York Early Music Festival: EMS 10 July
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Richard Tarleton
Have to catch this later, as something else also starts at 1400.....But yes with Rooley and Dunford, not to be missed!
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by doversoul View PostWell…. I’ll be very interested to hear what you think of this King of Denmark’s Galliard.
In fact Dowland reworked this piece several times during his life, adding more divisions each time - his first take on it was his "Battle Galliard". He reworked it for his piece dedicated to King Christian lV - who besides being his employer for a while was also the brother in law of his next employer, King James 1. There's a shortened version for viol consort as well.
The opening measure belongs to the 16thC genre of "battle pieces", derived from 2 pieces which swept Europe in the early 16thC (so Diana P tells me) - Jannequin's La Bataille and Werrecore's La Bataglia Taliana, and it can also be found (for example) in Byrd's The Battle, in the section called The marche of horsemen, in My Lady Nevell's Booke. It appears in numerous other places, Poulton gives a few examples, including Dowland's Mr Langton's Galliard.
It's tremendous fun to play, successive divisions leaping between 2 and 5 sharps (BDBDBD) - guitarists retune their G strings to F# which replicates the tuning of a renaissance lute (at a different pitch) - you can play it straight from the lute tablature unless like me tablature does your head in, I prefer a good transcription. I have multiple versions on lute and guitar on CD.
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