Henry Purcell (1659-1695) Suites and Transcriptions for Harpsichord Source: A choice Collection of Lessons..... (1696) A British Library, MS. Mus 1, London...
Henry Purcell
(1659-1695)
Suites and
Transcriptions for Harpsichord
Source: A choice Collection of Lessons.....(1696)
A British Library,
MS. Mus 1, London Add. MSS 22099 and 41205
The Fitzwilliam
Museum, Cambridge MS Mus 653
Henry Purcell was born
into a musical family in London and began his education as a chorister in the
Chapel Royal under Captain Henry Cooke, Pelham Humphrey and later with John
Blow. At fourteen he was retained as tuner of the King's keyboard instruments
for which he received no fee. At eighteen he was appointed composer-in-ordinary
for the violins of the Chapel Royal and two years later became organist of
Westminster Abbey. His attentions turned to the London stage when William III
cut back court patronage around 1690. Purcell successfully combined the careers
of composer and performer to court and church whilst also pursuing his growing
interest in writing for the theatre and especially opera. His sudden death at
the comparatively early age of 36 caused wide-spread grief and robbed the
London musical scene of its leading figure. His reputation continued to
flourish, however, and his stage works were revived well into the eighteenth
century. Sadly, much of his keyboard music has been lost and apart from a few
manuscript copies our knowledge of it relies on printed editions. Most
important of these is the small collection entitled A choice
Collection of Lessons for the Harpsichord which contains the Eight
Suites. This was published posthumously by Purcell's wife, Frances, and
Henry Playford in 1696, one of only a handful of printed books of keyboard
music in late seventeenth-century Britain. It is dedicated to the Princess of
Denmark (later Queen Anne) and the preface thanks her for her patronage and her
generous encouragement of my deceased husband's performances in music, together
with the great honour your highness has done that science, in your choice of
that instrument for which the following compositions were made.
Subsequent editions
were prefaced by instructions for beginners and included six arrangements or
transcriptions. The discovery of a holograph manuscript of some of Purcell's
keyboard pieces in 1994 has put many of our preconceptions about his keyboard
music in a new light. This manuscript (British Library. Music Library, MS. Mus.
1) contains two of the suites assembled in their familiar order but in the case
of the A minor Suite includes a hitherto unknown Jig. It also
shows that Purcell himself was responsible for the keyboard versions of some of
his theatre music which many have previously doubted. Since this manuscript was
unavailable when this recording was made, the new pieces could not be included.
Purcell's eight Suites
exhibit a profound understanding of late seventeenth century keyboard idiom
and such subtle pieces were obviously written with the discerning player in
mind. The popular market, it seems, was more interested in the theatre and its
music and the later reprints of A choice Collection of Lessons included
six transcription of theatre music to offset any imbalance in the collection
which might affect sales.
Included here are four
previously unrecorded contemporary arrangements. They are all based on original
overtures by Purcell and reflect the popularity of this type of piece. The
tradition of orchestral transcription seems to have been imported from France
where d'Anglebert in particular had made a specialty of reworking Lully's
overtures as virtuoso harpsichord pieces. The English players incorporated
arrangements by other composers into their suites of pieces and the performance
of a suite restricted to a single composer must have been exceptional. They
were often careless about acknowledging the original source and composer,
making the task of ascription very difficult today. The transcriptions were
certainly associated with Purcell's Suites. The Overture in gamut flat, for
example, was written on blank pages at the back of a copy of A choice
Collection of Lessons now in the British Library. Similarly, the only
source of the Overture in C (Bonduca) places it before the Fifth
Suite as an additional or alternative prelude.
In terms of musical
style, the Suites are a curious amalgam of Italian and French
influences. The choice and types of dances show a predominance of French
models, especially in the Almands and Corants. Purcell goes to
great lengths to express the French convention of notes inegales (where
a passage of even note is given an uneven lilt by holding every other note a
little longer than its written value). The Preludes exhibit both
national characters; the prelude non mesure of the French and the
contrapuntally conceived Italian sonata style occur either separately or in
subtle hybrids of both. Although the Suites acknowledge these
continental traditions, the effect of the music is typically Purcellian and
quintessentially English, even down to the inclusion of an indigenous dance,
the Hornpipe. As with most of his music, the Suites display a
rigorous attention to detail. Each Suite has its own expression identity
related to the character and temperament of its key. The harmonic palate is
somewhat restricted but the quality of invention is such that there is always
something new to delight the listener. Purcell writes well for the harpsichord
and exploits many different textures and sonorities, from two-part textures
(often at the extremes of the keyboard) to rich chordal writing. Above all, it
is his command of melody which is most remarkable. The Sarabands and Minuets,
for example, have an inspired quality, in their simplicity and directness,
which is seldom found in the efforts of his contemporaries. It is little wonder
that Henry Purcell was highly respected in his own time (he was, after all,
thought of as the British Orpheus) and his name lived on in the next century as
that of the greatest of English composers.
T R Charlston, March
1997
Terence Charlston
Terence Charlston was
born in the Northern English county of Lancashire. He studied organ and
harpsichord at Oxford and at the Royal Academy of Music in London. He is a
passionate devotee of the keyboard music of the sixteenth, seventeenth, and
eighteenth centuries and has made recordings, broadcasts and television
appearances. He specialises in solo and chamber music playing and is a regular
visitor to the major European early music festivals. He has worked with many of
today's leading singers and period instrumentalists and is a member of the
quartet, London Baroque. In addition to a busy performing schedule, Terence
Charlston is also active as a teacher. Since 1989 he has taught harpsichord and
basso continuo at the Royal Academy of Music in London, where he was appointed
Head of Early Music in 1995 and is now Head of the newly formed Faculty of
Historical Performance.