By BBC Music Magazine

Published: Saturday, 04 June 2022 at 12:00 am


Purcell’s Funeral Music for Queen Mary, like Albinoni’s Adagio and Allegri’s Miserere, belongs to the category of old compositions shaped by modern hands. The scholar Bruce Wood suggests that the piece as generally performed, a compilation of early and late Purcell, is ‘thoroughly bogus’

. His verdict will sound harsh to those moved by its mix of music for solemn brass and choral settings of the Funeral Sentences from the Book of Common Prayer. Yet Wood, after considering opaque reports of Queen Mary’s state funeral at Westminster Abbey on 5 March 1695 and flimsy evidence for the music performed during it, attaches a long list of questions to the work. We know that the March and Canzona were heard by mourners at the funeral, for which Purcell wrote his second setting of Thou knowest, Lord. The rest of the resplendent service’s musical contents remains open to debate.

The best recordings of Purcell’s Funeral Music for Queen Mary

Vox Luminis/Lionel Meunier

(2012)

Ricercar RIC332

WORK ON THE CHURCH of Saint-Jean Baptiste in Belgium began six years after Queen Mary’s burial. The building’s sacred space – more intimate than Westminster Abbey – and the clear yet warm sound caught within its acoustics contribute to the intense atmosphere of Lionel Meunier’s recording of the Queen’s funeral music. Meunier creates a convincing survey of works performed on the occasion, embracing Wood’s research and placing Purcell’s funeral music for Queen Mary within the context of pieces associated with earlier English royal funerals. Vox Luminis follow their conductor’s unsentimental lead, sparing in their use of vibrato and eternally wedded to immaculate intonation and articulation. Their unmannered singing allows the harmonic tensions and surface colours of Purcell’s second setting of Thou knowest, Lord to emerge naturally; the addition of four ‘flatt’ or slide trumpets magnifies the anthem’s expressive power. Farewell Marches by James Paisible and Thomas Tollett are used to evoke the procession of ‘the Queen’s chariot’, a purpose-built hearse, from Whitehall to the Abbey, with Purcell’s March serving as bridge to the funeral service proper. Meunier and his musicians travel far beyond the bounds of studio recording to forge a strong impression of the ritual surrounding a royal burial.

 

Choir of the King’s Consort; Choir of New College, Oxford

The King’s Consort/ Robert King (1993)

Hyperion CDA 66677

Boy trebles, a quartet of slide trumpets, a crack team of adult male voices and shrewdly judged speeds add to the appeal of Robert King’s recording, part of his set of Purcell’s complete sacred music for Hyperion. King brackets the composer’s three early Funeral Sentences together with his final setting of Thou knowest, Lord, framing the four choral pieces with the March and Canzona and two long drum marches. He opens Man that is born of woman with a solo quartet, a strategy repaid by fine singing and a degree of textural transparency suited to words about life’s brief span and mankind’s misery. Best of all is the revised version of Purcell’s first setting of Thou knowest, sung with great tenderness and graced by exquisite recorded sound.