William Lawes (1602 - 1645) Consort Music For Viols, Lutes and Theorbos The sole surviving portrait of William Lawes, in the Faculty of Music at Oxford...
William Lawes (1602 - 1645)
Consort Music For Viols, Lutes and Theorbos
The sole surviving portrait of William Lawes, in the Faculty of
Music at Oxford University, depicts a quietly self-confident cavalier dressed fashionably
with wide- brimmed hat, ornate lace collar, and slashed sleeves revealing a costly silk
shirt. His eye has a shrewd and direct look, his mouth shows the beginnings of a wry
smile: this young man is clearly master of his art. The romantic notion of Lawes as a
dashing, headstrong member of Charles I's court is heightened by the tragic circumstances
of his death, fighting in the Royalist forces at the Siege of Chester in 1645. Although
his commission in the King's army should have kept him well away from the firing line,
like many of his comrades he was involved in a surprise rout by Parliamentarian troops in
what proved to be one of the most costly battles for the Royalists of the entire Civil
War. Some idea of the composer's importance in Charles' musical establishment may be
gained from the King's reaction as described by Thomas Fuller in 1662:
'hearing of the death of his deare servant William Lawes, he
had a particular Mourning for him when dead, whom he loved when living, and commonly
called the Father of Musick.'
Lawes' official appointment to the court as 'musician in
ordinary for the lutes and voices' dated from 1635, but he had already been involved for
some years before this in writing music for masques presented before the King, and it is
highly probable that he was a member of the inner circle of royal musicians led by the
influential English composer John Coprario as early as the 1620s. This group, under the
patronage of Henry, Prince of Wales, and later of Charles, included some of the foremost
composers of instrumental music in England, notably Orlando Gibbons, Alfonso Ferrabosco II
and Coprario himself. The two Princes also played viols with these musicians, and it is in
the context of this hothouse of new composition for consort that William Lawes most
probably met his future employer and learned his craft. Lawes was apprenticed to Coprario,
at the expense of Edward, Earl of Hertford, who had recognized the boy's musical talent at
an early stage, but his earliest musical training must have been supervised by his family:
Lawes' father Thomas was a bass singer in the cathedral choir at Salisbury, where William
was born in 1602, and his older brother Henry was a close collaborator and mentor
throughout his life.
Although William Lawes was prolific in most musical genres of
mid-seventeenth century England, it was as a musical dramatist that he acquired his
greatest fame, notably writing songs and other music for some 25 different masques and
stage entertainments. His love for the melodramatic musical gesture spilled over into his
consort music, which is characterized by wayward, often angular melodic lines, sudden
changes of texture, abrupt and unexpected harmonic shifts and highly charged dissonances.
The seventeenth-century critic Anthony Wood recognized this when he suggested that Lawes'
music 'broke sometimes ye rules of mathematical composition', but such descriptions fail
to convey the sheer variety of mood, the energy, and above all the overwhelming sense of
overall musical architecture which Lawes so often achieves.
Much of Lawes' instrumental music is in the form of dance
movements, often grouped together in 'setts' according to their key. But although he uses
well-tried genres such as the stately pavan [1,
5, 17] or the more rumbustious almain [9,
14, 24], they are far removed from their origins as functional dance music. This is music
to be played and appreciated by connoisseurs. One feature of dance music is its inherent
tunefulness, throwing the musical weight into the treble and bass parts, while the inner
parts often have a supporting role. In his four-part dances [1-3] Lawes choses to have two
equal top parts which share the main melodic material, often conversing with each other in
rapid dialogue. This is clearly heard in the two Aires [2,
3], while the Paven [1] presents a grave
aspect full of yearning gestures and a richly woven tapestry of contrapuntal lines.
Although the music is complete with its four parts, it was common practice in the
seventeenth century to add a thorough-bass on a keyboard instrument or theorbo, which also
strengthens the treble-bass polarity of the music.
Throughout his life, Lawes developed and adapted earlier
musical ideas, reworking pieces to make his ideas clearer, or to allow further
embellishment of them. Thus the C minor Paven [1]
was reused as the basis for flamboyant 'divisions' for two bass viols and organ [17]. Here
the organ plays a more or less straight transcription of the original paven, while the two viols select various elements -
sometimes the treble, sometimes the bass, or even a new counterpoint altogether - and
decorate them with increasingly elaborate variations. One can only surmise at Charles I's
skill as a bass viol player, though it is attractive to imagine him in courtly competition
here with his 'musician in ordinary'.
One of the largest collections of Lawes' music is a set of 66
movements in four parts: two trebles and two basses, accompanied by two theorbos. These
were clearly popular pieces, copied into collectors' part-books, often simplified into
just the melody and bass. In one set of books they are labelled 'Mr. William Lawes his
Royal Consort', though whether these pieces had any particular function at court is open
to speculation. In another source they are called 'The Create Consort'. Some of these
pieces survive in other versions for two trebles, tenor viol and bass viol, but the
striking feature of the Royal Consorts is the way in which Lawes treats the two bass
viols, which share material from the bass and tenor registers, constantly crossing in
competition and seeking attention, as do the two trebles. In some copies the top parts are
designated for violins, in others for treble viols, while the theorbos unify the
constantly changing textures and fill out the harmonies. In some of the pieces we can hear
the elegant inflections of contemporary French dances such as the Corant [10, 11], in others the rustic earthiness of
folk-dance [26], or the masque composer delighting in dramatic effect in two 'echo' pieces
[13, 25].
It was common practice in seventeenth century England to
preface a set of dances with a contrapuntal fantasia. There are only two Fantazies in the Royal Consort, in the key of D minor
[7] and D major121]. Here the theorbos have a different role, instead of playing together
from a figured bass, they each have an independent polyphonic part, which with the four
viols creates a wonderfully rich sonority. In the fantasia the composer devised a number
of 'points' or melodies, each of which was treated in turn to a fugal working out. In
these particular examples we can hear Lawes' propensity for widely spaced expressive
melodic lines [7] and the almost manic build up of hectic activity towards the conclusion
[21].
Another superlative collection of pieces is Lawes' music 'for
ye Viols' in five and six parts, dating from around 1635 to 1641. Again we have the
combination of fantazies and dance movements, but with the contrapuntal lines fully worked
out, not divided between different instruments, and with the organ significantly
highlighting important ideas and supplying extra material of its own. The A minor set
[18-20] shows its serious intent by having two Fantazies,
the first opening with two contrasted themes, while the second ups the
emotional temperature with some unsettling chromaticisms, only to dispel the darkness in
lavish virtuosity. The serene Paven [5] is a
pool of calm at the centre of the C major set, surrounded as it is by an often agitated Fantazie [4] and a jaunty Aire [6].
The pieces for two lutes [14-16]
are Lawes' only works in this medium, and appear in one of the great autograph collections
of his music now in the Bodleian Library, Oxford. However, it seems likely that only the
second lute part is 'original Lawes': certainly the first lute part of the Alman[14] is a solo Allemande by Rene Mesangeau, a leading Parisian
lutenist in the first part of the seventeenth century. The practice of paying homage to
another composer's work by writing a complementary 'contrepartie' was a well established
art, and it may well be that the two Corants [15,
16] are constructed in the same way, although no source for their original versions has
yet been identified. The Oxford manuscript does not indicate any ornaments, but the subtle
nuances of this music are best highlighted by the use of contemporary French
embellishments, which allied to the instruments' resonant tuning system gives these works
a very particular delicacy and luster.
1995 John Bryan
Rose Consort of Viols
The Rose Consort of Viols takes its name from the celebrated
family of viol makers, whose work spanned the growth and flowering of the English consort
repertoire. With its unique blend of intimacy, intricacy, passion and flamboyance, this
repertoire forms the basis of the Rose Consort's programmes ranging from Taverner and Byrd, to Lawes, Locke and Purcell, and
expanding to include singers, lutes and keyboard instruments. The Consort has also
commissioned and performed works by contemporary composers, including Sir Harrison
Birtwistle. The Consort performs extensively throughout Britain and the continent of
Europe, appears regularly on the BBC and in major London concert halls, and has made a
number of highly acclaimed recordings. It has received awards for its research and
performance of newly devised programmes, some of which have been toured on the Early Music
Network, or performed at leading festivals such as York, Utrecht and Bruges.
Timothy Roberts read music at
Cambridge University and studied early keyboards at the Guildhall School in London. In
addition to solo recitals on harpsichord, organ, fortepiano and clavichord he is much in
demand as continuo player for the Gabrieli Consort, His Majesty's Sagbutts & Cornetts
and the West German Radio choir Corona Colonensis.
Jacob Heringman
Jacob Heringman was born in the USA
but came to Britain to study lute and is now based in England. Besides solo work,
specializing in the renaissance repertoire, he performs regularly with leading ensembles
such as the New London Consort, the Dowland Consort, Taverner Players and Musica Antiqua
of London.
David Miller
David Miller studied at the Guildhall
School of Music and Drama, where he is now a professor. He appears as a continuo player on
theorbo, archlute and guitar, with such distinguished ensembles as the Taverner Players
and the Academy of Ancient Music, and as a soloist has made two recordings of songs and
lute music by Dowland and Danyel.