Songs from the Labyrinth
Songs from the Labyrinth is the eighth studio album by British musician Sting, released on 10 October 2006 by Deutsche Grammophon.[1] The album features interpretations of lute songs and instrumental pieces composed by the Elizabethan lutenist and songwriter John Dowland (1563–1626), performed in collaboration with Bosnian lutenist Edin Karamazov.[2] It comprises 23 tracks, including vocal renditions accompanied by lute, solo lute works, and spoken-word recitations from Dowland's personal letters, which provide historical context to his life and travels.[1] Sting's fascination with Dowland's music developed over more than 25 years, initially sparked by recommendations from friends and deepened through listening to recordings by tenor Peter Pears and guitarist Julian Bream.[3] For this project, Sting learned to play the lute, beginning with an eight-course instrument gifted to him, and worked closely with Karamazov, whom he met through his longtime guitarist Dominic Miller.[3] The recordings incorporate ambient sounds such as bells and birdsong to evoke the era, and were produced at studios in London and Sting's residence in Italy.[3] The album's title, Songs from the Labyrinth, draws from multiple inspirations: the circuitous journey Sting took to discover Dowland's oeuvre, the medieval maze-like rose pattern on the lute's soundboard, and the labyrinthine complexities of Dowland's peripatetic career across European courts and his introspective, melancholic compositions.[3] Upon release, it entered the UK Albums Chart at number 24, peaked at number 25 on the US Billboard 200, and number 1 on the Billboard Classical Albums chart, marking Sting's first foray into classical music interpretation.[3][4]Background and development
Conception and inspiration
Sting's interest in the music of John Dowland dates back to the early 1980s, when he first encountered the composer's melancholic lute songs, such as "Flow, My Teares," which resonated with him as an early form of introspective songwriting.[5] This longstanding fascination deepened in 2004 after his longtime guitarist, Dominic Miller, gifted him a custom-made lute, prompting Sting to immerse himself in Renaissance lute music and explore Dowland's works more intensively. The instrument not only reignited his curiosity but also highlighted structural parallels between Dowland's songs—simple verse-chorus forms with poetic lyrics and lute accompaniment—and contemporary pop compositions, which Sting described as evoking "our first alienated singer-songwriter" who toured and performed popular tunes.[6] John Dowland (c. 1563–1626) was a prominent English Renaissance composer, lutenist, and singer, renowned for his mastery of the lute and his contributions to the ayre, a genre of accompanied solo songs that blended English and continental influences.[7] Born likely in London or nearby, Dowland traveled extensively across Europe from 1594 onward, seeking patronage after failing to secure a position as lutenist to Queen Elizabeth I; he served in courts in Kassel, Germany, and Copenhagen, Denmark, where he absorbed Italian and French styles that enriched his melodic and harmonic innovations.[8] His works, including 88 lute songs across his four books of ayres, profoundly shaped English Renaissance music by elevating the lute song to a sophisticated art form, influencing subsequent composers like his son Robert Dowland and contemporaries such as Thomas Campion through their emotional depth and technical virtuosity.[9][7] For Sting, whose earlier career had occasionally touched on classical elements, the Dowland project marked a pivotal shift toward fully embracing historical music as a primary creative outlet, transforming a personal hobby into a dedicated album that bridged his rock background with Elizabethan artistry.[5] This endeavor was further catalyzed by his brief collaboration with lutenist Edin Karamazov, whom Miller introduced, allowing Sting to envision a recording that captured Dowland's introspective essence.[10]Collaboration with Edin Karamazov
Sting first encountered Edin Karamazov briefly in the early 1990s at a circus performance in Hamburg, Germany, where Karamazov and his trio played arrangements of classical works by composers such as Mozart, Vivaldi, and Khachaturian. Although Sting and his wife, Trudie Styler, invited the musicians to a party, Karamazov declined to focus on practicing his lute. Their paths crossed again in 2004 in Frankfurt, Germany, where Sting's longtime guitarist Dominic Miller introduced them backstage before a concert; Karamazov impressed Sting by performing J.S. Bach's Toccata and Fugue in D minor on the lute, sparking discussions about Renaissance composer John Dowland and leading to informal jam sessions centered on Dowland's lute songs.[11] Edin Karamazov, born in 1965 in Zenica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, is a renowned lutenist and guitarist trained in both classical and early music traditions. A protégé of conductor Sergiu Celibidache, he began his career as a classical guitarist before specializing in the Baroque lute, studying with Hopkinson Smith at the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis in Switzerland. Karamazov's expertise in historical performance practices, combined with his roots in Bosnian folk music influences, positioned him ideally to mentor Sting; during their sessions, he taught the musician fundamental lute techniques, including tuning, fingering, and ornamentation typical of Elizabethan-era playing.[12] The partnership evolved through a shared commitment to authentically revive Dowland's works using period instruments like the lute, while allowing Sting's contemporary vocal style—marked by his rock-inflected phrasing and emotional depth—to offer fresh interpretations. This blend emerged organically from their collaborative ethos, avoiding modern arrangements in favor of historical fidelity in accompaniment. Early rehearsals took place over four visits at Sting's home in Il Palagio, Tuscany, Italy, where they explored Dowland's catalog in a relaxed setting, initially for personal enjoyment rather than commercial intent, fostering a creative synergy that emphasized precise historical accuracy alongside intuitive, modern expressiveness.[11]Recording and production
Studio sessions
The recording sessions for Songs from the Labyrinth took place primarily at Sting's home studio, Steerpike Studios, located at Il Palagio in Tuscany, Italy, with additional mixing conducted at Metropolis Studios in London.[13][11] The process spanned approximately 14 months, beginning in late 2005 following initial rehearsals and collaborations, and involved four separate visits by Edin Karamazov to the estate for focused work.[11] Sessions emphasized a minimalist approach to evoke the intimacy of Renaissance-era music, centering on live takes featuring Sting's vocals paired directly with Karamazov's lute or archlute accompaniment, without extensive layering of additional instruments.[11][3] Overdubs were applied sparingly, primarily for Sting's secondary lute parts, vocal harmonies, and subtle atmospheric elements like synth textures for spoken excerpts from John Dowland's letters, ensuring the core performances retained a natural, unpolished feel.[11] Principal recording concluded by summer 2006.[14] Sting faced notable challenges transitioning from his rock background to this period-informed style, requiring vocal training in Elizabethan techniques such as controlled breathing, elongated vowels, and restrained dynamics to avoid overpowering the lute's delicate tone.[11] Tempo adjustments were made to suit contemporary listeners while honoring historical pacing, and efforts were taken to minimize recording artifacts, including Karamazov's breathing and ambient noise in the estate's chapel space, ultimately shifting to the controlled studio environment for optimal capture.[11][3]Production team and techniques
Sting and Edin Karamazov served as co-producers for Songs from the Labyrinth, overseeing the artistic direction and collaboration between vocal and lute elements.[13] Additional engineering duties, including recording and mixing, were handled by Donal Hodgson, who captured the sessions using a combination of high-end microphones and preamplifiers to preserve the intimate acoustic quality.[11] The album was mastered by Ian Cooper at Metropolis Studios, ensuring a polished yet authentic final sound that balanced historical fidelity with contemporary clarity.[13][11] Recording techniques emphasized a natural, unadorned aesthetic to evoke the acoustics of Renaissance-era performance spaces, primarily through live takes in a dedicated room at Sting's Tuscan estate, Il Palagio, with overdubs limited to essential elements like additional lute layers and vocal harmonies.[11] While the core process relied on digital tools such as Pro Tools HD for multitrack capture via an SSL 4000 G console, analog warmth was introduced through hardware like UREI 1176 compressors during monitoring and processing, particularly applying subtle compression to Sting's vocals to align with his established pop-inflected delivery without overpowering the lute's nuance.[11] For the lute, Hodgson employed a stereo array of DPA 4006 omnidirectional microphones paired with spot mics (Neumann U87 and AKG 414) to achieve a detailed, spatial image that mimicked historical chamber recordings, avoiding digital reverb or artificial spatial effects.[11] The spoken-word segments, drawn from John Dowland's personal letters and recited by Sting, were recorded with a focus on period-appropriate intonation and minimal intervention, integrating them seamlessly as narrative bridges between songs; these were enhanced only with subtle atmospheric synth undertones provided by co-contributor Kipper Eldridge to underscore their melancholic tone.[11] In the final mix, conducted at Metropolis Studios in London, priority was given to the equilibrium between voice and lute, utilizing gentle EQ and the Alan Smart C2 compressor on the stereo bus to maintain transparency and dynamics, deliberately eschewing electronic enhancements like auto-tune or heavy effects to honor the source material's Elizabethan origins.[11]Music and arrangement
Musical style
Songs from the Labyrinth primarily features lute-accompanied ayres and pavane dances composed by John Dowland, the renowned Elizabethan lutenist and songwriter, with Edin Karamazov providing the intricate lute accompaniment throughout the album.[2] The collection includes Dowland's signature works such as "Walsingham," a lively pavane, and melancholic ayres like "Flow My Tears (Lachrimae)," emphasizing the intimate interplay between voice and lute that defined Renaissance chamber music.[15] One exception is the inclusion of "Have You Seen the Bright Lily Grow?," an ayre by Dowland's contemporary Robert Johnson, arranged by Sting and Karamazov to fit seamlessly within the Dowland-centric repertoire.[15] This selection draws from Dowland's publications, including his First Book of Songs (1597) and Second Book of Songs (1600), evoking the era's blend of poetic lyricism and instrumental finesse.[16] The arrangements largely preserve Dowland's original modal harmonies and contrapuntal structures, maintaining the modal scales and interwoven melodic lines characteristic of 16th-century English polyphony.[17] Sting and Karamazov adapt these pieces for modern recording, with subtle enhancements like multi-tracked vocals to create choral effects in songs such as "Fine Knacks for Ladies," evoking a small ensemble without altering the core harmonic framework.[15] However, Sting's vocal delivery introduces interpretive phrasing influenced by his jazz and pop background, infusing the otherwise austere ayres with a contemporary rhythmic flexibility and emotional nuance that echoes his earlier work in ballads like those on The Dream of the Blue Turtles.[2] A notable adaptation is Sting's setting of Dowland's "Lachrimae" variations in "Flow My Tears," where the lute variations are reimagined to underscore the song's lachrymose theme, blending historical fidelity with personal expression.[16] The album's production is notably sparse, relying on minimal instrumentation—primarily Sting's voice and Karamazov's lute—to highlight a sense of intimacy and vulnerability, a stark contrast to the layered rock arrangements of Sting's prior albums.[18] This approach fosters an acoustic closeness that amplifies the music's emotional depth, with close-miking techniques capturing the subtle timbres of the lute and the natural inflections of Sting's tenor.[17] By eschewing electronic elements and dense orchestration, the recording evokes the private salons of Elizabethan England, positioning the album as an exploratory bridge between Renaissance traditions and modern interpretive artistry.[2]Themes and spoken elements
The songs on Songs from the Labyrinth draw heavily from John Dowland's lute compositions, which recurrently explore motifs of unrequited love, melancholy, and exile, reflecting the composer's own peripatetic life spent largely abroad in continental Europe while seeking patronage in England.[2][19] Tracks such as "Flow My Tears" and "In Darkness Let Me Dwell" embody this emotional landscape, portraying anguish and introspective sorrow as hallmarks of a refined intellect in Elizabethan culture.[20] These themes resonate with Sting's longstanding songwriting on longing and personal isolation, allowing him to interpret Dowland as a proto-singer-songwriter akin to his own "king of pain" archetype.[2] Interwoven throughout the album are spoken interludes featuring excerpts from Dowland's personal letters, including a notable one addressed to Sir Robert Cecil in 1595, narrated by Sting himself to illuminate the composer's biographical struggles and aspirations.[10][17] These recitations, delivered with atmospheric sound effects like tolling bells and ambient rain, provide narrative depth and historical grounding, transforming the recording into a conceptual portrait of Dowland's inner world rather than mere musical performance.[17] Collectively, these lyrical and spoken elements evoke the album's titular "labyrinth" as a metaphor for the intricate emotional and existential complexities of Dowland's life and art, akin to a meditative puzzle that challenges perception to uncover deeper truths.[10] The album opens with the instrumental "Walsingham," a contemplative lute pavan that establishes this introspective tone, inviting listeners into the maze of melancholy without vocal intrusion.[21]Release and promotion
Formats and editions
Songs from the Labyrinth was initially released on October 10, 2006, by Deutsche Grammophon in both standard CD and vinyl formats, featuring 23 tracks.[15][13][22] The CD edition was packaged in a digipak, while the vinyl was a 180-gram pressing limited to select markets.[13][22] A tour edition followed on October 21, 2008, expanding the original album to 26 tracks by adding three acoustic live performances of Sting's catalog songs, including "Message in a Bottle," recorded during the Dowland tour in Asia and Australia.[23][14] This special edition was distributed primarily in those regions and included a sticker highlighting the bonus content.[14] In 2013, Deutsche Grammophon issued the Dowland Anniversary Edition to mark the 450th anniversary of composer John Dowland's birth, expanding the release to 32 tracks on a single CD with additional bonus material, such as live versions from a 2007 London concert, alongside a DVD containing documentary footage.[24][25] The edition was released on August 16, 2013, in a deluxe CD/DVD set format.[24] The album has been available digitally since its initial release, with versions accessible on platforms such as Apple Music and iTunes starting October 10, 2006, including both the standard and tour editions.[26]Marketing efforts
Deutsche Grammophon, a renowned classical music label under Universal Music Group, released Songs from the Labyrinth, marking a deliberate shift for Sting from his prior rock-oriented labels like A&M and Interscope to lend the project classical authenticity and appeal to purists, while leveraging his established pop and rock fanbase for crossover promotion. This strategic partnership positioned the album as a bridge between genres, with the label's marketing emphasizing Sting's vocal interpretation of Renaissance lute songs as a modern extension of his songwriting legacy.[16] Pre-release publicity built anticipation through high-profile interviews where Sting portrayed composer John Dowland as the "pop star" of the 16th century, highlighting parallels between Dowland's courtly fame, emotional depth, and commercial success with contemporary stardom to intrigue both classical enthusiasts and Sting's mainstream audience. In discussions, Sting noted Dowland's status as a traveling performer sought after by European royalty, framing the album as a revival of historically resonant "pop" music from the Elizabethan era.[2] The album's promotion integrated a supporting tour from late 2006 into 2007, featuring Sting alongside Edin Karamazov in intimate duo performances that showcased lute-accompanied Dowland songs, extending the recording's intimacy to live settings and targeting classical venues to broaden exposure. Notable stops included recitals at prestigious halls like Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, where the duo's renditions emphasized the music's dramatic storytelling and historical fusion, drawing diverse crowds from opera lovers to rock fans.[18] Media outreach amplified this hybrid appeal through appearances like NPR interviews, where Sting elaborated on the album's blend of 16th-century melodies with his introspective baritone, positioning it as an innovative fusion of historical authenticity and pop sensibility to demystify early music for wider listeners. These segments, including discussions on Dowland's alienated persona mirroring modern songwriters, generated buzz by humanizing the project's scholarly roots while tying it to Sting's personal artistic evolution.[2][27]Reception
Critical reviews
Upon its release in 2006, Songs from the Labyrinth elicited mixed critical responses, with reviewers divided over Sting's crossover interpretation of John Dowland's Elizabethan lute songs. While some appreciated the album's role in bridging popular and classical music, others critiqued its stylistic clashes and perceived lack of historical fidelity. AllMusic awarded the album 3.5 out of 5 stars, commending its intimate arrangements that showcased Sting's vocal vulnerability in a stripped-down setting rarely explored in his career.[28] Similarly, The Guardian praised the emotional authenticity of Sting's delivery, noting how his renditions cast Dowland's melancholy themes in a fresh, heartfelt light during promotional performances.[29] Rolling Stone highlighted the nostalgic, weathered production that evoked an Elizabethan atmosphere, though it found the results inconsistent in blending modern sensibilities with period material.[30] Critics offered mixed assessments of Sting's vocal approach. Entertainment Weekly gave it a C+ grade, arguing that his contemporary timbre felt mismatched with the lute songs' historical context. The BBC review echoed this, describing Sting's "recognisably modern" voice as jarring against the material's antiquity, despite his evident passion.[31] Edin Karamazov's contributions drew consistent acclaim for elevating the album. Reviewers lauded his lute playing as spacious and warm, providing a sensitive counterpoint that grounded the arrangements in authentic early music textures.[31] The album was also valued for its educational impact on Dowland, often called the era's first singer-songwriter. Critics noted that it successfully introduced the composer's works to pop audiences, fostering appreciation for Elizabethan music beyond niche classical circles.[31] This reception underscored a broader divide, with pop-oriented outlets more skeptical and classical reviewers more receptive to the experiment.Accolades and legacy
The album's release marked a significant crossover success, debuting at No. 1 on Billboard's Classical Albums chart and maintaining the top position for several weeks, while also topping classical charts in the UK, France, Canada, and Germany.[32] The project sparked renewed interest in John Dowland's compositions among contemporary pop and classical audiences, introducing the Elizabethan lutenist's melancholic lute songs to listeners beyond traditional early music circles.[33] Sting's interpretations, blending his distinctive vocal timbre with authentic lute accompaniment, highlighted Dowland's relevance to modern songwriting sensibilities, drawing parallels to introspective artists like Nick Drake.[16] This exploration influenced Sting's subsequent ventures into classical and historical repertoires, notably paving the way for his 2009 album If on a Winter's Night..., which incorporated medieval, Renaissance, and folk elements in a similar vein.[33] Retrospective analyses, such as a 2020 uDiscover Music article, praise the album as one of Sting's most experimental efforts, emphasizing its innovative fusion of 16th-century madrigals with subtle modern production to create an "exquisitely weathered" sound.[16] Its enduring presence in classical catalogs underscores sustained sales and replay value, contributing to Sting's reputation for genre versatility.[16] The album's cultural footprint extends to visual media, featuring prominently in the 2007 documentary The Journey and the Labyrinth: The Music of John Dowland, which includes live performances, interviews with Dowland scholars, and historical context on Elizabethan music, further showcasing Sting's role in bridging popular and historical genres.[34]Commercial performance
Chart performance
Songs from the Labyrinth debuted at number 24 on the UK Albums Chart in October 2006 and reached number 1 on the UK's Official Classical Artist Albums Chart, spending a total of 60 weeks on the chart.[35] In the United States, the album entered the Billboard 200 at number 25 and topped the Classical Crossover Albums chart; it was the best-selling classical album of 2006.[4][36] The album performed strongly across Europe, achieving top positions on classical charts in several countries. On mainstream album charts, it peaked at number 11 in Germany, number 7 in Italy, and number 20 in France.[37][38][39]| Chart | Peak Position | Year |
|---|---|---|
| UK Albums Chart | 24 | 2006 |
| US Billboard 200 | 25 | 2006 |
| US Classical Crossover Albums | 1 | 2006 |
| German Albums Chart | 11 | 2006 |
| Italian Albums Chart | 7 | 2006 |
| French Albums Chart | 20 | 2006 |
| UK Classical Artist Albums | 1 | 2006 |
Sales certifications
"Songs from the Labyrinth" achieved gold certification in Germany from the Bundesverband Musikindustrie (BVMI) in 2007 for shipments exceeding 100,000 units.[40] In Italy, the album received a gold certification from the Federazione Industria Musicale Italiana (FIMI) for 40,000 units sold.[41] The release did not receive any RIAA certification in the United States, despite selling 268,000 copies by 2010.[42]| Region | Certification | Certified units/sales | Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| Germany (BVMI) | Gold | 100,000^ | 2007 |
| Italy (FIMI) | Gold | 40,000 | 2007 |
Related releases
Live album
In February 2007, Deutsche Grammophon released The Journey and the Labyrinth: The Music of John Dowland, a companion live album by Sting and lutenist Edin Karamazov, capturing performances from their 2006–2007 Songs from the Labyrinth Tour.[45][46] The recording features selections from the duo's earlier studio album Songs from the Labyrinth, including John Dowland pieces such as "Flow My Tears (Lachrimae)," "The Lowest Trees Have Tops," "Come Again," and "Have You Seen the Bright Lily Grow," alongside acoustic reinterpretations of Sting's originals "Message in a Bottle" and the Robert Johnson cover "Hellhound on My Trail."[45][46] Performed in an intimate duo format emphasizing lute and voice, the eight-track collection totals approximately 29 minutes and highlights the stripped-down arrangements that defined their tour sets.[47] The album was recorded live at St. Luke's Church in London during a concert as part of the tour, which spanned venues across Europe and North America from October 2006 to early 2007, promoting Sting's exploration of Dowland's Renaissance-era compositions.[45] This release served to document the onstage chemistry between Sting and Karamazov, extending the thematic "labyrinth" narrative of discovery and historical immersion introduced in the studio album by conveying the immediacy and emotional depth of their live renditions.[45] It debuted at number 2 on the Billboard Classical Albums chart, reflecting its appeal within classical music circles while bridging Sting's rock background with early music traditions.[48] The package also included a DVD component with additional tour footage and interviews, but the audio CD stands as the core live document, offering fans a sonic snapshot of the tour's innovative fusion of genres without orchestral embellishments.[46]Documentary
"Sting: Songs from the Labyrinth" is a 2007 documentary film that explores the creation and performance of Sting's album of the same name, focusing on his collaboration with lutenist Edin Karamazov in interpreting the works of Elizabethan composer John Dowland. Directed and produced by Jim Gable and Ann Kim of Graying & Balding, Inc., the film captures intimate behind-the-scenes footage of rehearsals at Sting's homes in Wiltshire, England, and Tuscany, Italy, where the duo refines their arrangements of Dowland's lute songs.[45][49] The 54-minute production interweaves these sessions with historical segments featuring musicologists David Pinto and Anthony Rooley, who provide context on Dowland's life and era through discussions of his letters and compositions, recited by Sting himself. It also includes live performance clips from a concert at St. Luke's Church in London, showcasing the duo's onstage synergy and the emotional depth of tracks like "Flow My Tears" and "Can She Excuse My Wrongs." These elements highlight the project's blend of scholarly insight and artistic innovation, emphasizing the timeless appeal of Dowland's melancholy melodies.[45][49] The documentary received positive reception for its educational value in bridging Renaissance music with contemporary interpretation, earning an 8.2/10 rating on IMDb from viewers who praised its accessibility and the evident chemistry between Sting and Karamazov. Critics noted its engaging portrayal of the creative process, with The Hollywood Reporter describing it as "surprisingly enjoyable entertainment" that humanizes Sting's venture into classical territory.[49][50] Originally broadcast as a PBS Great Performances special in February 2007, the film later served as bonus material in the 2013 "Dowland Anniversary Edition" reissue of the album, bundled with additional live footage and interviews on DVD. This distribution expanded its reach, allowing fans to revisit the project's origins alongside expanded audio content.[51][25]Content details
Track listing
The original 2006 edition of Songs from the Labyrinth, released on CD and vinyl by Deutsche Grammophon, features 23 tracks primarily composed by John Dowland, with one exception by Robert Johnson; the album totals 48:27 in duration.[13][28] These include vocal songs, instrumental pieces on lute and archlute, and spoken excerpts from Dowland's letters read by Sting. The track listing is as follows:| No. | Title | Duration | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Walsingham | 0:38 | Instrumental |
| 2 | Can She Excuse My Wrongs | 2:35 | The Earl of Essex's Galliard; First Booke of Songes, 1597 |
| 3 | "...Ryght Honorable: As I Have Bin Most Bounde Unto Your Honor..." | 0:40 | Spoken letter excerpt |
| 4 | Flow My Tears (Lachrimae) | 4:42 | Second Booke of Songes, 1600 |
| 5 | Have You Seen the Bright Lily Grow | 2:35 | By Robert Johnson; arranged by Edin Karamazov and Sting |
| 6 | "...Then in Time Passing On Mr. Johnson Died..." | 0:32 | Spoken letter excerpt |
| 7 | The Most High and Mighty Christianus the Fourth, King of Denmark, His Galliard | 3:01 | Also known as "The Battle Galliard" |
| 8 | The Lowest Trees Have Tops | 2:16 | Third Booke of Songes, 1603 |
| 9 | "...And Accordinge as I Desired Ther Cam a Letter to Me Out of Germany..." | 0:55 | Spoken letter excerpt |
| 10 | Fine Knacks for Ladies | 1:50 | Second Booke of Songes, 1600 |
| 11 | "...From Thenc I Went to the Landgrave of Hessen..." | 0:24 | Spoken letter excerpt |
| 12 | Fantasy | 2:42 | Instrumental |
| 13 | Come, Heavy Sleep | 3:46 | First Booke of Songes, 1597 |
| 14 | Forlorn Hope Fancy | 3:08 | Instrumental |
| 15 | "...And From Thence I Had Great Desire to See Italy..." | 0:28 | Spoken letter excerpt |
| 16 | Come Again | 2:56 | First Booke of Songes, 1597 |
| 17 | Wilt Thou Unkind Thus Reave Me | 2:40 | First Booke of Songes, 1597 |
| 18 | "...After My Departure I Caled to Mynde Our Conference..." | 0:30 | Spoken letter excerpt |
| 19 | Weep You No More, Sad Fountains | 2:38 | Third Booke of Songes, 1603 |
| 20 | My Lord Willoughby's Welcome Home | 1:34 | For two lutes; instrumental |
| 21 | Clear or Cloudy | 2:47 | Second Booke of Songes, 1600 |
| 22 | "...Men Say That the Kinge of Spain..." | 1:01 | Spoken letter excerpt |
| 23 | In Darkness Let Me Dwell | 4:12 | A Musicall Banquet, 1610 |
-
- Fields of Gold (3:38)
-
- Message in a Bottle (5:57; live)
-
- Have You Seen the Bright Lily Grow (2:36; live)
| No. | Title | Duration | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 24 | Flow My Tears (Lachrimae) | 4:42 | Live |
| 25 | The Lowest Trees Have Tops | 2:26 | Live |
| 26 | Fantasy | 2:45 | Live |
| 27 | Come Again | 2:53 | Live |
| 28 | Have You Seen the Bright Lily Grow | 2:38 | Live; by Robert Johnson |
| 29 | In Darkness Let Me Dwell | 4:05 | Live |
| 30 | Hellhound on My Trail | 3:15 | Live; by Robert Johnson |
| 31 | Message in a Bottle | 6:00 | Live; by Sting |
| 32 | Fields of Gold | 3:32 | Studio; by Sting |