Shakespearean Music in the Plays and Early Operas
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Shakespearean Music in the Plays and Early Operas - Frederick Bridge
Frederick Bridge
Shakespearean Music in the Plays and Early Operas
EAN 8596547187745
DigiCat, 2022
Contact: DigiCat@okpublishing.info
Table of Contents
CHAPTER I SHAKESPEARE’S KNOWLEDGE OF MUSIC
Thou dreadful Ajax! that the appalled air
May pierce the head of the great combatant,
And hale him hither.
Now crack thy lungs, and split thy brazen pipe;
Blow, villain, till thy spherèd bias cheek
Outswell the colic of puff’d Aquilon
Come, stretch thy chest, and let thy eyes spout blood!
Thou blow’st for Hector.
CHAPTER II THE ACCOMPANIMENT OF THE SONGS. THE SINGERS
CHAPTER III CONTEMPORARY SONGS
It was a Lover and his Lass
Enter two Pages. (They meet Touchstone.)
CHAPTER IV SONGS APPEARING AT A LATER PERIOD
Cantus Primus. R. Johnson.
CHAPTER V SOME CONTEMPORARY AIRS
NEW FASHIONS
CHAPTER VI THE MUSIC OF THE PLAYS AND THE OPERAS
CHAPTER VII THE PLAYS (continued)
CHAPTER VIII SHADWELL’S OPERA THE TEMPEST
Shadwell’s Preface to Pietro Reggio’s Book of Songs
CHAPTER IX PURCELL’S OPERAS
The Fairy Queen
(Purcell)
CHAPTER X HAMLET’S SOLILOQUY
HAMLET’S SOLILOQUY Act III. Scene i.
Whether ’t be nobler in the mind; to suffer
Thus, Conscience makes Cowards of us all;
MUSICAL APPENDIX
O MISTRESSE MINE (With Morley’s original Harmony for the Citterne and Pandora) From Morley’s Consort Lesson , 1599.
GREENSLEEVES (The generally accepted Version)
GREENSLEEVES The Version given by Cobbold in his Humorous Fancy or New Fashions (Probably about 1610.)
PEG O’ RAMSEY Cobbold’s Version (1610?)
WHOOP! DO ME NO HARM, GOOD MAN (Song mentioned in Shakespeare’s Winter’s Tale as part of the wares of Autolycus the Pedlar.)
ECHO DUET (From Shadwell’s version of The Tempest)
The Soprano part is sung off the stage. Music by J. Banister .
TO BE; OR NOT TO BE; Hamlet’s Soliloquy Act III, Scene i. Accompaniment added by Sir F. Bridge . From the original MS. in the Pepysian Library.
CHAPTER I
SHAKESPEARE’S KNOWLEDGE OF MUSIC
Table of Contents
Shakespeare’s frequent tributes to the power of music, his apt use of musical terms and his many allusions to musical instruments, are, of course, well known.[1] We do not know anything of Shakespeare’s intercourse with contemporary musicians, but there were many good composers and theoretical writers hard at work during Shakespeare’s time, and it is certain he had knowledge of these men and their works and made good use of it. Of course, in those days music was an important branch of education, as important as Latin or Fencing. The story told in Morley’s Plaine and Easie Introduction to Practical Musike illustrates this rather well. A young man is describing his unfortunate experience at an evening party of the period:
Supper being ended, and music-books, according to custom, being brought to the table, the mistress of the house presented me with a part, earnestly requesting me to sing. But when, after many excuses, I protested unfeignedly that I could not, every one began to wonder, yea, some whispered to others demanding how I was brought up!
Now, what apparently was expected of a well-brought-up
young man—one who would fulfil the conditions of 2 Peacham’s Compleat Gentleman so far as music was concerned—was that he should take part, at first sight, in a madrigal (the great vocal composition of the period) possibly in five or six parts, and to sing not from a score but from a single part—possibly also without bars; and because he had to confess unfeignedly
that he could not, he was looked upon as one who had been badly brought up.
I am afraid our present standard of musical education is hardly up to what was required in those days!
The prevalent study of music in Elizabethan times, and the use made of it by the upper classes in their houses—with their chest of viols
—and the itinerant vendors of merchandise in London (as evidenced by the remarkable Old Cryes
which I have had the good fortune to unearth), would make it advisable for any clever dramatist to introduce lyrics and instrumental music into his plays. And this is what Shakespeare did to a remarkable extent. It will be seen later on that, in some cases, he took lyrics with their settings which were popular, and inserted them, with some alteration of the words, in various plays. It was at one time thought that not a single note of the music originally written to Shakespeare’s plays was to be found. Professor Edward Taylor (one of my predecessors as Gresham Professor of Music) said in one of his lectures; It is much to be regretted that the original music to all Shakespeare’s dramatic songs should have perished. No musical history with which I am acquainted contains any record of them, and no traces of their existence have I been able to discover.
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