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Sofie Vanden Eynde|Mistress Elizabeth Davenant, Her Songes

Mistress Elizabeth Davenant, Her Songes

Rebecca Ockenden and Sofie Vanden Eynde

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As the title suggests, Mistress Elizabeth Davenant, Her Songes, was a collection of music made for a specific individual. The collection dates to the year 1624 and has never left Oxford, where Elizabeth Davenant's father, John Davenant, was a prosperous tavern-keeper whose clientele apparently included William Shakespeare. This is not the only recording to take a cross-section of English early music by relying on a single manuscript, but it is one of the most interesting, and, as long as you are ready for a mood that's very gloomy even by the standards of English music of the early 17th century, one of the most attractive. The preponderance of melancholy songs, interrupted by a few dances for lute but by hardly any cheerful vocal music, seems to have resulted not from Mistress Davenant's individual personality but from a constellation of factors characteristic of the collection and the world of which it was a part. That world, contends annotator Anthony Rooley in the notes (which are worth the price of the CD version of the album), was one characterized by rapid change: politically, musically, and socially. Radical forms of Protestantism were on the rise, and music seemed an escape from an increasingly treacherous political realm. The influence of the Italian monodic style was felt in the basically conservative English lute song, and some of the pieces here are ingenious hybrids that have hardly been heard before (many are anonymous). Sample the ascending-octave glissando-cry at the beginning of John Wilson's Go happy hart (track 7). The most striking feature of the music is its female-centeredness, a trend that ultimately had begun with the reign of Elizabeth I and her interest in music. Mistress Elizabeth Davenant was singing words in which she could believe, with protagonists who for the most part are clearly female. And soprano Rebecca Ockenden, whose English is flawless, believes in them, too, aided by graceful accompaniment from lutenist Sofie Vanden Eynde. This aspect of the music is inventively highlighted by the recitation of sonnets by a female poet of the era, Mary Wroth; this has rarely been tried in recordings of early song, but of course it would not have been a surprise in a household of the time. Highly recommended for those attracted by the thorny but increasingly popular English repertory of the 17th century.

© TiVo

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Mistress Elizabeth Davenant, Her Songes

Sofie Vanden Eynde

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1
Heare My Prayer O God
Rebecca Ockenden
00:03:06

Rebecca Ockenden, Performer - Sofie Vanden Eynde, Performer - Anonymous, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

2
Woodes, Rocks & Mountaines
Rebecca Ockenden
00:04:02

Rebecca Ockenden, Performer - Sofie Vanden Eynde, Performer - Robert Johnson, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

3
Galliard (My Lady Mildemays Delight)
Sofie Vanden Eynde
00:02:08

Sofie Vanden Eynde, Performer - Robert Johnson, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

4
Cloris Sighd and Sang and Wept
Rebecca Ockenden
00:05:49

Rebecca Ockenden, Performer - Sofie Vanden Eynde, Performer - Anonymous, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

5
Almain
Sofie Vanden Eynde
00:01:19

Sofie Vanden Eynde, Performer - Robert Johnson, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

6
When Nights Black Mantle (From Pamphilia to Amphilanthus)
Rebecca Ockenden
00:01:36

Anonymous, Lyricist - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Rebecca Ockenden, MainArtist - Mary Wroth, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

7
Go Happy Hart
Rebecca Ockenden
00:02:07

Rebecca Ockenden, Performer - Sofie Vanden Eynde, Performer - John Wilson, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

8
Dropp Drop Goulden Showers
Rebecca Ockenden
00:03:05

Rebecca Ockenden, Performer - Sofie Vanden Eynde, Performer - Anonymous, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

9
Pavan
Sofie Vanden Eynde
00:05:33

Sofie Vanden Eynde, Performer - Robert Johnson, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

10
If When I Dye
Rebecca Ockenden
00:02:11

Rebecca Ockenden, Performer - Sofie Vanden Eynde, Performer - Anonymous, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

11
Cease O Cease This Hum of Greeving
Rebecca Ockenden
00:01:17

Rebecca Ockenden, Performer - Sofie Vanden Eynde, Performer - Anonymous, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

12
How Well Poore Hart (From Pamphilia to Amphilanthus)
Rebecca Ockenden
00:01:25

Anonymous, Lyricist - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Rebecca Ockenden, MainArtist - Mary Wroth, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

13
Musicke Thou Soule of Heaven
Rebecca Ockenden
00:04:31

Rebecca Ockenden, Performer - Sofie Vanden Eynde, Performer - Anonymous, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

14
I Prithee Leave Love Me No More
Rebecca Ockenden
00:02:46

Rebecca Ockenden, Performer - Sofie Vanden Eynde, Performer - Anonymous, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

15
Carman's Whistle
Sofie Vanden Eynde
00:03:51

Sofie Vanden Eynde, Performer - Robert Johnson, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

16
Like to the Damaske Rose
Rebecca Ockenden
00:02:16

Rebecca Ockenden, Performer - Sofie Vanden Eynde, Performer - Henry Lawes, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

17
Sleepe Sleep Though Greife Torment thy Body
Rebecca Ockenden
00:02:11

Rebecca Ockenden, Performer - Sofie Vanden Eynde, Performer - Anonymous, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

18
Come You Prettie False Eyd Wanton
Rebecca Ockenden
00:01:25

Rebecca Ockenden, Performer - Sofie Vanden Eynde, Performer - Thomas Campion, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

19
Whether Away My Sweetest Deerest
Rebecca Ockenden
00:01:34

Rebecca Ockenden, Performer - Sofie Vanden Eynde, Performer - Anonymous, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

20
Good Now Bee Still (From Pamphilia to Amphilanthus)
Rebecca Ockenden
00:01:25

Anonymous, Lyricist - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Rebecca Ockenden, MainArtist - Mary Wroth, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

21
Have You Seene the White Lilly Grow
Rebecca Ockenden
00:03:27

Rebecca Ockenden, Performer - Sofie Vanden Eynde, Performer - Robert Johnson, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

22
Eyes Gaze No More
Rebecca Ockenden
00:01:34

Rebecca Ockenden, Performer - Sofie Vanden Eynde, Performer - Anonymous, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

23
Shall I Weepe or Shall I Singe?
Rebecca Ockenden
00:02:18

Rebecca Ockenden, Performer - Sofie Vanden Eynde, Performer - Anonymous, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

24
Galliard
Sofie Vanden Eynde
00:02:17

Sofie Vanden Eynde, Performer - Robert Johnson, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

25
Care Charming Sleepe
Rebecca Ockenden
00:02:53

Rebecca Ockenden, Performer - Sofie Vanden Eynde, Performer - Robert Johnson, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

26
My Strength Hath Faild
Rebecca Ockenden
00:02:22

Rebecca Ockenden, Performer - Sofie Vanden Eynde, Performer - Anonymous, Composer

2011 Outhere 2011 Outhere

Album review

As the title suggests, Mistress Elizabeth Davenant, Her Songes, was a collection of music made for a specific individual. The collection dates to the year 1624 and has never left Oxford, where Elizabeth Davenant's father, John Davenant, was a prosperous tavern-keeper whose clientele apparently included William Shakespeare. This is not the only recording to take a cross-section of English early music by relying on a single manuscript, but it is one of the most interesting, and, as long as you are ready for a mood that's very gloomy even by the standards of English music of the early 17th century, one of the most attractive. The preponderance of melancholy songs, interrupted by a few dances for lute but by hardly any cheerful vocal music, seems to have resulted not from Mistress Davenant's individual personality but from a constellation of factors characteristic of the collection and the world of which it was a part. That world, contends annotator Anthony Rooley in the notes (which are worth the price of the CD version of the album), was one characterized by rapid change: politically, musically, and socially. Radical forms of Protestantism were on the rise, and music seemed an escape from an increasingly treacherous political realm. The influence of the Italian monodic style was felt in the basically conservative English lute song, and some of the pieces here are ingenious hybrids that have hardly been heard before (many are anonymous). Sample the ascending-octave glissando-cry at the beginning of John Wilson's Go happy hart (track 7). The most striking feature of the music is its female-centeredness, a trend that ultimately had begun with the reign of Elizabeth I and her interest in music. Mistress Elizabeth Davenant was singing words in which she could believe, with protagonists who for the most part are clearly female. And soprano Rebecca Ockenden, whose English is flawless, believes in them, too, aided by graceful accompaniment from lutenist Sofie Vanden Eynde. This aspect of the music is inventively highlighted by the recitation of sonnets by a female poet of the era, Mary Wroth; this has rarely been tried in recordings of early song, but of course it would not have been a surprise in a household of the time. Highly recommended for those attracted by the thorny but increasingly popular English repertory of the 17th century.

© TiVo

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