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Showing posts with label lute. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lute. Show all posts

Friday, 10 March 2023

Philippus Thomassinus (Filippo Tomassini): Canzone franzese (from lute original)

 A transcription for low-4th ukulele from the original tablature for 8-course lute in Conserto Vago...  

Facsimile at: Museo internazionale e Bibl. della musica, Bologna (I-Bc): V.156 

Please see my post of 13 Feb for the ToC and further info.




This is the final piece for lute in Conserto Vago. The title translates as "French song", but I do not know whether it is a new composition in French style or is an entabulation or variations on an existing song. The beginning reminds me of Le Roy's "Fantasias".

You can download a pdf version for free here.

Thursday, 9 March 2023

Philippus Thomassinus (Filippo Tomassini): Gagliarda (from lute original)

A transcription for low-4th ukulele from the original tablature for lute in Conserto Vago...  

Facsimile at: Museo internazionale e Bibl. della musica, Bologna (I-Bc): V.156 

Please see my post of 13 Feb for the ToC and further info.





A relatively simple piece, even in the 8-course lute version. I imagine that it was the basis for improvisation and decoration. I leave it up to you...

You can download the pdf file here, for free.

Tuesday, 7 March 2023

Philippus Thomassinus (Filippo Tomassini): Corrente (from lute original)

 A transcription for low-4th ukulele from the original tablature for lute in Conserto Vago...  Facsimile at: Museo internazionale e Bibl. della musica, Bologna (I-Bc): V.156 

Please see my post of 13 Feb for ToC and further info.


The first line of "Corrente" in upside-down format


A lively little piece with a skipping tempo. As usual I have had to take some liberties with the lower voice in adapting from an 8-course to a 4-course instrument.

You can download a pdf of the arrangement here.

Tuesday, 28 February 2023

Philippus Thomassinus (Filippo Tomassini): Balletto (from lute original)

 A transcription for low-4th ukulele from the original tablature for lute in Conserto Vago...  Facsimile at: Museo internazionale e Bibl. della musica, Bologna (I-Bc): V.156 

Please see my post of 13 Feb for further info.


The first line of "Balletto" in "upside-down" tabs

A charming piece and good practice at playing successive 3-note chords. 

You can download a free pdf of the transcription here.

I hope that you enjoy playing it.



Monday, 27 February 2023

Philippus Thomassinus (Filippo Tomassini): Volta (from lute original)

 A transcription for low-4th ukulele from the original tablature for lute in Conserto Vago... 

Please see my post of 13 Feb for further info.


The first line of "Volta"
(The bar number was inserted by me as an aid to transcription.)
Facsimile at: Museo internazionale e Bibl. della musica, Bologna (I-Bc): V.156 


In an earlier post I was rather grudging about the first pieces in this compilation, but on mature consideration I find them to have some interesting fingerings that one doesn't normally find in uke music. So, a good exercise in playing shapes that don't "automatically" fall under the fingers.

You can download a free pdf of the transcription here.

Saturday, 1 August 2020

Dowland (?): A Fancy (P 74)

A short fancy, less challenging than the previous post


This fancy, P 74, is arranged from the keyboard notation of Poulton & Lam The collected lute music of John Dowland (Faber, 1995), pp 236 – 7, which I have followed closely – including the grace notes and right-hand fingering. They distinguished up to four voices which we cannot really reproduce on the ukulele, but I have tried to indicate as many as possible.

The original MS, from a facsimile at the wonderful Sarge Gerbode repository of lute music:
http://www.gerbode.net/facsimiles/GB-Lbl_British_Library/ms_Add_31392_1595/24.png
The date of the MS is about 1605.


This piece may not be by John Dowland, but Diana Poulton thought it had many hallmarks of his style, and that’s good enough for me.

“Fancy” was a contemporary word for “fantasia”, but I get the impression (not necessarily correct) that a fancy was lighter in tone and content. They involved the composer starting with a theme, and then developing it as he saw fit, with no rigid structure.

This one is not too complicated, and although the sight of long runs of divisions often fills me with dread or ennui, the divisions here are engaging. Note that JD changes from major to minor and back again.

As regards the graces and ornaments, there is no certainty as to their meaning. The + and # signs obviously meant specific but different things to the scribe, but what they were … well, I leave it up to your skill and judgment to play them, or just ignore them. (In the MS and P&L's transcription they are placed before, after or under the note, but I have put them all in front.)

The dots under notes were there to indicate a lesser stress, probably by using the weaker index finger rather than the thumb: it helps to get a distinct rhythm going. I have written a blog post about the different interpretations of the little dots, by players vastly more knowledgeable than me.

The presence of fingering indications may indicate that this was intended for an amateur, so I have reproduced them rather than converting them to "i"s (I’m a learner too).

The first notes of this piece were also used in "Fantasia P 1", which I will transcribe soon, although it is 95 bars long.

Available to download free (from Google Drive) in the following formats:




Tuesday, 5 February 2019

Allison: Almain

Another nice easy piece!

Rather than wade through facsimilies of MSS, I went straight to Eric Crouch’s Guitar Loot website (http://guitarloot.org.uk/Scores/EnglishMusic/Other/AlmainAllisonAS.pdf) for something not too challenging (he grades all his postings).

This one is from the Matthew Lodge Lute Book (Dd.2.11. f.75r/2) in the Cambridge University Library. You can read all about the composer using the link above.

Facsimile of the original. It's a really clear one, should you want to compare it with this arrangement, and see the compromises I made to fit it on the ukulele. Incidentally, the letters should be written between the lines, but Mr Holmes didn't always manage this.

All that I had to do was imagine my ukulele was a guitar and write down the tabs, though the bass line is rather modified. (I must admit that I find still it easier to read notation on guitar than on uke.) The key wanders between A major and A minor (whichever I choose gives a similar number of accidentals).

Available to download free in the following formats:
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Friday, 11 January 2019

Transcribing Renaissance music for the low-G ukulele

Introduction


This is a brief account of the process that I adopt in making my low-G ukulele versions of this wonderful old music. Well, I say brief, but it is quite a long post now I come to think. I have also made a pdf version, which you can download here.

Transcription involves getting the original copied as accurately as possible in a different, more appropriate, format. Arranging involves estimating the length of time that a note is sounded, fitting music for 6- (or more) course instruments such as lute or vihuela on a 4-string instrument such as the ukulele, and sometimes simplifying the most difficult parts. The most abundant music available (in print or online, transcribed or in facsimile) is for the lute, but there is plenty for the vihuela and Renaissance guitar as well.

Most published versions of arrangements of old music for the ukulele give staves for the full notation and tabs in parallel. The tabs may be a reduced version indicating just the fingering, but not the note lengths, so you have to read notation and tabs staves simultaneously. My intention in this blog is to give the fullest version of the tabs, with note lengths, voices, ligatures etc., so that they can be used alone. It's not possible, however, to show all the subtleties, so the notation will be the definitive version.

This means that I'm being a lot more prescriptive than the original composers: they just showed the bare bones of the music, and left it to the player to use his or her own ingenuity and experience to interpret it. So here is a caveat: my transcriptions are just my opinions. You may have different ones. You only have to compare modern transcriptions of the same piece, by trained musicians rather than by an amateur like me, to see how different they are from each other – even though they have all the right notes in the right places. 


Renaissance guitar


We will start with the Renaissance guitar. It was a little larger than the tenor ukulele, and had 4 courses (of paired strings, except usually the first) tuned to the same intervals, if not to the same pitch, as the uke; this means that the first stages of transcription are relatively simple. 


The available music by French composers, such as Le Roy, is written in tablature, and is clearly printed. In French tablature, also used in Britain, a indicates the nut (fret 0), b is fret 1, c is fret 2, and so on. The letter j was not used, so k = 9, l = 10 and m = 11. There is a full list in the lute section below.

The first string is represented by the space above the top line of the stave, down to the 4th string at the bottom. The facsimile above shows one and a half pieces in Adrian Le Roy's Quart livre de tablature de guiterre, pub 1553. The letter forms are squashed but clear. The has a flat top to distinguish it from the e. (When we get to manuscripts later, we will see that letter forms are not always so clear.)

The "flags" above the letters indicate how long a note sounds until the next note is plucked, but not necessarily how long the note should be held. See the table below.

Concordance of the various symbols used in Renaissance lute and guitar music in print and MSS (French format). One may need to halve the lengths of the notes in the originals, as Poulton and Lam did in most of their transcriptions. The first finger dot indicates un-accented notes, assuming that it is weaker than the thumb.

In some setting styles, every note will be given a length flag, as in modern music. In others, as in the Le Roy example above, if there is a series of notes having the same lengths (or, strictly, are plucked at the same intervals), only the first note is flagged. This leads to a less cluttered appearance, but makes it harder to appreciate complex rhythms at a glance.

Having got the notes down in the right place on paper or in your favourite music setting package, you then has to decide how long a note should be held.

To set the music, I have been using the slightly idiosyncratic TablEdit app, which seems perfectly designed for setting this early music, because note fingerings are in effect entered into a tablature grid, with a regular time axis along the bottom. Once the notes are in the right place, their lengths can be easily adjusted.

Looking at bars 1 and 5 in line 1 in the facsimile above, it is pretty obvious that the notes on strings 2, 3 and 4 should be held through the bar whilst the melody is played on the top string. In line 4 bar 5, the melody is held on the top string throughout the bar.

When it comes, however, to the bass line (on the 4th string) in this bar we have a problem. In this notation system, rests are implied by a gap, just as an extended note is. So:
(a) is there a minim (half note) rest in the first half of the bar, before we play two crotchets of a, or
(b) do we extend the from the previous bar?

The obvious thing to do is to try it out on your ukulele and see what seems best. Or, you can find a recording online by an expert, and see what he or she does. Valéry Sauvage (a k a "Ukeval") is a really excellent and productive exponent of this music, and it is worth searching his YouTube channel.

There are occasions where a note followed by a space does not imply that it should be extended. In line 3 bar 5, for example, the on the first beat on the first string is obviously part of a scale that continues down the second string (d b a) so the will last just one beat. The notes on the third and fourth strings will, however, be held through the bar.

Clef: it is traditional and convenient in music for guitar and banjo to write the music on the treble clef, but an octave higher than it actually sounds. When I started transcribing this is what I did, as you will see from the first posts on the blog. There were, however,  just too many ledger lines.

Later transcriptions I have posted are true pitch, with middle C (the one on the first ledger line below the stave) = C4 = string 3. This means the low G string for which I write only needs 2 ledger lines.  I am grateful to Bill1 on the Ukulele Underground forum for pointing out the inconsistency, and the value of true pitch notation.

(For the lute transcriptions by Poulton and Lam, shown below, the great stave is used, which is OK for understanding a composition, but impossible as a performing copy for a lutenist.)

Here is a worked example of how I adapted a piece by Le Roy to be played on a ukulele with a low 4th string. I've used this one as it is one of the first that I worked on. You will see how compact the original format is. I read somewhere that in this period books were so expensive that they cost as much as a lute, so conciseness was obviously an imperative. 


My version below should be self-explanatory, if not perfectly set. Note the attempt in places to discern three voices: melody on top, bass on the bottom, and filled out with harmonies in between. Understanding these is a great help when interpreting some complex lute pieces.




Baroque guitar


Arranging baroque guitar music for ukulele is a minefield. Different composers used different, often unspecified, tunings. The instrument has five courses, of paired strings, except sometimes for the first. The courses were often in octaves, or the lower strings could be re-entrant, like the modern ukulele. This can make the music seem rather jumpy in playing a particular voice. If you ignore the octaves, the tuning was like the first five strings of the "normal" guitar. 
I have made a few arrangements and published them on this blog. 

For more information I refer you to A guide to playing the Baroque guitar by the late James Tyler (Indiana University Press, 2011), which I found invaluable.




Lute 



There is quite a body of lute music available: as facsimiles of MSS (more on reading them later), as transcriptions (tablature and notation), and as arrangements for guitar (some with the third string tuned a semitone flat to give the same intervals as a lute). I am assuming here that the French form of tablatures described above is used.

Much of this account also applies to music written for the vihuela, a Spanish instrument tuned like a lute, but with a body more like that of a guitar. The tablature was written in numbers rather than letters, and the string order was reversed, with the treble at the bottom. This post is long enough already, so I will just deal here with lute music in French tablature.

If you are lucky enough to have a Renaissance guitar (I recently treated myself to one) most of the transcriptions will fit perfectly. The only problem is that on a tenor uke you can stretch to an extra fret, so in a few places my arrangements feel a bit uncomfortable on the guitar.
The first step is to transfer the fret/string positions in the lute as directly as possible to the ukulele. The challenges include: 
(a) The 3rd string on the lute is 1 semitone flat in comparison with the 3rd string on the ukulele or guitar. This is a pain because if there is an open 3rd string in a lute piece, this has to put on string 4 fret 4 on the uke, which can mess up the bass line.
(b) The uke obviously has no 5th and 6th strings, so where possible we have to move notes on them up an octave and enter on strings 3 and 4, which might already be occupied.
The following equations (sorry if you hate algebra) summarise what I do in my head when transcribing. If U1...U4 = fret positions on ukulele strings 1...4, and L1...L6 = fret positions on lute courses 1...6, then:
U1 = L1
U2 = L2
U3 = L3 – 1
U4 = L4
U3 = L5 + 2 [8va]
U4 = L6 + 2 [8va]
You will see that the 3rd and 4th strings could get a little crowded.
(Thanks to Mauro Padellini for pointing out errors in the formulae.)

The second step is to identify the voices. If you have a piano transcription in parallel with the lute tabs (as in Poulton and Lam, see below) this is quite easy. In general there will be a "melody" line on top, a bass line (guess where), and one or two middle lines or chordal harmonies, all rather like the Le Roy pieces mentioned above, but more complicated. It's probably best to metaphorically ink in the top voice first, then the bottom voice, and finally see what one can do to fit in the middle parts. It will never be as full a version as the original, but it does help in our understanding of the music. By studying the tabs of composers such as Le Roy and Morlaye for the Renaissance guitar you can see how the masters managed the compromises.

The third step is to refine the arrangement by
(a) Playing it through, on the ukulele, adjusting the fingering and string on which a note is played to make it as easy and efficient as possible to perform. At least we can stretch to a few more frets than the classical guitarist!
(b) Listening to the piece played by a skilled performer on the lute, to get the feeling of the music, and to understand the structure and emphasis.

It may make the piece easier to play, or more complete, if you transpose the piece to a higher key, to make more use of the higher frets on the ukulele or to fit some lower notes in.

My observation of lute pieces is that the chords (in our modern way of looking at music) are generally rooted in the bass. Often in one's uke arrangement one wants a bass note as part of the rhythm (the boom in boom ching), and the ukulele doesn't have it. I then use another note from the chord on the bass (4th) string. So, in the chord of D or Dm, I will use an A rather than the absent D – not perfect, but better than nothing. (This is also what composers for the Renaissance guitar did.)

Addendum added Nov 2023
I have recently been trying out a modification of the above workflow:
1. Make a full transcription for lute – surprisingly easy in TablEdit. This means I always have a full copy to work with.
2. Duplicate the lute version, and copy notes on the 4th to 7th strings an octave higher. Play back each bar in MIDI and listen for and correct any discords.
3. Eliminate the bottom strings, leaving just the top four strings. This gives a version playable on a ukulele with the 3rd string tuned down a semitone.
4. Make a copy of the above, adjust the tuning to that of a conventional low-G ukulele. All the notes on the third string will have to be dropped by one fret. Annoyingly, this means representing an open 3rd lute string at the 4th fret on the 4th string.
5. Now comes the refining stage: correcting the note lengths, and further modifying the fretting to fit more easily under the fingers. The upper voice will always be maintained, but the skill is in making the lower voice(s) comprehensible.
6. I have now started making two versions of the arrangements: 
(1) a fully-voiced version, to aid understanding of the musical lines, and 
(2) an unvoiced version with all the stems pointing up, and every note on the same stem of the same length. This sounds horrible in MIDI playback but it does help getting the timing right in more complex passages. And, of course, this is much as the Renaissance lute player would have dealt with - see the illustrations in THIS POST.

Symbols and handwriting in MSS


The table above shows a concordance of fret numbers, French tab letters, and examples from facsimilies of MSS around 1590. And here is the secretary hand from the fount "Secretary hand ancient":

The forms are pretty close to those used in fingering MSS scores. It is confusing at first that the c-symbol resembles r, the can look like ß, the like y, and the like a mistake in writing an l. Even now, in my head, I say "= 2" rather than "= 2". Why they weren't written as clearly as those in Le Roy's books from the 1550s, I don't know – tradition, I suppose.

By the 16th century the elegant Italian chancery hand (later to become "Italics" in print) was influencing handwriting, and the text in lute MSS was written in the more legible form, or a hybrid between the two.

An example: John Dowland's Lachrimae Pavan


I have chosen this piece as it was enormously popular in his time and was his signature composition. Here we see the first four bars.

One of many MS versions of Lachrimae PavanNote that the second flag looks a bit like a ß with a long stemthis is a shorthand version of the crotchet (quarter-noteflag, which should look rather like an "F". The MS versions of even shorter notes look like a stem with a wiggly line, and are not always easy to interpret. In flagging adjacent notes of the same length, the tails are joined as in modern notation, to give the "gate" or "grid-iron" format.
This facsimile can be seen in full here: https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-DD-00005-00078-00003/18


The first 4 bars of Dowland's Lachrimae as transcribed and interpreted by Poulton and Lam. I think this must be a consensus version from a number of sources. A modified version of the Secretary hand is used for the tabs. The # symbol indicates an ornament of some kind (it's up to you), and the slanting lines indicate how long to hold the bass. 
You will see that in the lute version there are as many as four voices (musical lines), as in bar 3. In the uke version below I have simplified this to two or three voices: the upper stems-up, the others stem-down. When the stems-down notes are of the same duration it is neater to combine them, but where durations vary they may be displaced to left or right, whichever is the less cluttered.

 The tablature setting I have used is as complete as possible within the constraints of the format. This means that you can play directly off the tab stave, rather than use the tabs for fingering and the notation for duration. The notation does give a much better visual impression of what the music sounds like.


The same 4 bars in my arrangement for ukulele, with a low 4th string. 

This example shows amongst other features:

(a) Bar 1, beat 1: The low G2 on the sixth string of the lute can't be represented as an A2 on the uke, so I have made it an A3, on the fourth string an octave higher. Beat 2: on the lute the G3 is an octave higher, but on the uke we have to repeat the A3. 
[For definitions of G2, G3, etc, see this blog post:
https://renaissance-ukukele.blogspot.com/2018/02/names-of-notes-in-scientific-and.html.]
(b) Bar 2, beat 1: The ligatured B♭5 on lute string 1 is implied, not written in the tab.
(c) Throughout, there are inevitably fewer notes in the harmonies in the uke version, and the lower voices are sometimes combined.


Concluding remarks

Despite the length of this post, the process is really not that difficult. Why not have a go?
Arranging can be just as much fun as playing, and it does help you to understand a piece.


References

You can find useful publications and facsimilies listed on this blog page: https://renaissance-ukukele.blogspot.com/p/resources.html















Wednesday, 31 October 2018

Devereux & Bacheler: To plead my faith (song and ukulele accompaniment)

My previous posts dealt with two galliards (by Bacheler and Dowland) based on this song, so I thought it might be a good idea to examine the original in more detail.

It is in four sections, each consisting of repeated 8-bar strains. Fortunately the lute accompaniment  still exists, and is not too challenging, so I have transcribed it for ukulele.

Robert Devereux in a portrait by Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger
Image from Wikipedia


Robert Devereux (1565 – 1601), second Earl of Essex, was a distant relation of Elizabeth I, a brave soldier and a poet. He became a favourite of the queen, but lost his head on a charge of treason.

Daniel Bacheler (1572 – 1619) was a lutenist and composer, who at one time worked for Devereux, and later held office in the court of the wife of James I / VI. His style of playing was at the time considered complex and difficult, but this accompaniment isn't too hard.

The piece was published in Robert Dowland's A musicall banquet. I can't find a facsimile online, but you can see a transcription here.

I have provided links to the arrangement below. There is also a MIDI file of the melody – played on an oboe, which is the least horrible synthesised melody instrument on my computer.

Links:


P.S. As the galliards by Bacheler and Dowland diverged so far from the original air, I am making a plain and simple arrangement for ukulele, sticking to the melody. I will post it in a few days.

Wednesday, 17 October 2018

Daniel Bacheler: Galliard to 'To plead my faith'

Daniel Bacheler (1572 – 1619) was about 9 years younger than John Dowland, but as regards status more successful, in being appointed to the court of Queen Elizabeth I, and gaining a coat of arms. He was apparently admired by Dowland, who wrote an arrangement (P 28) of this piece, which I intend to arrange for ukulele soon.

The galliard is adapted for ukulele from a tablature transcription of the lute original (BL Add MS 38539 p 15v/1) by Sarge Gerbode here. I subsequently referred to a transcription for guitar by Eric Crouch here.

Daniel Bacheler (on horseback) from an engraving by Thomas Lant 
of the funeral procession of Sir Philip Sidney in 1586.
I don't think you'd recognise him in a police line-up without the horse.

Image taken from Wikipedia.


According to Diana Poulton, this piece is based on Bacheler’s own song melody “To plead my faith”, but apart from the first four bars (and their repeat) it deviates widely. There are three themes of eight bars, each followed by a variation.

Much of the activity in the lute original is thankfully on the top four strings, but as usual I have tried to fit in some bass notes. The durations shown are as in the original, but it may not be possible to maintain them on the ukulele as they have to be fingered, whereas on the lute they are often on open strings.

The piece is quite syncopated and, to make the timing clearer where a note crosses the beat, I have notated with ligatures rather than dots. In some places, especially where there are three voices, it would be a good idea to take the timing from the notation as the tabs are stretched to the limit.

The first two lines of the galliard from the Sturt Lute Book (British Library).
The grace symbols are clearly visible.
Timing is indicated by the (now conventional) note symbols, but in short-hand form.
Full facsimile on Sarge Gerbode's website here.

The image above shows that the original is decorated with indications of graces (#, × and +). I have omitted them as: (1) there seems no clear consensus of what they mean, and (2) I find the piece difficult enough already. As players of the day seem to have been rather like jazz musicians in their ability to improvise, I think it’s consistent for to us to add mordents, slurs and so on to the longer notes as we see fit (or are able to perform). Or, you might want to download Gerbode's transcript and work out for yourself what is feasible; if you do, let me know.

As with much music of this period, the voices are integral to the piece, and I have found it unrealistic to simplify for performance by, say, just playing the top voice. So ... it's not easy to play, but I have enjoyed trying. Perhaps I'll have a go at making a simple arrangement of the original song.

You can download the galliard in the following formats:

... and also the words and music of the song:

Thursday, 11 October 2018

John Johnson: The Old Medley (Brogyntyn)

After the previous short piece by Johnson, here is a longer one, also from the Brogyntyn Lute Book. I considered adapting a transcription by Sarge Gerbode of another version of this piece from the Marsh Lute Book in Dublin, but it is so full of fast divisions I feel it is out of the scope of this amateur blog.

The first 3 lines from Johnson's The Old Medley. 
Facsimile from https://www.library.wales/discover/digital-gallery/manuscripts/early-modern-period/brogyntyn-lute-book/
It's a nice clean MS, carefully written, with only one small error that I can detect.


On the whole, it's quite an easy piece, with a few tricky bits. The harmonies are mostly quite simple, with some quick chord changes and patches of syncopation to cope with.

There are eight themes, each followed by an often minor variation. These are indicated in Roman numerals by I, I’, II, II’ and so on. The first three themes are set in in common time annd are 8 bars long; the fourth fits most comfortably into 3/4 and is 4 bars long; and the rest are in 6/8 time and 4 bars long. This ukulele version has been set at 4 bars per line, to make the structure clearer.
The themes are presumably arrangements of old songs and dances, whose identities remain unknown to me.

The abundance of block chords in this 4-string version give a possibly misleading impression that they would have been strummed, but checking the lute originals shows most chords include unplayed internal strings; but, there's no reason that we can't strum them (anachronistically) in the fashion of Gaspar Sanz et al. if we want to.

In chords such as E and F which do not have a root note available on a lower string, I have often added B and A respectively on the 4th string, mainly where a fuller chord is indicated in the MS.
To help in interpretation, I have tried to identify voices by stem direction, but this was not always possible.

Available to download in the following formats:



Monday, 8 October 2018

John Johnson: Galliard (Brogyntyn Lute Book p. 17/2)

Now, here's a nice little galliard in three parts, with some slightly unexpected harmonies. As with all pieces set in D (or Dm), one runs out of root notes in the chords, so I have used 5ths in places.

The galliard in the Brogyntyn Lute Book.


It's one of a number of pieces by Johnson (c. 1545 – 1594), copied out very neatly in the Brogyntyn Lute Book. You can see facsimilies of the original in the National Library of Wales here.

John Johnson was a lutenist and composer and was at the court of Queen Elizabeth I. You can read his biography here

Available for download in the following formats:

Friday, 5 October 2018

Anon: Seven variations on Walsingham (Holmes Nn.6.36 20v, 21r)

The second of two versions of Walsingham in the Mathew Holmes Lute Book Nn.6.36 20v, 21r/1 in the Cambridge University Library, and the last (for now, at least) of my ukulele arrangements, which were advertised here.

The first 3 lines of the clear original MS.
Note that Holmes, the compiler, had bought a 5-line music manuscript book, and had to rule in an extra line.


The preceding version of Walsingham in the book (uke arrangement here) is a bit of a dog’s breakfast, so I was pleasantly surprised by this piece. There is the usual problem with tunes in D or Dm on the ukulele, as you tend to run out of low notes, but I've done what I can.

This piece diverges more from the original air than do most arrangements of Walsingham – even at the beginning it has some unexpected harmonies. It is both interesting and not too challenging (if you keep to 60 bpm).

It is more tuneful than most, and quite contrapuntal in places. Where I have heard hints of the campanella effect, I have scored accordingly. Even the, apparently obligatory, variation with semi-quaver divisions has a clear melody and articulation, and is not merely a stream of scale fragments. You will gather that I like it. I hope you do.

Available to download in the following formats:

Wednesday, 3 October 2018

Dowland: Walsingham (P 67)

As explained in an earlier post, this is one of a series of adaptations for ukulele of late 16th century arrangements of As I went to Walsingham for the lute.

I have had the luxury of following Poulton and Lam’s transcription (and reconstruction) of Holmes’ MS Dd.9.33 67v–68r, rather than using the MS, which is is rather confusing.

Holmes’ MS Dd.9.33, p. 68r, bottom three lines. (Cambridge University Library.)
You can see the state of the MS. All hail to Poulton & Lam for making their transcription.

There are seven variations, of 12 bars each.

The first two variations keep quite closely to the melody, but later ones include loads of divisions (mostly in the form of scale fragments) which seem very workaday to my ears, with none of the unexpected twists and catchy repeated motifs of Dowland at his best.

Variation 5 is weird, with (in the transcription) four bars in 3/4 time with triplets, four bars in 9/8, and the final four in straight 3/4 with a totally different feeling and quite out of place. (I have tweaked bar 51 to tidy things a little, but it’s a bodge of a bodge job.)

Poulton, in her biography of Dowland, describes this setting of Walsingham as “far less satisfactory than the one in galliard form (P31)”. [You can see a transcription of P31 for ukulele here.] The MS is the only copy, so she says one can’t ascribe to blame to Dowland performing below par, or to Holmes using a corrupted source. Also, I believe that Holmes was quite old and becoming unwell at the time he wrote the MS. Poulton also describes extending the song from 8 to 12 bars as destroying the “beautiful balance” of the original.

It looks to me like a case of cut-and-paste, with some of the pastings in the wrong order.

Even so, it sounds pretty good when Nigel North plays it on the lute.

Still curious? You can download the arrangements in the following formats:


Monday, 1 October 2018

Marchant: Variations on Walsingham (Holmes Dd.9.33 26v)

I enjoyed Marchant’s short galliard on page 29 of this volume (Dd.9.33) of the Holmes Lute Book, so I had high hopes of this piece.

The first two variations of a much longer piece.

The first two variations are quite enjoyable, but then we get further and further into divisions of increasing difficulty – and, to me, lack of interest. I have therefore ended my arrangement at 32 bars, although there are another 2.5 pages to go.

You can download the arrangement in the following formats:

Saturday, 29 September 2018

Marchant: Galliard on Walsingham (Holmes Dd.2.11 29/2)

Yet another lute arrangement of Walsingham (see here for an introduction) and the first of three by John Marchant. This one is in the first Matthew Holmes Lute Book (Dd.2.11) in Cambridge University Library.

Facsimile of John Marchant: Galliard on Walsingham in Matthew Holmes Lute Book Dd.2.11 29/2


A clean legible MS with no infelicities.

Incidentally, if you are interested in Holmes' calligraphy, most of the letters used in the MS tabs are clear here. The notes on the first string from bar 1 are:  d f h f  | d d d | d f h i f h  | d c d f h | d | c d f hand so on. The first a is in bar 5 string 4. The first b is in bar 9, string 4, beat 3. The first e is in bar 1, string 4, beat 3. The i looks to me rather like a fancy y, so that is how I recognise it. The c looks more like an r, and the f often tends towards the German ß or Greek β. The d is always in the Greek-ish form ∂, like a partial differential. Often a note is written on rather than between the lines, but it's normally easy enough to work out what is meant.

There are three variations, of 8, 8 and 10 bars; the longer final one seems to have been a popular device. It starts in the relative major (C), but the 2nd and 3rd variations are in Am. As is to be expected, all three end on the major. Because of the chordal construction, I have felt free to suggest modern chord symbols, but have not indicated passing tones.

It feels quite vigorous and martial to me, and I think that I have managed to pick out the voices, which are much easier to spot in the lute version. You may, of course, disagree with my analysis, which is more obvious in the notation than in the tabs.

Good fun to play, particularly the third variation, where the repeated motifs remind me of Dowland’s work.

Available to download in the following formats:



The Composer
“John Marchant (fl 1588–1611). English composer or composers. A ‘John Marchant’ was admitted Gentleman in Ordinary of the Chapel Royal on 14 April 1593, but is not mentioned in chapel records thereafter. A letter endorsed 8 December 1611 from William Frost to Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury, states that ‘Mr Marchant is latelie deceased who taught the princes [Elizabeth] to play uppon the virginalles’.” (Grove Music Online. )
A John Markant, mentioned in Diane Poulton’s biography of John Dowland, was responsible for liturgical music, and could be the same man.

Thursday, 27 September 2018

Anon: Six variations on Walsingham (Holmes Nn.6.36 19r)

Another in the series of transcriptions of lute versions of As I went to Walsingham: see introductory post here. Apologies for the strange title: the code refers to the first of two sets of variations in the 4th Matthew Holmes Lute Book (MS Nn.6.36) in Cambridge University Library.

Bars 41 – 51 of this Anonymous piece in the 4th Matthew Holmes Lute Book.
The full image can be seen at https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-NN-00006-00036/39


I find this piece difficult to get to terms with. How much is due to the anonymous composer, and how much to copying mistakes by an ageing Mathew Holmes, I am not qualified to judge. As explained below, I have done some recasting, which may or may not be appropriate.

After a fairly orthodox first variation, the work becomes quite jumpy: sequences of 1 to 3 bars concluded by a bar with a single block chord.

You will detect my lack of enthusiasm, but I've spent a day on the transcription, so I thought I'd give the piece an airing, albeit as an example of an oddity (or of my ignorance).

Notes on transcriptions

Since bar 21 has only 2 beats scored, I have shortened the single chord in bar 20 to one beat, and concatenated the two bars. In bar 20 perhaps Holmes’ time mark ꜏ (note 3 beats long) was a misprint for ꜓(1 beat). This assumption makes the score look more symmetrical.
Similarly, I have joined bars 29 and 30.
Bar 48 in the original has 5 beats, so I have split it into 2 bars.
It’s all a bit of a mess, and I am not wholly convinced by my tinkerings. Please regard this as a first attempt, which I include in the interests of completeness. I will have to think about it some more.

Downloads

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Tuesday, 25 September 2018

Collard: Variations on Walsingham

Another post on the many late Tudor variations on Walsingham, as advertised and described here.

According to Diana Poulton, Edward Collard (fl c1595–1599) was an
English lutenist and composer. He was appointed one of the musicians for the lute, in place of John Johnson, on 4 June 1598, four years after Johnson's death. He appears to have received no salary until a warrant was issued on 7 June 1599 for 15 months' payment. No further entries appear in the Audit Office Declared Accounts, but whether Collard died or retired is not known. 
The top 3 lines of Collard's Variations on Walsingham.
The full image can me seen at https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-DD-00002-00011/188


 This piece takes our now familiar air, and presents it in 8 variations: six of 8 bars, and the final two of 12 bars - well, that's how it sounds to me. It is as well to start to play it at a slow speed, as later variations, especially the last two, become increasingly challenging (for me, impossible). (I have set the midi version to 60 bpm.) Even in the earlier (easier) variations there are some fine and unexpected harmonies, and the piece as a whole is rhythmic and lively.

Transcription notes.

Bars 9 (top right in the image above) and 67 have partly disappeared over the centuries, so I have had a go at reconstructing them. A number of bars begin with the chord of F (on the ukulele), with a low root, which would be on our 5th string if we had one, so I have substituted a low A to maintain the rhythmic pattern of a held low note under higher lines. A number of bars, e.g. bar 3, can be played from a 3 barré on the lute, but because our tuning is slightly different on the 3rd string, we have to be a bit more nimble.


Downloads.

You can download this arrangement in the following formats:




Friday, 21 September 2018

Dowland: A galliard on Walsingham (P 31)

And now a version of Walsingham by the greatest of the Elizabethan composers for the lute, John Dowland.  It has been arranged for the ukulele (in A minor) after Poulton D, Lam B, Eds. 1995. The collected lute music of John Dowland, Edn 3. Faber Music, London. There is a post about the song As I went to Walsingham and the arrangements of it by various of his contemporaries here.

Facsimile of the piece in one of Matthew Holmes' Lute Books.
This is a very clear image, and comparing it with the published transcriptions helped me to understand the calligraphy.


There are 3 variations. The first keeps fairly closely to the melody, whilst the second and third deviate considerably. Indeed, since the second ends on the dominant chord (E major), numbers 2 & 3 could be regarded as parts of one variation.

Even in strain 1 the melody is sometimes buried in the lower voices. Variation 3 contains a number of descending scale fragments, as was Dowland’s wont. The “Solus cum sola” motif appears in bar 15.

Available for download in the following formats:

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Anon (Wickhambrook): As I went to Walsingham

And now a version of Walsingham arranged for ukulele in Am. (The previous 3 postings have been in  Gm: see this introductory post.) It is based on a transcription by Sarge Gerbode from the Wickhambrook Lute Book (1592), f 17. (US-NH Ma.21.W.632), “ a large folio-sized manuscript compiled in the 1590s, perhaps to collect and preserve lute music by John Johnson, who died in 1594, and whose works predominate in this source”, according to an account by The Lute Society. There is full information on the book here.




There are 3 variations, the first keeping closely to the melody. The second and third are tuneful and enjoyable to play. I hope that you agree.

The following features seem quite Dowlandian to me: the scales in bars 13  – 14; the motif in bar 17, and its repeat an octave lower in bar 18; and the ascending scale in the upper voice in bars 20 – 23, with its  acccompanying motifs in the lower voices. Possibly, though, these are just common features of late 1500s music.

Available to download in the following formats:

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