Campion - Sunday 1st March

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  • ardcarp
    Late member
    • Nov 2010
    • 11102

    Campion - Sunday 1st March

    Lucie Skeaping marks the 450th anniversary of the birth of English composer, poet and physician Thomas Campion.

    Really looking forward to this. ..a singer's composer. Given the BBC website's sparse infprmation, there's this from Hyperion:

    Campion was born in London and studied at Peterhouse, Cambridge, but left without taking a degree. He later entered Gray's Inn to study law in 1586. However, he left in 1595 without having been called to the bar. On February 10, 1605 he received his medical degree from the University of Caen.

    Campion was first published as a poet in 1591 with five of his works appearing in an edition of Sir Philip Sidney's Astrophel and Stella. The Songs of Mourning: Bewailing the Untimely Death of Prince Henry (1613), were set to music by John Cooper. He also wrote a number of other poems as well as a book on poetry, Observations in the Art of English Poesie (1602), in which he criticises the practice of rhyming in poetry.

    Campion wrote over one hundred lute songs in the Books of Airs, with the first collection (co-written with Philip Rosseter) appearing in 1601 and four more following throughout the 1610s. He also wrote a number of masques, including Lord Hay's Masque performed in 1607, along with Somerset Masque and The Lord's Masque which premiered in 1613. Some of Campion's works were quite ribald on the other hand, such as Beauty, since you so much desire. In 1615 he published a book on counterpoint, A New Way of Making Fowre Parts in Counterpoint By a Most Familiar and Infallible Rule, which was regarded highly enough to be reprinted in 1660.
  • DracoM
    Host
    • Mar 2007
    • 12973

    #2

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    • cloughie
      Full Member
      • Dec 2011
      • 22127

      #3
      Saw the heading and thought that’s an early flowering date, but it was more about early music than early spring!

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      • Serial_Apologist
        Full Member
        • Dec 2010
        • 37691

        #4
        Originally posted by cloughie View Post
        Saw the heading and thought that’s an early flowering date, but it was more about early music than early spring!


        I keep thinking "Red Campion", but he was a bit too early for all that shenanigans!

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        • ardcarp
          Late member
          • Nov 2010
          • 11102

          #5
          I'm now on a Campion Trip, and recall that this used to be popular:

          Stile Antico (joined by Fretwork) explores a long-neglected repertory -- the wealth of Tudor and Jacobean sacred music written for domestic devotion, rather ...


          Although it has words of a sacred nature, it was not an 'anthem', and needs a bit more madrigalian light-footedness than the excellent Stile Antico give it. IMVHO of course.

          I think EMS might be a bit of a whodunnit. IIRC Thpmas was accused of some sort of murder plot.

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          • Count Boso

            #6
            Originally posted by ardcarp View Post
            I'm now on a Campion Trip, and recall that this used to be popular:

            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I5JHHnh6bOk
            One of the first records I bought as a teenager was a 45rpm on "Campion Records" called Welcome Sweet Pleasure by the Northern Consort and that was my favourite song/madrigal. Others on the EP by Weelkes, Dowland, Monteverdi, Josquin and two by Lassus.

            This one (I've unearthed mine after not playing it for decades. Now inspired to do so after reading this post).

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            • ardcarp
              Late member
              • Nov 2010
              • 11102

              #7
              Wish I could read the singers' names!

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              • Count Boso

                #8
                Originally posted by ardcarp View Post
                Wish I could read the singers' names!
                Barbara Yates soprano
                Cynthia Scott contralto
                Owen Wynne (director) counter tenor
                Raymond Locke tenor
                Leslie Auger baritone
                Edgar Parkinson bass

                The sleeve note says they are (were) all 'Northerners in their twenties or early thirties'. Recorded in 1958. I see there was an obituary for Owen Wynne, who died aged 89 in 2016.

                Other lives: Singer who launched many collaborations and taught music to schoolchildren for more than 20 years

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                • ardcarp
                  Late member
                  • Nov 2010
                  • 11102

                  #9
                  He [Owen Wynne] is the only one I remember. Saw/heard him several times in the past...and had forgotten about him until you kindly revealed the list!

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