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Early Music Consort

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Early Music Consort of London
An early line-up of the Early Music Consort (left to right: Christopher Hogwood, David Munrow, James Tyler, Oliver Brookes, James Bowman)
Background information
Also known asThe Early Music Consort
OriginUK
GenresClassical,Early music
Years active1967(1967)–1976
LabelsArgo;Virgin Veritas
Past membersDavid Munrow,Christopher Hogwood,James Tyler,Oliver Brookes,James Bowman

TheEarly Music Consort of Londonwas a Britishmusic ensemblein the late 1960s and 1970s which specialised inhistorically informed performanceofMedievalandRenaissance music.It was founded in 1967 by music academicsChristopher HogwoodandDavid Munrowand produced many highly influential recordings. The group disbanded in 1976 following Munrow's suicide.

History

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The formation of the Early Music Consort of London in the late 1960s has been credited with popularising the genre ofEarly musicin UK and being main instigator of the BritishEarly music revivalof the late 20th century. Munrow was inspired by theAlte Musikmovement that had already gained popularity in Germany, and sought to foster an interest in music of the Medieval and Renaissance eras among British audiences.[1]Munrow collaborated with Christopher Hogwood, with whom he had studied atPembroke College,Cambridge University in setting up a new specialist music group, initially called the Early Music Consort, but changed to The Early Music Consort of London, prior to their tour of America. It was essentially a small, versatile group optimised for touring purposes, but capable of being augmented by larger forces for recording purposes. The group's original line-up consisted of Munrow, a wind instrumentalist who played many different instruments; Hogwood playing keyboard, harp and percussion;Mary Remnantonfiddle,organandtabor;Oliver Brookesonviol;Robert Spencer onlute;and thecountertenorJames Bowman.[2]Later, another multi instrumentalistJames Tylerreplaced Robert Spencer and Mary Remnant left. A number of other singers also worked with the group such as the tenorMartyn Hill.

Selected discography

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The Voyager Golden Record

The Early Music Consort of London produced many influential collections of early music, typical of which wasThe Art of the Netherlandsissued as a three-record set in 1976.

A track from their 1976 recording,Instruments of the Middle Ages and Renaissance— "The Fairie Round" fromPavans, Galliards, Almains and other short Aeirs— was selected byNASAfor inclusion on theVoyager Golden Record,a pair ofphonograph recordsthat were sent into space aboard theVoyager 1andVoyager 2space probes in 1977. The piece, written forrecorder consortby the English Tudor composerAnthony Holborne,was chosen by a committee chaired byCarl Saganas a significant example of Western music and a representation of human culture.[3][4]The sheet music used contained an error in the bass part which created a most uncharacteristic unresolved cadence. Munrow played the bass sordune on the recording.

  • Ecco la primavera - Florentine Music of the 14th Cent(1969)
  • Music of the Crusades(1971)
  • The Triumphs of Maximilian I(1970)
  • The Six Wives of Henry VIII(1970)
  • Music for Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain(1972)
  • The Art of Courtly Love(1973)
  • Praetorius- Dances and Motets(1973)
  • Music of Guillaume Dufay: Missa "Se La Face Ay Pale"(1974)
  • Instruments of the Middle Ages and Renaissance(1976)
  • Monteverdi's Contemporaries(1976)
  • Music of the Gothic Era(1976)
  • Greensleeves to a Ground(1976)
  • Festival of Early Music - Music from 14th Century Florence, Music of the Crusades & The Triumphs of Maximilian(1976)
  • Henry Purcell:Birthday Odes for Queen Mary(1976)
  • The Art of the Netherlands(1976)
  • A Contemporary Elizabethan Concert(1977)

References

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  1. ^Wilson, Nick (2013)."2. Seven Ages of Early Music".The Art of Re-enchantment: Making Early Music in the Modern Age.OUP USA. p. 19.ISBN9780199939930.Retrieved20 March2018.
  2. ^"David Munrow (of the Early Music Consort) and Folk Music - Semibrevity".Semibrevity.1 May 2015.Retrieved20 March2018.
  3. ^"David Munrow - Biography".davidmunrow.org.Archived fromthe originalon 20 March 2018.Retrieved20 March2018.
  4. ^"Voyager - Music on the Golden Record: Music From Earth".Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology.NASA.Archivedfrom the original on 20 March 2018.Retrieved20 March2018.
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