[Cover graphic]

Compact Disc CDA67648

£13.99


Mark Padmore is widely acknowledged as one of the greatest tenors working today, celebrated in the opera house, the concert hall and as a peerless recording artist. He is admired—among other things—for his ‘extraordinary diction and whispering chamber-like intimacy … [his] joy in conveying the emotional core of each situation’ (Gramophone) and it is these facets of his performance—together with the exquisite musicianship of Elizabeth Kenny—which make this disc of Dowland songs such a delight. The little world of each song is sensitively explored and beautifully expressed.

Elizabeth Kenny writes in her scholarly booklet notes that ‘over the years many great singers have made Dowland’s voice their own, and this is one of our starting points for this disc’. Padmore and Kenny have used some perhaps less familiar manuscripts to perform a number of these songs and the result is fascinating.

Britten’s Nocturnal after John Dowland, written for Julian Bream in 1963, is an extended exploration of the tensions and nightmares behind the song Come, heavy Sleep, and receives a darkly brilliant performance here by Craig Ogdon.


Recorded in All Saints Church, East Finchley, London, on 5–7 February 2007
Recording Engineer
JULIAN MILLARD
Recording Producer
MARK BROWN
Booklet Editor
TIM PARRY
Front Picture Research
RICHARD HOWARD
Executive Producer
SIMON PERRY
© Hyperion Records Ltd, London, MMVIII

Duration: 75'25
DDD
Front illustration: Disappointed Love (1821) by Francis Danby (1793–1861)


Contents:

    JOHN DOWLAND (1563–1626)

  1. Unquiet thoughts [3'46]
  2. Say, Love, if ever thou didst find [1'54]
  3. Sorrow, stay! [4'06]
  4. Away with these self-loving lads [2'35]
  5. Fantasia No 7 from A Varietie of Lute Lessons lute solo [3'44]
  6. Come again! sweet love [4'56]
  7. Sleep, wayward thoughts — lute solo [1'22]
  8. Come, heavy Sleep [4'28]

    BENJAMIN BRITTEN (1913–1976)

    Nocturnal after John Dowland Op 70 †
    Reflections on Come, heavy Sleep guitar solo [17'55]

  9. I Musingly (Meditativo) [2'10]
  10. II Very agitated (Molto agitato) [0'43]
  11. III Restless (Inquieto) [1'37]
  12. IV Uneasy (Ansioso) [1'28]
  13. V March-like (Quasi una marcia) [1'38]
  14. VI Dreaming (Sognante) [1'59]
  15. VII Gently rocking (Cullante) [1'17]
  16. VIII Passacaglia: Measured (Misurato) — Slow and quiet (Molto tranquillo) [6'53]

    JOHN DOWLAND

  17. Flow, my tears [4'28]
  18. I must complain [4'50]
  19. If my complaints could passions move [3'04]
  20. Captain Digorie Piper’s Galliard lute solo [1'42]
  21. What if I never speed? [2'22]
  22. To ask for all thy love [2'23]
  23. Now, O now, I needs must part [6'12]
  24. In darkness let me dwell [4'25]
Sleeve Notes


SUNDAY TIMES CLASSICAL CD OF THE WEEK


'The lyrical tone, immaculate diction and musicianship of Britain's finest tenor … He makes the strongest possible case for regarding Dowland as the father of English song with his expressive, deeply-felt accounts of some of the best-known numbers … Kenny's authoritative booklet notes puts the songs into a fascinating historical context' (Sunday Times)

'This fascinating release does more than raise the standard of Dowland interpretation yet another notch: it also helps to contextualise the composer in relation to both his own time and ours … Mark Padmore again shows why he is one of today's finest tenors. The quicker songs, like "Away with these self-loving lads", gain in clarity from a semi-declamatory approach, while the slower are eerily viol-like. The interpretations are restrained yet intense. Elizabeth Kenny's lute caresses the vocal line, embellishments, colour changes and rhythmic pointing never retarding the flow' (Gramophone)

'The opening Unquiet Thoughts introduces the clarity and lightness, as well as the dynamic chading and delicate ornamentation on repeated phrases which are a feature of all that follows … Engagingly written booklet notes by Kenny and a fine recorded sound provide just two more reasons to recommed this as one of the best Dowland recitals on disc to come our way in a long time' (International Record Review)

'… 'Flow My Tears' is beautifully inflected, though finer still is 'In Darkness let me Dwell', where in the final bars Padmore's enrapt engagement seems to conjure up the very chill of death … With Elizabeth Kenny's insightful support, there is an involvement which even surpasses Paul Agnew's superb Dowland recordings of a decade ago' (BBC Music Magazine)

'Padmore is wonderfully expressive in Flow my teares, which he embellishes fluently. Britten's dreamy guitar solo Nocturnal after John Dowland is sandwiched between the songs and exquisitely played by Craig Ogden' (Classic FM Magazine)

'A simply brilliant disc. I can't praise it enough. A bronze Liz Kenny should be on the empty plinth in Trafalgar Square, in my opinion' (Early Music News)

'Since Emma Kirkby's first recording in the late-1970s, we have known what to expect from Dowland's lute songs. Some fine discs have followed, but not until Mark Padmore and Elizabeth Kenny's new release has there been one as radical in its potential impact on our understanding of the music. With tonal purity intact, voice and lute add subtle decoration, rhythmic fluidity, drama and rich poetic sensibility to these songs, using Craig Ogden's expressive performance of Britten's 'Nocturnal' as their foil. Odd to hail "Come again" as the highlight, but the vivid reading of this ostensibly simple song is a revelation' (Independent on Sunday)

'Having displayed Handelian virtuosity in his highly acclaimed solo release of last year, Padmore brings a more focused drama to his performance here. Kenny's sparse and precise accompaniment allows him to explore his voice as an instrument, sometimes mellow and resonant, sometimes cleaner, reedier, but never resorting to the sort of hollow breathiness that can taint exposed recital work. There is a great control of expression and Padmore's sensitive ornamentation makes the music his own – according to the project's theme – without garish disfigurement. The simple cover slip provides lyrics and detailed notes by Kenny, though Padmore's immaculate diction renders the former almost superfluous' (MusicOMH.com)

'Padmore sounds genial, worldly, relaxed. He can be touchingly tender at times: he has an affecting vibrato, which he uses effectively… His voice is full, his enunciation clear' (Fanfare, USA)

'...exquisite diction, studied and pure pronunciation, warm and burnished vocal tone, endless breath support. The incredibly long note at the end of Sorrow, stay! will take your breath away, although Padmore sounds like he had some left over. Elizabeth Kenny, a distinguished lutenist is a sensitive partner, allowing Padmore to anchor the ends of phrases, add rhythmic touches to important words, and treat repeated phrases with an eye toward variation....The warm sound, captured in London's All Saints Church, renders the fragility of the genre, music that is meant to be heard from as close as possible, without introducing too much distracting detail' (IONARTS.com)


Home | About Hyperion | Catalogue | News | Artists | Distributors