Combining Early Music Monday with a little self-promotion... if you're looking for a holiday event that's a bit more relaxed and fun and equal parts old favorites and new excitement, come hear me sing with my dear friends in Seven Times Salt tomorrow! Concerts at 4:30pm and 7:30pm in Newton, and we'd love to see you there! More info available here
Banbury Ale Preview!
What are you doing Wednesday evening? Check out the preview video below and then join Seven Times Salt, Matthew Leese, and I for a romp through 17th-century drinking songs, presented by SoHIP Boston: Society for Historically Informed Performance. Pickpockets, vices, creepy suitors - Early Music isn't all stuffy and serious!
For As Many As Will
This Monday, join my friends in Seven Times Salt for their tour of English Country Dance tunes! (I know they'd also appreciate a donation if you're able.)
Do you know these tunes?
Missed the earlier posts in the Name That Tune series? Catch up here:
Part 1 - Carmans Whistle (and how the series started)
Part 2 - Nottingham Ale (with my friends in Seven Times Salt)
Part 3 - Minuet from Overture in G major, TWV 32:13
Part 4 - Canaris from Suite No. 5 in G minor by Jacques Champion de Chambonnières
There are three tunes that have yet to be identified… can you help?
If you know any of these three remaining tunes, let me know!
Name that (early music) tune, part 4 - Canaris from Suite No. 5 in G minor by Jacques Champion de Chambonnières
And the last installment (for now) of our Name That Tune series! If you need to catch up:
Part 1 - Carmans Whistle (and how the series started)
Part 2 - Nottingham Ale (with my friends in Seven Times Salt)
Part 3 - Minuet from Overture in G major, TWV 32:13
Kudos to Alastair Thompson for his identification of this one! Read more below about harpsichordist and composer Jacques Champion de Champonnières, and then have a listen to the two different ways his tune was used!
Name that (early music) tune, part 3 - Minuet from Overture in G major, TWV 32:13
Back to our Name That Tune series! If you missed the last two:
Part 1 - Carmans Whistle (and how the series started)
Part 2 - Nottingham Ale (with my friends in Seven Times Salt)
This week, Telemann’s Minuet from Overture in G major, TWV 32:13
Telemann was a friend of both Bach and Handel, and was incredibly prolific. Read more about Telemann below and then have a listen to the two videos!
Name that (early music) tune, part 2 - Nottingham Ale/Lillibulero
Back to Name That Tune this week! This is the tune that started it all! Read more about it below, and then have a listen to the versions from the video game and then from my friends in Seven Times Salt (who included it on their “Courtiers and Costermongers” CD)!
Name that (early music) tune, part 1 - Carmans Whistle
In the mid-90s, I spent a good chunk of time playing a computer game called Logic Quest. It was all puzzles and mazes, knights and castles, and I loved it. Except… in retrospect I may have loved the music more than the game.
Fast-forward 20 years or so, and I was sitting in the audience for a concert by my friends in Seven Times Salt. Imagine my surprise when they begin playing one of the tunes that I knew from the game! So this got me thinking that if one of the songs from the game was a legitimate piece of early music, perhaps some of the other ones were as well!
Now that pretty much the rest of my season has been canceled due to the pandemic, I’ve had some time to research these pieces. With the help of my good friends Alastair Thompson and Daniel Meyers, I’ve started a new (Logic) quest to identify all 7 of the main themes. It turns out that whoever designed the music for this game was definitely into early music!
Here’s installment one: first the version from the game, and then the actual tune - Carmans Whistle, as set by William Byrd in the Fitzwilliam Virginal Book!