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Unity in logic and emotion
Concordia's latest recording builds on their
peculiarly close rapport with Gibbons
Seventeenth-century composers, especially English ones, don’t
usually excite the kind of adulation we generally reserve for our favourite
19th-century romantic heroes. But, unlikely though it may sound, Orlalndo
Gibbons (1583-1625) - court musician to James 1 and organist of Westminster
Abbey - has a fan club. And one of his most enthusiastic champions was the
pianist Glenn Gould; his praise may have been excessive (Monteverdi was ‘brash’
in comparison), but his hauntingly beautiful performances succeeded in
impressing Gibbons’s keyboard music on a wide new audience. Now, the viol
consort Concordia hope to do the same, and have just released the first disc of
a long overdue survey of Gibbons’s complete consort music.
‘There’s a bit of Gibbons in just about all our concerts, partly because
we love him,’ says the group’s director, Mark Levy, ‘but also because we
find that audiences really respond to his music, particularly the contrapuntally
complex works like the In Nomines. There’s always a very prayerful,
personal quality to these pieces, but they also have something very public about
them.’ Like Gould, Levy is quick to make flattering comparisons. ‘Gibbons,
like Bach, is a high priest of the sensual mathematics of counterpoint. He
understands not only how to write fine imitative polyphony, but, crucially, how
to shape it into a language in which logic and emotion are perfectly united.
This is the effect you experience at the end of the five-part In Nomine No.
2, as the galloping lines arch their way to a close with a quite tangible
inevitability. In concerts it’s often followed by one of those still silences
in which players, audience and the spirit of the composer seem to merge into
complete understanding.
‘Most performers of Gibbons feet he was something of a romantic,’ says
Levy. ‘Take the fourth of the six-part Fantasias. Once you’ve heard the
opening, or better still played it, you’ll never forget it, there are all
these gorgeous scrunches. And the two four-part fantasias have this glowing
sonority produced by their incredibly widely spaced parts, shaped by Gibbons’s
original dynamic and tempo markngs (‘soft long’ and ‘away’) and
punctuated by unexpected bursts of folksong.’
And where would a real romantic be without a keen literary sense? ‘Gibbons
set really good texts,’ enthuses Levy, ‘unlike Byrd, who, I’m sorry to
say, set mainly doggerrel. I think Gibbons had a real poetic sensibility, which
is something I hope we’ve captured in the consort songs we’ve recorded with
soprano Rachel Elliott.’
“Gibbons looks like a bit of an
organist, a bit of a briefcase”
Compared with the austerity of many of his contemporaries, Levy finds
something ‘quite feminine and shapely’ in Gibbons’s music which is always
‘brimming with good tunes’. Though, admittedly, if you look at the rather
stiff portrait of the composer, ‘Gibbons looks like a bit of an organist, a
bit of a briefcase, you don’t hear any of that in the music.’ Quite the
opposite. In the more forward-looking pieces, and those that call for the rare
‘greate dooble base’, there’s plenty of Italian sunshine to banish the
clouds of English melancholy. Gibbons’s extrovert nature is also glimpsed in
the quirky passages which so often interrupt the stately progression of his more
serious fantasias - echoes, perhaps, of the grotesque dances of witches and
madmen which were such a popular part of the court masque.
The mainstay of ‘Royal Fantasies’ (the first of Concordia’s two Gibbons
discs) are the nine supposedly ‘royal’ fantasias for three viols which,
unusually for the 17th century, were published as a set, and which Concordia -
also unusually - have decided to record complete and in their original order.
There’s good reason for this. It has been suggested that these nine pieces may
well form a mini set of ‘enigma’variations. The theme itself is never
stated, of course, but a series of melodic fingerprints recur throughout the
set. Mark Levy admits that the jury is still out on this appealing theory, but
that when the ensemble plays them in concert ‘you feel there’s a real
journey through these works. Coincidence or not, there’s definitely a feeling
when you come towards the end that you’ve got something which has been broken
down into its elements - just a couple of intervals - which are then played with
over and over again, so the point is really hammered home.’
Another enigma is the Pavan De Le Roye, to which Mark Levy has
cleverly managed to provide his own solution. Time has not been kind to the
music and only three of the original five parts survive. Nevertheless the music
looked interesting enough to attempt a reconstruction. ‘I spent a two-week
holiday composing the two missing parts,’ says Levy. ‘It’s a shame that it
had to be the treble and tenor voices that were lost because they generally
carried most of the melodic interest in pieces like this. But I found that the
surviving shell actually left surprisingly little room for manoeuvre. So it’s
possible that I’ve achieved something quite close to the original, though, of
course, we’ll never really know.’
Another novelty of their recording is Concordia’s decision to add a
harpsichord to the consort. Levy is quick to justify this: ‘I see Gibbons
himself at the very heart of these pieces, so there has to be a keyboard and it
has to have a creative role.’ Earlier recordings by groups such as Fretwork
have tended to use a chamber organ, but the 17th-century theorist and
composer Thomas Mace particularly recommends the harpsichord (Gibbons would have
called it a ‘virginal’). Levy agrees. ‘Whereas the organ is a blending
instrument, the harpsichord is the opposite - it’s like lemon juice, it helps
bring out the flavour of the other instruments.’
And Concordia have a very distinctive flavour, too. ‘The way we play sounds
totally different from other groups. I think we play in a much more horizontal
way; it’s much more colouristic, and there’s a feeling for the importance of
each line.’ And a particular feeling for Gibbons, too, who has been a constant
thread in their development as a consort. ‘This is our coming of age
recording,’ says Levy, and by ‘our’ you know he means Orlando, too.
Simon Heighes
© Gramophone October 2000
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