A sampling of other highlights from this release includes Henry Purcell’s Music for a while from his incidental music for John Dryden and Nathaniel Lee’s 1692 play Oedipus. Holi, in a setting by Papagena’s mezzo-soprano Shivani Rattan, is an Indian celebration song. The motet, Sicut lilium, is attributed to Leonora d’Este, a daughter of Lucrezia Borgia. From a collection of the earliest surviving examples of polyphonic music written in English, is the carol, Ther is no rose. The title song Tomorrow is Today, commissioned by Papagena from Janet Wheeler with a text by the composer’s daughter Sarah Cattley, is subtitled Dawn Chorus, and is filled with bird references reflecting the ensemble’s name of the bird-catcher’s wife in Mozart’s Magic Flute.
Dolce Cantavi, written in the style of an Italian madrigal by American Caroline Shaw, also contains allusions of birdsong, natural beauty, and the dawning hope of love; while in Welcome somer, the Canadian composer Don Macdonald partners Chaucer’s text with music that references medieval rhythms within a more contemporary harmonic idiom.

