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Alte Musik

Dec. 4th, 2004 10:40 am
poliphilo: (Default)
[personal profile] poliphilo
When I'm feeling really sentimental (as now, because it's Christmas) I reach for the "Early Music".

Alte Musik (it sounds better in German)- troubadour songs, crusader songs, Carmina Burana- but in the original settings, not Carl Orff's (though I like those too.)

Currently top of my medieval hit parade are.

1. Palastinalied- an ineffably sad song about crusading by Walther von der Vogelweide (d. 1230)

2. Quan Vei La Lauzeta Mover- Benart de Ventadorn's 12th century ballad of lost love.

3. The Wedding of Robin Hood- an English ballad which may or may not have inspired As You Like It. It has such a pretty tune.

4. Ja Nuls Homs Pris- the song Richard Coeur de Lion wrote while banged up in an Austrian prison.

Coeur de Lion was a murderous psychopath and arguably England's worst king ever (all he did was tax us and ignore us) but he can be forgiven much for this lovely little song. I wrote a poem about it a few years back and here it is...

JA NULS HOMS PRIS

Richard the Lionheart sings in his prison
And serve him right.

But the song is lovely.
It potters along the roads of Europe,
Under the poplars, under a sky
Of whisk-tailed cirrus. The killer, the rapist,
The butcher of Acre is feeling so sorry.
It stirs the oak and the beech where peasants
Are herding swine. They suppose that the lack
In their lives is a king who is being kept from them.

I love the middle ages. Maybe I was a crusader in a previous life. Maybe I was an outlaw. Maybe I was a monk.

Maybe I was a lady in a turret room in the Auvergne, waiting for some poet, some singer, to drop by and amuse her.

Date: 2004-12-04 05:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] poliphilo.livejournal.com
Cromwell was Leo McKern- who went on to be Rumpole of the Bailey.

And Cardinal Wolsey was Orson Welles.

Date: 2004-12-05 12:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] currawong.livejournal.com
And John Hurt was Rich, who figured in this delightful exchange at More's trial:

Thomas More:(Who has just been fatally betrayed by Rich) ... What is on that chain of office you are wearing?

Rich: It is the ensignia of Wales!

Thomas More: Rich ... It profitteth a man nothing if he gain the whole world and he loseth his soul ...but WALES Rich, ... Wales!

There has been a new "Six Wives ..." by the BBC since the far superior Michell version. This version was in dramatised doco style. There was also an "Elizabeth" ... again, not a patch on the Glenda Jackson version.

The historical fiddlings in the recent Cate Blanchett "Elizabeth" annoyed me greatly ... the crowning silliness being Mozart's "Requiem" being used in the climactic scenes.

Date: 2004-12-05 12:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] poliphilo.livejournal.com
Ah yes, they had Ray Winston as the cockernee king. I didn't watch it. I've had my fill of the historical dramas we Brits are supposed to do "so well."

I didn't see the Blanchett Elizabeth either. I'm like you; you my flesh crawls at anachronism.

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