of the great English madrigal books, but until now it has received little attention. Of the 26 pieces here, only the rightly celebrated When David heard (one of three sacred settings in the collection) has received a respectable number of recordings, while most have probably never been recorded at all. No doubt this has something to do with the fact that Tomkins was, as usual, some way behind the times, taking little heed of contemporary Italian trends; yet although he may not have been a natural madrigalist like Wilbye or Weelkes, he was certainly a fine composer, and these pieces display all his customary professionalism and invention.
They also show considerable variety, from deeply serious pieces such as Too much I once lamented to robustly playful numbers such as O yes, has any found a lad, with many stages in between; Weep no more and Oft did I marle pass through numerous mood-changes, Adue, ye citty prisoning towers is a delightful little scherzo with a joke ending, and O let me live for true love seems to be a parody of Dowland’s Lachrymae.
Also striking is the imaginative way in which Tomkins uses ‘fa-la’ passages to enhance a work’s expressiveness, so that (for instance) the final section of See, see the shepheards queene really dances, while Phillis, now cease to move me ends in determinedly carefree dotted rhythms. Most affecting of all, perhaps, are the lazily rising and falling ‘fa-las’ which punctuate Too much I once lamented.
I Fagiolini make a strong case for this neglected music, not only negotiating its intricate textures with great skill but also demonstrating a strong feeling for shaping and characterisation. Effective handling of the music’s ebb and flow, such as the build-up and release of tension in Phillis yet see him dying, abound. There are occasional moments when an uncertain start to a note suggests that intonation has not quite ‘settled’, but these do not detract much from the overall enjoyment of the performances. This is a valuable and welcome release.
They also show considerable variety, from deeply serious pieces such as Too much I once lamented to robustly playful numbers such as O yes, has any found a lad, with many stages in between; Weep no more and Oft did I marle pass through numerous mood-changes, Adue, ye citty prisoning towers is a delightful little scherzo with a joke ending, and O let me live for true love seems to be a parody of Dowland’s Lachrymae.
Also striking is the imaginative way in which Tomkins uses ‘fa-la’ passages to enhance a work’s expressiveness, so that (for instance) the final section of See, see the shepheards queene really dances, while Phillis, now cease to move me ends in determinedly carefree dotted rhythms. Most affecting of all, perhaps, are the lazily rising and falling ‘fa-las’ which punctuate Too much I once lamented.
I Fagiolini make a strong case for this neglected music, not only negotiating its intricate textures with great skill but also demonstrating a strong feeling for shaping and characterisation. Effective handling of the music’s ebb and flow, such as the build-up and release of tension in Phillis yet see him dying, abound. There are occasional moments when an uncertain start to a note suggests that intonation has not quite ‘settled’, but these do not detract much from the overall enjoyment of the performances. This is a valuable and welcome release.
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