John Blow (1649-1708) 

Venus and Adonis

 

John Blow (1649 - October 1, 1708) was an English composer and organist. His pupils included William Croft and Henry Purcell. John Blow was probably born at North Collingham in Nottinghamshire. He became a chorister of the Chapel Royal, and distinguished himself by his proficiency in music. He composed several anthems at an unusually early age, including Lord, Thou host been our refuge, Lord, rebuke me not and the so-called "club anthem", I will always give thanks, the last in collaboration with Pelham Humfrey and William Turner, either in honor of a victory over the Dutch in 1665, or more probably simply to commemorate the friendly intercourse of the three choristers. To this time also belongs the composition of a two-part setting of Robert Herrick's Goe, perjur'd man, written at the request of Charles II to imitate Giacomo Carissimi's Dite, o cieli. In 1669 Blow became organist of Westminster Abbey. In 1673 he was made a gentleman of the Chapel Royal and in the September of this year he married Elizabeth Braddock, who died in childbirth ten years later. Blow, who by the year 1678 was a doctor of music, was named in 1685 one of the private musicians of James II. Between 1680 and 1687 he wrote the only stage composition by him of which any record survives, the Masque for the entertainment of the King, Venus and Adonis. In this Mary Davies played the part of Venus, and her daughter by Charles II, Lady Mary Tudor, appeared as Cupid. In 1687 he became master of the choir of St Paul's Cathedral; in 1695 he was elected organist of St Margaret's, Westminster, and is said to have resumed his post as organist of Westminster Abbey, from which in 1680 he had retired or been dismissed to make way for Henry Purcell. In 1699 he was appointed to the newly created post of Composer to the Chapel Royal. Fourteen services and more than a hundred anthems by Blow are known. In addition to his purely ecclesiastical music Blow wrote Great sir, the joy of all our hearts, an ode for New Year's Day 1682, similar compositions for 1683, 1686, 1687, 1688, 1689, 1693 (?), 1694 and 1700; odes, &c., for the celebration of St Cecilia's Day for 1684, 1691, 1695 and 1700; for the coronation of James II. two anthems, Behold, O God, our Defender and God spake sometimes in visions; some harpsichord pieces for the second part of Henry Playford's Musick's handmaid (1689); Epicedium for Queen Mary (1695) and Ode on the Death of Purcell (1696). In 1700 he published his Amphion Anglicus, a collection of pieces of music for one, two, three and four voices, with a figured bass accompaniment. A famous page in Charles Burney's History of Music is devoted to illustrations of Dr Blow's "crudities", most of which only show the meritorious if immature efforts in expression characteristic of English music at the time, while some of them (where Burney says "Here we are lost") are really excellent. Blow died on October 1 1708 at his house in Broad Sanctuary, and was buried in the north aisle of Westminster Abbey.

 

Venus and Adonis is an opera in three acts and a prologue by the English Baroque composer John Blow, composed c.1683. It was written for the court of King Charles II at either London or Windsor. It is considered by some to be either a semi-opera or a masque, but The New Grove names it as the earliest surviving English opera. The author of the libretto is unknown, but is surmised to have been by Aphra Behn due to the feminist nature of the text, and that she later worked with Blow on the play The Lucky Chance. The story is based on the Classical myth of Venus and Adonis, which was also the basis for Shakespeare's poem Venus and Adonis, as well as Ovid's poem of the same name in his Metamorphoses.

Cast
Cupid-Soprano
Venus-Soprano
Adonis-Baritone
Shepherd-Alto or Countertenor
Shepherdess-Soprano
Huntsman-Alto or Countertenor
Chorus, acting variously as Cupids, shepherds and shepherdesses, huntsmen, and courtiers.
 
Music
In overall form the opera owes much to French operas of the period, especially those of Jean-Baptiste Lully, whom Charles II would have encountered while in exile in the court of Louis XIV. The French elements in the opera are the French overture, the Prologue which refers in scarcely veiled terms to the court for which it was written, and also includes many dances popular at the time. The piece is a clear example for Henry Purcell's opera Dido and Aeneas, both in structure and the use of the chorus. The piece is remarkable for the period because of its through-composed nature; there are no clear arias or set pieces, but the music continues throughout the piece, using recitative to further the plot.
 
Libretto
The author of the libretto is not known. The traditional story is as follows: Venus is with her son Cupid, and he accidentally pierces her with one of his arrows. The next person Venus sees is the handsome youth Adonis, with whom she immediately falls in love. He is a hunter, and she decides that in order to be with him, she will take on the form of the goddess of the hunt, Artemis. Eventually she warns Adonis of the danger of hunting the wild boar, but he does not heed the warning, and is gored to death by the boar. In Blow's version, Venus encourages Adonis to go hunting, despite his protestations:
   Adonis:Adonis will not hunt today:
   I have already caught the noblest prey.
   Venus:No, my shepherd haste away:
   Absence kindles new desire,
   I would not have my lover tire.
This is reminiscent of the scene in Dido and Aeneas when Dido rebuffs Aeneas' offer to stay with her. In addition to this major difference in Adonis' motivation, Blow's version also includes the addition of a number of comic scenes with Cupid, including the spelling lesson he gives to the young cupids, and his opinion that almost no one in the court is faithful, an especially pungent critique given that it is believed that Cupid was played by Lady Mary Tudor, then around 10 yrs. old and Charles II's illegitimate daughter, and Venus by Mary (Moll) Davies, the king's former mistress.
 
Recordings
"John Blow:Venus and Adonis" (recorded 1987), directed by Charles Medlam, on Harmonia Mundi (1901276), with Nancy Argenta (Venus), Lynne Dawson (cupid), Stephen Varcoe (Adonis), and London Baroque.
"Venus and Adonis" (recorded 1999), directed by René Jacobs, on Harmonia Mundi (901684), with Maria Cristina Kiehr (Venus), Robin Blaze (Cupid), John Bowen, Jonathan Brown, Gerald Finley, Christopher Josey, Rosemary Joshua, and Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment