Gabriel from Heven King Sunday, Nov 25 2007 

The cheerfully sounding song about the Annunciation, Angelus ad Virginem or, in its English form, Gabriel, From Heven King Was To The Maide Sende, was a popular Medieval carol that is still popular today. The text of this song is a poetic version of Hail Mary, full of dramatic tension and theological profundity.

It appeared in an Dublin Troper (c. 1361, a music book for use at Mass) and was found in a Sequentiale (Vellum manuscript, 13th or 14th century), possibly connected with the Church of Addle, Yorks. This lyric also appears in the works of John Audelay, in a group of four Marian poems. Audelay may have been a priest; he spent the last years of his life at Haghmond, an Augustinian abbey, and wrote for the monks there.

Read More

Sheet Music

MP3 Files

Soprano/ Alto

Tenor / Bass

Both Parts Together

Ther is No Rose of Swych Vertu Sunday, Nov 25 2007 

Ther is no rose of swych virtu
Anonymous English 15th century hymn
Música Antigua de Albuquerque
A ROSE OF SWYCH VIRTU

- Dorian 80104Translations and notes

Sheet Music

MP3 Files
Descant / solo chorus
Alto and Soprano Parts
Tenor and Bass Parts

All Parts Together

Tempus Adest Floridium Sunday, Nov 25 2007 

“Tempus Adest Floridum” (“Spring has unwrapped her flowers”), a 13th Century spring carol; first published in the Swedish Piae Cantiones, 1582.

Sheet Music

Soprano Part
Alto Part
Tenor Part
Bass Part

All four parts together

Nowel, owt of your slepe aryse Sunday, Nov 25 2007 

Selden Carol Book ( 15th C, Bodleian MS. Arch. Selden B. 26)

Sheet Music

MP3 Files

Soprano and Alto Parts

Tenor Part

Bass Part

All parts together

Full Lyrics:

Owt of your slepe aryse and wake,

For God mankynd nowe hath ytake,

Al of a maide without eny make;

Of al women she bereth the belle.

Refrain:

Nowel! Nowel! Nowel! Nowel! Nowel!

2.

And thirwe a maide faire and wys,

Now man is made of ful grete pris;

Now angelys knelen to mannys servys,

And at this tyme al this byfel.

Refrain

3.

Now man is bryghter than the sonne;

Now man in heven an hye shal wone;

Blssyd be God this game is begonne,

And his moder empresse of helle.

Refrain

4.

That ever was thralle, now ys he fre;

That ever was smalle, now grete is she;

Now shal God deme bothe the and me

Unto his blysse yf we do wel.

Refrain

5.

Now man may to heven wende;

Now heven and erthe to hym they bende;

He that was foo now is oure frende;

This is no nay that Y yowe telle.

Refrain

6.

Now blessyd brother, graunte us grace

A domesday to se thy face.

And in thy courte to have a place,

That we mow there synge ‘Nowel’.

Refrain

Edi Beo Thu Hevene Quene Tuesday, Nov 20 2007 

Anonymous (14th century) Middle English – a pretty lilting 2 part song.

Translations: Singable | Literal

Sheet Music

MP3s:
Soprano/ Alto
Tenor /Bass

All Parts

Coventry Carol Tuesday, Nov 20 2007 

One of the best known period carols really. I like it because it is dark and realistic. in period a lot of religious pieces focussed on the darker details of the bible. it’s written for the feast day of the innocents – the 28th of December.

Coventry Carol Sheet Music

MP3 Files:

Soprano

Alto

Tenor

Bass

All 3 parts together

Documentation:

William Studwell, The Christmas Carol Reader

The lyrics were written for the Pageant of the Shearmen and Tailors in Coventry. (The pageant was a medieval-style mystery play based on biblical stores. At least in the beginning, the pageant was connected with the two guilds.) The lilting melody, probably also composed for the same production, appears to be from the same period [e.g., the fifteenth century]. No person has been associated with the authorship of the lyrics except that the oldest known text was written down by Robert Croo in 1534. Likewise, there has been no personal attribution of the compelling melody, whose oldest known printing dates from 1591.

Robert Joseph, The Christmas Book:



This lullaby comes to us from the world of fifteenth century English theater. In those days, various guilds (comparable to today’s unions or workingman’s associations) would perform “mystery plays” that re-enacted Christmas scenes from the Bible. They were written in English, instead of Latin, and instead of being done in churches, were performed publicly on bi-leveled “Pageant Wagons.” The lower level served as a curtained dressing chamber. This was a sort of street theater in which the topic matter of the play (for example, the building of the ark) would relate to the particular guild that performed it (shipbuilders).

’The Coventry Carol’ was included in the “Pageant of the Shearmen and Tailors.” Although the composer is unknown, the text was written in 1534 by Robert Croo. In the play itself, the women of Bethlehem sing this lullaby just before Herod’s soldiers come on-stage to slaughter their children.

More…

Christmas Carols Tuesday, Nov 20 2007 

The series of period christmas carols that I started last year are finally reaching completion! this post will be the anchor post and table of contents for the others. the individual posts will have links to the Sheet music and MP3 files of each part along with some documentation. If you would like a printout and the music on CD email me and I will get it to you (for a small fee – just costs, about $3 +postage)

The format for all of these is the same. I suggest downloading the sheetmusic and listening to the MP3 with all of the parts together first. then learn your part by choosing it’s specific mp3 to listen to the part on its own – when you are confident work on singing your part together with all the parts. for further information you are welcome to email me.