The Paul O'Dette recording of 1985 is available on CD, "Robin is to the
   greenwood gone", Elektra Nonesuch DUOCD 89027.
   The 1987 recording of Christopher Wilson does not seem to be available
   on CD (at least, that I'm aware of), but Wilson recorded it again in
   1990 in the CD "Rosa: Elizabethan Lute Music" , Virgin Classics 7
   91216.
   There is also a recording made in 2002 by Lynda Sayce in "The Queen's
   Goodnight", Signum Classics SIGCD020. In this CD it's called "Arthere's
   Dump", which is the title it has in the Osborn manuscript, pages
   9v-10r.
   Here are the pictures of said pages:
   [1]http://beinecke.library.yale.edu/dl_crosscollex/brbldl/oneITEM.asp?p
   id 07314&iid38881&srchtype=ITEM
   [2]http://beinecke.library.yale.edu/dl_crosscollex/brbldl/oneITEM.asp?p
   id 07314&iid38882&srchtype=ITEM
   (you also can get all pages of the MS at high resoultion)
   A transcription of the piece is also found as No. 2 in the Complete
   Works of Philip van Wilder edited by David Humphreys and published by
   the Lute Society.
   Matteo

   On 11 June 2012 13:15, Ron Andrico <[3][email protected]> wrote:

       Paul O'Dette recorded the piece as 'Dump philli (Philip's Dump),
     Philip
       van Wilder? (d. 1557)' on Electra/Nonesuch LP 9 79123-1, recorded
     1985,
       timing 3:58.  Christopher Wilson recorded the piece as Arthur's
     Dompe -
       Philip van Wilder (c. 1500 - 1553) on the 1987 LP, CRD 1148,
     timing
       6:12.  Differences abound.  The interpretations range from
     O'Dette's
       forward-leaning pulse that pushes the piece ahead whether it wants
     to
       or no.  Wilson takes his time, favoring the center of each and
     every
       note to the point that you know its life story before it's finally
     gone
       away.  Extreme ends of the spectrum in attribution, pacing, style
     and
       interpretation: One is almost gleeful and the other quite doleful.
      But
       both players make an event of the missing music, which they omit
     simply
       because it wasn't there in the score.
       The best information available today points to the definition of
     'dump'
       as a reverie of sorts, which doesn't necessarily preclude a little
       faster interpretation but it's probably not meant to be
     aggressive.
       However, I tend to agree with John Ward's reckoning in Music for
       Elizabethan Lutes. 2 vols., Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1992, Volume
     one,
       page 4, that 1) the piece is probably not to do with Philip van
     Wilder,
       and 2) the missing music is a copyists' mistake, and the ground is
       meant to have a more formal proportion.  In the Elizabethan world,
       proportion was important, which is a little difficult for our
     modern
       minds to grasp.  We seem to like things that are different and
     kicky.
       But while you could likely find some examples of irregular grounds
       (French baroque chaconnes, for example) a ground is a ground
     because
       it's predictable.
       I think the missing music is a mistake in copying and prefer a
     pulse
       and tempo that translates as wistful, or perhaps nostalgic, but
     not
       interminable.
       RA
       > Date: Sun, 10 Jun 2012 23:53:08 -0700
       > To: [4][email protected]
       > CC: [5][email protected]
       > From: [6][email protected]
       > Subject: [LUTE] Re: Philip or Arthur's Dump

     >
     > Hi Ed,
     > I checked the facsimile of the Marsh lute book and the break in the
     > pattern is definitely there -- I tend to agree with the "Maybe it
   is
     not
     > a mistake" theory. It could be an intentional echo effect - the
     melodic
     > pattern of the second half of the bar is repeated a fourth up in
   the
     > first half of the following bar. It might be intended to wake up
   the
     > audience in a fairly long and repetitive piece and as you indicate
     > prepare them for the final recap of the theme. Maybe Philip Glass
     could
     > help here? It is worth noting that the piece appears twice in the
     book,
     > the first time left obviously unfinished with a page and a half
   left
     > blank immediately following, i.e. enough space to finish the
     > transcription later. The scribe however finally recopied the piece
   at
     > the very end of the book from the beginning all over again. There
   are
     no
     > scratches or corrections of any kind in the second version.
     > Another interesting aspect of this piece: it is not doleful.
     > Alain
     >
     >
     > On 6/9/2012 1:04 AM, Ed Durbrow wrote:
     > > I got a modern printout recently of Philip or Arthur's Dump -
   from
     Marsh, I believe. About 16 m. before the end there appears to be a
     missing measure or three. That is, the alternating C-G pattern breaks
     and there are two measures based on G.
     > > I also saw mention on the lute society site catalog of a duet
     version. Is this the same version as Marsh? I thought I had Marsh,
   but
     I don't, I think I mixed it up with Mynshall.
     > > I wonder if the 'missing' measure was a mistake and is in Marsh
   or
     a concordance, or perhaps someone famous has reconstructed it.
     > > Maybe it is not a mistake? Magnus Andersson certainly plays it
     convincingly:
     > > [7]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pVuhbBhYCl0
     > > If I were the composer, I would have put that two bars of G bit
     right before the 'recap', where he brings back the opening theme at
   the
     end.
     > > TIA
     > >
     > >
     > >
     > > To get on or off this list see list information at
     > > [8]http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
     > >
     >
     >

       --

   --

References

   1. 
http://beinecke.library.yale.edu/dl_crosscollex/brbldl/oneITEM.asp?pid%2007314&iid38881&srchtype=ITEM
   2. 
http://beinecke.library.yale.edu/dl_crosscollex/brbldl/oneITEM.asp?pid%2007314&iid38882&srchtype=ITEM
   3. mailto:[email protected]
   4. mailto:[email protected]
   5. mailto:[email protected]
   6. mailto:[email protected]
   7. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pVuhbBhYCl0
   8. http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/%7Ewbc/lute-admin/index.html

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