作曲者 | Henry Purcell (1659-1695)・ヘンリー・パーセル |
タイトル | Secular Songs |
出版社 | Novello・ノヴェロ |
シリーズ名 | The Purcell Society: Complete Works, Volume 25 |
品番 | HL9781785581502 |
校訂者 | Margaret Laurie |
形状 | 316 ページ・28 cm・ソフトカバー |
出版年 | 1985年 |
出版番号 | NOV151025 |
ISBN | 9781785581502 |
This volume contains all Purcell's secular solo songs which have no known association with the theatre. It also includes those songs which, though mainly for solo voice, end with a short duet section. The first edition of this volume was prepared for the Purcell Society by Arthur Somervell, published in 1928. This new edition is not just a revision, but the outcome of a fresh examination of the sources. A new editorial continuo part, more suited to the harpsichord has also been provided.
A thousand sev’ral ways (Z. 359)
Ah! cruel nymph (Z. 352)
Ah! how pleasant (Z. 353)
Amidst the shades (Z. 355)
Amintas to my grief I see (Z. 356)
Amintor, heedless of his flocks (Z. 357)
Ask me to love (Z. 358)
Bacchus is a pow’r divine (Z. 360)
Beneath a dark and melancholy grove (Sappho’s complaint) (Z. 461)
Beware, poor shepherds (The caution) (Z. 361)
Cease, anxious world (Z. 362)
Celia’s fond (Z. 364)
Cupid, the slyest rogue alive (Z. 367)
Draw near, you lovers (Z. 462)
Farewell, all joys! (Z. 368)
Farewell, ye rocks (The storm) (Z. 463)
Fly swift, ye hours (Z. 369)
From silent shades (Bess of Bedlam) (Z. 370)
Gentle shepherds (A pastoral elegy on the death of Mr. John Playford) (Z. 464)
He himself courts (Z. 372)
Hears not my Phillis (The knotting song) (Z. 371)
High on a throne (Ode on the Queen) (version A and B) (Z. 465)
How delightful’s the life (Z. 373)
How I sigh (Z. 374)
I came, I saw (The thraldom) (Z. 375)
I lov’d fair Celia (Z. 381)
I love and I must (Bell Barr) (Z. 382)
I resolve against cringing (Z. 386)
I take no pleasure (Z. 388)
If grief has any pow’r (Z. 378)
If music be the food of love (1st setting). Version A (Z.379A)
If music be the food of love (1st setting). Version B (Z.379B)
Corinna is divinely fair (Z. 365)
If music be the food of love (2nd setting) (Z.379C)
If pray’rs and tears (Sighs for our late sovereign King Charles the Second) (Z. 380)
In Cloris all soft charms agree (Z. 384)
In vain we dissemble (Z. 385)
Incassum, Lesbia (The Queen’s Epicedium) (Z.383)
Let each gallant heart (Z. 390)
Let formal lovers (Z. 391)
Let us, kind Lesbia (Z. 466)
Love arms himself (Z. 392)
Love is now become a trade (Z. 393)
Love, thou can’st hear (Z. 396)
Lovely Albina (Z. 394)
Love’s pow’r in my heart (Z. 395)
Musing on cares (Z. 467)
My heart, whenever you appear (Z. 399)
No, to what purpose (The concealment) (Z. 468)
Not all my torments (Z. 400)
O solitude, my sweetest choice (Z. 406)
Oh fair Cedaria (Z. 402)
Olinda in the shades unseen (Z. 404)
On the brow of Richmond Hill) (Z. 405)
Pastora’s beauties when unblown (Z. 407)
Phillis, I can ne’er forgive it (Z. 408)
Phillis, talk no more (Z. 409)
Pious Celinda (Z. 410)
Rashly I swore (Z. 411)
Sawney is a bonny lad (Scotch song) (Z. 412)
Scarce had the rising sun (Z. 469)
See how the fading glories (Z. 470)
She loves and she confesses too (Z. 413)
She that would gain a faithful lover (Z. 414)
She, who my poor heart possesses (Z. 415)
Since one poor view (Z. 416)
Since the pox, or the plague (Z. 471)
Spite of the godhead (Z. 417)
Sylvia now your scorn give over (Z. 420)
Sylvia, ʼtis true you’re fair (Z. 512)
The fatal hour (Z. 421)
They say you’re angry (The rich rival) (Z. 422)
This poet sings (Anacreon’s defeat) (Z. 423)
Through mournful shades (Z. 424)
Urge me no more (Z. 426)
What a sad fate. Version A (Z. 428A)
What a sad fate. Version B (Z. 428B)
What hope for us remains (On the death of his worthy friend Mr. Matthew Locke) (Z. 472)
When first my shepherdess and I (Z. 431)
When her languishing eyes (Z. 432)
When my Aemelia (Acmelia) smiles (Z. 434)
When Strephon found (Z. 435)
While Thirsis, wrapp’d (A pastoral coronation song) (Z. 437)
Whilst Cynthia sang (Z. 438)
Who but a slave (Z. 440)
Who can behold Florella’s charms (Z. 441)
Ye happy swains (Z. 443)
Young Thirsis’ fate (Z. 473)
Appendix A: Arrangements
Turn then thine eyes (Z. 425)
What can we (Z. 429)
Leave these useless arts (Z. 389)
Appendix B: Mock songs
When first Amintas (Z. 430)
Oh! how happy’s he (The loyal delights of a contented mind) (Z. 403)
Honours may crown (The triumphs of a conquering lover) (Z. M627/21))
No watch, dear Celia (Z. 401)
We now, my Thyrsis (Z. 427)
I envy not a monarch’s fate (Z. 376)
Appendix C: Incomplete songs
I fain would be free (Z. 377)
Ah! what pains (Z. 354)
Appendix D: Songs of uncertain authorship
When Thirsis did the splendid eye (Z. 436)
When I a lover (Z. 433)
Sweet tyranness (Z. S70)
I saw that you were grown so high (Z.387)
More love or more disdain (Z. 397)
Sweet, be no longer sad (Z. 418)
Cease, O my sad soul (Z. 363)
How peaceful the days are (Z. D133)
Why so serious? (Z. 442)
Aaron thus propos’d to Moses (Z. 351 )
Stripp’d of their green (Z. 444)
A choir of bright beauties