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The Early Music Consort Of London - Henry VIII And His Six Wives (1972) US 1stPressing - LP/FLAC In 24bit/96kHz

Posted By: Fran Solo
The Early Music Consort Of London - Henry VIII And His Six Wives (1972) US 1stPressing - LP/FLAC In 24bit/96kHz

David Munrow & The Early Music Consort Of London - Henry VIII And His Six Wives: Music From The Soundtrack Film
Vinyl | LP Cover (1:1) | FLAC + cue | 24bit/96kHz | 900mb
Label: Angel Records/SF0-36895 | Released: 1972 | Genre: Renaissance

Band 1 9:27
A1a Basse Danse “Jouyssance Vous Donneray
A1b Pavane “Le Bon Vouloir”
A1c Galliard “Traditore”
A1d Fireworks Music
Band 2 4:48
A2a The King’s Ballad : “Pastime With Good Company
A2b Lute Solo: “Le Petit Gentilhomme”
A2c The Ballad Of Robin And Marion
Band 3 2:09
A3 Street Music
Band 4 2:30
A4a Henry’s Loneliness
A4b The Joust At Westminster
A4c Henry’s Lonliness II
Band 5 2:28
A5 The King’s Hunt
-
Band 1 5:25
B1a Fanfare “La Mourisque”
B1b Galliard
B1c La Pastorella
B1d Galliard
Band 2 4:12
B2a Regal Solo: King Harry VIII Pavan Galliard
B2b Wedding Music For Anne Of Cleves
Band 3 3:01
B3a Harpsichord Solos: The Short Mesure Off My Lady Wynkfyld’s Rownde
B3b My Lady Carey’s Dompe
Band 4 2:28
B4 Ethiop Masque 2:38
Band 5 2:17
B5 “O Death Rock Me Asleep”
Band 6 3:42
B6a Catherine Howard’s Interrogation
B6b Lute Duet
Band 7 2:39
B7 Closing Music


Arranged By, Composed By, Directed By, Music By, Shawm, Chalumeau, Performer [Rackett] – David Munrow
Cittern – James Tyler
Cornett, Trumpet – Iaan Wilson, Michael Laird (2)
Countertenor Vocals – James Bowman (2)
Flute, Harmonica [Chinese Mouth Organ] – John Turner (5)
Harpsichord, Harp, Regal – Christopher Hogwood
Lute – James Tyler, Robert Spencer (2)
Performer – The Early Music Consort Of London
Psaltery, Bells – Gillian Reid (2)
Sackbut – Alan Lumsden, Colin Sheen, Martin Nicholls (2), Roger Brenner, Roger Groves, Trevor Herbert
Tenor Vocals – Martyn Hill
Timpani, Percussion – Barry Quinn, David Corkhill, David Johnson (15)
Viol – Dennis Nesbitt, Elizabeth Page, Jane Ryan
Viol, Lute – Desmond Dupré
Viol, Strings [Crwth], Trumpet [Tromba Marina], Cello – Oliver Brookes


The Early Music Consort Of London - Henry VIII And His Six Wives (1972) US 1stPressing - LP/FLAC In 24bit/96kHz

The Early Music Consort Of London - Henry VIII And His Six Wives (1972) US 1stPressing - LP/FLAC In 24bit/96kHz

The Early Music Consort Of London - Henry VIII And His Six Wives (1972) US 1stPressing - LP/FLAC In 24bit/96kHz



This Rip: 2017
Cleaning: RCM Moth MkII Pro Vinyl
Direct Drive Turntable: Technics SL-1200MK2 Quartz
Cartridge: SHURE M97xE With JICO SAS Stylus
Amplifier: Marantz 2252
ADC: E-MU 0404
DeClick with iZotope RX5: Only Manual (Click per click)
Vinyl Condition: EX+
This LP: From personal collection
LP Rip & Full Scan LP Cover: Fran Solo
Password: WITHOUT PASSWORD

You may remember a film from the early 1970s called Henry VIII & his Six Wives, starring Keith Mitchell, Donald Pleasance, and Charlotte Rampling; it was notable for its score, which not only featured authentic music of the period (nearly unheard-of at the time), but also was, according to David Munrow, “the first historical film in which the music has been scored entirely for historical instruments.” Munrow also added a few numbers of his own to satisfy the needs of the movie, patterned after 16th-century style and form. Although these days such attention to authenticity is common, even expected, Munrow was one of the pioneers in bringing musicological research and the more immediate practicalities of really old, original instruments and stylistic practice to the level of popular culture. Of course, also in these early days was planted the impression that period instruments must necessarily be somewhat clunky and (to varying degrees) not quite ideally in tune–and in some cases, just plain annoyingly squawky and prone to obnoxious buzzing noises. While this generally fine issue from Testament offers many reminders of those times, when musicians were still finding their way in unfamiliar territory (and often using very user-unfriendly instruments), this release will prove mostly a delight for early music fans–and will be a real treat for those who own the original LPs from which these tracks were drawn.

While top billing goes to the selections from the film soundtrack (from 1972), the album is generously filled out with items from two other Munrow recordings–Greensleeves to a ground (1976) and Instruments of the Middle Ages and Renaissance (1973/74). And with such big names (or yet-to-be) as James Bowman, Martyn Hill, Christopher Hogwood, Catherine Mackintosh (playing viol!), and George Malcolm in the mix, you can be certain of first-rate, detailed performances totally committed to the letter and spirit of the music and its original context. There are viols and sackbuts, lutes and recorders, and full bands of winds, along with psaltery, harp, shawm, harpsichord solos, and selections for countertenor (one of which is a tune by Henry VIII himself) and tenor (an authentic-sounding Ballad of Robin and Marian composed by Munrow). We hear five dances from Dowland’s Lachrymae and also one of his lute pieces (Orlando Sleepeth) and a fantasy by William Byrd.

At least one of the pieces goes on way too long–the trying-to-be-realistically-crude Street Music–and Munrow’s strikingly weird, avant-garde-like Henry’s Loneliness, a truly creepy sequence written for the film that must be the most twisted use of psaltery, harp, and crwth ever devised, seems a bit extreme outside of the movie’s context. However, you can’t beat this revisitation of an exciting earlier, still-experimental era for its brave, bold vitality and freshness of approach to what until then was a relatively uninformed and largely ignored realm of the world of music performance and scholarship. Munrow was an important figure in the period-performance movement (sadly, he committed suicide in 1976 at age 33), and these recordings show what a class act he and his Early Music Consort of London were. The sound is perfectly fine, and the liner notes provide interesting information about Munrow and about the original recordings.
Review by David Vernier, classicstoday.com
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