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Flora Gave Me Fairest Flowers
Various, John Rutter, The Cambridge Singers
Flora Gave Me Fairest Flowers
Genres: Special Interest, Pop, Classical, Gospel
 
  •  Track Listings (25) - Disc #1

"an absolute joy" - Music and Musicians Hi-Fi News and Record Review Record of the Month The sixteenth-century madrigal was an Italian form. The term ?madrigal? was loosely applied to a wide variety of music, but general...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Various, John Rutter, The Cambridge Singers
Title: Flora Gave Me Fairest Flowers
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Collegium
Original Release Date: 1/1/2000
Re-Release Date: 8/1/2003
Genres: Special Interest, Pop, Classical, Gospel
Styles: Holiday & Wedding, Vocal Pop, Opera & Classical Vocal, Historical Periods, Baroque (c.1600-1750), Early Music
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 040888051121

Synopsis

Album Description
"an absolute joy" - Music and Musicians Hi-Fi News and Record Review Record of the Month The sixteenth-century madrigal was an Italian form. The term ?madrigal? was loosely applied to a wide variety of music, but generally denoted a polyphonic setting for four or more voices of an amorous or pastoral text which was closely depicted in the music. Thomas Morely transplanted the form into England in the 1590s; this marked the beginning of the brief but brilliant flowering of the English madrigal. Between the 1590s and the early 1620s, twenty composers published a total of 36 books of madrigals, after which the form virtually disappeared. Some of these composers, such as Morely and Weelkes, followed the Italian model closely; others, such as Byrd and Gibbons, mostly stayed with the simpler English form of the consort song, where the tune remains in one voice, word-painting is not used, and strophic form is preferred to the continuous structure of the madrigal proper. Among the twenty-one items selected for this recording there are examples of several types of piece,! ranging from true Italianate madrigals such as Too much I once lamented, via more popular ?balletts? such as Fyer, fyer!, to the simple part-songs like A little pretty bonny lass. The variety, imagination, and inspired blending of poetry and music characteristic of the best of the ?English Madrigal School? afford a particular kind of delight in performance, shared equally by singer and listener

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