Prices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | The Earth Resounds
Josquin, Brumel and Lassus were truly European composers, leaving their origins to work in the top establishments of Aix-en-Provence, Ferrara, Rome and Munich. Their music has a unique sonority which will astound you all - from the depth of expression and fascinating texts of Josquin (prepare yourselves for the surreal nature of Praeter rerum seriem) to the overtly decorative mass movements of Brumel’s Missa Et ecce terraemotus where the 12 parts interweave in extensive imitation and thrilling tracery, culminating in the extraordinary harmonic stillness of Lassus’s Timor et tremor and his gorgeously evocative 12-part setting of Aurora lucis rutilat. “The choir is at its best in two movements selected from Antoine Brumel's Missa Et ecce terrae motus...The Gloria opens with some truly delicate singing, and the clear, restricted harmonies evoke a performance of monumental majesty from The Sixteen.” BBC Music Magazine, June 2012 **** “The strongest features of this latest recording from The Sixteen are its conception and the performances of Lassus's music” Gramophone Magazine, June 2012 “The byword here is magnificence: three of the greatest Netherlandish Renaissance composers in works of stature, ingenuity and beauty...The Sixteen’s singing, mostly directed by one of their basses, Dougan (supervised by an incapacitated Christophers), is as refined, clear and elegantly phrased as always.” Sunday Times, 19th February 2012 “It's all music that has been chosen for the vividness of its response to the texts...The Sixteen plot all these musical sleights of hand with great precision and suaveness, even if the results are a little too polished and controlled; there's surely more guts to this music, more earthiness to its rhythms, than these performances admit.” The Guardian, 16th February 2012 *** “Outstanding among these crystalline contemplations is Brumel's Gloria from his "Earthquake" mass, vocal lines perpetually erupting over each other.” The Independent on Sunday, 26th February 2012 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Orlandus Lassus - Missa Osculetur me
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| |  | Great European Choral Works
Bach, J S: | Cantata BWV34 'O ewiges Feuer, O Ursprung der Liebe' | Brahms: | Selig sind, die da Leid tragen (from Ein Deutsches Requiem, Op. 45) | Buxtehude: | Membra Jesu nostri, BuxWV75: Cantata I, Ad pedes | Fauré: | Requiem: Agnus Dei | Handel: | Dixit Dominus, HWV 232: Dixit Dominus | Lasso: | Timor et Tremor | Martin, F: | Mass for Double Choir: Sanctus Mass for Double Choir: Benedictus | Monteverdi: | Beatus vir (from Selva Morale e Spirituali) | Mozart: | Vesperae Solennes de Confessore, K339: Laudate Dominum | Palestrina: | Assumpta est Maria a 6 | Poulenc: | Sept Répons des Tenèbres: Judas, marcator pessimus | Schütz: | Herr, nun lässest du deinen Diener, SWV 281 | Teixeira, A: | Te gloriosus Apostolorum Chorus (from Te Deum) | Victoria: | Gaude Maria |
Since they were founded in 1979 Harry Christophers and The Sixteen have recorded over 100 discs of choral music spanning 600 years. On this new collection, CORO presents a selection of their most celebrated recordings of music by composers from across Europe. This disc features music from over a dozen composers representing ten countries from Palestrina’s Assumpta Est Maria and Monteverdi’s Beatus Vir to excerpts from Poulenc’s Sept Répons des Ténèbrae and Frank Martin’s Mass for Double Choir. This disc provides a superb collection of works from some of Europe’s most celebrated composers and, alongside the first disc in this set, Great British Choral Works, is the perfect introduction to The Sixteen’s wonderful music. | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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| |  | Renaissance Choral Masterpieces
Allegri: | Miserere mei, Deus The Sixteen, Harry Christophers | Byrd: | Ave verum Corpus The Sixteen, Harry Christophers | Despres: | Ave Maria (4vv) The Sixteen, Harry Christophers | Lasso: | Timor et Tremor The Sixteen, Harry Christophers | Lotti: | Crucifixus in 8 parts The Sixteen, Harry Christophers | Obrecht: | Salve Regina The Sixteen, Harry Christophers | Palestrina: | Stabat mater transcribed & edited by Jon Dixon Gabrieli Consort, Paul McCreesh | Tallis: | Lamentations of Jeremiah I & II Ed. Philip Brett The Choir of King's College, Cambridge, Stephen Cleobury | Victoria: | Salve Regina a 8 Gabrieli Players & Gabrieli Consort, Paul McCreesh |
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| |  | Laudent DeumSacred Music by Orlande de Lassus
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 | | | (also available to download from $10.50) | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.) |
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| |  | Lasso - Great Choral Works
The Girl Choristers and Gentlemen of York Minster Choir, John Scott Whiteley (director) A glorious selection of Lassus’ greatest choral works. One of the most important composers of the late 16th century polyphonic school. Features Lassus’ most well-known and popular works, together with the large-scale settings of the Magnificat and Veni Creator. Sung in the incomparable acoustic of the Chapter House of York Minster by the Minster’s Girl Choristers and Gentlemen. | | | Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days. |
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| |  | Stairway To Heaven
Allegri: | Miserere mei, Deus | Bach, J S: | Advent Responsory | Barber, S: | Agnus Dei | Burgon: | Nunc dimittis | Fauré: | Requiem: In Paradisum | Lasso: | Timor et Tremor | Messiaen: | O sacrum convivium | Mozart: | Ave verum corpus, K618 | Poulenc: | Videntes stellam (No. 3 from Quatre Motets pour le temps de Noël, Op.152) Mass in G major: Agnus Dei | Purcell: | Hear my prayer, O Lord, Z15 | Schubert: | Deutsche Messe, D872: Sanctus Ave Maria, D839 | Stanford: | Eternal Father, Op. 135 No. 2 | Victoria: | Tenebrae factae sunt |
The Choir Of Trinity College, Cambridge | | | Usually despatched in 3 - 4 working days. |
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| |  | The Sacred FlameEuropean Sacred Music of the Renaissance and Baroque Era
Anerio, F: | Christus factus est | Bach, J S: | Motet BWV118 'O Jesu Christ, mein Lebens Licht' | Buxtehude: | Magnificat anima mea, Domine BuxWV Anh.1 | Despres: | Ave Maria | Gabrieli, G: | Jubilate Deo 8vv with continuo | Gesualdo: | O Vos Omnes | Hassler, H L: | Dixit Maria | Joao IV: | Crux fidelis | Lasso: | Ave Verum Corpus Timor et Tremor | Monteverdi: | Beatus vir (from Selva Morale e Spirituali) Cantate Domino Christe, adoramus te | Palestrina: | Exsultate Deo Sicut cervus | Schütz: | Psalm 100: Jauchzet dem Herren, alle Welt, SWV 493 Selig sind die Toten, SWV391 | Sweelinck: | Laudate Dominum onmes gentes | Victoria: | O vos omnes Jesu dulcis memoria |
Easter 2009 sees the release of a major new disc on Collegium from John Rutter, the Cambridge Singers and La Nuova Musica, featuring a collection of outstanding motets from the canon of European sacred choral repertoire. Focusing on the extraordinary body of choral music produced for liturgical use during the Renaissance and Baroque periods, The Sacred Flame explores the rich and varied ways in which European composers responded to sacred texts. Delving into a treasure-trove of music from cultural centres as diverse as Amsterdam, Antwerp, Leipzig, Milan, Rome, and Venice, this collection features familiar classics by Gabrieli,Monteverdi, Palestrina and Schütz, as well as less widely-known masterpieces by Bach, Buxtehude, Hassler and Sweelinck. All are performed in stunning new recordings by the Cambridge Singers at their sensuous and virtuosic best, joined here for the first time on disc by the instrumentalists of La Nuova Musica, rapidly establishing areputation as one of the UK’s most exciting early music ensembles. All repertoire featured on The Sacred Flame is drawn from the enormously popular European Sacred Music collection edited by John Rutter for the Oxford University Press Oxford Choral Classics series. Recorded in the unparalleled acoustic of the Great Hall at University College School in London, and produced and engineered by award winning producer Simon Eadon, the performances of these much loved works heard on this disc are set to become definitive. “These singers of John Rutter's choir are so expert, so very good at everything they do… They shade and shape the phrases beautifully” Gramophone “…these are dedicated performances. They sometimes sound as if they could date from the 1950s or '60s, but many listeners will surely welcome that mellower, less athletic approach.” BBC Music Magazine, June 2009 **** “A pleasing anthology that delivers what it promises. …the Cambridge Singers… don’t disappoint… The instrumentalists from La Nuova Musica are sensible and sensitive accompanists…” Gramophone Magazine, October 2009 “John Rutter's pristine arrangements are realised to sublime effect by The Cambridge Singers. The occasional early-music settings of La Nuova Musica offer intriguing insights into the authentic period sound of stile nuovo pieces such as Monteverdi's "Beatus vir" and Buxtehude's "Magnificat".” The Independent, 10th April 2009 **** “The wonderfully sleek Cambridge Singers, under their founder John Rutter, make light work of this choral polyphony from continental Europe that sprang from the Catholic and Protestant Reformation, an era that saw the beguiling tunefulness of street music and opera permeate works written for the liturgy.” The Observer, 26th April 2009 | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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| |  | The Art of Melancholy
Monika Mauch & Natacha Ducret (soprano), Pascal Bertin (alto), Otto Rastbichler, Eitan Sorek & Josep Benet (tenor), Josep Cabré (baritone), Stephan Macleod, Daniele Carnovic & Paul Willenbrock (bass) Ensemble Daedalus, Roberto Festa (recorder & direction) Roberto Festa and his Ensemble Daedalus present a superbly expressive picture on the subject of “melancholy” in 16th and 17th century music. | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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| |  | Orlande de Lassus: Mass 'Tous les Regretz' & Motets
| | | (also available to download from $10.50) | Usually despatched in 8 - 10 working days. (Available now to download.) |
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