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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260621T180000
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SUMMARY:Who was John Dowland? Nicholas Mulroy, tenor Elizabeth Kenny, lute
DESCRIPTION:…the sheer expressivity of [Mulroy’s] singing was a thing of wonder here – Simon Thompson, The Times\n… a triumph […] Kenny’s performances are superb, technically assured in the trickiest variations, and always with a sense of spontaneous re-creation – Instrumental Choice, BBC Music Magazine\nThe festival continues its celebration of the 400th anniversary of John Dowland, with an evening with two of the most respected and exceptional musicians.\nSemper Dowland semper dolens (always Dowland, always mournful) was his motto. And yet Thomas Fuller claimed: ‘A cheerful person he was, passing his days in lawful merriment’ (The History of the Worthies of England, 1662). Was the melancholy persona real, along the lines of Burton’s influential Anatomy of Melancholy, or was it a carefully-constructed “brand”?\nWe can imagine his voice in the extremely personal texts, some of which may (but also may not) be written by him. The more Dowland appears to be present, the more he disappears, his secrets closely guarded. In 1595, he wrote a long self-exculpating letter to Sir Robert Cecil claiming accusations of Catholicism had unfairly prejudiced the Queen against him. As well as Italian songs that he may have given his son Robert to publish in A Musicall Banquet (1610), tonight will feature music by his contemporary William Byrd, whose recusancy was maintained in a more transparent manner, despite the risks in Elizabethan England.\nYou never quite know where you are with Dowland, and the intensity of his secrets, hints, and symbols, remain an enduring part of his appeal.\n
URL:https://artsfestivaloxford.org/events/who-was-john-dowland-nicholas-mulroy-tenor-elizabeth-kenny-lute/
CATEGORIES:Early Music Weekend
LOCATION:Magdalen College
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://artsfestivaloxford.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Image-for-N-Mulroy-and-E-Kenny-page.jpg
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