Partager
MUSIC OF BROTHELS AND BAWDY HOUSES OF PURCELL'S ENGLAND
THE CITY WAITES
- Ref. BA6276
- MUSICA OSCURA, 1996. Enregistrement 1995.
Diddle Diddle or The Kind Country Lovers * The Fair Maid of Islington * Green Stockings * The Jovial Lass or Dol and Roger * Mundanga Was * Lady of Pleasure * The Old Wife * The Beehive * Blue Petticoats or Green Garters * The Gelding of the Devil * The Maid's Complaint for Want of a Dil Doul * Oyster Nan * The Frolic * The Husband who met his Match * The Jovial Broom Man * The Disappointment * The Lusty Young Smith * Greensleeves and Yellow Lace * The Jolly Brown Turd * Two Rounds: Tom Making a Manteau - When Celia was Learning * Lady Lie Near Me * Oh how you Protest * A Ditty Delightful of Mother Watkin's Ale * Miss Nelly
Interprètes
Œuvres
- ANONYME : Diddle diddle (texte Pepys Collection, tune Lavenders green)
- ANONYME : The Fair maid of Islington (texte John Bagford Ballads, tune Selinger's round )
- ANONYME : Green stockings (Mr Playford's English Dancing Master 1675)
- ANONYME : The Jovial Lass (texte Pepys Collection, tune Robin Hood)
- ANONYME : Mundanga was (texte Thomas Durfey, tune Don Quixote)
- ANONYME : Lady of pleasure (Mr Playford's English Dancing Master 1688)
- ANONYME : The Old wife (texte Thomas Durfey, tune for Don Quixote)
- Thomas D'URFEY : The Beehive (Wit and Mirth, or Pills to purge Melancholy)
- ANONYME : Blue petticoats (Mr Playford's English Dancing Master 1688)
- Thomas D'URFEY : The Gelding of the devil (Wit and Mirth, or Pills to purge Melancholy)
- ANONYME : The Maid's complaint for want of a dil doul (texte Bagford Collection, Pepys Collection, tune Packington's pound)
- Thomas D'URFEY : Oyster nan (Wit and Mirth, or Pills to purge Melancholy)
- ANONYME : The Frolic (Mr Playford's English Dancing Master 1688)
- ANONYME : The Husband who met his match (texte Roxburghe Ballads, tune Calleno)
- ANONYME : The Jovial broom man (texte Roxburghe Ballads, tune Jamaica from Playford's Dancing master 1670)
- Thomas D'URFEY : The Disappoinment (Wit and Mirth, or Pills to purge Melancholy)
- Thomas D'URFEY : The Lusty Young Smith, song
- ANONYME : The Greensleeves and yellow lace (Mr Playford's English Dancing Master 1688)
- Thomas D'URFEY : The Jolly brown turd (Wit and Mirth, or Pills to purge Melancholy)
- Henry PURCELL : Tom the Taylor
- ANONYME : When Celia was learning (texte and tune John Ishem)
- ANONYME : Lady lie near me (Mr Playford's English Dancing Master 1688)
- Henry PURCELL : Oh how you protest (The Mock Mariage), Z 605
- ANONYME : A ditty delightful of Mother's Watkins ale (texte Huth Collection of seventy-nine blackletter ballads)
- ANONYME : Miss Nelly (Mr Playford's English Dancing Master 1689)