Choir of Magdalen College, Oxford - Magnificat.wmv
From
Second Service & Consort
Anthems,
William Byrd(1540-1623)
Stefan Roberts, treble;
Rogers Covey-Crump, tenor; dir.:
Bill Ives
A few other compositions by Byrd should probably be assigned to his teenage years.
Apart from his contribution to In exitu
Israel (
Similes illis fiant a4), these include his setting of the
Easter responsory
Christus resurgens (a4) which was not published until 1605, but which as another Sarum liturgical unit could also have been composed during
Mary's reign. Some of the hymns and antiphons for keyboard and for consort may also date from this period, though it is also possible that the consort pieces may have been composed in
Lincoln for the musical training of choirboys.
Byrd's first known professional employment was an organist and choirmaster of
Lincoln Cathedral, a post which he held from 25 March 1563. Residing at 6
Minster Yard Lincoln, he remained in post until 1572. His period at Lincoln was not entirely trouble-free, for on
19 November 1569 the
Dean and Chapter cited him for certain matters alleged against him as the result of which his salary was suspended. Since Puritanism was influential at Lincoln, it is possible that the allegations were connected with over-elaborate choral polyphony or organ playing. A second directive dated
29 November issued detailed instructions regarding Byrd's use of the organ in the liturgy. On
14 September 1568 Byrd married
Julian Birley, a long-lasting and fruitful union which produced at least seven children.
The 1560s were also important formative years for Byrd the composer. The
Short Service, an unpretentious setting of items for the Anglican Matins,
Communion and
Evensong services, which seems to designed to comply with the
Protestant reformers demand for clear words and simple musical textures, may well have been composed during the Lincoln years. It is at any rate clear that Byrd was composing
Anglican church music, for when he left Lincoln the Dean and Chapter continued to pay him at a reduced rate on condition that he would send the cathedral his compositions. Byrd had also taken serious strides with instrumental music. The seven
In Nomine settings for consort (two a4 and five (a5), at least one of the consort fantasias (Neighbour F1 a6) and a number of important keyboard works have been assigned to the Lincoln years. The latter include the
Ground in Gamut (described as Mr Byrd's old ground) by his future pupil
Thomas Tomkins, the
A minor fantasia and probably the first of Byrd's great series of keyboard pavans and galliards, a composition which was transcribed by Byrd from an original for five-part consort. All these show Byrd gradually emerging as a major figure on the
Elizabethan musical landscape.
Some sets of keyboard variations, such as
The Hunt's Up and the imperfectly preserved set on
Gipsies Round also seem to be early works. As we have seen, Byrd had begun setting
Latin liturgical texts as a teenager, and he seems to have continued to do so at Lincoln. Two exceptional large-scale psalm motets, Ad Dominum cum tribularer (a8) and
Domine quis habitabit (a9) are Byrd's contribution to a genre cultivated by
Robert White and
Robert Parsons. De lamentatione, another early work, is a contribution to the Elizabethan practice of setting groups of verses from the
Lamentations of Jeremiah following the format of the
Tenebrae lessons sung in the
Catholic rite during the last three days of
Holy Week, other contributors including Tallis,
White, Parsley and the elder Ferrabosco. It is likely that this practice was an expression of Elizabethan Catholic nostalgia, as a number of the texts suggest.
(
Wikipedia)