The title and subtitle In a Strange Land: Elizabethan Composers in Exile requires at the least a bit of elaboration: Some of the composers here did not leave England during the Protestant rule of Elizabeth I but remained in what might, one supposes, be termed an interior exile. Chief among these was William Byrd, who enjoyed Elizabeth's favor, and the pieces offered by the virtuoso small (13 voices, mixed-gender adults) English choir Stile Antico are brought out in their full intensity by the program here. Likewise Dowland, ...
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The title and subtitle In a Strange Land: Elizabethan Composers in Exile requires at the least a bit of elaboration: Some of the composers here did not leave England during the Protestant rule of Elizabeth I but remained in what might, one supposes, be termed an interior exile. Chief among these was William Byrd, who enjoyed Elizabeth's favor, and the pieces offered by the virtuoso small (13 voices, mixed-gender adults) English choir Stile Antico are brought out in their full intensity by the program here. Likewise Dowland, who did flee to Denmark, is extremely effective in a vocal consort version of the famed Flow, my tears: It comes off as a deeply spiritual lament. Elsewhere the program gets a bit more diffuse. Richard Dering and Peter Philips make the cut as genuine exiles, whereas Philippe de Monte is here because the motet included is thought to have been addressed to Byrd as a kind of inquiry as to how things were going. This composer was Netherlandish, not English, but the inclusion is...
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Add this copy of In a Strange Land-Elizabethan Composers in Exile to cart. $21.57, new condition, Sold by Importcds rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Sunrise, FL, UNITED STATES, published 2019 by Harmonia Mundi.