BOYCE: Symphonies Nos. 1-8, Op. 2
Total playing time: 01:04:03
$8.99
(CD)
In Stock - Usually ships within 24 hours.
Just copy this code and paste it where you want the link on your website:
William Boyce (1711-1779): Eight Symphonies, Op. 2 The English composer William Boyce is nowadays best known for his church music, anthems and services for...
William Boyce (1711-1779): Eight Symphonies, Op. 2
The English composer William Boyce is nowadays best
known for his church music, anthems and services for the
liturgy of the Church of England, and for the present Eight
Symphonys in Eight Parts, Op.2, published in 1760.
Boyce was born in London, the son of a cabinet-maker.
As a boy he was a chorister at St Paul's Cathedral under
Charles King and studied the organ with Maurice Greene,
to whom he was apprenticed, also serving him for some
time as a copyist. He is said to have had lessons from
Johann Christian Pepusch, the successful arranger of the
music for Gay's The Beggar's Opera, a noted theorist, a
co-founder of the Academy of Ancient Music, and a
scholar with a profound interest in earlier music. Pepusch
may have done much to arouse the enthusiasm of Boyce
for a study of earlier music and theory, shown in an
unpublished treatise, Harmonics, or an Attempt to
Explain the Principles on which the Science of Music is
Founded. In 1734 he was appointed organist at the Earl of
Oxford's Chapel, now St Peter's, Vere Street, moving two
years later to St Michael's, Cornhill. In 1736 he
succeeded John Weldon as second Composer to the
Chapel Royal, sharing the duties of second organist,
under the first Composer and Organist, Greene, with
whom he was also involved in the Apollo Academy, a
society for the performance of secular music. For the next
twenty years, at least, he conducted the Three Choirs
Festival.
Boyce gradually established a wider reputation as a
composer, particularly after the success of his Solomon,
with the descriptive title, rare hitherto in England, of
serenata. This was first performed in London at the
Apollo Academy in 1742. During these years he
contributed music in various forms for the London stage,
most significantly when employed by David Garrick, who
found Boyce more reliable than Thomas Arne. In 1749
Boyce was appointed organist at All Hallows the Great
and Less, a church that served the Joiners' Company, of
which his father had been appointed resident beadle in
1723, with a residence at Joiners' Hall, where Boyce
seems to have lived until his father's death in 1752. He
retained the position at All Hallows, his responsibilties
often entrusted to a deputy, until his dismissal in 1758,
and at St Michael's, Cornhill, for a further ten years, until
similar dissatisfaction led to his resignation. In 1758 he
received official appointment as an organist of the Chapel
Royal. He had succeeded Greene as Master of the King's
Musick on the latter's death in 1755, assuming more of
Greene's former responsibilities, among them the task of
assembling the important collection Cathedral Music,
being a Collection in Score of the Most Valuable and
Useful Compositions for That Service by Several English
Masters of the Last 200 Years. This was published
between 1760 and 1773, and retains a continuing
influence on Church of England cathedral repertoire.
The Hanoverian court had largely preferred the music
of Handel for royal occasions. The latter's death in 1759
left the way open for Boyce to provide the anthems for the
funeral of George II in November 1760 and for the
coronation of his successor, George III, the following
year. There had been considerable enmity between
Handel and Greene, perhaps the result of the latter's
appointment as Master of the King's Musick in 1727.
Boyce, however, retained great respect for Handel,
remarking, of his 'borrowings' that he took other men's
'pebbles and turned them into diamonds'. Charles Burney
praised him for his reverence for Handel, but also for the
fact that he 'neither pillaged nor servilely imitated him'.
During his last years he limited his musical activities,
while continuing to supply the necessary odes for royal
birthdays and New Year. He died in 1779, his death an
occasion for widespread mourning, and was buried at St
Paul's Cathedral, where his funeral brought together the
choirs of the cathedral and of Westminster Abbey.
Boyce's Eight Symphonys in Eight Parts were
published in 1760, collected from a number of earlier
works. The first four of the symphonies published are in
the form of three-movement Italian overtures, although
Boyce only has a slow second movement in the first of the
set. Symphony No. 1 in B flat major is taken from the
overture to the New Year's Ode, Hail, hail, auspicious
day, written for 1756. This is very much in the style of the
period, both in general form and in the melodic and
rhythmic treatment of the material, with an effective and
tuneful slow movement at its heart.
Symphony No. 2 in A major is taken from another court
composition, the overture to the royal Birthday Ode of
1756, When Caesar's natal days. The first of the three
movements is in suitably celebratory style, leading to a
second movement, Vivace, an elegant little dance. The
symphony ends with music of similar charm.
The third of the set, the Symphony No. 3 in C major,
opens in more formal baroque style. It was originally the
overture to The Chaplet, a two-act afterpiece first
mounted at Drury Lane on 2nd December 1749. This was
commissioned by David Garrick, with a libretto by Moses
Mendez, a well-to-do Jewish stockbroker whose
Portuguese grandfather had come to London as a doctor
in the service of Queen Catherine of Braganza. The
Chaplet is a pastoral piece, in which two shepherdesses,
the innocent Laura and the more worldly wise Pastora vie
for the attentions of the shepherd Damon. Like
Richardson's Pamela, Laura refuses to grant her favours
without marriage, a fate to which Damon finally
succumbs, leaving Pastora to make what she can of the
young treble Palaemon, already known to her, as it
transpires. Attention has been drawn to the composer's
use of the bassoon, in the tenor register doubling the
violin melody in the A minor second movement, an effect
Boyce uses elsewhere.
Symphony No. 4 in F major was originally the overture
to The Shepherds' Lottery, a two-act afterpiece with
libretto by Moses Mendez, first staged at Drury Lane on
19th November 1751. Another pastoral, this won less
popular favour than the earlier work. The lottery of the
title refers to the custom by which shepherds drew the
names of their respective wives from an urn on May-day.
Phyllis, the ingenue shepherdess of the drama, is anxious
that her name be drawn by her lover Thyrsis, while the
more experienced Daphne has no time for men, using the
occasion to slight the shepherd Colin, who wins the day
by refusing to draw any name at all. The symphony opens
with a spritely Allegro, followed by a Vivace ma non
troppo, marked piano sempre, an instruction Boyce uses
for other such movements. In 9/8 this movement makes
bold use of the wind instruments, notably when bassoons
and then horns double the violin melody. The work ends
with a characteristic Gavotte.
The fifth of the set, the Symphony No. 5 in D major, is
taken from the overture to the Cecilian Ode of 1739, See
famed Apollo and the nine, with words by the versatile
John Lockman, writer and Secretary of the British
Herring Fishery, 'so eminently distinguished by his many
curious writings', as Faulkner's Dublin Journal wrote of
the first performance in Dublin. It had been heard in
London at the Apollo Academy, thus avoiding
competition with Handel. The symphony is in the form of
a French overture, with a stately formal opening,
strengthened by trumpets and drums, leading to the
necessary fugal section. This is complemented by a
Gavotte and a Minuet.
Symphony No. 6 in F major was the overture to
Boyce's very successful Solomon, with words by Edward
Moore, a writer who frankly claimed that his literary
endeavours were undertaken 'more from necessity than
inclination'. The text is indebted not only to the Song of
Solomon but also to The Fair Circassian by the Reverend
Samuel Croxall. The first of the two movements is in the
characteristic French overture style, with a stately
introduction, here with the appropriate dotted rhythms,
leading to a fugal section. This is duly followed by a
Larghetto dance movement.
Symphony No. 7 in B flat major, originally the overture
to the ode Gentle lyre begin the straine, with words after
Pindar by Walter Harte, composed in 1740, is again in
French overture form, the opening dotted rhythm Andante
leading to a Spiritoso fugal section. It is followed by a
stately dance movement, and a more spirited final English
Jigg.
Also known as The Worcester Overture and Concerto
in D minor, the eighth symphony proclaims something of
its origin in the alternative titles. Again Boyce uses the
baroque French overture style, an opening marked
Pomposo followed by an exercise in contrapuntal writing.
The two following movements are in the dance forms still
expected by English audiences of the period, so soon to be
swayed by the newer fashions of Johann Christian Bach.
Keith Anderson
Symphony No. 1 in B flat major, Op. 2 (more info)
-
I. Allegro - 2:58
-
II. Moderato e dolce - 2:35
-
III. Allegro - 2:04
Symphony No. 2 in A major, Op. 2 (more info)
-
I. Allegro assai - 3:22
-
II. Vivace - 1:04
-
III. Presto Allegro - 1:27
Symphony No. 3 in C major, Op. 2 (more info)
-
I. Allegro - 2:37
-
II. Vivace - 1:52
-
III. Tempo di Menuetto - 1:27
Symphony No. 4 in F major, Op. 2 (more info)
-
I. Allegro - 3:32
-
II. Vivace ma non troppo - 1:40
-
III. Gavot Allegro - 2:12
Symphony No. 5 in D major, Op. 2 (more info)
-
I. Allegro ma non troppo - Allegro assai - 4:00
-
II. Tempo di Gavotta - 1:39
-
III. Tempo di Minuetto - 1:42
Symphony No. 6 in F major, Op. 2 (more info)
-
I. Largo - Allegro - 4:21
-
II. Larghetto - 3:13
Symphony No. 7 in B flat major, Op. 2 (more info)
-
I. Andante - Spirituoso - 4:08
-
II. Moderato - 3:01
-
III. Jigg (Allegro assai) - 2:00
Symphony No. 8 in D minor, Op. 2 (more info)
-
I. Pomposo - Allegro - 4:59
-
II. Largo Andante - 4:05
-
III. Tempo di Gavotta - 4:05