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LOVE SONGS & SONNETS OF JOHN DONNE & SIR PHILIP SIDNEY
Paul AGNEW, Christopher WILSON
Guilaume TESSIER: In a grove most rich of shade (Sydney) - DOWLAND: O sweet woods (Sidney) -* ANONYME: Come live with mee, and bee my love (Donne) - So, so breake off this lamenting kisse (Donne) - DOWLAND: Sweet stay a while (Donne) - MORLEY: Who is it that this darke night (Sydney) - DOWLAND: Preludium - ANON.: Goe my flocke, goe get you hence (Sydney) - COPERARIO: Send home my long strayde eies to mee (Donne) - ANON.: Goe and catch a fallinge star (Donne) - FERRABOSCO: So, so breake off this last lamenting kisse (Donne) - ANON.: O deere life when shall it be (Sydney) - CORKINE: The fire to see my woes for anger burneth (Sydney) - ANON.: Sir Philip Sidney's Lamentacion - ANON.: Dearest love I doe not goe (Donne) - CORKINE: 'Tis true, 'tis day, what though it be? (Donne) - John HILTON: A hymne to God the Father (Donne)
- Paul AGNEW Ténor, Haute-contre
- Christopher WILSON Luth, Guitare
- Guillaume TESSIER: In a grove most rich of shade, lute-song
- John DOWLAND: O sweet woods, the delight of solitarinesse
- ANONYME: Come live with me and be my love [Shakespeare, Merry wives of Windsor]
- ANONYME: So, so break off this last lamenting kisse, lute-song sur un poème de John Donne
- John DOWLAND: Sweet stay a while, why will you rise ?
- Thomas MORLEY: Who is it that this darke night
- John DOWLAND: Preludium, pour luth [Non identifié]
- ANONYME: Go, my flock, go get you hence, lute-song
- John [James] COPRARIO: Send home my long strayd eyes to mee, lute-song
- ANONYME: Goe and catch a fallinge star, lute-song sur un poème de John Donne
- Alfonso FERRABOSCO II: So, so, breake off this last lamenting kisse, air pour voix et continuo
- ANONYME: O dear life, when shall it be, lute-song
- William CORKINE: Fire to see my woes for anger burneth, lute-song (The)
- ANONYME: Sir Philip Sidney's lamentacion, pour luth
- ANONYME: Dearest love I doe not goe, lute-song sur un poème de John Donne
- William CORKINE: Tis true, 'tis day, what though it be? lute-song
- John HILTON [2]: Wilt thou forgive that sinne, an hymne to God the Father, lute-song