Composed by Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina
Performed by Cambridge King's College Choir Conducted by David Willcocks
2. Missa Papae Marcelli, for 6 voices Gloria
Composed by Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina
Performed by Cambridge King's College Choir Conducted by David Willcocks
3. Missa Papae Marcelli, for 6 voices Credo
Composed by Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina
Performed by Cambridge King's College Choir Conducted by David Willcocks
4. Missa Papae Marcelli, for 6 voices Sanctus
Composed by Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina
Performed by Cambridge King's College Choir Conducted by David Willcocks
5. Missa Papae Marcelli, for 6 voices Benedictus
Composed by Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina
Performed by Cambridge King's College Choir Conducted by David Willcocks
6. Missa Papae Marcelli, for 6 voices Agnus Dei I
Composed by Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina
Performed by Cambridge King's College Choir Conducted by David Willcocks
7. Missa Papae Marcelli, for 6 voices Agnus Dei II
Composed by Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina
Performed by Cambridge King's College Choir Conducted by David Willcocks
8. Vespro della beata vergine, for chorus & instruments, SV 206 Concerto: Nigra Sum
Composed by Claudio Monteverdi
Performed by Cambridge King's College Choir , London Early Music Consort with Francis Grier , Francis Grier , Elly Ameling , Charles Brett , Norma Burrowes , Martyn Hill , Anthony Rolfe Johnson , Peter Knapp , James Lancelot , James Lancelot
9. Vespro della beata vergine, for chorus & instruments, SV 206 Psalm: Laudate Pueri
Composed by Claudio Monteverdi
Performed by Cambridge King's College Choir , London Early Music Consort with Francis Grier , Francis Grier , Elly Ameling , Charles Brett , Norma Burrowes , Martyn Hill , Anthony Rolfe Johnson , Peter Knapp , James Lancelot , James Lancelot
10. Vespro della beata vergine, for chorus & instruments, SV 206 Sonata Sopra: Sancta Maria
Composed by Claudio Monteverdi
Performed by Cambridge King's College Choir , London Early Music Consort with Francis Grier , Francis Grier , Elly Ameling , Charles Brett , Norma Burrowes , Martyn Hill , Anthony Rolfe Johnson , Peter Knapp , James Lancelot , James Lancelot
11. Vespro della beata vergine, for chorus & instruments, SV 206 Magnificat
Composed by Claudio Monteverdi
Performed by Cambridge King's College Choir , London Early Music Consort with Francis Grier , Francis Grier , Elly Ameling , Charles Brett , Norma Burrowes , Martyn Hill , Anthony Rolfe Johnson , Peter Knapp , James Lancelot , James Lancelot
Palestrina & Monteverdi: Choral Works,Peter Knapp,Claudio Monteverdi,Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina,David Wilcocks,David Willcocks,Philip Ledger,Andrew Leach,Francis Grier,James Lancelot,Cambridge Choir of King's College,Early Music Consort of London,Elly Ameling,Norma Burrowes,Anthony Rolfe Johnson,Charles Brett,Martyn Hill,Robert Tear,John Noble,Angel Records,Choral,Choral Music,Classical,Renaissance Mass
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Palestrina: Missa Papae Marcelli, Missa Aeterna
Manufacturer: Naxos ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000013U7 Release Date: 1994-02-15 |
Tracks:
- Kyrie
- Gloria
- Credo
- Sanctus
- Agnus Dei
- Kyrie
- Gloria
- Credo
- Sanctus
- Agnus Dei
Amazon.com
There's a wonderful legend, retold by (among others) Pfitzner's opera Palestrina, attached to the "Pope Marcellus" Mass: the Council of Trent, ground zero of the Counter Reformation, was about to ban all music but chant from the liturgy when Palestrina submitted this Mass, thereby changing the prelates' minds and saving church music. The writing is beautiful enough to deserve such a story: cheerful yet devout, comprehensible but not simplistic, without the complexity and secular borrowings (very prevalent in the preceding decades) that so perturbed the Council. The Missa Papae Marcelli has been recorded by choirs from Westminster Abbey to the Tallis Scholars, yet the Oxford Camerata does itself proud: Jeremy Summerly's reading of the music is reverently sweet, yet he's not afraid to make a joyful noise when appropriate--and the various voices are unusually clear. The equally radiant Missa Aeterna Christi Munera gets a similarly pleasing performance. Amidst serious competition, Summerly's readings of these Masses are among the best available--and, at Naxos's superbudget price, definitely the best value. --Matthew WestphalCustomer Reviews:
Something familiar, something new.......2005-10-19
Giovanni Pierluigi de Palestrina is sometimes called the greatest composer of the Roman Catholic church. Born in 1525 near Rome, he spent the better part of his career in service to the church as a choir member, choir master, conductor, composer and school master. He was sought after by many churches, and sometimes his popularity and skill got him into trouble both with his clerical patrons and with fellow musicians. He was offered prestigious positions in Rome and Vienna which were ultimately withdrawn because Palestrina's salary and conditions requirements were too high. He had some influence on the Council of Trent's musical decisions for reform of the Catholic worship practices, and was involved intimately with revising the Gradual and produced a harmonised version of the Latin Hymnal in 1589. He died in 1594.
--Masses--
The first mass presented here is Missa Papae Marcelli. Written in the 1550s, it wasn't published until the next decade. Pope Marcellus was only pope for a few weeks, but managed to endear himself to composers and conductors by insisting upon clarity as the highest of virtues for choristers. There is a joy to this, as Palestrina is definitely in the mode of celebrating the life of Pope Marcellus. This is one of Palestrina's most recorded works.
The second mass, Missa Aeterna Christi Munera is likewise a strong composition, although it is much less known than the first. Palestrina wrote over 100 masses in his lifetime (in addition to a wide range of other pieces), so it is not surprising that there might be some relatively overlooked. This particular mass has a more solemn tone to it, but still soars magnificently, and has no real flaws in composition.
--Oxford Camerata and Jeremy Summerly--
The performance of both of these pieces is superb. Perhaps the better performance belongs to the second mass; the Camerata has twelve singers, who double on the six-voice Missa Papae Marcelli, but are able to triple on the four-voice Missa Aeterna Christi Munera. They play with tempo and expression in new ways. The Oxford Camerata was formed in the early 1990s under the direction of Jeremy Summerly - this disc is their second recording. (Legend has it there was a cement mixer just outside the Dorchester Abbey, and that the recording engineers missed the first session for recording due to car trouble.)
Summerly's direction and selection of material and interpretation is such that it bears watching in the future.
Palestrina's a giant in renaissance counterpoint.......2005-10-14
Outstanding - music of the spheres........2005-10-12
Palestrina's Masses...I love them all..........2004-11-18
from three different musical periods; because of
their different mentalities, different cultures,
and different resources at their disposal...The
Missa Papae Marcelli is of interest because is
one of the earliest works to challange the regulations
in music of the Counter-Reformation; but yet in
other aspects it stays very close to what was expected
of Palestrina...Of special interest of the
Missa Papae Marcelli is the Mass'Gloria....
The Missa Aeterna...is a work that is based
on a motet a procedure that at the time
was a "BIG NO, NO" to the Counter-Reformation
movement...As all of the Palestrina Masses these
works are all full of beauty and serenity...
Oxford Camerata does a wonderful job....
Not just a bargain disc..........2001-03-12
Normally in a review like this I would give some contextual/historical information about the pieces, but Palestrina and his Missa Papae Marcelli probably need little of this. It is often pointed out that this mass was written partly as model for textual intelligibility in polyphonic music; it is, though, even more than that: it is a model for perfection in Renaissance form.
I have three other recordings of the Marcellus Mass - two are by the Tallis scholars (one on the Palestrina 400 collection and the other on another separate recording) and one is by a German Baroque choir that I can't and won't take the time to remember (the recording isn't very good). Of the two T. Scholars recordings, the one on the 400 collection is preferable for its tempo, the other for the better acoustics of the recording venue. Both are fine recordings - typical Tallis Scholars. I haven't heard the Voices of Ascension or Westminster Choir recordings of this mass, but they are probably good.
I would recommend this present recording over the T. Scholars ones, though, for different reasons. First, the acoustics are preferable - there's more resonance in this one. The most importance difference is not really in interpretation (both groups render the music as flowing smoothly and slowly) but in the choral sound. Summerly's choir simply sounds fuller. For all their precision, the Tallis Scholars recordings sound thin - their sound lacks body, compared to the Oxford Camerata, although the former does seem to carry with it, as I said, the singular advantage of linear precision. In any case, the Oxford group sounds less pinched and more full-voiced.
This really is a splendid recording - I only bought it to get the Aeterna Christi Munera mass, but was more than pleasantly surprised by the quality of both masses. This disc provides much more than you have a right to expect for 6 dollars. Strongest recommendations...
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Agnus Dei: Music of Inner Harmony
Manufacturer: Erato ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000005E4J Release Date: 1997-02-18 |
Tracks:
- Agnus Dei, op.11 - Barber
- Cantique de Jean Racine, op.11 - Faure
- Kyrie - Palestrina
- Ave Verum Corpus K 618 - Mozart
- Jesus bleibet meine Freude - Bach
- Ave Maria, op.37 No.6 - Choir Of New College Oxford
- Lux Aeterna - Choir Of New College Oxford
- Totus Tuus - Choir Of New College Oxford
- Hear my prayer - Mendelssohn
- The Lamb - Tavener
- In paradisum - Faure
- Miserere mei, Deus - Choir Of New College Oxford
Amazon.com
Beyond this recording's new age packaging and title is a splendid sampling of some of the world's finest choral music, sung by one of the world's outstanding choirs. This "anthology of sacred choral music" spans 400 years and includes such masterpieces as Allegri's Miserere, Bach's "Jesu, joy of man's desiring," and Barber's exquisite Agnus Dei, which is the composer's choral setting of his famous Adagio for Strings. Along the way we also hear Mozart's sublime "Ave verum corpus," Elgar's "Lux aeterna," and the Kyrie from Palestrina's Missa Papae Marcelli. There has been a choir at England's New College, Oxford, since the year 1379, and this impressive line of experience shows in the intelligent, unfaltering, and finely polished performances by today's ensemble of 16 boys and 12 adults. --David VernierCustomer Reviews:
Agnus Dei music of Inner Harmony.......2007-05-14
Simply The Best.......2007-02-23
Wow!.......2006-07-08
Buy it. You won't be disappointed.
Profound sublimity.......2006-02-27
Beautiful music.......2006-01-18
All other versions of these songs I've heard since don't compare to the versions on this CD. Maybe because it was my first listen, maybe they're just good.
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The Essential Tallis Scholars
Manufacturer: Gimell UK ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00009NJ20 Release Date: 2003-09-09 |
Tracks:
- Miserere
- Ave Maria For Double Choir
- Sicut Lilium I
- Praeter Rerum Seriem
- Pater Peccavi
- Ego Flos Campi
- Tota Pulchra Es
- Descendi In Hortum Meum
- Alma Redemptoris Mater
- Salve Regina
- Ave Regina Caelorum
- Gloria
Tracks:
- Media Vita
- In Manus Tuas
- O Nata Lux
- Audivi Vocem
- Exaudiat Te Dominus
- Ah, Robin
- Salve Regina
- Kyrie
- Gloria
- Credo
- Sanctus
- Agnus Dei
Customer Reviews:
Great choral music CD.......2007-01-26
a voice teacher and early music fan.......2007-01-08
Victoria's 8-part 'Ave Maria' and Palestrina's 'Sicut lilium' are both pieces iln a contemplative mood, the first making direct reference to the Virgin Mary, and the second indirect reference to her via the poetry of the 'Song of Songs'. The remaining selections on Disc l, maintain the consistent, intense sonority of Flemish polyphony.
Disc 2 falls into two parts. The pieces by Sheppard, Tallis,White and Cornysh come from the first half of the sixteenth century and are part of the 'English School' of writing. Here the music is made up of long lines, more notes than syllables, with the emphasis on the part-writing and not the harmonic background.
The second part of Disc 2 is Byrd's five-part Mass, which was written in the 1590's for a recusant Catholic community. Byrd's music has drawn closer to the Flemish style; that is imitative voice parts, largely syllabic in setting with the occasional examples of word-paintings, and the voice parts closer together. But the mood has a different intensity than the writing on Disc one; darker and more questioning. Never was polyphony more passionate than in Byrd's masses,of which the five-part is the crowning achievement.
The members of the Tallis Scholars vary from year to year, and the list of participating singers is included in the accompanying booklet; but it does not tell you which singers are singing each year. That bothered me somewhat because I like to know to whom I am listening specifically. It does mention, however, that the solo group in Allegi's 'Miserere' is Alison Stamp (treble), Michael Chance (countertenor) Jane Armstrong and Julian Walker.
The recording is outstanding in every way. Perfect balance between the voices, perfect emotional investment, flawless dicton and the most beautiful vocal sounds you will ever hear; just Two and One-half hours of pure pleasure!!!!!
Lovely!!!.......2006-06-02
Beautiful, but a little cold.......2006-02-06
The Greatest Hits of a Pioneer Ensemble.......2005-09-27
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Moreschi - The Last Castrato
Manufacturer: Pearl ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000000WYS Release Date: 1993-01-21 |
Tracks:
- Domine salvum fac
- Et incarnatus est, Crucifixus
- Ideale
- Ave verum
- Tui sunt coeli
- Ave verum
- Crucifixus
- Crucifixus
- Pie jesu
- Hostias et preces
- Preghiera
- Ave Maria
- Incipt lamentatio
- Laudamus te
- Improperia
- La cruda mia Nemica
- Oremus pro pontifice
- Pope Leo XIII
Customer Reviews:
For historical reference, a must have........2007-05-09
A real rarity.......2007-05-07
a voice teacher and early music fan.......2006-10-03
What a beautiful voice!.......2005-08-16
A new world opened in front of me........2005-08-16
I was at first slightly shocked about the CD. Spoiled by our standards today I had to get used to the voices and especially to the low quality of the recordings (1902-04). The more I was listening the better I liked it. I started to understand that this long ago poeple were feeling different and therefore singing different. So many more emotions and so much suffering, you can hear it in the music if you can open up to it and, ignore the bad technical part of it.
I don't regret buying this rare recording since it gave me more than just music.
Thanks for saving these recordings and thanks to Amazon for making it possible to buy them.
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Allegri: Miserere
Alison Stamp , and Tallis Scholars Manufacturer: Gimell UK ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000059GLW Release Date: 2001-04-10 |
Tracks:
- Miserere
- Vox Patris Caelestis
- Missa Papae Marcelli: Kyrie
- Missa Papae Marcelli: Gloria
- Missa Papae Marcelli: Credo
- Missa Papae Marcelli: Sanctus & Benedictus
- Missa Papae Marcelli: Agnus Dei I & II
Amazon.com
Here's a wonderful introduction to Renaissance choral music, with two tried-and-true repertory standards and the Mundy, a gorgeously sensuous example of a lesser-known mid-16th-century work, whose complex polyphonic strands are rendered with compelling involvement by the Tallis Scholars. These performances were among the group's earliest recordings and helped catapult them into the forefront of specialists in this demanding repertoire. The Allegri became a favorite back in the 1970s, a sort of choral equivalent of Albinoni's Adagio, in which repetition serves as the driving force. The Tallis Scholars give it welcome variety through spatial placement in a large church and their colorful singing. Palestrina's Missa Papae Marcelli is one of that great composer's finest works. Its mastery of polyphony while clarifying the text is said to have convinced the Church to withhold its impending ban on polyphonic church music. The group sounds larger than its 21 members because of the acoustics, the clear diction of the Scholars, and the power of their singing, always transparent and involved. They use female sopranos instead of boys' voices, so there's more heft and color than we often hear from early-music groups. Vivid engineering makes the CD even more attractive. --Dan DavisAmazon.com
Here's a wonderful introduction to Renaissance choral music, with two tried-and-true repertory standards and the Mundy, a gorgeously sensuous example of a lesser-known mid-16th-century work, whose complex polyphonic strands are rendered with compelling involvement by the Tallis Scholars. These performances were among the group's earliest recordings and helped catapult them into the forefront of specialists in this demanding repertoire. The Allegri became a favorite back in the 1970s, a sort of choral equivalent of Albinoni's Adagio, in which repetition serves as the driving force. The Tallis Scholars give it welcome variety through spatial placement in a large church and their colorful singing. Palestrina's Missa Papae Marcelli is one of that great composer's finest works. Its mastery of polyphony while clarifying the text is said to have convinced the Church to withhold its impending ban on polyphonic church music. The group sounds larger than its 21 members because of the acoustics, the clear diction of the Scholars, and the power of their singing, always transparent and involved. They use female sopranos instead of boys' voices, so there's more heft and color than we often hear from early-music groups. Vivid engineering makes the CD even more attractive. --Dan DavisCustomer Reviews:
Startlingly familiar music.......2006-11-14
Ertherial Music.......2006-11-10
12AX7 Anyone?.......2006-07-19
This is the real thing.
Two eyes & your CNS 'resolves' depth by combining & extrapolating 'cues' that we see as distance. So is this true of high end audio recordings where the engineers were fully cognizant of how we hear 'dimension'.
Two ears & 1 brain. All that we require to hear depth. In fact, all we CAN use to hear depth for anything beyond this simple yet perfect 'design' corrupts our experience such that we no longer hear depth or placement of musicians but rather we hear chachaphony. Sometimes a pleasent & fun caca-phoney but caca-phoney nonetheless.
A true stereo recording takes the cues just as two ears would and if played back through TWO channels with the design of temporal accuracy at the fore, we will heard TRUE spatial placement of the room in which the recording was made.
In this recording, imagine yourself sitting about 6' in front of a pair of speakers with say, 20' or more BEHIND the speakers. This recording has 3 choirs. One in the fore, one centrally placed & one way in the distance. If your stereo can resolve space-time with any truism, you will hear NOTHING from the speakers (or rather, it seems that way). The first choir will be between the speakers. The 2nd, 6 feet BEHIND the speakers.The last choir is heard as if they are OUTSIDE. So far back they penetrate your walls.
This is what high end audio is about. It eschews confusing multi-channel, only recently did it even embrace digital audio AND most importantly, we love TUBES. Tubed amps/preamps & CD players have none of the coloration of their Silicon counterparts & are to this day, the most linear amplification device known to man (Linearity with NO correction like feedback & it's awful pollution of harmonics & destruction of slew & rise times, try placing a chart of curves of an op-amp or bipolar transistor vs. a triode, not even close).
Pick up an old Dynaco Stereo-70 & a pair of mini-speakers using soft domes & you're 3/4 of the way to the 'underground' truth. A microsociety that lives for music & it's ACCURATE reproduction. For there is no greater joy than when the musicians virtually stand in front of you. You will not hear this with multichannel or even transistor gear, no metal drivers or any other unnatural materials.
A showcase of original RCA masters now abound on many streaming audio websites. Some now play at high enough bitrates to support glorious fidelity.
Navigate through the eary 60s recordings when these discs were recorded with TUBES! I've just recently heard the Tebaldi Tosca on a 1957 RCA. Breathtaking reality as performers walk & sing, on & off stage. Spooky real. But remember to LISTEN & NOT download for MP3 is a sonic disaster with no intent on improving! Compression=depression in the high end audio. "Save yourself Elizabeth, stay away!"
Only through simplicity can we see art & only through a vacuum can music pass without coloration. For what can add color less than nothing?!
5 months after buying, I still listen every day.......2006-04-16
Very recommendable!.......2005-11-15
Anyway, this early performance is really great!
I agree with the reviewer Brendan, that Allegri's Miserere not is the most interesting piece here. The repetitions make it appealing like modern pop music - repetitions go for ecstasy. Repetitons may also give a meditative effect. The gem for entertaining is in fact the least famous Mundy's Vox patris caelestis, which has a real build-up to an emotional peak. Glorious!
The famous Palestrina-mass sounds very nice on this performance.
Very, very recommendable!
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Great Choral Classics from King's Choir of King's College, Cambridge
Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000007OTQ Release Date: 1998-06-09 |
Tracks:
- Miserere
- Stabat Mater
- Spem In alium
- Sancte Deus
- Ave verum corpus
- Gloria in D Major, RV 589: Gloria in excelsis deo
- Gloria in D Major, RV 589: Et in terra pax
- Gloria in D Major, RV 589: Laudamus te
- Gloria in D Major, RV 589: Gratias agimus tibi
- Gloria in D Major, RV 589: Propter magnam gloriam
- Gloria in D Major, RV 589: Domine Deus
- Gloria in D Major, RV 589: Domine Fili unigenite
- Gloria in D Major, RV 589: Domine Deus, Agnus Dei
- Gloria in D Major, RV 589: Qui tollis peccata mundi
- Gloria in D Major, RV 589: Qui sedes
- Gloria in D Major, RV 589: Quoniam tu solus Sanctus
- Gloria in D Major, RV 589: Cum Sancto Spiritu
Tracks:
- This Is The Record Of John
- Motet: Jesu, Priceless Treasure, BWV 227: Chorale: Jesu, Priceless Treasure
- Motet: Jesu, Priceless Treasure, BWV 227: Chorus: So There Is Now No Condemnation
- Motet: Jesu, Priceless Treasure, BWV 227: Chorale: In Thine Arm I Rest Me
- Motet: Jesu, Priceless Treasure, BWV 227: Trio: Thus Then, The Law Of The Spirit Of Life In Christ Abiding
- Motet: Jesu, Priceless Treasure, BWV 227: Chorus: Death, I Do Not Fear Thee
- Motet: Jesu, Priceless Treasure, BWV 227: Chorus: Ye Are Not Of The Flesh
- Motet: Jesu, Priceless Treasure, BWV 227: Chorale: Hence With Earthly Treasure
- Motet: Jesu, Priceless Treasure, BWV 227: Trio: If Therefore Christ Abide In You
- Motet: Jesu, Priceless Treasure, BWV 227: Chorale: Fare Thee Weel That Errest
- Motet: Jesu, Priceless Treasure, BWV 227: Chorus: If By His Spirit
- Motet: Jesu, Priceless Treasure, BWV 227: Chorale: Hence All Fears And Sadness
- The Anthems For The Coronation Of King George II And Queen Caroline, HWV 258-261: Zadok The Priest
- The Anthems For The Coronation Of King George II And Queen Caroline, HWV 258-261: My Heart Is Inditing
- The Anthems For The Coronation Of King George II And Queen Caroline, HWV 258-261: Kings' Daughters
- The Anthems For The Coronation Of King George II And Queen Caroline, HWV 258-261: Upon They Right Hand
- The Anthems For The Coronation Of King George II And Queen Caroline, HWV 258-261: Kings Shall Be Thy Nursing Fathers
- The Anthems For The Coronation Of King George II And Queen Caroline, HWV 258-261: Let Thy Hand Be Strengthened
- The Anthems For The Coronation Of King George II And Queen Caroline, HWV 258-261: Let Justice And Judgement
- The Anthems For The Coronation Of King George II And Queen Caroline, HWV 258-261: Alleluia
- The Anthems For The Coronation Of King George II And Queen Caroline, HWV 258-261: The King Shall Rejoice
- The Anthems For The Coronation Of King George II And Queen Caroline, HWV 258-261: Exceeding Glad Shall He Be
- The Anthems For The Coronation Of King George II And Queen Caroline, HWV 258-261: Glory And Great Worship... Thou Hast Prevented Him
- The Anthems For The Coronation Of King George II And Queen Caroline, HWV 258-261: Alleluia
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Chanticleer: Magnificat (A Capella Works by Josquin, Palestrina, Titov, Victoria, and Others)
Chanticleer , William Cornysh , John Taverner , Claudio Monteverdi , Vasily Polikarpovich Titov , Tomas Luis de Victoria , Vassili Polikarpovich Titov , Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina , Josquin Desprez , and Marianne Kach Manufacturer: Teldec ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00004SDN3 Release Date: 2000-07-11 |
Tracks:
- Ave Maria
- Ave Maria, Mater Dei
- Magnificat
- Stabat Virgo Maria
- Maria, Quid Ploras
- The Angel Cried Out
- Regina Caeli Laetare
- Alma Redemptoris Mater
- Ave Maris Stella
- O Thou Joy Of All The Sorrowful
- Ave Regina Caelorum A 8
- Ave Maria A 4
- Salve Regina A 5
Amazon.com
In the wake of its previous, Grammy-winning disc of contemporary madrigals (Colors of Love), the all-male a cappella ensemble that calls itself Chanticleer--in homage to Chaucer's Canterbury Tales --comes home to roost in this theme album of early music. After all, this is the territory that Chanticleer first staked out when the group banded together in 1978, and the return is most welcome. Magnificat offers manifold rewards, from the sensitive, imaginative culling of its program to the warmth and lithe interweaving of vocal layers in its execution (vividly recorded in splendid 20/24-bit process at the Skywalker Ranch)--not to mention the capsule music history that it traces. Like depictions of the Annunciation in medieval and Renaissance paintings, musical settings of texts that are centered on Mary abound during this period. Chanticleer's anthology includes familiar gems (the hymn "Ave Maris Stella"), but the group is delightfully unpredictable in many of its choices: examples of the polychoral sacred music of Russian Vasily Titov, contrafactum reworkings of two Monteverdi madrigals to Marian texts, and a full Magnificat setting by Tudor master John Taverner. The latter gives a microcosm of Chanticleer's vocal versatility, presenting stern, unadorned plainsong side-by-side with melodies that blossom like tendrils. Or listen to the ensemble's dynamic control, from the exultant climaxes of the Titov choral concerto to the achingly beautiful, held diminuendo on the second Monteverdi piece. Most impressive of all is that Chanticleer manages to avoid the bane of a cappella groups--a bland, homogenized sameness of sound--through its subtle variations in color and thoughtful musicality. A real treasure. --Thomas MayCustomer Reviews:
Beautiful with excellent sound engineering and singing.......2007-06-27
Should be a grammy nominee
Beautiful performances and some nice surprises.......2005-06-17
Titov composed at the time of Tsar Peter the Great's modernisation drive in Russia. He brought in composers from the West and Titov's music represents a marriage of the Italian compositional styles of the Seconda Prattica with the traditions of the Russian Orthodox Church. Like the grand architecture of St Petersburgs, and the Hermitage this is an fascinating mixture of Western influences with distinctly Russian ones. The twelve part polychoral writings have some of the dark solemnity of Russian Orthodox music while clearly being heavily influenced by the likes of Monteverdi, Gabrielli, Lassus and Palestrina. Perhaps a more authentically Russian approach to this music would have given far more prominence to the basses, but this still has trumendous impact. It makes it strange that there is so much interest in composers such as Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninov, Moussorsky, Shostakovich and the like but the Early Music movement have yet to catch up with Eastern Europe - Titov is very easily their equal and I would welcome more substantial recordings devoted to exploring this neglected composer.
This is a great recording recommended both to a general audience as well as to lovers of Renaissance music alike. The recorded sound is natural and full bodied. You can pick out individual voices in the chorus without them being drowned into an amorphous porridge of sound - a sign of a good recording. Still, I have heard wider sound staging and a wider dynamic range, so for all its virtues this is almost - but not quite - audiophile quality. Clearly a SACD format DSD recording would have been preferable.
Heavenly.......2003-01-04
Marvelous sound.......2002-03-08
Gorgeous choral voices surrounding you.......2002-02-03
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Tallis Scholars sing Palestrina
Manufacturer: Gimell UK ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0007DBXHO Release Date: 2005-03-08 |
Tracks:
- Assumpta Est Maria In Caelum
- Assumpta Est Maria In Caelum
- Kyrie
- Gloria
- Credo
- Sanctus & Benedictus
- Agnus Dei I & II
- Sicut Lilium Inter Spinas I
- Kyrie
- Gloria
- Credo
- Sanctus & Benedictus
- Agnus Dei I
Tracks:
- Lamentations For Holy Saturday
- Kyrie
- Gloria
- Credo
- Sanctus & Benedictus
- Agnus Dei I & II
- Kyrie
- Gloria
- Credo
- Sanctus & Benedictus
- Agnus Dei I & II
Customer Reviews:
*** Transportively Enchanting & Sublime.......2006-10-29
Tallis Scholars sing Palestrina.......2006-08-14
Lovely Recordings of Great Mass Settings.......2006-02-16
The great master of Renaissance counterpoint sung by 20th century masters of gorgeous contrapuntal singing.......2005-10-28
The style of composition he developed took the countrapuntal methods of the Renaissance with a personal style that emphasized smooth voice leading and the beauty of sound from the voices. In many ways, the Baroque style, founded in Italy around the time of Palestrina's death, was a reaction against the powerful cultural presence Palestrina's music had become. I understand the desire of the Baroque composers to express the words more directly, but to say that Palestrina did not express the meaning of the words in his music is a gross oversimplification.
When I hear these settings of the ordinary of the Mass I am still shocked at their beauty and transcendence. Every now and again someone tells me that they find Palestrina's music boring and I am dumbfounded. What could they possibly be hearing? My conclusion is that they are trying to listen for functional harmony supporting a single melody because that is the kind of music they know. Yet, that listening technique will not only cheat you of Palestrina and all of Renaissance music, but of most of Bach, Handel, and their contemporaries as well. While Bach does appear to have functional harmony, and at times he does, his real glory is his matchless counterpoint. For that matter, all the great "classical" composers through Brahms were also great writers of counterpoint, but it is at a level of remove from the surface after Bach.
The Tallis Scholars deserve their fame. Their sound is amazingly beautiful, their intonation is perfection, and their clarity a delight. Any issues of performance practice "inaccuracies" are just silly. The whole point of musical performance is to come up with something that convinces and delights. Scholarship is supposed to support that end. In the end, an overly fussy approach to performance cheats one of everything because if a performance doesn't please its hearers and performers it will disappear back to the shelves with all the other unperformed music. I like hearing this music performed with boy trebles, but I also like hearing it performed by skilled women who take a careful approach to they way this music is sung. In the end, it is how it sounds, not who makes the sounds.
If you do not know the music of Palestrina, these disks are a marvelous introduction. He was important enough to become a shorthand for an entire era of music and became a model for counterpoint for centuries of composers.
Anachronistic but amazing..........2005-07-26
Regarding historical accuracy, there are clearly issues with this recording, most obviously in the use of sopranos (as opposed to the original treble or castrato voices). In addition, recent Palestrina scholarship has convincingly shown that one-per-part performance was likely, and indeed almost certain in polyphony for Holy Week like the Lamentations (the Tallis Scholars' 2-per-part allocation, though, is closer than large treble choirs...). The solo singers also appear to have added lavish ornaments to relatively plain lines, and an organ or sackbut sometimes accompanied the singers (see Graham Dixon, 'The Performance of Palestrina', Early Music [November 1994], 667-75).
Of course, none of this would concern Peter Phillips. He has always had a sour, suspicious attitude to 'authenticity', being primarily concerned with creating 'beautiful sounds' (see his interview in Bernard Sherman, Inside Early Music [Oxford, 1997] and his article 'Beyond Authenticity' in Knighton & Fallows (eds.), Companion to Medieval & Renaissance Music [Oxford, 1997])
But is it really surprising that multiple-voiced, Notentreu interpretations of Palestrina dominate when recordings of this calibre are produced? The accuracy of intonation, blending and indeed 'beautiful sound' achieved by this ensemble are matched by only a handful of others; certainly no treble choir comes even close. It is significant that the first disc was awarded the 'Gramophone' Early Music Award for 1991 (when originally released) by musicologists like David Fallows and John Milsom who are normally anxious to point out historical inaccuracies. What could better demonstrate how wonderful these performances really are?
'Authentic' Palestrina...? Try:
1. Andrew Parrott's "Musica della Cappella Sistina" recording of the Stabat Mater, O beata et benedicta & Dum complerentur (1-per-part with added ornaments) on Virgin Veritas.
2. Sergio Vartolo's "Missa Sine Nomine / Missa L'homme Arme" on Naxos (1-per-part with organ accompaniment).
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Beyond Chant: Mysteries Of The Renaissance
Manufacturer: Delos Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000006ZN Release Date: 1994-05-23 |
Tracks:
- Sicut Cervus
- Ave Maria
- Justorum Animae
- Jesu Rex admirabilis
- Exultate Deo
- Exultate Justi
- Jesu,Dulcis Memoria
- Ave Verum Corpus
- Psalm 90
- Psalm 96
- Hodie Christus Natus Est
- O Maria Virgo Pia
- Tu Pauperum Refugium
- O Sacrum Convivium
- If Ye Love Me,Keep My Commandments
- Hosanna To The Son Of David
- O Quam Gloriosum
- Selig sind die Toten
- Heu Nos Miseros
- Exaltabo Te
- O Sing Joyfully
- O Magnum Mysterium
- Laudate Nomen
- Cantate Domino
Amazon.com
Go right to the first track and prepare for one of the most masterful and stylish performances of Palestrina that you'll ever hear. It's not flashy music nor is the singing especially virtuosic, but the unified phrasing, ideal balance among sections, and overall ensemble technique is impressive, and Palestrina's little motet simply opens and displays itself like a beautiful flower. The rest of the program, which includes a variety of beautiful flowers from composers such as Josquin, Sweelinck, and Tallis, maintains the same standard. Anyone looking for an introduction to Renaissance sacred choral music will find much here to encourage further exploration--standards like Byrd's "Ave verum corpus" and Victoria's "O magnum mysterium"-- and lesser known tiny masterpieces such as Victoria's "Jesu, dulcis memoria." The Voices of Ascension ranks with the world's finest choirs, and this recording reflects both the highest standard of choral singing and the highest standard of choral composition during the Renaissance. --David VernierCustomer Reviews:
Great literature... but thats about it.......2007-06-17
Essential listening........2007-03-05
Keene uses a variety of different voicings and numbers of singers according to the needs of each particular piece, sometimes with only 2 on a part. The ensemble heard on this recording is a select professional core of The Voices Of Ascension, one of the best choral groups in the country. The voices are all very rich and resonant, and the intonation through the entire CD is unquestionably on par with the best in the world. The singing is, for the most part, completelly vibratoless and extremely smooth, which creates a gorgeous purity that allows this music to shine. However, it does become strident at times, which may put off some choral conductors who are strongly against straight-tone singing.
Of particularly high quality and beauty are the Viadana "Exultate Justi", Byrd's "Ave Verum Corpus", Tallis' "O Sacrum Convivium", and the Victoria and Sweelinck pieces. Another extraordinary track is Leonardo Leo's "Heu Nos Miseros", a late Baroque piece included because of its influence from earlier styles. It is a 9 part double choir piece full of extravigant dissonances and emotion, performed breathtakingly.
Captivating!.......2006-04-12
Lofty music.......2005-10-14
One of the interesting features of this disc is that it includes three pieces by Sweelinck, two psalm settings and 'Hodie Christus Natus Est'. (Sweelinck is very under-represented in recording and performance today). Some pieces are very well known - Byrd's 'Ave Verum Corpus' is perhaps one of the most familiar pieces from this period, as is Palestrina's 'Exultate Deo'. This is a collection that draws from the breadth of the Western Christian tradition of music from this time, with composers from Britain, Italy, the Netherlands, France, Germany, and Spain.
The composers here wrote liturgical music for Masses and other worship services, as well as other pieces - motets and other kinds of new music. This disc represents music that is two or three steps removed from plainsong and basic forms of chant - some are quite a bit distant. Viadana's composition for 'Exultate Justi', for example, was actually composed later, and despite being done in a more Renaissance style, shows decided influences of the Baroque (this might also be part of the performance of the Voices of the Ascension that gives this impression).
The Voices of Ascension, under the direction of Dennis Keene, grew out of the choir of the Church of the Ascension in New York City. Many of the singers are active soloists in addition to being part of this group (whose numbers vary, but often around 40). Keene is a conductor, organist and teacher (not an uncommon combination). Trained at Juilliard, he has led the Voices of Ascension through many outstanding recordings and performances.
This is a performance that is definitely uplifting, and a good collection of music in its breadth to introduce the glories of Renaissance polyphony to those who with little exposure to it. The recording quality is very good, and the choir is quite full and well suited for the music. Some have commented upon the tempo, but this was not a concern for me, and did not stand out as unusual or a problem upon listening (indeed, there were a few points at which I might wish for it to be a bit faster, rather than slower).
A collection that soars!
Slow down Maestro !.......2004-01-04
"Yet the performance is not the slowly flowing honey usually served up by, say, the Tallis Scholars (as good as that is). Particularly in the Gloria and Credo of the Mass, Dennis Keene deliberately de-emphasizes the rise and fall of the different voices' lines in favor of a more naturally speech-like declamation of the long Latin texts. This means a surprisingly fast tempo--and some rhythmic spring and syncopation one might not expect in Palestrina. Some (not all) of the motets get a similar treatment: it works well in joyous pieces like the Pentecost motet Dum complerentur, but listeners might miss that melodic rise and fall in some of the slower works. The singers of Voices of Ascension are quite skillful, and the slight edge in their tone helps make the different melodies unusually audible. Very worthwhile, but not your father's Palestrina."
As a matter of fact, I used to like this album quite much although it was certainly not my favorite. That was until I listened to Robert shaw's "O Magnum Mysterium", which is amedley of Renaissance, negro spiritual, Russian and Western contemporary religious music. I was struck by Shaw's profoundly spiritual interpretation of the pieces by Victoria and Tallis that are also recorded on "Beyond Chant".
From then on I could no longer listen to this cd without feeling feeling increasingly dissatisfied. I tried to find a precise reason and not being a music specialist I was quite at a loss until I found the review above. Maybe the quick tempo is the key to my dislike.
I definitely feel that Dennis Keene and his singers do not have the depth of the Robert Shaw Festival Singers although the booklet accompanying the cd claims that the audience was spellbound by their performance, which took place in a cathedral in New York.
You may have a more gratifying experience if you buy a cd by the Tallis Scholars, Robert Shaw ("O Magnum Mysterium"), Pomerium(see their wonderful "Book of Hours") or even by the French countertenors and baritones of the Organum Ensemble ("Missa Pange Lingua").
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Brother Sun, Sister Moon
Gregorian Chant , William Byrd , John Taverner , Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina , Samuel Scheidt , John Sheppard , Maurice Durufle , Robert White , Cambridge Singers , Gerald Finley , and John Rutter Manufacturer: American Gramaphone ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000005MF Release Date: 1990-10-25 |
Tracks:
- Music Of The Morning Rite: a. Alleluia - b. Haec Dies
- Music Of The Morning Rite: Easter Sequence
- Dum Transisset Sabbatum
- Sanctus
- Exsultate Deo
- a. Easter Acclamations b. Surrexit Christus Hodie
- Music Of The Evening Rite: Before The Ending Of The Day
- Music Of The Evening Rite: In Pace
- Music Of The Evening Rite: Into Thy Hands, O Lord
- Music Of The Evening Rite: Ubi Caritas
- Music Of The Evening Rite: Keep Me As The Apple Of An Eye And Nunc Dimittisa
- Music Of The Evening Rite: O Christ, Who Art The Light And Day
- Music Of The Evening Rite: a. We Will Lay Us Down In Peace b. Libera Nos, Salva Nos
Amazon.com
A brief glance at the packaging for this recording might make you think New Age, and indeed this label normally offers recordings in that vein. The disc's cover tells nothing about the music inside--all we see are the ruins of an ancient abbey, the moon in the sky on the front, the sun on the back. But wait. If you get far enough to listen to the recording, you'll find one of the most beautiful and beautifully programmed choral recordings in the catalog. The compositions, organized into the categories "Music of the Morning Rite" and "Music of the Evening Rite," are mostly from 16th- century composers--Byrd, Taverner, Sheppard, White--with a few Gregorian chants and a gorgeous rendition of the 20th-century motet by Duruflé, "Ubi caritas." Conductor/choral music legend John Rutter has assembled a program that's both uplifting and restful; the performance is faultless. One could only complain about the short (39 and a half minutes) playing time. --David VernierCustomer Reviews:
Choral work at it's finest........2007-06-03
I have since purchased many other Rutter titles including "Images of Christ", and more recently "Lighten our Darkness"
Love it.......2007-05-02
Light and shadows.......2003-07-29
--Brother Sun--
The first half of the disc is largely composed of pieces from the liturgical Morning Prayer cycle, concentrating on texts from Easter, the most important of Christian days. From the Alleluia to the Acclamations and Surrexit Christus Hodie (Christ is risen today), the flow from Gregorian Chant to compositions by Byrd, Taverner and Palestrina (giants of this type of music) in increasing energy and glory, as befits both a Morning service (time to wake up!) as well as a celebration of the resurrection of Christ. Perhaps of particular note here is the cantoring of bass Gerald Finley in the Easter Acclamations.
--Sister Moon--
The second half of the disc concentrates on music of the evening; in particular, the Compline service, a service of unwinding and sombre meditation with which monastic communities conclude their days of work and worship. Many churches have reincorporated Compline into a regular cycle of services; some have even done so as a result of exposure to this recording. The music here is softer and less energetic than that of Morning prayer. This includes music from Whyte and Sheppard (also masters of the Medieval-to-Renaissance liturgical polyphony) as well as a brilliant motet by twentieth century composer Duruflé for the Ubi Caritas.
--Liner Notes--
The notes for this recording include the titles and words, in both Latin and English, for each of the pieces recorded here. It has an excerpt from a prayer by St. Francis, and a basic introduction to the music relating it historically and liturgically. One thing conspicuously missing is any biographical information about John Rutter, or any descriptive information about the Cambridge Singers apart from the basic listing of singers.
--John Rutter--
Rutter was born in London and educated at Clare College, Cambridge. This was where his career as a composer, arranger and conductor began. His early work was with groups at King's College Chapel at Cambridge as well as the Bath Choir and Philharmonic Orchestra. He has worked for the BBC providing music for educational series such as 'The Archaeology of the Bible Lands', until in 1979 he began forming the Cambridge Singers, and has continued a remarkable career of performance and recording as their director ever since.
--The Cambridge Singers--
The Cambridge Singers are a mixed choir of voices, many of whom were members of choir of Rutter's college, Clare College, Cambridge. While they specialise in English and Latin liturgical pieces, they have a wide range of recordings that span from modern compositions (including a remarkable requiem by Rutter) to English folk songs of the Middle Ages. For this particular recording, the choir consisted of eleven sopranos, six altos, six tenors, and six basses.
Cambridge Singers = Quality.......2002-05-23
American Gramaphone, please reissue this title........2000-03-30
John Rutter trains his singers to sing without vibrato, and blends their voices with such balance that they come together as a single instrument. The selection on this CD is perfect to demonstrate the clarity and richness of this ensemble. If American Gramaphone does reissue this title, I will be first in line to purchase it.
Music Review:
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- Prokofiev, Kodaly and Ravel
- Puccini For Dummies [Enhanced]
- Purcell: Instrumental Works
- Purcell: Theatre Music
- Ravel for Dummies
- Richard Strauss for Dummies [Enhanced]
- Richter - The Authorized Recordings: Bach
- Rodrigo:Orchestral Works II
- Schubert: Rosamunde Overture/Symphony Nos. 5 & 6
Music Review
Dusolina Giannini a l'Opera (1927 a 1932)