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Composition as an Act of Performance: Artifice and Expression in Purcell's Sacred Partsong Since God so tender a regard
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2020
Abstract
Since God so tender a regard is one of a small number of ‘domestic sacred’ pieces Purcell entered into his manuscript scorebook, London, British Library, Add. MS 30930. Its particular interest lies in its construction over a ground bass, and the range of artificial devices Purcell employs in its setting. Its background in seventeenth-century psalm settings, and its likely performance circumstances, allowed Purcell to turn these features to rhetorical advantage, with highly imaginative and individual results.
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References
My thanks to Laurence Dreyfus for his encouraging comments after reading an earlier version of this article, and to the two anonymous JRMA readers for their helpful suggestions.Google Scholar
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5 Since God so tender is on the fourth disc in the series (Hyperion, CDA 66644, 1993). The performers are Rogers Covey-Crump and Charles Daniels (tenors), Michael George (bass) and continuo players from the King's Consort (Helen Gough, bass violin; David Miller, theorbo; Robert King, chamber organ).Google Scholar
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49 Other, comparatively rare, instances of ground bass in contemporary sacred music do seem to explore the idea of constancy, but without the paradoxical relationship expressed in Since God so tender; see, for example, Martin Adams's comments on Purcell's anthem In thee, O Lord (Z.16) in Henry Purcell, 179, and William Turner's symphony anthem Behold now, praise the Lord, discussed in Christopher Dearnley, English Church Music 1650–1750 (London, 1970), 224–5. Similar instances crop up in secular music, too, such as Purcell's song O solitude (Z.406; Henry Purcell, Secular Songs for Solo Voice, rev. edn, ed. A. Margaret Laurie, The Works of Henry Purcell, 25, London, 1985, 75–9), on the same ground as the opening of In thee, O Lord.Google Scholar
50 Fortune, ‘The Domestic Sacred Music’, 67–9, 72–3.Google Scholar
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