Tuesday, November 18, 2014

#2 Review: Under the Greenwood Tree: Mellstock Band peforms Carols of Thomas Hardy's Time and Place

#2 Review: Under the Greenwood Tree: Mellstock Band performs Carols of Thomas Hardy's Time and Place


by Ray Rojas
Updated on Jan. 29, 2020 for broken links.

This 1986 issues by the Mellstock Band on Saydiscs explores Thomas Hardy’s Under the Greewood Tree with recordings of carols and dances played on authentic instruments of the period.


An interesting recording with some seldom heard interpretations of tradition carols. The dances bring to light the fun it was to dance in those times. The Mellstock band mixes what would have been heard by church bands as well as by folk choirs of the time.

Dorset, England

Hardy set most of his books in south and south west England, an area he termed Wessex. The Hardys, noted musicians, lived in Puddletown in Dorset and Bockhampton, and this recording recreates what music would have been like in Hardy’s time with dance pieces and four-part carols representing music from around 1820 to 1840. Note that liner notes are by Dave Townsend. Among the Christmas carols played are:

“Arise and hail the joyful day” – mentioned in the novel in which “the tenors sing he air.



“Hail the happy morn” – from Puddletown origins.



“Awake and join the cheerful choir” – from Puddletown manuscripts. The editors of the New Oxford Book of Carols have extensive notes on this carol (#90) and point to it being included in “George Hanford Book, 1830” in the Dorset County Museum, in the carol books in the Thomas Hardy Memorial Collection (more information on his collection below), and in the Anell manuscript in the Dorset County Records Office. The setting in the New Oxford Book of Carols is from the Collection of Dorset Carols (1926) from W.A. Pickard-Cambridge. The editors of NOBC state a very similar version is found in the Wiltshire Folk Songs and Carols 1904.


“See Heaven’s High Portals” – from Puddletown manuscripts - “The 6 time signature and ‘fugueing” passage in the second half of the verse are characteristics found together in many of the carols in these collections.


“Awake, awake ye mortals all” – from Puddletown manuscripts song by female voices with violins, flute, and cello. The liner notes state:


Original key D, sung here in C. The curious harmonic texture of this carol, full of parallel movement and unusual discords, marks it out from all the three upper parts packed closely, as here, as well separate from the bass, which is not sung to avoid overemphasizing the harmonic clashes.”






“While Shepherds Watched” – from an Hardy manuscript. A well-known carol by that time, in this manuscript, “lacks the tenor line” but is reconstructed for this recording. Furthermore, the “splitting of words in the ‘fugueing’ passage was characteristic of west galley music, to the disgust of Victorian church reformers.”




“Behold the morning star” – from Hardy and Pubbletown manuscripts, “The Carol that rouses Farmer Shiner to wrath in Under the Greenwood Tree. As in the novel, and in the Stinsford choir.”




Arise and Hail the Sacred Day – from the Hook manuscript entitled “Christmas Piece,” according to the liner notes “represents a transitional stage between the carols of the church bands and the folk carols such as those sung by the Copper family in Sussex. It is sung here as a duet, like the folk carols, but accompanied, like the church band carols.” Note that this carol is #87 in the New Oxford Book of Carols, whose editors say is also found in the carol book in the Thomas Hardy Collection in Dorset County Museum, Dorchester. The editors have more extensive notes on the roots of this carol.



“Rejoice this glorious day is come” from the Puddletown manuscript, “An elaborate setting, with solos and instrumental interludes or ‘symphonies.’ The instrumentation is close to that of the large church band at Puddletown.”

The liner notes state:



                As interpreted by the Puddletown and Stinsford choirs, the carols usually have a bass which rarely goes lower than baritone range, a high tenor, trebles carrying the tune , and a very high descant part called the “counter”. It was not a counter-tenor part nor were the “viols” and “bass-viols” of the Mellstocke Quire anything but violins and cello of the usual kind.”

 
Phil Humphrie with The Serpent, http://www.davetownsendmusic.com

Period instruments used are the boxwood clarinet and the serpent. The boxwood clarinet has 8 keys. The serpent has 3 keys and is a wing instrument of conical bore, made of wood covered with leader, blow with cupped mouthpiece like that of a trombone but with finger holes and keys like a bassoon. The eight-foot tube is curved in a snake –like series of s-bends, whence the name. 


The rest of the recordings are instrumental reels and dances found in Puddletown manuscripts named “Tunes s for Violin.” The liner notes state, “The carols on this album, and others from the same manuscripts can be found in The Mellsock Carols, ed A.D. Townsend, published by The Serpent Press. Many of the manuscripts mention here as well as others, can be found at www.davetownsendmusic.com
 
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