Tag: Madrigal

  • John Wilbye 450th & Sweet Honey-Sucking Bees https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ZlK1bnOqqc&t

    John Wilbye 450th & Sweet Honey-Sucking Bees https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ZlK1bnOqqc&t

    English madrigalist John Wilbye was baptized on this date 450 years ago. Anticipate spring with “Sweet Honey-Sucking Bees.”

  • Weelkes: The Rock Star of Classical Music

    Weelkes: The Rock Star of Classical Music

    It is the greatest irony that classical music is so often viewed as “elitist,” and even a little prissy, when its greatest practitioners could be as antiestablishment and badly behaved as the most celebrated rock star. Take the case of composer Thomas Weelkes, who died 400 years ago today.

    Weelkes served first as organist of Winchester College, where concurrently he began writing the madrigals on which much of his lasting fame rests. Then, after two or three years, he was hired as organist and choirmaster at Chichester Cathedral. Somewhere along the way, Weelkes discovered alcohol.

    By 1616, he was “noted and famed for a comon drunckard [sic] and notorious swearer & blasphemer.” Also around this time, he was fined for urinating on the Dean from the organ loft during Evensong. But even that wasn’t enough to get him fired. He was dismissed for drunkenness and rough language during divine service. A short while later, he was rehired, and he did it all over again.

    “Dyvers tymes & very often come so disguised eyther from the Taverne or Ale house into the quire as is muche to be lamented, for in these humoures he will bothe curse & sweare most dreadfully, & so profane the service of God… and though he hath bene often tymes admonished… to refrayne theis humors and reforme hym selfe, yett he daylye continuse the same, & is rather worse than better therein.”

    He also impregnated at least one woman out of wedlock. Not a big deal now, but surely scandalous behavior back then. However, he made the best of a “bad” situation and married her (Elizabeth Sandham, from a wealthy family) and the child was born six months later. Perhaps it was a happy marriage, as the couple went on to produce two further children. Elizabeth died in 1622. Weelkes met his Maker a year later. He was roughly 47 years-old.

    True, a great composer’s legacy frequently transcends his human frailty. When the creator is dust, his or her creations live on. The hellraiser is elevated and those he offended are vaguely recollected by historians and specialists, at best. None of it matters in the end but the work. Or as we like to say, it all comes out in the wash.

    How talented was Weelkes? Face it, he routinely showed up to work drunk, was disruptive during religious services, and literally urinated on his boss. Yet 400 years after his death, he is still celebrated for his madrigals and church music. Weelkes wrote more Anglican services than any other major composer of his time.

    Raise your lighters to Thomas Weelkes, rock star!


    Weelkes madrigal in praise of tobacco

    “To Shorten Winter’s Sadness,” complete with fa-la-las.

    In a loftier mode, the anthem “When David Heard”

    Further anthems

  • May Day Madrigals on the Lost Chord

    May Day Madrigals on the Lost Chord

    Now is the month of maying!

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” at the end of a lusty day of reveling around the maypole and “playing barley-break,” unwind with three 20th century instrumental and orchestral works inspired by Renaissance madrigals.

    Tune in for Igor Stravinsky’s “Monumentum pro Gesualdo di Venosa,” Bohuslav Martinu’s “Three Madrigals” for violin and viola, and Joaquin Rodrigo’s “Concierto Madrigal,” a piece for two guitars and orchestra.

    Fie then! why sit we musing, youth’s sweet delight refusing? Celebrate May Day with “Unsung Madrigals,” this Sunday night at 10:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    Throwback to Merrie England

    Maypole dance from “La Fille mal gardée”

    Suite from Howard Hanson’s “Merry Mount” (after Hawthorne’s “The Maypole of Merry Mount”)

    A toast to Merrymount’s Thomas Morton

    https://almostchosenpeople.wordpress.com/tag/thomas-morton/

    Shakespeare, the May Pole and the Hobby Horse

    https://silibrary1.wordpress.com/tag/maypole/

    Welcoming the sun with a good old-fashioned morris dance

    May Day is for capering around the May Pole. Beltane is for embarrassing your parents.

    The May Day Fish-Slapping Dance and the Gavotte of the Long John Silvers

    “Now is the month of maying” on crumhorns

    Deer Man

    Fa la la la la la la la la, fa la la la la la la!

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