The Queen's Six and The Rose Consort of Viols - Troubled Times: Music and Espionage in Renaissance England (2026) [Hi-Res]

Artist: The Queen's Six, The Rose Consort of Viols
Title: Troubled Times: Music and Espionage in Renaissance England
Year Of Release: 2026
Label: Signum Classics
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / 24bit-192kHz FLAC (tracks+booklet)
Total Time: 01:04:11
Total Size: 289 MB / 2.06 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Troubled Times: Music and Espionage in Renaissance England
Year Of Release: 2026
Label: Signum Classics
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / 24bit-192kHz FLAC (tracks+booklet)
Total Time: 01:04:11
Total Size: 289 MB / 2.06 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Bull: Almighty God, which by the leading of a star (5:24)
2. Taverner: Quemadmodum (5:56)
3. Sampson: Quam pulcra es (4:33)
4. Byrd: Cunctis diebus (5:41)
5. Ferrabosco I: Vias tuas (3:59)
6. Peerson: Who will rise up? (4:27)
7. Wilbye: O God the rock of my whole strength (1:44)
8. Morley: Out of the deep (4:12)
9. Morley: Eheu sustulerunt (2:34)
10. Morley: Domine Dominus noster (3:26)
11. Bull: In nomine (2:49)
12. Ferrabosco I: Laboravi in gemitu meo (3:10)
13. Ferrabosco II: Fuerunt mihi lacrimae (2:40)
14. Byrd: O salutaris hostia à 6 (2:48)
15. Philips: Beata Agnes (4:43)
16. Dering: Factum est silentium (2:38)
17. Byrd: Teach me, O Lord (3:34)
Troubled Times: Music and Espionage in Renaissance England explores sacred music written amid the religious and political instability of 16th-century England.
Performed by The Queen’s Six with The Rose Consort of Viols, the programme examines how composers navigated shifting allegiances, censorship, exile, and suspicion, from the Henrician Reformation to the Elizabethan settlement. Works by Byrd, Taverner, Morley, Philips, Ferrabosco, and others reflect strategies of adaptation, concealment, and survival, whether through recusancy, foreign travel, or service at court. Placing music within its historical context, the recording highlights the complex relationship between faith, power, and artistic expression during a period of sustained upheaval
Performed by The Queen’s Six with The Rose Consort of Viols, the programme examines how composers navigated shifting allegiances, censorship, exile, and suspicion, from the Henrician Reformation to the Elizabethan settlement. Works by Byrd, Taverner, Morley, Philips, Ferrabosco, and others reflect strategies of adaptation, concealment, and survival, whether through recusancy, foreign travel, or service at court. Placing music within its historical context, the recording highlights the complex relationship between faith, power, and artistic expression during a period of sustained upheaval