Woman With a Cittern, by Pieter van Slingeland |
The instruments they’d have heard were flutes/recorders,
drums, trumpets, the viol family, harps, guitars, lutes, bagpipes from Scotland and Ireland, and virginals (small
keyboards similar to a harpsichord).
Woman Seated at a Virginal, by Jan Vermeer |
Church music
In New England, where the Dyers lived after 1635, there were
no church organs—organs being related to the hated Catholic mass, and drawing
attention away from God and to the skills of the performer. At Sabbath meetings
of the Massachusetts Bay churches, they sang
psalms without musical accompaniment. Rev. John Cotton disapproved of
instruments in worship. In 1640, three ministers published the first book in
the American colonies: a psalter that they approved for use in the churches of Massachusetts Bay. It was a text of psalms in rhyme,
without notes because almost no one could read musical notation. In a short
time, congregations forgot the tunes, and each singer sang in his or her own
key, melody, and rhythm. (Perhaps something like a “Happy Birthday” cacophony today.)
Thomas Walter wrote at the end of the 17th century:
"The tunes are now miserably tortured and twisted and quavered, in some
churches, into a medly of confused and disorderly voices. Our tunes are left to
the mercy of every unskillful throat to chop and alter, to twist and change...
No two men in the Congregation quaver alike or together, it sounds in the ear
of a good judge like five hundred different tunes roared out at the same time
with perpetual interferings with one another." Source: Puritans at Play: Leisure
and Recreation in Colonial New England, by
Bruce C. Daniels, p. 54.
James Franklin (Benjamin Franklin's older brother) wrote in
1720s satire that he was "credibly informed that a certain gentlewoman
miscarried at the ungrateful and yelling noise of a deacon" whom Franklin described as a
"procurer of abortions."
Though church music was in a woeful state, colonial secular
music flourished at celebrations of all sorts, including dances and festivals,
and urban dwellers spent evenings “consorting” with their instruments,
particularly violins and viols. The more highly-educated (ministers, teachers,
merchants) had the larger, more expensive instruments like the viol da gamba
(six-stringed, but similar in size to the four-stringed cello) or the virginal.
Many households who valued music but had less money, used shoulder-held violins
or a cittern, a wire-stringed instrument between a banjo and a mandolin. Military
men naturally favored the trumpet, fife, or drum.
A Musical Party, by Jacob van Velsen, 1631 |
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Click the highlight for information on 17th century musical instruments in New France (French territories in North America).
The following links are videos of 17th century English music that
might have touched the ears of the Dyers and their associates. Click the
highlighted titles to open a new tab in You Tube.
17th
century English or Scottish folk tune The Water is Wide
Matthew Locke, Fantazie for two friendly
Basses
17th
century English street
song – The
Crost Couple, or A Good Misfortune.
17th
century English song, The Bailiff’s Daughter of
Islington – recorder and guitar
William Byrd, Earl of
Oxford's March Brass quintet
Nicholas Lanier, Mark
How the Blushful Morn – soprano voice and lute
Nicholas Lanier, Love’s
Constancy – soprano voice and lute
My ears hurt from imagining how those hymns must have sounded. Thank you, Mistress Dyer, and I am sure that you sang like a lark!
ReplyDeleteEnjoyable and enlightening post!
ReplyDeletethe music is just wonderful thankyou ms mary
ReplyDeletehmm this is a great little site thanks for the knowledge ;)
ReplyDelete