Lasso: Jubilate Deo

This page lists all recordings of Jubilate Deo, by Orlando di Lasso (c.1532-94) on CD & download (MP3 & FLAC).

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Laudent Deum

Laudent Deum

Sacred Music by Orlande de Lassus


Lasso:

Ecce nunc benedicite Dominum

Veni in hortum meum

Qui sequitur me

Resonet in Laudibus à 5

Sine textu 15

Omnes de Saba

Qui moderatur sermones suos

Exaudi Deus orationem meam

Jubilate Deo

Sine textu 19

Timor et Tremor

Omnia Tempus habent

Alleluia, laus et gloria

Magnificat tertii toni

Quid gloriaris in malitia

Laudate pueri Dominum

O Maria, clausus hortus

Laetentur caeli

Laudent Deum cithar

Sine textu 13

O peccator, si filium Dei

Fratres, quie gloriatur

Agimus tibi gratias

Magnificat 'O che vezzosa aurora'


The Choir of St John’s College, Cambridge, an exclusive Chandos artist, here presents its third release on the label. Established in the 1670s, the choir has a long and distinguished tradition of performing religious music and here offers distinguished interpretations of sacred works by Orlande de Lassus. Of its most recent release, Hear My Words: Choral Classics from St John’s (CHSA5085), The Telegraph wrote: ‘The boy treble voices bring lustre and freshness to the sonority and the singing throughout is stirring and polished.’

Lassus was a prolific and versatile composer and the most famous musician of his day. By the age of twenty-one, he had been appointed Director of Music at the church of St John Lateran in Rome, an impressive appointment for one so young. More than 2000 works by Lassus survive: Latin settings of masses, canticles, motets, passions, litanies, and hymns, as well as secular pieces in Italian, French, and German.

Lassus was charismatic and gregarious. He was also bipolar, however, a condition that caused him personal unhappiness, but which also accounted for some of the more original and startling passages in his music. The pieces on this recording represent only a small part of his enormous output: nineteen of the 750-odd surviving motets; two of the one hundred Magnificat settings; and three of his dozen purely instrumental works. It is a small sample, but it shows a composer whose formidable technique, kaleidoscopic ear for texture, and matchless word settings made him the darling of the musical High Renaissance in Western Europe.

The majority of Lassus’s motets were settings of religious texts. Ecce nunc benedicite Dominum is one of two seven-voice pieces chosen for this recording, and its rich texture allows Lassus to explore appealing vocal combinations without breaking into double-choir cliché. Veni in hortum meum places the listener in the gently seductive world of the Songs of Songs – that ‘sensuously exciting and baffling’ book of the Bible, to quote the English novelist and poet A.S. Byatt.

The two Magnificat settings on this recording were composed at least twenty years apart. The Magnificat ‘O che vezzosa aurora’ dates from the mid-1580s. A significant proportion of this work is based directly on a six-voice madrigal by the Modenese composer Orazio Vecchi (1550 – 1605), which was published around the same time. Lassus’s own setting, however, is sunny and optimistic in six-voice sections, and respectively robust and reflective in the three- and four-voice sections.

“His Majesty's Sagbutts & Cornetts shine in their performance...When solo, the players' clarity of gesture makes their music speak. To add dimension to the lines, the Sagbutts & Cornetts alternately shadow and pull away from the vocalists whom they double, movements which are deftly caught by the engineers...a provocative glimpse into Lassus's imagination.” BBC Music Magazine, April 2011 ****

“while Nethsinga brings scholarly insight to his performances and his musicians bring enviable technical prowess, they also deliver it with complete confidence and self-assurance...Even if Lassus is not a composer whose music would, in the normal course of events, have you making a beeline for this disc rest assured that we have here a fine demonstration of technical and stylistic excellence.” International Record Review, May 2011

“With lively support from His Majestys Sagbutts and Cornetts, the Choir of St John's College, Cambridge takes full advantage of this treasury of vocal colour with exuberant, full-toned precision and impressive musicality.” The Observer, 13th March 2011

Chandos Chaconne - CHAN0778

(CD)

$16.75

(also available to download from $10.50)

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.)

Vox Neerlandica

Vox Neerlandica

A capella works from the Renaissance


Ciconia:

Gloria

Clemens:

Carole magnus eras

Despres:

Tu solus qui facis mirabilia

La Déploration de Johannes Ockeghem

Dufay:

Ave Regina

Alma Redemptoris Mater

Kerle:

Suscipiant Domine

Lasso:

Jubilate Deo

Io ti voria

Tristis est Anima mea

Obrecht:

Salve Regina

Rore:

Datemi pace

Rue, P:

O salutaris hostia

Schuyt, C:

Voi bramate ben mio

Sweelinck:

Pseaume 90

Laudate Dominum onmes gentes

Waelrant:

Musiciens qui chantez

Willaert:

Pater Noster


Vox Neerlandica is an anthology of choral compositions from the Northern and Southern Netherlands for mixed voices a capella, which was published by Harmonia in 1995. The works date from the Renaissance to the present day.

Etcetera - KTC1368

(CD)

$17.00

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days.

Berühmte Chöre Vol. 1

Berühmte Chöre Vol. 1


Bach, J S:

Dir, dir, Jehova, will ich singen, BWV299

Beethoven:

Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125 'Choral': Ode to joy

Die Ehre Gottes aus der Natur ('Die Himmel rühmen des Ewigen Ehre'), Op. 48 No. 4

Bizet:

Te Deum

Haydn:

Die Schöpfung: Stimmt an die Saiten

Kempter, K:

Pastoral Mass in G major, Op. 24

Lasso:

Jubilate Deo

Mozart:

Ave verum corpus, K618

Te Deum laudamus, K141

Scarlatti, A:

Exultate Deo adjutori


Eurodisc - GD69093

(CD)

$10.75

Usually despatched in 8 - 10 working days.

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