Альбомы исполнителя
Lachrimae
2023 · альбом
A Celebration of James Bowman
2023 · альбом
Time Stands Still
2023 · сингл
Lessons
2022 · альбом
Flow My Tears (Lachrimae)
2021 · сингл
Semper Dowland
2021 · альбом
Dowland - Great Recordings
2020 · сборник
John Dowland - The Essentials
2020 · сборник
Dowland: A Fancy
2020 · альбом
The Art of Julian Bream
2020 · сборник
Renaissance Vol.2
2020 · сборник
Dowland: Lachrimae
2019 · альбом
Dowland: Whose Heavenly Touch
2019 · альбом
Dowland: Works for Lute (Performed on Guitar)
2019 · альбом
What if a Day
2019 · альбом
Dowland: Lachrimæ
2019 · альбом
John Dowland: First Booke of Songes or Ayres
2018 · альбом
To Dowland or Not to Dowland
2018 · альбом
Dowland: Lachrimae
2018 · альбом
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Биография
Melancholy was all the rage in Elizabethan England, and John Dowland was the most stylish composer of his time. "Semper Dowland, semper dolens" was his motto, and much of his music is indeed exquisitely dolorous. Although he was a talented singer, Dowland mainly followed a dual career as a composer and lutenist. He was the period's most renowned and significant composer of lute solos, and especially ayres (also called lute songs), and a gifted writer of consort music. Nothing is known of Dowland's youth; even his date and place of birth are uncertain. It is clear, though, that in 1580 he went to Paris in the service of the ambassador to the French court. Dowland converted to Catholicism during this time and later claimed that this excluded him from employment as lutenist at the Protestant court of Elizabeth I in 1594 (actually, the court was cutting costs and left the position unfilled for five years). Dowland managed to respect tradition while absorbing the trends he encountered on the Continent. Dominating Dowland's output is a form called the lute song or ayre. It was peculiar to English music, and was systematized somewhat by the 1597 publication of Dowland's First Booke of Songes or Ayres. These early songs are simple strophic settings, often in dance forms, with an almost complete absence of chromaticism. Dowland also wrote a significant amount of instrumental music, much of it for solo lute and some for consort. There are some 90 works for solo lute; many are dances, often with highly embellished variations. Even here the Continental influence shows; such chromatic fantasies as Forlorn Hope fancye and Farewell are far more intense than the lute music of any other English (or, for that matter, Continental) composer of the time. Among the consort works, Dowland's Lachrimae, or Seaven Teares Figured in Seaven Passionate Pavans (1604), became one of the most celebrated compositions of the late Renaissance. In 1598, Dowland became lutenist to Christian IV of Denmark, but he was dismissed for unsatisfactory conduct in 1606. Between 1609 and 1612, he was in the service of Theophilus, Lord Howard de Walden, and finally in 1612, he was appointed one of the "musicians for the lutes" to James I of England. Continental techniques come to the fore in the vocal music of this period, in such songs as In darkness let me dwell (1610) and Lasso vita mia (1612), full of declamation, chromaticism, and dissonance. Dowland is known to have died sometime between January 20 and February 20, 1626. ~ James Reel, Rovi